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Page

. 12~The

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Daily Sentinel

Friday. January 29,

--,Local news ·briefs.-. .....· Board decid,es against action .against .Clark
By FJtANCE;S ANN BtJJtNS .
PATERSON, N.J. (UPI) -A .
lawyer lor Joe Clark Is declaring
victory In a school board decision
not to reinstate diSCiplinary ·
action against the bat-carrying
princlpai whose tough·mlnc1ed
approach has won praise from
the Reagan administration.
The board backed away trom
Its previous stance, voting not to
bring charges but Instead to
direct ~ superintendent
Frank Napier- a staunch Clark
· backer - to Investigate last .

M~lgs County Em~rgency Medical Servlces reports live calls
· Wednesday; Racln~ at 6:31 a.m. to a minor chimney fire at the

Tom Fill residence; Middleprt at 10:24 ·a.m. to 175'i!j Nort!)
. .Second Ave. lor Don VanCooney to Holzer Clinic; Middleport at
4·50 p.m. to Holzer Clinic lor Patrlc.k McDaniel to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 4:55 p.m. to Long Bottom for Eugene
German to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 10:34 p.m. 111
Lasher Road lor Lessle Lush to Holzer Medical Center.
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Triple header slated Saturday ·
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Southern fans can &lt;'njoy not two, but ihree basketball games
at Southern High In Racine on Saturday. Southern's freshman
team will pl;ly Ravenswood at· 4:45p.m. In the afternoon. The
· Tornado Reserve team will play Miller at 6:30 p.m ..
Immediately followed ·by Varsity action between Southern aild
·
Miller,

...

.Stocks
Dally $(0Ck prices
(As of 10:30 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis .t. LOewl

Parents to ·nieet Sunday
the Parents For Education support groupwlll meet Sunday, 2
p.m.. at Meigs Junior Hl.gh ~hool In MlddlePQrt, to formally
organize and to outline goals lor the remaining school year, ·
Allconcetned parents In Meigs Local Dlsttlct are urged by
Parents For Educ~tlon organizers to attend the meeting and get
Involved in "your" school system.
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month's unauthorized and IDI·
proper suspension of Eastside
High School students.
. ·
Lawyer VIckie Dol!aldson
called tile board action "a
victory lor Joe Clark."
"I . think It's possible now to
•strike some medium, •' she said.
· Neither Clark nor any of his
supporters attended Thursday's
board meeting.. The brief, quiet
meeting· was a contrast to the
.stormy · .session earlier . this
month when the board voted to.·
lnltlat .e disciplinary
proceedings . .
Board . members' said they
-hoped the publicity 'that has
dogged them since the dl&amp;ptite

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EMS has six calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Thursday and one call early Friday morning. ·
. Thursday at 1: 17 a.m., Middleport to 391 North Fourth for
Randy Lawson who was treated but not transported; Racine at
3,: 09 a.m. to Stlversvllle Road for Keith Musser who was treated
but not transported; Rutland at 1:13 p.m. to a fire at the
Charlene Hess trailer on Nichols· Road; Syracuse Fire
Dep;trtment at 2:28 p.m. to a fire at the Michael residence on
Church St.; Racine F"lre Department was called to assist .
Syracuse ~t 2:3.3 p.m.; Syracuse EMS at 2:44 p.m. treated
fireman D10n Jones at the scen.e of the fire; Middleport Rescue
17 at 3 p.m. was also called to assist a.t the fire In Syracuse.
. Frld'!Y at 1:57 a.m .. Pomeroy to 126 Laurel SUor Bill Priddy
:o Veter11ns Memorial Hospital.
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Sunday

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50 cents

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66
students
he
said
were
malin·
•
began -In . December would die
· gerers who were not trying to :
down. · .
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"I would. like to take this learn. ·
.
opportunity to apologize \O the
The · board forced Clark to ~
community and to the children of
Paterson In particular," said readmit the students and voted : ·
board Vice President Elease 7-1 In parly January to begin •
Evans, , who was recently at· disciplinary action against him :,
tacked by Clark lor her alleged lor Insubordination and unlje.. ~
l;lck of support.
coqiing conduct. The · ilctlori ~
"I feel like It's dragged out. · could have led to a reprimand or ;
There are other things In my life eve11 a suspension.
1 .
ra like to get on with and I hope
· the n~xt time you receive media · Board members later were ,
attention It w111 be more posl· forced to rescind the action ;
because of procedural violations'.,;,
tive," she said/
Clark has been under fire from ofthe state open meetings law; j
leading toThtirsdl!y's decision on ;
board members lor his unautho·
rlzed suspension late last. year of reinstatement of the charges.

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Beat of the .Bend, By Bob Hoeflich -

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Am Electrlr Power .. ........... 29~
AT&amp;T .. .. :·:.: .............. , ....... ... 29~ .
Ashland 011 ................... :c ... 55~
Bob EV!!DS ~ .•. :....... :.......... ;; ,15%
Charming Shoppes ..... , ....... .12%
City Holding Co ................... 29
Fedttrat Mogul.. ...................35%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .............58'f.,
Heck's Inc..... ...... ................ 1}-8
"Key Centurion .......... d .... , .... 40
Lands' End. , ....................... 20%
Limited Inc........................ .lS%
Multimedia Inc....... ........ ;... 53'f.,
Rax Restaurants ........... ....... 3%
Robbins &amp; M:yers ... ~ ..... , ...... . 7%
Shoney's Inc . .................. .. ..22%
Wendy's Inti. .................... ,.. 5%
Worthington lnd................. .17'f.,

00 Mcintyre's boyhood home
.

·:

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COME IN AND SEE THE ALL NEW .1988 REGAL ·

Hospital

WE THINK YOU AlE GOING TO "FALL IN

.: Vat: 22 ND. 111

Middleport~Pomerov:-Gallipolis-'Point Pleasant. January 31, 1988

MIDDLEPORT '..:.. As many as ' Central Office at about a 60 parents to arrange conferences ..
1,000Melgs ·Loca!Schooi'Distrlct percent average during the
The school Will notify those
students could be In violation of strike, this could mean that the40 who are In violation or those who
the .district's attendance Polley percent not attending - If they · are close to being In violation, but
as the resul! of t!)e recent were consistently the same stu- It Is definitely the iesponslboillty
teachers strike In the dlsttlct.
dents,.not In attendance- could of the parent to make arrangeMeigs .. Local Supt. Dan E. ilu~ller about1,(JOO ~ 40 percent ments to discuss the problem,
· Morris Friday announced the of the district's enrollment.
according· to Friday's ;mnounceattendance ·and work makeup· . .However, the board of educa- ment.
.
·
policy of the district.
.
, lion has said that cases will be · Aspects .of the grading period
According to the existing at- handled· on an llldlvldual basis and makeup work ·: were also
tend11nce policy of tile district, through conferences with the explained In the ~tatement Issued
.
"studems wno miss more than 15 respective bl!lldlng prlnlclpal as by Supt. Morris.
· According to p(an; the second
days . In ·a semester ~ourse .-e&gt;r. . · to whether .·or. no.t this pe&gt;licy
more than 30 days In a y&lt;'ar may · might be waived.
six weeks will end of as Nov. 5,
be given no credit for . the
The administration, however, 1987 with grade cards going to
semester course or for the year." . stresses th&amp;l It Is Important, If , . parents for this grading period on
The board has decided that parents believe there Is or tl)at • Monday, Feb. 1, 1988.
attendance will count for the there might be a prohl&lt;'m In the
The· third. grading period will
days school was In session during future with receiving credit be from Dec. 21, 1987, to Feb. 27,
the strike~ a total of 19. Since becauseoftheattendancepollcy, 1988, &lt;~nd will be divided Into two
attendance was reported by .the It Is the responsonslbllty of the parts, which Include: the first.

.' '

LOVE''~ •• ·.·

"We've .Got The Keys To A Better Deal"

@
BUICK

SMITH-NELSON OTORS,
500 EAST MAIN
992-2174

~----Want

POMEROY, OHIO

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WASHINGTON (UP!) -Tech·
re-Interpreted In response to
nological developments that
almost" certain challenges of the
· have expanded the press . to
government's right to regulate
Include new forms of broadcast ' access to the media and ownerand electronic media will force a
ship of new media outlets .
Some new forms of media,
re-definition of First Amend·
ment guarantees of free speech
such as electronic publishing,
: and a free press, a congressional .. ,may not .match old regulatory
research report said Saturday.
pattern~. which have generally
"Satellltes, computers and digused different sta.ndards for the
Ita I transmission lines are -like . ilr,tnt medii!, _br~~dcasters and
th"!' telegraph. telephOne, .radio
so!called common carriers,
and television technologies be- ·which share 11\formationthrough
electronic bulletin boards and
fore them - changing the ways
in which we communicate Ideas,
Other.outlets, the report said.
theories, 'opinions and inciteThe researchers warned that it
will b~;&gt;come increasingly dlfflments to action·, " the report by
the Office of Technology Assese·
cult to justify distinctions bement said.
. . tween the rights of neWspaper
"Taken together: advances in
and magazine publishers, broadcasters and operators of new
computers and telecommunicalloqs may change the concept of
media form s.
·
'thl'press' from one· in which one
Some officials believe ne w
organization publishes for many
restraints might be necessa ry to
to one in which many share
protect technological informalnformatlon amongst them·
lion; others say · freedom of
,selv!'s," the report added.
speech and of the press may
As a result . the office said, the · al.ready have been comprom·
First Amendment will have to be ised, the report said.

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SUPER SATURDA~I .

HANES
Men's knit briefs, T -shirts. A
shlr'ts. boxer ahOrts, including big
sizes, plus boys T shirta and
briefs and men's and boys
thermal tope and bonoma. ·

SATURDAY ONLY .

Funeralfriends
Homemay
at call'from
Ravenswood
where
2 to
4 'and 7 to 9 p.m. today .

Gerald Michael
Funeral services for Gerald E.
Michael. 61, who lost his life In a
fire at the Michael residencE',
1261 Church St., Syracuse, on
Thursday , will be held at 2'p.m.
Sunday at the Ewing. Funeral
Home.

Forfeiting a $450 bond In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night on a
charge of driving while lntox·
lcated was James Dwayne Priddy
not the same lndlvldual as James
Priddy.

SAVE

20°/o

Collins files for treasurer

Quality - DIP'fldability

$2 7

'

SIMPLICITY
·PATTERNS

25(

wu

MEN'S SHIRT SALE

Includes all aport shirts, all flannel shirts, all knit
shirts, quilt lined flannel shirts, Van HauHn dress
shirts.

EACH

BOYS,
.SHIRT SALE
'nctudea entire •lalctlon.·Knlts.

WASHINGTON tUPil\ - Coal
rnlners and mine owners huddled
' saturday, hoping to arrive at a
·: new four-year contract .before a
: mldnlghtSundaystrlkedeadllne.
•swkesmen for both sides said.
. · !ljelther ' side In the talkS ·
'between the United Mine
.'1:0rkers and the Bltqmlnous
:. CoaiOperatorsAssoclatiQn,con·
tlnuous since Nov. 12, would say .
'whether a setflemerlt or a strike ·
·was Imminent.
. ''We jlre very conscious of the
' time element," UMW spokes. man ~oseph Corcoran !lllld. "Ne-,
gotlatlons are proceeding at a
. ,very Ql!lck . pace with a· clear
.~rstaridlng that midnight

sport ehirt1, jean• ahlna. Sizet 8
tn 20. · •'"

~RICE

PRICE

ct..

POMEROY
~ SHOP

a loved one?
Let Americare Pomeroy Nursing and
Reha.bilitation Centers' understanding,
professtonal staff temporarilY. relieve you of
·
your heavy responsibility.
·
.
Accepting residents for short term re~pi.te care.
Call Sonya Wolfe et 814-992-8808
.
For Consulting ·and Information

YTEX SALE
ALL PLAYTEX BRAS
ALL PLAYTEX GIRDLES

0°/o OFF-.
' SAT. ONLYI

CHAIR SALE

DINETTE SET

,Special group of Berklihe
· wallaway recliners and
. rocker I rec;linera

TABLE &amp; 6 CHAIRS

REG. 279 ..............SALE SJI6
REG. S419 .............SALI S2IO
REG•.S456 .............SALE S305
REG. S479 .............SALE S320

S1.9

during the recent Ashland 011 spill in Pennsyh/ania. The geese
seem to have been unaffected, although their niunbers have
dwindled In the past week. (Times-Sentinel photo by Lee Ann
Welch)
·
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s-turdlf ~·lrl

Supe·r

•nn1eman, J•M ull
or v .. k

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Temperatures In Gallljiolls have been warm, but not really.
swimming weatller, unlerls of course, you're a Canadian Goose,
and,have taken up resldeac11 along the Ohio River. The geese have
been along the riverbank for the
month, an- some concern
raleed by the Audobon
In Athens 1111 to their

SATURDAY ONL Yl

To

"CAN

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rr:=:::;;;;;;;;;::==~

YOU USE OUR HILP?" . .
Do you need a vacation from 24 hour care ·of
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RCA INFARED .
REMOTE CONTROL
. Reg.
S349

LAMINATED TOP

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Qililfte •
tile........,

e

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..., llOimi\Utetll. ·

POMEROY ~ Meigs County
Treasurer GeorgC' M. Collins has
·announced h&lt;' Is seeking a fourth
eJected term In the treasurer's
position . Collins filed his petition
for the Republlca.n nomination
for treasurer Friday afternoon.
Although this would be the ·
fourth time for Collins to seek the
treasurer's seat through the
elective process, he became
treasurer of the county In Marcil

~:~p~~=nth~e~~~:~p~~~~~~~~ ~~

Frank ·files
for Sheriff.

of luDell to Southeaster"ll Ohio. .
In (!ODCJualon, Sell· Loq a11d
Rep. Boater alated that they will
contlllue to work on this proposal
toward a prorram that ~llallow
the return of a fair abare of Issue
'IW' ~n to assist Southeast· .
e~n QbJO. With tllell' Jntra~tructure J)l'011)111111. ·
·
TlltclfliiiUOnwtllbedraftlq

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Tuppers Plains Community Club
and Is active in the s ummer ·
league baseball program in th~
Tuppers Plains area.

