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'

Friday. Janwwv e. 1989
Middl rt Ohio
P
-~~~~~1~0:!~~~0~~-l~y~SMm~~-n~~~--~~~~~~~~------~~~ma~~o!v::~=~~~·~~~----------~~----·~----~:-~~~~~~~~

Easterll part of

NATIONALWEATHERSEPIVICEFORECASTTO'TAMESTH-89

'
•'

I

0

E:·:~ fsNOW

8

RAIN
~SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded
Map shows mirimum temperatures . Atleast50'Yo ol any shaded area is forecast
to receive p&lt;ecipita~on indicated
•
.
UPI
WEATHER MAP - Durin!{ early Saturday momlng, snow Is
forecast for parts of the northern Intermountain Region, the
central and norther11 Plains, the upper Mlsslil'slppl ValleY, ancl the
upper Great Lakes. Showers are possible In most of the Pacific
Coast Stales and the GuH Coast States. Rain/showers are possible
1n parts of the Ohio Valley and the mid Atlantic Coast. Snow Is
possible In most of the Intermountain Region and most of the
central and northern Plains. UPJ

11

ft

By !Jolted Press Jnternalional
Freezing rain, sleet and snow
lashed the eastern part of the
country Friday from Iowa to
Pennsylvania, sending homeless
people scurrying for shelter and
prompting officials In some
areas to take emergency mea·
sures to keep roads open.
Moderate snow was falling
over northeast Iowa and south·
ern Wisconsin, the National
Weather Service said.
Two Inches accumulated over
northeast Iowa slnce ·Thursday
evening. In WisconSin, over ,3
Inches had fallen at Menomonee
Falls and 2 Inches of new snow
was on the ground at Madison. ·
Snow also was falling nioder·
ately across lower Michigan, and
forecasters said between 1 and 3
Inches of snow was expected to
· fall before the snow tapered off.
Snow and freezing drizzle was
expected In northeast Iowa,
northwest llllnols and the south·
ern third of Wisconsin.
Weather advisories for a mix·

Stocks

. ,i ------Weather-----Extended Forecast
South Central Ohio
Sunday through Tuesday
Tonight : Cloudy, with a low
Rail! and snow Sunday, but {air
between 35 and 40. South winds 10
Monday
arid Tuesday. Highs will
to 15 mph~ Chance of preclpita·
be
between
45 and 45 Sunday and
tion 20 percent. .
,
In
the
30s
Monday
and Tuesday.
Saturday: Mostly cloqdy and
Early
morning
lows
will be In the
breezy, with a slight chance of
30s
Sunday,
In-the
20s
Monday,
rain. Highs will be-1&gt;etween 55
and 60. Chance of rain 30 percent. and between 15 and 25 Tuesday.

---Local news briefs...- - contlnued from page 1

Squads have 8 calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports eight
calls Thursday; Rutland at~ : 18 a.m. to Romaine Road !or Levy
McGrath to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 11:17
a.m. to Route 7 for Geo"rge Hensley to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Pomeroy at H : 28 a.m. to Route 7 !or Eloise Boston to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 11:35 a.m. to
North Second for Phyllls Blake to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 12:20 p.m. to Reedsville for W!lllam Hoselton to
Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 12:56
p.m . to Sumner Road for Betty Farrar to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Rutland squads at 2: 39 p.m. transported Bobby Wright and
Tracy Wright from an auto accident on Route 124 to Holzer
Medical Center; Raclne ·at 9: 54p.m. to Trouble Creek Road for
Mary Kearns to Holzer Medical Center.

:·

.,
I

'

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark ,Smlth
of Blunt, Ellis A: Loewi
Am Electric Power ............ .26%
AT&amp;T .. ............................... 28~
Ashland 011 .. .......... ... ...... , .. 34 ~
Bob Evans .... ... ...... ............. 14%
Charming Shoppes .. .... .. ...... 16~
City Holding Co .... .. ............. 21
Federal Mogul .............. .-.... .49!-2
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................51%
Heck's ... .. ..... .......... .. ........ ... %
Key Cen turton .. ..... .. .. ........ .. 15
Lands' End ... .............. ........ 28%
Limited Inc ...... ........... ....... 29!-2
.Mullimediirinc ..... .... .. .. ..... .75%
Rax Restaurants .... .... .......... 2%
Robbins &amp; My~rs....... ... .... ... 14 34
Shoney's Inc ..... .............. ,.. .. 7%
Wendy's Intl. .............. ........... 6
Worthington Ind ...... ..... .. .... 23%
(Charming Shoppes an·
nounced that Its December sales
were tip 32' percent. Go(Hiyear
\ declared a S.4$ dividend, payable
March 15, to shareholders of
record Feb. 16. Limited Inc.
announced thai Its · December
sales were up 39 percent.)

•

Meteorites, he said, are pieces
of the solar system that are not
easily obtainable.
"'The composition Is what we
might find In rocks near the
center of the earth," Hansen
saud, "They"d be about 4 ,!-2
b!Jllon years old, about the age of
the solar system."
· Fireballs are fairly common In
Ohio, but he said he knows or only
seven meteorites that have fallen
In the state.
,._.

;Traveling youth
:revival scheduled

:Rev.
.

IEMEMBER
wnH' fLOWRS
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e h=-'='
orvtoM

•

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--.

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Page B-1

-fllBiuring """
•$2,51Xl in l1ltXI8Y'
S/Mngcou~

GREETS
- Ubyan leader Col. Gadhall waves
the A1 Kablr Hotel in Tripoli after a press
to his supporters
conference on Saturd~. (REUTER)

;Gadhafi proposes
:t8lks with U.S.

ing siting of commen:ial hazardous
waste treallllent facilities in the
area was one of ''what's next?"
Thm Walsh, local spdtesmaJi for
Aptus Environmenlal Services, led

(. p~rcent.

the parade of surprised officials at
the action Thursday night
"We wiU continue to work on
our permit to submit, but this con·
stant changing of positions by the
commissioners malc.es it difficult,"
Walsh said. pointing out that Aplus
has not presented an application for
any facility in Mason County as
yet.
Walsh said his company would
(See cmzENS, A5)

By DICK THOMAS
Tlmes-Sendne1 Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
recorded Its first traffic fatality
of 1989 at 12:30 a.m. Saturday
when a Galllpolls youth died In
the wre·c kage of his pickup truck
after an accident on State Route
141, In Perry Township, about 13
mlles south of Gallipolis. Two·
passengers were slightly Injured
In the accident.
The State Highway Patrol said
the truck driven by Sean C.
Harris, 17, 487 Kathy St., Galllpolls, slid off the right side of the
road, struck a guard rail, and
then went down an embankment,
landing on Its top. Damage was
heavy to the truck.
The victim was trapped In the
vehicle and had to be freed with
the. "'Jaws of Life." Two passengers, Matthew W. Johnson,
18, Rt. 3, Galllpolls, and Darrell
L. Patrick, 16, 31 Evans Heights,
GaiiJpous; suffered·minor vis lble
Injuries but were not treated. The
patrol said none of the tliree

people In thevehlclewas wearing
a seat· belt.
·
Hatr!s was the son of AI L.
Harris and Pam Harris Dotson,
both of Gallipolis. He was a
senior at Gallla Academy High
School and a member of the Key
Oub. He was also an Eagle Scout
from Boy scout Troop 200.
Funeral services will be con·
ducted Monday, 1 p.m. at First
Church of the Nazarene, with
bu rtal In Oh lo Valley Memory
Gardens.
TI1e Gallla County Sheriff's
Department sent the " Jaws of
Life," on another accidental 9: 10
a.m. Saturday at the junction of
SR 160 and 554.
Troopers said David F . :RI·
chardson, 48, Ewlngton , was
headed north on SR 160 and
Richard T. Anderson, 38, Bid·
well, east on SR 554. Troopers
said Anderson pulled onto SR 160
and coUlded with the Richardson
veh.lcle. Damage was heavy to
both cars.
Both drivers were Injured ·and

Murder trials slated
McARTHUR - Three people
Indicted In the December death
of 71-year-old Jackson resident
Dick McGoon are faclqg tenta·
tlve trial ilates tn VInton County
Common PI eas Court:
Oscar Hiiinblln, 25, Creola,
charged with aggravated
murder, aggravated robbery,
kidnapping and two counts of
grand theft, Is to be tried Feb. 1,
Common Pleas Judge Michael
Brame determined. The aggra·
vated murder charge carries a
· death penalty specification, ac·
cording to the !ndlctmerit.
Hamblin's wife, Teresa, 23,

Creola, Is to be tried Jan. 31. Her
brother, Mike Caldwell, 20, Well·
ston, Is tentatively set to be tried
Jan. 30.
Teresa Hamblin ahd Caldwell
were each lnd lcted on charges of
complicity to aggravated
murder, complicity to aggra· ·
vated robbery, complicity to
kidnapping and two counts of
complicity to grand theft.
The three have been charged In
the death of McGoon, whose body
was found Dec. 6 In the Mead
Experimental Forest In Vinton
County.

at the
takwen to Holzer Medical Cen· Saturday on SR 7,
ter . Richardson, who was tern· Intersection of mile post26, near
porarlly trapped In his vehicle, · the French Quarter, at Kanau ga.
Troopers said William 01·
was freed by the "Jaws of Life."
daker,
22 . 1619 Chatham. Ave ..
He was treated and released
Gallipolis,
headed south and lost
from the Emergency Room a few
control.
His
car wentoffthe road,
hours hours after the accident.
striking
a
guy
wire to a utility
Anderson was also treated and
pole,
highway
signs
and a man
released from Holzer.
hole
cover.
Damage
was
heav y.
The patrol cited Anderson for
Oldaker
told
the
patrol
he met
I allure to yield 'the right of way at
on
l)ls
side
or the
a
white
jeep
an Intersection and for not
road and swerved to avoid a
wearing s seat belt.
Both drivers claimed minor collision. Oldaker suffered a
Injuries In an accident at 11:15 minor Injury but refused
a.m., Friday on Hannan Trace treatment.
The patrol charged Oldaker
Road , 0.2 miles east of SR 775.
Troopers said Marvin M. with driving under the Influence
Church, 56,_Rt. 1, Northup. met a and failure to maintain control.
Another driver refused treattruck driven by Ryan G . Sinclair,
22, Shade, O'hlo, applied hls . ment after an accident at 9: 54
brakes ~nd slid left of center, p.m . Friday on SR 7, 0.3 miles
coll!dlng with the truck. Neither south of mlle post 30, near
driver was· treated. Damage was Addison.
Troopers said Kammy Sayre,
heavy to both vehicles. There
23, Addison, head ed north, had
was no citation.
The driver refused treatment stopped on the left side of the
(See GALLIA, A3)
in an accident at 2: 47 a.m,

Early morning fire destr.)ys
Meigs County mobile.home
EAST MEIGS - The mobile home of Paullne LaBonte was
destroyed by lire early Friday morning.
Chester Fire Department Chief Bruce Myers reported his
department, al'ong with Racine and Bas han, were called to the
, s~en~ at 6: ~1 a.m.. Appare~lll)l. the flre was discovered by a
neighbor. The 'Bashan Department was already on the scene
when Chester and Racine arrived, but the home was already
engulfed In flames.
The home was located approXImately two mlles from State
Route 248 on County Road 28 (Bashan-Raclne Road). No famlly
members were home at the time of the fire, and no Injuries were
reported.
.
The origin of the fire remains unknown, but It appears to have
started In the center of the trailer, Myers said. Myers believes
the home was Insured.

State backs. board on Webb suspension
By JEANNIE SURFACE
OVPStaff
'

A hearing examiner for the West
Virginia Education and State
Employees
Grievance
Board
backed up the Mason County
Board of Education, and Superin·
tendent Charles Chambers • suspension of Bill Webb in a ruling that
was released Friday.
M. Drew Crislip has ruled that
Webb was insubordinate in not following the dress code directive, and
that the board and superintendent
had the right ui suspend hiiiJ; Cris·
lip also Slated that Webb faded to
show that his employment conuact
was violated, a claim he had made
throughout the hearing, and
previous county hearings. , .
Webb had stated in earlier county
suspension hearinss thai i'!lplemen-

tatiim of the new dress code made a
change in the tenns of his conuact.
Webb sajd Saturday morning that
he plans 10 appeal the decision to
the Circuit Court of Kanawha
County. ·
"We'D run it through the process
and see what happens," said Webb.
"Either way, I'm satisfied. I can get
up in the morning, look in the mirror and not be ashamed of what I
see. I don't feel like I've lost anything.'' Webb added.
Webb said that if anything, he
hopes something will co~e out of
the situation to benefit other teacher
and employees in the Slate.
The veteran teachers said that if
he receives an unfavorable ruling at
the circuit cllurt level, he would
appeal again. "ICs not over until it's

over."

After rece•vmg the decision from adminisuators employed
Friday afternoon, Chambers said, 'within the county, including the
"The only thing I've ever wanted teacher's principal or the superinwas whar was best for Mr. Webb tendent of schools.
An employee must abide by all
and the students of Mason County.
Mr. Webb could still be teaching of the rules and policies put into efschool today if he had followed the fect during his employment tenn,
established procedures in redress- the ruling stated,
"A county board of education
ing his disagreement with the board
may adopt the actions of its superof education.
· "He continuously refused, not intendent of schools;" Crislip
only me, but the pnncipal of Point · stated, and by the board's upholdPleasant High School and Mason ing of the four-day suspension,
County Board of Education thereby which was Webb's first suspension.
being ruled by the hearing ex· the board "made Chambers' policy
aminer to be insubordinate to these its own. Therefore, Chambers'
individuals," Chambers added.
authority to unilaterally promulgate
Crislip further stated his decision the same is not in issue.'
in the ruling "An order for a
Webb also filed an appeal with
teacher to comply with board of the state hearing examiner on his
education policy need not come · firing, but a decision has not yel
from the board of education itself, been reached on that matter.
but may also . appropriately co'me

Mourning
begins over
llirohito

Eastern budget approved

BY SHOPPING AT THE PRESCRIPTION SHOP
. YOU WILL IE KEEPING AT LEAST ONE OF
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IIDDUPORT, OH. •

Sunday, partly cloudy : Low
In 30s. Chance of rllin 30

Gallia youth dies in wreck

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Reaction to the lalest move by
Mason County Commissioners to
again reverse their stand on allow-

271 NORTH SECOND

Along the River ....... .. B1·8
Bu.slness ..•• .•......... •.. •..•. Dl
Com lcs· ... ............ .. .. Insert
ClassUleds ....... .. ....... . D:l-7
Editorial .. ... ......... ........ A2
Deaths ......... ... ...... .... ... A3
Sporls ...... ......... .... .. ;. C1-6

Midd!eport.:.. Pomaroy-Gallipolis-Poin,t Pleasant, January 8. 1989

-.

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·

Inside

tmes -

By GLENN McCASLAND
OVPStaff

$2.00 Per Person

Cl

•

Citizens· surprised
over Mason decision

SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1989

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
99J-6669

In Our Town: It's time to buy dog licenses...
Page 87

LONDON (UP.I) - Libyan
Gadhafl's remarks Saturday
leader Moammar Gadhafl said . came lri his first direct public
Saturday he would like to meet statement since U.S. Navy jets
with officials of President-elect shot down t~o Libyan MIGs In a
George Bush's administration to • dogfight Wednesday over the
discuss disputes between the two Mediterranean.
countries that have escalated In
"America should understand
the past week,
that the policy of force, threat
·,
''BUsh's administratiOn should and terrorism, and the policy of
sltface to face with Libya around gunboats, aircraft carriers and
the negotiating table so that we s iege, have .. sharply failed, "
could agree on disputed Issues," Gad hall said.
Gadhafl told reporters In Tripoli
"'America should open direct
lnremarkscarriedbytheLlllyan · negotiations with Libya and slt
news agency Jana and mon1t01;ed around the negotiating table .
by the British Broadcasting America should put arms aside
Corp.
· so that we could establish peace
As U.S. allegation&amp; that Libya In the Mediterranean and the
has built a chemical weapons · world .
plant continued to overshadow a
"I believe that the Bush
Paris conference on chemical administration Is capable of this,
weapons, Gadhafl was also and that It has learned enough
quoted as saying he Is ready to lessons derived from the policy pf
join any International committee force and terrorls'll which
set up to Inspect suspect proved to be Ineffective." Gad·
factories.
hafl said.

Natlonll
DI#Dunt Program

~~

1

1

You'll get agreat deal with lhe Club!

A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs County .Probate
Court to Gregory Michael Willett, 24, Middleport, and Atrlcla
Lynn Louden, 33, New Haven,
W.Va.

9:00 p.m.•l :00 a.m.

.

HELLRAISER II

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

; A traveling youth revival Is
:being hosted by four local
, churches and Is scheduled to be
: held Thursday, Friday and Sat·
urday, Jan . 12,13 and 14.
• Thursday night's service Is
: being hosted by the . Ru tiand
: Church of God and the RuJiand
' free Will Baptist Church and w!ll
: be ·held at tlie Rutland Free Will
Baptis t Church. The se.rvice w!ll
• begin at 7 p.m. with Rev. Ralph
, Cundiff as tile guest minister.
; Friday night's service wlll be
• held at the Mission Church Ill
: Syracuse. The service will begin
; at 7p.m'. with Rev. John Evans as
: the guest minister.
On Saturday night, the service
•wlll be held at the Ash Street Free
1
Wlll Baptist Church In Middle: port. ThIs service will begin one
' half hour later at 7:30p.m . with
; Rev . Mark Morrow as the guest .
:minis ter.
: Special singing wlll be featured
;each. night and a pizza party wlll
be held after the Saturday
'service.
·
! For more Information, call
Mark Morrow al992-3661.
.
'

Beat of the Bend: Local candidates sought ...
Page B8

COLONY THEATER

RIVERBOAT INN ·
•

Brighter
holidays

Eastern menu

BLITZKRIEG BAND

''

50 cents

Bengals, Bills clas·h today

..

' Maniage licences

NOW APPEARING

·

.

Veterans Memorial
Thursday aadmlsslons
Grace Krider, Long Bottom; Roy
Showalter, Pomeroy; Phyllis
Blake, Middleport.
Thursday discharges - Effie
Buskirk.
·

Continued from page 1

; disappeared.
' He said that repor t came from
, the· northern part of Columbus,
' but that there had been reports
i from throughout the capital city, ·
! .and from opposite ends of the
. : state.
! Hansen said fireballs are spot·
' ted all over the country quite
: regularly.
1
·'There were two last year I'm '
aware of In Ohio," he said, noting
: that one seen lrr March was also
• seen over Wisconsin, Michigan
; and Kentucky.
; He said one seen In June over
; Columbus drew so many reports
a·bout a possible plane crash that
1
sheriff's deputies as far north as
: Delaware County were out look·
: Jng '!or a downed plane ..

rai~

Hospital news

·L-------------------------------------------1
i
.

! Bright...

• county c·ourt'
MeuJ's
-e·

The Disabled American Veterans and Ladles Auxlllary wlll
meet Monday, 7 p.m·. , at the post
home on Butternutr Ave. In
Pomeroy.

An entry cancelling all recorded and non..recorded deputy
sheriff commissions made previous to Sherlft James Souisby's
term of office 'bas been filed In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. A record of all new commissions for deputies shall be
filed with the Meigs County Clerk of Courts.

hit by sleet,

major arteries open to auto '
ture of snow and freezing rain . from the cold.
.
The Long Island R~ll Road trafflc.
were In effect early Friday for
Freezing rain and sleet was
police union' s action Thursday
northeast Indiana, lower Michl·
as far SOI\th as the
reported
came hours after two men died
gan, northern Ohio and western
Piedmont
In North Carolina ,
P ennsylvan ia. A winter slorm from exposure as Icy 18 mph
forecasters
said.
winds whipped the chill factor
warning was In effect for ex·
Snow
also
was falllng over
down to minus 21 degrees.
treme nor~eas t Ohio.
much
of
the
western · United
Homeless people across the
The Inclement weather ex·
States,
and
rain
was falling along
city flocked.to terminals and bus
tended Its reach into Washington,
D .C., and parts of West VIrginia, ·stations, and pollee between 4 parts of the Pacific Cbast.
p.m. and midnight Thursday
Vlrglnla, Maryland, Pennsylva·
nla. New Jersey, Delaware and
piCked up seven homeless people
In Eureka~ Nev ., between 6and
New York state.
from the streets to take them to .. 8 Inches of new snow fell. Ten
A police union In New York shelters.
Inches of snow fell between Ely
threatened to defy new railroad
In Maryland, state police lm· and Elko, Nelf. The snow com·
mana'gement orders to "keep the plemented a snow emergency blned with winds between 60 and
homeless moving" : In Perin Sta· plan for Prince George County 70 mph to produce zero vislbllf·
_
·
lion where they sought refuge early Friday. working to keep ties In the area.·
•
The Lake Tahoe ski areas on
the Callfornla·Nevada border
recetvedheavyamountso!snow.
Between 1 and 2 feet were
The following indlviduals were suspended to two days, six
reported.
·
fined this week In Melg5 County months probation, assault.
The snow was expected to
Court by Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Jonathan Fout. Waverly, $868 move Into Utah, where 1 to :Ueet
Donald · R. Crites, ReedsVille, and costs, overload; Lew FriSby, was forecast for the mountains •
$250 and costs, three days' In .jail, Wellston, $283, overlOad; Ml· and 4 to~ -Inch acc\lmulatlons In ·
60 day license suspension, DWJ; chael L. Amos, Racine, $30 and
valley areas.
Melvin .Lee, Pomeroy, $250 and costs, failed to control; Zane A.
Up to 8 Inches of snow was
costs, thr ee days In jail, 60 day Beegle, Racine, $30 and costs, .. expected to fall over higher
license suspension, DWI; $75 and failed to control; Jimmy D. elevations of Arizona.
costs, three days In jail to be Jackson, Coolville, costs only,
served concurrently with other disorderly conduct whlle lntoxl·
Snow has also been falling
sentence, driving under suspen· cated; Ruth Arnold, Syracuse, from western Wyoming, across
stan; Margaret A. Cox, Cheshire, $10 and costs, failed to yield.
eastern Montana and Into .west·
30 days In jalls suspended. two
Flneq forspeedlngwereJames ern North Dakota, the NWS sal d.
years probation, costs, petty E. Darst, Marlon, $24 and costs; Western and north central North
theft; Dana Swiger, Reedsville, John B. Toney, Dunbar, W.Va., Dakota was expected to receive 2
$25 and costs, 30 days In jall $22 and costs; Douglas W. to 6 Inches of new snow.
The Northeast had another
Beaver, Pomeroy, $23 and costll;
Robert C. Mitchell, Galllpolls, cold night, with rea,:Jings dipping
$23 and coslli; Darrin K. John· below zero . for much~!- New
ston, Langsville, $20 and costs : England. Much of the nation had
The menu for cafeterias of the Wendell Bennett, Columbus, $25 temperatures In the 20s and 30s.
Eastern Local School District for and costs; Jeffrey Newberg,
the week of Jan. 9 is announced:
Huntington, W.Va.. $30 and
Monday - hot dog, sauce, costs; John C. Sheets, Richmond,
french fries, fruit. m llk.
Va .. $27 and costs.
Tuesday- chut, peanut butter
FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
Bonds were forte! ted by Bryan
sandwich, pickles, fruit, milk.
K. Landers, Columbus, $55;
Wednesday - cheeseburger, Douglas W. Kemp, St. Albans,
green beans, cherry crisp, milk. W.Va. , $55; Ralph D. Rallte,
R
Thursday - taco" salad with Point Pleasant. W.Va., $55; Jef·
Claire Higgina
corn chips, peas, fruit , chocolate . frey D, McCall, Murray City,
chip.cookie, milk.
ADMISSION $1.00 PER PERSON
$75; and Lois A. Taylor, Dublin,
Friday - cook's cook.
$55, all for speeding.

To meet Monday

Old deputy commissions canceled .

natio~

Sunday

PEOPLES BANK
IIEIIBEll
F.DJ.C:

IYEWHAVEN
882-2135

POINT PLEASANT

IIIASON

875-112"1

773-51114

TOKYO (UPI) -Huge crowds
of mourners. many weeping
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern Local Board of Education
openly and bowing In reverence,
adopted a ' 'statement of needs" budget of $3,057,959 In the
swarmed to the Imperial Palace
general fund for fiscal Y,ear 1989-90, when they met Thursday.
In TokYo Sal urday to pay their
This general fund figure, which Is $61~,105 more than projected
last respects to the late Emperor
revenues for 1989-90, emphasl2es the severe financial condition
Hlrohlto as Japan entered a
of the district.
·
solemn gerloo or mourning.
In addition, the board also adopted budgets of $15,788 In bond
Hlrohlio, 87, who died earller In
retirement; $301,952 In school funds, activity funds and State
· the day In hls bed at the palace
and Federal programs; and S217,800 In lunchroom and uniform
'!allowing a long battle against
·
supply funds.
cancer, was . Immediately suc·
Dr. Dan Apllng, Eastern superintendent, reported on a recent
ceeded by his eldest son, Crown
evaluation of the district by the Ohio Department of Education. ·
Prince Akthlto, 55, who became
The reporf summary said parents, teachers, adminiStrators
the 125th emperor of Japan.
and students should be proud of the way Eastern Local Schools
The funeral, which will be the
are meeting the educatiOnal needs of students. A strong
first such Imperial ceremony In
commitment to students by the teaching staff has helped to
Japan since 1927, Is expected to
offset current financial dlfflcultles.
. .,
be held In 45 days In keeping with
Re-elected board president and vice-president year were Jim · " tradition and to allow officials to
Smith and Kathy Manlcke, respectively. The board established
prepare for th~ elaborate evenl. ·
meeting dates as the fourfh Wednesday of every month. at 7: 30
Alth,ough no announcement
p.m .
has been made, the ceremony
The next regular meeting of the board will be Jan. 25 at the
was expected to be held on Feb.
high school.
·
·
24 with top world leaders In
Board members present were Smith, Manlcke, and Susie 1
attendence.
·Heines, Ray Karr and 1.0. McCoy.
·
·
(See MOURNING, AG)

..;, -

!

'

.

MONARCH DIES- The picture of the .late
Emperor Wrobllo, on a bed of U,OOO peiU"IIIn the
showcase of a major Jewelry shop In Tokyo, draw.s
---.~

the Hrlo.- atleatlon of a If&amp;tle girl )18811inr by on
Saturday following the death of the monarch.
(REUTER)

)

/.

�•.

.

.

Januar{S, 1989

'.Conim~ntary
..

~un:bq

'ihrtet ,. j.entinel .

A Division of

825 Third Ave., Galllpolls, ohi'o .... ,,111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 446-2342
(614) 992-2156

•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.

Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
AssiStant Publisher·Controller

,·

A MEMBER of The United Press [nternatlonal, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and tile American Newspaper Publishers Association.
·

.•' '

long. AU lettersaresubj ect toedltlng and must be signed with name, address and

.

.

.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300 words

telephone number. No unslgna:lletters wlll be published. Letters should be In

goocl taste, addressing issues, nor perscrtalltles.

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

}Backstairs
at ·
..
\ihe
White House
..

and perspective

Busine~s

• f,teporters covering the White House are going to have to brush up
their knowledge of sports and its jargon. The incoming pres-ident likes
to jog, play tennis, pitch hon;eshoes, fish and hunt. And he is big on
boating in Maine during his summer vacations.
He plans to use the White House tennis courts regularly and he will
have plenty of partners to Invite from the Cabinet, including his
political mentor, Secretary of State-designate James Baker.
The country got a hint of his love of leisure when he went to Camp
David alter spending several days hunting in Texas and a day fishing
In Alabama during the yuletide season. Bush is planning· another
fishing jaunt to the Florida Key s before Inauguration Day.
All this points to a very active president, heavy on physical fitness
, and exercise. White House Secret Service agents also havetoget with
it in terms of infinite variety. They have had an outdoors-loving
president in Reagan, but he was mainly interested in horseback
riding and chopping wood.

Berry's Worl·d

~lt\@MBQR

This legend
goes back 1many
centuries
It tell of
It b
s
a vs
Y
·
Jesus to England when he was
somewh
b t
th
f
ere e ween e ages o
12 and 30. These are known as
"the hidd en years .. in Jesus
·
• life
about hi h th Go 1
w c
e
spe s say
noThthlngl .
e egend pinpoints the site of
J esu.•. v1s 1t as Gl asti:mbury · in
Somerset Co t 1
th
t
un Y n sou wes
England. There today stand
f ragments of t he ancient, ruined
Gl
. as I onb ury Ab bey. At the gate
t o th e a bbey grou nds, now a
popu Iar tourist attraction, are
souven Ir s hops.
on a ta bl e in one.of the shops a
newspaperman, John Justin
SmithofthenowdefunctChlcago
.

It took a lynch mob of Chinese

students in Nanjing to remind us
that Juliet's inquiry, "What's ina
name?" alters no global ~~ercep-

Inland Daily Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Aasoctatlon, National
Adverttstng Representative, Braabam
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue.
New York, New Yort 10017.
SUNDAY ONLY

SUB8CRIP110N RATES

By Carrier or Mote.- Bo•te

One Week .•.......•.•......•..... .... 70 Cents
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SiNGLE COPY
PRICE

Sunday ..... ~ .......................... 50 Cents
No sublcripltona by mail permitted In

areas where motcr carrier .service Is
available.
The Sunday 11mes-Sentlnel wUI not be

retponsible for advance payments

made to carriers •

IIIAIL IIUIIIICIIIPTJONS

illuodor OIIIJ

One Year ........................ ......... $37.44

Six monthl ............................... $19.!0

•
•
•
•
•
•

••

t-A

DalbudllaHu

IIIAIL Sl11IIICIUPTJONS

...... c..eq.

"This time of yeir, we get s lot of people
stressed out over Super Bowl hype/"

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

GALLIPOLIS .:._ Sean C. Harris, 17, 48'7 Kathy St., Gallipolis
died Saturday in Gallipolis.
Born March 29, 1971 in Point
Pleasant, W.Va .. he was the son
of AI L. Harris, who survives in
Galllpolis, and Pam Harris Dot·
son, who also survives In
Gallipolis. ·
A senior_ at · GaiUa ·Academy
High School, he was a membe·r of
the GAHS Key Club. He was a
member of Boy Scout Troop 200
and earned~ the rank of Eagle
Scout ln. 1987. He also was a
member of the Nazarene Youth
Club.
Also surviving are one brother,
Brad Harris of Gallipolis; a

Daily News, pic;ked up a pam·
phlet entitled, "Did Our Lord
Vis it Britain As They Say in
Cornwall and Somerset?''
Published in 19.. , the pam·
....an Anglican
phlet was written by
clergyman, Rev. C.C. Dobson.
The legend, which the cleric says
is centuries old, goes like this·. ·
Joseph of Arimathea _ who is
spoken of In the gospels as the
manwhosetombwasusedforthe
body of Jesus _ was an uncle of
the Virgin Mary, the younger
brother of Mary's rather. He
became wealthy in the tin trade
which existed between Cornwall
England, and Phoenicia on th~
coast of Syria.
M
ha
ore t n 30 years after the

'
cruc111x1on, 1n 63 A,D., the story
says Joseph of Arlmathea came
t 0 Gi
astonbury with 11 other men
and founded the first Christian
h
c hurchJ in England
on the spot
,
w ere esli!i house stood.
The tradition thaf Jesus visited
England is pres!!rved ln an
A 11
ng can hymn w.hich puts to
music a poem by Wliliam Blake:
"And did those feet In ancient
1
t me / Walk upon ·· England's
mountain
I And was the
ho1y Lamqgreen?
of God/ On England's
1
peasant
pastures seen?"
1s there any proof !or this? The ·
C
hicago newspaperman could
fine none. But he ·decided that
J
esuscouldhavevisitedEngland
with Joseph. Fairly recent ar·

chaeoiogical findings Indicate
there was trade between far
parts of the world during and
even before the time of Jesus.
And th en there 1s th e mys1ery
of the flowering thorn in Glaston·
bury which, unlike any other
flowering thOrn, blooms twice
each year - one o1 those t1mes
being at Christmas. Botanists
have linked it b tot ththe heastern
Medit
erranean u ey ave no
1a tl
h it blooms twice
exp
na
a year on w y
Th ·1
d 1
ef hi
egent 1 a hso bsays that on
one o s r ps e rough! with
hi f
J
1
h
m rom erusa em. t e Holy
Grall, the chalice from which
Jesus and his disciples drank
during the Last Supper.

Importance of being African-American ·

· Member: United Press International,

•
•

Sean C. Harris

13 w..u .................................. $19.21
26 w..u .................................. $37.96
52 w..u .................................. 174.36
lloteo Ollllhle Coni)'

13 w..u

................................. flll.80
52 w..u ................................. 1'!!1/

2e w..u ................................. Nq.ar

tlons, especially of a black skin.
"Down with black devils,"
screamed the students.
"Beat the black devils," ex·
horted their banners.
That which we call a rose
Byanyothernamewouldsmell
as sweet.
t
And that which the worW
knows as an African, by any
other name would be ' just as
despised, whether castigated as
"black devils" In •China,
"niggers" in America, br "kaffirs" In South Africa.
.i
1
Granted, nomencll!-ture does
not automatically confer power.
But at least It ensures respect for
ethnographic accuracy. And
that's what a group pf prominent
black Americans, Including
Jesse Jackson (the nation's
equal-opportunity version of Harold Stassen), had in mind at a
recent press conference when
they requested that they now lk!
known as African-Americans.
. ' If nothing else, their demand
tries to clarify the nomenclatural
confusion represented by organi~
zational profusion: African
Methodist Church, AfroAmerican Newspapers, Black
HlstoryMonth,Natlona!Assocla·
tion Jor the Advancement of
Coliored People, National Association of Minority Contractors,
and the Negro Ensemble Co.
Doesn't one all-encompassing
name make more' economical
sense?
Following the Jackson press
conference, a Phlladelphla Dally
News colleague, ASsistant Man·
aging Editor JOhn . Praksta,

posed a thoughtful series of
questions in ,. memo to me:
Q. Wirh rhe hyphenatedAmeriron_cgncepr fading among
white folko, wlwt ""'' rhe •ociologi·
cal rri!fger rhat broug)u rhi• ro rhe
fore in the black community?

A. I don't think the hyphenated
concept Is fading. Several bolldays stUI .enjoy a special ethnic
affinity from various hyphenated
Americans -St. Patrick's Day
Columbus Day, Pulaski Da/
Three· Kings Day and Vo~
Steuben Day.
Althbugh various organizatlons are already using the term
African-American, th'e "socio.
logical trigger" may have been
the formation of the White
Students Union at Philadelphia's
Temple University. Blacks were
shocked. Instead of being accepted as just another Ingredient ·
In etHnic America's "melting .
pot," blacks were being Isolated
by a coalition of all whites.
· Q. Doe• the movement ""'"" rhe
idea of e pluribu• unum, or doea if
create onorher divi1ive 1troin in
•o&lt;iery?

·

A. Divisiveness already exists
because of a low esteem for

Ch k S
UC
tone

Africa, and Reagan's presidency
has made divisiveness more
acceptable. During the past eight
years, we've seeri a war on
affirmative action, an academic
conservative movement against .
· blacks in higher education, and
organized violence against black
college students (at the University of Massachusetts, University of Michigan, University of
Pennsylvania and Smith College,
among others) . Ironically, e
pluribus unum represents the
ongoing resolution of group COD·
filet in American history.
·
Q. How can people suc.h n&amp; )e1cse
}ocluon os.•u m e thor millions of
people wonr srill another nomr
change?

You name It, and Jesse's ego
will assume it. But the wiSdom of
Malcolm X authenticates the
case for the name change: "If
you put a cat in an oven and she
has kittens, you don't call them
biscuits."
After 200 years, it's time to stop
calling African-Americans
biscuits.

Today in history

•

Gallipolis. Ohio

Point Pleasant. W. Va.

· NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) -All
'
seven attendants on a United Finland, recleved a bomb threat
AirUnes flight from Newark 10 Dec. 5 against a Pan Am flight
Los Angeles walked ofl the from Franfurt, where the Iiiaircraft because they feared ll fated aircraft originated.
was the target ol a terrorist
bombing, forcing the airline to
cancel the flight, officials said.
The attend.a nts on United Air·
lines Flight 49, scheduled to leave
(From GALLIA, A1)
Newark at 9:45p.m. Tuesday for road. A southbound car driven by
Los Angeles, were briefed by Ralph Quails, 51, Pomeroy, went
members of the cockpit crew on a off the right side of the road and
bomb threat receivell by the U.S. coll!ded healj·on with the Sayre
Embassy in Oslo, Norway, Cindy vehicle. Damage was moderate
Yeats, a spokeswoman for the · to both vehicles.
Association of Flight Attendants.
Sayre suffered a minor visible
·
said Friday.
injury but was not treated.
The attendants were told tfie
· The patrol cited Qual is for
embassy received a threat failur~ to maintain control.
against an unldentifitid U.S.
['io one w~s injured in a one
airline on a Jan. 3 Newark to Los vehicle accident at 3 p.m. Friday
Angeles flight , Yeast said . .
on Williams Ridge Road, 0.2
Flight 49 was the last of several miles south of Southers Road.
daily United flights from Newark The patrol said Joseph A. Willito Los Angles and only one other ams, 32, Crown City, lost control.
Kathleen Mllhoan
carrier had a flight scheduled to His pickup truck went off the
depart Newark lor Los Angeles road, striking a tree. Damage
PIKETON - Kathleen Mil- . . that night, an air line spokesman was modera te. Williams was
hoan, 61, Rt.1, LongBottom, died said.
·
cited for not wearing a seat belt.
Saturday morning at Pleasant
Citing the Dec. 21 bombing of
Damage was moderate In a
Hill Convalescent Care Center in
Pan Am Flight 103 over Locker-• car-deer accident at 11: 15 a.m .
Piketon.
tile, Scotland, that killed all 259 Friday on Patriot Road, three
She was born on Feb. 20,1927 in aboard, Yeast said she believed miles west of SR 775. Troopers
Keno. daughter of the late the crew felt "overwhelmed" at said the animal was hit and killed
Mlllard and Nona Osborne.
the risk.
by a car driven by Teresa L.
She was a member of the Keno
After the crash, officials said Holtlrook , 27, Patriot. Noone was
Ch11rch of Christ.
the U.S. Embassy ln Helsinki, Injured.
Survivors Include a son, Wil·
liam Milhoan of Long· Bottom;
two grandchiWten; and a.sister,
Carole Coleman of Reedsville.
Services will be Monday at 2
p.m. at the White Funeral Home
in Coolville. Evangelist Roger
Spring will officiate. Burial will
be in Sand Hill Cemetery,
Coolville.
Friends may call the funeral
home after 2 p.m. Sunday.

Gallill ...

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Page A·3

Sohio stations nm::ne •to change
CLEVELAND' tUPil - Sohio
service stations and thousands of
others operated by BP America·
Inc., the domestic sutlsidiary Of
the British Petroleum Co. of
London, might soon be getting a
new identity .
BP America plans to consoli·
date their 7,700 stations across
the United States under one
,name wJthin two months. a
company official said Friday .
· The word follows an announcementlnLondon last week that the
wor.Jd' s third-largest oil company planned to slight iy alter the
BP iog'O' and consider a name
change for the U.S. service
stations.
It ~as been speculated that the

401 Main St.
Pt; Pleasant ·
Ph. 675-4020

new name for the domestic
service statiOns will be BP. but
company olficla is have made no
official announcement. Some
analysts believe naming ttie
stations BP cou id hurt sales by
angering. consumers who do not
. want 19 by foreign products .
BP America operates 1.100
Sohio service stat ions in Ohio a)ld
about 5,000 Gulf stations in the
· Soulheast acquired from the
Chevron Corp. Ou !lets in otljer
areas are opertated tinder the.
Boron, BP. Gibbs, and Gas &amp; Go
names .
The firm IS to close a deal later
this year to trade some Gibbs,
Gas &amp; Go and Gulf stat ions (or
Mobil stations on the West Coast.

334 Second Ave.
Gallipolis
Ph. 446-817 8

165 Broadway
Jackson, Oh.
Ph. 286-6934

•

Meigs County EMS
answers two calls
POMEROY - Meigs. Couniy
Emergency Medical Services
reports two calls Friday; · Racine, Bashan and Chester Fire
Departments at 6:21 a.m. to a
trailer fire at the Pau Une La·
Bonte residence on Bashan
Road; Middleport at 7:30p.m. to
104 Peacock Drive for Ella Smith
to Veterai)S Memorial Hospital.

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f)' Ualted Press International

•
Today Is Sunday, Jan. 8, the eighth day of 1989 with 357 to follow .
The moon ls waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn .
The evening stats are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
lncl~e financier Nicholas Biddle in 1786.
··

maternal grandfather, James
Clendenin In Clendenin, W.Va.;
and a paternal grandmother,
Jean Harris of Dunbar, W.Va.
He was preceded in death by
his maternal grandmother, Lor·
nea Rucker Clendenin and his
paternal grandfather, French
Harris.
Services will be Monday, 1'
p.m. at First Church of the
Nazarene with the Rev . Mlcbael
Bearden officiating. Burial will
be in Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens.
·Friends may call Sunday, 6 to 9
p.m . at Willis Funeral Home.
Pallbearers will be Stoney
Johnson, Matt Johnson, Troy
Johnson, Coby Davis, Shannon
Mayes, Troy Miller, John Cremeans and Chris Bailey. Honor·
ary pallbearers will be J.D.
Campbell a!ld Tom Byefs.
In lieu of flowers, friends may
make contributions to the Academic Boosters Club ~f the
Gallipolis City Schools in ·the
name of ·Sean Harris.

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Did Jesus visit ancient England? George Plagenz

ontoe.

..........
.......
' ..... '.
.............

MIDDLETOWN- Robert Eugene Chasteen, 57, of Middle' town, died Saturday morning at
Kettering (Ohio) Hospital.
He was born in Gailla County
on Oct. 31, 1931.
Arrangements will · be an·
nounced by McCoy-Moore Fun·
eral Home of Vinton .

•.. J

D

Ohio 45631. Entered as second class
mailing matter at Pomeroy, Ohio; Post

::; ; ::

WltflN

STVLe?

Published each S..~. 825 Third AVf!.,
Ga!Mpolls. Oblo. by tile Ohio Vall&lt;:!' PubUshlng Q&gt;mpony /Multlmedla. Inc. Second class postare paid at Galllpoll!,

~;:

. Nannie L. Blain, 81, Henderson,
~Friday morning, Jan. 6, 1989,
m. . lhe Pteaw.t Valley Hospital,
Pomt Pleasant, after a long illness.
She was born March 22 1907 at
Gallipolis Ferry, a daught~r of lhe
late H.G, Likens and Cora Simmons Likens.
. She was a member of the Gospel
Lighthouse Church, Point Pleasant.
Her husband, Harold Blain Sr
pm:eded.her in death Feb. 4, l979:·
Sllf\'lvmg are one daughter, Mrs.
Charles L. (Deltha) Messick Henderson, with whom whe made her
~; three sons, Harold Jr. and
Dwam, both of Apple Grove James
R. Blain, Point Pleasruit; II
grandchtldren;
seven
stepgrandchildren and seven great·
grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by
three sislers, Mary Jarrell, Lon!
Cnwford and Thelma Albanese·
three brothers, Joseph, Jesse ami
Jasper Likens; ooe grandson, John
Roger Blain.
. Services will be Monday at 1:30
p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home
~ith lhe _Rev. ,Lloyd Mayes orficiat·
mg. Bunai will follow in the Beale
Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove.
Friends may caD at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home Sunday, from 7 to 9

Robert E. Chasteen

A GReAT h\4ST~s

(USP S!J.IIee)

'·

federal government may not
have been negotiating in good
faith. Daewoo had waived the
statute of Iimltatl~ns in exchange
for good-faith seUiement talks
with the United States.
DeAngelus' affidavit said he
believed $12 million would have
been a "great" settlement be·
cause, he concluded after review·
ing tile investigative files, that
Daewoo was not guilty of
dumping.
_
If customs officials believed
that, and were ready to settle,
Daewoo thinks the government
should not have backed out
because of pressure, · real or
Imagined, from Congress.
DeAngelus told us he is
"ticked" at ~imseif for voluntar·
liy talking to Daewoo. He Is not a
lawyer, but he said with 30 years
of law enforcement experience,
he should have ·known better.

STUD?NTs WJULD
.CONe To AN ART
M~VM To sTuD/

'

•

_______________J_ac_k_A_n_d_e_~_on_

Middleport

--Area deaths.__...;___ Aitendants·walk off
Nannie Blain
-terrorist-ta,_.get flight ·

p.m.

As a matter of fact, the ambiance will not be so different for Bush
either. He has had an office a stone's throw from the Oval Office for
the last eight years. So the adjustment will be easy. Bush also
received daily intelligence briefings in the Oval Office during his vice
presidential tenure and attended regular meetings in the Cabinet
Room.
·
Strangely enough, he has not yet said whether he will accord Vice
President-elect Daniel Quay.Ie the briefings and privileges that
Reagan gave him. Reagan put Bush in charge of the crisis
management panel, as well as head of a number of task forces. There
'Is no word yet on whether Quayle wiil be as involved in foreign affairs
or will travel as much as Bush did.
Bleachers are being constructed along Pennsylvania Avenue for
·the inaugural parade on Jan. 20, Which will get under way after
George Bush is sworn in as president and a luncheon is held in his
honor on Capitol Hili.
When the President and Mrs. Reagan ride down Pennsylvania ·
Avenue for the noon oath· taking, they will be taking permanent leave
of the White House. For former lirst families it has been a sad time.
Tears are shed by those they leave behind, and sentimental good byes
are said to the household stall.
Mrs. Reagan is one of the few first ladles in history who said she
enjoyed living in the White House. To others li has been a mausoleum,
a museum and not a home. But the Reagans made it a cozy place to
: · llye with bright colors, comfortable sofas and chairs and warm
glowing fireplaces.

Jl~IJ~

. January 8, 1989

WASHlNG'fUN - A top candi· talks, and that's where be goofed.
suit won't be clear up til the judge
·date to take over the U.S. He slgl!ed two affidavits that
decides the case.
Customs Service nearly ruined bolstered Daewoo.' s case, even
Whatever the impact In court,
the agency's chance of winning a though he was not compelled by
DeAngelus' action will haunt him
$110 mlillon lawsuit. Alfred A:- taw to do tttat. In hiS'affldavlts he if he ls nominated to become
DeAngelus is on George ·Bush's said that he didn't think Daewoo customs commissioner.
short list to succeed William von · . engaged in dumping.
DeAngeiUs refused to com·
Raab as customs commissioner.
Justice .Department attorneys ment on the ·possibility of his
In 1985, the Customs Service had already managed to con- nomination, but he vigorously
,sued Daewoo International, a vince a federal judge at the Court denied that he was trying to help
South Korean steel company, for of International Trade in New Daewoo. Jle said he didn't know
$110 million in damages, alleging York City that DeAngelus did not that the Court of International
that the company "dumped" have to answer the Dae..:oo Trade had exempted him from
cheap steel on the U.S. market to subpoena.
giving his statement.
lure business away from Ame_rl·
DeAngelus told our associate
Among other things, DeAngecan steel companies.
StewartHarris.thathethoughthe ius' action raises concerns that
DeAngeluswasthent,hedeputy was required to give the state- he might be trylng.,;to forge
commissioner of customs and ment to Daewoo attorneys and business ties with the Koreans by
helped negotiate a settlement of that he didn't know It would hurt helping Daewoo with Its lawsuit.
the suit. That settlement eventu· the government's -case. The DeAngelus denies any ulterior
ally fell through. DeAnge[us governm. ent only recently con· . motives, but admitted to us that
retired In December 1986 and vinced the courts to ignore the he Is ~·seeking to establish an
went Into private busine.s s as an issues raised. DeAngelus' affl· · international trade consulting
Import &lt;;onsultant. Daewoo davit. But the effect of his relationship" with Korean firms.
wanted, on the record, DeAnge- statements on theoutcomeofthe
DeAngelus' affidavit was siglus' version of the settlement
niflcant because it showed the

• •,
By HELEN mOM AS
: .;
UPI While House Reporter
-;. WASHINGTON- White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, who
.: I!iecomes White House press secretary Jan. 20, is selecting his stall
.· fhat will be ready to start work immediately alter the swearing in of
George Bush as the nation's 41st president.
... Fitzwater, like Bush, seems to be leaning toward familiar faces. He
has already tapped B .J. Cooper, currently deputy White House press
secretary, to stay on the.job in the next administration. He also has
asked Steve Hart, the vice president's press secretary, to join the new
administration as a deputy press secretary.
·Fitzwater served as the vice p~esldent's press secretary before he
was summoned to replace spokesman Larry Speakes at the White
House. So there won't have to bean initiation period. Fitzwater will be
able to jump right in and go to work.
The format of Bush's press relations still has to be worked out. Bush
is expected to hoW more news conference's bul.he is balking at being
subjected to questions outside a formal format. News, however, does
not alw.a ys break according to plans.
The vice president has been friendly to. the press and has been
willing to talk to reporters in formal and informal situations. He also
has not been adverse to daily picture takings.

'

ties

Page-A-2

.Pomeroy

;~

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1S a reg1s1ered utaem•rl! ot Elfoytllll Fum,!Ufe l!"'dl.lllrftt. lnt , LenOir . N C 216:13
Pr1ce1 •nC pr~vet SPe&lt;:•I•C.ll•on, sub~«! to CNI~ WithOut MofiCe

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•
•

Pomeroy-Mi~leport-Gallipolis, Ohio· . Point PleaS@nt. W. Va.