Howard Frank, whO became
Information on strike benefits.
county auditor at that time.
"We're hoping for the best; · ·
· Collins resides on a 90-acre
we're also prepared for the
farm In Olive Township. where
worst," Corcoran said.
· . he, bls wife Nancy, and 12-yearIn East 'Bank, W.Va., union' · old son John Cavld. raise beef
coal miner Ja~es Estep said, ' cattle. Another son, Mkhael Lee,
"Nobody's heard , nothing. It'S Is a member of the U.S. Army,
unbelievable they can keep a stationed In Bambqrg, Germany.
secret this long. 1 guess·we will
Currently, Collins Is a member
all find out what Is gojng on of ,the Meigs County Budget
tomorroW'. We have prepared for Commission, Meigs · County
(See COAL, A4)
Board of Revisions, Meigs ,_ L.o.=..:.....-_..;__ _:_.o~...o.;:..,._-1
County Planning Commission
GEORGE M. l:UILLJI~
and Meigs County Hospital Com·
mission. He is also a member of
the Board of Trustees or · the

meet on Issue 2 _

LoiiiUtl'B olteuclcledtllatthe
~llaruun Ill the form~- , . aiiHflldlnllata to tilt Iaaue Two
. ~ ·~ an4 •
aN hopellll ies(ISIU. U4 wm be propo.tna
. ctals report. TMir amendment• tMt fllnlltr m~atton can be tllem hi the weeki ahead.
·
. lllld4! to euure a fair dlatrlbutlon

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neaotiatiOn
.continues.
~

.COLUMBUS - At the reqlleat . would be dell~ to benefit
_of Sen. ·Jan Michael' Loq aM rul'lll Ohio In 1i!l)"'al, an!l
State ~p. Jolynn Boater, the . Sovtheastem Qllla. ~lcally,
Appalachian DeJeaatlon of the thlw .report.
·
.
· 01110 Geaeral Alsembly met
LOq and Boater ·a lao note4
··Tbunday to dlleuaa Iaaue Two that they wiD PfOPOie to fliJ)IIn!l
tundlnl ~~~tO\VlllhiP alld vlllap ,.,_I 11ntaWhile .the dtlllfUOII 4111' not Uon at tile dlltrict tlflttlbutlon

mtdtadl.
did dll·
euaa potenttal tillhtlnalt• to
-the tXIItllll propoula, tile Oftl.

e·

.Sunday is on Its .w ay.
best handled on ihe table and not
"!3oth-sides are working very In the public for~m."
hard. Both·sldes are still at the
Tom · Hoffman, a spokesman
table .... As long as they're there. ··for the coal o!JE!ratorsl a·l so said
!here's a chance to get · a
he "can't say" If a strike ·or
settlement. That's our . objec- settlemcilt looks likely.' 'All I can
tlve," Coreoran said.
tell you Is they're continuing to
"A decision to sttlke Is one that' talk. Atthe momenttnere Is not a
Is taken very seriously~" one the deal.'·' .
·
union hopes t.o avoid, he added,
Like Corcoran, Uoffmari also
"(but) at tlie slime time we are said, "l have no comment on the ·
preparing· our members for a · mood at. the table. :... J:!oth sides
worst-case scenariO."
have decided that It's · In~ their
Asked what the miners sought,
Interest to leave the ,negotiating
Corcoran replied: "I Just am . to the negotlllfor}l at the table,"
prohibltE!d from speaking to the
and out or the news. ·
Issues by mu't ual agreement,"
The January l9l!8lssue of the
wlt)l the owners.. "It's been our
United Mine Workers Journal
experience that negotiations are
contalned ·several 'pages of .·

:~slato~

·ONLY 2 TO SILL!

endcirle allY

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·states thilt for tl!ose students who
have chosen to take "credit ''
th&lt;'n the three six weeks grades
given by the teacher will be
averag'ed for the semester grade.
For those students who choose a
grade for the. first part of the '
third grading period. or those
who receive an •·F" for not
making up work, then all four
grades will be averaged for the ·
s!'mester grade.
The bottom line of the announcement Is that the student
carries the responsibility to see
that the make up work is
complete and the parent has the
respoilsblllity for arranging a
conf!'rence with the building
principal if there is a11 attend·
ance policy problem :

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AT·ELBERFELD$
UND[RWEAR.

The second part or t~-·grade
will be given by ·the regular
teacher for the week done from
Jan. 25. The regular teacher Will
also give a grade of "credit" for
the work made up by those
students who received grades of
"Incomplete.". The student mak·
lng up the work can ask for a
letter grad&lt;' for this make up
work. ··
. Supt. Morris said thalli should
be emphasized that the student Is
responsible to see t.hat the make
up work is completed. This is the
policy in effect at all: times.
Students who do not make up
work will be given a grade of "F"
for the first part of the grade in
. the third six weeks.
The announcement further

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part being from Dec. 21. 1987, to
Jar1. 21, 1988, and the second part
being from Jan. 25, 1988 to F.eb.
27, 1988. Grade cards wlll go out
on Mrach 3 and 4 . .
The student will receive two
grades for the ·third grading
period. ·The first" gra\'le will be
given bY the substitute teachers
Who worked during the strike and
will be based on the work.done by
those students who attended
school during the strike. The
student who did not attend or who
did not do enough enough to earn
grades from the sbustltute. wlll
receive a graae of "Incomplete''.
The student who did earn grades
. be . giver\
.
'
Will
a "credit" grade,
unless the student or the parent
desires to have a letter grade for
thls'· period.

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Oreat Savhagsl ·

8 Sections. 66. Pages
A Multimedia ln.c. Ne~ap8per

io take a swim?-'~--~---o:---....,
Technology raising
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Committee to meet
The RUtland VIllage Water
Committee will meet at 7 p.m.
Monday at the Rutland Civic
Center.

·Clarification

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BRAND NEW FROM THE GROUND UP • .

l/2 PRICE

Otmer c;, Polk. 81 Wayne, .
Mich.. formerly of Pomeroy,
died Wednesday at the Garden
. City Hospital in Garden City,
Michigan.
.
Born in West Virginia, he was a
son of the late Clarence and
Agnes Rector Polk . He was a
retired steel worker.
Su rvlvlng are three sisters,
Mrs. Roberta.. Reichblum and
Mrs . Ma rie Rondazzo, both of
Wayne, and Mrs . Gladys Lightfritz, Garden City.
Servi~es will be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday at the Straight-Tucker

~ver

Meigs students may he in attendance violation

. ALL
HOUSEWARES

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Comics-TV .............. Insert
Ct'asslfled!i . ~ ... ;.. ........ D-2·7
Deaths ................... :..... A-4
Editorial ..................... A-2
Sp:orts .. ~ ..... ,_..•.•.....•.. ~-1·8

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Buslness ................. ~·~··D-1

Announcements

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Super ·Bowl22 preview

·Hi-tech·
'f anning ·

NOT JUST .REGAL • • • BUICK REGA.L

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Area deaths

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Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions - ·Ear·
line Ebersbach, Racine; Elma
Goodnite, Racine; James Burt.
Middleport.
Mr. Michael was born Dec. 21,
Charles Pickens
Thursday Discharges - Allen
1926 at Gallipolis, the son of the
BaU, Donald Collins, Dorothy
Charles j, Pickens, 68, Ne- late Oylvan and Hazel Thompson . Collins, Eula Wolfe. Pauline
wark. formerly of Middleport. Mich.ael. He tNas a veteran of
Der!'nberg!'r. Thurston Stone
died Tuesday morning at Licking · World War II having served In
Jr., . Stanley McGI!Ire, • Mary
the U. S. Army and he was
Memorial Hospital in Newark.
Carr.
Born in Middleport, he was a employed as a chernls t's
son of the late Speed l!nd Maggie assistant.
Surviving are his wife, Gloria
Amos Pickens. He was a gradu·
Fischer
Michael; three daughate of Middleport High School
ters
and
sons-In-law,
Brenda and
and a former te acher in the
Hickel,
Pomeroy;
Carol
Benny
Middleport schools also having
and
Barry
Theiss
and
Debbie
and
served as prihicipaL He was a
Curfman,
all
of
Syrac;use;
Kevin
superintendent in the Cleveland
a sol\ and daughter-In-law, Gary
and Central Ohio area schools.
Mr. Pickens was a graduate of and Lynn Mlcbael, (;allipolls;
Rio Grande College and Ohio two sons, Roger Michael. Sy.ra·
University and received . his cuse, &lt;Jnd Dennis Michael, Fort
masters degree in !'ducalion Riley, Kansas; a sister, Nora
from Ohio State University. He Shook, Akron; a brother, Ralpl!
was a member of the Ohio School Michael, . Lebanon, Ga. Also
Boards. Assn., the Buckeye Asso- · sUrviving are his mother-ln:taw,
ela tion of School Administrators. Susie Fischer, Morning St111:;
the American Association of five grandchildren and several
School Administrators, the Asso- nieces &lt;Ind nephews.
Officiating at Sunday's service
ciation of County Superintendwill
be Mr. Mark Morrow and
en ts and was a past president of
the .Centn!l Ohio Teachers Assn. burial will be In Meigs Memory
He was a veteran of World Warll Gardens. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7to 9
having served in the Navy .
p.m. Saturday.
Surviving are his wife, Norma
J. Kaiser Pickens; a son. J.
Bruce of Upper Arlington. and
Square dance
two brot hers, Richard E. of
A square dance wHI be held
Ches hire and Warren of Brook~day.Sp.rn. to midnight, at the
ville. ·
!liiddleport American Legion An·
Besides his parents he was
nex. Music by the True Country
preceded in death by two sisters
Band. . Refreshments will be
and seven brothers.
served. Admission $3.
Services were held at ll a.m.
today at the Brucker and Kishler
Sorority to meet
Funeral Home in . Newark with
Members of XI Gamma Ep.
.
the Rev. Charles Baker official·
silon Chapter of Beta Sigma .Phi
ing. Burial was in the Wesley
Sorority will meet in the upper
Chapel Cemetery, Hilliard.
.Pomeroy parking lot, 6: 15 p.m.
Contributions may be made to
Tuesday. to go to the Down Under
the Charles Pickens Memorial
Restaurant.
Sc holarship Fund, Licking
Council to meet
County Schools. Newark. Ohio
Racine Village Council will
43055.
meet at 7 p.m. Mo~Jday at the
Shrine Park building.
Otmer Polk ,.

I

..

1988

.c - -

EMS hru fioo co.lls Wednesday

•'

••

Incumbent Meigs County She, riff Howard E. Frank filed his
petition of candidacy for the
Republican nomination as the
party'alllerlff candJclatewlth the
Melts Co11nty Boarll of Elections
on Friday, Frt111Ji: 11 seeking the
· ~p~bllcan nomination . In the
May primary elections and If'
.nomlnat!ld will run for reelection
to hi• poat . IIi the November
election. He Is.seeking his RcOnd
term.

�~

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~

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-- ..... - -

~

Commentary·and perspective
-,.

.

I

'

January 31, 1988

I

POMEROY - The following
Individuals were fined this week
In Meigs County Court , as t·e·
leased on a lis t by Judge Patrick
O'Brien.
-Minla Plckens, Point Pleasant ,
W.Va., $50 and costs, six months
In jail suspended to time served
one year probation. restitution:
passing bad checks; . six months
In · jail suspended, one year
probation, restitution and costs
oh another court of passing bad .
checks; Carol Smith Lucas,
Pomeroy, $250 and costs, three
diJYS in jail and 60 day license suspension, DWI ; Curtis Fulks,
Shade; $100 and costs, five days
In jail. with $500 of the fine and

fly Jack Anderson

Disabled Iranian ·lllissi es __,.......;a=n=-dn::::....:a=le~·v;-'-'-an_A_tt__,_a.

•

A Division of

::

.·
.·

· 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis. Olllo 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
!614) 446-2:142
(614) 992·2156

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publis her
HOBART WILSON ,JR....
Executlvl' Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welrom£1. They shOuld be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone nilmber. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not persmallties.

:T oday in .hjstory
•.'

By United Press International
Today Is Sunday, Jan. 31. the 31st day of 1988 with 335 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
" The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury , Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this da te are under the sign of Aquarius. They include
Austrian composer F ranz Schubert in 1797; western novelist Zane
Grey in 1872; Ru ssian ballerina 'Anna Pavlova in 1882; singercomedian Eddie Cantor in 1892; actr~ss Tallulah Bankhead in 1903;
TV game show host Garry Moore in 1915 (age 7.3); Jackie Robinson .
the first black to play ma jor league baseball, in 1919; singer Mario
,Lanza in 1921; a.ctress Carol Channing and novellst Norman Mailer.
both in 1923 1age 651; civil rights leader Benjamin Hooks in 192ri (age
63); and actresses Jean Simmons In 1929 Cage o9) and Suzanne
·
Pleshette in 1937 tage 51).

On this date in history:
, In 1929. the Soviet Union expelled communist revolutionary Leon
Trotsky. He went into exile a nd later was assassinated in Mexico.
In 1950, President Harr-Y Truman announced he had ord~red
development of the hydrogen bomb.
In 1958, Explorer-], the first successful U.S. eart h satellite, was
·la unched from Ca pe Canaveral.
·
'
.
In 1982, the Israeli Cabinet agreed to a multi-n ation a l
peace-keeping force to act as a buffer between Israe l and Egypt in the
Sinai peninsula.
1n 1987, New York's Long Is land Railway, the -nation's busiest
commuter line, res umed service after a two-week strik e.
A thought for the day: Ta llulah Bankhead said, ·'If I had to live my
Life again I'd make all the same mi stakes - only sooner ."

WASHINGTON- Iran has 270
deadly Phoenix air-to-air missiles, but no -one has felt the sting
of them. That ls because a gutsy
American Navy captain sUpped
Into Iranian air bases In 1979 and
disabled: the missiles while t)le
Ayatollah Khometnl was seizing
power.
·
Tile Iranians hav~ llad custody "
of the missiles since 1979. when
the shah was still In power. A
Phoenix can shoot down a s~eU- ·
ing jet 100 miles away. Eut not
one of the $670,000 missiles has
been used by the Iranians against
Iraq, even though Iraqi air
strikes against Iran have been
devastating. And not 0ne Pho·
· enlx has ,been used against U.S.
aircraft f!Yil!g escort patrpl in
the Persian Gulf. '
The Navy captain who .dlsabled .
the missiles wants to remain
anonymous, primarily to protect
the Iranians who help him. But
the story of his mission now can
be told.
The American retreat from
Iran was frenzied.· By the end of
1978, our defense contractors ln
Iran knew the shah's position
was shaky . While· Jlmll)y Carter
toasted the shah's stability, the
Grumman Corp. was evacuating
Its people from Iran - 478 people
In one week alone.
.Khomelni's triumphant arrl·
val shortly afterward gave U.S.
military officials the shivers .
They realiZed this fanatic ShUte
lealler would have access to
sophisticated American military
equipment sold to the shah.
The shah had purchased 80
F-14s, of which 79weredellvered.
Two crashed before he was
overthrown, leaving 77. Accord·
lng to secret documents we have
seen, the shah also had ordered
420 Phoenix missiles worth $282
million to be mounted on the
F-14s. The 'shah placed his order
In 1976, and 270 missiles 'had been
delivered by the time his regime
collapSed.

been fixed on the present and
near-Allure. The Iroquois Is quite
different. As an Iroquois chief
explains the process,. 'We make
sure every decision we make·
relates to the welfare and well"
being of the seventh generation
to come, and that is the· basis by
which we make decisions in
council. We consider: ·wm this be
to the benefit of the seventh
generation?'"
How will the "generations to
come" grade our stewardship of
the environment?

•
•

...

~:---Municipal co':lrt

'

I

HOLZER CLINIC
GALLIPOLIS, OHiO

"CONVENIENT HEALTH CARE-. THA~
DOESN.'T COST AN ARM AND A LEG

URGENT
CARE CENTER
'

Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Galliporis

446-5287

5:00 P.~.

to

9:00 I'.M .'

~

,.' '

GALLIPOLIS- In Gallipolis 59, Danbury, N.C., $44; and
•. Municipal Court Friday, John Jeffrey N. Ramey, 25, Chesa•' Black, 30, of 71 Garfield Ave., • peake, $44.
~ was fined $250 and given a
: suspended six-month jail sent·
· • ence for driving without' a
,.l ucense.
••
• . Various bonds were ,forfeited
, by Michael L. Albrecht, ~3. 577
c:fuln Valley Dr. , $41, tailgating;
.·James H. Fowler, 77, Rt. · 4,
~:Gallipolis, $41, failure to yield;
: Ronald Hatfield, 26, Rt.1, Water• ioo, $41, no muffler; Donald E .
-~Halley, 26, Rt . 1, Northup, $41,
':expired temi&gt;orary plates; Phil·
.-Up W. Sloan, 20, Rt. l , Northup ,
:$41, no valid registration sticker;
'VIcki L &gt;Macomber, 28, Rt. 1,
· :cheShire, $41, failure to yield;
~Andr.ew H. Bryant, 27, Loveland,
1
, $41, no'valid registration sticker;
: Frederick W. WIU!ams, 37, 329
·· Fourth Ave., $41, no valid license
: plates; and Everett R. Mayes, 32,
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., $41 .
failure to yield.
., • Speeding bonds were forfeited
; by.Terry Lee Ranson, 36, Ripley,
·• W.Va., $43; Ralph L. Roberts, 22,
!'Wilmington, $76; Judy C. Lambert, 37, Rt. 2, Pat~lot , $41;
•Daniel W. Pendleton, 26, Rt. 2.
:::VInton, $48; Edwin S. Sandor, 39,
;thllllcothe, $40; Dana W. Swift,
?.Q6, Point Pleasant, W.Va., $39;
~.Willie Anderson, 41, South Point,
:.$87; H6nest J. Ellis, 53, Rt. 1,
,-l,&gt;'tnton. $40; Larry Ward. 33, Rt .
,t Bidwell, $45; Marion D.
SILVER BRIDGE'PLAZA
;.'Gardner. 35, Vinton, $45; G.E.
• Guinther, 29, Rt. 2. Gallipolis.
446-9522
Randy C. Talley, 22, Chester·
;:Jl4!1a, Ind .. S48; WUUs H. Overby,

man. Parkersbu rg, W.Va .. $22
and costs; Robert L. Washburn ,
Guysville, $24 and costs; Gerald
Bottom, $25 and costs, lllegal
Leon Baker, Funkstown, Md·.. $24
trapping; Charles E . Hensley ,
and costs; Charles Peterson,
Long Bottom, $10 and costs.
Parkersburg, W.va.. $15 and
failure to. yield; Harold Reeves ; costs; Robert Brooks ,' Albany,
Pomeroy, costs ·only for dlsor· $21 and costs; Albert Stapleton
detly conduct; DennlsE . McKin· Sr ., Brunswick. $23 and costs ;
ney, Rutland, $10 and costs . Julie Thompson, Rutland, $21
failed to stop for stop sign; Joe . and costs; Clinton Bailey, Long
ROberts , Coolville, $10 and costs. Bottom, $28 and costs;· David
expired registration: Thomas Tyree, Middleport, $23andcosts;
Stobart, Racine, $20 ;~nd costs, James Burkhart, Vienna , W.Va.,
failure to control; Anna William· $20 &lt;~nd costs.
son, Pomeroy, $20 and costs,
Bonds for speeding were forte·
. expired license plates.
!ted· by Billy Jo Spurlock. Hun·
Fined for sp_eedlng were Ches- tington, W.Va., $55; Dennis
ter Cowles Jr., Racine, $21 and Hurst, Newport .News, Va . . $55;
costs; Allee Chapman, 'Parkers'- . Michael Sandlin, Newport News,
burg, $23 · and costs; John .. Va.. $55; Nancy Hupp, · Long
Clawges , Westover, W,.Va., $23 Bottom, $55; TerryPeach,Giousand costs; R.E. Mlfler. Pomeroy, ter, $55; Stephen Roush ,' Galllpo$23 and costs; John C. Hogan. Us, $55; .Frederick Crowl, Cincln·
Ashland, Ky., $25 and costs;
nat!, $55; John Helmich.
Diane Burke; Farmington, Buchannan. W.Va ., $55; Jay
W.Va.,
$21 and· $24
costs;
Holter, Raclne,
and Harry
costs;

Wt•t'k.-nd"' &amp;. Holidu,·l'
.&lt;
I :00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M.

Publlsbed each Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
Calllpolis, Oh io, by the Ohio Valley PubUshlng CompanyJMultlmedla , Inc. Second class postage paid at GallipoliS,
Ohio 4.5631. Enteral as second class
m ailing matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post

OHice.

M ember: United Press lnternallonal,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
OhiO Newspa per Association, National ·
Advertising Represent'atlve, Branham
Newspape_r Sales, ~3 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Sunday .............. .. .............. .. W Cents

WE .WILl BE CL.OSED MONDAY UNTIL 5:00 P.M.
TO PREPARE FOR THIS
EVENT.
MONDAY
FROM -5-9 P

.

pIan_"'our Wedding

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

S29f5

'
Groom~s tux FREE with a or more.

HASKINS-TANNfR
HOORS
Mon. &amp; Fro 9-8
Trr~ &lt; Wrd . rnur
Sit

9·5

· 332 Second Ave .
Gellipolio, Ohio
'{JI•J!il! All·JI ·,

MEN'S
O.lhf

•

Hushpuppies
Armadillos

..

lf't·,; r

\ m et• JH(/, ..

WOIOIEN'I

.

WOMEN'S
DRESS AND CASUAL

ONE

BOOTS
DINGO • DEXTEI
ARMADILLOS

ALL OTHERS
NOW

NOW

Cctnltits

112 PRICE

•AIMiiton1
.,,,,;,. 1/2 PRICE
STIIDE•RITE.

GROUP OF
WOMEN'S

NOW

WOMEN'S NYLON

SPIDER TENNIS
1 PRICE

/2

HOUSE
SLIPPERS

1/2 PRICE

MEN'S

SNOW
BOOTS

DINGO
BOOTS

SO PAllS

20% OFF
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1/2 PRICE
ALL BROOKS TENNIS

20°/~0FF
REG. PRICE

GROUP MEN'S

WORK BOOTS

DEI111 • IIOOKS • COIIYieSE

·Now

..~.·· -

·GROUP QF MEN'S

ATHLETIC SHOES

ALL AVIA TENNIS

20°/o

112 PRICE

S2500

~- ~
OFF

RIG. PRICE

Open Mon. &amp; Fri. til I p.m.
Tues., Wed •• Thur. &amp;
.
Sol. til s

~

.
.REGISTER TO WINf f
er THE
· a"1ngs
$ sooo
.
. .

Tlme!!-~tlnef will not: beo
responsible for adva nce payments
made to carriers.
·

MNIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

Suoday Onty

One Year ..: ..................... ..... , ... $32.24
Six months ............. , ...... ......... .. . $]6.90

.

.

.

GIFT CERTIFICATE
IN EACH STORE ·

AT

Dally and Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
IDskle County
·
13 Weel&lt;s .................... .............. $17.29
26 Weeks ......................... ;........ $34.06 .
52 Weel&lt;s .. .. .............................. $00.56
·_ Ralee Outllde County
13 W~eks .. ............................... $18.20
26 Weeks ................................. $35.10
52 Weeks .. ............................... 167.60

POMEIOY, OHIO

L'ef Ut ·Htlbr You

DRI!S AND CASUAL SHOES

On All Fall &amp; '
Winter Merchandise

-BY PREDICTING THE FINAL
SCORE AND WINNING TEAM
.OF SUPER BOWL XXII

LAFAYETTE MALL
•

FEBRUARY SPECIAL

128 MULiiEIRY AVE• .

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

lARGE GIOUP WOMIN'I AND MDI'S

The Sunday

20°/o OFF IEGUUR PIICE
GRANNY'S CRAFTS I
992-2312

·passing on a double ye llow line~
Kevin Knopp. Syracuse. $50 for
no ~eadlight; David Shuler,
Langs vill e, $75, disorderly
conduct .

....:.----------..,.....---------...----!

No subscriptions by ·mall permitted in,
areas where motor carrier servlc~ Is
avaOable.

FLOSS 5 FOI Sl OO
CROSS STITCH SUPPLIES.

Kaufman , Washington , W.Va ..
$55; 'Mary Milne, Fairview Park,
$75.
Others ·forfeiting bonds were
Scott Gheen . Middleport . $55 for

Tracy N. Klaiber, Long Bottom,
$25 and costs; Connie L. Water-

OFF

(USP 525'800)

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-3

.------------...1..---------------------,....;..__

·.Final Clearance

. NQ APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Mondu)·-Fridoy

jail sentence to· be suspended if
operators license Is ·obtained
within 60 days , no drivers n:
cense; Robert Hunt, Long Bottom, $100 and costs, 10days In jail
suspended, one year probation,
on charges of fleeing and Improper handling of a firearm in a
motor vehicle; Fona Sinlth,
Pomeroy, 10 days In "jail suspended , 120 d ays probation,
restitution, petty theft; Kenneth
R, Shultes, Dexter, $250 and
costs, 60 day license suspension,
three days in jail, DWI ; costs for
reckless operation.
John D. Holsinger, Duncansville, Pa., $20 and costs, failure to
control; Duane Longenette, Long

I

One Year ...... .... .... ._. .. ............... $31.20

Plagenz---------

Newsweek says the United
-whue continuing to make the
States will be moving into a ·new best use of our technological
era in 1988: "Greed is out of style. ac hievement s, we ll)Ust not
We will ca lm oown , gain weight, forget to look up to find direction
stay home more and pay as we for our lives:
go. It 's so long to the ethic of the
Some years ago, the U.S. Coast
'80s: Faster, higher, longer, .. and Geodetic Survey discovered,
more."
·
BOO miles west of Seattle, the
. That 's worth a big c heer. But it
highest undersea mountain In the
will take something more than North Pacific. It towers up from
that if we ar e to regain a spirit of the floo r of the Pacific to within a
reconciliation in our lives:
few hundred fathoms of the
The Harva rd Theological Re· surface.
view has just published a study of ·
He reaft er, said the captai n of
Wlllard L. Sperry, who was dean
the vessel that made the discov·
of the Harvard Di v inity School
ery, ships will be equipped with
from 1922 to 1952. In 1947. Sperry
fat hometers, a nd navigators will
preached a sermon on reco ncilia- use these marine mountains as
tion in which he told this story:
sea ma rks, just as they, hitherto
"During the war. the little
have useq.ca pes or lighthouses a,s
native villa ges a lon g the coas ts
landmarks .
of New Guinea were ra ked by
Then he added, "But I don ' t
J a panese bombs and reduced to . mean tha t navigators will forget
ashes. A yea r or so after the war ,
to look up. We will always use
a cpmpany of native Christians in
ce lestia l navigation."
the village of Gona met with their
-If we are to preserve the
pr iest. who had been for three
beauty of the ea rth, we must
yea r s a prisoner of the J apa nese.
become better stewards of this
" They had raised a sum of
la nd 's bounty. In his book "Time
money to rebuild the:ir school. At
Wars," Jeremy Rifkin recoma point during the meeting , one of
mends that we look at the·
the church wardens got up a nd
Ironquois Indians:
said. 'I think God would be happy
·"Am erica n culture ha~ always
If we sent half of our offerings to
the Japa nese and used half ·for
.... ..
our sc hool. We shall then be
helping these people who spoiled
our country to be better people,
so that they will b'e helping ones,
not spoiling ones. That 'is what I
think God wants us to do, because
we are his children.'
"To which the assembly · replied, 'These are good words. a nd
we s hall do so."'
-Albert Schweitzer la id as ide
distinguished careers In music
and theology to become a doctor
In Africa . His rever e nce for lile,
his hatred of cruelty and his
almost childlike tenderness en·
dowed him with a goodness that
has been ' in short supply in our
world. Listen to Schweitzer:
"When some poor moaning
creature Is brought to me with an
. Inflamed appendix or strangulated hernfa , I lay my hand on hts
forehead and say, 'Don't be
afraid. In an hour's time you will
be put to sleep and when you
awake you won 't feel any more
pain.'
"When the operation Is fin Ished, I watch for the sick man 's ·
awakening. Scarcely has he
recovered consciousness when
he stares about him and exclaims
again and again. 'I've no more
pain .' His hand feels for mine and
will not let it go.
"The African sun Is shining
through the coffee bushes Into the
dark shed as we black a11d white
sit side by side In the room and
feel that we experience the
meaning of the words, 'And all ye
are brethren."'

have been operable at any one.
chlstan II) Pakistan, according to
during the war with Iraq.
time
our sources.
.
Many
of the Iranians who kne'f'
This should explain the mys·
tery to European and other how to fly and fix them fled whet( .
mllltary analysts who have won- Khomelnl took power. Spare
parts are hard .to come by. Eve!' ·
dered why the Iranians have
never used · their Phoenix when the F ·14s areln the air, they;
have· been used mainly as radar
arsenal.
platforms
instead of missile
The ayatollah . still . has the
.
launchers.
·
F-14s, but fewer than a dozen

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Mot• Route
One Week ...... ...................... 60 Cents

Thoughs to change by
--~-----George

Mounted on an F-14 , the
Phoenix can track up to 50
targets within 150 miles of the
p)ane. It can evep assess the
threats against the plane and
launch missiles by priority. The
F -14s can hold up to six Phoenix
missiles and launch 'them all
simultaneously jf necessary. The
plane• also carries a 20mm
ca-llnon and the shor.ter-range,
less-sophisticated Sidewinder
and Sparrow missiles.
The U.S. mll,itary In Iran
swung Into action in 1979 with
several covert operations aimed
at destroying the F -14s and their
mlsslles. Only one operation was
carried out, and It succeeded
because of the inltlative of the
Navy captain.
.
The captain's plan was simple
- sneak Into the alr bases where
the mlsslles were stored a11d
remove a critical widget from
the fire control system of each
F-14 Phoenix mlsslle system. He
did it, with the help of anti·
KhOmeini Iranians, after all
other Americans except embassy officials had been
evacuated.
The job took longer than he had
planned, and the Navy worried
for weeks tl)at the captain had
been caught and executed. But he
ma.naged to slip out of the
country over land through Balu·

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

Meigs County court _________

Page-A-2

.