Paga-A-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Municipal_ court
GALLIPOLIS- Frank Taylor,
Jr., 52, Ironton, was fined $500
and costs Friday in Gallipolis•
Municipal Court .Qn a charge of
driving under the influence. He
also received a ten-day )ail
sentence and a 120-day licery;e
suspension. ·
Dawn L. Elliott, 26, 76 Pine St.,
GaiUpolis, was fined $300 and
costs IorDI)!. Shealsoreceived a
three-day jail sentence and a
60-day license supenslon.
Twenty-three persons forfeited
bonds for speeding, including:
Robert A. Coope(, 21, Dunkirk,
Ind., Dana B. Hinscher, 43,
Chapel Hill, N.C., and Thomas L.
Gilliland, 19, Wellston, all $49·
Paul R. Seqtil,n, 39, Saras~ta.
Fla, $46; Maurice H. Harbour, 52,
Rt. 1, Cheshire, $45; Larry A.
Green, 24, Charleston, W.Va.,
Marlon D. Martin, 40, Dayton,
Keith M. Wood, 25, Cambridge,
and Marguerite J . Wayne, 63,
Logan, W.Va., all $44;
Richard D. Hendren, 40, Columbus, BjahJe K. Hess, 23,
Columbus, Sand~a K. Bledsoe,
21, Earling, W.Va., Donald R.

Warner, 50, 'l'ayJOr, N.C .. and
David C. Osborne, 37, Huber
Heights, Ohio, all $43;
Tony M. McGuire, 22, Crown
City, Clarence A. Spencer. Jr ..
32, Frenchburg, Ky., and Brian
C. Dailey, 24, High Point, N.C.,
all $42; James W. Eaddy, 31,
Marysville, N.C., David T. Pace,
46, Taylorsville, N.C .. Eric T.
McMullen, 22, Hagerstown, Ind ..
and Robert W. Jordan, 38,
. Chillicothe, all $40; Frances C.
Bradford. 22, Richmond, Va. and
Chrlstopil,er E. Massey, 33, Kll·
lingsworfh, Conn., both $39.
Forfeiting $41 bonds on other
traffic violations were: Bonnie s.
Barton, 43, Middleport, disobey Ing a trarnc control device;
VIolet M. Stumbo, 77, Rt. 1,
Scottown, Leona M. Gordon, 52,
Rt. 1, Gallipolis, both for failure
to yield the right of way; and
Daniel E. Williams, 48, Rt. 1;
Point 'P leasant, Improper lane
usage.
• Terry L. Massey, Rt. 2, Pa·
trlot, forfeited a $76 bond for
possession of marijuana.

Police investigate two wrecks
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Pollee Investigated an accident at
12: 24 p.m. Friday at Third
Avenue and Vine Street . Officers
said a truck driven by Michael L.
Dennison, 25, Rt. 1, Crown City,
and a car driven by Billy Houck,
63, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, bOih headed
south, Stopped at the stop sign.
J\ccordlng to police, Dennison
backed up and struck the front or
the Houck vehicle . . No one was
injured. There was no citation.
One dr lver was cl ted In a
motorcycle-car accident at 9:41
p.m. Friday at Second Avenue
4nd Spruce Street. Pollee said
T.amltha L. Bates, 18, Rt. 2,
GaiUpolls, turned left off Second
~venue onto Spruce Street. Be·

\
I

hind her, Richard D. McDonald,
18, Tuscan, Ariz., riding a 1978
Hondl!, 750 motorcycle, also was
turning left and collided with the
back of the Bates car. No one was
Injured. McDonald was cited for
failure to stop within the assured
clear distance.
Pollee citations during a 24hour period ending at 9 a.m.
Saturday Included: Sally L.1
Vance, 41, 424 Fourth Ave.,
Gallipolis, speeding; Kathy L:
Mallette, 616 Shawnee Trail,
Point Pleasant, disobeying a stop
sign; John D. Meeks, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, disorderly conduct; and
Richard .K. Jagers, 34, ESR,
GaiHpolls, open flask.

January 8, 1989

Meigs County Court·
· 1988 report released

GALLIPOLIS - Bonnie K.
· Aldridge, Rt. 4, Oak Hill, filed a
suit Friday In Gaflla County
Common Pleas Court against
Diana L. Sharp, of Oak Hill,
seeking .damages for Injuries
suffered In a car !pedestrian
accident last July. \
In her · complaint, ~~
- drldge
stated that she was stru ~July 9,
1988 on the parking lo of the
Sportsman' Inn, at Gallla, by a
car driven by Sharp. The plaintiff
claims the accident occurred
because the defendant failed
exercise ordinary care.
Aldridge said she Is permanently disabled from her-Injuries
which Included both a cervical ·
and low back strain, multiple
By LEE LEONARD
to most brackets, the . lowest contusions and abrasions, a
, UPI Statehouse Reporter
being excepted, according to grade II sprain of an ankle and a
laceration ot the right leg. The
sources.
.
plaintiff
stated that she !ncu rred
• COLUMBUS. O)llo (UPI) Geleste also was reported to be
of more than $2,500,
expenses
Wasting little time In setting the considering an Increase In the
S,'tatehouse agenda for 1989, Gov. clagrette tax for eldercare pror- · including $1,744.30 to Oak Hill
Hospital.
·
Richard Celeste will address the grams, which he would like to see
The plaintiff is seeking damOhio General Assembly this ' expanded to the tune of $150
ages In a~ amount which would
week, delivering his· 'State of the
million.
·
fully
and fairly compensate her
S\ate" address to a joint HouseSince the governor's 1990-91
her
Injuries, along with court
for
senate session.
.
budget recommendations are to
: The governor Is expected to
be made publiC within two weeks,
press his case for excellence In
he Is not expected to talk In detail
e(lucatlon, calling for higher
about them.
'
lpdlvldual and corporate Income
Unless additional taxes are
Ul'xes to go specifically for
Imposed, the two-year budget
~hools and colleges, when he
growth Is not expected to exceed
CHESHIRE - · Gallla ·Meigs
~kes the rostrum In the Ohio
8 . percent, less If there ' Is a
Community
Action Agency Is
House chamber at noon Tuesday.
recession. Lobbyists for educa.11rglng
all
Gallla-Melgs
residents
: "It's going to be' very subs tan·
tion and social services are
holding
food
commodity
cards to
tJve," said press secretary Defeeling the pinch from the curpick
up
U.S.D.A.
commodities
bra Phillips after reading a fifth - rent budget, which grew by the
draft or the speech the governor
lowest amount In more than 20 (butter and flour) on Tuesday.
.Meigs residents may pick . up
has been laboring over for the
years.
past two weeks. "He lays out the
Phillips said Celeste would commodities from 10 a.m. to Z
~ucatlon proposal."
reflect on the accomplishments p.m. at the Meigs County Fair·
· The ' education proposal In·
of19118, the major one of which he grounds, the Racine America!
volve&gt;, greater equity In funding
views as cleaning up the Legion, the Tuppers Plains fire
station and the Pagevllle Town
lt;~eal school districts, more ac·
environment.
countablllty and demonstration
But there Is no question the Hall. Gallla residents may pick
o'! learning, better rewards for governor wants education to up Items rroni noon to 2:30p.m.
good teaching, and ;m emphasis
occupy center, stage. Follwing at Woodland Center, The Mt.
on keeping · ~at risk" students In
his address, to be telecast state· Carmel Baptist Church at Bids.chooi, IIreludlng pregnant
wide, Celeste will conduct an well, Guiding Hand School and In
teenagers.
hour-long' 'teleconference' • dedi· Merceryllle and Crown City.
: For college students, Celeste
cated to Issues raised In his
wants easy access to programs of
speech and using studio audienc))o!ce and excellence on the
ces In Columbus, Cleveland,
~;ampus.
Cincinnati, Dayton, Toledo, Ak·
.All this COS IS· money, and the
ron and Youngstown.
110vernor Is likely to recommend
Most. or the regional hosts will
( 1 percent hike In Income tax
Include members or his Educa·
rates, raising about$800 million a
tlon 2000 Comll\lsslon which
~ar. That's well shortofthe$1.2
recommended the ex,tra money
Dillion a year requested by the
for schools and colleges.
e4ucatlon community.
"We see this as the kickoff or
Celeste also Is expected to ask
the education reform movelpwmakers to place on the
ment,'' said Phillips, adding that
9tatewlde ballot a referendum on
"we've found this a very etrec·
tile so-called "educavon tax "
tlve way to get across what he's
lfhlch would be sent to a separate
talking about."
trust lund with proper safeAt8 p.m. Tuesday,Celestewlll
!P!ards so It will be spent only on
host a special 90-mlnute edition
education.
of his radio call-In show, ''Airing
;Ohio's personal Income tax
Education," to be broadcast
J:'ates DOW range from about 0.8
statewide from Columbus. He
~rcent to 8 percent. An addl·
wants to reach as many Ohioans
ARHOLD
t_!Onal I percent would be added
as possible.

.

costs.
Lloyd Vinton Rankln, New
Haven, W.Va. was granted a
divorce from Mary Ann Rankin,
Rt. 1, ·Gallipolis, on grounds of
gross neglect of duty. Married ·
Sept.10, 1977, the couple had two
· children, custody of wh.om Is
provided for In a separation
agreement signed by the couple.

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N- P-oy-Mason lridge
leo L Yaugltan, Mgr.

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By Margaret Caldwell · ·
Times-Sentinel staff
GALLIPOLIS - Throughout
January, Rice's Furniture, a
locally family owned and oper...
ated store. will be celebrating Its
L ~ •
20 years In business.
David and Jo Rice began their
business In a one-room showroom with the warehouse In their
two-car garage. They reiurned to
Galllpol!s to open the business,
following In David's father's
footsteps. The store first 'opened
In January 1969 at 852 Second
Ave.
·
.In 1971, REA E)!press moved .
aut o( the other half of the
· building th~ Rices owned, allowing the store· lo expand to two
.'
rooms to sell new and used
furniture, and changing the address to 854 Second Ave.
Five years later, David had
both rooms remodeled. And after
the Blizzard or 1978, the front of
the building was remodele(l with
the awnings replaced.
The latest Improvement was In
11985 when a warehouse was built
the years, Jo and David Rl~e wlii celebrate the · .
20TH ANNIVERSARY
Rice's Furniture
. RICE'S FURNrrtJRE - Jo and David Rice opened Rice's
behind the store .
store's anniversary with specials and sales
opened 20 years ago, wilh a one-room showroom
Furniture In January 1969. Aller 20 years In busllless, the Rices
The highpoint ol the Rice's
with lhe Rice's tw&lt;&gt;-car garage used for the · thrDughout the month of January. (Times· •
have remodeled the Inside and front of the store and built the
career was~n 1972 when they won
·
Sentinel photo)
warehouse. With ·numerous Improvements over
:.
·
warehouse behind the store. (Times-Sentinel photo)
a 10-day trip to Switzerland from
a mattress company .
The sate incJuaes 20 to 60 a set of springs and mattress, or a
"That was the highlight," of the.Nazarene In Gallipolis.
A.:.::1:....l- 9
percent off all merchandise, loveseat.
"We have met a lot ol nice
David said. ·'That was a once In a people and made a lot of
There are give-aways for pur·
givethree
free
drawings,
and
In Paris, delegates !rom 141 just moments before 'he died at lifetime trip.'·
chasing any living room suite; •
aways with purchases.
friends," Jo said.
nations : at the opening of a 6: 33 a.m., said, "The sad news of
''They did It flrstclass, too," Jo
and free financing for 24 months.
enters
In
the
Anyone
who
·'We
are
able
to
serve
the
chemical weapons conference the passing or his late majesty, said. "They d!dn' t scrtmn on
The store. fererred to as a ·
no
purchase
necessa
r-y,
drawing,
community better because we
rose for a minute of silence In a the emperor, has left me grief- anything."
and l;'op" store, carries •
"Mom
has
the
chance
to
win
a
recliner,
have low overhead, family opertribute to Hlrohlto, the last stricken."
They also enjoy the time they ated, direct factory buying, vosuch name brands as Lane and n
Hlrohlto: s chief physician spent at furniture shows In High
surviving major World War II
Sealy.
~ .
leader, as messages of condo· Aklra Takagi told a news confer· Point, N.C., meeting dealers and lume selling and we own the
building, "David said.
lence poured &amp;lnto Tokyo from ence the emperor was diagnosed · manufacturers.
· ,
"The community has given to
around the world, Including from In September 1987 as possibly
David and Jo have two child· us for 20 years, now It Is our turn
President Reagan and having duodenal cancer, but was ren, David Rice and Lynn Foster,
never ·told of his disease In and three grandchildren. They to give to the community," he
President-elect George Bush.
The 7:55a.m. announcement of accordance with ·the custom of ar~ members of the First Church said, speaking of the 20th anniversary sale.
Hlrohlto's death on national protecting Japanese patients
television unleashed a~masslve from bad news.
_.:.::&lt;F:...:r.:;om:::...:.cm=z=E::..N:...:s:.:.A-=1.:.1_ _ _ __
The government did not admit
outpouring of grief. .
Flags llew at half-staff the emperor had cancer until work ~ithin whatever policy exists any more."
Sheline voted against the resoluwhen the time for seeking a pennit
throughout the nation and after his death.
tion
offered by Larry Sayre, the
His, -5-foot-3 frame weighing arrives.
hundreds of thollsands of people,
"Meanwhile we wiU watch and new commissioner, and ·seconded
young and old, flocked to the just 50 pounds at his death, ·
Imperial Palace. By the end or Hlrohlto had been kept alive with read the Register to see what's by Thomas ''Tucker" Mayes. who
has just assumed the president's
the day, nearly 280,000 people almost dally blood transfusions next," Walsh said.
But Jimmy Joe Wedge, who 8er- chair on the commmission.
had signed condolepce registers by · a team of lour physicians
"I don't have any further com·
since a relapse of Intestinal veli as liason for PyroChem_Jnc., in
In tents set up at the palace gates.
ment,"
Sheline said. "And I have
cancer
Sept.
19.
Point
~leasant,
declined\C&lt;&gt;mment
. Pollee guarded against possl· .
·no
idea
what the next resolution
Four
hours
after
the
emperor's
Jisiday morning on the commis·
~le disturbances by leftist groups
will
be
aboutif there is one."
- seeking to abolish the monarchy. death, Aklhlto took possession of s1on's action, saying he would wait
the
sacred
symbols
of
the
moU.S.
Rep.
Bob
WISe, 0-W.Va.,
until "I learn exactly what hapl(nd kept a close watch on elderly
mourners amid' rears there narchy -a mirror, a sword and pened at the commission meeting said from Washington Friday morning, however, that he would urge
would he a rush tQ commit ritual . the "Magatama," comma· and what was said."
shaped
ancient
jewels,
marking
PyroChem,
Inc.,
has
submiued
a
Governor-elect
Gaston Capenon to
suicides at the palace In anguish
his
ascension
on
Japan's
2,600·
a
hazardous
request
for
a
permit
for
seek
a
state-wide
policy regarding
over the emperor's death.
The Stihl 009 is a small
year-old
Chrysanthemum
waste
treatment
facmty
within
who
makes
the
first
deciS1bn on
At least one such suicide was
chain saw that's big
Throne.
hazardous waste treaunent facilities
MasOn Coilnty.
.
reported In western Japan.
enough on power and
The death brought an end the
The conmussioners had first pas- in West Virginia.
. "I gQ together with the em·
performance to take.
per or In death," was written on a 62-year era known as "Showa," sed a similar resolution to prohibit
care of an your firewood
n_'ote left by.an 87-year-old former or enlightened peace. The new the facility in September of 1988,
needs. And since it's a
reign
of
Emperor
Aklhlto
will
be
but
in
November
of
1988,
by
a
vote
J-apanese ·soldier who killed
Stihl,
you know it
be
known
as
"Helsel,"
or
peace,
on
of
2-1,
they
reversed
the
action
and
lllmself In Wakayama.
·
Earth
and
In
heaven.
Aklhlto's
around
for
a
long
time
to
approved a resolution which would
; Many of the mourners milling
Dec.
23,
will
become
a
birthday,
come.
allow siting to move forward. That
aro1.1nd the palace wept openly
resolution was forwanled to the
and bowed In reverence to national holiday.
'Hirohlto's
wlre,
Nagako,
85,
West
V'uginia • Department of
Hlrohlto, who ascended to the
now
the
empress
dowager,
Is
Narural
Resoun:es for a decision
throne 62 years ago as a living
froni
hlp
trouble
and
suffering
regarding
its confonning with an
gOd only to be reduced to a
has
not
appeared
In
public
for
executive
order by Gov. Arch
pPwerless symbol of state In the
several
years.
Palace
ofllcla1s
Moore
Jr.
haltipg
any conspuction
wake of Japan's defeat In World
made
no
mention
of
her
in
or
siting
of
a
hazardous
waste
CHESTER
War IL
Saturday's
announcements.
facility.
• Mlkl Ebara. 21. said, "I was
986-3308
Most world leaders sent condo·
No decision has been announced
surprised to find so many people
lences
praising
Japan's
postwar
by
the ONR regarding that resoluo)Jt here. It means he was
accompl!sbments,
but
South
Kotion.
supported by the majority of the
WITH EACH
rean government officials Issued
R. Kenton Sheline, the only '
Japanese people."
'10.00 ~URCHASE
David Bailey, 55, a New York polite condolences laced with commissioner which has not chanbitter
memories
of
Japan's
36.
his
position
during
the
con-ged
state un,l verslty professor study·
•
•
lng In Japan. said, "From the year colonization ·or Korea before troversy, said Friday morning,
"Nothing thai anybody does down
bottom of my heart I mourn the WWII.
here (the courthouse) s~rises me
death of Emperor Hlrohito."
The nation came to a partial
halt as the stock market canceled
· trading for the day and factories
temporarily shut down assembly
lines. Tokyo's usually crowded
shopping and night-life districts
turned dark and relatively deserted. The government Issued a
6-day ban on dancing and singing
by all civil servants and urged
private citizens to refrain from
festivities for two days.
Most of Japan's 122 million
people were huddled around
television sets, which stopped all
regular programming to replay
highlights or Hlrohito's reign
around the clock. Black and
white footage of the emperor
astride his white horse leading
parades during the war brought
back memories of Hlrohlto's
glory days before Japan's defeat.
A-AL
Television co~merclals were
To show appreciation ro our cusromers, Civic Savings is pleased to offer this elegant
YIElD
suspended for two days, but
French Lead Crystal Stemware for opening a new passbook savings account or certifimre
entertainment and sports proof deposit or simply adding to an existing passbook savings account or cercificate of depograms
were to be broadcast as
$3,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
,
•
seheduled.
. sit. You will receive four beautiful goblets for a minimal deposit of $200.00, plus the added
:The U.S. military In Japan
bonus of earning a high rate of return on your investment. You will want to add to or
c.nceled high-visibility military
open your account today to rake advantage of this great "Customer Appreciation" offer.
tr.alnlng exercises, Instructed Its
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO, N. A.
See the beauty of this fine crystal on display in our lobby: ,
4~.000 U.S. personnel not to wear
uniforms off base and to "scaleThe Bank That Makes Things Happen
back private and social activities·
tJtat might be contrary to the
Gallipolis, Ohio
GALLIPOLIS
national mood."
MIDDLEPORT
§AVONGS
:Prime Minister Noboru Take446-0902
II
\
"'o lo..
992-8681
sl\lta, who stood . with the ImpeMember FDIC
rial lamlly at Hlrohlto's bedside
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Food comrrwdities
to ·be picked up·

&lt;Family Planning

Sunday Times·Sentinei-Paga-A-5 .

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South Central Oblo
Sunday, p~rtly .cimidy . and
colder. Temperatures will fall
Into the 30s. Chance ofpreclplta·
tlon Is 30 percent.
Extended Forecast·
Monday through Wednesday
Generally, fair through the
period, with highs ranging from
25 to 35 each day. Overnight lows
will be in the 20s Monday and in
the teens Tuesday and
Wednesday.

w. Va.

•

);Jlne i&gt;treet tJlbro &amp; lJIJrli

Tl\lrd &amp; Vltte

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasa~t.

Rice's Fun•iture celebrates 20 years in business

Hospital news

Oak Hill woman files suit

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POMEROY -Total receipts In 1988.
SheriU' s fees for 1988
· Meigs County Court were nearly
•;
the same In 1988 as In 1987, with amoupted to $2,498.
1
J only a $560 Increase in 1988 · Civil judgments collected In
reflected In a year-end report 1988 were $16,547, reflecting a
from Judge Patrick O'Brien. $3,925 increase over the $12,621
Total receipts In 1988 amounted total In 1987. ·
Money paid Into the various
• to $174,751. The total In 1987 was
State budgets In 1988, Including
$174.191.
The county's share of receipts wildlife and the State Highway ;
In 1988 was $60,798, with $33,424 Patrol, totaled $50,481. Seat belt
paid to the general fund, $17,759 fines to the State amounted to
to the law library and$9,614 to the $695.
There were 618 misdemeanors
auto license and gas fund. The
county's share In 1987 was · rued In 1988, as compared to 644
$53,133. These figures reflect a · misdemeanors In 1987. Seventy·
$7,665 lncreas~ to the county In eight felonies were llled In i988,
compared to 70 In 1987.
Regular traffic cases were
down from 1, 7551n 1987 to 1,649 In
1988, a difference of 106.
Veteran• Meinorlal Hospllal
OWl's were alsodown -lrom 119
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS In 1987 to 104 In 1988.
Mattie Warner, Pomeroy; ChaThere were 96 civil cases rued
. rles Schoonover, Rutland; Ella In county court In 1988, 10 more
Smith, Pomeroy; Ivory Bush,
than 1987's total ol 86 civil cases.
Middleport.
Small claims In 1988 totaled
FRIDAY DISCHARGES ~ 319. Small claims In 1987 totaled
Otis McClintock, George Har- 227, 92 less than 1988's figure.
vey, Herbert Shields, Dene
The year-end county court
Smith, Keith Musser, Pauline
TOP SALESMAN - Gene Johnson, of Jim Minks Chevrolet·
report
was prepared I&gt;Y Linda
Derenberger, Phyllis Blake,
Olds, announced James H. Walker has earned Salesman of the
Bentz, clerk.
Sally Walters.
Year honors for the second year In a row. Walkeroutsoldallotber
salespersons during 1987 and 1988. Walker received the award
from Jobll!lon on Friday. (Times-Sentinel photo)

(;overttor to address
~semhly this week

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Janu.-y 8, 1989

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Page-A-6-Sunday TII118SooSentinel

Pome~oy-Midclaport-GIIIIip9li,, Ohio-Point Pleasant.

w. Va.

JartUrf 8. 1989

•

fudge grants change of venue

Plenty of snoW in West; 'cold in East

orrg t e rtver

LOGAN, Ohio (UPI) - A
JudgeThomasGerkengranted
Hocking
·
C
ounty
Comrnon
Pleas
·
a
chance
of venue Tuesday after
VlslbiUtles dropped to near
By United Press Interaatlonal
northwestrowalntosouthernand · coast states, the Ohio valley and
Court
Judge,
who
says
everyone
he
said
everyone
Is talking about
zero over portions of southeast
A weather system sent snow
central Wisconsin. Roads were ! middle Mississippi Valley,
Is
talking
about
the
new
.trial
for
this
case.
·
and strong wind'- whipping
reported Icy and many cars were
vtslbllltles less than a quarter Iowa, ·northeast Missouri and • . Dale Johnston, has granted a
"I can't even go to the gas
west central Ohio.
across the central Rockies and
stuck In ditches.
of a mlle.
change of venue for the man station without having somebody'
the northern Plains states Satur·
Snow w&amp;s falling over northern
accused of two mutilation ask me about thls," the judge
day , and forecas\ers · sald the
Arizona and New Mexico, the
said. "I don't sef! how we can
slaylngs.
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 PM EST 1~i
system was moving Into the
NWS said. Gallup, N.M., re55,
was
sentenced
to
abvold • the possibility of
Johnston,
ceived 4 Inches of new snow and
Mississippi Valley.
,
death
In
1984
for
the
1982
slaylngs
prejudice."
·•
·snow was heavlestearlySatur'
some roads across northern New
of
his
stepdaugher,
Annette
Gerken
has
not
decided
where
Mex leo were snow packed and
day over North Dakota and
Cooper, 18, and her fiance, Todd the trial wlll be held, but has
Icy.
Minnesota.· At least a foot of snow
Schultz, 17, whose bodied were ruled out Franklin and MontgoIn the Northeast, winter
" fell at Fargo, N.D., while Fergus
40
dismembered.
.
mery counties because of the
Falls, Minn., received beLween 9 weather was winding down after
But
the
Ohlo
Supreme
Court
extensive
media coverage In
and. 10 Inches, the National , a mixture of snow and freezing
ordered
a
new
trl&lt;~,l for Johnston those two areas.
Weather Service sald.
rain fell over the middle Atlantic
ln October. Defense attorneys
Gerken said the trial woultl
Along with the heavy snow, an· Coast states and· southern New
asked
that
It
be
held
outsld!!
have.
to be held In a county large
England Friday. Many areas
arctic air mass was decendlng
Hocking
County.
enough
to provide a pool of
Into the north·central section of
received from 3 to 61nches of new
Johnston
was
released
last
impartial
jurors·. Defense attarsnow.
•
the country, se11dlng tempera·
week
from
the
Southern
Ohio
neys
are
approving
a jury trial
lures plunging Into single digits
Winter weather advisories re- .·
Correctional FacUlty, according this tlme. They. chose a trial by
or below zero.
malned in effect through the
to the Supreme Court ruling three Judges In 1984 because they
Hlgh winds from the north and
night from northern New Jersey,
which granted him a new trial, feared they could not get an
northeast accompanied the cold
coastal sections of Connecticut,
but Hocking County Sheriff Jlm Impartial jury In Hacking
Rhode Island and southeast
temperatures, causing ' wlnd·
Jones
won't reveal where John· County.
chill readings between 30 and 50 Massachusetts•
ston
Is
being held .
A freezing drizzle advisory was
degrees below zero over the
ln effect overnight for northern
western Dakotas.
Winter storm warnings were ln Vlrglnta, northern Delaware,
effect early Saturday for parts of northern Maryland and the south
..
eastern Montana, the Dakotas,
central mountains of western
sNOW ·
-RAIN
SHOWERS
Pennsylvania.
Minnesota and Michigan.
Freezing rain was falling from
Dense fog was blanketing the
FROtflS:
Warm "Coid . . Static "
Occluded
southern South Dakota across southern and middle Atlantic
Map shows m~m lemperai\uas. At least 50% ola~ shaded area Is forecast
to receive prec:ijlitakln lrdcale&lt;':
.
UPI
WEATHER MAP - Durln1 Sunday, seaUered m- aDd snow
W1: Ho~v1: Ill!: 1 illlt::.t St:!u:tlllll (Jl
showers are predicted for portlona ol the northern Plains, upper
Mississippi Valley, ud upper aad lower Great La•es rell-·
lr 1 :.; t 11
i 11 1:.1 1, • 1 tl, 11 r~ u : fl ill :: A
Scatlered showers ud thuaderslol'lllll are predicted for portlona of
the north, middle, ud south Atlantic Coast rellon. VPI .
l,!fijl: :.;iII' :\Iiiii [)I Hlli:k:.

Em

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IN A WIDE
.
VARIETY OF COLORS.......

S2·' '.

446-3131

{)

a ,

.

All Sale Prices
Are
Negotiable!

Come
Celebrate
With Us!

DRAWINGS~

Every Sealy Mattress and Foundation
\s on Sale Now! Including:

1'\IU~S;\l\ Y

2·1 MONTH
FREF
FIN1\NCINC
\\'&gt;tl&gt; :\;'\'''"'.,\ ( rc.i&gt;t
l u·m . . l·n~kr '~ou
:-\,&gt;t lnt l11dnl

POSTUREPEDIC ·
BUY ANY UVING ROOM SUITE

THAT'S RIGHT, ON FEB.
4TH WE WILL BE GIVING

'39995
OR MORE AND RECEIVE A: .

AT THE SALE PRICE OF

AWAY A RECLINER,
1-MATTEss· AND BOX

o.

FREE

Tight Sea.t

Early American
Living Room Suite

Reg. S499.95
SAVE '200.00

BIG- RECLINER "-.

1299

*17995:
SAVE '120

F
EVERYTH .....

1,.
ane

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realized, that where maybe their visit them monthly.
At the monthly visits, they
parents gave them a'"'!;eries of
$100 electronic toys or $60 sweat· provide treats, games and friend·
ers the childr~n they were · ship to the residents. They have'
sho,pplng for would be happy to birthday partie~ to mark those
get a S10 Barbie doll and nothing special days, picnics and other
more •
activities .
.
In ~ddition to toys, each child
But the big event of the yea~,
recieved a stocking with candy Lester said, Is the winter carOl·
and the family recleved coupons
val for GDC residents.
from either Rax, McDonald's or
The hlgh school st.udents w~~k
Dairy Queen for free items.
long. hours getting Ideas
d
ToyTown didn't just have the puttmg the carnival together.
Involvement of the Key Club _
They set. UP_"the ga':"e~, decorate
the Kiwanis and Builders Club . the actlvilles bmldmg for a
In addition, every club at the high festive atmosphere, s~pervlse
school donated at least $100 to the games and relate with the
.
Lester sat'd.
residents.
project,
"I •
t · 1
Now ToyTown was not th e only
t ' an oppor um1Y ~r us 1o
project of the club during Interact with these spectal peo·
ple," Key Club president Cindy
Decem ber.
Maso~·
· sat"d . ." We just 1o.ve th em,
Everyone loves a carnival the balloons, the games, the they a~e S'?._ much fun a.~d they
clowns - and esidents of appreCiate the ca rnt-:at.
.
r
It's a umque expenence to the
Gallipolis Developmental Center . first time Kev Clubber. Freshwere treated to one on campus.
man Chris Carman said the
The Key Club provided the carnival was "a lotpffun. !didn't
manpower (or clownJ&gt;ower) for realize· how much thev (GDC
anafternoonoffun..a nd frolic at a
'd nt w ld n· ·the WinWinter Carnival.
rest e s 1 ou e JOY
h K
ter Carnival.
.
h h. d ·
Th IS
wast e 1 tr yea~ t e ey
"And 1\lldn 't realize how much
:lubbers put on the carmval, and
fun our members would have
with the residents," Carman
everyone was a winner. Prizes
'-':ere ribbons and stuffed animals
dd d saying he was looking
-and hugs were a reward.
·a e ·
. .
.
According Lester, the club
forward to domg 11 agam next
year·
.
decided in 1986 to begin wo1k lng
with the residents, and not only
Lester said both projects WI 11
be continued next year. and they
put on the winter carnival, but
hope ToyTown will double In size.
have adopted two cot.ages and
. And both projects are appreciated by those affected. Lester
said he received letters from
many ToyTown recipients that
touched the hearts of the club
members, and they realized how
needed the project was, and how
much it was appreciated.

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ORGANIZING -Heather Huestis, Galtia Academy lllgh School
freshman, helped organize the mountains of toys distributed
through ToYJ'own. The GAHS Key Club sponsor~d and pullogether
the massive project.

(COMPLETE)
Includes : White daybed,
bunkie mauress, rails,
cover and pillow shum .

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Sug. Rernil $269.95

$1999 5 s~7~E

•

NEW SHIPMENT JUST ARRIVED!

Living Room Sui~es in Stock.

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AD At Prices So Low, You Won't Believe Your Eyes! •
; N"' 2 jjc. Liv. Rm. Suire
Sug. Retail 1349.95

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$19995
SAVE
!150,()()1

,

ALL SALE PRICES GOOD THRU JANUARY 31
OR WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.

Wi!h Approv«&lt; Crei!i!.

__

__....

;:--

..
AT mE CARNIVAL -Key Club members
Sherr! Dyer, lett, and Donna Bolden, right, help a
resident ol Gallipolis Developmental .Center

90 Days Same As Cash

If. '

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GALLIPOLIS - While headlines In most newspaj;&gt;ers scream
of violence against man, chemical weapons being manufactured
and the sadistic youths of today,
a group in Galllpolrs is just the
opposite.
A refreshing change in the "all
for me" at tltude that seems
prevalent today, the Key Club of
Gal!ia Academy High School
took on a larger than life task and made lt work.
A group of around 100, the club
raised $10,000 in cash and goods,
which doesn't include the Items
in 40 additional food boxes, and
distrlbu ted them to the needy of
Gallia County.
Accordi.ng to club advisor John
Lester, the young people ar·
ranged gifts for 502 children who
otherwise might not have had
Christmas.
The Key Club wanted a large
single project to enter incompeli·
lion for this year, and brainstormed until they came up with
the Idea of giving toys to the less
fortunate children of the county.
After further thought, Lester
said. the club members realized
refurbished used toys wouldn't
be what the children should
receive, and set about to acheive
their goal of $10,000 for new toys .
They contacted individuals,

clubs and businesses about do·
nating money or new toys and
received more than they thought
possible. The items for the extra
40 food boxes were donated by the
students at Gallia Academy
alone.
Clubbers distributed applica·
lions throughout "the area (or
parents to fill out, then sent
coupons to e~ch for shopping at
ToyTown, the Key Club's toy
store.
· 'It really opened up their eyes
to the problems of the needy in
the area," Lester sal d. He added
that the club members saw the
homeles.s in Washington, D.C .
during Hlstqry Day competition,
so the problem was not totally
unfamiliar to them, but you don't
think of the needy being virtually
next door.
•
ShOppers at ToyTown entered
a brightly decorated display
room, and made their selections
to a club member. He or she
would send the order to the back
s hop where it was wrapped and
tagged for that child.
Working a little differently
than Santa, the clubbers shopped
till they dropped, so to speak.
Lester sald they hlt the toy sales
and received a discount at one
store for their project.
At first, Lester sald, the
students thought they'd have to
spend much more (or each
child's gift. Eventually they

..

OAYBED

20% 60%

. 2 piece

01

~

By LEE ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel Stall

.

Chris Slagle ls on the ladder, and Kiwanis Club member Bill
Smeltzer ls holding the sign from below.

Times-Sentinel photos courtesy of John Lester

OR

SALE

The Tight Seat is Here! The problem is solved! No more
worry with 3 cushions moving up and dow_n and around. The .
right seat is all one cushion with a 3 cushton look. Fastened
sa:urely in place (as shown belowl., ·,-r;./
~,'fl1
1 ,7'"77'$'''"•'"- ·

SIZE"

from Key projects

UP GOES THE SIGN - ToyTown, a project of the Key Club of
Gallla Academy High School, was -located on Second Avenue in
Gallipolis, and here volunteers hang the sign outside. Key Clubber

"You have given to us for 20 years, now is
. our turn to give to you."

The Tight Seat Is.-Here!

Sug. Retail

GDC .benefit

3 FREE ROOMS Of
CARPET CLE ANED
TELEVISION
by Frumier Carpet Cleo ni.ng
OR
24 Month Free Financing with Approved Credit.

SPRINGS AND A
B-EA UTIFYL LOVESEAT!

"MAN

. ~eedy,

I

nntversary

Pl.RCH,\~1

u,

1-304-421-1065 ·
Across from (iwic Ctnt11
PAIIIIEIISIURG: Tal lridgl cnl Gu lilld AwL-1-304-525-7090
CHILICOTHE: W1111m An.-Central CHIII'-1-614-773-6700

•

FREE

&amp;

WAU.P
APER
SUPERMARKET
.
HUNTINGTON: Downtown -.Jiuntington. Third Awe.

WALLPAPER MILL OUTLET
SPIING YAWY PUlA
GlWPOUS, OH.

Free Gifts
just For
Coming In!

'* ~

HAVE TO HAVE A TREE- No holiday loy store Is complete
wltlrout a Christmas tree, and here, Builder's Cluh member Ryan
Brenneman helps dec.o rate one In the display room of ToyTown.

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The Biggest Event ill Our 20 Year History!
;\10

t*
~#$#'

• Children's Rooms
• Offices • Kitchens
'
• Dinings Rooms • Wide Borders
• Narrow Borders
•B'orders with Motorcycles, Skiers, Basketball, Football, Baseball, Airplanes,
Golf, Cars, Houses, Dolls, Geometric
Designs &amp; Many More.

Trim
Around.
Sockets
Carefully!

20t

3

Holidays brighter with ·one club's involvement·

d.; vv

1-You can lease In your own
county or wlthln the ·State of
Ohio.
2-You must file an ASCS-578
(acreage report) certifying your
planted acreage for the current
year.
3-The farm shall have a cur·
rent effective quota greater than
zero.
4-You may not lease more
quota than required to markek
the current year's crop of burley.
5-You are not limited to the
15,000 pounds of the cropland
limitation and you must have
. met all price support eligibility
requirements.
A lease and transfer agreement must be filed and approved
before Feb. 16, 1989. These leases
are limited .to one year and su·
bleaslng Is not permitted.
The county office wlll place
your name on the ASCS bulletin
board If you want to lease to·
bacco quota to your farm or
away from your farm.

1989

BORDERS All COMING BACK
moNGD THAN EYER

Announce changes
in leasing_provisions

GALLIPOLIS - Due to the
drought conditions In the Burley
Tobacco belt, there have been
some changes made In the leasIng provisions.
Tobacco can be leased to or
from a farm after July 1lt the fol·
lowing conditions apply:
U you have tobacco quoto to
' leue away from lbe farm:
1-You must tile an ASCS-578
(Acreage report) certifying the
planted acreage of tobacco for
the current year.
2- You must have planted en· .
ough acreage to produce the
farms current year effective
quota.
3-The drought disaster must
have caused a 20 percent loss In
expected production.
4- You must have made a rea·
sonable and customary effort to
produce the effective farm mar·
ketlng quota and have met all
price support ellglblllty require·
men is.
U you need to leaae tobacco
quota lo your farm:

January

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~ ~tntind Section a.8

WALLPAPER BORDERS GALORE

fm'.a

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1rimts

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make a drawing for Iter room during one ollhe
many acllvltles at the Winter Carnival put on by
tbe club for residents of the facility,
(

EV.J!:RVONE HELPED - Klwanlll members
from GaiUpoUs l'Oiunleered to help wrap
Christmas gifts at ToyT9wn. fl.c tured In the
foreground are Klwanlans Bill S.meltzer, left, and

MillArd Cassidy, right. The K-FamUy of Kl~anls,
Key Club and junior hlgh school Builder's Cl.ub
helped In the holiday project.

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Times- Sentinel

.James Sands

DENISE GIBEAUT
SCOTI' TRUSSELL

Gibeaut-Trussell
played at McClure's Dairy Isle,
MIDDLEPORT ,.-- Mr. and
M
lddleport.
Mrs. Danny Wlll, Zuspan Holow
Trussell graduated from EastRoad, Middleport, announce the
ern High School and Hocking
engagement and approaching
Technical College at Nelsonvllle,
marriage of their daughter,
and Is employed by the Meigs
Denise .Glbeaut, Middleport, to
County Sheriff's Department.
Scott Trussell of Middleport, son
The wedding wlll take place
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Trussell,
· March 4 at Trinity Church,
Bashan Road, Long Bottom.
Pomeroy.
•
Ms. Glbeaut is a graduate of
Meigs High School and Is em-

Based on projections, It Is antlci·
paled that new patient growth
wlll dou)lle by 1994.
While' chiropra.ct!c is the second largest health-care professlon lri the United States and
dates back to 1895, much of the
profession's rapid growth may
be attributed to the public's
interest In more· conservative ·
methds of heal til care. aceordlng
to Dr. Robinson.
Dr. N.P. Klme of the 11-)eigs
County Chiropractic Clinic
pointed out that chiropractic
procedure does not Involve the

BY JAMES SANDS

0

DISCUSS COURSE - llecky Rich, RN, .diabetes education
coordinator, left,. and Nancy C. Vaughan, a proKJ'am KJ'aduate,
dlseuss the upcoming diabetes ~ourse.
ophthalmologist, blood pressure
control, and termination of
smoking.
Diabetic retinopathy Is just one 1
topic covered In the upcoming
Instructional program, which Is
available to both Inpatients and
outpatients tflrough physician
.referral.
- Since education Is ,a necessary

part of health care, the cost of the
course is covered by most
insurance plans.
To register for these classes, or
for additional Information on
procedures to do so, ·contact
Becky Rich, R.N., Diabetes
Education Coordinator, at 4465246.

use of drugs or surgery .
. ·'Chiropractic is different i,n
that It emphasizes the body s
ability to heal itself If cond!Hons
are such that there IS no interference with the healing process. Its

.

treatment Is directed at bringing
the system into balance througJ:t
the use of spinal manipulation
nutrition, exercise and othe;
procedures, "Dr. Klme stated.

WINTER

SUNDAY
CROWN CITY- Kings Chapel
Church has Family Night, Sunpay, 7 p.m., with singing by the
Gloryland Grass.
' GALLIA - ·Grubb Family
Singers will be at Gallla Baptist
Church. Sunday, 7 p.m.

· 20°/o OFF

BOOTS

llllil•&lt; WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S

GROUP WOMEN'S

SPORT SHOES
MEN'S
SHOES
DRESS
.

20°/o OFF

LAIGE GROUP
CHII,DREN'S

$1500
SEIICTED GROUP ARMADillOS .... S25 00
SEIICTtD GROUP NUN BUSH ...... S3000
SEIICTED GROUP "~YTrD

MONDAY
. :.
· • RACINE - Southern Local
:6APSE Chapter 453 will meet
.Monday , 7 p.m ., at the high
.&amp;chool.

101 Januafj-\he
our \eatured g~mFor evef'l(lne ce\e·
tiefi garoe · · rsonal hOliday
brating tMir own 0Mt special so·
\his "'onlh: Lav'S.,\1 o1 line lewelf'/ .
"'eon!&gt;',Wtlh a j ct trof11 earrings ,
Cof11B in and se e canis and more .
rings. pen

. : TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
,Township Trustees will hold their
Qrganizational !Yleeting on Mon:day • .7:30 p.m., at the home of
Dorothy Calaway, township
:aterk.
·
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WoIll en· s Fa II &amp; Wi nlf! r Shoes