.

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January 31 , 1988

TIll Ul , . ,
1 $up~r Btlllll

Wk/W1ndws11
girl

o/o
OFF
ANY

- ~WINTER
DRESSES, SWEATERS .
.-&amp; SPORTSWEAR

/50°/o ro 75°/o
OFF

SUNDAY· ONLY
·1 P.M. TO 5 P.M.

URGE GROUP -OF

•

SWEATERS
S60.00) ·
(VALUES 10

A~L=-

MEN'S

IN CASE OF TIE, THE EARLIEST
ENTERED PIEDICTION WILL WIN.

··~tOP

=Baske'tball Reeboks

40°/o

75°/ooFF

-SUITS &amp;
SPORTCOATS .

50°/o,o 75°/o oFF
SPRING

OVER 60 PAIRS OF
SPECIAL GIOUP OF

fNTIRf STOCK OF FALL &amp;
WINTER MERCHANDISE

WOMEN'S ZODIACS

SWEATERS
•

REG. $30.00

5O«!t/o-7 5 °/o OFF

"

lATH

TOWEL
Asst.
2 FOR
Colors

COATS, PANTCOATS &amp;
LONG COATS 11. ·
.
1:2 OFF·

JUST ARRI~ED FOR
·THIS SALE

12 FURS

60-0fo-....

75°/o

MEN'Z ZODIAC &amp; .FRYE

. BOOTS
50°/o~75°/o

NOW·

'

GROUP OF

OFF

LONG
·DRESSES

FALL &amp;. WINTER SHOES

::Ms PANTS 112
SPORT COATS 'f:

$1500

1/2 OFF

99
NOW$9
. . . 1"-

,

'f; '

.,.'

.,I';
•I

'!

~l.J
d

"'

·;

•J

"y._

SIST~A'S

t4.eSt.T

. '

�-------

-·

-·-

-·
. .

'

Page A-4-Sunday

rHne.-Sentinel

----Area deaths

Ethel Cooper .of Parkersburg,
Charles L. Lambert
Edna King of Albany; two . W.Va. , Susan Gates of Vienna,
AKRON tUPI)- Members of .
uncles, eight grandchildren and W.Va .• Mattie Lawrence ot Por- the United Food andCommerlcal
1
GALLIPOLIS - Charles Lee
several neices and nephews.
tland, Dorothy Duncan and Ruby Workers complain
their union Is
Lambert , . 46, or Patriot Star
Services will be conducted Turner 'of Gallia County; one giving them no .support in fight.
Route. Gallipolis. died Thursday
Tuesday at 11 a.m . from Ewing sister, Eva ~ollon o! Chester;
at University Hospital in Colum- Funeral Home, with burial fol - four half-sisters, Goldie Krack· lng the closing of two area stores,
the Akron Beacon Journal said
bus following an extended
lowing In Riggs Cemetery in omberger of Chester. Opal Hol- Saturday . , ·.
Illness.
Harrisonville. .
lon of Chester, Margaret Bissell
"The unlon is not even return·
He was born April 11, 1941 In
Friends may call at the funeral of Long Bottom, and Mildred
Walnut Township. son ofEvldene
homeonMonday, 2 to4p.m. a-nd 7 Arnold of Pomeroy; 15 grand·
Funeral Home, Rev. charles
Lambert of Patriot. and the late
to 9 p.m.
children and . 27 ,great
bush officiating. burial fojlows ln
Estele Lambert.
grandchilden.
Morris
Chapel Cemetery.
Myrtle
M.
Shoemaker
Also surviving .are his wife.
She was a member of Morris
Friends
may call at the funeral
'
.
Lucretie Manon Lambert; one
Chapel
Church.
_
home
on
Sunday
, 4 to9 p.m., and
MIDDLEPORT- Myrtle 'May
son. ·Shawn Lambert at home;
~ervices wiH be conducted · Monday .from 9 a.m. until the
Shoemaker, 84, Bu.c yrus, for ·
two daughters. Annette Lee
Ewing time of service.
·
merly of Middleport, died Satur- Monday at 3 pcm .. from
Lambert at home. and Debra
.,
day at Heartland ln Bucyrus ..
Lambert of Columbus; three
Born May 31, 1903. ln Gallla
sisters. Mrs. Glenn iRoxle) Da- ·
County,
she was· the daughter of
vis. Mrs. Roger (Bobble) Thothe
late
Dayton Ralph and
mas and Mrs. William (Violet)
Sophrona
Siders
Ralph. She was
Wells, all of Patriot; four brothmarried
to
Joseph
Webster Shoers, Cecil Lambert. David Lam.
emaker
who
preceded
her In
bert and Rick Lambert all of
death
on
Aug.
19,
1972.
Patriot, and Carl Lambert of
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Eureka Star Route.
John Harrison of Bucyrus; two
' He was preceded in death by
granddaughters, eight great,
By LEE LEONARD
offices offering · "one-stop shophis father and an Infant brother.
grandchildren, and a sister.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
ping" for vehicle registration,
He was a tlmberman contracJessie Zwilling of Bucyrus. Be·
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI)
titling and inspection services.
tor, and attended ·Crossroads
si~es her · parents, she was
'The Ohio Senate' is ready to take
The House last week sent the
Pentecostal Church ai Cadmus,
preceded
in
death
swift
action
this
week
against
the
by
three
bill
back in drastically different
where funeral services will be
House
version
brothers,
a
sister
and
a
of
a
bill
revising
form,
keeping the deputy tegls·
conducted 11 a.m., on Monday.
granddaughter..
the
motor
vehicle
registration
trars,
making their operation
Rev. Kay Puckett officiating.
system.
to
and
to
send
lt.
to
a
joint·
A
homemaker.
she
moved
more efficient and well Burial follows in Salem CemeBucyrus from Middleport In 1927. Rouse-Senate conference com- advertised, providing for regis·
tery at Gage. Friends may call at
mittee for negotiations ..
Ira lion according to date of birth,
McCoy-Wetherholt-Moore Fun- She was a member of the First
The Senate may also vote and.making lt unprofitable to use
eral Home on Sunday 4 to 8 p.m. Christian Church -In Bucyrus.
Graveside rites will be held at 3 Tuesday to override Gov. Ri· the system for political payoffs.
Walter E. King
p.m. Monday at the Oakwood
chard Celeste's veto of legisla·
''The main goals of Senate Bill
Cemetery In Bucyrus wlth the . tlon delaying a mandatory auto 1, as we passed it, were to make
ALBANY- Walter!!!. King, 54 · Rev. Mary C. Martirfoftlclatlng.
emissions inspection in the the state's license distribution
of Albany, died Saturday at
No visiting· hours will be obCleveland and Cincinnati areas. · system more convenient for
Veteran's Memorial HospitaL He
served. The Wise Funeral Home
The Senate convenes at 1:30 0\\ioans anci to remove politics
jVas a coal rniner.
Is In charge of services.
p.m. Tuesday to take up. among from the system," Glllmor said.
• Born Dec. 1, 1933 In Meigs ·
other bills. changes In the state "In my vlew, the House bill falls
County. he was a son of the late
boxing law. The House meets well short of meeting these
Mary E. Holter
Edward and Frances King.
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.
goals."
RACINE -Mary Ethel Holter,
Besides his parents, he was
Senate President Paul G!lpreceded in death by one brother, 88 of Raclr)e, died Saturday at
Imor. R-Port Clinton, is so
9n half-sister and a Arcadia Nursing Home in
opposed to the House version of
Coolville.
granddaughter.
the vehicle registration blll that
Born March 27, 1899 on Eagle
: Surviving are a son, Walter
he has already appointed hls
Ridge in Meigs County. she was a
. Anthony (Tony) King of Albany;
conference committee
614-221-0888
three daughters. Frances McCo· daughter of the late Guy and
members.
mas of Albany. Pamela Priddy of Rhettie Singer.
One of them is Sen. Grace
She was also preceded in death
Cheshire and La Venda Douglas
Drake, R-Solon, who authored
AnORNEY-AT-LAW
of Stewart; four brothers, Frank· by her husband. Frank Holter, the original Senate Blll1 abollsh336 High St C0lumb115 Oi ·
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)ln. Charles and .Edward King of one sister, one brother and a
lng 272 deputy motor vehicle
LOCAL
CONSULTATION
in
grandchild.
Pomeroy. and William 'King of
registrars and replacing them
Surviving
are
five
daughters
,
Pomeroy
992-6417,,
in
Gallia
•
The Plains; a half-sister. Leota .
with state employees ln 150 field
County 245-9591.
In Pomeroy, with ATTORNEY D.
OQ S rJ,
-------~(F~r.:::om=C::::OAc::L::!.•..:.:A:.:,;I)c.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ L--.:::MI;::(H:::;A::El;.::M::;:UW=NS.:;__..J

Senate may act against
House.revised version ·
of deputy-- registrar bill

.

BANKRUPTCY
L. W. CENNAMO
s.

C l t •k e. ••

Bulletin
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
United Mine Workers union and
negotiators for 24 coal companies
reached ,agreement Saturday on
a new contract, averting a strike
threatened to begin at midnight
Sunday, both sides announced.
Pittson 's underground mines in
Virginia. WeSt VIrginia and
Kentucky .
AI Stagg. a coal analyst in
Charleston . W.Va., said it is
unusual for both sides to be this
tight -lipped .
"This may be the fi rst time
that th e coa l miners themselves
don 't know what 's going to
happen, " Stagg said, " A lot of
them don't know whether they're
going to work Monda y or not."
Stagg speculated UMW President Richard Trumpka is planning to call selective strikes at
two or three of the larger
companies. Consolidated Coal
Co .. the second largest firm In the
association. might be a target
since it is developing non-union
mines , he said.
Such a inove could be risky
s ince the union has never worked
without a contract, he added.
Job security appears to be the
big issue for the union, which has
75,000 active members nation-

wide, while relaxing unio~ work see, Alabama, Ohio. Indiana and
rules is probably the top priority Illinois.
The association. which once
of the coal association, whose
three largest members are Pea b· represente d more than 100 comody Holding Co., Consolidated panies in ~980. bar~ains for only
Coal Co. and Amax. Coal' Co .. 14 companies. Some 24 or more
companies pulled out of the
Stagg said .
.
Hoffma·n. while declining to organl2atlon and signed "me
discuss contract Issues, said the too" contracts which say that
mine owners seek "a contract they agree to pay whatever
that recognizes our nl!ed .. to settlement the association
compete in the long-term in a agrees to.
Under the current contract, an
tough energy market. The conav(!'rage mine wOrker earns
tract must "allow (unionized
mines) to compete with non· nearly $30 an hour in wages and
fringe benefits. The union says
union coal ... (and) with gas and
the average compensation Is
oiL ... t and permit) coal-fired
electricity to compete with hy - slightly more than $28 an hour .
while the association sets it ·at
droelectric power. "
more than $30 an hour.
The national agreement covers
Since the last contract was
workers in more than a dozen
.
negotiated
ln 1984. the union has
states, east of the Mississippi
River including Kentucky , West . lost nearly one-third of its active
Virginia. Pennsylvania. Tennes - members, Stagg said.

lng our telephone.calls," $ald one
union worker at a west slde Giant
Eagle store. "We thought bust-·
ness had· been picking up here,
but this is the store with the most
seniority and the highest
salaries."
Employees at two Giant Eagle
stores in Akron were told Thurs- .
day the supermarkets would
soon close.
Another Giant ·Eagle worker
who asked not to be· Identified
said management threatened to
close three other stores In' Kent,
Ravenna, and Rootstown if
workers affected by the closing
exercise "bumping rights" to
replace workers with less
seniority,
La Qcr contracts usually allow
workers affected by a store
closing to "bump," or replace,
employees with less seniority at
other stores covered by the same
contract.

Giant Eagle's contracts tor the
two Akron stores to be closed also
cover the three Portage County
stores. Two contracts, one for
clerks and the other for meat
cutters, expire ln July .
A separate contract, which
expired earlier thiS month, .covered Giant Eagle workers In
other Akron area stores, as well
as In Jackson Township In Stark
County, and In Wadsworth. .
Management officials were not
available for comment.
Union officials told the Beacon
Journal ·they had not tried to
contact Giant Eagle oftlcl;~.ls
about the closings because that
would be "bush league."
Industry sources said · both
stores to be closed have been
losing money, primarily because
they are much smaller than other
area supermarkets and offer a
much narrower range of services
than neighborhood competitors.

27'x36'x9' Eave
'1 - 13'x8' Sliding Door
1-3'K6' Service Door ·
Painted steel siding &amp;
roofing (choi!:e of 12
colors) with 20 yr. warranty.

Woman
·cited in accident
near Our House Museum

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Woman pleads not guilty

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POMEROY--Bonnie Fisher, Racine, entered a plea of not
gullty to a charge of destruction of property In an Initial hearing
Wednesday before Judge Patrick O'Brien In Meigs County
Court. The plea was entered on Fisher's behalfby her attorney
and a jury trial has beeri requested ln the matter. Fisher's case
was appealed to county court from Pomeroy Mayor's Court.