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OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. TIL 8 P.M.
WID.
7 PM; SAT TIL S PM

~~~-~ - - Cllll.aciiTY

ELENA ~ETH PEELE
DENNIS DWAYNEJI'EAFORD

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
David Peelle of Ann Arbor.
Mich. , are announcing the engagement of iheir daughTer,
Elena Beth eeele, to Denn is
Dwayne Teaford, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Teaford. Portland .
Miss Peelle attends Denison
University In Granville and will

(arl's
store

graduate in May with a degree In
art history .
Teaford attends West Virginia
Wesleyan in Buckhannon. W.Va.
where he Is an education major.
He will also graduate In May .
Plans are being made lor a
June wedding in Ann Arbor.

RIO GRANDE - Rehearsal
for the symphonic band at Rio
Grande College and Community
College will be Tuesday. 7 to 9
p.m. in Room 115 of the Fine and
Performing Arts Building .
GALLIPOLIS- Gallla County
District Library Board of Trus_tees meet lor organization and a
regular meeting. Tuesday, 5
p.m., Bossard Library.

3i8 ~£C0N'J AVI
GAHIPOLIS IIHII)

OFF SELECTED GROUP

RUTLAND - . The regular
monthly meeting of Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
he held Tuesday at u .a.m.

20°/o
TO 50°/o OFF

HARRISONVil-LE - A free
blood pressure clinic Will be held
Tuesday,10 .a .m. io 12 noon, at the
Harrisonville Town Hall. All
ages are welcome. Harrisonville
Senior Citizens wlll meet after
lunch.

SELECT GROUP

RACINE - Racine Ledge 461,
F&amp;AM, will have a regular
meeting. Tuesday, 7:30p.m. All
masons urged to attend. Refreshmerits will be served.

MA:CE ·meeting
postponed to Jan. 12
GALLIPOLIS - The MACE
meeting has been postponed until
Thursday, Jan. 12 .

HASKINS-TANNER
332 Second Ave.
IIOUIIS

Gallipolis. Ohio

- I Frl 9·1 "Quality Men·, Wear Since /866"

: GALLIPOLIS :.. GFWC I RivStudy Club meets Tues.
day , 1 p.m., homeofElaineRees.

TUK~Wtll·lhl.trL

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GROUP PICTURES St DO PER SUBJECT. PAY WHEN TA~"; EN

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LIMIT ONE SPECIAL PER FAMILY .
PACKAGED SPECIAL SCENIC BACKGROUND .
NO EXTRA Ct-11\AGE.

G. C. MURPHY CO.
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

22nd Anniversary.~le
S2S9s.oo Kimball &amp; Wurlitzer
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THIRD ROOM-

JAN. 9-1 0-MON. 10-S; TUES. 10-4:30

Countywide meeting
POMEROY The Meigs
County Association of Township
Trustees and Clerks · wiH meet
Friday, Jan. 13, 7 p.m., at the
Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy.

. $2995

•

MOTHERS!

20°/o-30°/o

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Commerce will
.hold its monthly meeting on
Tuesday, at 12 noon , at the
Pomeroy Trinity Churc(). Guest
speaker will be Dennis Mingyar,
assistant director to the Governor's A,ppalachia Program for ·
Southeastern Ohio. All members
are urged to attend .

We offer cor:nplete tuxlido •"rental
service to help you look your b"est
on that special day. Priced from

,
TUESDAY
: GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Rotary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m.,
Down Under.

1988 MERCHANDISE .TO MAKE
ROOM FOR 1989 MERCHANDISE

633 Second Ave.

·For That
S.paclai ·Occaslon

: 1POMEROY - The Disabled
,Amer ican .Veterans and Ladles
'Ailxlllary will meet Monday, 7
·p.m .. at the post home on
!;lutternut Ave., Pomeroy .

shoe

·RUTLAND FURNITURE CO. . IS
·stiLL SLASHING PRI(ES ON ALL

Peelle-Teaford

GALLIPOLIS- Operation Liftoff meets Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m .
Coulumbus Southern Electric
Building.

'fPOINT PLEASANT, W.Va.GALLIPOLIS- Gallla County
:mason-Gallla-Melgs Crusade for Division of the American Heart
;~pris t will hold services Monday · Association meets Tuesday , 7
through Sunday, Jan. 15, 7 p.m.
p.m .• home of Dottie Chesmut,
·~ac h evening, at the Church of
€ hrist in Christian Union, Main
·St.., Point Pleasant, W.Va. Spe·
cia! singing and speakers. Evetyone welcome.

CURRENT SEASON TENNIS
.•

GALLIPOLIS- Gallla County
Chapter PERI meets Tuesday, 3
p.m., Senior Citizen Center.
Topic Is recent change In death
benefits and Insurance.

GALLIPOLIS...:. Gallla County
Home Council meets Tuesday,
10:30 a.m., First Presbyterian
ROCK SPRINGS - First of a . Church. Morning topic Is rehabil·
~ve part film series on the end of
itatlon with Tim Betz speaking;
time will be presented at the
afternoon session is Food and
Rock Springs United Methodist Drug interaction, by John cunChurch beginning at 7 this ningham . Potluck dinner at noon.
evening and continuing each
-week. The series Is sponsor,ed by
GALLIPQLIS - Right to Life
:the Enterprise. Flatwood, Rock · meets T-uesday, 7 p.m. , Buckeye
·Springs Charge; open to public.
Rural Electric.

TENNIS

$2000

Dorothy Hartley speaks on The
Old National Road.

GALLIPOLIS- Special services Sunday through Jan. 13 with
Glen Mathews, 7 p.m. nightly at
Elizabeth Chapel Church. Sisson
Family sings.

THE PARK CENTRAL Holelln Galllpolls was flrsl opened to the
public In January of 1884. In the hotel's first lour decades or so It
was the scene of many of thP town's most elegant parties, dinners
. and rec.eptlons, particularly at the beginning of the new ye.a r.

FALL &amp; WINTER
CLEARANCE!

Calendar

ALL HOUSE SUPPERS

Januar{s
Birthstone .. ·
1\-\£ G~RN£1

The Park Central saw elegant days

.;:

Drugs, surgery. overused, chiropractors say
• MIDDLEPORT - As health
autl)orltles become more In·
formed about the risks Involved
in the overuse of drugs and
surgery, they are becoming
more conservative, according to
Dr. N.W. Robinson, a chlroprac·
tor at the Meigs County Chlropratlc Clinic;.
This, In J)art, has reflected on
the growth of chiropractic, Dr.
Robinson said.
According to Dr. Robinson,
from 1964 to 1984, the increase In
new patient~ who had seen a
chiropracftor rose more than 150.

.,

"The commodious parlors of the over· by Mrs. w .B. Fuller In a rich
almonds, sweet plckles, celecy and
·
French onions; soups conslsllng of Park Central were made exqul· and exquisite gown."
"A glance at the ladles and the
GALLIPOLIS - According to cream of chicken and c6nsomme a sitely attractive by arrangements
parlors was quite enough to reveal
: -pdd Mcintyre. New Year's Day Ia royale; meat entrees of prime and decoration, and rare' and
· · -l!'ways began for him and for many ) roast beef au jus, roast chicken with beaullftil chrysanthemums. The that the ladles were at their best In
health and mood, In their best In
' . ~ho loafed near
\. CUrrant JellY. spring lamb with darkened Fooms were lighted by
· , -tile City Park at
mint sauce, roast fresh ham with plano lamps and candles. The fine apparel and that their stir· '~e Park Central
rum sauce, and mllk fed chicken Italian Orchestra of Portsmouth
roundlngs were charming, their
. ~Hotel. Most of the
. · , '
topped with sauce a la Rlen. The discoursed Its sweetest musiC."
refreshments delicious and . their •
large New Year's
• ·:::.: '
vegetables Included: candled Jer·
There were nine ladles serving as socialities of the most enjcyaWe
.."Eve parties at the
·sey potatoes, cau11!1ower au gratin, receiving ladles Including from
character, and that they, .could not
. , -. m of the cenParlslenne potatoes, com on the Gallipolis: Mrs. W.G. Fuller, Mrs. separate and depart without taking
, · ry enQed up at
cob, peaS "in cre31lJ sauce. For J.C. Mon1$, Mrs. "Rutter and Mrs.
with them, In long remembrance.
j he Park Central for a late dessert ·one could dine on Custard George durrier. The receiving the kind attentions they had
received ·and "the happy time they
' • dinner-early breakfast. Tllen at 7 pie, . blackberry pie, peach Ice ladles stood In the west par lor cl. the
had spent at the reception given
a.m. on New Year's Day the Park cream, Angel food cake, and peach . llotel from 2 to 5 p.m. Miss Carrie
Brown presided at the punch bowl.
them by Mrs. Morris and Mrs.
Central porter Fleet White would short cake. The cost was 75¢.
"After the ladles had partaken of ' Fuller."
stand at the corner of Second and
While CoL and Mrs. J.C. Morris
As foottioles occupancy rate at
State and greet passersby with the owned the hotel (lB!Il-1897.) a the delicious fruit punch they were
ushered
Into
the
refreshment
room
the
Park Central durtng this era ran
offici~ Park Central Happy New
special u~talrs entmnce to the
Years salute. It was the custom dining room was added. The bY Mr. Sherman Eagle wllo was
over 111% with quite a few of the
then to lip porters and others who entrance was restricted for women richly attired. Tills room was also guests being traveling salesmen. ·
.One hundred years ago the big
did odd jobs on New Year's Day only thus allowing them to make a elaborately ornamented with chrysocial event of the holiday season
after the latter had wished you a grand entrance. A number of santhemums. In the center was a
was the "Firemari'"s Ball". The
ijappy New Year..
elegant receptions were also held at large taWe, ornamented · by a
· The Park Central Hotel which the Park Central· both under the beautiful bisque candelabra an\1 on dance Itself took place on the thlnd
Door of the Aleshire buDding (53
opened to the pubUc In January of Morrises and under the next two which were cakes, wafers, and the
Court Street) and the supper was
1884 put out a sumptuous meal at owners the Bryans and Walter "favors" which were ... uSed In
decorating . the ladles by Miss
held at the Park Central Hotel. All
the tum of the century. Following IS Cushman.
proceeds went to the Gallipolis Fire
the Sunday buff~ menu at the Park
We have before us a pllotocopy of Jennie · Dunn. who was most
·
.
Department.
Central In the early 20th century:
the Jouqlal account of a reception handsomely attired."
"In the north corner of this room
relishes of . queen olives, salted held at the Park Central In 1894.
was the chocolate table, presided

at Holzer Medical Center ·
all patients who have the disease
for 10 or more years, develop
mutatlonslln their retinas, the ·
thin llght·sensltlve linings In the
back of the eye. ...
Such cases often result In a
cpndltlon known as diabetic
retinopathy, the. weakening of
the retina's blood vessels, which
can-eventually cause leakage o.f
fluid or bleeding Into the eye,
Symptoms Include vision
changes, blurring, floating spots;
or dlfflcutly In focusing. . '
Diabetic retinopathy does not
become apparent untU It Is In a
fairly advanced stsge. Therefore, to help prevent eye disease,
patients should malntsln good
control of blood sugar levels. If
sugar levels remain at around
200 or above, patients should
keep In close contact With their
physician, since this condition
.could hasten visual probl~ms.
Other preventative measures
Include annual eye exams by an

Sunday Times-Sentmei- Page- B-3

.

-Engagements__..;,- Diabetes series planned
GALLIPOLIS- In the ongoing
crusade to promote wellness
among the residents of the
Southeastern Ohio Valley, Holzer
Medical Center will again spon·
sora course on diabetes.
Tills series ol five classes wlll
meet Jan. 9-13, 7 to 8:30p.m.
Holzer Is one of only twenty
hospltsls II) the Stste of Ohio to
offer such a service as part of the
Ohio Community Diabetes Con·
trol Program (OCDCP).
Diabetes Is a disease that can
cause major damage within the
body. One sobering consequence
of lack of diabetic education and
medical supervision Is the devel·
opmeht of vision problems and,
•Ultimately, blindness. However.
recent research Indicates that
control of diabetes and of blood
pressure can decrease the risk of
damage to the eyes.
As part · of diabetes care,
physicians closely watch lor
·changes In the eye, since half of

•
Pomeroy-Midtlleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Janu.Y 8. 1989

January 8, 1989

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W ." Va.

Pomeroy-M

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

5399.50
BANJOS
• .
~~4950

2 Kimball Baby Grand

·
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$.7495 Snare Drum
95
Stands

PIANOS

$49.

S649soo CHAPEL
ORGAN S399s.oo

$7395.oo Now $4995,00 ·
.$9.925.oo
Now S599s.oo
.
.

MUSIC c.

CORNER THIRD AND COURT STS., .GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea

. Page-B-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

-----Weddings.__;__-

MICHAEL P. and JOYCE ANN (BARNES) WARD

Ward-Barnes
'

'
RACINE
Racine
United carried · a cascade bouquet · of
Methodist Church was thesetting . pink and white flowers in silk.
for the wedding of Joyce Ann
Missy Lykins, Gall!l\loli~ , w~s
Barnes. daugh ter of Anna M.
maid of honor, brldilslnaJd,.wa&amp;
t:;eamo'nd. Racine, and Michael Arlene Barnes, Gallipolis, sister·
Patrick Ward, son of Thomas in·law of the bride, both in white
Ward, Sr ., Ashland, Va. and dresses, and the flower girls
Beatrice McNun Ward, Hart· were Tina Barnes and Bridget
ford. W.Va .
Barnes, both sisters, attired in
The wedding look place on Dec. pink . .
3. 1988, with the Rev. Robert
Nathan Ward. Ha rtford W.Va. ,
Grace performing the double brother of the groom, was best
ring ceremony . Music was by man, and Charlie Ward, a
Marlene Fisher.
half-brother, was ring bearer.
The wedding took place before
A receptJon was held at the
a decorated archway. The bride American Legion hall In Racine.
was escorted to the altar by her The three-tiered wedding cake
brother, Do nald Barnes.
was decorated In pink and white,
Th.e bride wore a full lengt h and toppi,d with the traditional"
gown of white lace and illusion miniature bride and groo~.
over satin. It was fashioned with
The couple lives In Ashland,
a sq uare neckline, and sheer lace Va.
s leeves. Her vei I of illusion edged
The bride is employed at Pizza
in lace fell from a tiara . She wore Hut.
th•·ee strands of pearls, borrowed
The groom works with his
from the groom's mother. and lather In a cabi net shop.

Be watchful, be good·
constimers, says Ann

POMEROY - Tina D. Davis with a boutonniere of one white
• and Brian M. Manning ex· gardenia and two peach
changed wedding vows on Oct. r,osebuds:
Best man was Jim Manning
22, 1988 at Forest Run United
and
the u~her was Tom Manning,
Methodist Church.
The bride Is the daughter of both brothers of the groom.
The brIde's mother wore :\
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Davis.
. Minersville, and the groom is the tea-length gown of antique peach
son of Tom Manning, Cleveland. with a high necklne, .lace collar
The Rev. Melvin Franklin and long sleees. She had a white
officiated at the double ring gardenia corsage.
Guests were registered by
ceremony which included light·
ing a unity candle as a symbol of Jennifer Arnold and Melissa
their ,&lt; marriage with Christ . Ihle.
A recepton was held in the
Music was provided by Jane
Wise.
church social room. The three·
Given in marriage by her tiered wedding cake was sur·
parents and escorted to the altar rounded by four matching heart·
by her father, the bride wore a shaped cakes. It was trimmed
white satin gown fashioned with with peach roses and topped with
a stand-up collar, bodice and a lace heart accented with bells.
sleeves accented with simulated .. Serving were Ca rol Diddle and
pearls and Venise lace appliques, Thelma Jeffers, aunts of the
a sweetheart neckline and bride, Tracey O'Dell, a cousin,
and ..l•omen of the church.
basque waistline.
Both t he bride and groom are
The full skirt extended to form
in
the U.S. Navy stationed ar
a chapel length train. Tbe bride
Brunswick,
Maine.
wore a Ju liet cap accented with a
Attending
from o·ui·Of·county
pour of nylon net from which fell
were
Jim,
Peg
and Crissy Jgnaut,
a fingertip length veil of illusion.
Westlake:
ThomasManning.Nel·
She carried a cascade bouquet of
white gardenias and peach roses. lie Cronican , Jim, Tom and
Tamara Bachner. sister of the Eileen Manning,. North Olm·
bride, was matron of honor and · stead; Edward and Eileen
wore a dark peach satin tea· Balcer, West Bloomfield. Mi.:
lengt h gown with a sweet heart James and Eunice Dodd and
neckline. Bridesmaids were Ann Robin and Eva George, WellsVan Matre, cousin of the bride, burg, W. Va.; Floyd arid Mary
and Lois lhle. They wore light Capehart, MoundsvUie, W. Va. ;
peach tea -length gowns with Ruth Cuber, Toledo; Alton and
sweetheart necklines. All carried Laura Johnson, Chester, W. Va.
silk bouquets of peach and while and Kathy and Molly Stultz ,
Hu rricane. W. va.
roses with baby's breath.
Tamra and Mindy O'Dell,
cousins of the bride, were flower
girls and wore gowns stJnilar to
that of the matron of honor. They
carried wicker baskets filled
with peach blossom potpourri
and trimmed with peach roses
and ribbon.
The groom wore a black tuxedo

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Me·
Iissa Thacker, a senior at Ohio
Wesleyan Unlv~rsity, recently
participated in the Washington
Semester Program at American
University during the previous.
fall semester.
She spent the semester Intern·
ing lor the National Organization
for VIctim Assistance. Her duties
Included working on the "VIctim
Rights and Service Legislative
Directory for 1988," a s tate-by·
state legislative compilation of
rights and services. She also
received trainlrig as a victim
advocate/ counselor.
She Is the daughter of Felon
and Lola Thacker. Rt. 3,
Ga!Upolis.

LOS ANGELES t UP I) - Mau· Germany, France. Italy, Spain,
Belgium. Sweden. Norway, Den·
rice, Barry and Robin Gibb mark, Switzerland, Austria, Hoi·
"better known as the Bee Gees land and Great Britain.
.
have announced they will begin a
11he
tour
was
prompted
by
the
three-month European tour "in . ·
success of the Bee Gees ' best·
May.
sell ing " ESP '"' album this year,
concert dates are scheduled In
said spokesman Sean Mahoney .

you

Wedding Invitation
by stylart®

20 0110 Off

Between Ja!l. 14
and Feb. 11

· A Shop T~ · Meet Ti1e Need s .,f

Our low prices will surely appeal to your budget.

Come see the Slylart collection .today.

t

I

Gift books. garters. 1oa1ting gi•IM.
cake tapa, feathered pen1. bridal hose

"""ilfr/.l.,~~~

•

WINTER HOURS: Jan .. Feb. March Only .
THURS .. FRI . ID to 2 and 5·9-.SAT. I to 7-Eveninp by Appt.

PatJs Posie Patch

388-931,

Koontz Sailor Road.

A~k

Vinwn. Ohiu

fnr

P~t

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onanyllala•

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--·-----------------:I
Sale price lnctucl8s
shampoo. cutond

LEVOLOR CUSTOM
BUNDS

slyle.

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Offer. valid oolvwl1h
.
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,a COfP( at ad 1htough 1
February 4. 1989.
:.

60
+ 5°/o OFF
NOW THRU NOVEMBER
WALLPAPER
SUPERMARKET
HUHnNGTON: Downtown

I

-----:=;;:::::::. ~
I
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Huntington, lhird A•e.

·Across from Ciwic C~~tt•

.

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M.Y SISTER'S CLOSET

l
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4.

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The Mother- To-Be

•

WEDDING FLOWERS-Silk &amp; Dried Only

•

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PH. 446-3353

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

SPECIAL
.WINTE-RSALE

,.

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..

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I

Senior Citizen ·Centers set weekly activities

BRAIN and TINA (DAVIS) MANNING

WHEN SELECDON COUN15.
..COUNT ON LEVOLOII

Women '1 Aetohl~
CIIIIBI OFFetedl

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- B-5

Exercise Class" begins this week
on .Mondays and Wednesdays at .
3:30, · through March 22. 'l'hls
class consists of stretching and
bending for flexibility and mild
Cardiovascular arm and leg
.movements. Everyone Is Invited,
fee of 50 cents for ~ach session
attended.
. .
The Senior Nutrltlo Program
menu for the week Is:
Monday - Pork cu tiel, hom·
iny, buttered cabbage, brownie
Tuesday - Hot dog on bun,
vegetable soup, choco late
pudding
Wednesday - Liver and on·
Ions, mashed potatoes , wax r
beans, peaches
Thursday -Chicken and rice,
Harvard beets, cabbage salad,
and
cookie
dance 8·11 with music by True · Friday - Hamburger, oven
Country, admission Is $2 per f&gt;rowned potatoes, green beans,
person and bring snacks for the fl:uit salad
refreshment table
ChOice of beverage available
Another session of the " Over 50 wllh meal.
'

the following aclivlt~s scheduled lor the week of Jan 9·13:
Monday - Round and square ·
dance 1·3; exercise class 3:30
Tuesday- Ch&lt;:&gt;rus to extended
care 10:30, physical fitness 11:15,
chorus 1-2, bowling at Pomeroy
Lanes 1·3
Wednesday - Social Security
representative 10·12, knitting clr·
cle"10·12, bingo 1·2, bridge 1·3, oil
painting class 1·3 ;vlth Joan
Fetty, Instructor, cost$8forclass
materials furnished , exercise
class 3:30
· Thursday - Physica l fitness
11, health maintenance program,
sponsored by Holzer Medical
Center and Holzer C.linlc, Ltd. ,at
1, a pharmacist will speak on

au

Bee Gees announce European tour . ~~~~~tlons~o~nd

OVER 1000 READY-MADE .
BLINDS IN STOCK
EASILY SHORTENED
INSTALLATION AVAILABLE

1-304-428-1065

'

Ohio - Point Pleasant. W. Va .

GALLIPOLIS- Activities and parmesan cheese, garden salad.
menus for the week of January With carrot, cabbagi&gt;-oll and
9·13, at the Senior Citizens vinegar, rye bread, fruit cocktail
Center, 220 Jackson Pike, will be In jello ·
as follows:
Wednesday .._ Bean and Ham,
Monday- Chorus, 1 p.m.
chopped onions, mustard greens,
Tuesday -STOP/ physical f!t. cole slaw. cornbread, pears
ness, 10:30 a.m.
Thursday - Pork, Broccoli·
Wednesday - Card Games· /Noodles, cranberry sauce, roll,
Attorney , 1·3 p.m.
spice cake and Ice cream
Thursday -Bible Study, JJ .
-Friday -Ba~edllshandtartar
noon; Herbalis ts, 12:30 ·p.m.; ,. sauce, . corn · and green Iimas,
·.
bread, cherry cobbler .
Birthday party
Friday ·- Mlnl·craft, 1·3 p.in.
Make reservations in advance
Menus consist of:
for meals.
,Monday - Pepper Steak,
whipped ·potatoes, carrots and
POMEROY - The Meigs
· peas, bread, coconut pudding
County Senior Citizens Center,
Tuesday - Spaghetti with Mulberry Heights, Po.meroy, has

•

Thacker involved
in political program

Pomeroy~ Middleport- Gallipolis,

--Weddin

Manning-Davis

Dear Readers: Virginia
PAUERSIUIG: Toll lridgl and
Knauer, special adviser to the
Gorfitld he.-1-304-525-7090
President for consumer· affairs,
CHIUKOTHE: Wutom A•t.' Ctntral
sent on some wonderfully useful
c..,. - 1-614-773-6700
material explaining how crooks
bilk consumers out of millions of
dollars every year: I want to
ANN LANDER SO
share this information with you
"'1988. LM ..\ngl,. .
today.
Tim,.. Svndir•r •nd
Any product that promises
Cruliaft Syndl.rlll• ....
easy and quick weight loss, bust
enlargement or a way to banish
wri nkles or restore the sex drive
should be suspect. No cream,
To check out an ad that looks
magic potion, pili or "sclentlfl· suspicious, contact the Better
cally designed" exercise wUI Business Bureau. (There are 170 ·
accomplis h any of the above.
offices In the United States.)
Gallipolis Parks and
Key words that should trigger Other suggestions: Call your
suspicion are: overnight results, state or local consumer protec·
Recreaation is offering
rejuvenate. magical tra11sforma · lion office. Contact your city's
Women's Aerobics Classes
lion and secret formula.
chamber of commerce. These
Beware of " make money" offices investigate consumer
Beginning January 9
schemes. While some home em- complaints .and are aware of
ployment plans are legitima te, · advertising scams.
through February 17
many are not.
, People are also encouraged to
Advertisements are suspect if report advert~ing_fraud to the
they promise big income quickly publication or other media that
or you are required to send ran the ad. This Is the only way
money for Information or suppthe media can screen OUt fraudU ·
The morning class will meet fr11111 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM on Monday,
lies before you are ln,formed of lent ads and protect consumers.
Wedhesday, and Friday. The six week session will begin an January
the nature of the job and what Is
Dru.g.s are etleryu.'h ere. They're
9 and run through February 17. The session will involve 17 class
required.
ea.sy rn ~PI, easy co use and Ptle n
The usual work-at-home jobs emier to get hoo kPd on. If yot~ lioce
meetings and cost $27. The site fill' the mlll'ning dasses will be tht
offered are envelope stuffing,
que.sl ions abou t drug.s ond drug use,
Grace United Methodist Chwch.laby sitting will be provided by tht
sewing, clipping newspapers, ,-:J nn Landen' newly revised boo·
church at a rate of $1 per child. Donna Mitchell w~l instruct the
mailing circulars, arts and crafts
kl er, .. Thf' Lowdown on Dope. ·• will
mlll'ning sessions.
and small animal breeding.
give yo u the on.swers. Send $3 plu.&amp; o
The language used In the bait
sel f-oddreued, stamped bu.tineu·
The nening session wiU meet lrom S:.3D to 6:3.0 PM on Tuesday and
Is: large profits. high part-time
size cnlJelopc (45 cenl.5 poHage) to
Thunday.
The session will involve 16 class rn,tlings and cost $20.
earnings, little effort required,
Ann La n~er.1, P.O. Box 11562.
The _
site for the nening classes will be the Multi-purpose raot11 at
no experience necessary and
Chiro~o. Ill. 60611-0562.
tht Gallipolis O.velopm111tal Center. Babysitting will not be pro·
guaranteed earnings.
Easy victims are women with
viclecl for the evening dass. Sandy Blackburn will instruct the t¥111·
Presidents' bosses
small children with no skill$ and
ing
sessions.
•
The World Almanac of Presidential
limited education. New Amerl·
Facts reports that Harry Truman
Registration will be taken at the Parks and R~ereatian Office at S18
cans are apt to fall for these ads.
called his wife Bess "the Boss" and his
Be wary when you see:
Second Av111ue, or at the first dass session either time. far more inonly child Margaret "the Boss' Boss.'
Guaranteed job placement.
Dwight D. Eisenhower called his wile
formation rail 446-1424 Ext. 37.
Little or no skills needed.
Mamie "Mrs. Ike.'
Offers of salaries that sound
too gOod to be~
Watch lor catch phrases such
as "set your own hours" and " no
experience necessary."
Investment frauds suck In
LAFAYETTE MALL • GALLIPOLIS, Oil.
millions of people who want to get
rich quth. Clever swindlers
know what language to use to
attract the yokels. The promo·
•
ters usually promise unreallstl·
cally high returns within a short
period with little or no risk.
Be wary when you see: llmlt!.'d
or no riSk, or need to Invest
immediately. Also be suspicious
of offers to lend you money "alter
a lee has been paid." Too often
. the Joan falls to materialize.
These schemes are appealing to
•
individuals or businesses that
'
are unable to obtain conventional
financing.

Ann
Landers

January 8, 1989

January B. 1989

t, W . Ya .

.

11nt•'rnit\" Fushions from Lin/(erie 10 Finer
Ore.&lt;.« '# For Specia l Occasions.
lnfnr!l Clothi ll/l 0-24 Mont h.&lt;

LARRY D. and SHERRY J. (CHAMPLlN) CONNER

Conner-Champlin

.GALLIPOLIS - The New Life
Luthern Church of Gallipolis was
the setting on Aug . 6, 1988 !or the
wedding of Sherr! Jane Cham·
plln, ·daughter of Earl and ·a ea
Champlin of Gallipolis, to Larry
Dean Conner, son of Frank and
Loretta Conner of Crown City.
The church was decorated with
a large basket of red and white
roses at the altar and lighted
candelabra. witb stephanotis and
royal blue and white ribbons.
The bride and groom lit the
unity candle, while organ music
was provided by Phyllis Hesson
of Point. Pleasant, W.Va.
The brlde.was escorted by her
father and given In marriage by
her parents.
Rev. John Jackson of New Life
Luthern Church prefor.med the
ceremony.
:
The bride wore a white gown
featuring embroidered lace
sleeves with a matching lace
neckline. The skirt featured a
satin oversklrt with rose ac·
cented pick-up-drapes over a
lace hemline and a semi cathed·
raJ train.
·
Her veil was waist-length and
headband was of seedpearls and
stephanotiS. The bride carried a
bouquet of red and white roses
and stephanotis.
Maid of honor Jill Miller of
·Gallipolis. Her tea-length dress
was of royal blue lace over
taffeta, with short poufled
sleeves, She wore _a royal blue
ro~ wtth baby's breath in her

'Star Trek V'

LOS ANGELES {UP!) - Pri .
clpal photography has been co .
pleted on "Star Trek V: T e
Final Frontier," wh!ch reunites
the entire case of the original
''Star Trek" television series for
the filth time.
Starring are "Star Tre~" sta l·
warts William Shatner, Leonard
Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, James
Doohan, Walt!.'rKoeriig, Nichelle
Nichols and George Take!, who
' have appeared In both the TV
series and the movie versions .
Shatner makes his motion
.picture directing debut on the

Celebrate
the New Year with
Beautiful Designs from
Tope's Furniture Galleries

·The Best Dressed
30%-40%
OFF
Windows In '89 will
wearlm&lt; custom top treat·
be

ments, draperies and sheers by Tope's- all at 30rf off. AJso -custom
bed coverings at a terrific 40% Off.

Come In and see our complete line.

J

LEES AND MILLIKEN CARPET
NOW ON SALE
THIU JANUARY
,• :

FURNITURE
GALlERIES
. SKOIID AT GIAPI

GAWPOUS, 011. 4S6Jf
446-DJU
I'

•LAY-AWAY

•F.REE DEUYEIY
OPEN MON. &amp; FRI.
9-1

WEtOAYS 9-S

.'

-·

,,

'•

ON ALL
.
REMAINING STOCK

GRANNY'S
CRAFT992-2312

2.30 Broadway, Jacl(son • 286-26'59

\ ..

OpEm .TIJes.· Wed.-Thllra. Sat'. 9:30-5 :30
Mon. &amp; Fri tWl 61:00

·

·se•
" tic' ..
A;.

~

~
...,

Men and Women -Regain lost flexibility
through this moderate
stretching progmm!

filming

128 MULBERRY AVE:

film and alsp helped develop the
original story line with writers
David Loughery and Harve
Bennett.
Gene Roddenberry, who
created "the original "Star Trek"
series. is executJve consultant
for the film, being made lor
Paramount Pictures .
"Star _Trek V" Is targeted for
release m June.

20 To 50°/o
OFF

~~-"'

4th {I s,.oamore
Gallipolis

446-JSOZ

p•••••••••lllil•ill•••••••••••••ll!!l••••••••••l
HASKINS·TANNER
SEMI· ANNUAL
.

MEN'S SUITS

20°/o TO 2 5°/o OW

'4

REG. S135..... NOW S108.0Q
REG. S160 ..... NOW S128.00 ·
REG. S22S .... NOW S168.7S
REG. S275 ••••. NOW S206.2S

REG. S95 ......... NOW S76.00
REG. S11 S....... NOW '92.00
REG. s1SO ••.•• NOW '120.00

WINTER JACKETS

REG. S140 ..... NOW '112.00
REG. S1SO ..... NOW S120.00
REG. S16S ..... NOW S132.00

REG. S60 ...... NOW S48.00
REG. S7 5 •• :••• NOW S60.00 ·
REG. S90 •••••• NOW S72.00

MEN'S

SWEATERS
REG. $23 ......... NOW '18:40
REG. f2S ......... NOW S20.00
REG. S27 .......:. NOW S21.60 .

•Coats &amp; Jackets
•Denim Jeans
•Sweaters
•Skirts &amp; Slacks
•Blouses .
•Dresses
•Warm Sleepwear

SPORT
COATS

ALL WEATHER
COATS &amp;
TOP COATS

,

POMEROY, OHIO

STARTS NOW -

ZEA. .

value."
In addition, PBS reported
December membership drives
ne(ted ·Individual pledges total·
ing a record $18.4 million, a 14.4
percent Increase over the same
period In 198'l.
"Member support Is what
allows public television stations
to :proVIde new and continuing
services," said Michael Soper,
PBS senior vice president. "On·
air efforts to remain the best way
'to · br-ing new people to the
growing · family of 5 million ·
Americans who are members of
their local stations."

50°/o OFF

. -'J The Maternity Orchard

Support for PBS
comes everywhere
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (UP! ) A dozen majpr public television
stations received $100.5 million In
underwriting commltme~ts for
current and future national pro·
grams, PBS announced.
The commitments, mostly
from corporations and founda·
!Ions, were led by a five-year , $57
million commitment lor "The
MacNeil-Lehrer Newshour" by
AT&amp;T, Pepsico and the John D. ·
and • Catherine T. 'MacArthu r
Foundatlon.j
"Public television greatly ap. preciates the continuing strong
support given us by · well·
respected corporations and faun·
daUons across the country," said
PBS President Bruce Chris·
terisen. "The true beneficiaries ·
of their suppOrt will be millions of
Americans who will see PBS
special programs of lasting

GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE
CONTINUES!
OPEN ONLY ON MONDAY-WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY

·hair and carried one. long stem
royall;&gt;lue rose.
The br idesmaid Kristen Allen
of Rio Grande. She Wore a red
lace over taffeta tea-length dres s
with short pouffed sleeves. She
wore a red rose with baby's
breath In her . hair and carried
one long stern red rose.
The groom wore a white formal ·
tuxedo with a red rose boutlneer.
Best man was Mark Sheets of
Crown City who wore a black·
tuxedo with royal blue accessories rose boutlneer .
Usher as brother of the bride,
Da,n Champlin of Salisbury, Pa.
He wore a black tuxedo with red
accessories and wore a red rose
boutineer. The lather of the bride
wore a black tuxedo with royal
blue ac·cessorles and rose
boutlneer.
Mother of the bride wore a
tea-length dress of peach print,
with matching accessories and
wore a peach rose corsage,
Mother of the groom wore ··a
street length dress of red and
aqua and she wore a corsage of
red roses.
Attending the guest book wa~ a
niece and nephew of the bride,
Heather Champlin and Matthew
Champlin of Pennsylvania.
A reception ·was immediately
following the wedding at the Elks
Lodge In Gallipolis with the
Crossover Band providing
music.
,
The five· tiered wedding cake
was decorated with red and royal
blue roses and a fountain.

~raps

sq~are

MEN'S

20°/o TO 331f30FF

•Sweaters
•Slacks
·•Sport Shirts
'

DRESS SLACKS
REG. S23.00 .... NOW S1J.40
REG. S29.95.~.. NOW S24.00
REG. Sl2.9S.... NOW S26.~0
•

OPE~ FRIDAY UNTIL

8:00P.M :

504 Main Street, Point Pleasant
675-3640
t

'

�'

•

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

w. Va .

January 8, 1989

January a. 1989

Galleries
..

reopen for

srulprure,
patnttngs
•

CERTIFICATE FROM FRANCE - Charles Bauman, 93, of
Arcadia Nursing Home Is the fir st area resident to receive a
cerllficate from the French Government for service on French soil
during WWJ . Here Kenneth Hager, commander VFW, Post 0053,
presents the certificate 1!1 Bauman.

French send certificate
to local ·WWI veteran

•

GALLIPOLIS - The French
Art Colony, 530 First Avenue, wlll
exhibit resin sculpture and paintings by James Allen In the
galleries during January. Water·
colors by Vally Rahe, whose
work is displayed · Joeally at
Holzer Medical Center with
"This Week 's Special" and
Holzer Clinic's "Big Bertha"
will also be featured.
'
Allen is Chairman of the
Department of Art at Rio Grande
COllege. He produces work In a
wide variety of media, including
cast sculptures for painting, with
abstract and formal symmetri·
cal stylings. He has participated
In many juried and lnvitatlonal
·
·
exhibits.
Mrs. Rahe Is a self-taught
artist who hl!s painted tor 20
years. She shares her everyday
lite 'experiences in her art and
derives a great deal or pleasure
from painting things that involve
her feelings and intuition.
Gallery hours are Tuesday and
Thursday from 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
an~ Saturday and Sunday !rom
1-5 p.m. The Music Room has
recently been renovated with
new track lighting, wallpaper
and trim paint to provide as tresh
background for monthly
exhlb!ts.
.
French Art Colony programs
are offered with the support of
the Ohio Arts Council.

TUPPERS PLAINS - As a the award, according to Car r.
partoftheFrench Government's
program to recognize World War
I veterans who served on French
soil, the Veterans of Foreign
Wars, Post 9053. Tuppers Plains,
ARROW COLORED
presented a certificate to Cha rles
Bauman , a resident of Arcadia
Nursing Home Thursday.
VFW Ceinmander Ke nneth
Hager made the presentatio n of
Long &amp; Short Sleeve
the certificate which is printed in
French to Bauman, 93, a res ide nt
of Parkersburg, who has lived at
Arcadia for the past three years.
Bauman was drafted into the
MIDDLEPORT,
Third Division, U.S. Army, and
received his training at Camp
Shelby. After his training he was
shipped to Europe where he
spent 14 months.
The program 'of presenting
certlficat~s to American soldiers
who served in France during
WWI was originated by the
French Government and is being
handled through the VFW.
•
Present at the recognition
were Bauman ' s son and
daughter-in-law , Mr. a nd · Mrs. ·
Bud Bauman, Vienna, W.Va.,
and VFW representatives ,
Elmer Kaylor, Charles Lam ben
and Vic Bahr, trustees; Char les
Carr, quartermaster. and Harold
FROM
TO
Hawk, a member.
Six Meigs Countia ns qualify for

,..

12 OZ.:-Reg. S4.90
NOW

$199

-·l.

IEftO, NEVADA
APII. 20 TIIIU 23

MAALOX_

1....

20°/o

US VEGAS

OFF

BAHR CLOTHIERS
OH.

•

KA.OPECTATE
CONCENTRATE
WORLDWIDE TOURS

CORRECTION

DRESS SHIRTS

Prescription op
Flu Season Speeiall

EXHIDITOR
Painter
James Allen Is pictured with
"The Old .Ephesian" mixed
media on paper. Allen' s work
wlll be exhibited at the French
.Art Colony during January.

4-0NE WEEK TOUIS
HQNOLULU
MAT .. THIU 12-1719
JULY 20 THIU 28-1129
AUG.l TIIIU11....:.fl29
SEPT. 14 TO 22-1719

~
_

WHIP

APRI. 26 THIU APRIL 30
1399

EXTRA STRENGTH

........

REG. 53.89
\

~ow 99C 0

....

446·0699

GREEN. PLANT
SALE

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

271 N. Second, Middleport, OH.

I

We .have a large selection of Ferns,
Jade Plants, Some Floor Pants

soc

Quote of the day
By United Press International
Japanese Prime Minister Norobu Takeshita, reacting to the
death of Emperor Hirohlto of
Japan at the age of 87 after a
111-day bout with cancer:
·'The sad news of the passing of
his late Majesty the Emperor has
left me grief-stricken. We had
been hoping with all our hearts
for the emperor's reco,very. We
extend our deepest condolences
to the new emperor and share
with him our sadness."

Michael Jackson.

The video release follows Jackson's 15-month world tour that
began in Japan In Septe mber.
"'Moonwalker' is an Intimate
muslcill experience perfectly suited to 'home viewing," said
Jackson's manager Frank Dileo.
" It will provide those fan s who
saw his concert appearances
with an additional memento of
Michael's music and will give
those who missed him a chance to
experience Michael's magic
first-hand tn their own homes."

OFF

SMELTZER$

·j

-~)

.

Garden Center Qnd Flower 1Shop

")

.. / / t i l

_I

453 JACKSON PIKE
.
GAUIPOUS, OHIO
4 MILES WEST OF GAWPOLIS ON U.S. 35

I

!..----....

/. j~
·'I
. .i

,,h•

•,

ourchidren
needto · w
about·dru s.
Almost 2 out of e.vPrv 10
teenagers use drugs or alcohol on
a daily basis. Reduce ·the chance
of_your child~en becoming
another statistic _by educating
them at an early age about the
dang~rs of addiction. Ignorance
about addiction is dangerous.
Your children need to
kNOw about drugs.

By DICK THOMAS
GALLIPOLIS - Hey, dog
owners better buy your 1989
Gall!a Coun .
dog licenses before the dead·
l!ne and save
money. Dog
owners haveun·
til Jan. 20 to buy
dog 1lcenses for
lour bucks and a kepnellicense,
good for up to rtve dogs, goes for
$20. But, after the the deadline,
the price doubl es, singles $8 and
kennels $40·
And,, speaking of dogs, Prlncess died New Year's day.
You Proba blY d ldn' t know
Princess. She was special, or at
least Fire Chief Ray Bush and 1
thOught so. A DalmatIan, Prlncess was 14% ye-ars old. She was
oldanddeafandhadahardtlme
moving around, because of her
inflrrn!t!es.
But, I remember a time when
:she was as frisky as a sparrow In
!lie spring and rode hl parades on
top of a fire truck and how she
yapped when I waived at her. I
always stopped to visit her at the
fire station wh!le making my
rounds at City Hall. Ray Bush
sa!dheburledPrlncessattheflre
training school grounds )lear the
wastewater treatmnent plant In
East Gallipolis.
For a couple weeks there
during the Christmas·New Year's holldays, I was worried
about Henry Kiesl!ng, my
barber. His candy stick on the
outside oftheshopwasn'tturnlng
andtheshadeswerepuUedwitha
sign on the door, to the effect
"closed due to Illness."
I hate to bother people when
they're sick so I stewed for
several days and finally called
his son, Dr. Dan, who was busy,
but his receptionist told me
Henry was sick and in the
hospital but he was coming
home. I didn 't think he was
supposed 'to be back to work so
soon. But, Henry was back on the
job this past Tuesday morning.
OVB's Blll Gray was waiting and
Gene Plymale was In the chair.
Next!
If you like skUng, take advantage of the 0.0. Mcintyre Park
D!str!ct's ski-package, the weekendofFebruaryl7,18,and19,at
W!nterplace Ski Resort, near
Beckley, W.Va. Transportation
!s by coach. You'll get two nights
lodging at the Ramada Inn at
Beckley, two days skl!ng ·and,
two continental breakfasts lilnd
much more. That's all I'm gonna
tell ya. If you want to join the fun
of a relaxing experience at one of
West Virginia's l!nest ski slopes ,
call the Park District and let
them handle all the details. .

LOS ANGELES (UPI ) .-CBS
Mus!c VIdeo plans to release
"Moonwalker," a 94·minute vf·
deoofextravagantlystagedsong
and dance numbers, starring

We .still have some Decorative Items
Chemicals and Fertilizers, Some Flower Shop
Supplies and a nice group of Shade Trees;
Evergrnns and Shrubs at
TO

In ·our town...

'Moonwal'k;ng'
•
VideO·PIa nned

Sl ooo

50°/o 7 5°/o

Pomeroy- Middleport

Sunday Times-Sentinei- P~ge-B-7

Gallipolis. Ohio Point Pleasant. W : Va.

__;;,_,_Quirks in the

The guy In the passing car
yelledsomethlngl!ke, "It's about
By United Press International
time you covered up your face,"
or some-thlngllkethat.Ist!llhave
that stupid beard . 1 looked ag~ln
Woman wants 'doe' after deer
and 11 was John A. Epling, all the
runs amok In home
........_
way from Texas A &amp; M. College
ROCHESTER, N.Y (UPI) Statlqn, Texas . 1 yelled at him
Connie Roselli said Friday it cost
buttherewasnoparkingspotand
her "deerly" after a wounded
was
on
my
way
to
City
Hall,
so
deer
_crashed through her Uvtng
1
we didn't get to chat. Looked for
room window last spring and ran
him later but didn't ilnd him.
amol\ In her home, leaving a
. In fact, I didn't have a cha nce " mess she _said " looked lii&lt;J! a
to talk to Big John on the various
crime s9ene."
·
occasions he was In town last
The IOO·pound buck was trar;t·
qullized by animal control offic· year, even when his wile, Chris,
died. John aAd Chris were In one
ers and taken to a local animal
of the first news stories 1 wrote
hospital for treatment, but the
mess !I left behind cost $800. to .
for the Athens Messenger May
21,1957 edition. It was Lafayette
Day at Our House Museum. John
.L ~
If
and Chris were supposed to sing
· tn the garden but it rained. So
'
. theymoved!nslde and sa ngfrom
the spiral staircase.
And, there was the time just
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Two
beforeChristmasoneyear,early
northwestern Ohio women who
60's I bel!eve !I was on December
participated in an unusual bone
~2. that Mary Catherine was born
marrow transplant say tltfy are
while her father was performing will!ng to repeat the proee'Hure to
in the " Hallelujah Chorus" at
help critically ll! people survive. ·
Rio Grande College.
Unl!ke other bone marrow
And, there was another time
transplants, the two Ohio donors
when I had a 5 horsepower motor are not related to the recipients
scooter and John wanted me to under a year-old program.
give him a li!t down town . I did,
Linda Pfaff, a registered nurse
but, I was klnda shaky about the from Toledo and Brandy Eddlnwhole thing. Imagine me trying ger, a Bowling Green State
to balance a scootllr · with a University student from Monropassenger that weighed twice as evllle, became the f!rst people
much as I did. John said, · from the area recently to donate
."Where's · !he springs on this bone. marrow through the Nathing? and, I said "You 're sitting tiona! Bone Marrow Donor Regon them." But, we made it . I also is try at the Toledo chapter of the
gave Chris a ride on the sa me American Red Cross.
scooter. She wasn't as funny as
Dr. Peter Lau, the chapter's
John, but wa:s an easier pas· blood services director, said it
senger to transport. A great wlll take about a month detercouple.
mine If the bodies of the recipSaw a friendly lace over at the Ients, who live In Minnesota and
sheriff's office the other day. Oregon, wlll accept the new
Don't get me wrong. They 're all marrow.
friendly. But, this one's no
Lau said donors and rEcipients
stranger He was Ezra J . "Jim" traditionally are related because
Sheets, retired State Highway of the need to match tissue.
Patrol sergeant, retiring from Marrow transplants Involving
the Ga!Ua·Melgs Post. Don't ask f~mily members were first per·
me the date, must have been '88. formed about 20 years ago.
Jim Sheets Is a deputy under the
Statistics show the chances of
new sher!lf Dennis Salisbury. finding a ma tch among fam!ly
Going through the deparlmnent members are less than 40 per·
the other day, I also saw another cent, wh!le among unrelated
fam!liar lawman, Alva Sull!van, people, only one person In every
who was a deputy under former 20,000 Is able to match tissue
Sheriff Denver Walker. Alva's types, he said In a recent
going to work as a special with Interview.
the department.
'
"It is very easy to become a
It was just one ofthose things
donor, but very difficult to match
-just one of those crazy.things- tissue," Lau said .."Many letlkean envelope In the mail Friday m!a patients are waiting for bone
morning from Earlham College, marrow transplants; th~ sad
Muncie, Ind. It looked l!ke a part Is somne patients die
greeting card, Christmas or New waiting."
Year's. But, It was a birthday
Bone marrow, a tissue found
card... addressed to Emerson Inside the bones, produces blood
Sherow, Managing Editor, The components, Including white
Tribune, Gallipolis, Oh 45631. VIc blood cells which are the body's
SherQw will never get the card. main Immune system.
You see, VIc died aboutten years
Pfaff sa id thetransplantproceago. He was managing editor in dure Is fairly simple. After
the middle 50's but left !n 1958. l!nd !ng a match the patient's
The card from Richard Wood, bone marrow is destroyed
President of Earlham College, through chemotherapy. In Ohio
said "Your friends at Earlham · the donor visits the Cleveland
rush to wjsh you a happy Cl!n!c, where approximately two
birthday .. ."'
pints of bone marrow are ex·

news----------~~~--

'
Although
deer and elk have
clean up, and Roselli's insurance · dcflt\itlon which says vandall'm
moved
Into
residential
areas on
could
be
a
malicious
or
ignorant
company said it won't pay.
.
the
foothills
east
of
most
north~hav!or,
"
said
Gary
Glanforti,
The Royal Insurance Co. of
ern
Utah
cities
,
he
said,
the
la~er.
·
Roselll's
America claims her renter's
(llvlslon
has
no
plans
to
feed
the
There
Is
no
question
about
the
policy covers damage done by
vandals, but a deer cannot be damage, Rosell! said. The deer a-nlma)s, as It did during the
record-set ling 1983-84 winter.
considered a vandal because apparently cut an artery when it
• "We don't anticipate feeding ·
leaped
through
the
window.
animals cannot make the ded.
them
unless the situation gets a
jumped
on
her
waterbed
then
ran
sion to deface property.
who
le
lot worse," he said. " In the
around
the
one-bedroom
apartRosellltookthematter to court
first
place;
Its not good, sound
this week and State Supreme ment like a whirlwind, spe't"lng
ga
me
management
. · And , the
Court Justice Wilmer Patlowwill blood on cei lings, walls, carpets.
deer ahd elk don't need our hel p
have to decide II a ileer can be rugs and mir rors.
this year. They seem to be OK."
considered a vand I
a·
Due to a m!ldanddryfall, right
Eggs
and
deer
don't
m'lx
·'The pol!cy has a portion that
to the Christmas week, he
up
SAL-T
LAKE
CITY
(UP!')
covers vandal!sm or malicious
mischl r and I' e f d
Eggs co uld be just the weapon to said, Utah's deer and elk herds
e•
v
oun a keep deer and e lk, being pushed
:·are In good shape. They're
handling this w-Inter quite well.
out of the Utah mountains by
If II
heavy s nowfall, from eat in g It's nor at all like '83, when we
had heavy fall storms ."
garden plants a nd sh rub~. the
The division spent more than
state Wildl!fe Resources Division
$500,000 feeding deer and elk five
said Friday.
years ago, to prevent wi despread
don't throw the eggs at
tracted from the pelvic arid hip the"You
animals," saiddivlsion spo- s tarvation.
area.
But he said a series of heavy
The marrow Is ther\ rushed to kesman Steve Phl!lips . "You put
s(orms
during the past three
the patient since It m11st be a raw egg In a blend er with a
weeks
h&lt;tve
pushed the game
quart of water . Then spray the
transplanted Within 12 hours.
an
imals
"onto
their historic •
mixture on trees, shrubs and
"Anyone interested in the plants being eaten by deer."
winter range, where people have
program should not be afraid,"
now built homes." ·
"Deer don't like the smell and
Pfaff said . "I feel great.l would
"ll 's a question of who's In
they'
ll
stay
away
from
It,"
said
do !t again and would encourage Phillips.
whose ba ck yard ,". Phillips said.
anyone to give. It's a great
feeling knowing you may have
helped someone else.''
Pfaff S~Dd Eddinger said they
were both Involved in a program
that Involves 'donating blood
platelets when they were told of
the bone marrow program .
"Some of the testing was
already done as a pheres!s donor,
so when I was asked to participate in the bone marrow pro:gram, I said yes," Pfaff said.
"After further testing I was
told I was a perfect match with a
12-year-old patient In Seattle. "
she said.
Eddinger said her transplant
went to help a 40·year-o ld man In
St. Paul, Minn.
Re'd Cross officials say match·
!ng ti&amp;sue ror a bone marrow
procedure has to be more precise
than Is required for a heart or
lung -transplant.
'
The Toledo chapter is on~: of 55
In the country participating in
the program, w-hich has seen
about 80 such transplants In the ,
past year.

"J"'1wo Oh,;oans part,;c;tJate
-'·
lants
tn _
unusual transp

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A commitment to providing
. your family
with quality health care.

That's wiiat Dr. Dan Trent is brin~ing to the people of the Bend
Area with the establishment of his pnvate medical practice in the
former Bend Area Medical Center. It's the same commitment he's
made at Pleasant Valley Hospital, where h'e's 'been an Emergency
Care Center physician for the past four years and where he will
continue as ari active member of the Medical Staff.
A West Virginia native,-Dr. Trent graduated from Marshall
·
University with a degree in biological and general science. He earned
his medical degree from the West Virginia School of Osteopathic
Medicine i.n 1983, and completed a rotating internship at Traverse
City Osteopathic Hospital in Michigan before re-locating with hi s
family, wife Linda and children Usa and Dan, to Mason County. ·
Dr. Trent is looking forward to bringing a {;Ontinuity of care to
his patients and their families, and working with the community for
the good health and welfare of all its residents.
Appointments and walk-ins are welcome from 9 a.m. to 5 p .m.
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, and 9 a.m. to noon
Wed nesda'y.
'

••

J\t Shoney's? you can get chicken any way you like it for $4.99.
Try our tend~r Charbroiled Olicken, wit!) barbeque sauce, sweet n' sour
s~uce, sauteed oruons ~r mushrooms. Try our Hawaiian Chicken with grilled
pmeappl.e on a_ char~rolied breast, served with rice and sweet n' s~ur sau.;.e.
If fried chicken IS y&lt;;mr style, get our Fried Chicken Tenders. They're
~oneless .fillets of aU-white chicken, also served with sweet n' sour .sauce and
nee or fries.
·
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. Or you can try· our Italian Feast, a teflder breast and spaghetti topped
With our own meaty tomato sauce.
·
Shoney's chicken dinners \\jth our all-you-can:eat Soup Salad and F ' t
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Daniel R. Trent, ·D.O
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'•

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'
Page-8-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

..

·Beat of the bend

Want to be a help?

January 8, 1989

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

.·

evening dance party from 7 to 9
By BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY -Want to help In p.m . The workshop is being ·
the dally operations of Pomeroy carried out through the Commu- ·
niversit.y program and the fee is
or Middleport?
S25
a couple for ther entire-day of
Well- now is
on Saturday.
activities
the time to.
You
have
untU Jan . 13 to
There will be
register
and
there's
a tqll free
four village
numbe
r
in
Ohio
council posts op1-800-336-5699.
'
ening In both
"
Pomeroy and
"'
Me mbers of the Royal Oak
Middleport this year and if you
would like to throw the prover- Ballroom DanCE' Club do cut a
bial hat·lnto· the ring, you should mean rug and have. such a well
get with it. You can pick up your planned dance program wh ich
petition of candidacy at the takes them through each year.
Meigs County Board of Elections . Now for the less pleasant part.
Office on Mechanic St. In Pome- It's time for fl)embers to pay
roy and you have until 4 p.m. on their dues for the new year. This
Feb. 16 to get it filed at that ' fs 540 for the year and should be
office. Also In Middleport, there done immediately' so that the
• Is one seat on the town 's Bq,ard of activities can be planned and
Public Affairs to be filled. That is bands booked for the dances.
because of the vacancy . caused Members are to get their dues to
PERFORMING JAN. 15 -The Coryton Harp Duo will perform
by the death of' the late Willis Anna Bl ackwood, 40037 Sumner
Sunday,
Jan. 15 at 2:30 p.m. in the Fl . . and Performing Arts
Anthony who was such a goOd Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Center
of
Rio Grande College/ Community CoUege.
and I mean get them to Anna
member of the board.
Perhaps, you've a)ways had an imfTlediately- like yesterday.
Idea or two in the back ot your
A five part film series on the
head which you thought might
end
of time will be presented at
help to make life better for
the
Rock
Springs United MethoeveryonE' In the community. Is
dist
Church
begining today, Jan.
so, there's no better timet han the
series
will be shown over
8.
The
present to give it a shot.
RIO GRANDE -An "unusual was principal harpist with the
the
next
five
weeks and the
By the way, speaking of thE'
musical experience," in the Shanghai Peking Opera Orchesboard of elections office, there starting· time of the film each
words of one observer, w!ll come tra in 1972-78 and was a perwill be ·a special election in the Sunday will be 7 p.m.
to the stage of the Fine and former with the Shanghai Film
Tonight's film is "A Thief in the
Eastern Local School District on
Performing Arts Center at Rio Orchestra from 1978 until 1984,
Feb. 7. Polls of the district will be Ni gb,t' ' ·which . is a dramatic
Gr?nde College/ Community Col- when she came to the U.S. to
open tt·om 6: 30 a .m. to 7: 30 p.m . portrp yai of what could happen
lege on Sunday, Jan.15 when the study, under noted orchestra
for the special election . The when Jesus returns with the plot
Coryton Harp Duo performs at harpist Alice Chalifoux.
Issue, or course, is a 12.4 mill revolving around Patty Meyers,
2:30 p.in. as part of the "Espe" Especially Music" tickecontinuing school district tax a young woman caught llP in
clally Music" program · offered tholders may use their tickets for
levy for current operating ex- living lor the present with little
through the Valley Artists Series. the Coryton Trio appearance for
penses. You can vote ·the absen- concern about the future and the
The musicians will serve as the the performance by the harp·duo.
tee ballot on the issue at the results when her thinking finally replacement show for the Co- The Coryton Trio is expected to
bdard offlce until 12 noon on catches up with her. The film was
ryton Trio, the chamber music perform at Rio Grande next
given the Best Film of the Year
February 4.
group whose Nov. 20,1988 perfor- season.
award by the National Evangeli·' mance at Rio Grande was
For more Information, contact
cal
Film Foundation of Valley
Ger.ald Powell of Pomeroy is
cancelled due to a power outage.
the Fine and Performing Arts
constantly on the move through- Forge, Pa. , and Patty Dunning
TheCorytonHarpDuo,consist- •. Center at 614-24~-5353, extension
Risinger who plays the lead
out our area conducting sessions
lng of Betsey O'Hagan and X!ao 364 , or call (In O)l!o) 1-800·282·
received the outstanding female
as a professional d..-nc e
Lei Zhang, has been acclaimed ,.7.20•1•.
actress award for her perforInstructor.
for Its versatility with the harp
ma nce in the piCt\lre.
and the sensitivity ·each per· Gerald Is active at Ohio Un iOf course, tonight 's showing as
former has shown to their music.
verslty and will be conducting a
we ll as ather features of the
· 'T heir presence is alive with a
.one session workshop at the series, Is open to the public.
warm
spirit of enthusiasm and
Baker Center ballroom on caman eagerness to communicate
pus on Saturday, Jan. H.
I don' t handle the dark, drab
A universal life insurance
the beauty they have discovcered
It will be a Latin dance
days of January all that well, do
plan that:
in their instruments," said Sister
_workshop getting underway al10 you? Maybe we could call an
• Changes with your
Agatha Fitzgerald of Chatfield
a.m. and going to 12 noon: then emergency meeting of the Keep
changing needs.
College, St. Martin, Ohio, where
.going from 2 to 5 p.m., with an
Smiling Club. Sounds good to me. . the duo recently performed.
• Earns competitive
interest rates.
O'Hagan is thr founder an"
·
Provides ideal foundadirector of the Preparatory Harp
tion for your linancial
Department at the t;:leveland
security and retir.ement.
· InstltlJte of Music, the Cleveland
•
Junior Harp Ensemble and· the
,4-RTHUR A. HVNNEL
DOYLE J. SAVNDERS II
MODERN WOODMEN
Airman Arthur A. Runnel, son' Coryton Trio. She teaches on the
Doyle J. Saunders II, son of Mr.
SOLUTIONS
of Mr. and Mrs. DonaldL. Runnel staffs of Baldwin-Wallace Col·
and Mrs. Doyle J. Saunders of
lege.
and
Cleveland
State
Univerof 32658 Rose Hill Road, PomeRural Route 3, Bidwell, Ohio. has
roy, Ohio, has graduated from sity and is also involved in
graduated from Alr Force basic
Air Force basic training at research. As a guest performer,
training at Lackland Air Force
she has appeared in New EngBase, Texas.
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.
During the six weeks of train- land, throughout the midwest
During the six weeks of training the airman studied the Air and in China.
ing the airman studied the Air
Zhang, whose parents were
Force mission, organization and
Force mission, organization and
Cllstoms and received special both teachers at the Conserva customs and ~elved special
· tory o! Music in Shanghai, China,
training Ill human relations.
training In human relations.
In addlf\on, airmen who comIn addition, airmen who com·
plete basic training earn credits
plete basic training earn credits
NEIL MORRISON
toward an associate degree
toward an associate degree
P.O . Box 3461
through the community college
through the community college
Rio Grande. OH . 45674
_
614-221-0888
of the Air Fore~.
.
of the Air Force.
Phone :,.(6t4j 245 -9319
He Is a 1988 graduate of Meigs
' He was a basic training honor
graduate.
High SchOol, Pomeroy.
~;a.,,tq~
. The airman is a 1988 graduate
AnORNEY-AT-lAW
RICHARD D. THOMAS
of North Gallia High School,
MODERN WOODMEN
336 S. High·St, Columbus, OH.
Vintpn, Ohio.
Airman Richard D. Thomas,
OF AMERICA
LOCAL CONSULTAnON
son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger D.
A rltA.TU.NAl tlr£ INSUitANCl SOCttT Y
in Pomeroy 992-6417,
i'tO!Iolt OHICt • A.OC II
Thomas of Rural Route 2, Pa·
TIMOTHY W. WILLIS
in
Gollio
County
245-9591
tr
iot,
Ohio,
has
graduated
from
Army Pvt. Timothy W. W!llls,
. County 245-9591
Air Force basic training at
son of Robert 0. and Shirley A.
in Pomwov with ATTORNEY D.
LIFE • ANNUITIES • IRA'S
Lackland Air ForcE' Base, Texas.
Willis of Rural Route 124, Syra·
MICHAEL MUUENS
FRATERNAL PROGRAMS
During the six weeks of traincuse, OH, has arrived for quty in
Ing the airman studied the Air
West Germany.
Force mission, org~nizat!on and
Willis Is a . lighting vehicle
customs and received special
ln1antryman with the 15th
training In human relations.
Infantry.
,
In addition, airmen who comHe is a 1988 gradllate of
plete
baste iralning earn credits
Southern High School. Racine,
"We Manage Your Risk"
toward an assbc!ate degree
Ohio.
43 7 Second Avenue, GaHipolis
th rough the community college
SINCE
MORINA D. SAUNDERS
of the Air Force.
Opposite
the
Post
Office
1951
Army Private Morina D.
He is a 1988 gradllate of
Saunders, daughter of Linda F . Southwestern High School,
and Carl E . Saunders of Rural
Patriot .
Route 2, Gallipolis, Ohio. has
completed basic training at Fort
BURLINGHAM Modern
Jackson, S.C.
Woodmen
of
Arnerica
Camp7230
During the training, students
liFE
HOMEOWNERS
IUSIN£SS
GftO~P
HIE4LTH
received Instruction .in drUI and is having a dinner, with a
&amp;.FARM
ceremonies, weapons, map read· business me.e t!ng to fotlow, ori
lng, tactics, military courtesy, Saturday, Jan. 14, 7:30 p.m. at
446-0404
mUitary justice, first aid , and the Modern Woodmen Hall at ·
Burlingham, , The camp will
Ai'my history· and traditions.
COMMERCIAL &amp; PERSONAL
She Is a 1988 gradua te of Galli a furnis h different kinds cif soups
Mon.-Tues.-Wed.-Fri. - 8;30 til 4:30
and crackers, and coffee, free of
Academy, Gallipolis.
Th~rsday
&amp; ·Saturday- 8:30 til12 Noon
c harge. Members are asked to
JOHN-H. SAUNDERS- QE_TSY SAUNDERS CANADAY
brin g a salad or dessert. A
- HOWARD BAKER SAUN~RS - CONNIE HEMPHILL
drawing will be held for a family
door
Guests are welcome.

Coryton Harp Duo is set
at RGCjCC on Jan. 15

Basket class set

ports

Theater class begins

GALLIPOLIS - Jeff Call begGALLIPOLIS - Basketweav·
ins
~- six-week class in Theatre
!ng classes at the French Art
Wednesday,
Jan. 11, from 4·5: 30
Colony, 530 First Avenlle, will
p.m
.
at
the
French
Art Colony,
begin on Monday, Jan. 23 for the
530
First
Avenue.
Youth
age 10
basic Berry Basket. This class Is
and up will work to bring out
required for anyone making
·
skills with acting exercises as
more advanced baskets. The fee
well
as the tfllitn leal aspects of.
is $12 and the class will meet 6-9
theatre.
•
·
p.m. to complete the basket.
Both
American
and
European
Basket classes that w!ll be
one-act plays will be read to
offered Include the 'Thermosscript analysis, set deexplore
/ Wine Tote on Jan. 30, the large
sign,
lighting
a)ld plot. Class
Hanging Heart on Feb. 6 or Feb.
members
will
experiment
with
13, al)d· the Heart Basket with
writing
plays.
towel bar'o n March 13 or 20. Each
l'!.eg!stration fee Is $24 ($21.60 If
class meets from 6-9 p.m. and
FAC
member), and sl)ould be
completes a basket in one.
received
before the first class
session.
session. Mall check to P.O. Box
For detail on fees and working
472, Gallipolis or call 446-38~ for
supplies needed, call446-3834 .
more information.

By RICK VAN SANT
They were on. We weren' t Our
United Press IDternational
defense was like Swiss cheese. ••
CINCINNATI - The Buffalo
Also in tHat game, Buffalo ·
·Bills flgure • they must do two · turned the ball over four times
things differently than six weeks
(two Intercepted passes, two lost
~&gt;go If they are to upset the
fumbles) . One o! those lost
Cincinnati Bengals in Sunday's fumbles k!lled a drive that could
have tied the game In the final
·American Conference championship game,
quarter. Cincinnati committed
no turnovers.
The Bills need to shut down
''The key to that game was
Cincinnati's running game and
. turnovers," says Buffalo coach
commit fewer turnovers.
Marv Levy. "We gave it away
Buffalo failed miserably on
both those counts six weeks ago four times. We took It back zero
In a 35-21 regular season loss to tbnes. ''
''Turnovers always decide
Cincinnati.
In that game, Cincinnati pro- games," echoes Cincinnati coach
duced 232 of its 455 yards on the Sam Wyche. " You must elimiground to control the ball 41: 21 to nate them," .
Its f~r stopping Cincl.nnati's
18:39.
running, the Bills know they have
''They killed us," recalls Buf·
the players to do it. Buffalo Is the
fal&lt;i nose tackle Fred Smerlas.
AFC's No. 1 defensive unit. But
"It felt like playing under Niagara Falls. It kept.leaking on us.

L. W. CENNAMO

tSLAND. II.U"'O!~

HOWARD BAKER
SAUNDERS INSURANCE INC.
•• •
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Hocking _Tech
announces
dean's list

NELSONVILLE - Six Gal lia
County students at Hoc king
Technical College made the
dean's list tor tl)e fall quarter.
To be named to the dean's list,
student must.pos t at least a 3.3
grade-point average and complete at least 12 credit hours.
Students named to the list were
Keith Bartimus, Rt. ~ . Crown
City; Milford 13. Gilbert Jr ., Rt.
1,. Cheshire; Timothy 0. Litc!hflel~. Crown City; .Richard C.
Patterson, Gallipolis; Diana M.
Shepherd, Rt. 4, Gallipot!s; and ·
. Joseph Websier, Rt. 2, Gallipolis .

~

C

January 8. 1989

then, the Bills also were toprated wheri they were crushed by
rookie Ickey Woods (26 carries,
129 yards) and James Brooks
(22-93) on Nov. 27.
''We just have to look at that
game as a good learning experience against the best offense In
the NFL," said Smerlas. "We're
not after revenge, but we're glad
to have the opportunity to regain
some of what we lost six weeks

ago.,.

-

To beat the Ben gals Sunday,
Smerlas and his teammates
must win a critical battle they
lost six weeks ago -a push and
shove match against five mammoth Cincinnati offensive linemen Who weigh 280, 280, 285, 290
and 310 pounds.
"They mauled uSfl:,.lald Smer·
las. "They pushed u't; all over the
place. They pushed us by the hole

(opened for the ball carrier).
They created a new line of
scrlmmage with their size.''
Levy also says his defenders
must not over•p)lrsue cutback ,
runners like Woods and Brooks.
"Last time, there was an
eagernessonourparttopursue,"
he noted. "Their runners mix
power and agility."
Buffalo's defensive problems
aren't all solved just by stopping
Clnclnnati's run, of course. C!nc!nnatl boasts the NFL's No. 1
passer in Boomer Eslason and
the AFC reception yardage
leader In Eddie Brown.
"If Cincinnati makes you
bunch to stop the run, that leaves .
Brown one-on-one to go for the
big one,'' said Levy. ·
Dating back to the Buffalo
game, however. the Ben gals

have emphasized running over.
passing. Against the Bills, Cinc!nnat! ,ran 52 times and passed
only 25 times. .
"Our running game has been
so tremendous In 'the last follr or
five games that there's been no
reason for me to pass that
much," notes Eslason.
Buffalo' s offense, led by quarterback Jim Ketly, figures to rare
reasonably well against C!ncinnatl's mediocre defense. The 21
points the Bills scored six weeks
ago against the Ben gals should ·
be · sufficient this time If the
Buffalo defense can play like It
did a week ago against Houston
In the playoffs. The Oilers
managed just 10 poll)-ts agaii!St a
fired-up Bills defense. .
One big factor - and the
records of both teams verify Its

Importance- that Buffalo can't
do much about Is C!nclnnau's
home field advantage.
,
. Both C!ndnnat! arid Buffalo
bOast 13-4. records. Both teams
are 9.(1 at .home and 4-4 on the
road. Playing at home has been
of Immense help to both clubs all
season long.
"The difference In playing at
home Is that our crowd gets
excited and creates · electricity
that ourteam feeds off of," says
Wyche. "We're tough to beat at
home because of that." .
"lt' s always better to be at
home and have that crowd with
you," agrees Levy. "But we don't
have It Sunday and we're just
going to have to overcome it."
Fo.r Buffalo, quieting the Cincinnati crowd will begin with
stopping the Bengals' running.

·Burson sp~ks OSU to 73-70 . victory
AT OVB, THERE· IS
A DIFFERENCE!

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TIGHT SQUEEZE - The New York Knicks' Patrick Ewing,
boldlng ball, Unds space In the paint a bit scarce as Cleveland's
Brad Daugherty (right) tries to block Ewing's progress in the first
quarter of Saturday's NBA contest on the Cavaliers' home court.
The Cavs survived Ewing's team-hlllh %1 points to beat the Knlcks
184-98 and claim their llth straight victory. (UPI)

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RICHFIELD. Ohio (UPI) Cleveland 14·2 to cut the lead to
Guard Ron Harper scored 30 five at 97-92 with 4: 18rematning.
points and forward Larry Nance
Cleveland then scored five
scored 22 points and blocked 11 unanswered points to take a
shots ·saturday to lead the 102-92 lead with 1:57 remaining
Cleveland Cavaliers to their 11th and held on for the victory.
New York was led by Patrick
consecutive victory, a 104-96 win
over the New York Knicks.
Ewing with 21 points. Trent
Cleveland, which Improved Its Tucker scored 17 points, Charles
league-best record to 24-5, led Oakley 14 and Mark Jackson 13
31-26 after the first period, but for the Kn!cks.
Cleveland point guard Mark
New York regained th!;' lead at,
33·32 with 10:56 remaining !ri'the' Price,, who scored 11 points,
half on a basket by Sidney Green. sutrerE:iJ a hyper-extended knee
The two teams stayed within . Ia\~. in the game. It is uncertain
three points of each other the ' whether he will play Monday in
remainder or the half, with the ' Seatlle.
Cavaliers holding •a 57·55 half' score by quarters
time lead.
New York ...... 26 29 18 23- 96
The Kn!cks, 20-11, f.lho did not Cleveland ...... 31 26 26 '21-104
arrive ,In Cleveland until 4:30
· CLEVELAND (104)- Harper
- a.m. because of a snow storm in 8·2-8·30; Nance 10-0-4-24; Daughthe New York area, used a erty4-0-4-12; Prlce5-0-1-11; WIIU·
pressln·g defense to force 1the ams 4-0·3·11; Sanders 5·0·0·10;
Cavaliers Into 13 f!rst·hal! tur- Dudley 0.()-2-2; Ehlo 1-0-0-2;
noVers good for 15 New York Valentine 1-0-0-2. TOTALS points.
38-2-112-104
Harper scored nine thirdNEW YORK (96) - Ewing
quarter points to help Cleveland 9-0-3-21; Tucker 7-1-0-17; Oakley
build an 83-73 lead at the end or 6-0-2-14; Jackson 6-0·1-13; Green
three periods. Cleveland then 4-0·1-9; Strickland 4-0·0·8; Newthreatened to put away the man2·0·2·6; E. Wilklnsl-0-1-3; G.
Knlcks. A HotRod W1111ams'stuff Wilkins 1-0-1-3; Walker 1-0-0-2.
: on a pass from Mark Price gave TOTALS- 41-1-11-98
, the Cavaliers a 17-!loint lead at
Total fpuls - New York 25,
-95-78 with 9:10 remaining.
Cleveland 14.
Rebound8 - New York 51
(Oakley 11), Cleveland 63
The Knicks, who had re(Daugherty 12).
bounded from a 17-point fourthAllllllllu- New York 17 (Jackquarter deficit for a win iga!nst
New Jersey Wednesday, began son 8), Cleveland 27 (Price and
another comeback, out-scoring Harper, 7 each).

Late scores
Manhall 87

SMORGASBORD

Morehead

SILVEI BIIDGE PLAZA • GALLIPOLIS

Sial~

74

Ohio Univ. 71
Ball State 57

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) .:..
Jay Burson scored 12 of his 21
points In In the final five minutes
to rally 14th-ranked Ohio State to
a 73-70 Big Ten victory over
Wisconsin Saturday afternoon.
Burson, the Big Ten's leading
scorer, came to life after being
held to six first-half points by the
Badgers' tough man-to-man
defense.
·
The Buckeyes, now 10-3 overall
and 1-1 in the Big Ten, trailed
36-30 at halftime and would have
been even further behind except
for the play of 6-lol senior Grady
Mateen.
Mateen came off the benclr to
score a career-high 20 points, 10
In each half, and also grabbed
eight rebOun':!!..-and had four
blocked shots."'
Ohio State built a 47-40 lead
w:tth a 15·2 run to start the second
half, but.Wiscons!n, led by Trent
Jackson with 26 points and
Danny Jones with 17, quickly
recovered.
The Badgers led 64-60 with 3: 24
to play, but Burson tied It with
two free throws and a jumper In
the lane at the 2: 31 mark .
After a three-point play by
Jones, Burson hit another jump
shot an(! 'two more free throws to
put Ohio State ahead to stay at
68-67 with 53 seconds to play.
After two more Burson free
throws, Jerry Francis, w.ho
scored 13 points for Ohio State,
scored the Buckeyes' final three
points to make It 73-67 with 10
seconds · to go, set up on a
length-of-the-court pass from
Burson.
Wisconsin, which fell to 9·2
overall and 1-1 In the Big Ten,
also had Tom Molaskl with 13
points.
Kent State 79
Central Michigan 77
MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich.
(UPI) - Reggie Adams conneCted on a 15-foot Jumper with
three seconds remaining Saturday to give Kent State a 79-77
Mid-American Conference vic·
tory over Central Michigan.
Eric Glenn scored a careerhigh 28 points to lead the Golden
Flashes, 8-4 overall, and 2-btn the
MAC.
The Chippewas are 6-6 overall
and O-lin the MAC.
Clnclnnat189
Memphis Stale 79
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Andre
Tate scored nine points In the

second half and Lavert!s Robin- more points to bOost Oklahoma's
son had seven during that lime to lead to eight points and the 49ers
lead Cincinnati to an 89-79 Metro got no' cioser than seven the rest
Conference win over Memphis of the game.
UNC-Charlotte grabbed an
State Saturday afternoon . .
Tate finished with 14 and early six-point advantage, but
Robinson 13 for the Bearcats, 6-3 · .when Oklahoma center Stacey
overall and 1-0 in the conference. King made his first apperance of
Memphis State, now 8·6 overall the day the Sooners went on a 24-8
and 1-1 in the league, had taken a run . King, who missed three
25-19 lead In the first half before games with a fractured finger,
the Bearcats began to rally. scored 25 and had 17 rebOunds.
Cincinnati had managed a 43·39 Mookte Blaylock added 24 for the
Sooners.
lead by half.
The 49ers were led by Byron
Balclwin-W allace '18
Dinkins with 33 and Henry
Kenyon 70
Williams with 22.
GAMBIER, Ohio (UPI)
.Oklahoma's streak of nine
Kenn Kaminski scored 22 points
and led three other teammates in straight' 100-po!nt games fell
double figures Saturday after- three short of the NCAA record
nOt;&gt;n in Baldwin-Wallace's 78-70 set by Nevada-Las Vegas in 1977.
Louisville 81
win over Kenyiln.
.
DePaul87
B·W, 8-6, led throughout the
LOUISVILLE, Ky . (UPI) game, Including 37-33 at the halt.
Joe Rinkes and Brian Newland Perv!s Ellison had 21 points, 11
blocked follr
scored 16 each and Wayne rebounds and
shots
Saturday
to
lead No. 11
Bilinovlc 14 for the Yeomen.
Lolllsvllle
to
its
ninth
straight
Tim Keller paced Kenyon with
victory,
81·67
over
DePaul.
18, Andy Kutz added 15 and Scott
Tony Kimbro scored 17 points,
Smith 10. Kenyon dropped Its
11th game in 12 outings this 12 In the first half, and hit 7 of 11
shots. Kenny Payne had 12 of his
season.
14 points In the second half for the
OeefiMOWn 112
•
Cardinals, who Improved to 9·2.
Miami (Fla.) 79
DePaul was paced by Stanley
LANDOVER, Md. (UPI) Freshman Alonzo Mourning Brundy, who made 10 of16 shots
scored 26 points and grabbed 17 for 26 points and grabbed a
rebounds, both season highs, and game-high 12 rebounds. David
Charles Smith contributed 22 Booth had 20 points, 14 In the
points, to power No. 5 George- second half, and also collected
eight rebounds for the Blue
town to a 112-79 victory Saturday
Demons, who fell to 8· 7 w!th·rhe!r
over Miami.
Georgetown, 10-1, rebounded third straight loss.
Georgia Tech 84
from Its first defeat o!the season,
a 94-86 setback agalnst'Blg East
Wake Feresl 15
rival Seton Hall Tuesday. Miami,
GREENSBORO, N.C. (UPI)which had won Its previous five Tom Hammonds '!COred 30 points
and was off to its best start since and had six In an 11-0second-half
the 1964-65 season, fell to9-5. Eric run Saturday, leading No. -16
Brown lei! Miami with 25 points. Georgia Tech past Wake Forest
84-75 in an Atlantic Coast ConferOklahoma 94
UNC-Charlotte 86
ence game.
NORMAN, Okla . (UPI) Brian Oliver scored 19 points,
Andre Wylie scored 29 points and all tn the sec011d half, and Dennis
prevented ·a Northt.Carollna- Scott added 13 for Georgia Tech,
Charlotte raU~ Sa rday by 9·2 and 1·0. The Yellow Jackets
scoring eight poin s down the have beaten Wake in nine
stretch to give No. 6 Oklahoma a straight meetings.
Wake, 7-4 and 1-2, was led by
94-86 victory over the 49ers.
Sam
Ivy's 25 points. Ivy was on
OklahOma, 12·1, had a 75-58
lead midway through the second the bench with four fouls through·
half and was trying to reach 100 out Georgia Tech's decisive run.
points for the lOth consecll live Chris King scored 14 and Derrick
game. Five minutes later, UNC- McQueen 13 for the Deacons.
N.C. Stale 71
Charlotte had cut the Sooners'
Temple 59
.
lead to 78-75.
.
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI)
Wylie then scored the Sooners'
first field goal In more ·than six Rodney Monroe scored 17 of his
minutes. He followed with three 27 points in the second half

Saturday to lead No: 1B North
Carouna State to a 71-59 triumph
over Temple.
Chucky Brown added 14 and
Brian Howard 11 for the Wolfpack, 9-1. The Owls, 4-5, were led
by Mike Vreeswyk's 21 points.
Duane Causwell added 13 tor
Temple.
The Wolfpack led the entire
game with Brown and Monroe
each scoring 10 first half points to
lead N.C . State to a 38-25
advantage at Intermission.
Minnesota 12
Kansas State 67
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) -Jim
Shikenjanskl had 16 points Including a pairoffree throws with
two seconds remaining and Min•
nesota used a balanced attack
Saturday to beat ,Kansas State
72-67 In a non-conference game.
· WilUe Burton added 15 points,
Kevin Lynch had 14 points
including 10 in the second half
and Melvin Newbern and Ray
Gaffney 11 apiece tor the
Gophers, who upped their record
to 8-3.
Kansas State was led by Steve
Henson's 26 points with Tony
Massop adding 12 and LaKe!th
Humphrey 10 as the Wildcats fell
to 8-3.
Western Michigan 76
Miami (Ohio) 68
. KALAMAZOO, Mich. (UPI)Mark Brown and Phil Holmes
eaeh scored 13 points Saturday to
help Western Michigan to a 76-68
Mid-American Conference victory over Miami of Oh !o.
The Broncos, 5·5 overall, and
1-1 in the MAC, held a 31-25
halftime advantage and opened
the second half by building a 4f32
lead with 16:54 left.
Miami, 5-6 overall, and 1·1 In
the MAC, came back on a 21-11
run, capped by Karlton
Clayborne's 15-foot jump shot,
to go ahead 53-52 with 8:59
remaining.
But Western Michigan took the
lead !or good 17 seconds later,
55-53, when Ell Parker connected
on a three-point field goal.
Parker's basket started an 8-0
Bt:onco run that pushed them up
60:53 ·with 6:32 to play. The
closest the Redsklns could get the
remainder of the game was 60-56
with 5:36 remaining.
Western Michigan gradually
pulled away down the stretch.
Clayborne paced Miami with
17 points and Tim Stewart.added
16.

Footb~l:~ars,
By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO - It seems incongruous that the Chicago Bears
and San Francisco 49ers will play
In the NFC championship Game
Sunday for the chance to go to
another S\ljll!r Bowl.
This Is supposed to be a
"changing of the guard" season,
but the Bears and 49ers have
been near the top !or years.
Chicago won the Super Bowl
three years ago, and lts 70-25
record over the past sjx seasons
Is the NFL' s best.
San Ji'ranc!sco Is next at
68-26-1, and the 49ers have won
Super Bowls after the 1981 and ·
1984 seasons in the Bill Walsh-Joe
Montana era.
While past Super Bowl winning
coaches Chuck Noll of Plttsburg)l, Tom Landry otoaJias and
Don Shula of Miami lind them·
selves with last-place teams,
Chicago's Mike Dltka and Walsh
keer rolling.
- ne first year we made tlie
playoffs was '84," Dltka said. "It
was the Bears and 49ers~ Now we
play the 49ers agalri. It's kind of
• fitting ...
Chicago and San Francisco
last met In post-season In 1984.
The 49ers won 23-0 and went on to
win. Super Bowl XIX.

49ers
NFC's
~ld guard ·
.

The w:tnner Sunday plays the on guts than power. They were 49ers center Randy Cross said.
hit by a rash of Injuries this
Bears fiery quarterback Jim
~ner of the AFC title game
season,
and Ditka even missed a' McMahon spent the week unsure
~ween Cincinnati and Buffalo
Jan. 22 in Super Bowl X}pii at game after suffering am Ud heart if he would get on the field
attack.
.against the 49ers. He lost his job
Miami.
"We were so good in 1985, to Mil«; Tomczak because of a
Unlike the AFC title partie!·
pants, who both had losing everything came easy," Cl)icago knee Injury and Ditka said
records last year: the Bears and gu11rd Tom Thayer said . "This McMahon w!li only play If
49ers have defended their dlv- year we had so many new faces, Tomczak's separated shoulder'
islou. titles. But they haven't so many injuries. We'vr: had to sidelines him.
"I think they'll both play,"
crushed everything In their paths work hard for what we've accomplished
so
lt'.
s
more
Ditka said. "If he jTomczak)
to get to another conference title
rewarding.
feels good enough to move
game.
•
"It's more exciting, too. We around and take a hit, fine. If not,
To the contrary, this, season
has been a minor comeback year want the Super Bowl more than Jim wtll start.
''This game will not be won
for the Bears and 49ers. Until last we did in '85."
The 49ers were considered a because of the quarterback."
week, neither had won a playoff
Meanwhile, the rest of the
game s[nce their last Super Bowl. finesse team that relied on
Thill was three straight embar- Montana's passing In 1984. Now Bears tried not to let the
rassing postseason losses for San they can run it up the middle as uncertainty affect their
prepara t!on.
.
Francisco, and two straight well.
''This Is a power offense,"
''The only quarterback I'm
defeats against Washington for
49efs fullback Tom Rathman. con&lt;;erned about right now Is Joe
the Bears.
"The fact that we've finally "There's no doubt It used to be a Montana," Hampton said. "If
something happens t&lt;;l him, then
gotten by the first game Is finesse passing team."
The two most famiUar f~ces In Steve Young,"
great," Montana said. "It's
Montana leads an offense that
something we really wan ted to the game Sunday have had their
get behind us. But this next game ups and downs. Montana was includes running back Roger •
Is what It's all about, reaching benched In San Francisco's Craig and wide receiver Jerry
,. playoff loss to Minnesota and Rice. Craig finished seconp In the
the Suoer Bowl."
"ThiS is the one," Bears again early this season. Now the NFC with 1,502 rushing yards and
defensive tackle Dan Hampton 49ers rally around him, in hopes caught 76 passes. Rice caught 64
said. "All hands on deck and he can lead them to their t)1ird passes for 1.306 yards (20.4 yards
Super Bowl.
ready to go."
per catch) . Cr~ig and Rice each
"There's not quarterback In scored 10 touchdowns during the
Both teams have changed their
this business I'd rather have In a
season.
·
styles a bit to stay near the top.
big
game than Joe M?ntana,"
' The Bears say they win more

I

\
,•

•

�I

-.· Page-C-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

January 8, 1 989

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

January 8, 1989

POflle!'oy- Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va .

Jackson rallies .from halftime
deficit to defeat GAHS, 69-62

.

•

.

; . CASEY SHOOTS - GaiUpolls senior guard
. :: Todd Casey (10) scored a career-high 18 points
.• and picked ofl six rebounds In a 89-62 Blue Devil
: loss at Jackson Friday night. Jackson defenders,
.

.

left to right are Mike Abrams (40); Steve Walbum
(lZ); Mike Morgan (24) and Greg Harrlx (U).
HarriS paced the JHS attack with 26 points and 10
re~unds. (Chuck Boyd photo).

J SEO standings J Athens hands Logan

:
(All-Games)
::TEAM
W
L
.waverly ............ 10 0
:Logan ................ 9 1
: Chesapeake........ 9 2
; Athens ............... 9 2
Greenfield......... 8 2
; Portsmouth .. ..... 8 2·
: ·Wheelersburg .... 7 2
• Warren .............. 6 3
' •Vinton County .... 6 4
Southern........... .. 5 5
,Pt. Pleasant ...... 3 4
: Galllpolls ........... 3 6
• South Point........ 3 6
• Jackson ............. 3 8
~ Marietta .. ... ...... . 1 7

..
.•

P
713
637
806
689
562
783
553
575
637
654
403
442
627
667
401

OP
• 529
518
606
598
495
557
497
524
588
632
451
498
630
740
480

•

.
SEOAL VARSITY
·· TEAM
W L
P OP
:. Logan ............ 4 1 328 275
:' Athens ........... 4 1 310 267
'-; Warren .......... 3 2 315 285
·• Galllpolls ....... 2 3 267 287
. : Jackson ......... 2 3 281 346
; Marietta ........ 0 5 261 302
:• TOTALS
15 15 1762 1762
• Friday's varsity results:
.; Jackson 69 Gall!polls 62
:. Warren Locai6I Marietta 53 (ot)
: Athens 68 Logan 67

. first setback, 68-67
ATHENS - Scott Decaman·
ada nailed a pair of free throws In
the final eight seconds of play
Friday night to lift Athens to a
thrilling .68;67 SEOAL victory
over the Logan Chieftains.
The loss was the first for the
defending cliamplon Chiefs in 10
games this season and enabled
the Bulldogs to tie them for the
league ·lead with 4·1 records.
Athens. is now 9·2-in all games.
Senior Tim Moore became the
first player in the SEOAL this
season to score 30 points as the
veteran Chieftain scored 32
points, Including six three point
goals in the defeat. ·
. . The hot-shooting Bulldogs hit
18 of 24 first half field goals In

Schaus will not
name a successor

MORGANTOWN, W. Va .
CUP!)
- West Virginia Univer·
SEOAL RESERVES
sity
Athletic
Fred
w L p OP Schaus conllrmedDirector
: TEAM
Friday
he
will
· Logan ............ 4 I 238 22I '
·. Athens ........... 4 1 262 220 leave his poston his 64th birthday
: Warren .......... 3 2 231 227 June30, but said he wlllnotmake
• Marietta ...... .. 2 3 231 241 any suggestions on_ who should
succeed him.
: Galllpolls ..... ,. 1 4 182 206
''I certainly would not be in a
: Jackson ......... I 4 228 257
position
to even consider recom·
15 15 1372 1372
· .TOTALS
mending one individual or lndl·
•
.
viduals,'' SChaus said when
· Friday's reserve scores:
·asked
at a news conlerence 11 he
· · Jackson 47 Gal'llpolls 38
thinks
football coach Don Nehlen
; Warren Local 45 Marietta 42
or
basketball
coach Gale Catlett
• Athens 60 Logan 45
would
make
a
good director.
: Non.SEOAL scores:
WVU President Nell Bucklew
: Vinton County 63 Nelsonvllle··
s.aid
he has tried to talk Schaus
• York 39,
retirement! or months, but
out
of
: Ceredo·Kenova 69Chesapeake59
the
athletic
director - who also
:: Rock H11166 Sou!h Point 65
studentleader,
athlete
has
been
a
:· .Greenfield 50 Circleville 48
and
coach
in
Morgantown
·• -Sou!hern 70 Sou!hwestern 50
made
up
his
mind
Thursday
to
Milton 77 Point Pleasant 62
leave.
.
·
::Waverly 78 Minford 56
·'His legacy will be matched by
Portsmouth 64 Boyd 46
none,'' Bucklew sald.
• •'flheelersburg 70 Valley 46
Schaus, an Ohio native, has
• · Tuesday's games:
been
athletic director since re·
: Buffalo at Chesapeake
placing
Dick Martin in Sep·
• Chllllcothe at Athens
tember
1981.
Schaus and his staff
; Coal Grove at South Point
are
credited
with
turntng_around
: Meadowbrook at Marietta
the
economic
dismay
that had
• .Greenfield at East Clinton
program
at that
engulfed
the
: Eastern at Sou!hern
time.
; Pt. Pleasant at Hurricane
He said making money for
Friday's games:
the
university was no great
: Gallipolis at Warren Local
feat
.
:: Marietta at AAtnens
·'Thanks to the sucess of
;. Logan at Jackson
football . .. immediately, the
·: Alexander at Vinton County
revenue was !here," Schaus said.
:# Fairland at Sou!h Point
:: Greenfield at Washington CH
·: ·Southern at Kyger Creek
:· Waverly at Valley
:: Portsmouth at Greenup
·• Northwest at Wheelersburg
&gt; Saturday's games:
:: Pt. Pleasant at Gallipolis
•: Warren Local at Fort Frye
:• Marlon Franklin at Belpre
•: Wheelersburg at Jackson
:; Vinton County at Waverly
; • West Union at Portsmou!h
•
•

.

---

JACKSON - Gallipolis suf·
fered a cold spell from the field
and a defensive lapse in the third
quarter Friday night as hOst
Jackson rallied from a 28·24
halftime deficit to defeat the Blue
Devils 69·6~ In Southeastern Ohio
League hardwood play.
The defeat left Coach Jim
Osborne's lads 3·6 overall and 2·3
in conference play at !he halfway
point of the 1988·89 campaign .
Coach Tony Bornhorst's Iron·
men improved their overall
mark to 3·8 and league record to
2·3.
Galilpolls played Southern at
home Saturday night whlie J.a~k'
son was at Waverly.
After.falllng behind 15·14 at the
first whistle break. GAHS, behind the long·range shooting to
Todd Casey and inside play of Joe
Owen, moved ahead 28,24 just
before intermission.
Gallia Academy was stili on
top 32·31 with 5: 20 left in tile third
period when the roof caved in.
When ail the smoke cleared, JHS,
behind Greg Harris and Mike
Abrams, had outscored the vis·
!tors, 25·10 to take a 49·38
advantage into the final canto.
The Blue Devils kept battling
back, pulling within five points
on Wllliam Strait's three-pointer
with 51 seconds left, 63-58, but

building a 39·35 halftime lead and
finished the contest with an
incredible 70.7 percent shOoting
on 29 o! 41.
Logan shot well enough to win
as they swished 24 of42 shots for a
57.1 percent average. They con·
verted 12 tf 19 free throws whlie
AHS made eight of 10 at !he line.
Two free throws by Jim White
put Logan on top 67·62 with 2:30
remaining in the contest, but the
Chiefs did not score again In the
game. '
At the 1: 11 mark Corey CDrri·
gan made It 67·64, Matt Creer
stole a Logan pass and hit a layup
to reduce It to 67·66 with 37
seconds left.
Following a missed Logan shot
the Dogs got possession with 25
seconds left, and following a
timeout, worked the bali until
Decamanada was fouled with
eight secqnds remaining. His
successful one and one effort
sealed the win.
Box Score:
LOGAN (67) - Tim Moore
&amp;.6-2·32; Doug Stiverson 4·1·3·14;
Jim White 2·2·6; Dan Starner
3-4·10; Jim Redd 2·1·5. TOTALS
11-7·1:1·67.
ATHENS (88) - Jon Reed
1·2·2·10; Corey Corrigan 4·2·10;
Brian Walsh 3·2·8; Scott Deca·
manada 10·2·22; Shad Patterson
3·0·6; Matt Creer 6-0.12. TOTALS
27-%-8-611.
&amp;lore by quarters:
Logan ................ 15 20 18 14-67
Athens ............... 19 20 10 19-68
Reserve score: Athens 60,
Logan 45.

VINCENT - Curt Plummer
and Kevin Fausnaugh scored ail
of Warren Local's 11 points In
overtime Friday night In leading
the Warriors ·to a 61·53 SEOAL
triumph over the winless Ma·
rletta Tigers.
With Warren clinging to a 50-48
lead In regulation play, Martet·
Ia' s Brent McKenna canned a·
jumper with 17 seconds remain·
ing to knot !he score at 50·50 and
send the contest into overtime.
Fausnaugh tallied the firstfour
· points In OT for a 54·50 Warren
lead, but goals by McKenna and a
pair of free throws by Pete
Seurken shrunk the lead to 54·53.
Plummer, who led Warren
with 25 points, then accounted lor
·the final seven points with a field
goal and swishing five of six free
throws.
In raising their record to 7-3.
3·2 the Warriors hit 21 of 49 field
goals, 17 of 24 charity tosses, and

Oak Hill.claims 74~60
win over I(C Bobcats

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Tornadoes claim 70-50
win-over Highlanders

(Reserves)
TEAM
WL POP
Nor!h Gall !a ........ 6 1 395 273
Southern .............. 6 1 378 285
Symmes Valley ... 5 2 298 299
Hannan Trace ..... 3 3 251 244
Eastern ............... 3 4 311 342
Oak Hill .. . .. . .. .. .. .. 2 4 224 267
Southwestern ....... 2 5 279 302
Kyger Creek ........ 0 7 212 336
TOTALS .... , ....... 2'7 2'7 Z.'l48 Z348
Frlday'a reaults
Hannan Trace 59, Nor!h Gallla 54
Southern 70, Sou!hwestern 50
Oak Hill 74, Kyger Creek 60
Symmes Valley 75, Eastern 69·

...

•• Athletic. Boosters wlll meet on
• Tllesday, Jan. 10, beginning at 7
; p,.in. In !he.GAHS Library Annex
• according to Bill Todd,
•
• president.
•

: Correction

.·•
·'
.•
••
;:
.;

GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolls'
Sarah Todd had 15 blocked shots
In Thursday's Blue Angles 56-52
SEOAL wtri over Jackson, and
not five as stated ln. Friday's

.. ...

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ON SALE AND IN STOCK!

•

GAHS Boosters to
-;.•.•'rileet
on Tuesday
.....
• - · 'C ALLIPOLIS- The Gallipolis -

IS PURCHASED AnER THAT OAT E. FOR YOUR COIIIVENIEJICE USE THE HAIIDY APPLICATION BLANK AND MAIL TO
THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURTHOUSE NOW. FElS ARE FOUR DOLlARS ($4.00) FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR fE.
IAlE. (KEIIIU LICEI$( PENALTY $20.00.) DO~ TAGS WILL ALSO BE ON SALE AT THE HUIANE SOCIETY LOCATED
AT THE COlliER OF N-TH SECOND ST. AND WALNUT ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760.
Male $4.00
Spayed Female $4.00
Female $4.00
Kennel license $20.00
Own•'s Name. ....

Eric Lloyd led the Wildcats wlth
give them a six ·poini advantage
10
points.
which they squandered with
On
Tuesday . the Wildcats ('!1-6,
Glassburn's picking up his fourth
3·3)
will
host Southwestern, while