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For complete, professional individual and business
tax l'reparation as'sistance call

Certified Public Accountant
736 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446-8677
Open 9-5 weekdays, Evenings and Saturday by Appointment

Divorce granted

Deadline extended in Meigs

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POMEROY -The deadline for paying real estate taxes in
Meigs County has been extended. Meigs County,Treasurer
George C. Collins announced Friday that the final day for
payment of real estate taxes for .the first half of 1987 has
been extended from Feb. 5 to Feb. 12.

class-offered

GALLIPOLIS - In Gallla County Common Pleas Court
Friday, Nita F:lnley, of Rt.1, Patriot, and Gary Finley, of Rt.2.
Crown City, received a decree of divorce .

Jailers attend workshop
LOUISVlLLE, Ky.- Chester E. Stout, jail administrator for
the slierlff's department. and .. Robert W. Nance, chief
corrections officer. recently .completed the Liability Manage·
ment Workshop, a National Sherlff's _ As~ociatlon·sponsored ,
· workshop In Louisville, Ky .. according to Sheriff James · M. '
.
· .
·
Montgomery.
The seminar Included 14 hours of lecture and discussion on
tactics for legal defense; llablllty In recruitment, retention and
training o! personnel; and civil and crlmlnalllablllty for acts
arising from law-enforcement activities and custody of
prisoners.
Attene!ance of workshops of thls nature and other educational
events·are a part of continuing professional education that the
sheriff's department encourages tor Its members.

GRANDE - "Human
The course, Psychology 215. Is
~ro•Nth and . Development," a
a basic requirement for many
It hour psychology class,
col)ege programs, including edube \lffered this spring quar-' ·catlon, nursing and social work.
at Hannan Trace High School
Students may sign up for the
Rio Grande College/ Commun- class during open registration. ·
which will be held on campus on
,. ......_C.ollege.
·'
,
class, which focuses on Feb. 29; from 9 a.m. untllll: 30 .
l! .tages of life from birth through , a.m .• 1 p.m: to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m.
wlll meet for ·10 weeks unlll 8 p.m.
·
Mctnaay'. from 6 p.m. until
, Students may also register foor
beginning March 7.
the course at Hannan Trace High
wlll focus on the role of School during the firs! class
•m--P'hJPr&lt; such as parents and
meetlng on March 7. At that time, ,
and how they can registering students may pay for
·
that help ln the class and purchase the
full
growth · required \extbook.
~ ~~~.~ ..~d~~e;~v~e;Iopment," sald course . "Human Growth and Developl•
Edward R. Sofranko, ment" ls being olfered as a
community credit class· through
the college's office of continuing
St\f'r;!J1knsaid the course would . education. For more InformaF. !~ac~i&gt; emphasis on parental tion. call (614) 245-5353, or
Ies, discipline and
toll-free In Ohio 1-800·282-7201,
connmunicatlon
.
extension
325.
•

returns. H~ brings with him the sniffles...weepy eyes... a
'
fever...aches and pains.
And you never know when he'll strike. · The middle of the
night...weekends ...holidays...
.
Your first reaction is to retreat under the covers. But in this
.hectic woild of work, schoo,l and other commitments, you can't
afford to lie in bed for long: You have t~ get back to your daily ~
routine~ and fast.
Imril.ediate attention is essential, and that's when Pleasant _
Valley Hospital Emergency Care Center can help. We're here
24 hours a Clay, every day of the year. Although we can't replace
your family physician, we can and do work with your own
doctor to putthe "Bug" on his back...and get you up off of yours!

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·[Election
calendar
!
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Th~

following Is a ca'lendar for
~ election '88 - its deadlines· for
: filing and challenging .
·• Feb. 18 - Declarations of
: Candidacy for partisan candl·
: dates must be flied by 4 p.m. (75
days before the election)
., Feb. 25 - Boards of Electioqs
must certify validity and su~fl­
,. ciency of · partisan candidate's
~ petitions 1·68 ' days Qefore the
• election l
·
: Feb. 28 - Par~lsan candidate~
; may withdraw from Primary
' ,. Election by 4 p.m. 165 days
. before the election)
l Feb. 29 - Protests against a
partisan candidate's petition
~ must be filed by '4 p.m. (64 days
• !Jefore the election)
~ &gt; Mar. 24- Write-in candidates
: tor Primary, Election must rue
; peclaration of Intent by 4 p.m.
~ 40 days before the election)
~ Apr. 4 -Registration closes at
b-p.m. for ~rlmarj"Eiectlon only r
~ )29 days
before election)
.
~ : Apr . 21 - Pre-Primary Elec" : flon campaign finance repotts
• due by 4 p.m. (12 days before
: l!Jectlon)
• Apr. 22 - Deadline tor filing
~ Jilt of challengers and wJtnel! lor Primary election (11 days
• before the ~lectlonl
· ·
: ! Apr. 30 - AppllcatiOIII for
: frJmary Election absentee bal·
• ietl 4ue by noon ca dayallefore
: Aile electlenl Absentee ballots
!~ltllust be· returned by 7: 30 p.m.

t

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ld., laureiYIIIe, Oh., 61•·3U:·9U5

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~... v.lid 111/88-2129/88
only tor the purcNM of •n
MCirwd 10K gaiCI F1rdlnl

H.S. dn1 ring.

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... SECOND AVIIIUI ·""·"-

ThioAd

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Hannan Trace High School

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Lynn E. Angell

PORTSMOUTH -The February meeting of the Portsmouth
Area Multiple Sclerosis Support Group will be held Thursday.
February 4, at 6:30p.m., In Classroom No.2 at Scioto Memorial
Hospital. There will be a half-hour social period preceding the
meeting.
The subject of the meeting Is a two-part video presentation .
The first part Is entitled "M.S: A Struggle for Independence,"
and the second part Is entitled "Maximizing Mobility."
Personal MS clients may call the Gallia County representa·
tlve at 446-6768 .

GALLIPOLIS - An employee of Crown City Mining reported
a theft ofl.OOO feet of cable from a drag line, valued at $15 a foot,
from Its garage Friday night, according to the sheriff's
departmen.t. ·
The employee said that he saw an early 1970s model Buick
with white and red paint about half a mile drom the company's
garage, where 130 feet of tlte cable was found and r~overed.
Thefts of a Homellte chain saw and a weed trimmer were.
discovered Friday afternoon from a stor.age building owned by·
Harold Saunders. of Eureka Star Route .•t;ialllpolls.

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It never fails. This time of year - every year - the "Bug"

If you have substantial income
besides Social Security, part of
your Social Security income may
be taxable.

Tax
Tip$

MS support group to meet

Stolen cable reported to sheriff

•• '
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ceived 2,142 complaint reports
las t •year, 658 of which were
classed as offenses. Of these,
there "were two homicides, two
rapes, one robbery, 91 assaults,
187 bu rglaries, 349 la rcenies and
26 motor vehicle thefts.
There were 36 more burglaries
reported for last _year than for .
1986. Though the total number of
thefts are above the number for
1986, the recover y rate for stolen
property last year was 22 per-.
cent, up from the 16 percent ·
mark for 1986.
·
In th'e course of traveling ·
350,000 miles throughout the ·,
county on patrol last year, ,
deputies Investigated 223 accl·
dents and Issued 120 citations.
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GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County Sheriff's Department reported that during 1987, deputies,
with assistance at times from the
state Bureau of Criminal In vestlgatlon. burned 5,447 marijuana
plants with a street value ·of
approximately $4 .5 million.
tl!&gt;putles were successful In
go; !in123 convictions for posseS'siun of marijuana, seyenconvlclions for trafficking in mariJuana, a conviction .. each for
trafficking in cocaine, hashish
oil. There are 11 persons Indicted
for marijuana trafficking and
(hree Indicted for trafficking in
LSD whose cases are still await lng court action.
. The .

J·OOOO

TOTAL ERECTED PRICE' INCLUDING TAX,
DELIVERY AND UNLOADING

IRON HORSE BUILDERS

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POMEROY -The Meigs Emergency Service reports one call
011 Frld;~y. Middleport took Beatrice 'Ralrden from Valley
Lumber to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

.

GALLIPOLIS - Alexander F. Gray, 31. of Columbus, was
arrested by the State Highway Patrol Friday afternoon and sent
'to the county j all, according to the sheriff's department. He was
chllrged with DWI and cited for spe~lng.
·
Dale Scarberry,'22, of Scottown,was arrested by the sheriff's
department Fr!day a!ternilon on orders from the Galljpolls
Municipal Court. He was cited for' driving without a license.
.

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. One emergency call reported

SYRACUSE - A meeting of the Syracuse Board of Public
Affairs scheduled for Monday evening has been postponed until
7 p.m. on Tuesday evening.

Two jailed by Patrol
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POMEROY - · Veterans Memorial Hospital has Issued Us
discharges and admissions tor Friday.
Admitted were Bertha Diehl, Pomeroy; Erica Garnes,
Wilkesville; Barbara Johnson, Shade.
Discharged was Linda Rhodes.

Public Affairs meeting postponed

'GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis area WOfllan was cited in an
accident Friday, at 3:55 p.m., on First Avenue, near the Our
. House Museum, according to the Gallipolis Pollee Department.
Lynn M. Gardner, 36, of Rt. 1, Gallipolis, was cited tor failure
to yield after her 1986 Chevrolet Astro vim pulle4 from Tribune
Alley and hit a 1986 Pontiac Grand Am. driven by Gerald E .
Roach. 25, of 2 Willow Dr.
Gardner's view was obstructed _by a van parlled ·on First
Avenue, north of the alley and next to the museum. She pulled
out Into the street to see the oncoming traffic, and In the process
; . of doing so hit Roach's car as Roach was driving south on First
' AvenUI!.
·
. In other pollee news, Joseph D. Cremeans, ·18, df )tt: 1,
North\lp, was cited Friday ntght for running a red llght and not
having a Valid registration decal.
Kenneth Robinson, 21, of 456 Jackson Pike, was cit~
Saturday morning for running a red light.

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Btainnina in 1987, whether your
i~terest expense is treated as investment or perso111l Interest depends
on ho•nnd, if, the proceedswerere- .
eeived in cash, when you received
the loan proceeds.
. HOME MOIITGAGE INTEREST, subject to limitation~. Interest on debt
secured by the taKpayer's principal
William 0. Smeltzer
residence and a second residence reCllmfiiD PIILIC ACCOUinAIIT
main deductible under Jhe present
law. However, home mortpae interest on a debt in eKcess of the
purchase price plus improvements, up to the lair market value of the
residence, is only deductible if the debt is incurred for payment of
qualified educational or medical expenses.
·
PERSONAL INTEREST. In aeneral perso1111 interest is beina phased
out over Five years. For 1987, 65% of interest paid for ite111s such as
in~t~llmenl car loans, credit cards, revolvin11 cHarp accounts, credit
un1ons, or personal notes for money borrowed from a bank or another
person, is still dtductable.
lrMsTMENT INTEREST, ln11Nst subjef:t
to "' iNtStw~ inllr1st limijltion is, in
William 0. Smeltzer
--', Ill intnst {otla ~ consar
CEmFIID PIIIUC ACCOUinAIIT
~~nd~NSidinceinllnlst)on
126 First Ave; •
debt not int:imd iii COIIIICiion with the
torr 1111'1 tnlde ~ business.lhe dDH:tion
Gallipolis. Ohio
for iovtst1111nt inbnsl is JIIIRIIJ limilld
446-4471
to the mDlllt of 1111 inYISirnenl income.

Other Building Sizes
. and Options Available ..

151 ..0

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FOR ADUL1 BASIC EDUCATION
GALLIA·JACKSON·YINTO,. JYSD
Your GED diploma can be your 1st Prize.
PHONE 245-5336

Hospital make5 report

GALLIPOLIS - A GalUpolis man ivas cited In an accident
Friday. at 3:14p.m., after his car overturned off Neighborhood- ,
Road, about a mile and a half southofS:R. 141, according to the
Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Hlg!lway Patrol.
Bedford L. Wright, Jr., 18, ot 316 Sanders Dr. , was· cited for
' failure to control and driving without a seat bell after his 1969
Chevrolet Nova ·went off the lett side of the road hitting an
embankment and overturning.
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No one Willi Injured In the accident.

INTEREST EXPENSE

...

Through "Adult Services" at the

news ·briefs------·-----. Sheriff issues report

Cited by patrol
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Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-5

Porneroy-Micklaport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va.

,...--~-Area

REA01,
SET,
80!

UTILITY BUILDING SPECIAL

$4444

Janu.y 31, 1988

Union gives no support to workers

\'~orris of Akron; a former wtte.'

a strike. At the 29th (District
office, Beckley, W.Va. ) it saysthere will be no work until further
notice. So I guess I'm laid off now
until they say otherwise. My wife
started to work this week - that
is my preparation."
· The union has already said that
it will strike against the Pittston
Coa l Group. which dropped out of
the association to work out its
own cont ract with the union. The
walkout. set for midnight Sunday . will affect 2.000 workers In

January 31, 1988:

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

· election day.
May 2 -Nominating Petitions
for ln,dependent candida!~ (except president and . vice president, and candidates for state
board of education or county
court judges) must be !lied by 4
p.m. (day before the Primary
· Election)
·•
election

Quiz bowl
standing
GALLIPOLIS - With two
regular matches left In the
season. Hannan Trace tops the
varsity SVAC Quiz Bowl league
w,lth a 5-0 mark. Mark Jenkins
was the top scorer In the January
20 match.
Oak Hill and Kyger Creek, wit1i
Maret DIU and J;:rnest VIUanueva. respectively as scQrlng
leaders in the January 20 match,
are tied for second. at 4-1;
Southern and Symmes Valley are
tied for third, at 3·2, wlth
Elizabeth Smith leading South· ·
ern and three Willow Wood area
students tying for the top score;
Southwestern came In fourth. at
1-4, with David Banks as the top
scorer; and North Gallla and
Eastern are looking forthelrtlrst ·
wins of the .season, with Blaine
Gllmore and Mike Martin. respectively. (eadlng the way for
their schools.
In junior varsity action, Jen·.
nifer Arnold was the top gun for a
5·0 Southern team; Oak Hill,
Ha11nan Trace. Eastern and
Kyger Creek are tied for second,
at 3·2, with high scoring efforts
from Michelle Hill. Sandy Mar·
riner. Tom Hunter and Tracy
Eggleton, respectively; Symmes
Valley Is 2-3, behind leading
scorer Eric Floyd; Holly Pope
scored the most for Southwestern, which Is 1-4; and North
Gallla Is 0.5 behllld scoring
leader Anlssa Gee.

.