}eul, a lane violation which
North
Gallia
(5·4, 3·4) will liost
allowed Caldwell three chances
Kyger CrePk.
to sink two free throws and a
Score by quarters
~
charging foul by Denney . With
Nor!h Ga!Ua ....... 13 I2 I6 13·54
baskets from Caldwell and
'
. away Hannan
Trace ...... 9 21 9 20:59
Br umfield, Trace whittled
· HANNAN TRACE (59) : at the lead until Caldwel l hit the
Caldwell 5·0·4·14; Brumfield 5·0·
nylon with a Jumper from the
right wing with 3:04 left , giving · 3·13; Cremeens 3-1·0-9; Bevan
0·0·6·6: Cornell 3·0·0·6: Ran't&lt;tn
the Wildcat$.a'5H9 lead.
Mays, who e nded the game 1·0·4·6; Bailey 1·0·3·5. TOTALS :
with 10 points, came right back I8+20·59
Fleld·gOal shooting -19·50.{38
with a layup with 1: 34 left. but
•
with 46 secol)ds left, Stout fouled . pet.)
Foul shooting- 20·2I (95.2 pel)
Wildcat guard J .J. Bevan, send·
Rebounds- 26 (Caldwell 9)
tng hlm to the line to shoot a
Assls ts - 13 ·
one-and-one. Bevan sank both
Steals
10 (Cornell aJ!d
free throws, giving the hosts
Cremeens,
2
each)
53-51 lead . From there theGuyan
Turnovers - 9
five sank their next six free
NORTH GALLIA (54)- D~n ­
throws on their way to their .
ney 7·0·4-18; Mays 5·0·0·'10: S(out
five-point victory.
In !he reserve match, the 1·2·2-10; Glassburn 3-1·0·9; •:D:
Pirates prevailed 51·32. Ten'y Smith o.J·2·5: .T . Petrie ' 0·0·~·2
:
Farley and Chris Tackett paced TOTALS·- 16-4-10-54 ·
Nor!h 'with 15 points each, whlle
Fol!l shooting - 10·I4 C7I.4 pet)

sUPPLY

THE. 1989 DOG LICENSE
GO ON SALE DEC. 5. 1988
.
£DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF lilt DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 20TH. FOUR DOLLARS ($4.00) PENALTY IF LICENSE

LAFAYETTE MALL
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

gives·HT

•
WID

Opening Monday, January 9th

#

THE SHOE CAFE

pivot Rusty Denney and a threepointer from freshman· forward
Darin Smith, Nor!h Gailla had
closed the gap to one before
sophomore Craig Rankin. Tra·
ce'.s ~·I center , sank a pair of
one·and·one shots before thrU·
ling the Guyan crowd with a
reverse layup shot between Den·
ney and Mays, a 6·3 forward , with
five seconds left. .Hannan Trace
went to the locker room with a
30·25 lead.
Denney, in spite of scoring 11 of
his game·high 18 points in the
fi~st half, constantly faced the
waving arms and quick h!!nds of
&lt;:;aldweli and Cornell in the paint.
Caldwell, Cornell and Rankin
founp numerous opportunities to
tip the bali away from Denney ;
which somet tmes resulted In
Pir;Ite turnovers.
Elsewhere on the floor the
Wilcjcats played a fairly loose
zone defense and did not main·
taln close pressure, even when
they ' went to fuil·court pressure
later . in the game. "If we had
pres!ll'&lt;j !hem earlier, we would
have i run out of gas." Jenkins
said.
Act tjlree saw North Immediately begin erasing the Wild·
cats' halftime advantage untll a
30·30 tie was achieved at !he 5: 06
mark. The tie was broken when
Brumfield drove from the left
wing aqd was fouled on his way to
scoring, on a layup, which went
ln . The fqliowing foul shot com·
pleted ·!he three-point play, a nd
Hannan Trace was ahead 33·30.
The Wildcats had trouble main·
talnlng \hat -three-point lead, as
the Bucs rent ail-out to regain
the lead; which they did when
Smith connected on both ends of a
'one·and·one
' chance to give the
visitors a 36·35 lead with 2: 28 left.
Though the Wildcats would re·
gain !he lead on a Cornell layup
27 seconds later, that lead was
er!mlnated _ when Glassburn
launched a three-pointer with
th~ee seco,nds left to give the
Bucs a 41·39 lead.
The last quarter saw the Vinton
five put up four straight points to

OAK HILL - Senior Bobby Nor!h Gallla.
Ward, one of four Oak Hillcagers Score by quarters
posdng double ligures, recorded Kyger Creek .... I3 10 14 23·60
a game-high 23 points to drive the Oak Hill .. ........ 15 17 22 20·74
Oaks to a 74·60 win over Kyger
OAK HlLL (74) Ward
Creek Friday night .
7·1-6·23; Rawlins 6·0·7-19; Smith
The win puts !he Oaks (5·4, 5·1) 6·0,2-14; Coon 3·0·4·10; Ruff 2·0·2·
in first place In the SVAC by half 6; Miller 1·0·0·2. TOTALS a game over Eastern, who lost 2iH:Z1·74
75·69 to Symmes Valley: The
From the field - 26·46 (56.5
Bobcats fall to 3·7 over a! I and 2·5 pet.)
-in the teague.
From the line - 21·32 (65.6
Not only did the Oaks take care pet.)
of busin.ess on the boards, outre·
Rebouads -38 (Coon, Rawlins
bounding the shorter Bobcats and Smtih, 9 each)
38·28, but Ward got plenty of help
KYGEIJ, CREEK (60)- Leach
from center Jedd Rawlins (19 6-1·2·17; A. Denney 5·0·2·16;
points, nine rebounds, 14 blocked Reese 3·0.3-9; S. Denney 4-0.0·8;
PATRIOT - Sophomore Todd wanted it more than we did. In
shots). forward Chad Sml!h (14 Bradbury 2-0·0-4; Johnson 1·0-0Grindsta.tf led all scorers with 15 addition, they kept a lot of fresh
points) and guard Bobby Coon 2; Sipple 1,0.0-2; Gilmore 0.().1-1;
points to lead Southern to a 70·50 players In the game an&lt;) played a
• (10 points).
· VIllanueva 0-0·1·1. TOTALS victory over Southwestern Fri· physical bail game."
Backcourt plilyers Chad Leach ~·7-60
In the second half the Torna·
day'nlght.
·
(17 points) and Alan Denney (16
pulled away from the
·does
From the field - 25·72 (34.7
"We weren't down by much at
points and eight rebounds) were pet.) .
·
Highlanders
by outscoring them
halftime," said So11thwestern
the ·only Kyger Creek players
·
15·12
in
the
third
frame and 23-14
From lhe line -7·13 (53.8 pet.)
head coach Jim Walker of his
scoring In double figures. ·
Rebounds - 28 (A. Denney 8)
in
the
final
quarter.
cagers. who were behind 32·24 at
In the reserve game, the
In !he reserve game, the Oaks
that point, "but even though we
Tornadoes
won 60-47. M. Kincaid
won 42-33. Shane Maynard led the
matched up pretty well In size
led
Southern
with 18 points , while
Oaks with 13 points, while Phil
with them , they bustled and
Southwestern's
Kevin Kiser· led
Bradbury 1ed the Gallians with
1'VC STANDINGS
a.ll
scorers
with
23 points.
IO.
'&lt;Varsity only)
Totnadoes
(5·5, 5·2 before
The
The Oaks wlll travel south to TEAM
OP
W L .p
they played Gallla Academy
play Symmes Valley, while the · Trimble ............... 7 0 503 416
Saturday
night ), wlil host Easi·
Bobcats will travel west to face
Wellston .............. 6 2 564 502
Continued from C·2
ern
Tuesday
night. The High·
Belpre ................. 5 2 462 416
scored 29 points In the loss.
landers
(54,
3·4)
will travel east
VInton ................. 5 3 536 486
Box Score:
to
take
on
Hannan
Trace.
Miller ......... ......... 3 4 460 485
1\IARIETTA (53) - Justin
Score
by
quarters
Fed·Hocking ........ 2 4 356 408 Herb 2·2·6; Mike Roach JO·I·l;
Southern .......... ~6 16 15 23·70
SVAC STANDINGS
Nels·York ......... ... 1 5 313 355 Chris T hornes 1·0·2; Pe te
SWHS .............. 18 ' 16 I2 14·50
(All games)
Alexander .. . :, ...... 2 5 428 461 • Seurken 3·3·9; .Brent McKenna
SOUTHERN ( 70) -Grindstaff
WL
P OP· Meigs ..................0 6 380 463 13·3·29; Frank Steratore 1·1·1·6.
TEAM
6·0·3·15:
Johnso'l 4·0-I·9; Shuler
Nor!h Gallla ..... ,..5 4 625 554
Friday's results:
TOTALS 28·1-10·5S.
4·0·1·9;
Baer
1·2.'0·8; Stout 4·0·0·
Southwestern .... ...5 4 612 637 Federal Hocking 58 Belpre 68
WARREN (61) - Jeff On tko 8; Maynard 3·0·I·7; Taylor 1-1·0·
Oak Hill .: ............5 4 545 570 Alexander 70 Meigs 68
3·0·6; Scott Mitchem 6·I·13;
Continued on C4
Eastern ...............5 5 751 779 Wellston 73 Miller 65 (ot)
Kevin Fausnaugh 4·3·11; Curl
Southern ..............5 5 654 632 Nelsonville-York 39 Vinton
Plummer 4·2·11-25; Rick Rhodes
Congratulations to
Hannan Trace .... .4 6 605 599 County 63
0-H; Brad Holbert 2·1·5, TO·
Kyger Creek ........3 7 649 719 Trimble - Open
Rice Furniture on
TALS 19-2·17·61.
• Symmes Valley ... 1 8 507 658 Tuesday's games:
&amp;lore by quarters:
Your 20th
Meigs at Federal-Hocking
'Marletta ........... 13 9 11 17 3-53
Anniversary
Miller at Belpre
(SVAC games)
Warren ..... :..... 9 20 1110 11-61
T-EAM
W L P OP Nelsonville· York at Alexander
Credit Thrift of America
Reserve score: Warren 45,
Oak Hill .............. 5 1 398 348 Trimble at Wellston
Marietta 42
Eastern ............. .. 5 2 543 513
Southern .............. 5 2 485 435
Hannan Trace ..... 3 3 372 371
Nor!h Gall !a ........ 3 4 486 423
Southwestern ....... 3 4 458 497
Kyger Creek ........ 2 5 438 495
Symmes Valley ... 1 6 393 491
TOTALS ............ 2'7 2'7 3573 3573

SVAC standings.

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nl«hl's SVAC colltest In MercervUle. The Wildcats' hl&amp;h·pressure
defense was one of lhe keys to their 59·54 win over lhe Pirates.
(Timeo-Senllnel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Call FREE

snared 31 rebounds.
The Tigers (1·7, 0·5) hit 21 of 52
goals, 10 of 20 at the line, and
pulled down 38 rebounds.
McKenna, who has been sidelined with a back injury, re·
turned to the Marietta llneup and
ContinUj"d on C-3

.

BAILEY ATTEMPTS STEAL - Hannan Trace forward Bill
Bailey (left) lrles Ia steal the ball from North Gallla' s Brian Stout
as stoat tries to regatn hiS balance In the lhlnl quarter of Friday

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tlmes.Sentlnel Staff
MERCERVILLE - Hannan
Trace used eight consecu live
rree !hrows to break a tie and
buDd its lead in the last minute of
Friday night's contest against
North Gallla to defeat !he Pirates
59·54.
"We. got smarter a nd played
our game, which is patience, "
said Mike Jenkins, Hannan Tra·
ce' s skipper, wlio saw his team
·pick up their first win since their
58·57 decision over Kyger Creek
on Dec, 9.
·
The Wlldcats started the game
in control, but their 8-4 lead
evaporated as the momentum
changed in the Pirates' favor,
,namely when sophomore guard·
/ forward Brian Stout unleashed
a bonus bomb from the left sld.e to
cut Trace's lead to one. Two
consecutive baskets by senior'
Don Mays in !he last minute of
the first quarter put the Bucs on
their way to a 13·9 lead at the end
of that frame.
The second quarter saw the
momentum swing back tQ .Hannan Trace, as senior guard/ for·
ward Tim Brumfield and senior
forward Scott Caldwell pushed
the Wildcats to a 15·15 tie. That
set !he stage for a pivotal shot
· that Wildcat forward Rich Cor·
nell, a 6·0 sophomore, took at the
5:02 mark.
The hosts had successfully
brought the ball upcourt, and
suddenly one of the Wildcats let
the bail get away. There was a
scramble under the boards for
the bail, and Cornell was in the
thick of the hunt . He grabbed the
bali under his feet, and with one
foot fiat on the floor, he stood at
an awkward angle as he shot a
hook shot from under the basket.
The shot fell in, and Trace was
~ead 17·15.
"PThe Wildcats, fully charged by
Cornell's connection, proceeded
to score four more points to go on
top by six before the Bucs started
to make themselves known . With
baskets from senior point guard
Greg Glassburn, 6·5 veteran

Warren ...

~life;. not. spmlltot sport:•
•

lEG.

WORKERS'
COMPENSATION

Sunday Times-Sentiriei- Page-c:a

free-tffi-o~ sh~oting

TVC standings

l;lczczbOk
BASIOIALl

Clutch

JHS controlled the bail during Morgan bad 14 and Matt Bond 10
the !ina! minute of play, forcing points for GAHS. &lt;;Jlad Reynolds
GAHS to foul.
led the Ironboys attack with 13.
Ali told, the Ironmen were 19 of ChrJs White added IO.
Varslty box:
361rom the field for 53 percent. At
GALLIPOLIS (112) - Shawn.
the line, JHS canned 30 of 48
charity tosses for 62 percent. McNeal, 0·0·0; Rob Skidmore,
Jackson had eight persoMis, 35 0-0·0: Joe Owen, 8·2-18; Todd
rebounds, 10 by Harris and seven Casey, 3-(4)-0-I8; William Strait, ·
each by Doug Kidd anti Abrams. 2· (3) -0·13; Pete Anderson, 2·0·4;
The home-team had 13 turnovers. Chris Rathburn, 3·0·6; Eric
Kldd suffered an . ankle injury Murphy. o.o.o; AI Elliott, O·O·O;
early In .the third period and Josh Willlams, 0-( 1)-0·3; Gene
Sheets, 0·0·0; Justin Fallon, o.o.o:
never returned.
Harris paced the Ironmen with TOTALS 26-2-62.
26 markers. Mike Moore and . JACKSON (69) - Steve Wal·
Steve Walburn added 11 whlle burn, 1-(1)-6·11; Doug Kidd,
I·3·5: Mike Abrams, 3·4·10; Greg
Abrams finished with IO.
Gallipolis shot 26 of69 from the Harris, 9·8·26; Shane Prater,
field lor 3-7 percen\. The Galllans 0·6·6: George Smalley, · 0·0·0:
were two ·of three at the line. Mike Moore, 4-3-11; Clay ton
GAHS was charged with 33 Valentine, 0·0·0; Heath O'Neal,
personals, losing Shawn McNeal, 0·0-0. - TOTALS .19·30-69.
William Strait and Pete Ander·
By Quarters:
son on fouls. Two other Blue Gallipolis . .......... 14 14 10 24-62
Jackson ....... ...... I5 9 25 .20-69
Devils had four personals each.
GAHS had 25 rebounds, 11 by Joe
Reserves - Jackson 47 Galli·
polis
38.
·
.Owen and six by Casey. The Blue
Devils had only seven turnovers.
Gallipolis wlll play at Warren
•
Local Friday and host Point
Pleasant Saturday. Jackson will
host Logan Friday and Wheelers·
burg Saturday.
In Friday's reserve game,
Injured On
Jackson won its first league
game of -the year, 47.·38. Scott
The Job?

Warren edges Marietta. in
overtime·encounter, 61-53

.

...

•
•
•'

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·•.&lt;

FDIC~:

•

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•

�Page-C-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

January 8. 1989

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

PPHS drops 77-62. cage decision to unbeate.n .Milton five
By GLENN McCASLAND
OVPSta«
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. Milton coach Jim Stewan dido 't
think his Greyhounds played well
Friday nigtlt.
"Doo 'l let him kid you," Point
Pleasant Hi~h School coach Lennie
·Barnette smd. ''They played an aggressive, s1r0ng basketball - game.
'J;hey !lfll talented and a good
team."

·

' : Barnette's remarks are accurate.
'The Greyhounds outchased Point
Pleasant, 71-62, to remain unctefeated in six games while the Big
B)acks slipped to 3-4 on the year as
aresulr.
~ But despite the run, gun and
overall basketball slugfest disJ!iayed by Milton, the Big Blacks
91ayed within seven points of the
liisiting Hounds after a poor first
ljuaner in which Milton built an 11J!(lint lead, ·19-8, which was never
Challenged.
J'
·
. •; "We made a 1remendous number
of mistakes in the first quaner and
didn't capitalize on their mistakes.
'file result was they got a lead and
llept it. Then we pulled to within
!/even of them in the last two
minules of the third period and the
next thing I know they are' back up
liy 13. It was over from that point,"
I!amette said.
; · Not all the news was bad for the

Big Blacks, however.
Casey Hill, limping from a
sprained ankle and bleeding from
the lip after bein~ popped in the
mouth by a Milton rebounder.
managed to score 24 poincs - including three fourth-points Qn
three-point buckecs.
And Bryan Faber, again ,playing
a tremendous game of basketball,
bulled his way around for 20 points
on eight field goals and four free
shots. The two cagers provided 44
of the 62' points scored on the night.
·ScoU Coen came off the ·bench
for six poincs while Jenny Blain
could muster only four cunterS as
did Chuck Wood whild Bryan Morrow and StephtliJ Henry added two
each.
.
Senior Greg Brown scored 26
points for Milton, II of them on
field goals and added four from the
charity line. Mike McCoy and
Jason Gaddy were in double figures
with 13 and 12 poincs each, McQ&gt;y
hitting on two three-point shoiS,
while Teddy Petitt popped the cords
for one three-pointer.
The difference in the 2ame came
on the ftoor.
Milton sank 31 baskeiS for two
points and Point canned 19 shocs.
At the line, Point outshot Milton
15-6. Milton had 22 {outs called ·
against them while the Big Blacks
were hit with II fouls.
''The officials called everything

on us and didn't do the same with
Point," Stewan said. "And we
made mistakes we nonnally don 't
make."
If the 'Greyhounds erred, it was
difficult to tell.
The Milton crew pressed, ran,
slapped the ball and moved aroand
the court In style. The aggressive
action took the boards away from
Point as Milton finished the night
with 21 rebounds to 14. Fabe! had
three for Point and Hill four, but
Greg Brown pulled down eight Tor
Milton to lead the rebou,nding
phaseofthe game.
Point had 15 turnovers 10 Milton's 10.

Blain and Phil Swisher had three
steals each for Point while Blain
and Shane Miller had two assists·
each and Swisher had one. The Big
Blacks had II steals to eight and .
live assists to one for Milton.
"It's just a case of inexperien~
· against a senior ball club that has
played a lot of varsity action,' Barnette said. "We are going to continue leamin!l and sooner or later,
J.hings will chck."
.
' In the junior varsity game, Point .
Pleasant downed Milton, 55-51,
, with three cagers in double ligures.
' Denis Bums had 17 poincs, ineluding two three-pointers, while
Jason Swain canned 13 counters,

and two three-pointeerS, whil~ 0-4; Henry 0-0-+-2·2; Faber 8-0-4Joby Greer added II poiniS, includ- "2-20: Vo\ght 0-0-0.Q-0; Milelr 0-0ing one three-pointer.
0-0-0; Hill 5-3-5-2-24; Wood 1-0The Junior Varsity crew started 2-1-4; Coen 3,0:0-1-6: Morrow 1slowly and overcame a 15-12 first 0-0-0-2;
swiSher '0-0-0-3-o;·
period deficit to tie the game 27-27 Leonard 0-0·0·0. Totals 19·3-15·11·
at halftime. They took charge in the 62.
third quartei', 4140, and then hung Score by quarters:
on, 14-11, in the final period for the Milton 19-38-56-77
PPHS 8-29-43-62
win.
The varsity box score:
Milton (77) Chandler 3-0-0-4-6;
scores
'Gaddy 6.:044-12; Brown 11-0-4Canlli WJnchff!Wr 77, Ubtt-ty Oaion M1
2-26; McCoy 3-2-1-2-13; Osburn
Cant~ South 12, MarlnAton ~
Cardh•l '13,; RldunoniiUa 51
2-0-1-3-5; Bock 3·0-0-3-6; Petitt 0Carlisle- st. Btllbrook 7CI
I.Q-3-3; Noe 3-0-0-1-6. Totals 31Peh!I'. . I'JI S,rin~; !II, S K&amp;nfl' ~I
3·6-22-77.
Philo 13, Shf.l'ldiUI -It
Plckerln~oo J.L Olllllcetht lit ·
Point Pleasant (62) Blain I.Q-2-

Friday's

Wahama loses 72-54
.~ilt to Bison quintet

January 8, 1989

Spartans edge ;Marauders in final three seconds, 70-68

By I)AVE HARRIS
ior Carey BetZlng drilled a 3 hit a layup and free throw and the
pointer to begin the second Marauders were up 55-52 heading
Times-Sentinel Stall
ALBANY - Brian Skinner's quarter and put Meigs up 22-20. Into the final frame.
Matt Baker put the Marauders
short jumper with three seconds The Marauders then built an
· left gave the Alexander Spartans eight point lead, 39-31, on a Matt back up by !lvewlth another steal
a thrilling come from behind Baker bucket with 1:55 remain- and lay·up.But Chad Bayha lied
70-68 victory over the Meigs Ing. The Spartans cut it to six at It at 63 with a lay-up at the 3:53
mark, A Baker Up tn put the
Marauders Friday night at the end of the half 39·33.
Albany. ·
Alexander came· out of the Marauders back up by 3 at
The winning basket was set up blocks quick to begin the second 68-65,but Denny Jarvis lied It at
alter the Marauders were called half as they tied the game at 39 on the 1: 32 mark with a three
.lor a traveling vlotatlon with 14 a· lay In by Danny Burke.Ed poinl\!l; from the top of the key
~econds left as they tried to call a
Crooks drilled a three pointer to With Y: 32 remalnlng.The Spar·
timeout
put the Marauders back on top at tans had a chancetotakethe lead
: The teams traded baskets to 42-39. Matt Baker twice came up but turned the ball over with 50
begin the game with the Maraud· .with steals and turned them.both . seconds remaining only to have
ers taking a 17·13 lead at the-59 Into layups In less than a minute Meigs re.turn the favor with H
$econd mark. Skinller made 2-3 to give Meigs a 50-45 lead, but seconds remaining to set the
pointers to put Alexander on top Danny Burke hit a short jumper stage for Skinners heroics.
" It all boiled down toone call"
20-17. John Burdette pulled the drew a foul and completed the
Marauders to with In one at 20-19 · three point to cuI the lead to two. a dejected Rusty I;lookman resecond
Jun· Crooks returned the favor as he sponded alter the game, refering
to the traveling call as the
Marauders tried to calla timeout
with 15 seconds remaining. "It Is
a shame that a team that works
this hard Is 0-9. Everyone played
well tonight I thought that Matt
Baker and Ed Crooks played
extremely well. Scott Nelgler
sprained his back In warm _ups
and couldn't play so we went with,

out one of our starters. that really ·
hurt".
' ·Meigs Is not an 0-9 1epm"
according to Spartan coac~ Jay.
Rees: 'This garne was a c11se pf
both teams struggling to lind
themselves, we played hare)
tonight . Danny Burke played his
best game. Meigs boys need to
keep their heads up. The wins
will come."
The Spartans · placed three
players In double ligures, led by
Denny JarVIs with 17, while
Burke and Skinner each had ·15.
Alexander hit 43 percent lor the
floor hitting 21 of 43 from 2 point
range and only 3 of 13 from three
point range. AHS hit 59 percent
from the llne "(17 of 29) had 30
rebounds and were called for 20
fouls.
Matt Baker and Todd Powell
had 17 each for Meigs.Ed Crooks
chipped In with 10 off the
bench.Melgs hit 25 of 57 from the
floor tor 44 percent and 14 of 20
from the line lor 70 percent. Todd
Powell had 9 of ttie Marauders 39
rebounds.
Alexander won the reserve
contest 47-44. Chris Andrews led

AHSwlth 18. Jason Wright hadl3 ·
for the Little Marauders. Meigs,
now ' 0-9 overall and 0·5 in the
TVC , tra vels to Federal Hocking
Tuesday night . Alexander Is 2-5
In the TVC and 4 and 6 overall
plays Nelsonville- York- at home
Tuesday.
·
Score by quarters
MelgL ......... .,.1, 20 "16 13-68

BUFFALO W.V.- A disaslrious
first quaner kept the misfortunes of

the Wahama White Falcon basketball team on a sour note Friday
night as coach Lewis Hall's Bend
Area team suffered its worst beating of the 1988-89 season at Buffalo where the Bisons handed the
local cagers an 18 point 72-54
hardwood defeat.
The White· Falcons fell behind
early, Wld unlike a number of iiS
previous roundball contests in the
current campaign, failed to make a
second halt run as Buffalo coasted
to the easy 'victory. All 10 Bison
players dented the scoring column
for the hosts while Wahama was
held to 15 points below its season
scoring average.
The setback dropped the locals
season record to 1-'7 on the year
while Buffalo improv,ed its slate to
5-2.
WHS entered the game averaging nearly 28 field goals per outing
but cQIIIIIao0ly get 17 shots from
the ftOO'r'to penelrate the basket
which spelled the difference in the
game.
The Bend Area squad, normally
a poor free throw shooting team
over the years, converted 20 of 25
charity tosses on the evening which
kept the intersectional contest from
being a blow out.
Damitz led all scorers in the contest by totaling one-half of the Falcons total poiniS on the night. The

5-9 sophomore guard canned seven
field goals while adding 13 of 13
charity tosses for 27 poincs to increase his 1988-89 scoring av~e
to 23.5 points per game whde
senior center Chris Jewell added 10
markers for the Mason County
team. Buffalo placed three starters
in double figures with Stotts leading the winners with 19. ~illiS followed by Adam Null w•th 13 and
Barry Clendenin with 12 while
Glen Bowles and Todd Kelly added .
eight points each for the winning
Bisons.
In the reserve game Buffalo built
a commanding tw,entr point 56-36
advantage, thankS 10 a big third
quaner scoring effort before
weathering a strong comeback bid
by the Little Falcons to claim a 6857lriumph.Coach Frank Capeharcs'
.WHS squad managed to convert
just 13 of 39 free throws while falling to 2-4 on the season as the Little Falcons fell for the third straight
game.

Tornadoes ...
Cpntlnued from C.J
5; Murphy 2·0·0-4; l,.avender
0-0·3·3 Amos 1-0-0-2. TOTA~ 26-3-9-70

Free throws- 9·19 (47.4 pet)
SOUTHWESTERN (50)- Colley 6-0-2-14; John Ehman 3-1-1·
10; Walker 2-1-1-8; Hager 3-0·1-7;
Bryant 3·0·0·6; Hammond 0-1·0·
3; Jesse Ehman 0·0·2-2. TOTALS
· -17-3-HO

Free throws- 7-19 (36.8 pet.)

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BURDEfiE SHOOTS- Meigs guard John Burdette (00) takes
aim to put In two of his nine points as Alexander's Steve Hawk
moves In to defend In Friday night's TVC contest In Albany. The
Spartans downed the Marauders 70-GS. ( Tlmes-Sendnel photo)

HI·FI &amp; STEREO EQUIPMENT.

Symmes Valley .

25°/o 43°/o OFF

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Times-Sentinel
Correspondent
WILLOW WOOD - The
Symmes Valley Vikings handed
the Eastern Eagles .their third
loss 111 a row, 75-69, Friday
.. evening In an Important SVAC
boys' basketball contest at ·
Syin*es Valley High School.
The loss came after Eastern
had celebrated a 5·0 league will
streak before sUpping Into 1!1
three game losing skid that
leaves them tied lor second In the
league with Southern, also 5·2.
Oak Hill Is now one-hall game
ahead as a result of having a
make-up game left and a 5-1
league mark.
The win was Symmes Valley's
first In seven tries (1·6), while
Eastern Is now 5·5 overall and 5-2
In the SVAC. Symm'es Is 1·8
overall.
SV went ahead 12-8 In the first
frame, then built that to a 36-31
score at the half.
Eastern never got closer than

ROCK SPRINGS - The Lady
Marauders of Meigs High continued their Winning ways as the
varsity nothced a 44·36 win over
Alexander and the JV squad
remained unbeaten with a 28-16
victory against the Spartans.
Kelly Smith led all scorers as
she collected 23 markers lor the
Marauders. Trlcla Baer picked
up 7, Jody Taylor 6. Lesley Carr
had 3, Beth and Kim Ewing each
contributed a field goal and
Jennifer Taylor canned a free
throw to round out the scoring.
In the JV contest, Amy Rouse
had 8 pointsandAmyWagner6to
garner scoring honors for Meigs.
Kim Hanning hit a pair of field
goals; Kim Ewing and Kert.Black
had 3 points each and Mary
Butcher and Trlcla Baer added a
two point goal each.

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six points alter the opening
moments of the third period,
when Symmes Valley burst to a
55-43 advantage.
Eastern made It mmore re·
spectable In the fourth, outscor·
lng the hosts 26-20. but could not
get closer than six.
No Eastern stats were av&lt;lollable, but thanks to Symmes Coach
Terry Saunders the following
suUs from Symmes Valley were
available. Symmes hit 27-61 field
goals for 44.3 percent and hit
18-29 at the line for 60.3 percent.
Symmes grabbed 43 rebounds.
led by sophomore Carl Robin·
son's 17, had 19 turnovers, and 22
fouls. Eastern hit a meager 14-24
at the ltne for 58.3 percent ancj
had 21 fouls,
Symmes was led • by dual
16-point efforts from Carl Robinson and Paul Hayes, while Scott
Mlller had 13, Tony Schneider 12,
and Landon Harris and Larry
Large six each.
For Eastern Mike Martin had a
game-high 22 points, Scott Fitch
and Kenny Caldwell had 11.
Shaun Savoy 9, and Mike Frost 5.
Symmes won the reserve game
43-38 led by Todd Cas tee! with 17
points, while Randy Moore led
Eastern with 12.
This stages an importan I rematch between the oncoming
Southern Tornadoes who played
. Gallipolis Saturday, and the
Eagles, who wlll meet at Southern Tuesday evening ~! 6 p.m.
Score by quarters:
Eastern ........... 8 23 12 26·69
SVHS .............. 12 24 19 20·75
EASTERN (69) - Filch 4-1-011; Savoy 2-1-2-9; Martin 9-0-4-22;
Lance 1-0-2-4; Caldwell J.l·2·ll;
Bissell 0·0·3·3; Durst 2·0-0-4;
Frost 2-0-1-5. TOTALS 23-3-14-89
SYMMES VALLEY (75) Miller 5-0-3-13; Schneider 0·2·6·
12; Hayes 0·3· 7-16; Harris 3·0-0-6;
Robinson 8-0-0-16; Justice 1-0-02; Nicholas ~-0-0-4; Large 2-0-2-6.
TOTA~- 24-3-18-75

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MEIGS (68)- Bu rdette 3-0-3-9, •
BetZlng 0-1'2-5, Crooks 3-1-1-10;
Oller 3-2·8, Baker 8·1-17, Powell
6·5-17, Barton 1-0-0-2. TOTALS

Four

· Meigs girls win

Wlli,.
S..p~·

17·70

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Alexander ....... 20 13 19 18-70
ALEXANDER (701 - Bayha
4·0-0-8, Burke 5-0-5-15, Dicken
1-0-2-4, Hawk 2-0·1-5, Jarvis 5·1+
17. Skinner3-2·3-15. TOTALS 22-3·

24-2-14-68

•

By GARY CLARK
OVPStarr

Plige -C - ~ .

Sunday· Times-Sentinel

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

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Page-C-6-Sunday Times-Sent:::in:el~----111@111..::==~

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January a. , 989

w. va.

Pleasant.

•
•

••
•

Friday's
scores

:State/National

~imts-

ientinel

Section

D

•
•

January 8, 1989

Hm • Oluu lli,lt .... """' H,..I.,M/•11/I

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Bf'.vll!rcrHkH. KetetorlnrFatrmone tt
&amp;IIIIard (Mil'h ) A7, Foat..ta U
Iedford 01 ...t II.. Meat• Cat • U
BeiMin 11, Unknl Loultl
Bdhfo.lnr1'!,. SprlaJ N' wf'ltna Sl
Bflp,. t8. FPdfral HoeklllrSA
S..t~Lopn

14, w._,.DHftf'ldGo:ltft •

lorna •• Brll'cknlll•

n

•

BHIIa Cl.r W RH U , Lowf'llvlllf' U
&amp;rllalllludl), NPWeonwntflowaSS

..

Brit1'o'lllf" &amp;.4, Fttal.ta St WPII ts
B11 Walnut 18, Gra1uhlew .til
Bl•chNW 15, IUn p S%
IU•om Cat Hill Ill. Laacu&amp;rr Ftshtr a
.... ln&amp;Grettl 116. MUibul')' LabS!
Brt.lol111, Vlrt~Ja Mathnn 11
llruMwlck •· Bl'ru MldpllrkU
lv.cket"e N 15, Brlla.lrt&gt; 8t John ol$
S.ckt7P Trail U , Zanet RoMcnu S.1
Bllcyru. 61, Gallon41
luriOn lkorklhlrt&gt; $1, KlrttaadS1
Cambrldp 6!, Bar ~vlllf' t3
Cfodiii'WIIIt H. Madllloa Plallw 54
Cfonll'r'WIIIP 111, FairbOrn S!
Cf'ndo-Kenova If, &lt;llftlltllt'akt Sl
Cia CAPE li!. na ...ytawll31
On Coulllry Day IW, Nil"w Ml.ml 14
Cln Grt-HI-..11811. HarriiiDR M
Cl• ladhn Hill "'I, Oil"ll'r ruk tt
Cia LaSallf'll, Cln El*" N
Cln Laa*tlarliM, On Sf'nn Hll .. 71
Cln McNic Miu 84, AmP.IIa '7S
Cln Oak Hllllll, Mt Hr- a1111f t1
Cln Prlac.pto• H, W ChtM. Lakota U
Cia Ro It"" llacoa18, Cia MHIItr t2
Cln Sunvntl II, LocllluuiiS
Cln S)'camorf' BS, On Alldrra011'"
Cin Taft 11. N Bend Tl,)'lor 4~
Cin 'l'llr .. n 112, Milford 14
·
Cln Walnut Hilla h, Norwotd 10
Cln Wlt•raw 94, Gl.n Elltlo .as
Cln Woodward 1'1, Cln. W11n Bllhl.tt
Chvton Nol1hmora 13, TrO)' 14

•

EVERYTHING IN THI. STORE IS REDUCED!!
•.DINETTES
eRECLINERS• LIVING ROOM SUITES • OCCASIONAL TABLES
'

.

.

•BOXSPRINGS AND MATTRESSES • PLUS MUCH MO::E~I..
· --~~~---

. 01
weMIPIIl Of pofAf.l

0 suPER
'{OU'LL fiNsELECTIONS.
sA\1\NGS.
AND LO'ftl
EASY 'TERMS yN\EN1'S\·'

51'1

N\ON1'\"\LY p~

Clydr If,, Saadulok;,¥ st Mary•11
Col Aca.ckomy !It, luck eye Vaj 41
Col •oolkhaven M, Col EutiS
Col C•a~allllal 41, Col Norllludl8 ·
Col DeSaiNIIZ, Col St Clllr~ IS
CGI Euanoer Ill, Col M.,.Fran IIS1
Col Hamlloa'l'wf n, 1\m•cll u

•••••••••••••••

Col Maru.O.a 54, Col W•llllll(aa .U
Col Millin Ill, Col kr.dltr.ta N
Vol Se11Ul U. Cel Brla- 71
Col Watkraoa Sf. Col RarlJ.y H
&lt;lol Wt'lutt' Sf. Col
U:
Cal WM181, Col W.. a..t R1••18
Coldn.t"" •· Peri Remwry H "
Calf'ftln 1.1. Cln Alii.- 57
Coloftf'l Crawfofd 14, Rlcilledalf' 41
fentlnealal M. MIJW City~~
C.rtland Lak"'Ww it, II: Palatlnil" 81
Colhoctoall, Sl Clain\'111«' U
Croobvlllr '7!, Rlvll'r Vlf"W 11 (II)
Curahora Fall• 58, No.., ala 51
Danllle 11. Luf• 52
Day -lmoalll, Dar P.ateriOft 4R
Da)' Mll'...,wdlll,f' 17, hy Wlllk 14
01&amp;)' Oaltw110d 1J, •ooh"Uito Ill
DfGralf Rhrll'rJ1411' 80, l'alrbUIIal 41
DefiMCl' 14, Lima 8h•w•• ••
'
Drlawarll' e, Whilf'llall58

a...,.

FLEXSTEEL SOFA, Reg. $J,399 ...................... NOW $69995

CONTEMPORARY SECTIONAL, Reg. S1,099.95 ... NOW$ 54995
6 PIECE

Dlllf' U, Illy N•rthrld&amp;f' 15

Dover 51, Tua: . .• • \'al • (ot)
DoyleMown '71, IUUmaa •
Dubll1 ,., lontthaa Al•r tl

£ut CaateD 81, Mlaww. II

oa...,., tt. Ola&amp;on M•Me 81

EuWra Brownl'l', l.)'IM!IIhu'IIJ
EuUIIl" Nor111L Mqt'l~ciiM
F.aiiMOd

n. I!Jmwood 11

FLEX STEEL

~EG.

.

Eat•1S. V.. lf')l Vtrw II
Ecll1• N 57, Conelltoa V all"t' 4S
Elyria H , VHmU\oa5!
tlyrtr. Cuh 7L Lorai. CaUl II
Bb'rll Opm Boar lt, Oly hi c•r '72
l'alrftflld Unllla 81, Ucld•J Hta 74
'f
,...r ... da...,.,.,...,..,.., (lt'fa) 14
P&amp;lrpor• U . Tltomp Lf'dpmoail: n

ONE ENGLISH
.

PIT
GROUP

Drl,_• St .Joha18, Nt!W lrf'mrn It

SWIVEL
ROCKERS

.

REG. S4999s

51,199.95

Now·$2222·2

NOW$59995

LOVESEAT
REG. 5599.95

N01250°0
(CLOSE-OUTl

Falrvl..w 4t, Avo11 Lak• 411

'Vf!llf'\IUII' H. C..Orptown 15
FOr'IHII Park Ill, Oa NoriiiWNI M7
Fori Fryr M, .Skywr 41
Pert IAftlmiil' TJ, RuBIIIa'S3
Fraak Fur Grf't'a H. Porta C113 tt
frulllort Ad,_ II, Wntlall 77
FruWtn •· Diu Cari'OII 53
Fraalllln Moarw 72. Nail 'll'aJII!l
FI'Pepolf Lakflud '75, ~~~· HCJ 53
Frmtent Ro11N, flnclq II
Frttn.al St lor 11, 01 d Fori 5R
Froalltt" a, Sh,..drtt.b 51
GatiM• It, WN!ierWIIf'S Sl

Cal .. • Northmor 11, ()'eMht&gt; It
G.,.way 1t. St1Ub1u·~ U
GarrfthlviUII' 18, Dlamolll SE 51
G('ntw '71, .JII'Itfi'MI S8
Grn• K. Woadmo"' IS
Clhlloltburt84, 0tl!lf'p 'nl
C.Mhf'n SJ. Hamlltoa Rosa H
Grlfloa Mlctwk'w Ill, Lor So•lh\'lf'W

Grl' ... t'¥1t'W 10. Yl'llow Sprtana 51

OAK ASH~EY . ~"'\"(CLOSE
END TABLES ••~ ••••• !!~;:!!~~~~- NOW $6900
OUT)

i.•

sa.

"'llml••..
Hlllt., M, FIQ'ttW SS

•

Helpull Ed~trtoa 43
HelluciSprlnlfltt•n. MaumPrstl
H1t~ao.M. Botld••71 jott

• • • • Kl. Richfield ~vt'l'r

DARK• PINE ASHLEY

n

REG. 5199.95
NOW $79~0
·COCKTAIL TABLE ••••••••••••••

llu•II•!Jl.. Ressllt, PlkrtonH
... , .. ,~. M•caretta 11
latl a.,llltts, laaa. BUill Chr st
. . . . Lab M , Rld&amp;fmonl: ss
.lactuea . . Gall....ts Q
JPWf'U..Set.-15. M&amp;l\lf'l'a$1
.laMa&amp;owa11, Hufb 13
., • ._..... Northrldp II, t: bo11 ...
Kalklan. Forttlll'l'llliap ss
K.UJI¥ L1kola R!, Northwood II

ONE ROSE _HILL UGHT PINE

lltftt 71, Tall•dl'f' 11
Killllhll BadKfr n, Nll'wtoa FaiiM n

SQUARE
COFFEE
TABLE
•••
'

Lall,_.. 71, Broollfll!id 711 Uot)
Lakt'Wood Sl Ed 71, CIUiton MrKia~
18
Lf'hllnoa Sf, O.ford TNawucla 80
kftonla1S, Lordltown 113
Ll'men Mo.., 18, MIIIIDWiurt 54
Ubl'riy ~•. 0.-.nptea"
Liberty Cnttr D, Br,an •

·

Martina Ferry 8i. lrldi~Oit 11
MarJI\'IIf' "ta, &lt;Hmllang st
MMalllon Pll"rrr ... WooRer 51
Nll.)'a\tltt" 7t. Ntw C.acord Gle11 at4
Mc:Comh II, Llbt'rty 8etltnl3
Mtt . .llll'hrool 84. W~ll!el (WV) L11111yte
Mf'&amp;Ma 84. Slroap\'lllfo 'f8
M,. . . . lhldlll'ff'
1111
Mni• ti,IJiallllwlnt Br .... 41
Mid' low• PHIMdt 'fl. TrMt Edaewood
II
MIMetowa 81 , Falrfteld M
. ·

REG. S999.95

N_. LC'~~:ta ...•1t,

Dr......,nTn.va~u
l.o••
'II. Pbm. .a. 14
Nrw
14, CUitn 11mB 11 .
P~lll

Nr.wat II 10, Colla *tlf'Mirace tl '

Par.-anti.....Free Dellferr

NfwiiU'kCatll tit Hrtr.. Laki!WHd Q

N"'&amp;H 'M, . .dlonll~

OM ..II 'N, Jlrpr Creel!. •

ow..n,nynaW•tll

...... ......
Or,.., ...... •tmes.
n. ••-••wr •
Ol...,d Nil 'It, lkcQ alwr 11
-&lt;:aN~
Orqloa.ltleiiW, T•IS&amp;art II

... n
.................. u.... ..
Ptl-..........,
P..._-GDM.,~

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

.......... u ... .,., ..
Pe~ . . . . . .,._. w•...oak II

~-.

.

.
.----------~----·
(

$499 95

E••r Ter111, Low Mo_nthlr

Nrw BNlMU, Perla Notre Dame IS
NN b•Jnl.Ue •· MJ•*" 18

Norll f,iollea;to Hill H, f'tlktlyll
Narll v. .. a11. Loa. •
No ..... a, " ..dSI
Nerwalk ... •Ilene It (ot)
0 .. GJ• ~WVI n, t;dlna SIS

NOW

•liVING ROOM SUITES •RECLINERS
•OCCASIONAL TABLES •DINEnES
•BOXSPRINGS AND MAnRESSES

Mlllee U•'-•IS, Ill ami Eu111
.. ...,... IU qe 'It, .lacU.. MIMOil 4t
Mia~ lf, C. . . H
Ma....,.-wUJ" 'n, liacll 81\'... 11
Mou• Gil Mil 111, Prr~ cklowa~j
Maa• V"'••ll. IIUUanl U
N.,,....,.., 8JM:aa NGra-wJ"" "11

NfW

Part III

The Raccoon Creek ·Story

.

I

Interest
Payments.

Stewart with steel
finn 28 years · .

&amp;

.

~ ance

Johnson named to
. bank's board of directors

Training session
scheduled Jan. l l

can

'.

992-3307
----

•.. - - " - -

-·-.....

I

---- ··-

·--

Lori Ward joins
Holzer Clinic Staff

Brpker education
credit is available

90 DAYS
SAME AS
CASHi

Er.1PIRE OF POMEROY
108 WEST MAIN

:·

-

Safe Like Ne.,er Before!

u

MIMftO'itr• Cbr U, Mtaml Val,.JR
MU ..nl C... IU. Cia C..nlral BaJ 'JR

f

Money Ideas

'

Lands' End sales
30 percent

BOOKCASE HEADBOARD

....... I!Jat•l4. Qwey ~~

·n. cu,.

(CLOSE-OUT)

WITH

Marktn Rwcllllf II, M ... Maa.b, II

,.

S3 soo

BEDROOM SUITE

Uma W~ II, 01 . . . (M)
Lin. !!ir 1t, Hamlll:oa •
Lima Ternpa. 8t, De Herlla~:r 13
Uaho"ll, McDoaahiS1
l...tl Clowrteal t8, N Royaltoa u
IAr llrooW. U, Ler a~ln'ttw 4S
Ma~ter II. l.etabaJK n
Maalfll!ldSI Pff:,p l'f, LoudoaviiiC'H
Maplt Hb 'fl , WU.... II.,. 81111111
Marlemo• • · Oa Ril" ... aaU

(on

5

Rice licensed to use cleaning system

Grl'enlf"'d 51, Clrcii"'IUIII' 4R
Coplll'y :U
Baa Mil Traef II. North Gall Ia; 54
Hllllbor• a ,
-ta
Gr~lbu l'l Grt'f'n

Meigs mine employees
honored £Or 15 years senrice
•

-

'

'

The abbreviated week got off to The gain in 1he dollar, which •
By BRIAN J. EGLI
a bad start Tuesday- after the stabilized the bond market, IgUPI Busliless Writer
I NEW YORK - Stock prices three·day New Year holiday nited a buying spree le\1 by
institutions that continued
· .-/posted a gain on the first week of weekend - when weakness in
.,'
through
the rcs1 of I he week .
both
the
dollar
and
bonds
led
to
a
the new year as Institutions led a
•
•
Analysts
said thr stranger
rash
of
futures-related
program
three-day buying spree . that
do'llar
helped
att.ract Institutions
selling
by
institutions
.
drove a key market barometer
and
other
equities
buyers with
Stock-Index
futures
.sometimes
up to its highest closing level
•
large
cash
reserves
who were
•
trade
at
narrow
prem
turns
to
the
since the market crashed In 1987.
looking
for
a
re
-entry
point
in the
Cash
indexes,
leading
IO
aroi.
· The Dow Jones Industrial averwake
of
year-end
tax
selling
and
age, which rose 3. 75 Friday', trage that involves the purchase
•
portlolio
adjusting.
·'
closed the week at 2194 .29, its of futures and the sale of the
"The
market
was
drive
n
by
•
highest _closing level since 1he underlying stocks.
urbitrage
and
buy
programs,
"
..
The market' s tone improved
market crashed on Oct. 19.1987.
said Alfred Goldman, market
For the week, the blue-chip index sign ili~anlly Wednesda y, when
strategist WtthA.G. Edwards &amp; •
inves10rs became enthuslasHc
gained 25. 72.
Sons
in St. Louis.
•
Broader . market indicalors about the dollar's s harp rise on
"The sideline money jumped In r
•
also adva nced. The New York news two Libyan jets had been
Continued on D·2
Stock Exchange composite index shot down by U.S. Navy fighters .
rose
1.
70
to
157.9G,
while
Standard
•
&amp; Poor's 500-s tock index c limbed
a $5 cauih prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
, MYSTERY FARM - This week's. mystery
2.95 to c lose the week at 280.67.
Co. Leave your name, addre!ls and telephone
' farm, featured by the Galli&amp; SoU and Water
Advances trounced declines"'.
number with your· card or. letter. No telephone
~ Conservation District, is located somewhere In
1.290-565 among the 2.129 issues
.1'
llalls will be aceepted. All contest entries should
: GaiDa County. Individuals ~bing to participate
traded. Big Board volume to·
B
taled 613 615 280 shari's comAL ANY ..- The following St~phanle an d Tawny:
.
be turned In to the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each
• In the weekly contest may do "" by guessing the
pared with 4 6 666 050 1 ' 1 •e k emp loyees from Meigs Cou nty
Roger L. Mowery, longwali
Wednesday. In case of a lie, the winner will be
• farm's owner . .Just mall, or drop off your guess to
and 93 3 730 25o'a y~ar a~~ " e
are being recognized for their 15 helper at the Meigs No. 2 mine .
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Meigs County
• the• Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
· '
·
yearso l servlceatSo uth ~rnOhio
Mowery lives In Pomeroy with
farm will be featured by the Meigs SoU and Water
: GaiUpoUs, Oblo, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, Ill
Coal
Company
's
Meigs
Division
his wife, Wanda, and daughter ,
Conservation District.
i Court St., Pomeroy, ·Ohio, 45769,and you may win
In December.
Celena.
'
'
Russell J. Seymour, mobile
Nathan E. Arnold. su rface
utUityman at the Meigs No. 1 equipment operator at the Meigs ,
mine. Arnold lives ih Pomeroy No. 1 mine. Seymour lives In
with his wile, Sheila, and sons, Dexter with his w!le, Karen, and
part, will seek its own level. Th e be plante&lt;) from one . to four
'" GALLIPOLIS- Plate erosion
Nathan IV and Jason.
son, l)ylan. ·
..
:
.as It is most commonly called, Is adjoining creek level Is lower hundre&lt;) f~t from waters edge.
Cecil
D.
Brtnager.
section'
Rdbert
s.
Sh;&gt;ln,
mechanic
.
a
t
•J he most des tructlve of ail types than the bank , 1 th,erefore the Preferred species are oak, hi ck·
supervisor at the Meigs No. l ... : the Melgs·No ..2 mine. Shain lives
'of erosion, because It involves a movement is towards the creek. ory, birch, sycamore, walnut, or
mine. Brlnager lives In Racine in Raclnes with his wife, Ruth, •
1 BY STAN EVANS
much greater mass or area than The trees that once held the soli any of the species that have a
with his wife, Ruby.
a nd children, Emily, Samuel arid •
:pther types ;tnd the movement of along the creek bankS firm an In long tap root for It Is those long
•
Gary
D.
Evans,
diesel
me·
Matthew.
GALLIPOLIS- Most municipal
:earth is much more rapid. Its place, are no longer there. The tap roots, that anchors the soli
bonds pay interest twice a year. If chanic at the Meigs No. 1 mine.
·:Scope is many acres and in some soli movement ends In the water movement.
Evans lives In Racine with his
' The other solution Is the use of
you own -a registered
:,Places, several feet in depth. It and is washed away, never to
wife, Linda , and children, Reearth moving equipment. This Is
issuer has a re:{!an be from one to ten or more return.
becca, Michael, James and
cord of your
· There are two ways this the most expensive method and
Ieet deep.
Melanie.
name and ad·
• When creek bottoms become problem can be handled. The has been proven to be the least
Tommy J . Ferrell, maintedress and will
flooded, during periods of heayy first one and by far the best one, desirable. This method Is known
. POMEROY - Pomeroy e m- •
nance supervisor at the Meigs
·l:ain fall, flood plains become Is the planting of trees along the a§ channelizing and does not . mail you a check
ployeee
Ross Stfiwart will cele· ·
No. 1 mine. Ferrell lives In
every slxmonths.
banks. The Department of Recla- produce the required results so
tiuld or the consistency of mud;
brate
28
years Of servic e with
Middleport with his wife, Vicki,
and like water of which it is a mal.lon recommends that trees necessary to acco mmod ~te the If you own an
and daughters, Heather and Midwes&gt; Steel this February.
needs of fa'rmers, those seeking .· un reg ister ed'
Twenty·four of those 28 years
Hollie.
.
recreaflon such as boating and ' bond - also
a tleii~er
were as a fore man . Prior io his
Larry
W.
Fields,
faceman
&lt;1t
sight seeing, fishermen , hunters , bond '- you have to go to your
promotion to foreman, Stewart ~
and the general public who love
safetydepositboxeveryslxmonths the Raccoon No. 3 mine . Fields worked for the compa ny ·as a
In
Syracuse
with
his
wife,
lives
to be near R~ccoon and many
and clip a CO)Ipon. You can redeem·
Linda, and sons, Andrew and planer operator, a drill press
other streams here and In other
yourcouponsAtyourbanklora$5-7
operater and a cra ne opera tot.
•
lee, or we at The Ohio Company wlll Kevin.
areas.
A· native of Meigs Cou nty,
John
James,
Jr.
,
motorman
at
~ POINT P-LEASANT - Well·
redeem ·your coupons at no charge. ·
Stewart
is responsiblefor·21 crew
the
Meigs
No.
2
mine.
James
known businessman Vance John·
In the old days, almost all bonds
mem
bers
at Midwest Steel. ancl
lives
In
Pomeroy
with
his
wife,
~on has been named to the board
were sold as bearer bonds. If you
reports
directly
ro Tom Serey at
Barbara,
and
has
seven
children,
pf directors of the Peoples Bank
lost !hem m· they were stolen, you·
'Hogansville,
Ga.
James,
Carol
Petty,
Gregory
of Point Pleasant, Mason and
were out of luck. Whoever owns an
Stewart, and his wile, Trudie,
l'le:w Haven, Jt was announced to·
unregistered bond - eveq If he Lori Birch!leld, Lawrence,
reside
at Hys!'ll Run Road, · •
c.;
ByOonstance
S.
Whtie
Heinz·;•
Rona·Id
and
Timothy
·)lay by President James Lewis.
acquired it Illegally redeem
Pomeroy.
When not working,
Coats.
James
also
has
12
, ' Mr. Johnson, a lifelong restthe coupons without any questions
bQth
Stewart
and his wife enjoy ,
.
grandchildren.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
dent of Gallla County, operates
asked. So why .would anybody buy
hunhng
and
llsh
ln g. They also
Charles
E
.
Jones
,
SWCD
will
begin
the
thl~d
year
of
plant
opera·
·J ohsnon's Supermarkets in Galan unregister!'\(1 bond? Privacy. U
vaca
tio
n
in
Florida
and · My rtle
tor
at
the
Meigs
No,
1
mine.
Jones
cost-sharing
on
the
Mult
iflora
lipolis and Point Pleasant.
you hold an unregistered bond,
are
planning
an
Beach
and
lives
In
Langsville
with
his
wife,
Rose Control Program. As part nobody knows you own it. It's like
' He Is a member of the Ohio Re·
upcoming
trip
to
Arizona.
Connie,
and
daughter
s,
Mandy,
o{ the· requirements to partlcl·
ian Grocers Association and the
having cash under the mattress,
pate in the program landowners' only It's better because your secret
)Vest Virginia Grocers Associaare to attend a training session on
llon ... A former Gallipolis City
treasury Is paying interest twice a
proper handling of chem icals
~ommlssloner, Mr. Johnson is a
year.
and the various methods of
GALLIPOLIS
- Upon on the fioor .
~ember Q.l several community
Since there isn't any record of
treatment
.
If potential customers are not
completion of a sem inar cona.nd fraternal organizations.
ownership, It Isn't· surprising that
These methods can be mechan- some people don 't report taxable
ducted by a DuPont Company- s ure what ca(pet they own, .
:, Mr. ·Johnson and his wife,
Ical, chemical or selected liveslicensed che mica l supplier , DuPont provides a . carpet test
!dickey, who reside at 63 Cedar
capital gains and unregistered
tcx;k
graving and a combination municipal bonds. This isn't an
David Rice, owner and operator kit. which enables such licensed
Street In Gallipolis, are the paof any or all of these methods.
rents of six children.
ol
Frontier Cleaning Systems, cleaning tec hnician s as · Rice to
insJgntilcant problem. According to
'
Training for this year will be
•, ''
VANCE JOH~SON
was
recently lice nsed by DuPont determine the co mposition and
the .U.S. Treasucy, for example,
Jan.
11,
at
the
held
Wednesday
,
to use the Masteuseries carpet s ta in res ista nce of any Installed
•'
· tax-exampt bearer bonds are
district office at 7:30p.m. If you
•'
"carpet before a pplyi ng appropwidely used by drug traffickers and ." care clean ing system .