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I

•

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·p 8f A-8-Sunday Tin 11 Sentinel.

j~uary 31, 1988

Point Pleu.nt. W. Va.

Pomeroy-Midtlaport- Gallipolia. Ohio

- ' Compromise keeps home-schoolers home-- ---~-·/

ByJIMSIEUCIU
Smith.
.
· "We are cooperative people
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)
A · · .Smith, hoping to avoid. the
and we want to work With
/COUrt-ordered compromise that ~enten~ng, ordered the couple
hom~based parents," Baker
kept· a tundamentaltst . couple and their lawyer to meet pri- ,' , said.
.
from going to jail may help other . vately With Superintendent Tho- .
Wood later read a letter o!
families who teach !Jielr children . mas Baker.
·
support he · . received from
at hon)e, a home-school defend· . "I think it may help other
another · Ohlo couple whom he
ant said.
·
home schoolers' to know that
declined to Identify. Wood said
James and Kathleen Wood,
they can work With the superJr..
legislation before the Ohio As·
·clUng strict religious · beliefs, · tendent and resolve these Issues sembly would allow parents to
said they were prepared to spend
short of criminal proceedings," simply notify school officials
, . . six month~ IJI jail and pay a$1,000 Wood S!lid after reaching. the they. Intend to teach at home
ftne rather than go against their compromise.
The letter thanked the Woods
beliefs by se.ndlng their son to
Baker said he does not know for their "courage In standing up
, school or asking the county's how many other ram!jles may be for all of. our rights as parents to
. permlss.lon to tea~- h hlm.at home. . teaching the_lr children at home educate ou.~ children as God
The agreemen~wlth the Lucas , wltliout applying for a l'llrmlt. He commands.
.
',
County school . !jUper!ntendent said other agreements · can be
"It Is a great bu.rden and we
was reached Frtdliy atth~ urging reached slnnllar to the one will be praying for your case. We
of Juvenile Court Ju,clge Burke Involving the Woods .
. , are praying for better home
~I
.
•
•

.veto
· ·

schooltnglawslnOhlosowedon't
· Smith had found the Woods the Woods's lawyer, George
have to live In fear every time
guilty of contributing to the Smith Jr .. unsuccessfully sought
someone knocks on . the back
unruliness of a child, but delay - to have the judge disqualified on
door," the letter read.
lng Imposing the sentence while ' a motion of prejudice.
In a four-point agreement the r•-----------~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-1
Woods said they will pro~ Ide
their son's school records to the
school officials. · At the same
time, the county agreed not to
require them to apply for the
home school permit that had
been the sticking point.
· The Woods who entered a
packed courtroom with their
Bibles, said the compromise aoes
not violate theli tellglous beliefs.
•'I was· not looking forward to
the- Lucas County jaU," Wood
,.
said.
" I refused to sign any kind of
·application. This Is not an appl!·

SMITH'S GMC

d · h .
O.lj emiSSIOns
e1ays eads for ca,t.~~~·o~i?o:~~hat the~e
Ohio General Assembly showdown ~!~e:!~~cJf~!~~~!:;h:~~~;~
~

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse R~&gt;porter
COLUMBUS, Ohio &lt;UPI)
Gov. Richard·Celeste's veto of a
delay In a controversial auto
emissions Inspection program Is
headed. for a showdown next
week In the ·Ohio General
Assembly .
Saying Ohio has a legal commltment and an obligation to
purge the air o! harmful ozone,'
- the governor Fr,1day canceled the
bill, passed earlier this week;
which would have postponed the
mandatory Inspection for six
. months In the Cleveland and
Cincinnati areas.
Starting Monday, certain ser. vice stations will begin offering
Inspection of the emission control
systems on all 1980- and latermodel automobiles and light
·trucks In Cuyahoga, Lake, Lo·
rain, Hamilton and Bu tier
counties.
Lawmakersconcernedthatnot
enough stations are on lhfe wl!l
press for an override, starting
Tuesday in the Senate. The bl!l
cleared by 89·8 In the House and
22-7 In the Senate. An override
will require 66 votes in' the Hou'se
and 22 in the Senate.
Otherwise, an estimated
150,000 motorists In the affec.ted
counties, whose last names begin .

-I

The judge said he too was
with C and 0, will have to have veto will be sustained.
pleased with the deal.
certificates of Inspection when
If the veto Is overridden, the
''I am very happy t)!at you ·
they apply at their dep!JtY Inspection program would go have resolved your Issues. This Is
registrars' offices later In Febru- forward on a voluntary basis a juvenile court, this Is not a
ary for 1988 registration.
until Aug. 1,' ivhtm ti would criminal court," Smith said.
· The Inspection Involves check· become mandatory. The $5 tee
"I've been willing to sit down.
I ln!f' about eight emission control would go to $10 In August, with It's too bad It had to come this far
p"'ts under a car to see that they the state receiving $3 and the before we've had an opportunity
are operational and have not Inspection station $7.
to sit down," Baker said.
been tampered with. One Clncln·
Proponents of the delay said
"We worked out some d!fferennail lawmaker said the tnspec- less than 200 Inspection centers ces we. may have had,
tion tak115 at least 20 minutes, not out of 400 are ready in the personality-wise, and once we
counting p~rwork . The cost Is . Hamilton-Butler county area, got through all or this rlgama·
$5, of whl~n S2 Is returned to the and only 250 of a needed 600 In the role, It went very smootlily,"
state: . ,
northern region.
Baker said or the negotiations.
"In 1979, Ohio committed to the
Celeste said there are 300
The Woods agreed to provide
U.S. EPA tha,·lt would begin an stations ready to go In the · . school officials with their son's
automobile !nspec(!on program Cleveland area and 205 In the curriculum from the Christian
In the counties violating the Clnclnn!ltl area, and that those Liberty Academy, a com?sponozone standard.'·' Celeste wrote numbers will increase by the end dence school. They w!ll also hand
In his veto message. "That of February.
over standardized tests results
commitment . has ' yet to be
The u.s. · EPA ordered the Kevin has previously taken. The
Implemented, leaving Ohio one program to rid the Cleveland and Woods must provide assurances
of only two states of 32 nation· Cincinnati areas of unacceptable their son Is being taught five
wide not to have done so." .
ozone levels. The agency has hours a day, 182 day&amp; a year.
The governor also said the b!ll
threatened sanctions against the
The Woods also · agreed to
"doubles the fee for the il!specaffected counties If there Is release Lucas County from any
lion, p"ts unnecessary bllrdens
further delay .
liability stemming from· their
on local governments, and conThe sanctions would consist of action ..
fuses the public about an alrflady withholding federal highway and
Baker will review the J'ecords
difficult and frustrating
sewage treatment funds, and a ·. and the two sides wlll return to
situation ."
f, ·
ban on new · Industrial LucasCountyFamllyCourtFeb.
Sen. Richard Finan, R'·
construction.
19 to seal the agreement and. to
Cincinnati, said he does not know
Supporters o.f the delay said dispose of seven motions still
If he can reassemble the 22 votes
any sanctions w!U not be Invoked pending.
to carry the .b!il again . A until September, and Ohio's .--------------1
spokesman for the governor's
program would be mandatory In
office expressed confidence the August.

HOME OF THE ALL-NEW '88' SIERRA AND
THE VERSATILE S-15 JIMY.
Factory Rebates now in effect will save you even
more off our already LOW PRICES. Receive ·
*600· 760.00 Back, depending on model.
Stop in for some of the Best Deals .in the Tri·
County area. You can't afford NOT to stop at
Smith' .. GMC. Come in today or give us a call.
Just ask for Herb Smith.
·

Located at 133 Pine Street,
- ~llipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-2532

GJ;: trade workers threaten ·walkout
EVENDALE. Ohio (UPI) Although no strike date has been ·
set, about 1,400 trade worker~ at
the General Electric Aircraft
Engine plant have authorized a
walkout.
Members of International Assoc!atliiir'of Machinists Local912
overwhelming authorized a
strike this week. The union ·
CO!Itends GE has refused to
· arbitrate grievances and continues to subcontract work.
GE officials declined comment
on the strike authorization
·
Friday.
The union's contract with GE
doesn 't expire until July, but
members could go on strike long ·
before that. said Alfred O'Connor, president of the local:
If members go on strike, he
said. It would not be considerw a
wildcat strike because the lntr"

national union .sanctions any
strike over unresolved
grievances.
"We're going to go In and give
them a chance to negotiate,"
O'Connor said of the decision to
hold off on setting a strike date.
Also, officials of Local 647 of
the United Auto Workers union.
which represents about 6,000
hourly workers at the s~burban
Cincinnati plant, said their union
wlll hold a strike authorization
vote next Wednesday.
A UAW orrtcal said the · vote
was prompted by the company's
practice of subcontracting work
and Its proposed job con_sol!dation. which could eliminate 500
jobs at the plant over the next few
years.
.
GE has tecetved two major
contracts In the past wfiek. First ,
the Air Force announced the

plant would build all engines for
the topisj!cret B-2 Stealth'
bomber, a deal that could eventually be · W~fth more than $5
bmron. ·
.
Defe.nse Secfretary !?rank Carlucci. speaking ki-I;&gt;ayton Thurs·
day, said a strike .Could possibly
hamper development of the
Stealth.
"Obviously If the project Is
going to be delayed, so that It Is
out or phase, we would have to
look at appropriate aci!on to be
taken," Carlucci said, "but I
don't wapt to get Into that kll"of
speculation at this point. 'm
fully confident that manage ent
and labor wlll be able to resolve
the situation."
· Japan Air Lines disclosed
Thursday It has signed an Initial
$150 million contract with GE for
24 engines.

A policeman's involvement raises
questions in Stelt investigation

IE'=

• Was Now

25 Pt.

C!iMC:TRUCK
IT'S Nal' Jt5T A TlWCK
ANYMORE. "

.

..,......, Weftsday &amp; Sa·
twday nights aft• 4 p.m.
_Large Pepperori Plua for

big on performance
MfCRO EYE QllfST Radar Detector

• GaAs Mixer Diode for outstanding
sensitivity.
• New circuitry rejects false iC lland
alerts from RASHID VRSS Collision
Warning Systems.
• Surface mounted components for -~
reliability and performance ..
• Easy to use CIPAS mode for eliminating
· false X Band alerts.
• Computer,controUed signal procesSing.
• Volume control, separate X and K Band •
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.• Complete with 9' straight po\\:er ~brd,
windshield and -visor brackets; hook
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399 279

Diamond Earrings
&amp;· Necklaces all at
Discount Prices for
Valentine's Day

.

'"'·

''

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L.. _ :,~ J .

fight,;, to win restrictions on Chem!awn.
chemlc,al · spraying, Including
Chemlawn, Which operates
provisions that residents be lawn-spraying trucks In 46 staJes
notified In advance when a and 'three Canadian provinces.
neighbor's lawn Is to be coated
with pesticides.
Chemlawn, based In Colum-.
bus, Ohio, claims Abrams has
publicly questioned the safety of
01 Dm
Its lawn care programs and
•
privately threatened litigation·
P.M.
over the 'company's promotional
brochures.
6
"We have reached a point
where we Just want to be left
alone. We feel that we bave a
right to provide scientifically
factual 'Information about lour
. .. ....., ...32
services," said Steph~n Hardy· ,
PO""IY .
man, a spokesman for

FUU T•E
MECHANIC
9A.M.-5
DAYS

em
SIIVICI STAnON
FARM

~..hearing

.Model878

5Q Y rs. of Service

in Gallipolis

TAWNEY

Bob i Elmtotl•.

J~EWLERS

UPPEI IT. 7 ·
GAlUPOUS

422 Stconll, Gallipolit

.... ....

·~ ·

Feb~
·
..

set

, POMEROY - Meigs County
' !&lt;Game Protl!ctor Keith Wood
.wants area , residents to know ·
' ihat the Ohio Department of
, &gt;Natural Re$ources. Division of
. ,:Wildlife, wlll be lioldlng a fish .
~nd g"me hearing on Sunday.
:-web. 21. The publiC hearing tor ·
~!stiict IV will be held at the
'Recreation Center un State St. !n
Athens. starting at 1 p.m. All
Interested Meigs residents are
Invited to attend.
' To be discussed In the hearing
are the 1988-89 propOsals for
Ohio's fish and wildlife Jaws. One
of the key propilsals to be
dlscus~d. reported W~. _will be

21
'

a "two deer limit per hunter for
certain counties, Including
Meigs."
·
Anyone wishing to attend the
hearing Is welcome. or may
contact Wood at 985-4400 to ask .
questions or voice Input which
wlll then .be passed along at the
hearing.
There are five Wildlife districts
In the state, Wood explained, and
all five districts w!ll be meeting
on the Feb.' 21 date at their
respective locations. ·
In ca$1! or bad weather, the
District IV meeting will be held
Wednesda,y, Feb. 24.

71 "Volvo

..