signed up lor thi s year and have other criminals In money launder,·"
Rice's new status authorizes r iate solutions.
'
not attended a training session In
Rice offers a co nsumer brohim to reapply DuPont products
lng schemes.
•'
the past, you need to co me.
hure
listi ng the benefits of the
c
to c u r r ent " stain -resista nt
As a result, Congress passed a
•
It
's
hard
to
believe
that
It
will
Mastetseries
sys tem treat ments
•
law, effective In 1983, requiring all carpe ts , which promotes the
be· our third year already of
repair of soil protection which and a consumer care guide
new Issues of tax-exempt bonds to
Multiflora Rose Control work.
may wear off wi th traffic, a nd to containing suggestions to help
be
sold
in
registered
form.
In
19!li,
: : GALLIPOLIS- Lori J . Ward , tatlon In Huntington, WV. She This is a reminder to those of you
boost stain protection In the consumers care for their carpet
:A.T.,C., Certified Athletic received her Bachelor of Arts In who were approved In 1986·1987 Congress also decided to require
even
t of any loss of carpet between professional cleanings
Investors !!&gt;'report their tax-exempt
;'trainer, has recently joined the Athletic Training 1rom Marshall and did your first season of
eifectlve
ness wllhout voiding Du · and stain-resistan t a pplications.
Interest Income on their tax
University and received the title treatment tha t year, you are now
~taff of Holzer Clinic In the
Pont
carpet
warranties. In addl· It also lis ts DuPc&gt;nt's 1·800
returns. The Income will stU! be
;Department of Physical of NATA Certified Athletic entering the second year of
tion,
the
multi-step,
In-home number, which consumers ma y
tax-exempt, of course, but report·
Trainer In June, 1986.
•Medicine.
maintenance. When you com·
system
a
I
so
provides
hi gh· use for more in formation about
lng it will help the ms keep track of
Ms. Ward's specialized train· plete your maintenance thi s year
. Ms. Ward joined Holzer Clinic
quality levels of stai n and soil the Masterseries system or for
ownership. The reporting
:1n October , 1988 after having · lng allows the Physical Medicine please contact the District office llond
protection to most untreated advice co ncerni ng carpet care In
requirement took In 1987. ,
;worked with Huntington Physi- Department of Holzer Clinic to to set up payment of your final
regular nylon and wool carpet s, general. For more loca l details,
(Mr. Evans is an Investment
.cal Therapy and Sports Rehab! II· further expand into the Sports 25% of cost share funds.
except Oriental carpets, a lready contact Hice at Frontier Clean- •
Broker lor The Ohio Compnay In
Medicine !leld by providing
If you just started last year ypu.
lng Systems in Gallipo lis.
'
their Galllpoll!i olfice.)
training seminars for area high need to be thinking about prepar ·
'•
school coaches, as well as addi- lng for your first year maln te·
tional game coverage for athletic nance treatment.
~p
contests.
•
This can get confusing so try to
She
Is
a
member
of
the
keep your records straight on
, DODGEVILLE , Wis.- Lands '
'
National Athletic Trainers' Asso- number of acres you are ap·
End, Inc. , announced tbat Its
.sales lor the Christmas si:&gt;opplng ciation, the Ohio and West proved for and when completion
Virginia Athletic Trainers' Asso- Is required.
season went up 30 percent.
ciations,
and the Gator11pe Sports
We have .h ad much success and
''As a result , the$1.50 per share
Stlence
Instlture.
your efforts are showing- but It
J!arnlngs estimate that seems to
Ms. Ward currently resides In Is still a battle!
be the consensus among flnan·
Huntington
with her husband,
Cial analysts for our fiscal year
Tim
Ward,
who
Is employed at
J!ndlng Jan. 31 couid very well ·
prove conservative, assuming Motorcar Supply in Huntington.
. For more ln!ormatlon regardthe current month perfonns up to
Ing
the Physical Medicine De·
-. reasonable expectations," said
partment,
please call Holzer
Gary C. Comer, chairman of the
RIO GRANDE - Thirty hours
Clinic
at
446-5244.
· board and chief execu tlve ·
of
continuing education credit in
officer.
..
real
estate, required by law In
; . Lands ' End, which sellsca:;ual
Ohio
lor brokers, will be offered
clothing, luggage and domestic
January
through the Office ol
In
!!ems primarily through catal·
Continuing
Education at Rio
·egs, said the three-month period
Grande
College/
Community
prior to Christmas can account
College.
tor as much as 40 percent of Its
The classes will be taught by
8)1nual sates volume.
.. ,
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'
staff from Bliss College, Columbus, Jan. 23-26 In Room 113 of
Rhodes Student Center.
•' ATHENS LlVI!STOCK SALES
· Topics to be covered by the
'· lloto-. December II, 1181
·
30-hour course Include Secon·
' .CAT'IUl PIUCES: Feeder Steers 31»
:dl 1111. 75.5G-IQ; !11)0.700 1111. 7U&amp;, Staugl&gt;
dary Mortgage Market, the New
~r s-s over 1,000 till. 74; Feed..- Hell·
Agency Disclosure Law, Today 's
'11'0 IIJI. 1~79. -700 lbo. ~73;
Slllulbter Heifll'l DYPr 1,000 lbl . 72.
C-reative Financing, Civil Rights
BuDs 300o500lbo. 70.:10-78, -700
and the Core Law .
~iJ!~ Slaugbter BuDs over 1,000 lbo.
Cost of the course is .30. The
; ,!U.UGifi'ER COWS: UtDilloo 49-56.25·
deadline
for. registration Is Jan .
....,aon A C\11101'1 tl.:l$.110.
'
11
.
.
• !IPrfonrCowsbytllelleiUI4811-640; Veil
dealing In new and used tires.- Store hours are
uv.. Jlii.H; Baby C.lveo by llle bood 71).
NEW BUSINESS - Poor Boys Tires, fonnerly
For more Information, contact
from
9:88 a, m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
' BallY caJvel by lilt pciiiiJI! 7J.IJ!i.
locat.e d In Point PleftllaDI, recently moved Its
the Office of Con tlnulng Educa0G PRICES: Barr""" a Gllll 221).240
Saturday.
Shown from !ell to right are store
location on U.S. S5 In Hender!IOD. Under the
tlio. 40-41; Butch I!' So•n 23.25-28; Butehl!'
, tlon .&lt;ll Rio Grande, 614-245-5353,
manager
Chris
Ne al , Henderson Mayor David
Jll!o,rs 26-JJ; Fe«&lt;tr Ptpll.v helld 17-46.
ownersMp of Lon Neal ol Bidwell, the store will be
extension 325, or (In Ohio)
ZLambo 57-6'1; Old Sheep 18-23: GoalS by
Tarbell
and
Lon
Neal .
LORI WARD
i-800-282· 7201 .
.the head 17-41.
'
,. '
....

Coll.ladl!11 •· Co ,.,.f!llllolf' 81

Eul:

·StOck prices post gain

•

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~vestock report

s;s..rer

POMERO t OHIO
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D-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

..

January 8, 1989

January 8, 1989

Pomaoy-MiddlepOrt-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

ihe conference, dismayed Iranian delegates.
Iranian Foreign Minister Ali
Akbar Velayatlasked the conference to condemn Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein's government
lor Its use of mustard gas and
other chemical weapons during
Its eight-year war with the
Tehran government.
·'If the International communIty wishes that governments
abide by values and principles, it
Is high time that tho!ie respecting
these commitments be appreciated and those violating them
be punished and condemned,"
Velayatl said.
'
But Hussein In a speech Friday
said the Bagdhad government
never would renounce "the
means to assure Its seeu rlty."
French President Francois
Mltterrand asked conference
delegates not to try to be ·'a court
ot .Justlce" by condemning lndl·
vidual states.
Mltterrand organized the
meeting to strengthen the 1925
Geneva protocol prohibiting
chemical warfare, and to speed
up a chemical weaP.9ns ban
under discussion at the '2o-natlon
disarmament conference In Geneva lor two decades.
In his opening speech, U.N.
Secretary-General Javier Perez
de Cuellar said "all nations,
large or small, have an equal
Interest In working toward the
elimination of chemical

weapons."

·

The United States, France and
the Soviet Union produce chemical weapons.
On Friday, Soviet Foreign
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
said the U.S. downing of two
Libyan jet fighters over the
Mediterranean Sea last Wednesday, and Washington's claims of
Libyan chemical weapons production, had "poisoned" .the
atmosphere at the conference.
Shultz and Shevardnadze are
scheduled to meet on Sunday. ·

,

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EXCHANGE PROGRAM- Nasty~ Rudneva,
13, and JuUa Lazareva, 15, exchange students
from Moscow, look over a glove of the moon
during a visit to NASA Lewis Research Cenwr

Rats

t~

I

)

t

Friday. They ate with a group of nineteen Moscow
students visiting Medina, Ohio, as part of an
exchange program with Medina City Schools. UPI

get space shuttle ride

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
About four days before blastoff,
(UP!) - Four rats with delibereach animal In both groups will
ately damaged bones will be
undergo an "osteotomy," an
launched aboard the shuttle
operation conducted with anesDiscovery next month In an
thesia In which a 0.8 mUilmeterexperiment that one day could
wlde hole will be drilled In a bone
help Mars-bound astronauts cope
In one of each rat's hind legs.
with fractures In the depths of
' 'We're talking about the fibula
...space.
In the rats, which Is the non
"Very simply, we' re trying to
weight-bearing bone," Fras ii!lld
find out what el!ect the weightln a recent telephone Interview
less envlronmen t has on the
from his home In Binghamhealing of bone," said Andrew
ton. "The animal can walk
Fras. a second·year medical · around two or three hours after
student at Brown University who
It's done so It's very noncame up with the Idea in 1982
traumatic for the animal."
while In high school In BinghamThe rats, however, wlll be
ton, N.·Y.
killed after the flight, a common
"We think this is a very
fate for research animals and
Important experiment because
one that leaves Fras with mixed
the astronauts, we've found, Jose · emotlpns, especially at a time
a tremendous amount of bone
when an !mal rights activists are
structure when they go up in
on the offensive.
space and we want to find out
"I myself have a problem
basically how this process would
sometimes working in the Jab
affect healing It a bone were to be
and I'm not an uncompassionate
broken."
person," he said. "I feel tor the
The student .experiment, sponanimals, I think, as much as the
sored by the University of
next person does but I do place
Southern California Orthopedic
human beings above animals.
·Hospital, will be conducted dur- Being one of that specleslguessl
Ing the flight of the Discovery.
have sort of a bla~ed viewpoint.
j . scheduled• to
blast off around
"And I do feel that this
Feb. 23 on the year's first shuttle
experiment In particular Is very
mission.
well defensible because we're
Four rats will be launched. getting a lot of very Important
aboard Discovery with a co'ntrol · basic data on this, which has a lot
grouJ; remaining on the ground. . of applications for human wei-

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succ~ssful

WASHINGTON I UP!)- Pres- left ring finger and little finger to
Ident Reagan underwent suc- bend involuntarily at the knuckcessful surgery Saturday to les, weakening his grasp.
repair a chronic ailment that
Hutton said in the statement
constricted his left ring finger that " the operation consisted of a
and his doctor said the operation partial palmer and digital faswas completed "with !lying ciectomy," procedures In which
colors.''
phy sicians first made an Incision
White House spokesman Mar- that extended through the finger
lin Fitzwater said the president, . across the palm and then re77, who lllr.s given a ' local moved the diseased !Issue.
anesthesia, 'was alert 'Bnd re"The disease extended · from
sponsive throughout the opera- the wrist to the tip of the ring
lion, discussing various aspects finger, " Hutton said.
of the procedure with his
The cause of the problem is
doctors."
unknown , &gt;but experts say It is
The operation, which was common among white males
performed at Walter Reed Army over age 40 and tends to run in
Medical Center,lasted 2 ~hours . families. II treated early enough,
The anesthesia was admln is- bent fingers can be straightened
tered at 7:30 a.m. EST and and corrected with surgery .
surgery began at 8:24a.m. EST.
Fitzwater said Hutton lndlFitzwater said Reagan was "in clated that no further surgery
good spirits" after the surgery should be necessary and it Is
and had been taken to a room In anticipated that the president
the hlgh-rlse modern building, "will have full use of his finger."
where he will stay overnight. He
"Today's procedure Is not
was scheduled to return to the expected to Interrupt the presiWhite House Sunday.
dent's normal work schedule,
In a statement Issued by the other than the obvious presence
White House, Fitzwater quoted of a dressing on the left hand. "
Dr. John Hutton, Reagan's physi- Fitzwater said In the statement .
cian, as saying "the president Is
Reagan will receive no special
comfortable and completed the medication other than routine
operation with flying colors. He post-operative antibiotics and
was alert and responsive analesglc as necessary, Hutton
throug'lout the process. His over- sa1d, adding the president's ann
all health Is excellent."
will be bandaged and in a sling
Since the anesthesia was local, for a few days. After that, Hutton
the~e was no need for -a temporsaid, only a hand bandage will be
ary transfer of power to VIce required.
President GeOrge Bush, who will
The president. who has only
be Inaugurated Jan. 20 as the two weeks left in office, will be
next chief executive.
wear a "dynamic" splint on his
First lady Nancy Reagan and finger, which allows some flexi her brother, Dr. Richard Davis, a bility. for several months after
Philadelphia neurologist, ar- he leaves Washington.
rived at the hospital shortly after
But It was not expected to
the operation was over. Mrs. Interfere with his heavy agenda
Reagan, answering shouted next week, which Includes sevquestions, said her husband was eral official appointments, a
"fine."
farewell from the military with
EarUer, Mrs. Reagan told her colorful fanfare and several
press secretary, Elaine Crispen, dinners, Including one In honor of
that she would be bringing the the Cabinet Tuesday night.
president "some hugs."
The physicians Involved In the
The president's ailment · Is operation In addition to Hutton
known as Dupuytren's contrac- were Dr. George Bogumill of
ture, a condition In which tough, Georgetown University and a
fibrous tissue under the skin on consultant at Walter Reed; Col.
the palm of a hand thickens and Alan Smith and Maj. Paul Per ilk
shrinks. The shrinkage Is not of the hand service at Walter
painful but has caused R~agan' s Reed.

&gt;

f.'

attended by foreign dignitaries from countries
Including lbe United States, Russia, Israel,
Egypt, Iran and Libya. (REUTER)

Reagan surgery

)

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CompUed by:
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Court Houle
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768

EVERYTHING IN PLACE - Workers put Into
place a boarding bearing the logo of the
International Conferrnce on Chemical Weapons
at UNESCO In Paris. The conference Is being

fare In the future. I think we can
well justify this experiment to
the minds of anyone who cares to

Lt. Col.· Charles Gandy performed the local anesthesia and ·
was assisted by Dr. Marc Hahn.
Medal consultation was provided by Lt. Col. Lawrence Mohr ·
of the White House Medical Unit
and members of the Department
of Medicine at Walter Reed.
Fitzwater said earlier that ·
Reagan wanted to have the
operation done at Walter Reed,
which has a renowned orthopedic
department , and added, "He
wan ted to do a before he left ,
office."

Stock
...
Continued from D-1
saying ·maybe we're going to
have that January effect alter
all, '" he said, alluding to the
market's tendancy to move
higher at the siart of the year.
Ralph i\campora, director of
technical research at Kidder,
Peabody &amp; Co .. satd the market
showed its widest breadth since
October. On Wednesday, the
span between adval,lclng and
declining Issues was 854, compared with 631 on Oct. 21 .
"The strength in the dollar
suggested to stock investors that
the Fed may not have to tighten
credit conditions further," said
Michael Metz. a market analyst
at Oppenheimer &amp; Co,
Metz said equities investors
were concerned that the Federal
Reserve would raise Interest
rates further to slow economic
growth.
Recent government reports,
including one on December retail
sales, suggested the economy
was growing at a robust rate.
With those reports In mind, Metz
said Investors were worried
December job data, which was
expected Friday, wquld back
those reports up.
Early Friday, the Labor Department sald the nation's civIlian unemployment rate in December fell 0.1 percentage point
to 5.3 percent of the work force
from 5.4 percent In November. In
addition, non-farm payrolls In
December rose 279,000 to a
seasonally adjusted 107.66 million alter climbing a revised
404,000 to 107.38 million In
November.

ask."

1

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JOIN THE FIGII'f - MIIIIIIIICbilaetlll Goveraor
Michael Dullakls boldll up a "No Drup'' •llllllt a
speecl1 to Muucbuaetts municipal leaders

asldn1 them to loin poUce In cracking down on
f

drul dealen who ~eli lo children at the Copley
Marriott In :&amp;eton Saturday, UPI

Ralph E . Carl and Sadie Carl, ·
right of way, to Tuppers Plains '
Chester Water District, Bedford.
Donna E . Davis, right of way,
to Tuppers Plains Chester Water
District, Bedford.
Eleanor Faulk, right of way, to
Tuppers Plains Ches ter Water
District, Bedford.

Dale Har rtson ana Marlene
Harrison , right o f wa y , to
Tuppers Plains Chester Water
District, Bedford.
Homer E . Hyse ll and Pauline
Hysell, right of way , to Tuppers
Plains Chester Water District,
Bedford.

'

Ministry , s aid in an Interview

with the Communist Party daily
newspaper Pravda that local
militia were unable to cope with
the violence.
He said large scale troop
reinforcements wert' sent to the
two republics In November and
December.
Pankin, who said he just
returned from an In spection of
the republics, said an unspecified
number ol the 43 known dead
were killed in da shes between
rioters ·and police · and army
units .
"Mass disorders rook place In
Azerbaijan and Armenia in the
last two months of 1988 In both
republics the disorders rook a toll
of 43 lives, including those who
put up .resrstance to militia and
troops,"hesald
'
" Hundreds of people received
various bodily Injuries . There
were 3,000 cases of pogroms and
arson of admlnistrallve buildings, trade establishments , dwellings of citizens." he said.
Pankln said soldiers sent to the
nval republics were slowly starl·
ing to restore order.
" 'f.he local law enforcement
agencies proved to be unable to
take firm actions, stop crimes
and expose them In good time, "
Pankin said.
"The available forces were
insufficient to catch criminals
red-handed, to Inspect places of
·crime and record unlawful actions by persons kindling interethnic strife," he said In explaining why troops were sent to the

BRIDGE

ASTRO-GRAPH

Official says ethn_ic
violence in south
is out of control

MOSCOW !UPI) - Ethnic
violence 4n the southern repub - ·
lies of Armenia and Azerbaijan
was out of control In' the last two
months of 1988 with 43 deaths and
3,000 violent crimes recorded, a
senior Soviet official acknowl edged Saturday.
• The official said hundreds
more people were Injured in the
violence m the trans-Caucasian
r,e pubiics that incre ased despite
last month's devastaling earth·
quake In Armenia .
The strife, which erupted last
February , is the worst ethnic
'' iolence in the Soviet Union's
71-year his10ry.
Despite the Dec. 7 €'arthquake,
ethnic clashes between mostly
Christian Armenians and Moslem Azerbaijanis increased, the
official satd. The state prosecu tor's office of Armenta termed
the situation " explosive ."
Vyacheslav Pankln, chief· of
the Criminal Investigation Department of the Soviet Interior

Ches ter Water Dis trict, Bedfo rd .
Dav id C. Pratt and Ba rba ra J .
Pratt . right of .w ay, to Tuppers
Pla ins Ches te r Wa te r Dis trict,
Bedford.

William C. Jones , r lghl ol way,
to Tuppers Plains Chester Water
· District. Bedfo[d.
Lloyd King and E va L. King,
right of way , to Tupper s Pl ains

JAMES
JACOBY

BERNICE

BEDE OSOL
\
NORTH

t-&gt;tO

• K 10 6

republics.
To make matters worse, he
Jan. 8, 1MI
said , some police m en were In volved in the rlot s and arson and In tne year ahead you may become In·
54 officers In the tw o republics valved In a number of new ventures
were dismissed lor .. active paJ'· Though each one might be small, lhelr
collective returns could be surprisingly
ticlpatlon in disorders".
Pankln said 23 Investigations substantial
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. Ill Think In
o! ethmc mqrde rs have begun terms of small profits today Instead of
s ince November and 10 a,rrests trying to mf!ke a big score. If your ,ex~ .
have been made. Another six pectatlons are unreasonable, you are
likely to be severely disappointed. Capsuspects are In hiding
Soviet officials have said more ricorn, treat yourself to a birthday g1tt.
for your Astra-Graph predictions
than 100,000 refugees have fled Send
for the year ahead by ma11lng S 1 to Asacross rhe borders of Armenia tra-Graph, c/ o th1s newspaper, P.O.
and Azerbaijan since trouble Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101 -3428
began ll months ago . Both Be sure to state your zodiac sigh
republics host sizeable popula· · AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You'll instinctively know better than anyone else
tlons of each other's nationals .
Although the two republics what Is best for you today tnstaad of

•to
• KJ 2

+AKSHZ
WEST

EAST

.7 532

• A94

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the current strife started over PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 Maintain
attempts by the Azcrbtajani· your own counsel today , even though
controlled enclave , of Nagorno- you might be tempted to tell a companKarabakh 10 break with Azerbia- ion about someth1ng secret you 're hop·
lng to pull off. The less who know, 'the
jan and join Armenia
better
About 80 percent of Nagorno- ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19) II you alKaral&gt;akh's •l77,000 populat ion 'is tend a soc1al gathenng today make it a
ethnic Armenian. The territory point to circulate and talk to as many
was given lo Azerbaijan in a 1923 people as possible Someone you 'd
treaty with the newl y founded teast expect may have constructive mformatlon tor you.
Soviet Unton.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) You will be
The protests m the ttny moun- the toptc of conversation of others totain territory E&gt;ruptrd in rioting dey and they're apt to be say1ng n1ce
niat triggered mass protests in things about you, particularly it they
have learned you have been boost1ng
Yerevan, the Armenian capital,
them lately.
tn support oj sec cession.
Those demons trations cr('ated QEMINI (Mar 21-June 201 Your words
carry a lot at we1ght today ond someone
an anti-Armenian backlash in you mtght th1nk 1sn't paymg attention to
Azerbaijan. In th e Indu strial city your suggestions wtll, In actuality, be
of Sumgait in late February, an
taking your counsel to heart
anti-Armenian pogram klii('d :12 , CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 22) A lroend
who Is reluctant to discuss somethmg
people In a single day _of rioting,
wlth others may talk to you at length to26 of them Armenian .
day Keep what is said to you to yourself
The ethnic violence, acts of and try not to betray thts person' s confl·
arson and the flood of refugees ···-aence 1f1 you
continued !o1 the rest or the yE&gt;ar,
LEO (July 23·AUg. 221 II you enter Into
any type of legal agreement today , be
k llling as many as 100 people and
sure you read au the tine print U any
injuring nearly 1.000 others .
source ot'contenHon pops up In the lu~
The state prosecutors office of
ture, 11 will be the details that tngger the
Armema In a s tatement Friday
jrrUattons •
•
termed the s ituation as "explo- VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 Try lo clear
sive' · and sa1d some government
lhe Clecks today tor the Important projects you'll be facmg •n the week ahead .
officials aggravated 11 by cncou
Get all the /lute JObs out of the way' now,
raging natl&lt;if!altst behavio•··
so that they won't Impede your
As a result "several" district
progress
prosecutors were fired lor falling
L11RA (Sap!. 23·0cl. 23) Your greatest
to take action agatnst Armenian

asset today Is your ability to' manage
others In taclful ways so that they will
not think you are lordmg it over them
You should be especially elfectlve with
the younger set

nattonalists operating in the
republiC, the statemem said.
Th e €'thole unres t in Armenia
and Azerbiajan poses one of the
most severe challenges to Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev and
his a1 te mpts to ease central
comrol and liberaliZe society .
Nationalist feelings have also
neared lever pitch in the three
Balttc republics and large scale
demonstrations have been reported in Soviet Georgia in

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Give family
matters top priority today. There Is
something that should be anended to
that you alone can brmg Ia a satisfactory conclusion

SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Today your thoughts should be suNiclently

organized to dlscl!ss a delicate matter
upon which you've been anxious to
communicate to a close friend . Take
advantage of your qpenlng.

recent months.

@ ltll, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

• 10 7
... J 10 9 3

+6

SOUTH
.QJ8

.KJ5

•Assn ·

•

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Vulnerable Neither
Dealer North
West

PaS&gt;i
Pass

letting others dtctate your course ot acUon, do your own thtnk1ng

have been enemies for cPnturlf&gt;s,

•Qs o

.A9762

Nor.1b

East

Soulb

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Pass

3NT

2.

Pass

I.

Pass

.Openmg lead •s

Any old way

won't do
By James Jacoby
lmagme for a moment that your
name as Careful Charlie and you are
declarer m three no-trump today A

heart has been led and you have captured East's queen with your k1ng. AI- .
though you do not know who holds the
ace of spades, you can see the risk in
giving up a tnck. to .that ace 11 East

holds tt, he Will then lead a near! .
through your guarded honor, and the
defense wtll enjoy all theu heart
tricks. Fortunately you have what ap- .
pear to be some good tricks to take In the club suit So how do you go about
takang them?
·
You wall encounter graef if you take :

the natural approach of playmg the •
club queen and then leading a -low club :
to dummy. When West shows out on
the second club. you will be out of luck.
If you lead a spade, East wtll grab the . .
ace and lead a heart 11 you play a dia- :
mond back to your ace and then up to •
dummy's K-J, fine&gt;Sing, that will :
work But you wall have no way to get .

back to your hand for the good little :
d1am 0nds. Do you see what should be
done?
.
F1rst play a club to dummy's ace, ·
then back to your queen. If the su1C:
sphts, go to the kmg of dtamonds and •
run the clubs lor mne tricks. II clubs :
misbehave, you are at least in the ·
right hand to take a shot at the dta- .
mend surt You, can lead a low dia- ·
mond toward dummy and put In the :
·jack Then you can cash the king of di- ·
amonds Everyone lollows, so you :
take the other hrgh club while you are ·
strll in dummy, and then run three :
more diamond tricks to make your •
contract.
J11mes Jacoby'11 boob "Jacoby on BrJdfe•IUid ·
"J•cobyon Card GMneS"(tmtten
hillatMr,
the l•k OlliW'ald JIJt'Oby) are now IJY.Il;a&amp;le •t :
boobtOI'eJ Both are publisb«J by Pb1rw Boob. ·

"'th

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992;.2156
Register - 675-1333
Public N otic&amp;

Public N otlce

Public Notice

Public N otlce

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF 1
TRANSPORTATION
NOTICE OF HEARING
CONTRACT SALES
LEGAL COPY •et-41

coon Cr- thence. con·
tlnuln1 In 1 northerly dirac·

Route No. 326 to ite june·
dan with Oalllll County

changM and elter1111te lacetiona and design• to the

of the Ohio revlMd Codo ond
purauant to· Soctlon 128,
Title 2 3 of the UnMed Stat"
Coda. the Dlroctor of Tho
Ohio D811or1ment of Tronaportotlbn will hold 1 public
· hoorlng ot 1;00 p.m .. Wtdn•doy,Jonuory 11. 19891n
tho luckftt Hl11o Co,..
Center, County Rood No.
I 78. In Rio Grtlncle, Ohio,
lor the pu,:P- of heO&lt;lng

"I thought, wow, what would
happen If people were ever to
break their bones and how would
this be impacted by the lack of
gravity?"
June Marshall, Fras's sponsor
at the Orthopedic Hospital in LosAngeles, said the surgery must
be pel-formed several days before launch because It wlll take
that long for the healing process
to begin In ernest following the
formation of ,a callus In the hole.
''When the bone begins to heal,
one of the first things tbat
har· ns after the preliminary
wot:.•d healing Is the formation of
a callus .. . dense connective
tissue," said June Marshall,
Fras' s sponsor at the University
of Sou thl!rn California Orthopedic Hospital.
"After callus formation there
Is a cell that's related to bone
formation called the osteoblast.

'

Argobrlte, and Bill Argobrtte,
right of way, to Tuppers Plains
' Chester Water District, Orange .
Donald R. Bell and Lois Bell,
right of way , to Tuppers Plains
Chester Water DistriCt, Letart.
James Burke and D. Sue
James R. Burem and Linda
Burke, rlghtofway , to Columbus Burem, right of way, to Tuppers
Southern Power Co., Columbia.
Plains Chester· Water District,
Ronald A. Whittington and
Letart.
Emma Whittington, right of way,
Don Hill and Mary Hlll, right of
to Columbus Southern Power way, to Tuppers Plains Chester
Co., Columbia.
Water District, Letart.
Brian Windon and Wendolyn F .
Henry Hill and Kay Hill, right
Windon , right of way, to Columof way, to Tuppers Plains Ghesbus Southern Power Co .,
ter Water District. Letart.
Chester.
Janice Glenn, Virgil Hill, Paul
Virgil Windon and Kathryn
Hill and Charles Hill, right of
Windon, right of way, to Columway, to Tuppers Plains Chester
bus Southern Power Co .,
Water District, Letart.
Chester.
Virgil Hill and Kathryn Hill, ·
Marvin L. Keebaugh and Marright of way, to Tuppers Plains
gorle J . Keebaugh, parcel, to
Chester Water DistriCt, Letart.
Everett J. Calaway, Orange.
Letart Community Assoc.,
Thelma E. Adams, 2.0 A, to
right of way, to Tuppers Plains
Harvey Bartimus and Carole
Chester Water District, Letart.
Bartlmus, Olive.
Letart Township. by Trustees,
Kitchen and Son Construction
right of way, to Tuppers Plains
Co. Inc., lots 9 and 10, Charles L.
Chester Water District, Letart.
Kitchen and Helen Lynn Kitchen,
Robert Morris and Betty MorMiddleport Village.
ris, right or way, to Tuppers
Mildred A. Spencer, ~ A, to
Plains Chester Water District,
Daron Glen Jackson and William
Letart.
Lee Jackson, Letart.
Arthur Martin and · Nancy
Darrln Shane Sargent, Cha·
Martin, right of way, to Tuppers
rleen Sargent, H.B. Miller and
Plains Chester Water District,
Mona Miller, Right of way, to
Letart.
Buckeye Rural Electrjc Corp ..
Wallace Morris and Connie
Inc., Bedford.
Morris, right of way, to Tuppers
Radio Mid-Porn, Inc., .77 A, to
Plains Chester Water District,
E.T. Broadcasting, Inc.,
Letart.
,
Sallsbury.
Rev a Norris, right of way. to .
Catherine Ann Vlnueza Bren- Tuppers Plains Chester Water
nan, etal, Joseph Brennan;
District, Letart.
Louise Marie Vlnueza, parcels,
James R. O'Brien, right of
'to Wheeler Clevenger Oil Co., way, to Tuppers Plains Chester
Inc., Pomeroy Village.
Water District, Letart.
Larry O'Brien and Phyllis
William E. Guinther and Bev·
erly H. Guinther, Lots 4 and 5, to O'Brien, right of way, to Tuppers
Dwight Emerson Logan and
Plains Chester Water District,
Kathryn I. Logan, Sutton.
Letart.
Stephen 0. Jenkins and Kelll J.
Mary R. Porter and Frank W.
Jenkins, 13.23 A, to Cllfford D.
Porter, Jr., right of way , to
Hlll and Pauline Hill, Letart.
Tuppers Plains Chester Water
Ernestine Schade, Robert H.
District, Letart.
Schade, George H. Parsons, and
Randall Roberts and Judy
Alvena Parsons, . 76 A, to Lee
Roberts, right of way, to Tuppers
Williams, Bronwyn Williams,
Plains Chester Water District,
Middleport VIllage.
Letart.
Edith L. Forrest, dec'd, cert of
Roger Roush and Christie
trans., to Linda Stobart and
Roush, right of way, to Tuppers
W}lllam Sayre Forrest,
Plains Chester Water District,
Sallsbury.
Letart.
Dorothy Calaway, easement,
Walter Herbert Roush · and
to Everett Calaway, Orange.
Mary Roush, right of way, to
Gary Blake and Linda L.
Tuppers Plains Chester Water
Blake, 5 A, to Bernard F. Hobo,
Dis trlct, Letart.
·
Ollve.
Guy Shuler and Mary Shuler,
baisy Virginia Van Meter,
right of way, to Tuppers Plains
de.c'd, cert.,. to Ruby Congo,
Chester Water District, Letart.
Wilma Tillis, Dale Lawson, Glen
Donald E. Smith and · Vicki J.
Lawson, Delbert Lawson, Robert
Smith, right of way, to Tuppers
Lawson, Albert Lawson, and
Plains Chester Water District,
Phy Ills Whaley, Lebanon.
Letart.
Southern Local School Dlst.,
Ruby Congo, Charles Congo,
Dale Lawson, Glen Lawson,
right of way, to Tuppers Plains
Eleanor R. Lawson, Wilma TII- Chester Water District, Letart.
Geraldine Webb, right of way ,
II~, John Tillis, Delbert Lawson,
to Tuppers Plains Chester Water
Eleanor D. Lawson, Phyllls
Whaley, Charles V. Whaley,
District, Letart. ·
Robert Lawson, Lottie Lawson,
Beverly aka Bever lee Wickline
Albert E. Lawson and Sue
an&lt;;! Wllllam R. Wickllne, right of
way, to Tuppers Plains Chester
Lawson, 5 A, to Thomas Berry
Water
District, Letart.
and Mary L. Berry, Lebanon.
Ellen
Bussey and Ellen Eblln,
Richard Myers, Ruth Myers,
Bruce D. Myers, and Dorothy L.
right of way, to Tuppers Plains
Chester Water District, Orange.
Myers. right of way, to Tuppers
Ruby V. Burnside, right of
Plains Chester Water District,
way, to Tuppers Plains Chester
o,ange.
Water District, Bedford.
. Lloyd R. Myers, Mary Pugh

In accordence whh '1ht
provloiont of Choptet 1111

Fras, who designed another
student experiment that flew
aboard Discovery In April 1985,
said he got the Idea for the bone
study after watching a television
program that dlkussed bone loss
In weightlessness.

Page- 0 -3

Meigs County property transfe~s·_;,.._-.~--_;_,_-----

U.S. doesn't rule· out talk

'
PARIS (UP! ) - Secretary of to close down a chemical weaState George Shultz, stepping up pons plant Washington says
the U.S. campaign against Ll· Ll bya Is developing at Ra bta, 35
bya, urged the world community miles southwest or Tripoli.
Saturday · to prevent radical
In Tripoli, Gadhafi proposed
governments from supplying direct talks Saturday with the
chemical weapons to terroris t United States, the Libyan news
groups.
agency JANA said. The Libyan
"The threat is a real one," s trongn'Jan said he hoped talks
Shultz told representatives of14l migh t b e · possible after
natlons gathered at UNESCO President-elect GeOrge Bush
headquarters In Paris for the takes over Jan. 20.
opening of an International conBut Gadhafi warned that 11 the
ference on chemica) weapons. United States was not prepared
"Some governments which have . to conduct peaceful negotiations
been kndwn to sponsor terrorism a nd give up what he called "state
now have sizable chemical wea- terrorism ," there would be no
pons capabilities ."
choice but. continued confrontaShultz did not mention Libya or tion, eve n If it lasts for· 'a million
any other nation by name. But years."
diplomatic sources said his reA senior U.S. ·official In Paris
marks clearly were aimed at sa id Shultz recently had consiLibyan leader Col. Moammar dered the possibility of direct
Gadhafl's government, which talks with Gadhatl but that no
bas' a long record of supporting decision had been made.
Middle Eastern and other guer"There's nothing new . Jt has
rilla organizations.
l;leen talked_about by the secre''Terrorist groups could be tary. It's been talked about by the
tempted to shift, without warn- department (n the lastfewdays,"
Ing, to use of ChE;,! llical weapons the official told reporters.
for dramatic political and media
"We do have (Indirect) means
attention," he said.
of communication. We have used
"A nightmare for all, of course, them in the last few days. The
would be the combination of problem Is not communication. It
ballistic missiles, chemical war- Is Libyan policies. "
heads and biological weapons In
"I'm not ruling anything in or
the hands of governments with out, " said the official, who asked
histories of the conduct of terror- not to be Identified further.
Ist violence."
Also Saturday, Shultz met with
Shultz also rejected any lin- West German Foreign Minister
kage between chemical and · Hans Dietrich Genscher. They
nuclear disarmament during the decided that experts from both
five-day conference. Some Arab · countries would meet In ' Waand other developing nations are shington next week to assess
pressing lor rich states to cut reports West German companies
their nuclear arsenals as a were Involved in · the Rabta
condition lor poor countries to factory.
swear off chemical weapons.
West Germany has criticized
··International efforts in this Washington for charging that
area should not be made conting- West German companies helped
ent on other difficult arms Libya bulld a chemical weapons
control Issues, such as nuclear plant.
proliferation," Shultz said. Diplomats said Shultz's fatiure
Since he arrived Thursday. to publicly criticize Iraq, whose
Shultz has lobbied delegates to use of chemical weapons on
join In U.S. pressure on Gadhafl ethnic Kurds sparked the Idea of

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

tlon olong 1 cu...., to thelalt
ond 1 ton(llllt to 1 point In
the c.,ter11nt of ••lttlng
Sllto Route No. 321 ond

Rood No. 111 tWoodo Mill)

highway oyltom wUI bo dlo-

and there terminate. Stid

played. Tentative achedulet

Abondonman1 to lncludo oN

tor right·ol-woy ocquloklon

that portion of the IJlilllng

and con1tructlon, will be

balng0.20oltmHt,moreor

route not nec••ry for tH

dlacu••d.

constructkJn

IMt. It m . .ured 1long ,

ance of the propoMd corrH·
paneling
relocetlon
or
n..ded for any other Stete
highway.

A copy of the environmentJI document In th• form of a
CategOfical EKclu•ion, at
w ..l •
map1, drawtnge.

th•• twmlnate. Said point

Stlto Route No. 3211 In t
northetty dltoctlon from Itt
junction with Gtllle County
Rood No. 11 jWoodl MIIQ.
Sold doocrlbed Relocotlon
h0¥1ngo totlllongth of0.30
ol a mh. more or .....
PROPOSED, THE ABANDONMENT OF A PORTION
OF EXISTING
STATE
ROUTE NO. 321. SITU·
11•1ement1 on the propoMd ATED IN HUNTINGTON
Rolocotlon. Ab., ...nment TOWNIHP. QAIIIA COUNand Vocl11on of portion• of TY. OIIO.IAMETOREVERT
Stole Route No. 3211, - - TO THE GALLIA COUNTY
tion 12.01 looatld In Golllo IIIQHWAV IYSTEM . AT
SUCH TilliE THAT THE CORCounty.
PROPOSED. THE RELOCA- RESPONDING RRDCATED
TION OF A PORTION OF PORTION OF STATE ROUTE
STATE ROUTE NO •. 321. NO. JZI . IS OI'ENED TO
SITUATED IN HUNTING- TRAFFIC AND AFTER THE
TON TOWNSHIP, GALL1A FINAL ABANDONMENT EN·
TRY HAl .EN ENTERED
COUNTY. OHIO.
And Hlng more fully do- ON THE JOURNAL OF THE
DIRECJ'OR OF TRANSPORterlbldMfettowo:
·
loglnnlng' II I point In tho TATION.
cantlrllne of ••toting &amp;toto
-· fully . .
Roull No. 3211, llld point ..And
.. lal1-o:
Beginning II I point In tho
beln1 0.2 of 0 mlo. more or
,... • n1e81uNd81on1••· •toting -tlrllne of ullt·
lotln:::• Route No. 321 Inti • - Routo No. 3211,
IOU
terfY from ftt junc- told point Mlng 0.10 of 1
tion whh Ollila County mlo. mare or lou, • - R- No. 11 fWoodo MltQ; ourld olong •feting Stole
th.,ce. no&lt;lh olon1 ulltlng Routo No. 3211 In 1 oouth·
11111 Routo No. 321 on • -llriV direction from No
llngontond curve' to the left lunatlorl with GoHio County
lor 1 dhttonoo of 0.17 of 1 llold No. 111 JWood MH11:
mle. more or ••· cro11ln1 thtr!ce. In 1 northonterty ell·
DOIM Cr... tnd Little Roc· rect\on along e.~eil~ing SUite

or malnten-

environmental lnform1tion

PROPOSED, JHE VACATION OF A PORTION OF
EXIBTINII STATE ROUTE

end othet partlnant dolo do·
vtlopod by the Ohio Dapartment ol Tronoportttlon, and

NO. 321,

any wrinen comments re·

SITUATED IN

HUNTINGTON TOWNSHP, celvad 01 t rMuk of coordl·
QALLIA COUNTY, OHIO, notion wkh ttlte, loderot
SAME TO REVERT TO THE ond loco! olllclota tgancloo.
OWNERS OF THE UNDER· ond public odvloary groupo
l VINO FEE AND THE A8UT- wll1 bo ovol1obla for viewing
TINO PROPERTY OWNERS It the Ohio Deportment of
AT8UCHTIMETHATTHEDt- Tranoportotlon Dlllrlcrt 01RECfOR OF TRANIPORTA- fico. In Morl111t. Ohio. ColiON HAl COMPUEO WITH plas of tho anvlronmantal
THE PROVII10N8 OF SEC- document moy olao. bo
TION 111111.07 Of THE RE· viewed tt d•lgnotod locoVISED CODE OF 0110.
tiona. 1 1111 of whlcl! moy bo
An~ being mora fully doobtllnod from tho tbovo
tcrlbod It followo:
mentioned ODOT Dlatrlcrt
Beginning 11 the Junction Office.
ofStlto Roull No. 3211 tnd
Anyone wlohlng to oubrnh
Oollo County Rood No. 111 1 wrlttan ototemont or ••·
(W- Mill); thonce, In 1 hlblt concerning tht Cotnorthorlr direction elong ... ogortcol hctoulon or othr
toting lllte routo No. 3211 ltomo ol tho propo111 moy do
for I ••IInce of 0.10 of I 10 br pr•..tlng II 11 the
mle. RtON or t.a. 111\d tfwtl he•lilg or m ..llna to th•
lonnlnote. Sold Vocl11on to Ohio Doportmont of Trenlnc:ludo ol tbo • - do- aportotlon Dlotrtcrt Deputy
ocrlbocl portlorlo of -tlng · ·Diroctor, Bo• 818, Muoldn·
f1181o Route No. 321 not gum Drhll. In Ml&lt;lettl,
Mtdod for the OOIIIIM:tlon Ohio. 4117110. Tho flnll dolo
Of'

JnliftiMMce of the cor·

rNporMing propotod rtloc111orl or nlldld for ony
othet public highway.
'
At tlllt heO&lt;Ing, mopo
ohOwlng the
propoted

i

tor

aubmlnion of , .., • .

monll will ba Jtnuorv 23,
1989.
Bornord B. Hurot, P E.
Olroctor ol Tltnlportltlon
DEC . 1t; JAN.1. 8

Anno unee 111 en ts
3 Announcements

4

Giveaway

9

Compl•• hal.ltehold:l of furni-ture II tnt iquea. Alao wood •
co .. helt••· Swain' a F..niture
&amp; Auction, Third 8a OUve.

F,. puppiH, 5 weeki old. three
fourttw Au.trllitn Shepherd.

304-6711-34148.
Anyone toenlng the .ccldlnt on
E1tt•n Aw. In frorlt of Au on
U -10..88. Ple•e t:all Rtt1,

Dog~ :

Mh1ed, St S.rn•d &amp;
Norw.igan Etkhoundt, tnd St.

614-441-3119

Bern•d-AI•U'I Melmute, to

Junk Ctra

8 t+-441-4780.

... - ... 304-882-2519

We wll haul COli for em•stn'V
HEAP, Melgi CountY Dept of

8

Human StrYicet, and HEAP
vouchers. We can gNe you
prompt d..h.owl•. E .:elalor S11t
Worka. Inc. Pom•ov. Ohio.

No Hunttng or Tr•plluing on

P'_..., locltod Cl1ndtnln
Oiltrld, Old c.lhoun Prop«tv
aff Crob

Crotl&lt; Rood. Signed·

4

Giveaway

without

Furnlturaand •pll.nce1 bv the
piece or entire household. Fair

Engtlth Point• puppiel, 304-

575·8UO.

prl011 baing paid Call814-44t-

31118.

Lotrt and Found

Will buy or apprtlae anything!
AntMtuH, furniture. eppllenc.s.

LOST Whl
H
0
:
te ound
og
Owner'• n.,...e on coil•. VfltY
oily. If o Call 814-

441-8006

PI-•

my

J1oquellne Oerl•e T.. n • . VlcJ..
laton. will be prOHGUted .

or

t.oat 4ye• oldtem•eBeaglaon

N . M1ln, Rutlll'ld. Sundly. J111.

e.t:•t\4. Milot, complele home

1

furnllhlngt Marlin W.dern.,er.
.. 24 • 51152.
81
,:__--~-------,
wanted To Buv 250· 500 gal

p&lt;op.,, , .... Coli

3H2.

814-441-

1. W.•lng red coli•. WIIWM td

Ann Ia. &amp;1+ 742·28411.

U1ed tJrniture by the pl«:e or

1189 Soutt.n High School

entire houtehold lllo ..111no.

a- ring lit RadneLMindrM'I'tll. 814-7•2-2468
..b Ann written lntlde. call

814-143-8227.

3 Austrl.n Cotll• to give MIV

CoM 814·44&amp;-348• before 8
PM. 441-4019 aft or II PM.

B

-t

814-441-8087.

~ Aiok

3 year aldmllelchn.,llr· AKC
Rtglotwod. Dooln't lko childron. 32300 St. Rt. 143. Pam•
roy, Ohio.

lmll, 3 month old famele
puppy. Mmod brood. Con 81+

192-22110 altori:OO.

Pupplea to give .WfiV. Mott-.
'-ther part Colli&amp; 304-4M-

1&amp;88.

rlllplny II II~ ill
St~f Vll:t~ ~.

Pe••on Auction•, II·

, mel• tntlted breed. 1 ftmal•
Ohio end
Vlrglnll
Chllw..ohut,•1fomtlohou,.,ollto conaod
Ertatl. ..,..._ f•rn. llquklaglv-oy. Coli 814-28&amp;-15Bol
- ..... :104-773-5718.

Full time hourly poeh:6on fiVIII ..
ble In D"' Clean•• in IE Oh10
E•perience hllp-.1 but training
wlll be provided. S..d rftLnne
to P.O . BoA 328, Gllllpolia,
Ohio 46631

HELP WANTED

OEVELOPMENT COORDINATOR B S . preferred Siqnlttcant 8l(pf:lrienoe in ereas of
personal and oorporate soli at•·
tiOF\ ma)Or gifts end drec1 mall
ta requ•ed Demontlfated sue.
ens and leed•ship m the
Khlwemet'lt of fund · r1111ng
golft Donor cultHihon .,..ortt
wh:h Bo•d 6nd voluntelft.·
••ten1rve record keeping and
rMNrch " J«&lt;uired. FtChtme
posttion blled 1n A them, OhkJ.
require• evening / wu~end
tche&lt;illa~and trwel throughbut
eight southa•t em Oh10 oou ntl• Low 20's Slfldr..umeand
letter of inter1111t to Kay Atklnt,
E•cutit.la Director, Pl~nned Par
ern hood of SoutheattOhtO, 396
Richland A wnua, Alharu, Ohio

'
·
'
,

'

46701

Public Sale
lit Auction

3 vr old temele Huaky. C.ll

Help Wpnted

388-9303

white German Shepherd and 8

6

with

11

moton. Call Larry Ltvetv- 614-

814-992·3891 .

Flons Chlmnt¥ Sweep Special
OhN Jonuor; 304-773-1348.

Wanted To Buy

11

Help Wanted

FEDERAL . STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS
NOW HIRING Your ar ..
t13.1550 to 159, 480 IMME·
OIATE Opanlngt. CALL 1-31&amp;73 3- 808~ E" F 2768.
Oat JMid tor r81dlng bookll
a tOO per title. Wrile: PAS E·

9

Wanted To Buy

-TOP CAIH plld for '83 modtl

n.,w

c••·

ltld
liNd
Smtth
luldi-Pontlec, 1 I 1 1 Etft.-n

Awo .. Got11pollo. eon 814-44112282.

W1nt.d to luv-Good uaed Pool

Tobl~.

Coli 814·4411-175&amp;.

PwHimtMLTfor ... ltv equipped
Phvslalan't Offtct ~borlltor,,
Appl¥ ., poroon to Tho Medlctl
Pr••· 201 Jadlton Pike b.
t - 8:30-,:30.

EARN MONEY Ao. .ng Boaul
t30,DOQ/yr. Income potentt•.

o.ttllo. ttl 80&amp;-1117-8000 E" '
Y-4882.
• '

•

33A . 161 S. Llnoolwow. N
.Aurora, IL 80642.

AVON le•n while you ••nl ,
F,.. training. lnturance ~~o~•H• · •
ble. Fhllible houra. ,.IWII'd and ~­
recognit lon tor Ml• succ••
Want to know morel C"ll A von ~
O.ltrkt Moneger .t 814-698- .

7111

\

�•

.

;,~"
11

Help Wanted

15

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrigh.t