WAS 1491. ·
0

Standard &amp; Pooi's highest your acc;:ount or matled to cellent lictuidity. In addition,
bond-holders benefit from a
rating of AM.
you.
redemption fund that per·
mits requests for payment in
the ewent of death or at the
holders option should funds
be available.
,

87 lan,er

Su~r

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and.offer
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For more information
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PEPSI and
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GROU_ND BEEF

BREAD

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IJ,OIO ldlll . . . wllll . . lltll

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GaUipolls, Ohio

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$169 lb.
HALF $1 89 lb.
CENTER $259

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~~~Fish ·and·game publ.ic

what are the th re·e
most important features ·iQvestors
prefer i'n their investments?. ·

By DAVID' ARMON
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI) Chemlawn Services Corp., the
nation's largest lawn care com· pany, Is suing New York's
attorney general for · attacking
the firm's advertising and "con- ·
tlnu!ng harassment."
A spokesman for Attorney
General Robert Abrams said
Friday the suit was a pre·
emptive maneuver by Chemlawn
lawyers concerned about a pendlng lawsuit against tl)em.
"They know what we are doing
and they have decided to take the
first shot," said Chris Bra!thwa1te an Abrams · spokesman In
N~~ York' Clty.
Abrams has been leading a

.'
3 bedroom. 1 Y2 baths ,

Small in size-

XENIA, Ohio (UPI) - A apartment in the same building Schenck and others In February t------1----'------,,.---L----..,----_;::..::============~~
former Beavercreek police of- where she lived.
1986 that she bad become romanficer who allegedly became roThe· detectives befriended the tically Involved with one of the
mantica lly involved with the wife woman and drew information detectives.
of triple homicide suspect James from her that allowed prosecuO'Loughl!n made the allega·
Stelts may have overstepped th~ tors to eventually Indict $tells for tlons concerning the relationship
bounds of good police practice. the stayings, Schenck said.
during a hearing this week In
according to a lawyer for Stelts.
B~t Stelts' lawyer. Michael · another case against Stelts and
'
Stelts has been charged with O'Loughl!n, sajd Anthony be- two Columbus men . The three
aggrava ted murder In the slay- came Intimately Involved with men are accused of participating
ing of three people in a farm - •Mrs. Stelts and· urged her to In an org;m!zed crime ring that
house outside Beavercreek in divorce her husband. ·Anthony burglarized Ohio and Michigan
1983.
has since left the Beavercreek homes from 1979 to 1982.
The ruse that allegedly led Pollee Department and curU.S. District Judge Walter
Beavercreek Police Detective rently works as an Investigator Rice ·wants a run hearing on
Harry Anthony to form an for Cub Foods.
O'Loughlln's charges and other
attachment with his wife, Renee
Near the end of the undercover events surroundl!lg the pollee
$tells. began when Beavercreek Investigation, an attorney for
Investigation.
3.
police were Investigating the Mrs. Stelts reportedly filed d!·
Schenck said he didn't know If
triple homicide.
vorce Pi!pers for her In Greene the allegations or a romantic
Greene County Prosecutor WI!· County Common Pleas Court. connectjop were true, and thai
Safety of collat~ral: Ginnie Safety of high ·yields' and Safety of liquidity: these
Ham Schenck said Mrs. Stelts About two months later, she even It they are, that wouldn' t
Mae Collate_raltzed Bo~ds mohthly interest: Month bonds can be sold at market
was viewed as a possible source asked the court to dismiss ·the hamper the government's case
~
~re
collaterahzed. by obJtga·_ after month, like clockWork price in· a viable secondary
for Information on her husband, complaint.
·
against St.elts.
·
t1ons of the Umted States the funds are cred'ted t ' market which provides exso several detectives rented an
Mrs. Stelts reportedly told
Government. They carry ·
t. . o

Chemlawn sues NY attorney general

···$30,500

CUSTOM
BUILT
HOMES

ss.oo

ct. aso 1so

1.

THE BOYHOOD HOME OF Odd Mcintyre was this house:
located on Court Street in Gallipolis ~ .Odd's grandfather Al exander·,
Mcintyre., built the house about 1864. That year, Alexande&amp;
operated a tinsmith shop on the comer of Third and Court, O,dd died
50 years ago this February In New York City.

TRUCK ·cENTER

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,•

�Ohio Point PIIIUnt.

.,

31. 1988

w. v•.

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r1ve-r

Section

•
31. 1988:

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CASE-BULK
SALE
SALE PRICES OOOD FEBRUARY tST THROUOH FEBitUARY 6TH

FRESH

OROUND BEEF

~

,, .

89

OR MORE

•

A

GALLON

/

..-

/

... • &lt;

HOTDOCS

SMALL

EGOS

19

S DOZEN

ROAST • STEAK
OROIIIOCHUCK

GOLDEN GRAIN

PEAS

.MACARONI
&amp;,CHEESE

$700

$600

24-16 OZ. CAliS

CORN
00

24-16 oz.

24-25 OZ•.CAliS

CALIFORNIA ICEBERG

88
CALIFORNIA

Frankias

.- ~

.
time.
Times-Sentinel Stall
Once the milk flow has slowed.
units. which are housed ill
POMEROY -Hi-tech is mak - then the metatron automatically
individual cow stalls, are in the
ing its mark everywhere, even ,_ releases the milker from thecoiiv .
barnyard.
, :
"When a cow comes up to tha~
down on the farm .
. · and signals the operator If
The latest for dairy operators production on that particular feeding unit, even though It'S:
are computers .which balance cow has decreased 20 percent been there earlier In the day, that
milk production and feed re- from a previous milking. Tl!ls unit is going to know just ho~
quirements, analyzing each alerts the dairyman to a variety much fpod to give that co~ so tha:l
cow's output to determine the .of health and breeding need it doesn't exceed the right
amount or food based on her mil~ '
right combination and quantity situations .
· ·;
The milk production figures production." Eddie says.
of grain for the amom1t of milk
she's giving. . ·
automatically move Into the
It Is again the sensor arounit
Printers kick out dally milk electronic feeder · program the cow's neck wMch activate;
reports, lnplvlduallzed grain re- where. as Eddie explains. "ba- the computer which dispense'
. quiremepts, breeding data, and lancing taltes place- each cow is the grain. Only a portion of th(
other information which is inval- only fed what she milks. shE' gets day's quota Is dispensed at ~.,
uable to the farmer in improving just what she needs In the way of time. meaning that the cow can't
efficiency in the dairy operation. grain for the amount of milk she gorge it all at once, but musi:
/ The only dual feeding-milking Is giving ."
r!'turn several times a day lrt
computer system in operation in
Once a week the 1eeding order to get her alloted amount ot
Meigs County- and, in fact, one terminal using Information from grain.
Not controlled through th~
of
only a few in Ohio - is on the the milking terminal' calibrates
mUkers. The result Is a more cost
BOLTER FAMILY FARMERS- Roy, Eddie
Five
the
feed
ration
for
.
each
cow
computer
system Is the amoun ~
Holter
family
farm
near
and Allen operate the Holler family farm business · operalloa slnee there Is a balance between the
(See
FAMILY, B2)
:&lt;.
Points,
operated
by
Roy
,
Allen
,
according
to
her
production
and
amount of grain fed and the quantity
which Is llle county's first dairy to Install
. of mil~
. ,given
and Eddie.
by each cow.
,~ ·· ..
. 1..
• snychnllllaed eomputer-controUed leeden ud
Efficiency in operation has
alway~ beim a concern of the
·.
l;lolt!'rs ~!lk'h ha~e a t&lt;;&gt;tal herd of
· . 284 purebred registered Ho t:'
stf jns, and milk between 80 and
90 cows twice a day,
The computer system was
installed in April in a small office
building j-ust outside the milking
barn. A coded sensor. called a·.
responder, with a number on it is
the cow's link with the computer.
The responder ·aciivates the / system.
"As explained by Eddie Holte(
as each cow enters the !Jlllking
p·arlor which has spaces for eight
it is identified by' a micr&lt;&gt;'
processor, called a metatron, .
which is at each station. Once
identified, fhe computer then
automatically signals that cow
for observation for ' possible
health P,roblems before the milk·
ing process begins.
·
• '
Once a clear signal has been
given , the cows udders are
•
"stripped", washed with an
antiseptic solution, theQ dried
f
and
the milkers attached. The
, •
I
•
1
•
metatron
. has ·a series of red
: . ' ELECTRONICGR;\INFEEDERS-Each~ow
that cow. The system is ·fl· dual rntlon feeding
lights
which
flash as the evalua·• hu her own number and coded neck coUar, called
system that f~~edstwo dllfei-enttypes of grain. The
tion'
and
milking
process moves
~ a responder, which signals
Ieeder computer to
tota111111ounlls dispensed over a 24-hour period in
along, records the total milk
: release feed according to {be mllll .produetlon
of
n:::~= feedlnp with each cow having to return
.
yield for that particular cow, the
FEEDER FUNNEL SILOS -These two funnel silos are a part of •
the feeder stall.
maximum milk flow, the averthe new electronic, comp'!ter controlled feeders. The feed In the ~
•
age milk flow, and the milking
silos is released Into the containers in the feeder stalls.
•:
•

*"e

HEAD·

-CRISPY SER~E

$12 9

t LB. BAt

Ro•ie~~~~~~............ ~».llf$119
$900

MOll FLOSS
_
_
OllllfOII ouiooooolkt'J.iJ.gffJ

s,
·

12

oz.

PACKAGE

$900

MOUNTAINEER

THOROFARE

$900

Sa.uaaga

Slleed Potato••··············

•
•

..•
f:

••

'

Krlttf Caraekere •···~'•M•·
24-ts oz. CAlli

to

•

LB.

SUNSHINE _- SALTINES . _ _

.-.

,••

~ ~-

8

.

~-

BACON

Tender Sweet Carrots ...

COUNTRY STYLE

Stare.Ribs

$649.
5 Ll. PAGICME

1 LB. ·
RO~
tile
~

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

wlaea tile flowr oompleted.
It ... opetl&amp;or II .......... II ol118
paw.&amp; II' - - . Ben AIIH Ho._. ole- llle
udder tl oae of the 81 Rolltelna- beiBI mOked
In p...,.,..len lor IIUaclllnr the milkers.

mlcnpnuuara,
,• an pldwcd lieN. '1'111

,• com,.eer ldleb obHrvel
'

-

for • •

or

hedL problal1 llcftre tile mD 1 ,.a••
:• bqla8. 0._~ 1he miller ~ Mtubad t11ea the •
7

.

~;:

'

.

COMPUTEJt SYSTEM - Tile only nal
feeder-mllldar balueed compater ap&amp;nn tn
Melp (lOIIltty II In &amp;p
lion at Ole &amp;•Iter lllmDJ
farm at Five Polatl. The prtntauta detaU exactiJ
what Ia hlppealnt; wMII eac~ cowlnclacllnr milk

...

•

I•

'

..
makes the changes. The feeding"·
.•

.')~ .j

..

6

..••

:·t

.REO. BUN SIZE

LB.

THOROFARE

Head .Lettaee

•

. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

KAHN'S ALL MEAT

1~.

•
•

POTATOES.

'\ _
_· _

.1·10 lit.'

•

7

•

I

$159
-

,•

•
••
.•
•

Family farm using bigh-tech means _
•
to ·monttor cows, _improve efficiertcy .
''

CHUNK.COMBO ·

'•

•

WISCONSIN

to LBS.

LB.

.••

)

I

,.

�~2-Sundlw

Tim•• Sentinel

..

SUNDAY

PORTER - Clark Chapel
- Church wm have Rev. Robert
Persons In services, Sunday, 6
Is Bonnie Friend, Flatwoods p.m. Spelcal singing.
.
BJ IIOB BOBn.ICB
· Melp COUDtlani -~~ with Road, Pomeroy.
lbeAmerlcanRedCniMBioaclm·
BIDWELL . Mt. Carmel
)aile program
WIDDer or last Sunlday's Mys· · Church will have Layman Day
ve hoping to ret
tery Farm contest In The Times· Service, Sunday,10:45 a.in. and Z
Q1e new year oil
Sentinel ls' l'at Holter, Route 3, p.m. Speaker Rev. Gilbert Craig
!0 a good start
~meroy. Five,contesntanti cor· Jr.; Voices United will sing.
when a bloacl·
rectly named the Ray Carr Farm
tnoblle visits the
on Whlppel Road, ancl Pat was
HENDERSON. W.Va. - The
· Meigs Senlot .CI·
selectllCf as winner of the $5l!rlze Grubb Family Singers will be In ,
flzens Center In
offered. the wln~r via lottery.
concert at COncord Baptist
·~omeroy from 1 to 5: 30 p.m. on
Church, Sund.ay, 7:30p.m.
,F eb. 10.
Joe Leach, deputy director of
: In previous years, Meigs district 10, Ohio Departemnt of
, MIDDLEPORT - An organ!·
eounty ·has met or exceeded Its Transportation,' anno11nced that zatlonal meeting of Parents For
quota of blOod donations so the the Morgan County Garage re- Education will be beld Sunday, 2
toea! participants want to start ceived the County Garage of the p.m., at Middleport Junior High.
1$88 by again meeting quota with Year award In the district.
All cOncerned parents In Meigs
However, Meigs County with Local School District are Invited.
from IKl to 100 pints of blood.
: All types of blood are urgently Jim Prolfltt as superintendent
scored well in the judging. Meigs
ileeded but 0 positive and 0
MONDAY
l)egative ar~ especially In short was first In equipment rating . BURLINGHAM-TheWordol
·' supply. The Auxiliary of Drew winning the winter dry run Life Church at Burlingham win
Webster Post. 39. American Le· Inspection; tied with ·Morgan · begin ~viva! services ¥onday, 7
glon, will be bandllng the,c anteen County on facility appearance;
p.m. each evening. Johnnie Rid·
. ~r the Feb. 10 visit.
· was first In superintendent rela· ' die will be the evangelist.
tionship, that · Is, how well , the
; Probably during the pasqveek, superintendent relates with the
you 've all been tipped on the garage crew, and was In a five
value of the an asp!1'ln in averting way tie In the direct charge
a heart attack.
percent point judgtng, which Is
: However. did you know that m&lt;~lntainlng anything within the
POMEROY -The Meigs
Or. J.J. Davis of Middleport was state's right-of-way.
County ~nior Citizens Center,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, In:
one of tbe 22,000 persons Involved
vltes all elderly of the county to
·lit the Harvard testing? The
A Melgl' High School student
take part In activities at the
~.000 people In the test were
has a crisis · with her livestock
divided Into two groups, half project. •
center.
faking the aspirin over the · . She needs a home for her six
The schedule or activities for
~tlng period and the other half and one-half month old steer
the week of Feb. 1·51s:
•Monday-Round and square
noj. Dr. Davis was In the aspirin · which she has had as a Future
;'Caking group.
.
Farrners of American Project. dance 1·3, Exercise Class 3:15 .
Tuesday-Physical Fitness 11,
· ThiS wasn't the first time Dr. The person now keeping the
Cavls has taken part In national animal says it must be moved at
Chorus 1·2, Oil Painting Class at
testing programs. While a medl· once. She will provide grain and 1, with Lois Pauley as Instructor.
I $10 hi h
eal student at Ohio State Univcr· hay, but has no place to keep the The f t th I
slty, he was one of a group taking steer. If you can help please stop Includes
ee orall e cmaterials
ass s
, lor
w ca
atabrlne used In the fight against by 6&amp;5 Diamond St., upper end of finished painting.
Wednesday-Physical Fitness
· lilalarla.
Middleport across from the
Queen
or
If
you
can't
do
11,
Knitting Circle 1().12, Bingo
Dairy
--'
'.
• Members of the Churches ol that but can help just give me a 1·2, Bowling 1:30, Bridge 1·3,
Christ across Meigs County will call and I'll pass along your offer .Exercise Class .J: 15
thursday·Pbyslcal Fitness 11,
to help.
~r pouring Into the Middleport
(:burch of Christ for a hymn sing
.
at 7 this evening. The public Is There ~re a few tiCkets left for
ipvlted 'to atiend also. ·
, , . the Meigs County Republican
.
'
Lincoln Da:x dinner to be held at
POMEROY -,.Bookmobile Ser·
: V~rne Ord, a. 1974 graduate of . 6: 30 p.m. Wednesday at the
vice Is provided In Meigs County
Southern High School who Is Meigs High School Cafetrla.
by . the Meigs County Public
picking . up his education at George Volnovich, three tl'rm
Library under contract with the
fofarle~ta College, has been
Cleveland-mayor who Is a candi- Ohio Valley Area Libraries
riamed to the dean's ·list at that date for the U. S. Senate, will be
(OVAL).
S!:hool for the 1987 fall semester. speaker. You can pickup tickets,
Monday February 1, -Chester
Verne, son of Bob and Leah Ord: $7.50, from Meigs County Repub-· (Fire Station), 2: 15·2:45; KenQ
·,Syracuse, is majoring ln.geology. !lean Chairman Rich Jones or 3:00.3: 30; Burlingham (Mobil~
: Meantime, Hocking Technical any county office holder ..
, Home Park), 4:30-5: 15; Harrl·
College at Nelsonville announces
sonville (Church), 6:15·7:00; ·
tbat Is omitted local students
How 1 did · we ever make It
New Lima Road (1 mi. South o!
from Its e~rller listing of the through the night before pizza? Fort Meigs), 7:15-7:45,
dean's list at that Institution. She Do keep smiling. . , ·• .
,
. WedJINday...,Februaey 3, ,...
Heedsvllle (Reed's Store), 5:00.
__;,&lt;F_r.....,om_F_AM_n.....:v'....:B...:J&gt;_ _