Schools
Instruction

2 btG'ooma. furnhlhed. In A•

3 bedroom traltf'. you pay

tlm.,-permanent l.,prCil. 20
houn per week; noweekendl' ot

Will do betJrlll:t-.g in my home
any time d(ff Of nlgtt ... d
week~dl. lN• right nec.t to Rio
Gr., de v.te tc:hooL Cell 614-

HoliUi ~ra) . Medic.&amp; Labor•
tory Technologist for the Ott~
p41thic Medical Cent•. JOB
OUTIE$: Pwform t•t proe.
dur• in Hem.!tologv, Chemistry, Serologv, COasPJI•Ion. Urin aty til, I nnu nohematologv:
answer qUestions from 11urMt.

Phvsiciant, pathologilts. and
1!1\' o1her aourcea nece111ry.
Maklrafn BJCcellent work q,.ltty

For 14x70 troY•. 3 eddltkuWII roo,_ 8 mllet out Crib

44

Lanp

Lito. 814-742-2859.

Sof• lftd Chlin priced from
e395 to •ns. T•bl• •eo •nd

New completety furnished
apartment &amp; mobile home In
city. Aduk1 ont,. P•rking. Cal

Now~lng

pi111o I11Non1 in my
home. Call &amp;hwon at 814-26&amp;-

814-&lt;Wo-033Q.

8278.

in theclinlcolloborlliOIV·OUALI-

1

A CATIONS: Experienci In aH

upects ot Medical Teehnololfl
MT (ASCP) R•piltry 01 eligible.

houri\' rltt t9.88.
Deadline for making JPpliCIItlion
11 Fridll'(. Jenuorv 13,1989.
Make applieation to EmployMent ManMJ•. ' untvntty Pertonnel Service~~. Ohio Unlvertfty, 44 Unlv••itv T.,rece.
McKee House. Athens, Ohio

Financial

Shirting

44

;21

Unfurr.ithed 12x 60 Forett Parle.
paneled walls .,d ceilinQI. two
bedrooms. total 'electric:.

Business
Opportunity

t7. 000. Coli 814-440.3010.

45701 .

Ohio University:
Athens. Ohio
An Affirmative Action/
Equal Opportu_nity Employer
Mlnorttla~(Women are .-.cour~ed to apptv .

,

NIJRSES

If h.,ing 18tilfectlon in ctrlng
for the !ltd.-tv one of your go all
'" life Scenic HHit Nursing

c..,... Ia looldng for juat mit
ty~ of indlvld.lal. We offtr
ocmpettt.-e\!Wigl!lll and•cellent
ben ,tits. Apply at Scenic Hlllt

Nurslnp Cent•.

Rd .. Gallipolis. ·

~38

Buckrldge

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISti'
lNG CO • ...,.mmendo tho! you

do busln., wtlh people you
know. and NOT to tlnd mone,'
ttwou"' the m.U untl yoo hwe
itwMtlgllted tM off.-ing.

1000 SUNBEDS
TONING TABLES
Suniii·WOLFF
SlenderOue~t

T~ning

PauNe Exerdl-

1292.

Help

fleal Estale

)

Wornod

Need 8 good people

31

No experience nece~ury . Mult .
be .,ail able for immediate employment. Hourt: 1 to 10 PM .
81200 I mo. Cllll·forlntendew,

614-"46-7461 .

Babttslttar in Rio G rende sd\Ool

dlstriCI. Coli 814-245-9428 eltet' 6 PM .

Homes for Sale

Vfll'y attract:Ne brldt 4beci-oom.

2 boll\ fomlv room wkh firep i - formal dlnlna I•.. living

room. 30 ft. oustom oak kll:chen
clbinara. oak wooct.Nork. fin'-h
baunWtt, 2 car g•age. hwM
IIndt~_, lot, 4 ml• from
Holl8f' Hotpbf off At. 35IUt•brook Subdivlllon. caM

814-446-4189.
Get paid 'for reading books!

$100. pw IMio. WrHe: PASE·
31A, 181 S. Llnoolnwoy, N.
Aurora. IL 60642.

GovemmentJot.lt18.037. to
869.406. Immediate Hiring!
Your •~•·

Call

(Refu nd.bf.)

1·518-458-3811 E111. F1822

tor Fedtfal tilt 24 Hour~.
AVON- All

'I

area~.

Cell Marilyn

1984Silyline 14x70, 3 8R .. 1'h
blthl. EJCCal , cond. On rent.t

lot. lnclud• vinyl skirting.
porch•. b.16 wood storage

campti'. Own• moving &amp; mud
tell. Cab Fr.,ch Ctty Brokwage.

814-"40.9340. "

Tara Townhou1e .,.-trl*tt1· 2

BRo., 1~ bolha, CA .. dioOep. tr 1101. """Ired. $32&amp; por hw•ehw, dilpoul, ptivet:e en·
mo. Coli e14-4441-0278 ofler 8 cloaed
p•lo. poo~ pl""ground.
PM. w~endlanytlme.

~.,., a. trHh Included.
Starting 8t t 289 pw mo. C•H

WM•.

21 Galli a St 8300 a mo. 8200

814-387-7850.

depooM. Col 814-1146-2205.

Modern 1 BR, downtOW'n, compi•• k~chen. olr. cwpet Oopostt. no pMa. Call 814-446-

Hom• for Rent/Le•., l.. d
Socii Rd ..
Rodi'OV VHI1111e II, EY1111 Hgta.
Ref•enc. and depoatts r•
quiied. Bt.ckb.Jrn Reattv. 81 ~

com-. Crouoe

0139 eynngt, aft• 5.

Pom8rov-2 BA. remodeled
ap.-tment off Spring Aw. Sec.
dop. lk rot. Cell oft• 8 PM.

445-0008.

6 roonw &amp; bath.. b•ement

814-992-6888.

child. Ref. tr dep. Call
814-1140.1183.
.

Unfurnished 2 BR g•eu•IPa1·
m.-rt.lntown. C.rp81ed. Aduh:s

c•pet &amp; appliii'ICM. No pM&amp;
One

1980fllrmont BayviM"14l'70,

4 BR., full bMement &amp;

g•~e.

fullv c.pOied (•ome n-1. Clly
tehoolt. Utllit•• low. Woodburn.-. Natural g• furnace.

onlv. No palo. Coli 814-448HouM for rent. 4 or 8 bidroom. 4561.
.
824 JocktOI'I Sl.. VIm on. Ohio.
CIIIIII14-3Q0.9380.
SHADY LAWN APT$- 729
Seo:md Ave. Furnilhed efftci.-..
CA.H for your used mobile r Ch •• 3 •-~
homo. Now ..,ylng 1972-1982 n •••• ~wOOft\ 2 balhe, ci• .t1rtlng It t17&amp; 1 mo.
modola. Got our r;lco FIR$11 oil alee Oep. r.,uired. Coli ln&lt;*rclng - · .. garbage.
Coll800-820.076 al. 315. · 814-387-7Q87 or 1-703-388- Single lllll~o only. C.:n 8141109.
446-4807 or 446-2602.
Repos ...sed 14«.70. Nl~ 2 3 beci-oom ranch. 2 bathl,
bectoom. 2 bah. w/firepfeca. ollicl.,. heol pump. ~ .,.. 3 BH .·8 Court St Khchen w~h
1984 Patriot Independence. g.. eg., tSOO • mo. 3 bectoom """" .. refrlg. .260 ..... dep...
t&amp;OOdown. 'CIIkeov• kJ.,, Cel ranch within walking dlltance or rrtl. No pOlo. Cell 614-"454926.
'
800-820.07S2. .... 315.
downtown. 1380 1 mo. PrNMe
3 bl~oom 2 ttory bride on 1
Uud Mobile Hom•. We Ha· acr• Crown City. *311• mo. Newlv remodeled 1 BR. opt.
..,.·em. We Flnance'eml Pay· Remodeled 2BII. ronch. cloaolo Appl. lurnlshed.ldoollocolion-1
mtntt to ftt y~r budgtt. ELSEA Vlncon gradnc:hooL 82715amo. blade. 1rom downtown. C.ll
HOME CENTERS, C.U lodll'(, Rtf•anc. and 1eaurlty deposit 814-ol40.4e3Q.
800-B20.0752. .... 316.
required on all pr~'-· WI•&amp;:
Furnllhed .,r., 1 BR. 807
man Rel4 Eitate, 814-4-'8·
Second. Gallipolis.. 8226. Utill1982. 14x70 Wellington. 2 3844.
d• paid. Call 446-4418 after 7
be*oom. 2 full bat ... centr•
&amp;ir, total eloclrlco, porch .,.d 3 BA. house. Depo11t ta:~ulred. PM.
M'nlnSJ. 2 out taJitdlng~. 1'.12 10 Old Fort Troll. Coli 614-440.
acr• In Rutlll'ld vll.ve. C1H 2683. 9 IO 5 dollv.
Nice 1·2 bedroom BJUI'tments.

Priced lo ooll. Col 614-440.
0278 oft• 6 PM, woekonda
enytlma.

8

8

·:~tr,~8~ E~ :~~~~

.....

tt~tth

acre land. close to Royal

4 cw 6 beltoom. 822 Jack1on Oek Rooort. Coli 814-992St, Vlnlon. Ohio. Coll81 4-388- 8314.
9380.
1988 VIC1orl101 2 bedroom oil
Now"' ..,.,doled 2 &amp;lory hou ae •ectric mobla hom&amp; Gardin
In Pl. Plo• Priced lo aoll. Cell tub. bll'( win-. loedod. Priced
304-875-8318.
to sell. E-*lent concltion. Call
304-'882-34S1 oft« 6:30p.m.

Fur nit heel !pt. 1 DR. 701
Fourth. 1210. lftilitiee ~ld. Catl

e

auociale Dr. MlchiMf Certille.

FMitlble hours. EXJ*Ience · •
must. Send retume to P.O. Box
0029. Point Plea~ent. W. Va .

COOK

•

3 bocl-oomo. 2 bolhe. lui
flnlthed bonment, .-lurneco
and c•nrll air. o•-ae. fenced
yard. 2414 Mt. V.-non Aw. Pt.
At, priced on ~lpectfof\ 30 4-

J'

675-1774.

Rentals

Vf/lfV nice apt. fn dty. 2

Homes for Rent

Nlcefv futniihed •mal hou11.
Adulta only. Ref. requir.t. No

polo. Coii814-448-033Q.

PleMent Valla¥ Hotpilal iltelk-

ing e

with cooking

person

axP1fiance. Apply penonnel of·
fie•

AA-EOE

Director ot Physical Th•apy
Service. 228 bed ea,~te care
hospital- long term c•e
f&amp;dllty. EJC selarv end
benefflt. putatendlng profwtional opponuntliel. Contact
Tom Gooch. Oicector of
Personnel. Ple11ent VtlliWf
Hospital, Point

Pfe•n W.

Va. 25560. 304-875-4340.
AA-EO E.
12

Situations
Wanted

BAIRD~S

Jii
lOW
•

TOWING
;i
and BODY SHOP

• 1

,i ·

,,

.-IDBDt,

Accidents .or lteaw-.t 'li"-:-

''' lllliii•'. thNs '''''/'::
Towih&amp; &amp;Tr~nspoltltl0n7 '
. " .it•••* lA. II'S ,
toi1Jt facilities for ••flitlt &amp; nl•lilles?

Rood. 304-875-3Q34.

,;, .· , .· , iil)t wi lll•'s

46 Space for Rent

Beech Slreol. Middleport. Ohio:
2 ~G'oom furnilhed _,..rmenl,
utltr:IM paid, referan-=-·

304-882-2586.

Pho""

\lllllt•. Calll!li14-387-7287.

86 Enoore. ;J 8A for rent or .. Ie.

Coli 814-.Wf-0680.

For R.,t or SII•Crown City.

Call 814-250.8208.

2 boci'oom. furriahOd. woah•
end ...,.,., olr oonclllo-. 122&amp;

month plua dtpolh: •nd utUilil.

1

Furnitt.d or unfurrWihed. Good
1:1- oonclllon. 1c:hllcl. no polo.

One and 2 belt'oom ap.nments.
Wedge Apartments. No Pats.

MOLLOHAN FURNITURE

Towemotor forldift. time dock

GJtlf, 24x24 Wid cou"* top

office d•k. g• heat•, p•lkrt

NEW- Woot•n boo,._ 835.
-kboolo 118 1k "P· (SIMI 1k
oofl tool. Call 814-.Wo- 3159.

Sol. 814-1146-1899, 827 3rd.
Avo. GoiNpollo. OH.

Fll'nllu,.Upp• Rlv• Rd .. 814- Gooil uaed ._...,. hNI• &amp;
441-7444.
. mlcrOWIYeoven. 1150for ~h.
c.ll 814-266-1438ofter ~PM.
VIRA'S FURNITURE tr
APPUANCES
Ethan Allen queen aize bed
()pen Mon.-801. 9 AM-5 PM, trema &amp; m•dll.ng eh.t of
SUn. 12 noon-S PM. 814-"40. - · · Coll814-2&amp;5-6558.
3158.
'
8 foot flbergl. . beth tub. f75.
PRICES SLASHED-Wwdrobe- Coll814-843-&amp;348.
.
1
rog. •148 now t7&amp;. Queen aile

4:00

54 Misc. Merchandise

MOlTON

BUILDINGS, INC.
1-;o:n•/l ..m·•• 'inh 19/i'l

m1ttr- Ht-reg.

1189 ·now

•~08. Country wood toblewMh
3 ch•aa bench-reg. Uet now

(304) 733-ibSl
Coli Toll frH Morton. II
1-800-447-7436

1289. Meny More

Mon~rt

Sav-

lngVolu-. 111.141 lnCeni'"'IIY

1A

mle O~? Lincoln Pika

3 piece living room su,ite and

long 3 cuehk)n couch 850.00.

good oond, 3114-882-3206.

Real Estate Ganerel

I~!~~~!~;;;~:~~~~~~:r

hot meal1. Re•onlbl•

814-250.6509.

C.ll

Will care for eld•tv ~ In my
home. Call 814-4.41-0000
A Non-Smoldng lady 10 life In

wilh ChriiJion elderly lody. Coli
814-"40.2937.
WHI do · houoe cl0111lng. Coli
814-992-2970.

•

-FREE ESTIMATES24-Hour Towing 8t Recovery Service
DON- 1614) 446-4060- STEVE
Route 7. Gallipolis, Ohio

....

8

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

WMI c•e for eld•tv In their
home. night thift. TNitWortt'fv
.,d dependable. 'Phone ~14-

Will do bel7ftltllng In mt home.
Have rlf•enCII. E .cellent c•e.

Call 814-742-3080.

•

1 Card of Thanks

Thanks to the many
friends, neighbors, relatives and -pastors for
their expressions of
love during my recent
stay al the hospital. ·
Everything that was
done, from your visits,

phone calls. cards, flow·
ers. to the food broulht
to my home, was &amp;really
1ppreciated.
II I have failed to
thank anyone, please
forgive me.
Thanks for everything
and may God Bless you

'all.

NADit+E HUDSON

From Gallip~lis, take Rt. 141, turn left onto Rt.
7!5. turn nght onto Patriot Road. Watch lor
s1gns.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 12,' 1989 at 7:00 P.M.
WAREHOUSE MOVING ALL NEW MER'CHANDISE
ALL NEW KOHLER PLUMBING RODUCTS
SOUIX TOOLS
Van~ies · all colors, alllypes of commodes, bath tubs, Whirlpool bath tub, s~nk &amp; shower frttings, wmmode seats, fiberglass showers, lavatones, stainless steel sinks, faucet fit·
lings, brass &amp; chrome; maple top vanrties, Delta faucets,
shower bases,'llrdl bits, showers, Olsonrte seats, fuel od furnace, masonry b1ts. magna brts, Remington blades, dies &amp;
, brts, Sarco parts, Marco part~ Band saw blades, grinding
wheels, sanding d1scs, saber saw blades, chisels, Black and
Decker tools &amp; accessones, pipe hangers, Jenkins valves,
clamps, sta!nless steel fillings, lx5 mpple, weld fittings,
gauges, un1ons &amp; fittings, compression &amp; flare fittings
grease guns, lavatory faucets, brass &amp; chrome, showe;
noor~ 011 cans, sealers &amp; adhesives, band saw blades all
SIZes, sand paper d1sc, all sizes, &amp; much, much more.
Eats
Cash
Positive 1 D

450 2nd AVE.

•

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 38B-8828
RUTH GOOOY, REALTOR. 379-~628
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR, 256-8251
. LfESA CLARK. REALTOR,"448-303R •

304-675-6027

ltroll• t2&amp;.00. baby bMhtub
corrlplete 110.00. Que~M bedep.-.ad and drap• t20.00,
Str.wbitt1y Shorte.ke bedroom
lnttmble and utr.s t25. DO.
Compact lrl Star modei•"""P•
With att•chmente, •189. 00
CMh or hlrmt arr•oged, phone

SOUTHERN HILLS R. E.,
652 Second Ave.
.•

Gallipolis, 9hio
JUDY DE WilT -BROKER

388-8155

J. MERIIIlL CARifR
37-9-2184 .

~

10n

446:8655

"""" of

Auatln Weston 4 wheel drNe
with 45 foot boam. 1160

c...

liv(ng

,

1

REDUCED! - NOW $42,500- Approx. 6 acres wrlh 2
story home. 4 bedrooms, lormal dining room, basement
Lau1el Cliff Road.
H2680
$32,000. LIKE NEW CONDITION- 3 bedroom ranch, I

Situated on 2.9 acres more or less. ~M.ouu.
more mformat1on
112678

Buck Stove, t160. Coli 614448-7217
I

Wood

car attached garage, llvmg room , bath and more.

localed al Rutland.
'
#2647
1¥, STORY HOME IN MIDDLEPORT- largesJ&gt;lcious
rooms with lighl oak lrirn. Exira well cared for home on
nrce lot close to Village Park. Attached l -ear ga;age. AskIng $39,900
'
#2684

burn•. Excel.

1

Fir.,ood for •le. Mixed h•d
wood. HEAP vouchers accepted. Pick up or deiNered.
814-742-2426 anytime.

IN TOWN- Two bedroom, one slcry vinyl Sided home
w1th livmg room, bath, fam1!y room, formal dinin g and

krtchen on large lenced-ln lot w1lh storage bu1ldrn~
$38,900
#2650

FARM/50 ACRES+- Ill story VInyl Sided home. 3
bedrooms, full basement, liuingroomanddiningroom 2
large barns, corn crib, unattached garage Borders Ra'c
coon Oreek. Call for more tnlormation. Prrced upper
$40s
#2 679

For lllle: , Contlnuou• Gutter

Mochlno: Coli 814-992-2772.

large round bll• 1600 poUnds

good mbted hev. ezo.
814-985-3949.

'

.eon

225,000 BTU Janllrol Furnece.

&amp;14-985-3844.

' .

11600. c.ll 614-948-2025.

SURPLUS -Original Army, Denim. Rentll. C.rh.-t Clot:Nng

USA Jungle Boo... G'-!; Comouft,e (and black wr,ite).
SAM OMERVILLE'S, OLD
ROUTE 21 , NEW ERA. WVA
(noon • 8:00pm. Doc. onlyJ.

Other monthl Friday, Saturday,

Sundll'( only. 304-273-5866.

•

20 ACRES WITH HOMESITE - Part~ally wooded. Pond,
well, eleclnc. Pnced to sell al $10,000. Hannan Trace
, scho~s.
.
#2667
50 ACRES- Close loSR 35 Approx. 6 miles 10 lown.
1
Call today .
#2655
58 ACRE fARM_; Remodeled 6 1oom house w1th balh.
Abarn lor slorage ol caltlean da workable garage. Some
tillable land, fenced J&gt;lSiure and somelimberland Rural
wale1 recently mslalled. Clay lownsh1p. All m~neral
rights included. Om reduced hs11ngpnce only$48,500
#2700
VACANT LAND- 18 80 acres '"Green Township. Has
been surveyed, partially wooded and small pond Rural

BEAUTIFUL FARM SETTINGroom b1ick home
with 2 ~ balhs Apartmenl building used lor caring for
elderly and handicapped people Large mqdern barn
used as a feeder pig busmess, presentty has 44 sows,
potenlral for 100. Farm localed in Guyan Townsl&gt;p, 50
~cres level bollom land almosl surrounds larm build
mgs. Call lor a show1ng loday.#2602
CABIN IN THE WOODS- 3 rooms, unlmrshed bath.
Back porch, util~y bUildm~ Cabin Wifed lor electricand
rural water 1s available. 12 acres of land in Green Township. liSted reasonable. $12,900.
#1694

water and electric a"ilable Needs to sell at $13,000.
##2693
GEORGES CREEK ROAD, Kyaer Creek S&lt;hools- Ap·
prox. 1,440 sq. ~, 3bedrooms, 2bath doublewrde w~h
li11mg room, di rling area. central a1r, car part and storage
buildmg All on .300 o! an acre. $29,900
#2639
GREEN TOWNSHIP - 3 bedroom, 2 balh, 1985 sec-·
tiona! on block loulldation with liv1ng room. I amlly room,
formal dining. large eat-1n kitchen. ulrlity room, 2'h car
carport, covered deck and pa11o All th1s on landscaped
8 acres. Calllooay.
#2652
NEW LOG HOUSE well consllocled. "The Greal Room" ·
consrsts ot fully equipped k1lchen.dinrngand liVIng area
wrth nice woodbummg stove. Really an eye calcher, 3.
bedrooms, 2 balhs House is nol complelely fin1shed.
large workable garage. 42 acres ol land and much
more. Please call for particulars
#2688

Put Number 1 To Work For You!.

!1 anrl " tradem&lt;~rks of Ct•m ur\' 21 Real Estate Corporat ion Equ31 Housmg Opportu~ll &gt;'

.

Real Estate Ganeral

,,1;-;.,,.,{iibi"""'"i

SPRING VALLEY .•. $64.900!- Lovely Inlevel offers 3 BRs. 2 baths, spacious k1lchen,
d1nmr, LR, FR w1lh fireplace, gas heat, cent.
air, 2 car attached garage.Gall today
1

ac.,
story
021.
llvmg room where ~ou can

Pnced '" low $70's.
1323. 40 ~C. m/1, with older mobMe home. Priced in $30's.
lfH&amp;. BUILDING lOl, w1th foul\1atlon, all uti~ies. Good neighborhoOO.
$8,0110.00.
1324. A FIVE AC. building lot now available. mce flat to roiling land
·' ,162. SfCLUDEID: 10 ac. m/lw1lh 19808ay.,,. m/hw/expondo 7x11. AI
cond1t10n. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, L.R. w/FP. 2 car unattached garage. Askrng

$13,50MO.

THIS HOUSE WAS MEANT FOR YOUR FAMILY- Located i~ a nice neighborhood close
to HMC, th1s home offers 3 BRs, 2\! baths,
equipped kitch~. LR, FR. dming rm., gas
heat, cent. a11. woodburningstove. 2 car gar·
age, storage bldg. City schools. Call today.
22 ACRE CHURCH CAMP FOR SALE Numerous buildings Including dinmg hall,
caretaker's trailer, cabins, pool, church
buildmg. If interested call for more detailed
·information.

•

i

ONE ACRE M/L AND A MOBILE HOM£'-2
BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, rear deck, most furmture stays with mobile home. Call for an appomtment.
· ·•

•

•

(

(it

,EACtl OFI-' ICJ.: IS INIU:PI'.f\ DENTLY OWNED ANDOP£RATEU.

plenty of storage, niCe neighbJrhood. 1~ac. mtt

GALLIA - Need to settle an estate. Pr1ced only )J4.~Uu.
N1ce cottage sitting on 5 acres. Quiet country

. m-245·5152

LOOK WHAT $49,900 WILL BUY- Lovely 3 bedroom
ranch wilh VInyl srdrng lull basement 2 baths, 2 car
garage, convenient 1o tow n Pwners have used lots ol
loving lender care.
#1669

1s a bargain Small down payment you can bu~ ttl•s 3bedroom ranch. I bath,

NO STAIRS- Really nice 3 bedroom ranch home. Owner
relocating and IS offering this well kept home lor
room, eat-in krtchen . Fenced 10 backyard for small rh1lrlr~•n
or pels. Excellent neighborhood.

'

w

and Bonnie Stute• - 446-4206
Ta1mn1w Nloore- 367-7760
Richie - 446-3838
11,11 .

SPRING VALLEY- Mraclrve ranch lealunng 3 BR, ltv
rm. wilh fireplace, 2 balhs, equipped kil , SJ&gt;lcious FR,
utility, treed lawn, immedtate ,possess1on. Priced m
$60s. Shown by appo1nlment.
#2686

lell1le doh. All lor $12,000 011
mo. LOAN IIAY 81 ASSIIIIABlEo19~% ml~"' torapprox.11 Y"·letl.Th•

COMMERCIAL GARAGE ON STATE ROUTE- Call for
mation.

AVE. RE&lt;"R

NEW LISTING- As you turn uponlhecor&lt;rete dnveway you not1celhe man1cul!d appearance o!thiS 3 be do
room, 2 balh home. G1ea1 room Wilh calhedral ce1lrn~
Mummum siding. Gas heat and central a1r Close to c•tv
City schools system. $44,000 Call lor app~ntmenl lo­
day.
#2698

""'I" •3 bettoom, 2 baths, dollblewlde rs set up as Real Estate.
Has an
garage (2 car), front porch toefl toY those warm summer
' eve rungs wh1ch are not too lar oH All rooms are large, and has plenty ol stCI"·
.. age space. 1 ac m/1, vmton r~: N0r1h Galha Schools. Cal~ let us tell you about
how to finance w1lh low down payment
lf361. GET READY to enjoy hshmg, boalmg or rust relaxing, watch1ng the
beautiful Oh1c rtVI!f from th1s klvely l4~t24 deck. 1974 Shultz, 3 beli'ooms. l
bath mvery good shape. Has appro11.. 1 ac m/1, with storage build•ng, a!'ld sa·

VACANT LAND- St. Rt. 35, 6.9 acres. Good location for
building spot or could even be used for commercial

482 21110
'

742-3171

· JUST LISTED l. Freshly painted and newly caroeled
lbroughout 1~ slories, 3 bedrooms, basement Attached
ca1porl. 2~ acres Silualed al the edgeol c1ly, lmm.edl·
ale possess1on
~
2697

lHIS
of the.,.. ,... __

4396.

SOUTHWESTERN SCHOOL DISTRICT - N1ce 3 bedroom
home, 2 baths, living room w~h woodburner, modern
k1tchen w/ apphances. Also washer and dryer mcluded.
large lamlly room, 400 sq. ft. covered patiO. Partral basement. Give us a call for more details'

Charleston Area
Medical •Center

446-2707

lnclralry Equ!p.: fJ .0 .

690 backhoe on tr1dts. ln•levcr..,•M16 mounted on TMtdem dl .. el cruck. H~. cran.-

wnh ......,. dwlgn). $75. 8011

NEAR THE COLLEGE- Lookmg lor a large room home w1th
most everything. Brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, hving
room with wb fireplace, fam1ly room Complete kitchen
w/appliances; also a microwave oven. Formal dining room,
stereo intercom. Very nice home. Almost 3,000 sq. ft.

·w1 EST~ TE

CHERYl LEMLEY

Plrystor dump. 1970F -7&amp;0Ford

Real Estate General

.

SONNY GARNES

lingle alt ctlmp. He.,y Ciqu~po

Twin box tprinv- end m•ti-a.
tiiO. Couch !brown .,d b'elge

HOURS: M-T·W·F 9·5
9·12:00; SAT. BY APPT.

..

446·2ZIO ·

REALTOR•

1978 lntern1tlon11 T1m~ dem

•

Raal Estate General ·

•

. PHTWS LOVEDAY

m

6. Tam·
Hyot• Low Soy.

T.,nlng Bad for sal a. Used v,.y
ltttle. Wolf..Qr. Kern Brfllnd

REDUCED! REDUCED! REDUCED!
21 ACRE FARM- Amustio see' Includes a large barn,
shed and cellar. Fences surround these beautiful acres
cement block hOme w/2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living
w/new woodburner. Call office for appointment to
Located near Coal Company.
· •

$1U1ES REAL ESTATE- 446·4206

Temderri M1ck tr8Ctor

dom 25

Flrtwood tor lila. $20.a pi~p

(614) 388-9615

NEW LISTING- 6 Acres, more or less, vacant land. South of
Rio Grande Good bu ilding lot. Wooded.

Sharp as can be! Extra, extra clean! New carpet throu ghout. Call fot an appo10tme11t.
·

446-6610
U'tPt IJJ (} t!tJI.

PATRICK COCHRAN

of childrltl's bookl. 810 All In
good condtlion. Cell 614-,8&amp;-

I

Guor.,leod Cluollly .
CETIOE, INC.. Alhant-814S94-3578

304-876-"416.

ONLY

P. &amp; L 30 yrs., 11%fixed rate. F.H.A. loan. Why pay ren1!!!
When you can own your own home.

WESTERN REO CEOAR
• Channel Rustic
and Beveled Lap Sidi!lg
• Deck Mtt•ialt

•

· $33,900 ..:.._ SALE PRICE
1 1,100.00 DOWN PAYMENT
MONTHLY PAYMENT 330.05

lls Bloc:ll Co.. 123~ Pina St ..
Golllpolh. Ohio. Coli U 4-4462783.

304-1175-3214.

NEW ON THE MARKET

Buy or s.JI. Rtv•W.e Antiques.
1 124 E. Main Street, Pom•Ov.
Hours: M,T,W 10•.m. tq 8p.m ••

lc1ed. You plcll up.Coll814- ?423112.
.

A LOT JUST MINUTES FROM TOWN- Contains electric
ter and sewage. City schools.
. '

I"

9 foot Fiber 91•• gwege door,

Antiques

•

GREAT BUY FOR THE RIGHT BUYER - Endless opportuni•
ties and great potential for hunters, for home builders w~h
ingenurty, for the busmess mmded With ingenurty or for
bus10ess mmded wrth 1ngenurty or for the combination.
could be what you've been lookmg far.
I fre1e ••• I
for 2 dwellings w1th the 2 wells on the
20's. OWNER IS AWHEELER DEALER Curious' Give u.sa

f

phone 304-875-1S53.

3839.

446-6806

INSTAlLATION AVAiLABLE

Critical_ Care N~•"· When ~ou worlc for one of th~ top medical
centers m ~.nation. you'll fuxl there's no such thing as a routine
day. As a ~neal care nurse at the General Division o( Charleston
Area~ed1~ C~, you'll w.orlc·in our multi-specialty intensive
care umts wtth a vanety of patient cases such as Renal Transplants
T1'3.111!'a, Neu~.and Cardiopulmonary. CUtrently, we welcome '
expene~ced cn.Jlcal ~ ~urses, and because of our extensive
onentation ~· this IS an excellent opportunity for new graduates. You will be able to take advantage ofourexcellent critiCal care
courses taug!tt from entry to advanced levels.
Some of the advantages of Wc!rldng at CAMC are a com(lCiitive
salaJy and bellefit package, a certification bonus, evening, night and
w~end _bonuses, full and pait·time flexible hours, plus generous
twllon reiiDbursement You 'II also have the opportunity to advance
through our clinical career ladder.
.
·
Ita typicil day isn't what you want. call (304) 348-7458 tollfree 1-800-323-5157, or write Cbarleston Area Medical Center,
·Nurse Recruilment, P.O. Box 1547, Cbadeston, WV 25326.
. EOFJAA. .,
.

OWNER: WESTWATER SUPPLY CORPORATION ..
MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER

814-"45-7"4~

Coppertone gas range in good
condition. an en glne .. ~zer
end a3 hftchtowb81', 814-98&amp;-

RESIDENTIAL · INVESTMENTS CO~MEHC"IAL FARMS

An Parts Guaranteed to Fit anti It Good.

DAY

'

Bunk bed. TV at•to. coff•
tlbl•, With• _, d dryer, toOl
. bue•. compr-or, camp• top,

Upper River ROlld
Gollipollt. Ohio

F~h•

Motors, Transmisions, Rear-ends,
Sheet M ,etal, Glass, Batteries, Brake
Drums, Rotors, Starters, Alternators,
and a wide selecton of used tires.

HERE
R
. r
ISNrr

742-2267 onyllme.

•fl• 4:30p.m.

Concrete b(ocb- •II '""' Yl'd
or deiW..,.. Meeon 11nd. Glltipo-

Ottlo. 814-992-8481.

"Your ·Used Parts Supermarket''

HttiHS

304-676-2.767

Portoblo beoolnOI $20.00, Gerry

~

245-&amp;121.

,

bunclt. Containing approx. 1"h
ton. Ohio P•let Co., Pomeroy.

VINTON, OHIO

Help Wanted

CoH 1114-"40.2359.

3SBO.

Mbted h•d wood olebo. 112 pw

DODRILL'S AUTO PARTS

Local Sales
Representative
Donna Crisenbery
E.S.R .. Box !66
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
Ph. 614-256-6518

••ov•

5 PM, week.,.dllrlytlm'" ,

~----------------~ :

thoudeals.

rubber

Cond. Coli 814-245-6837 oft•

~--~B~UY~--~S~E~LL~~T~R~AD~E=---~ ·

Specializing in Pole Build·
ings. Designed 10 meet
your needs. Any size Choice of 10 colors.
FREE
on post

b-

For ule: Ollk firaNood. Call

304-675-8498

53

zip loc:ll

gtovu. l -ull•. 4 indl
pipe. 4 new 161nMtr•&amp; rim~

H•nd _q_uRted qultlt for ule. Call

Near Jet. Its. 35 &amp; 7"
446-8444

47519

122 VI Wid Strllt
Point. Pte-.ant, W.V1.

jock.

Block. brlck. JeW• pip111. wlndowa. Mm*, etc. Cla~de Wnt•a. Rio Gr.-ideo 0 . Call S1.C.

2

304-4118-1979.

BARGAIN LAND
Cannelburg, Ind.

'*"'·

Carp.. In stock only Vinv•
ttertlng at t3.99 .,.rd In •tock
only. Free lltm.t:•. no job to
..,.. . or am~~P . Two IDC8tlon.~ .

dozarwnhpow«bled• Locoted
coffee table. like neW-. t&amp;60. • at Athelia Ohio on St. Rt. 7.
Coli 514-992·3944.
814-990.9029.
I

. FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TOYS,
TOOLS. TV'S, VCR'S, STEREOS,
GUNS, COINS, TIRES, ANTIQUJ:S,
KNIVES

D.C. Metal Sales, Inc •

Compt.ttllnt of c.ptt. congoleum. vktyJe encl ~pet

Bullring Mlleriolo

burner;: comm«cl.t.
.. eetric .. St.r"; 1126. 00 each.
Coli 304-875-5955 or 875ltO¥e

s....

; .j

Have vac•u"' for lady In prfllate
home and .,.., to share an
11).-tment. All .,rnllhed. 1Vend

..,att,..

"Something For Everyone"

54 Misc. Merchandise

11

SWAIN
•
AUCTION a . FURNITURE 112
Olive St., Golllpollo.
NEW- 8 pe. Wood grotrp- 1389.
Living room oul1• 1199-.599.
Bunk bedt w~h heddlng. '249

Real Estate General

• furniture come to Moltotlln

Lettwtf Now For Chrltttnatl

304-875-2072 .

54 Misc. Merchandise 55 Buildi~g Supplies

D-5

sZe.

Bulin•• 01 Relldentlat- for ...-rt1at floor. 6 1•91 roonw Mtd 1'A
bM:t. on State St., ov.tooldng
p•k No pen. Aefw.,CM and
sea.ulty , deposit r«~ui'.S. Call

54 Misc. Merchandise

OH. 45631.

Now Hoven. 304-882-2488.

For Lease

S&amp;9S Rt. bO 1., HuntinJ!.o~.~~.

Immediate opening
for experienced medical transaiptianist.
Proficient in medical
t«minology and a
good typist. Excellent
working conditions
and fringe benefits.
Send resume to Per·
sonnel Department, P.
0. Box 344, Gallipolis,

T I\ X f HII iNC\JMl

49

440.4249, 1146-2326 or 440.
4426.

EXPERIENCED
MEDICAL
TRANSCRIPnONIST

OVERSEAS
POSITIONS

3 811., 14x70 Kyg• Crook
School diolriCI. •260 oluo - ·
dap. tr irtl. lnwdw gerboge lk

814-992-7479.

3718. E.O .H.

c•pced. SeC: dep. required.

Coli 614-oW0.855B or. 44&amp;4758.

Country Mobile Home Plfk.
fk»ute 33, North of Pom•OV·
Lots. rentela. p.-ta, uiM. Cell

Comma"cialspece, 1400~quare
feet corner Second and Pin•
Ample p11klng In r.,.. Call

Now ICceptlng application• for
2 be4r'oom epertments. fully
CMpeted, epplhi,CII, wM• and
tl••h pldcups provided. Malntea-.oe free living close to shop.
ping. banka end schools For.
more fn1ormllt:ion call304-882:

11 . Help Wanted

N- 1v deooreled, 2 BR.. fully

46 Space for Rent

614-11411,4240 ond 9:00PM.

r~ulre­

mont. 814-992-7481 or 304882-2898.

Midrl_... From •182.
614-992-7787. EOH.

42 Mobila Homes
for Rent

814-992-7479.

CAll aile&lt; 2p.m. 304-773Mason WV.

5661.

unfurnished.

No p•s. Meet1 HUD

c•

mom h. December &amp; J11nuary
ontf. VHI119e Manor and
!Wv . .lde A portmento In

Thr .. beci'OOft\ 2 ....... Blld-

-,:;;-u.==-.-;;;:--41

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
A .. oTreihr space. All hooh-ups.

6304

Smlll furNihed .,_.mern for

•210•

...ry

Hotol-614-445-9580.

1 be$-oom atflclency apt. in
Middleport. Call 814-992-

•I•

ltory. tun bument, a•eaa. nice,
304-875-3030 or 675-3431.

Roorm for ...,t-week or month.
St.-tlng at $120 a mo. Gallia

G,..dri College. Call 614-2456223.

...... Call814-ol4&amp;-3355.

3 BR. hous• Country ne• Rio
Gr•ute. Oep. No p.U. 1 fami~
ontv.
mo. Call814-24&amp;&amp;438 wanlnga.

g•1111e. CA. g• heal. Rof. tr
w• .,... 304-882·2845.
dep. r..ui-ed. Coli 814-"46Mce amall hou• at,447 Fourth 4159.
AVONoiiS'-11 Shlri.,Sp..o.
Aw. Adul1o onloi. Rei. roqui-ed.
304-575-1429.
Coli 814-ol40.1214oft« 6 PM 2 BR. spt., n., plush c.pet,
n-r.lnl, Ullhl• pOrtlolly pOid.
House wtth till bat.,..art. a•
Get paid for re~~ding bookll
•17 omo.Coii304-875-S104,
3
BR.
hou
..
,
deluxe,
AC.•
pool.
furnace. 3 acr-. N,edl tome 1978 Uberty 14x70. 3· bod$100.00 p• th.le. Write: PASE·
87&amp;-5388. e7&amp;-773Q.
*350omo.
CoM
304-875-S104.
1517A, 181 S. Uncolnway, N . rep*. $18,000. Cal 814-985- room, *7.900.00. 304-875- or 87&amp;-S3811.
3920 or 814'378-6215. •
Aurora, II 60542.
1871 .. d875-1783.
Busin., Cf" Rulct.Jtiel- tor rant1st floor. 61•geroonwand1'h
2
BA.I.ocoled
ol
192f'h
ChestMAJOR NAT'LMULTI-LINE IN- House for ..le of rtnt on '81 mobile home 14x64. 2
b.tt. on State St., overtookin g
Neighborhood Rood, GoNipolls. bect'ooma, exc cond. lmmecl•• '"'' St. t17hmo. •ndep. Col p•k. No pet&amp; Aef.-enClll Wid
SURANCE CO.
814-1140.3870.
Seekingmeture. aggrMtlvelndt- Ohio. phone 814-"46-4246.
ocarpollon. t8,600.00. 304teaJrtrv •os• requred. Call
vlct!al to mkt. Hom.-Aut~Lifllt'
875-3779.
814-4-'0.4240 .... _ , 4~0
Newly
redecorated,
2
bedor rent on
Heatth Ins., 2 ve• trelning Houae for
and 9:00PM.
roonw,.
W·D
hoolt-up.
Adutta
program, training progrll!'" plu• Neighbor hood Ro ed. Galllpollo.
pr.r.red, one chHd ICCGP.fed.
benaftl pkg. •zs-us.ooo.oo Ohio. phon a 814-440.4248.
35 Lots &amp; Acreaga
No PML . Ref•ence required. 2 be«oom Apts, for rant.
fftt ye• aat.-y comm upenae
Avoileblo now. Coli 1-210.835- Corpced•.Nlco telling. Laundry
Nice
houae
In
Hendlr1on.
3
allo-nce. EJ~Cellent opportu~
focllki• ovallebl&amp; Coli 8143952.
Aoltton
boarlilul
Iorge
building
ity fQr experienced life and bedroom•. 24x38 genge,
992-3711. EOH.
lots, mobile hom• p•mlned,
prop.-tv ciiUelty egentJ. with 1040 red b•n. phone 30 4N-lv
remodeled
3
br
hou
..
ln
public wlter, a11o rhl• ~··
proven triiCk recor•. Phone 875-4123.
One Month Free Rent
Clyde Bowen, Jr. 304-S75- Mason. •250. pw month. Pay
304-582-3309. Lei'• elk.
Ouallfled rent .. - •zoo.
own utUitiM. 304--773-9684.
Mull aetl to senle ertlte, 1"12 2336.
Oep01it md no rent for the
Dr. J . Stephen loval, Dent lit,
ha an immedhlte need for a
dental usiltMtt .,d an office
manag•. to work with his new

beth. Coll44&amp;-4418oflor 7PM.

446-"416 ell• 7 PM.

cr.... 2 b8droom.

Furnished Rooms

Furnllhed room-919 Second
Ave.. Golllpollt. t7S • m'IUtilttl• ptld. Slnglem•e. Sh•e

Available furnished or unl.lr·
nlahed. Oepotk requir-'. Call
814-1148-4346 oft• 6 PM.

2 Bedroom house in cfty. 823&amp; 1
month plut deposit. C.ll 14-

440.0924.
1974. 2 becWoom. one .,done

46

2 aptt. for rent elate to "' Rio

all eloc.. 3 BRo.. H~bathe,l•ge
lllllng room w•h flroploce. Coli
814-"40.8213.

HAIR STYUST

for lntervieN 814-44~3363.

oge. 814-"40.9340.

·blon. 21 fl. oelf oonloined
Ba'dl.

on. Call tor FREE Color Colelo(Jle. Sovolo 110%. 1-81)0.228-

Man ao• wanted for Hair Heppening Sty.llng Salon. Ple11e call

19 84 24x 52 Se&lt;tional, 3 BR .. 2
full baths. Relktf toinove. Excet
cond. Call Fr•u:ti Cttv Brok•-

4BA·., full basement. c•p•. g11
rano- ctty tchooll. No ptU.

Apartment
for Rent

54 Misc. Merchandise

up 10 1125. Hkl.o-bede 8390 · GOOO USED APPLIANCES
to ne11. 111c11n.. •us 1o Wahan, *van. rofrlg•atoro. SUndlll' 1 to 8p.m. 8f4-992137S. lompa 128 to 112S. rangtt. Skegge Applllncet, 2528.
Dlnett• *1091nd up to 1485. Uppw Rlv• Rd. bealde Slono
Wood IOblo w-8 ch oira 828S to c - Motol. &amp;14-.Wt-739 8.
f78S. Detk .,00 up IO •37S.
54 Misc. Merch11ndise
Hutch• 1400 and up, Bunk
PICKENS'USED RJRNITURE
bedl compl•• w·mllttr•• Complete hou~~:hold furnlstt129hndupto•38s. eobv- ingo. Y, mii.,Jorrlcho. 304-e75$110. Mo-oaorboa op'lnga 1 4so. e 14-38 8· 9773, W'heelc:h.rt-......, or ·UMd. 3
wheeted electric acoot. .. C.ll
full rwiWin fSB, firm 17Q. end evening~.
Rog.. Mobilty oolleel, 1-614eea. au- - 1280 • u
970.9881.
I
King uso. 4dr_ch., •8B:
Plckene Uted Furniture
Gun cobln• 8, 8 tr 10 .,,_ 304-878-14&amp;0 or 814-388FM Sllle Flr!ONook-Mbted . or
Bobv ..,..,.... US lk US.
9773. eve.
t25 deiNtrect local,
led fromoo •211. t30 lk ICing Brown 2 pc. lvlng room auit• •-onid.
tumo 8110. Good alllecllon of Hke nM, t135. Hi.da-e·bed. Bidwell oroe. Oovid Hll 814IHMfroom eutt:M, mtttel cetHn•s. f1URoclln- U51kup.4pc. 3a8-8138.
boedbowda •30 "'d up 10 •n. bedroom auhe, f 12&amp;. AD 1y,_ ' Z-t.,ning beds. 1 toning tabla.
---8··---v·
of bodt tr bedding. king olze
J•curzl txerdte equip., wide•
10 0.ye IBmt IS CMh with m.ctreu • box springt.. t76.
Alf "" es.ooo. Call
opprovod crod~. 3 Ml• out
Holloiwood frornoa, 110 a Ujl 2 furniture.
614-"46-7821
or 304-:173Bul.,llle Rd. Open 9am to 'Pm
pc. 81uettc:hln1Cibinet. 122&amp;,
.
Mon. lhnr Sol. Ph. 814-446- Meple """"'· •125. Mony mo're 9994."
r'
0322.
lamo. ~ milo out Jericho R~ .. FirMood for 1ele. Hlr..:ooc
Pl. Pl101011t. W.Vo.
·
opll. $30 pldwp lrucll deliVery.
V•llev Furniture
Call 814-~0.4992.
!
New and usad turnttur11 and Good Uled Color TV'S for
oppllcancee. Coli 814-448- Coll814-114&amp;-1149.
I
Uke ntw r8frig., $1150. Com7S72. Houra 9-&amp;.
plete bed. dlnnatt:e Mt. coUch.
5 pc. living room turnltura.
rec11n...
r~ry.,, dwk a
For low pric. on Qu .. ttv carpet 8800. Coii814-3QB-90&amp;ii:l·
ch*- Coli 814-446-3224.

Apartment
for Rent

Will
In mt hom&amp;
'ville wea. Have r.r•S'ICII. CeH

51 Household Goods

County AOPII.,co, Inc. Goo&lt;l
uttd ~ppHwu• 1nd TV •••·
OpM 8AM to &amp;PM'. Mon thru

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Creoll. 8200. monlhly. 304875-30"4.

388-8206.

bobv••

51 Houeehold Good•

111111•. depoall roquked, 304. 87&amp;-253S.

Sunday

51 Household Goods

1 &amp; foundltior1
ltlrtlna: *99 . Aecllnen
Nrtin~ l99.
USED- Btdt; drMIIN'I, beii'oom
suit•. De1ka, wringer wash•. 1
oomplett line of U18d furnltuN.

Mmllondf sc

12x&amp;6 mobile home. 2 beOroonw. ~nice lot. Routh &amp;..te

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

Full1ile

Ch•l*o. Ohio, 304-773-S82B.

Bolrnllllng fo• working paronta.
Mon. lhNFri.8AM!o&amp;PM.Call
614-245-6028.

part·

814-"46-0238.

KlriC. 304-870.1078,

.18 Wanted tci Do

Medical Lab Teehnoklgilt
Ohio Untv erslty Personnel S...v~
&lt;* it currentlv accepting IlPPI ..

a

Ref. r.qulred. No PRII. lnqui'e
01: 831 Fourth Ave., GoUipollt.

Trel•s. unfurniehed. ~pi•.
1mlll chHdren accepted. Rt. 1,
LDcult Ro~. Pf.Ptt. behind

••tt

for

'-tially . .,rnllhed 1Pa1m.,t.
Sui'llbte for one or two 1 o...tt 1 .

cine. Coli 814-992·6039.

RE-TRAIN NOWI
not jiJ.a: a job. and If YO/ are SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
wiling to put your t1lent1 to COUEGE. 629 JocUon Pika
work. We would be intertilted In
c.ll "40.4387. llog. No. 86-11 talking with you. Wa off• : 10&amp;58.
toecollent PIIV ocolo. IJ.S Mon.Fri., exceu.,, pay &amp;

cetlona

For l&amp;~~se

49

/"'

MANAGEMENT POSrriONS

Wedl'wdlll' only, 9 AM -&amp; PM
111d •k fof Mr. Joe Krebo.

January 8, 1989

.ePuzzler on Page D7

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

If you are aeektng a c.ew 1nd

retlrernMt programs. To qualify
for en· tlnervle.v, pleMe c ..l
Q14-ol40. 3373. Mondo¥ 11wu

I

..

January 8.--1989 ·

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

Page- D-4 - Sunday Times-Sentinel

--

.

LOTS FOR SALE'ON QEBBY DRIVE- Call for
location and more details.

I '

l

.

AHOML Kilchon w/11n~.,dref.. 3
m/1, &lt;•pori City "hoo . 133.000.

,,

•,,I

83.2 ACRES, MIL, NEAR MEIGS MINE #I
- Older two story home w1th vinyl siding
and stqrm w1ndows. Two small barns.
FIRST AVENUE- RIVER FRONTAGElovely two story home offers a formal entry,
equipped kitchen, be·autifulliving room w1lh
lireplace. family room, 2 baths, gas heat, basement wrth brick firepace, summer porch,
lovely level area by nver. Shown by appointment only.
$25,000.• •CITY SCHOOLS • . •MIN UTES TO
TOWN - Approx. one half acre. Home features LR, OR, k1tch en, bath, FR. 2 bdrms., full
basement, large unattached block garage,
gas heat. Call fp1 an appointment.

slyle

en, bath. laun·

1 car ga1age

KRISTI DRIVE - . BEAUTIFUL BRICK
RANCH - This home offers several attrac
live leatures 1nclud1nga 12x30 family room,
LR, 'itchen, 3 bedrooms, 1'h baths, fireplace. cent. all; carpeting. attached garage
with electric door opener. Cal l for an appointment.
PLENTY OF ROOM FOR EVERYONE- Lamt
Orive. Bnck ranch, 3or 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, ·
equ1pped krtchen. den, lam1ly room, LR,
sewmg room, dming. laundry, 2 fireplaces,
gas heat, cenl. a11, attached garage plus carport, pat1o, privacy fence, city schools. Make
an appointment today .

73 ACRES, MIL. PERRY TWP. - 40x60
barn and various other tarm bu1ld10gs. Very
nice home features 3 BR, 2 baths, kitchen,
LR, new carpet. Call lor an appl.

All BRICK - LOCATED ON ST. RT. 35Lovely home offers 4 BRs, equipped kitchen,
LR, dinin g rm., fi1eplace, full basement,-g-as
heat, cent. air, satellite dish, attached gar·
age, ca1port and storage bu rldin g. Nice level
lawn convenrent to HMC and shopplfll&lt;
Shown by appointmen\
PRICE REDUCED TO $39,900! - GREAl
BEGINNER HOME - ThiS home ofte1 s '
large LR with fireplace, kitchen, dining area,
3 BRs, bath; full basement, 1 car garage,
deck, fencea yard . Just minutes to lown
Rl. 141. Call lor an appomtment.

EWINGTON $19,900- four bedroom home
mdudes kitchen, living room, dining room,
bath, NG school district.

MAX·ENO ROAD .:. Mobile home wrth 3
BRs. LR. kitchen, l'h baths, nice level lot.

MOBILE HOME LOT cl ose to town Al l ut1h11es l

11.872 ACRES. HARRISON TWP. on lincoln
Pike. All vacant land. $12,000.

29.8 ACRES M/L VACANT LAND- Fronts
on Rt. 160. BUild or put a mobile home here.
$16,900.

AFFORDABLE HOME IN TOWN - l~~:~e~~~
on Upper Second, $25.000. Gill for me
tails.

avai l ~ble

-.
•

•

�.

·~

.

..

'

.

·-

Page-:0-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. Va .

January 8. 1989
January 8, 1989

8
':~~:~;~' S©\\.~1A-~£tfS
Edit•d by ClAY R. POLLAN
2eorronge the 6 scrambled
0 wor
ds below to make 6

WOlD

64 Hay &amp; Grain

GAM!

llmothr Hoy • whHt -

1~.r 1Nr

I

1

Squ.,. bilod mil_. h., . Coli

114-2411-11417.

1

c1

2

71 Auto's For Sale

I I' I I I

GOVERNMENT 8E2ED
d• lort100. Fordo.

Corvett:•

Voh~

Mor-.

Sui-Diua.

8uytrt Guida 111 808-887·
1000. Ert 8·10189 .

R E T 0 C I.

I

a..,.,..

Two dlllll'ldabl&amp; ru.t tree,
ilol ol!ldont en wlh
rdolo. 1183 Ply-h Roll ...
IE. 10.110 mi.· tz210. 1183
Dadgol00.13.000 ml.·t3700.
1184 Dodgo C - Mini

lo-

Transpurlaii!HI

MOLGOY

I

tor

• • Call 114-379-2719.

simple word~ . Pr int !etters of
·. eoch in its Ime of $quores.

1

71 Auto's For Sale

v... ,...,..•. oltho•t-

Shorpl 51.000 ml•*l,350.
1879 Ford Cou'* pl._p, • pllnt l front fenden ,
dop .. clobi .. 0950. Coli 8144411-8383.
1t8JVWRobbl dioo&amp; AM·FM.
4 1pcl., AO.
t~•· C.l
11o4-2S8-18Z4.

n_,

1988 VW Golf. 4 door, lopood.

71 Auto's For Sale

71 Auto 'a For Sale

1184EM:OrtLWegon.lllto., PS .
PB. llir. fedory ••eo. 1119&amp;
1980 C'-v PU, I cyL. Milo. .
Pl. ~·- t1etl. c.u 114-288-

1978 lllundorbircl 1981 Dol·
ounpl .... p. 19e9C'-vpldlup.
Coli 114-317-0IU
.

•szi

\887 Clwvol• IAb•on Coupe.
Exool. conti AM optlono. Col
et4-448-IOIO oft• I PM .
19132· 28 c....... 30" - ..
m•lc. PS, PB, ..... tilt. cn.ail•
r.t wlh blldc &amp;: ,.,
lnt.-lor. 05500. Coli 114-4481172 d., .... 448-9803 ......
lngo ook lor Keith.

••eo.

1988 ChOIIY Col*ltv· 43.000
ml• v~ e. -.tto. , AC,cruile. dtl.
AM· FM-Cou. Coil 814-3811-

8240.

1 981 ChOIIY C&amp;prl.,. ~otlon
Wagon. Good mnd. t2ZOO. CtU
814-448-8238.

ltr. &lt;AM·FMc•tiCte.Lowml•.
•011•
concltion. •sooo. c-1
114-89.2-2919.

1972 Ch011ylmpol1. PS. PB, olr.
Clood oond. 1150. Coli 114248-94111&gt;
1984 HondoAcooul Vory good
condllon. Coli 814-446-0548
!21 1981 Ford T«npoo. 1980
PlymouthC.rwll• 1881Ch.,.
Ch ...... OUio. 1811 .... ntloo
Sunbircl 1918 Olclo Cutl-. 2
dr. 1981 DodgoD.Y,- 1983
- ... ry o... d Morqulo. 1110
Buldt Ro,&amp; 2 dr. 1980 C'-v
Clprice .W. 1910 Ford LTO
S .W. 1971 01• Cull•o. 2 dr.
Priced to 9olll B &amp; D Motora.
Hwy. 110- 114-441-1885.
1981 ConQ)f'cl " 2 cbor, 61 4988-3839.

Ohio- Point Pleasant,

71 Auto's For Sala
1978 f.lllrcl. Runo gooti 351
Wln•or ongln&amp; t?OO. Coli
114-982-2828.
1970 Dodge Stltlonweaen.

Mike offlr. G•• floor furMC&amp;
•21. 21 1\ah oon•ol• mfor lV177 s,_nol, Mldclopon.
•
1112 Dodo• A..... Air oondili-

onecl. Qood condiUon. t2000.
Coli 614-992-2077.

For•"•

de .. on lnfiiY or used
cw. trucii orwn . ..,Kenrrv Bau
•t Jim Mink Ch1vrol•t ·
Ol~mobh, 61.t-441-3B7Z or
304-773-1134.

'1981 Fotd Eaoon for tale,
304-1711-1839.
''
'87 VW bu~ AM -FM' c••otl•
run1 good. loti · new' pMI,
HOO.OO. 304-175-7418.

71 Auto 'a For Sale

71 Auto ·, For Sale

'81CUII-Suprom"' T-top.PS ,

mii&amp;IIUM- •1.100 llr""
304-1178-3Bt&amp;

1981 C'-v IIIY..m PU ... 4 .
1111 C'-v, PU. 1188 Ford
R.,u-PU . 1181Fordl-ooll
liLT. 1877 F«d PU . 1177
DadtloPU . 1911 l-uPU. 117S
Ch..... PU. 1171GMCPU. 1978
Ford l4ton PU . Priaodtolollf8
• D - - Hwy. 180. Coli
114-448-8855.

1113 Chryol• E · Clou.
f2.500. 304-871-4410.

exund•d

PB. -

Y· 8. 304-178-2311.

1113 Chrtol• -

Vorkw.

u. 100. 304-1175-oMeo.

11tPPI¥moulhRoiiOI'II. 47. 000

' 87 VW Fox GL. 4 - · llr.
..,.fm c.~.na. exc. cond.
304-1175-4132 oft• I 1711914.

72

Trucks for Sale .

1871 Ford 150, 3021ong bod.

ltWUIIrd. tiOO. C1U ... enings.

Real Estate General

Real Eatata General

114-311-1151

I

1971 lllunclorbircl 1911 Dot·

.... .,..,... .._, ... a.......up.

Ad
in local paper:
~ L E c A y
"Typewriter for sale by ex~~8 ~l....:._,lr9 -i writer who has been published
just once, and- a r e - it."

I

1-.;.l:.._;...::. ;..
1
L__L_L_L__L__L.J

1118 ChOIIrolot S-10. Y·IJ Milo
ub~T•hoe

82

76 · Auto Parts
&amp; Accaaaoriu

co,.

1171CJI JNp. Ecoll ...
..ion with IP"• pM&amp; *1500.
310Honclo4w,._. - •· 1971
Dodao
Coli 114-~
Zld.
.

T"''*·

·eo CJ5

......, • • oonti 304-

171-231~

1971 .loop Ch•o,_ 4 whool
drivl. •BOO.' :104-178-4437.

w. Va.
Plumbing
&amp; HBBting

.Improvements

BUDGET TRANIMISIION·
U11d • rebulh ttl typet.
......... 30 . . . p~- ••••
up, Uo.......... - ·
corw.rt... •wullrd dutaft-.
pr.IIUnl ,.. . . . . throw DUt

-In• _...,.,2-. eve

lolntwl typa. Col 814-17..

86

CAliTEII'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Ptintlng: lnt•ior • Ederior.
11-oo ootlmota Col 114-4481344.

RON'S Tt,levltlon Service.
Hou11 ctMe on RCA, Quuer.
Ge. -sling 1n ZonMh. eo•
304-l?llo231S ar 114-44112414.

Times-Sentinei- Page- 0-7

Cor. Faurth and Pin•

o.tlt":"3188
Ohio

Phone 814a
U!-4477

84

2220 .. 304-1175-1751.

Ot'

114-

General Hauling

Oill•d W•• Strvice: Poots.

87

Upholstery

Nlowr-r'• Upholst.-i"g .....,lng

a.t•na. Wells. O.Uv.ry Any- trl countyerH23.,..,1. Thebllt
•••740 .. N0 in AmYture upholtt.mg. "C.I
tim .. -C.II 1 1 ~-u..,.
304- 875 - 41114 for free
S_,:;un:.:.dl
l
:
::_&lt;::oi
:
:Jt_
.
-----.1
I ot · _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
_
~·ot::=m=::w::

Electrical - &amp; Refrigeration

Real Estate Gsneral

pkfl .

loaded. 10.000 mWa. • •
ellvtr. See It Jim Minke.
Chevrolet ~ OI ch. 814 ~ 4.48 -

74

Motorcycle•

COMMERCIAL SITE

3172.
1171 V. lon Ch...,' pld&lt;·up. PB.
PB. 310cublc lnchm-.IKIIo..
very good oondlllon. 114-84a.
2237.
.

•7;1 Clowv pl...,p. good oond.
eo.ooomlle~;771rr ........,
- . 55.000 mloa 304-17112372 or 178-2281.

call 11o4-317·0182.

1910F-31&gt;0Y·Iongln&amp;4otr-. IWhn cllmp Mel '!.c .
Conti tt.300. :IOA-4811-1031.

1178 ~ 1ol ton Dido up.
Milo.. tit - Wing. PI, PB.
AM -FM-Coi
8 cyl.. 310.
t2900. Coli 4-387·0428.

1.981 Ford 150 pldt up. 39,000
mil•. t7.4te.OO, 30o4-17S·
4308.

1914 Hondo KR 200 Pro Link.
oxc ooncl ttoo.oo. 304-BBZ.

3180.

.

1983 Hondo V45 MognA 304871-3833.

18

Auto Pans

. &amp; Accaaaorias
1t71MGnto Co~o -Pinto
2300 ...... Col 1!4-

112-212&amp;.

Hom a

81

RON'I APPUANCE S.EIIVICE ,
coli oorvldng GE, Hot
IPIDint, WMhiN, dry•• tnd
304-11711-23911.

Improvements

85

General Hauling

-

BASEMENT

WATERPROOANG
UnOII-Ionol lftllmo ......

'*'"•c.nW..hM.
mltect

tM. LoCII
,,..
..a:lmlt-

1

Akn T... Trirft"*'~ :',d Stump'

RemCMI. Fne _.

•·. Cllll

304-115-7·121.

1·114-217· 04111. d...........
Rogerslttement

J&amp;JWfiA•S.Vk». Swimming
d o t - wolo. Ph. 814-

241-12811.

'

A • R Wit• Sttvkle. Pools,
cla1ern1. well1. lmmedllt•

1.000or 2.000gollonodo1Hory.
Col304-878-$370.

w.. •prOGIIng.

SWEEP Ell ond -lng moclllne
rill*· pert• ond oulltllleo.

-goo

'I'*

up '"d dtlllftery, Dt¥11 Vecuum
For •le ... porll. 1179Pontloo . Cl•. . •· one helf mile up
G... ... Mono. ezoo. Coli
C - Rd. CoW 814114-892·2331 .
4411-0284.
'

..

r I' 1· 1· . 1'. I' I' I' I' 1 I
I 1· fREI I I I I I I I
16

SPECTACUlAR STONE &amp; CEDAR
Rarely do we have such asensational residence to
offer lor sale. Adream home priced well under today's construction cost This outstanding 8 yr. old
home is located in city school district on adensely
wOOded picturesque 5 acre tract. When you tour
this·2400 sq. ft. of elegant iving space, your heart
will skip a beat. InCluded is a sensational krtchen
with all qualrty appliances plus pantry. Family
rootn wrth lirepalce and wooded view provided by
Andersen thermopane windows. Formal dining
with vau~ed ceilings and huge cork stone wall
with see throilgh fireplace. Step down liiingroom,
formal entry, 31\ gleaming bathrooms. The master
bedroom is I8x19 wrth bath and patio doors to a
private sundeck. You will not see a more pleasing
party or rec. room . This large area has solid, select
cedar walls, expensive new carpet, a built-In bar
w~h h/c water, patio doors to ground level and
back deck. Outside you will find flower beds and
shrubbery gardens of professional quality which
succeed in helping make this the outstanding
property for sale in Gallia County. Owner is anxious to sell and has priced it below its fair market
value. We want to show you this breathtaking
home and are waiting your call!
"110

--.J--------- --- -------- __no;.. . _

-

.

"

r

VNI0'(31:1 &amp;Je
1:13Ain0

.. 'I! ElNIOV31:l

).:)'(f)3'7

9J8 00A PUB '90UO l&amp;nf P94B!tqnd
U&amp;eq R4 04M J91!JMX8 .(q BiBS

l::JIQQ'(

I

JOj JBI!JMedA.I,., ;Jaded 19:)01 U! PV

Oi.L0/:13

~~~5

S13'7·W'(/:10S
Ol SllliMSNV

Pets for Sale

· 56

Groom ond Supp~ Shop-Pet
. Grooming. All breeds ... ."l
.tylel. l1m1 Pet Food Dellw.
.Nile Wobb Ph. 114-4411-0231.
Dr-nwynd Cottory -not
.,_.jan and Si~m•• ll'ld Him~
t.,.lf'l ldttms. Chow ltUd servlo». Coli 114-4411-3844 oft or 7
PM.

Cltll

BIDWELL CASH FEED J D
NORTH PRODUCE.

3 mole AKC Regiot- block
lAb puppl•. 8 wU. ohl Good
hunting dog ...... Coil 114448-0229.

1'1• Yl'· old AK C Regiot- mole
811gla. Milke offer. Cell 81 ...
448-2710.
2 mile &amp; 3 female tinchs. Call

114-211·1510.
2 Pure' Bred Whh.e German
Shopherd puppl•. t100 ooch.
814-742-2911 or 814· 742·
3100.
Htppy J•cll: Trfvarmlclde: recagniud eafe • effecttve by U S
Bur.., of v.. ..mlfY Medicine
egiiMt hook. round &amp; tep•
worms it dogs clllsl R • G
Food&amp; Supply, 399W. Moln St.,

a

Pl&gt;rnoroy, Oh.

AKC reglot-llooootl ,........
• 100. Coli 114-119-3711.
Fl1h T.mk. 2413 Jeckson Aw.
Point
304-175-2063..
10 golool up t14.9t ond 10 gol
compl.., e43. 25.

Pl-.

57

Musical
Instruments

lndWkkMI PJitlr ,...... beginn.ra. •rious gultarfrt IN~

..... Muolc. 114-441·0187.
WamiiiY IMtructor, 814445-8077. Llmkod oponlng11.
~ff

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Red ond Gold Dollclouo opploo.
U.89 podc, food otomps wel-

come, Jed!:' a Fruh M.,ket. Rt.
31. -dorlon.

Suppl11~s
&amp; LIVI~SIIIt:k

I dlll i

8' Farm Equipment
UTILITY BLDG . I PL. :

30'•40'•1'1" Cle•enea 1 -

,.~.r -nak door, 1-3' • •
door: 14189 ERECTED. Iron
...... lldro. Colli 14- 332· 11748
Coli . ..

•••so.

4020 JD tQctor w/yet~ round
c1b. nice,
Oreh•m

••
••
•••
••
••
••
•• ii
:
••
••
•

-~

••

Ii

noc:t IOod•. -,o. t3891. WIH
flnono&amp; Col 814-288-1522.

'--• ' model 444 lnt..nedonel
tr.:torw/ lft. bush~ plow.,
cllc. oorn .,.antw, 3 pt. 1Pft1V
outfit. ••sao . 230
lnt.-nol-lloo,_..,_. with

plow., aultlwftor, bush hog •
r~ hoe. t1711. fin ....
Coli 114-288-1522.

Holl.,d 311grlndor-mlllw.
New Ide• 2 row, ""'ow corn
pldt•. 2 - l y bodo-both with
10 ton rumlng _ . . 121
buehM IU'tonwtic fMd wego n.
800 got. 2•o . .k ..,IL AI
IQUip.,_,t in •OIIIIent cond.
Coil 814-248-1815.

..

63

Uveatock

·
............
Solo-u
.,..,
-nllr· Albonv·
1 PM.
Uvool"'* - o d oft• 4 PM
...., F~.-. 1 ... • • ot
A - on lt. Ill. 10. Col
t14·112· 232Z. 111·3131

..........

..

TOO HARD TO BELIEVE?
Ideal home for the particular person. Over 1600
sq. ft. of living space w~h 3 bedrooms, very nicely
remodeled house. TV room and attn~ctive living
room with woodburning fireplace and bay win·
dow. Outstanding oak kitchen· any cook would
love, and full basement. Owner 'has gone to great
lengths to put this home in perf'ct condition. New
wiring, roof, kitchen, bath... the list goes on and on .
Maintenance free siding, fenced yard for kids and
dollS. Much more. give us a cal~ we really do have
a cream puff! $60's.
~218

HOllE ALONG Kathy -·· .. ...
School Oist. Price: ~4~1, UUIU.uu.

. PROPERlY IN PORTER- Grocery store, 3bedrm. home, •
S.bedrm. home. Call for more Information. •

•

INVESTMENT, OR LIVE-IN. Double house loc ated along •
4th Ave. Good condition. Buy for $32,000.

•

•
•

3 BEDROOM HOME on 50'xl50 lot within Kanauga. Rural
water, FA heat (gas), some furniture with property. Buy
now. $20,000.00.
WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II , edge ol
Gallipolis (18 acres) and Mills Village. Call for more in for·
mation.

•

HOW ABO UTA NICE RESIDENTIAL. or commercial, loca- •
lion along Upper Rt. 11 $35,000.00.

•
•

3 BEDRM. HOME withm Vinton Village.' 1.5 acre, 6 rm. ••
hou se with garage, Now $28,000.00.

•

••
•
•
•

•

2 LOTS WITHIN GREEN ACRES SI D. One is 84'd48', the·.
other 75'x l48'. Purchase erther for $5,500.00.
75 ACRES localed along Glen Summit'Rd. , older 5 rm. house.•
$$20,000.00.
•
•• 21.5 ACRES, NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures.
located along Frank Rd. $18,900.00.
•

•
•
•

:

&gt;

SSPrice SlashedSS
Make us an offel we can't refuse!
Owner is building a new home and nel!ds to sell
his present home so he can move. This lovely 3
bedroom ranch is located in city schools and is
convenient to both the hospital and Rio Grande.
The kids can play in the fenced backyard while
you relax on the spaciousco1ered patio. The large
eat-in kitchen will delight the lady of the house.
living room, cozy family room w~h woodburner,
and that's not enough, the w'asher, dryer, range
and refrigerator stay!l Asking $33,400: Don't ler
this bargain pass you by!
#601

•
•

•
HOEMEchlolepiowo, U95. JD •
11 ft.lold-upHorruw. '411.JD
1010 ttwctor wtJD quidc cen- •

REAlTY
MIDDLEPORT - A nice 14x65 mobile home in beautiful
condition. New front deck and screened rear porch. New
carpel~vinyl , paneling and ceiling fans. Storage building
and chaio link fenced yard. Nothmg to do but move in.
OWNER WANTS OFFER! $26,500.00.

LOOK AT THIS
II you can fmd a better buy, buy it! But before you
do, you better "look at thi s" one. We thi nk rt's the
best buy on the mar~et for $69,900 "Look at this"
list of features :
2500 square feet of livin g space
3 lull baths (no waitmgJ
4 bedroom s (no small ones)
Equipped kitchen
•
Oining room
2 car garage
17 years old
Crty schools, water, sewer
Woodburner 1n fireplace
Carpet throughout
OUTSTANDING OFFERING
Quality construction
First Time On The lltrktt! .
1 Mile to H.M.C.
Beautiful 2 story brick and frame on a 2 to 3 acre
Shopping close by
lot in the c~y. First floor includes a formal entr·
Excellent neighborhood
ance, living room with fireplace, formal dining,
Your builder w11! tell you fhat it takes $40.00 asq.
wife approved eat·in kitcnen, a huge screened ·
ft . to build (not counting the lot) 1! you don't ask
porch plus a mother·in·faw apartment which in·
for too many extras. $40.00 x 2500 sq. ft. =
eludes living room with fireplace. I bedroom.
$100.000. At $69,900, you're getting the extras.
kitchen and bath. On the 2nd floor, 4 more bed·
Maybe you better "Look at this"!
#2ll
rooms and 2 baths. The basement has a finished
family roorn with fireplace, a rec. roorn, 1h bath
an d unlinished stora)le rooms. A 2 car Rara~e.
n1ce landscaping and a beautiful pool round this
Selling Your Own' Home
out to be an outstanding offering for $1291po0•
•120
Is A Risky Thing To Try

HAPPY JACK TRMRMICDE:recognb:ed ..f, • etfecttv1 bv
U. S. Bur.., of Votorinory
Mtdldne itvainiJt hook. mund ·•
t8pM'orrM in dop &amp;

JUST II IN UTES FROM TOWN
This home offers 4 bedrooms, living room , large
eat-in krtchen plu s 1 bath. Enclosed porch, utility .
building on !0 acre..more or less for only $42,5110.
C~y schools.
#707

••

3 LOTS LOCATED NEAR TYCOON LAKE (50'x115'). Cane
purchase on land contract. $2,000 down. 10% Int., pay.
$129.69 lor 6 yrs.
·
.
•

•
•
•

5.6 ACRES. located below Gallipolis Dam, along Hazel Ridge.
Rd. $4,900. !Can purchase on lan~ contract). $1,5110.ooe
down, 10%,pay $100.00 per mo.
•
SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS ....
1
CALL AN EXPERIENCED WDOD REALTY SALI~SPEiiS0~ '

SURROUNDED BY NATURE
·Large mature stands of oak, hickory and other
hardwoods along with beautilul llowerin·g dogwood trees help make this homesrte off Rt. 588
outstandin, 2 acre= lot offers seclusion rom
neighbors (while still having some) but~ located
only a mile or two on good roads to Spring Valley
area. Ideal location for that dreatn home yo~·ve
been wanting to build.
#230
PROFITABLE BUSINESS FOil SALE
Tired of a deadend job? Do you want to control
your own future? This could be a business oppor·
tunrty for the right persons. Owner needs to sell
this successful business in order to expand other
bu~ness ventures. II you are ambrtious, hard
working and want to be your own boss,~ive us a
call today lor details. Owner may considef'some fi .
nancing to a qualified person.
#60 2
63 ACRES VACANT LAND
2 miles from city park! Good froollge oo blacktop
r001d. Small stream - 90% wooded. 2 gas and oil
wells. Broker's Note: "There should be a1iew ofthe
river fnro the hill on the back of this property."
$40,000. .
Nl44

When an owner tries to sell hts
borne, it's Uke someilne fllllng hts own
teeth. Even If he somehow succeeds,
he's in for a. lot of anguish.
That's because serious buyers are
wary of homes that are for sale by
owners. They know they will find few
bargains. Instead. buyers seek the ser·
vices of real estate professionals who
are familiar with the market and can
gulde them through what may be the
biggest Investment In their lives.
"For Sale by Owner"signs, ho·
wever, often act like a magnet for peo·
pie who hope to take advantage of un·
suspecting sellers. Sometimes these
"buyers" can cost setters many thou·
of dollars, monthsoftfmeoffthe
et, a!ld mountains of headaches.
Real estate'"\lrofesslonats obtain
real buyers fr.om many sources, In·
eluding national referral services .
· Agents from many companies wlll br·
tng their buyers to see- and perhaps
buy -a tts\ed home. Owners who go It
. alone do n~t have these resources .
When we bring a buyer to see a
home, the dwner kntlws'!Mt the prospect Is qualified and is genuinely Inter·
ested and we wtll help him find flnanc·
ing. But owners who try to sell by
themselves don't know lfthe strangers
who drop by are quallfled, truly inter·
ested - or perhaps just coming In io
took over the owners' possessions. AM
1f they do find somebody who wishes to
buy, owners seldom know of all the fl·
nanclng p&lt;isstbutttes available.
Most owners who try to sell their
homes themselves end up calling a 11·
censed real estate professional. They
know we consider our reputation for
fair deallng a precious possession.
And they know we wlll work bard to
sell their borne whether they are living
In It now, or )n another city. If we don 'I
get results, we don: t get paid.

NEW llSTING- 6.09 beautiful country acres close to town . .
3 bedroom mobil a home, small barn, and hookups lor 2nd
mobile home. WANTS $21,900.00.

ARE YOU SERIOUS ABOUT BUYING A HOIIE7
Here is a home that will fill all your reqUirements.
4 bedroom bric~ and cedar tri-level that incl udes
formal dinmg with woodburning fireplace, kitchen
with all appliances and snack bar, 2\7 gleami ng
baths, lots ol closets, large family room with wood·
burning fireplace w1th pri1ate bar room. N1 ce car·
peting and Bruce hardwood floors. 2 car garage. 3
level sundeck, large in-ground pool and large
shady landscaped Lot. On eoft he bes\ locations in
town. Children walk to school yet it's in a low traf·
fie, quiet, peaceful neighborhood. $109,900.
#102

MIDDLEPORT-GOOD CONDITION- Ofder home wrth a nice
block garage and workshop in gooo condrtion. PRICED TO
SELL AT $19,900.00.
POMEROY- A beautiful modern kitchen compliments this
3 bedroom home. Full basement, newer back derk Int. nf
closet space. Nice woodwork' PRICE REDUCED. $41,900.00.
RUTlAND - i ~ story home in town. Buy house and lot for
$24,000.00 or house and 17 acres for $31,900.00.

E. M.
David Wiseman. 446-3796
Pat Robie, 379-2288
Rae Beasley, 446-8126

~isem(ln,

POMEROY - This neat horne is ready for immediate occu·
-pancy . Five rooms with 3 bedrooms, large lot, other features.
$19,500.00.
•
MIDDLEPORT~

Affordable home in town! 3bedrooms, util·
ity room, bath and close to park and pool! ONLY 123,000.00.
SYRACUSE- Really nice 1982 Double Wide, 3 bedrooms, 2
paths. decking and many other features. All in good condi·
lion. WANTS $34,500.00
POMEROY - Nice neighborhood! 4 bedroom home with 2
car garage, WB, fireplace, full basement, oak trim, workshop
over garage, lots of cabinet space. $39,900.00.
RUTlAND - Nice ranch type home on a level lot. 3 bed·
rooms, equipped krtchen, close to schools, all in .&amp;dod condi·
lion. Assumable loan' Ask for details. $29,900.00.

FIVE POINTS AREA- Three one-acre building sites. Elec
and water available. Good location for your new home.
$5,900.00.

UJ9
MIDDLEPORT - Excellent start home wrth mcome from upstairs apartment. House needs a lit·
tie fixinR up, but when.you are finished, you can
s1t on the big lront.porch and en1oy the uverview.
Priced at an affordable $25,000.
#445

RACINE~ N1 ce 1\1 story home wrth wrap-around porch. 34 bedroom~ family room, fireplace, part basement. Many
unique features. Only $29,900.00.

LETART -Like new Inside and out' Completely remodeled 4
bedroom home, garag~ new roof, new siding fireplace, drop·
in range. $27.500.00.

CHESTER AREA- Vacant land. Approx. 20 acres to build on
or would make great hunting srte. ONLY $10,000.00.
•

MIDDLEPORT-- Apjuox. 12 acres of woodland plus a seven
room brick home. 4 becdroom s, F.AJ.O. heat plus a wood·
burner. PRIVACY. $27,000.00.

SPEND A LITTLE. GET A LOll
There's a lot bemg offered in this 3 to 4 bedroom
home lor $54,900. Including 1ery nice wile-approied eat-in krtchen wrth deck, living room. 2
bat hs, family room, good storage and attached
garage. Heat pump. Low mainten-ance. Large lot
for kids located in Green School District in lamily·
oriented neighborhood.
~15

•
HENRY E. CLELAND .. ...............................
:..... 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL. ......................... :.................949-26li0
DOniE TURNER ............................................ 992·5692
JO Hlll ........................................................985-4466
OFFICE .................................................. ....... 992·2259

POMEROY - PRICE REDUCED on this handicapped ac·
ces~ble home. Ramp ways,' special floor covering. special
bath fixtures, etc., all designed with the handicapped m
mind. 3 bedrooms, fireplace, basement, large modern
kitchen. ONLY $34,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Unique 3 bedroom home in good condi·
lion. Equipped krtchen, washer and dryer included. Fire·
place, front sitting porch, l'h baths. $17,500.00.

NICE STARTER HOME
Cheshire area ranch offers 3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
family room , living room. Situated on 2. 42 acres.
Owner anx ious to sell. $20,000.
#702

NEW LISTINGS NEEDED- We have buyers lor Meigs
County Property. list with us for best results.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General
•

LOTS FOR SALE IN SUNKIST SUBDIVISION
2 lotsside by side each 96 x 177. Just off Rt. 35 in
qual1ty neighborhood. Electric and water on property. $4,000 each..
·
#202
MAINTENANCE FREE RANCH ·
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large kitchen and dining
area. Thermo·pane windows wrth attached 2 car
garage. Situated on 1 acre, only 12 miles from
town. Priced to sell at $48,500.
#701
... QUIET, COUNTRY LIVING await s you at this
modern A-frame in the woods. 3 bedroom s, 11\
balhs, spaciou s kitchen lor two cooks. Sunroom,
living room with fireplace. new deck. ~erfectly
priced at $27,000. .
#B0 2
FOR SALE OR LEASE -Residential or Business
Best use would be as a business. Large beamed
front room surtable for recept1cn/dis play ma. or
could be con1_
erted into apartments. 3 bedrooms,
_. 21k bath s; kitchen/dinm garea. ca rport and an at·
tached income-producing additiOn. Frontage on
Rt. 35 in the Village of R1 o Grande. Add1!ion al va cant lot and approx. 25 acres a1ailable lor
purchase. Call for details.
#403

.

.

.

THIS BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME LOCATED ON SECONO
AVENUE IN GALLIPOLIS IS NOW BEING OFFERED FOR SAlt
VERY NICE FLOOR PlAN, FO.RMAL DINING. DEN WITH FIRE·
PlACE· 3 BEDROOMS, 2!0 BATHS. LARGE PRIVATE BACK
YARD WITH POOL PERFECT FOR THEFAMILYWITH SCHOOL
AGE CHILDREN. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY.

Broker

JUST A LITTLE BI~COUNTRY - 3 BEDROOM RANCH
HOME, 2 BATHS, W SAVER KITCHEN HAS OAK CABI·
NETS, SNACK BAR,
GE, REFRIG ., UTILilY AREA WITH
WASHER AND DRYER, CARPORT PLUS 24X30 GARAGE. 5
ACRE LOT HAS FRUIT TREES, GRAPE ARBOR, CITY SCHOOLS,
BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY SURROUNDINGS. $68,000.
COURT STREET IN DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS 1- THIS
BUILDING HAS GREAT POTENTIAL, 2 COMMERCIAL UNITS
ON FIRST FLOOR FRONTING ON COURT STREET. SECOND
AND THIRD FLOORS WOULD MAKE EXCELLENT RENTAL
UNITS, 1 STORY, FRONTING ON ALLEY SUITABLE FOR STOR·
AGE AND MANY OTHER USES. ASKING $69,000. ·

LOW MAINTENANCE. ENERGY CONSCIOUS
HOllE ready for you ,to enjoy. Features lfiCiude 3
large bedrooms, 3 complete bath s. family kitchen,
large living room, master bedroom with attached
bath, extra space in garage with automatic door
opener, lots of st orag~, 1.3 rolling acres. Beaut1·
fully maintained home. $59,500. Call today!
. #808

•

NEARLY NEW RANCH WITH 2~ ACRES. BEAUTIFUL
WOODED lAWN, 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, EQUIPPED
KITCHEN, FULL BASEMENT, ATTACHED GARAGE, STORAGE ·
BLDG. VERY PRETlY. KYGER CREEK OR NORTH GALLIA
SCHOOLS $53.000.

Rl 7 - SMALL FARM HAS 3 BEDROOM HOME. LARGE
60X70 BARN. TOOL SHEDS, OTHER OUTBUILDINGS. GREAT
RESIDENTIAL OR COMMERCIAL LOCATION. $45,000.

LOCATED Ill THE VIllAGE DF NORTHUP- EXCELLENT
BUY ON THIS SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOM RANCH. LARGE FAM ·
ILY ROOM· EAT·IN KITCHEN, BACK YARD HAS PRIVACY
FENCE. GALLIPOLIS CITY SCHOOLS. $39,000.

VERY COlY 2 BEDROOM HAS FIREPlACE IN LIVING ROOM,
EXTRA LARGE KITCHEN, 2 BEDROOMS, BASEMENT. NICE
SIDE PORCH. IN CITY. $35,000 .
IAfiD FROMTING ON OHIO RIVER AND RT. 7. APPROX. 15
ACRES. LEVEL TO GENTLY SLOPING. All CLEARED, EXCEL·
LENT BUILOING SITES.

AUDREY f, CANADAY. REALTOR
ROBERT E. GORDON, REALTOR
MARY FLOYD, REALTOR .
OFFICE: 2&amp; LOCUST ST.
GALLIPDUS. OHIO

loretta McDade, 446-7729
B, J. Hairston, 446-4240
. Phyllis Miller, 446-8346

1-.rtng Hog. Col 114-3811-

1448.

.
II

'·

ANY HOUR -

LOCATED ON UPPER RIVER ROAD
ACROSS FROM NEW SHOPPING CENTER

BLACKBURN REALTY
446-000S

Phone

SUNDAY PUZZLER

EASTERN DISTRICT - Spacious livin g w1th privacy on a
deadend road. large home with 4 bedrooms, tam1ly room,
dining room, living room with fireplace, nice krtchen cabi·
nets. Many other features. Call for an appointment.

MIDDLEPORT- Here is acute lrttle log house with acute lit·
tie price. Up to 3 bedrooms, wrth a beautiful river view.
WANT $17,900.0~.

120 ACRES M/l OF VACANT lAND - Gooclroa~
lrontage for bu il ding home and small farm. Owner
will divide. Excellent area for hunt ing. Most lays
well for hay and pasture land. All for $63,000.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

CARPENTER - Nice doublewide srtting on 1.86 acres in a
country settm' 1 ~ car garage. dec~ equipped kitchen,
fenced yard. ONLY $32,5110.00.

POMEROY- Older 2 story home, gorgeous woodwork. fire·
place, nice kitchen cabinets. 3 bdrms., equ ipped kitchen,
central .air, garage and storage. $39,900.00.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
(614) 446-3644

MIDDLEPORT - 2 unrt apartment building in Middleport.
Good rental income. Good neighbOr. OWNER WANTS SALE
NOW? $24,900.00.

TUPPERS PIAl N.S - 1~ story frame home with 3 bed·
rooms, bath. 1 car garage sitting on a nice double !of: ONLY
$17,900.00.

VINTON - Older 2 story home in need of repair
but could be a beautiful home. 7 rooms and bath,
. full basement with shower, large metal buildin g,
garden space, located on 0.7 acre directly across
!rom a new school. Priced at $29,000. Make an of·
fer!
#401

BRICK HOME ON 3 ACRES
Very nice home in country atmosph ere offers
what everybody seems to want - ·a little space in
the yard. Forced air furnace in home, also
equ1pped kitchen, den, covered patio, lenced
yard. Frurt trees, garden space. Priced to sell a!
$54,900. Oon'f hesrtate to call. Lower end of
Meigs County.
·
#209

NEW LISTING - SUNNY HOLLOW- Approx. 30 ~ acres,
wrth spring. electric available. and all minerals. ASKING
$14,000.00.

NICE HOllE LESS THAN 10MINUlE DRIVETOGALLIPOLIS
APPROX. 2 ACRES
8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, fenced in yard. Nat. gas for cooking
and heatin~ Nice front polch. modern kitchen with dish·
washer and lots of cabinet~ You must see thishome before
IOU buy. Priced at only $49,9!!0.00.
1Hi74

Ariswer to Puzzler on Page D4
ACROSS

1 European herring
6 After eome time
f1 Morning prayer
18 Profl11
21 veracity
22 MuM Of poe1ry
23 Fac&lt;~ the morning
24 Permit
25 Jim Evere11, e.g.
26 Long for
28 Cheaper by 1he
30 Breathing organ
32 Agave plant
33 Tha1 thing
34 Before: prefix
35 Edible~
36 To load
37 Shipshape clock
38 Church bench
40 Wash cycle
42 Foolliko pa.rt
43 River Iaiande
44 Station
45 Consumed
47 Injure by
overexertion
49 S·shaped
molding
50 Cry of cow
51 LB11 races alter
heals
54 Splrl1
55 SloYe part
56 Leaps and -:59 Pismire
60 Sllll
62 Ben1
64 " The Emperor"
65 Again: prefix
66 Guido's low note
67 Knock
69 Aquatic mammal
70 Seasoning
71 Wrl1e
72 Unl1 of Bulgarian
currency
74 Aber plant
76 Title of respect
77 Ornamentll knob
78 Electric catfish
79 Enc:rOIChes
82 Conveyed
84 AgrlcuHural plota

85 Fur-bearing
animal
86 Shadow
88 Leak through '
89 Opening In fence ·
90 Ham of property
92 Gloss
94 Reliance
98 Give lood to
99 Classify
100 Long, slender llsh
102 leland In Aogea~
Sea
103 Hyson
11M Sesa"'e
105 Goll cry
108 Shy
108 Obatruc1
109 Silver symbol·
110 Printer's measure
111 Mus of floating
lea
112 Cut
114 Openwork fabric
118 Employ
117 Iterate
119 Groan
120 Peat
122 Transgressor
124 Consume
125 Strain for breath
126 S1rlke out
128 A - of gold
129 Swift
•
131 "- Side Story"
132 Article of
furniture

133 FluUars
135 Away
138 Uluminated
139 Liquid measure
140 Tampa's st.
141 Stomach
142 Neon symbol
143 Equally
144 Sear~h for
145 African antelope
147 Takes one's part
149 Fish limb
150 "The Big-"
152 White sale Item
154 Think
156 Speechify
l58 Llatensto
159 Flnlllled
160 Drinks heavily
161 Brimless cap

DOWN
1 Denude
2 Talk Idly
3 Alcoholic
be\ferage

4 Near
5 Old pronoun
6 Becomes aware
of
7 Apprehends
8 Make Into leather
9 Latin conjunction

10 Staff
11 Labyrln1hs
12 Region
13 Me1a1
14 Exlsls
15 Nullify
16 Strong wind
17 Everyone
18 Nega11ve prefix
19 Memoranda
20 Fast
27 Slender finial
29 Unlock
31 Ooglags, I.e.
36 Hold on properly
37 Midday
39 Need
40 Depend on
41 God oflove
42 Helmsmen
43 Malured
44 Look suflen
46 Tantalum &amp;ymbol
48 Vehicle: colloq.
49 Above
50 Majority
51 Blemish
52 Bury
53 Conllnued slory
55 Musical dramas

56 Hairless
57 Vision
58 Dlspa1ches
61 Soviet news

agency
63 Auricular
64 Pralle
68 Grazing land
70. Walked
71 Fa1her or mo1her
73 Boal
74 Quarrel
75 Smallest number
77 Splr.lled horse

•

78 Evaluate
80 Sow
81 Pose for portrait
83 Crimson
84 Novelties
87 vast throng
89 Fabled diminutive
belnga
90 In back o1
91 River In France
92 Learnln9
93 Inclined roadway
95 Verve
96 Slop
97 Ardenl
99 Chimney carbon
101 Torn
105 Level
106 Snare
107 Transac1ion
111 Accomplishment
112 Expense
113 Anracted
115 Gralultles
116 Old prep&lt;lllltlon
'118 Nuisance
119 Spar
121 Loosely woven
cotlon fabric
123 Noga11ve
125 Docile
126 College olllclal
127 Eludes
129 - Gordon of the
c;pmlcs
130 Passageway
131 Emerge
vlctO[IOUS
132 Not Irritating
134 Female sheep
136 Join
137 Doctrine
139 Young dogs
140 Escape
144 Tha1 woman
145 Goal
146 Speck
147 Drink slowly
148 Cry
149 'o1s1ant .
151 Babylonian deity
153 At home
155 Italian river
157 No1e of scale

�..,..

•

•

;Oil'- -

•

..

•

•

'

...

.•

January 8. 1989

Bengals
win AFC
crown

LAST WEEK
TO GET

YOUR HAM

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

'

SJO

THRU SAT., JAN. 14, 1989

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN.,

ON YOUR
WHOLE .OR
HALF
BONELESS

.

.

$ 59
Cube Steak ••••• ~... 2. ••••••·•• $14 9
.1,4' por'k Lo1n

Sliced Bacon ......~~. 69&lt;

''
•
. 1/
•

POWELL'S
SUPER VALU
•One space will be vHiidnted BACh

week with , the purchase of
or more, excluding
beer. wine and tobacco pro·

·~o

nnw cards will hP. iuued a her
Saturday. Jan . 14, 1989to~tart
the promotiOn .

•Only o ne Ham Certificate per

family .

•Aif 12 .spaces must be properly
validated before a Ham Certlticate will be honored.
•Certificates can only be redeemed
on the purchase of a Whole or
Half Boneless Ham . NO cash re-

funds wil1 be made. _

LB. ROLL .

•Ham certificates will be honored
Morch 19-25, 1989. No ••·

demptiona after thl1 date.
•Tho week of Fob. 26· Morch 4. wo '
••k that you bring in your CMd
1nd exc:henge it for • OIIW c1rd
.4 for our invenlory purpoHit.

SPECIAL
OFFER ON

U.S. ~1-10 LB~ BAG

$

'

199
Idaho Potatoes ....

GENUINE
NEW ARE
\·

,\

FLAVORITE

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
GAL.

$ .4_9
Orange Juice •• ::~!~ 1, .

KRAFT GRAPEFRUIT OR

SUNSHINE

·

Dog Food •••••••••••••
BONUS 22 lB. BAG

2 LITER BOnLE

. .
10-11 oz.
99&lt;·
D
1nners
••••••••••••
TV
349
KEMP'S S QUART PAIL
$ 99

$

-BANQUET ·

Seven -Up •••••••••••••• 99( Ice Cream ............
OR OR. PEPPER

MAXWELL HOUSE

BETTY CROCKER

INSTANT COFFEE

CAKE MIXES

12 OZ. JAR

$429
c..- ,
... .....

1i.soz.

lillllt 1 ••

Ottly At Powoll's Super Vatu
lall.lthruS.t.,Jall.l4, 1919 ,

._

Reagan sends· 1990 ·
budget to Congress

idntccl each weP.k , no mal!:e-ups.

Fish 'n' Batter •••• $599
GUNNOE'S OAK RIDGE FA.RMS
.Sausa ge •••••••••••••••• 99&lt;

3J$2

Lilllit 3 P• CIMtomer

Goo4 Only At Powoll'1 Super Yalu
Goo4
.._,., lllru !at. Jan. 14, 1919
0

•

..........

2

·:couPON
CAMPBELL'S

.(tiCKEN NOODLE SOUP
10.75
oz.

3/Sl
c,.,_,
•

Limit 1 ' "
Goo4 Only At Pawoll's S.,. Yalu
0
Goo4 Sun.. .kin. lllwu Sat. Jan. 14, 1919· o
•

•••••• •

PAPER TOWELS
..
.
JUMBO

lOllS

3/Sl

Limit I ' " c..to,..r
0
o. GOIMI CWy At Powoll's Super Vatu
...GOIMI
.-..1 tin Sat....... 14,1919 • •

5 PC. PLACE
SETTING

$199
WITH 20 BONUS
CERTIFICATES

6 Piece Place Setting
Consists of: Dinner Plate,
Cup, Seucer, Soup/Cereal
Bowl and Salad Plate

Two Beautiful Pauerns
To Choose From

•••

Matehing Acee88orles
Available

• ••

SEE STOlE DISPU Y
FOI DETAILS

KEGWORTH, England (UPI)
lies problems. The jetilner ·smashed Into a ta ngle of trees on
- A rare multi-engine !allure
landed safely and there were no the highway embankmen t. said
may have caused the crash of a
injuries, officials said.
aviation expert Chris Lockwood.
new British Midland Airways
For the second time in three
As the plane desce nded
jetliner at the edge of one of weeks Monday, Queen Elizabeth sharply, one unidentified surviII had to send a message of vor said from her hospital bed
Britain's busiest highways, kll·
ling at least 43 passengers,
condolence because of an air Monday, "We just said a prayer
aviation officials said Monday .
crash -this time to tell relatives and got on with it. "
Investigators said they had of the BMA accident victims that
Another surviv or, Gareth
recovered both flight recorders she was "deeply shocked."
Jones, hospital ized with cuts,
Authorities said a bomb blast bruises and a black eye, sa id that
!rain the wreckage of BMA
Flight 92, a 12-week-old Boeing brought down a Pan American when they were to ld th ere would
World Airways Boeing 747 jumbo be anemergency landing, "I just
737-400 with 126 people aboard,
jet on the Scottish village of shot my head down to get Into
that plowed into an embankment
along the Ml motorway Sunday Lockerbie Dec. 21, killing all259 · position. That's where I got the
night after narrowly missing the persons aboard and another 11 on shiner - I didn' t get my head
the ground - Brltain's worst ai r down fast enough."
• tiny town of Kegworth. ·
Asked whether sabotage might disaster.
As dazed survlvors stumbled
The Boeing 737 crashed Sunday from the wreckage, firefighters
have been Involved, as in the
crash of a Pan Am plane that 55 minutes after it left on a swiftly poured foam onto the
killed 250 l11st month, Transport commuter flight from Heathrow wreckage to prevent any remainSecretary Paul Channon said, " I to Belfast, Northern Irela nd, ing aviation fuel from exploding
don't rule out anything but coming down within sight of the a nd causing an even worse
there's certainly no evidence of it runway lights where pilot Kevin catastrophe, said Chan non.
Hunt had hoped to bring his
at this point."
The last of the vlc'tims was
Tony Butler, assistant chief crippled craft to a safe landing. pulled from the rubble in the wee
Hunt skillfully avoided hitting hours . of the morning, nearly .
constable of LoJlghborough. said
there were 43 confirmed dead but the tiny town of Kegworth, 110 e ight hours after the plane went
that more than 80 people, includ: mlles northwest of London but down.
lng the eight-member fllgh,t
crew,. sljrvlved ln Britain's second air disaster in 18 days.
Channon said investigators
were checking the flight recorders at.d reports of witnesses
amid growing indications that
both the jetliner's engines had
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres- Congress are expected to overfailed, forcing It down one-half Ident Reagan, in his final budget, haul in the months ahead, ·promile short of an emergency sent Congress Monday a $1.15 poses a flscall990 deficit of $92.5
. '· IIII)P,\ng at Eas.t Mldla.nqs , \rUUol) spending plan lor 1990 bllilol!. bel'ow the $100 billion
:·; '{MTJ&gt;Qrt. .~
. . . ,.. , '
that. contains rio new taxes, calls · deficit cap required for next'year
Authorities said there had been
for etlnitnating 82 programs and by the 1985 Gramm-Rudman
only seven reports of multi- projects a deficit of $92.5 billion.· balanced budge! Jaw .
engine failures in the past 10
The budget projects a deficit
"This . budget shows that a
years. Pilot John Tritton sald it
gradual elimination of the dell cit for this fiscAl year of $161.5
was "almost unheard ol" and
is possible without raising taxes, bllllon. , ;
another expert described it as a
The 'president, who presided ·
without cutting into essentia l
' '100 million-to-1 chance."
over
the largest peacetime mil·
social programs, without dev,asAt London's Heathrow Airport
ltar-y
buildup ln U.S. history,
tating defense and without m!gMonday, about !2 hours after
lectlng other nationa l priori- proposed a $315.2 billion PenBMA Flight 92left on Its Ill-fated· ties," Reagan said 'In his budget tagon budget for the fiscal year 1
journey, another Pan Am 747
message. "New taxes are not beginning Oct. 1, representing
from Washington to London with
real growth after inflation of 2'
Although many of the passengers and crew
required."
percent. ·
·
·
a bout ~00 people aboard made an
survived the incident, at lell!it 431ost their Jives In
Reagan's budget , which Reem~gency landing after the
Congress passed a $298.8 bilthe accident. REUTER
·
pilot reported suspected hydrau- publican Pres!dent-!!lect George lion defense spending bi ll las t
Bush ;md Democrats who co ntrol year.
.,

.

, Ouly one space may be val - .,

SEA-STAR-5 ll.• BOX

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

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engine failure
may have caused crash

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Tonight, parlly cloudy . Low
near 25. Tuesday, partly
sunny. High .in mid-30s.

•

~~~~;~~~~~·h;~o~~~~~~~8;9 :::=:=~:=:=:=:=:=:=~::::::::::~~;;~~~~~~~~0~h~i~o~,~~onday. January9, 1989

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298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Daily Number
922

Page 4

CARD!

STORE HOURS
Monday 1hru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Ohio Lottery

CLEAN UP DEBRIS - Firemen clean up
debris around the broken remains of the Midland
Boeing 737 airliner which crll!ihed on lhe Ml
molorway embankment late Sunday night.

Court to hear arguments on
Missouri's anti~bortiOn law
· WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Supreme Court stepped into the
volatile abortion debate Monday,
agreeing to review the constitutionality of a wide-ranging antiabortion la.w from Missouri.
The court will hear arguments
In the case brought by the state of
Missouri seeking review of a
ruling by the 8th U.S. Circuit
Court · of Appeals that struck
down major portions of the law.
The case Is the first major test
of the legality of abortion to be
accepted by the eourt since It
returned to full strength last year
with the confirmation of Justice
Anthony Kennedy , whose view on
the matter could be critical to the
fil lure of the landmark 1973 Roe
vs. Wade ruitng that legalized
abortion. .
The last major abortion case

before the court was resolved on
The federal government and 'a
a 4-4 vote. The tie upheld the number of states have bans on
lower court ruling that struck the use of public funds for
down portions of the Illinois law abortion and have placed limits
that dealt with a minor's access on the use of publicly financed
to abortion.
hospital services for abortion.
The 1986 Missouri abortion law The Supreme Court, ln rulings in
includes a variety of provisions 1977 and 1980, generally upheld
that range from declaring llfe the bans.
·
begins at conception and that
•
Doctors, nurses and two non,
"unborn children have protectable interests in life, health and profit corporations challenged
well-being," to provisions ban- the constitutionality of the Misning the use of state funds, souri law. The district court
employees or public facilities for struck down the provisions and
the appeals court concurred. •
abortions.
The appeals court held that the
The law also requires that
of the law were
.
provisions
doctors, before performing an
unconstutional
and designed to
ll,bortlon on any woman whom a
erect
obstacles
"iri the path of·
doctor has reason to believe is 20
or rnore weeks pregnant, per- women seeking full and uncen·
form tests to determine the sored medical advice aboutalternatives to childbirth."
viability of the fetus.
The court also said the ban on
the . use' of · public facilities for
abortions went beyond Supreme
Court rulings. .
·

CONTRmUTES TO RIO SCHOOL OF BUSINESS- Ohio Valley Bank recently presented a
$20,000 check to Rio Grande College as the final
Instalment on a three-year, $50,000 pledge to the
endowment fund of the Emerson E. Evans School
of Business Management. Since lis founding In
1983, the School of Business has graduated more

. . . . .-- Local news briefsMiddleport tax fornts arrive
'

Middle(lOrt residents are now receiving their first Middleport
Income Tax forms. These are standard forms which will be used
for all years the tax Is in effect.
Middleport's tax ordinance went into effect July I, 1988 and
residents are reminded that they will be.paying for six months
ol'lly in 1988. Residents are to enter wages D11ly from July 1when
fiUlng'out the return form, however a W-2 copy should also be
returned with the tax form.
Anyone with questions regarding the tax or the tax form
should Co~Jtact the tax office at 992·2827.

Fire destroys electrical box
An outside fuse box at the Dan Littlefield house.on Broadway
St. In Racine, caught fire early Sunday morning. The Racine
Fire Department was called at 6:44a.m. Destroyed was the
electrical box and some of the siding on the house. There were
· no in)urles.
·
Continued o.n page 5
I~ .

,· than 200 degree recipients, Including nearly 20
graduates from Meigs County. A total of 168Meigs
County residents are currently enrolled al the
college. Pictured presenting the $20,000 check to
College President Paul C. Hayes, center, are OVB
President James L. Dailey and OVB Executive
Vice President Jeffrey E. Smith.

Ohio Valley Bank· completes
School of Business pledge

The appeals court said there
"Is a fundamental difference
between providing direct funding
to effect the abortion decision
and allowing staff physicians to
. perform abortions at an existing
publicly owned hospital ,"
Seeking hlgh court rev lew,
Missouri argues that the appeals
court's analysis "expands this
court's precedents In favor of
abortion on demand , further
contracts the state's compelllng
Interest In the life of viable
unborn children, and disregards
this court's holdings that abOrtion Is a private matter which
government need In no way
subsidize."
Missouri also said that lf Its law
Is unconstitutional, "Roe vs.
Wade should Itself be
reconsidered.

Ohio Yalley B&lt;J.nk 'officials OVB President James L. Dailey.
presented a $20,000 check to Rio
"This generous gift ls greatly
Grande College/Community Col- ap preciated and wlll assist in the
lege In late Deceml!er as.the final college's effort to serve · the
Installment on a three-year, common community," Dr.
$50,000 pledge to the e ndowment Hayes added.
fund of the Emerson E . Evans
The mission of the Evans
School of Business Management. School of Business Management
"Community service has al- reflects the career and Ideals of
ways Men a hallmark 'of Ohio former OVB President Emerson
Valley Bank's philosophy of E . Evans, entrepreneur and
doing business throughout sou- -successful businessman In souththeastern Ohio," College Presi- ern Ohio. Evans serv~d as
dent Paul C. Hayes said In president of OVB from 1954 until
accepting the check presented by 1976.
I

The school of bu siness at Rio
Gra nde College was officially :
dedicated In the fall of 1983. S1nce
that time, Ohio Valley Bank has
contributed $150,000 to the
school's endowment fund .
In addition to Its financial
support for the endowment fund.
OVB each year awards sc holarships to deserving students from
throughout southern Ohio. During the current 1988-89 academ ic
year; 18 students, incl uding residents or Ga llla, Jackson and
Continued on page 5

•

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