--- '

POMEROY - Pomeroy Ma·
sonic Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, 7:30
p.m. Monday at Middleport tern·
pie with practice for work In the
E .A. Degree; all master masons
lnyjted.
·
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
ship Trustees meeting, 7:30p.m.
Monday at Syracuse Municipal
building. '
ROCK SPRINGS - Meeting of
Meigs Local Band Boosters, 7
p,m. Mond'ay In band room or
Meigs High School..
TUPPERS PLAINS- Regular
meeting of Orange Township
Trustees, 7: 30 pm. Monday at
home of Clerk porotby Calaway.

TUESDAY
GALI,IPOLIS - Gallipolis Ro·
tary meets TueSday, 6 p.m.,
Down Under.

'
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
Lions meet Tuesday, 6: 30 p.m .,
Oscar's.

Meigs Seniors plan week

---

'

a

Family farm ... __

silage,
2,460 4,000
pounds
of grain
peunds and
of hay,
pounds
of
dally to the cattle which drink
5.006
gallons of water a day and
need 750 pounds of straw for
bl!ddlng and other purposes.
'In normal years the Hollers
gr:ow everything they need to
feed the animals on the farm ·
whiCh consists of 844 acres. about
half of which they own and the
oi.her half they rent.
:Farming has been a way of life
for_ ~era! generations of the
Holter family. The late Homer
Holler. who's wife, Ada, still
ht!Jps with some cleanup wort&lt; ·
around the milking equipment,

!armed thl' land and carried mall
to supplement his Income. His
son, Roy, moved right Into the
operation as have his two sons.
Allen, a graduate of Ohio State
University, and Eddie, a gradu ·
ate 'of Washington Technlca.l
School. Both now have families
and reside on the family farm.
It's thetwosonswhohandlethe computerized part of the . farm
operation. Associated Fabrlca·
tors of Pomeroy Installed the
equipment which In the past nine ·
months has been updated three
times. It's anticipated that the
system will pay for Itself In a
couple of years through the more
efficient feeding method.

years ago

']n 1963, 25 years ago, The
World Almanac reports, the
Kodak Instamatlc camera and
the muscle retaxe!' Valium were
Introduced. and the first com·
nierelal nuclear reactor was
lllltalled by · Jersey Central
Power and Light.

,,,

,(

..

··~ ~

..

~

.........

.. .~ .• . ~·· .,

. ........... h,..., .... ..-. ........... -,,:.. ·- .. - -· · ., ••.. ... .....~ ........ - · • .•.

~-

~

----·· 4 . ... . " ..... .. ... --· -· ~ ....... ~ ••• &lt; J \ • .. -..-

. .....

......

.. .,.

, .,., ... .

Thursday-Macaroni
corn,
oranges and grapefruitand
cheese, creamed tomatoes, Wal·
dorf salad, cake
Friday-Vegetable soup, cheese
wedge, fruited ' gelatin, cookie
Choice of beverage available
with meal.

.

Hoover Guardsman COiiitwrdal
Hoover Hel~te Hanckleoner
· Hoov.- Spirit 900 P.N. Canist.1

SAL£ PRICES HOOVER KEEPS
GOOD THRU FEB. 6! ·MAKING IT
'

·-.......

~------~--~-----AIR l'llllfii!IIU

Cle-wllh

Puua• ......

·--.....__
. . . ..

--

o· The Maternity Orcha..d

_.,.-

.,

230 Broedwey, Jackaon • 286· 2669
Open Tuea.·Wed.·Thura·Sot 9:30-5:30
Mon. &amp; Fri. till 8:00

~~~~~~;;;~~~;;;;;;;;~;~~~

5: 30; TuP.per's Plains (Lod·
wlc;k's), 6:35-7:35.
· The Carpenter stop has been
eliminated In 1988:
OVAL Bookmobile crews have
been providing users . at these
sites with alternative "next clos·
est" service locations since the
middle of November. In many
lnstancl!S the users drove several
miles to the stop, and with the
new schedule they will merely
change the dlre.!!tlon and time .
t""y traveUo tl!e.'l!l;o:okmobll~. ,

Pick up wet lnd dry! Ewn combination

.

'SAVE

ChorgHwhi!o

hanging In deluxe

$2011

wollato~erodc

W11hable, rMIUble filter

Va1entine' s Day

Eaav·..-P'Y 8 or. cup •
-ch

SMELTZER'S

• Mill DIAPIIS

~ ....... (CIIUIS)

.....

•IWY emu IJEIS

We .. IIIZIIJ/Irl altl_, ..W ._._ Ftr Y-.

n:'J::S"· ""'"":...... 446·7283

. ..
..
'

WITH WRAP

CONVENIENT
. BUILT·IN
CARRYING HANDLE
9 QT. DISPOSABLE .
BAG
NO SHOCK HOOD

.. .Non-Conduct.lve Surface

4.8 AMP MOTOR

, • 7% qt. dlaposeblo bog

•·Fuli time edge dean,i ng

ST!I;!I;L AGITATOR

• 16ft. power cOrd
• Hendy topaldo switch
• OeiUM rug and.floor

S3289

nozzle

Two dirt driving brushes lift
dirt IntO the path of suction.

''Deep Cla•n• C•rpatlng!''

FULL·TIME
EDGE
CLEANING

--

· 453 Jackson Pike, Ga,i lipo.lis, Ohio .

.' .

HOOVER®
HOOVER®
two·· · ·~ · Deluxe
Shampoo,._., ........
Polisher

~ncapt
Self·Ptcp allad
Cleenlng Syet&amp;m

.

;

• Brushed edge cleaning

• 16% qt. disposable bag

SAY~ S140!!

• Twin lamp headlight
• Automatically adapts
. to most carpet
• Comfort grip Vf'ith

/

I

~WERNORI

Convertible~

Cleaner

THE #l
RATED
.
.
CANISTER IN
THE USA BY
INDEPENDENT
TESTING!

I''

all systems

/

• Toola Inside
• One-step hose connector
• Carpet/hard floor

Win one of five
free vacations for
four to Hawaii.

aelector

f'owei kif Abow

~~-·

1"'0\'loMI. ~p ....Utl'i"' c ......... Induct.~
tl'lt~ lfiiH!II'ID ,.,.... ..... Moo,t

..,. ..... _job . ·-·

••o
•......- ...... ~
ft,..nnptomrol
•

_,.

.w..,. .......a •nti-......

h prd

• ....,...,._ "'atoo -itc~

ww.........
......
IIP,Of..-..
tnpa&lt;l

0

•

$9995
SAVE SSO!!

bou.'-

U4377·9

SAVE

•

,•

•'

two-speed ·
Quik-Broom'"'ll

Vacuum
ComDulet Your Cleaning
~&gt;owe! tnllanltyt
'

Win a free Hawaiian shirt to
be given away each week in February
. at every·shoney's Restaurant. .

·'

I•-;-

.•

.,

HOOVIR.

lWO.MOTOR

Decade 80~
Cleaner ·with

Spirit'"'

Power Surge·

Grut for Qulc:k Plck·Upsl

Switch

Greb it hom the ctOMt where II hanp ,
reedv to gil your piece il\ tt~epe fa&amp;t .
Plug it in, and 1terl cleening .

• Htgh

• Powerful3.6 Amp Motor '
• Easy cord reiMH!
E-·empty -thru dirt cup
• Edge cleanl"g
• Con¥e'nlent ewitch
• Hang-up for storage
• Deluxe rug and floor

'i'

• ComiiHt . . .ned ,lflp
• Chrome pt-.ct 1tHI handle
• Edgltllghl ciNnlng
perforrn~~nc•

8.0 Amp. motor
• Ee.,- emptr dirt contiiMr
• 4·poslt!on ht8 ldjultii'Nint
. . rn41cat«

HOOVER®

Powemozzle
ClearilngSystem
• Oelu•e two-brush agitator
• Edge cleaning

• 7% qt. dispoaoblo baglsignol
• Contour.,.grip with suction regulator
• Handy top-siCia switch
· • Convenient top-side tool storage

'

.

$1

SAVE
SSS!

'

j

.S3995

Tty our-delicious Hawaiian
Chicken Dinner with Soup, Salad
. and Fruit Bar for just $4.99. .
'

S2097

KENMORE

"..

SAVE $6011

S3439

SAVE S20!1

-

EUIUA

fRISTAI ,
AND AU OTHDSII

"' ,,

.

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

!Gt _,.... ll'llf """'· OlttMftHr lrlel"

U3321

.

4.3* PlAKHP

.

SAVE
S4011

• T...-..ort""*'*'

$29995

· 2 speed
• 15 qt. top-fill bag
• 4-posltion rug attachment

$8011

finding heedlight
• Dirt
.
'

REMOTE CONTROL'

·. ·
If you're lookihg for sunny beaches,
, · ·
tropical shirts or ~harbroiled Haviaii~n Chickt:n, you needn't
travel far. It's a.s close as your nearest S?oney's. ·~. '

. .
&amp;.,~ _

·-. ~: '
,...._
,.

• All 1teel handle wl1h grip
• Poweriul ~- 0 Amp. motor

f74y9s

AIR FRESHENER

SYSTEM

'

• Dual mode- automatic
or manual control
• 9 qt. beg capacity

..

.....

With

Headlight ·

.WITH40UARTSUPfR
TANK! COVERS MORE

fingertip controlS

E.Cl.EANING SYSTEM

• 7 LED dilp..,. ,m orlitors

-

S3Ul

••I

''•

Sweepstakes ends Z/:10188. Void where prohll:!fted. No purchase necessary, ,
Full details available at checkout (9Unter. ·
.

.•

.AVE•.

•

America's Ditmer

~

•

.' ~

,'

L---~----------~--------------------------~------~ ·
'

r

'

18' CORD

U4383
NEYO
.NEEDS
lAGS

.........

• LIFT CIIAIIS

• ...W&amp; • • • - · CIIILGO • IIIMDlC IIII'PUII

·•..a sreou •'Anm um

•

HANDLE

SAVE 5,3011

OUYCUAJIS:
ELECYIOLUI

•IIIII DIY..
•.....

•

.~

Spirit™.
Canister Vacuum

Flower Shop &amp; Garden Center

Bowman's

'I"~IJ

0

ALL STEEL

446-4848

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~

flfl~l'

0

. ..
... . ..
. ..
'· . .
.• . .
. .. .. .
...

with

Locat1;1d on At. 160, 1 mi. north
of Holzer Hospital.

U"'mecare II,.JicaJSurnnfv
nl.#,

•

•

POWERFUL

-

. ,.

0

INCLUDES
ATTACHMENTS!

Feb. 8'-14

' '

LIST $99.95

twndVKI

'

'

•

•

HOOVER®

-·-·· /' ·- S2995

'Spit~~ ere no challenge for this~

'

'

.FREE

S1083

•

OPERATORS ......:\
,
Linda Garrett, Susan Lookado, Tina Ba.ker
OWNER p 11 Melh
: a Y
eney
·

UGSI
BUY 2GET 1

SAVE S2S!!
I

U4413

',

..
..
....·....
.........
.. .. .. .
..........
.. .

SAVE NOW
GENUINE.~.liOOYER' !
REPlACEMENT

...

0 ~

•

MtM

HOOVER.

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

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

•18 Ft. Cord
•Dusting
Brush ·
•w I Agitator
•#1 Rated

Bn.sh-Vac™
Vacuum

Dubi•Duty"
Wet &amp; Dry Hand Vee

For all the things
you couldn'.t say ...
Send flowers on ...

HOOVER~

SAVE S40!!

~

U4381-9

.,'"ffOIIIIRI'III . . .

Feb. 4. 5.&amp; 6 .- · Winterfesr of Values
Super Savings on Selected Clothing.

'

Hair Styles, Cuts, Perms For All The ·
Family At Great Prices.
$
TOP BY OR CALL 446·6144

I

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

•

SAVE $4011

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

........

'

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

.

Sl 5995

•o.llll . . . . . . ...

'
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County Health Department will
conduct a quit-smoking group
clinic starting Feb. S.at 6 p.m. In
Its offices located In the Court·
house. These short one hour
classes will be held Feb. 8, 10, and
12.
The will use the American
Cancer Society methOds of how to
quit smoking and offer helpful
guidelines which are easier In a
group situation in becoming an
ex-smoker.
Call the Gallla County Health
Depa.rtment at 446·4612extenslon
292 twreglster.

FAMILY HAIR CARE CENTER

OUR FULL LINE OF SWEEPERS ARE'
ON SALE-DON'T r.tSS THIS HUGE EVENTI
%

•Fashions f.,r Morhers·to·be sizes 4-46
•Nursing lingerie &amp; tops for New,Morners
•Infant wears 0·24 months ·
·

'

~

Hoover Powerdrive Con. One

One Stop Shopping for Mothers-lo-be
+ New Mothers

.

HOOVER.
Convertible
Cleaner

$18995
$18995
$19995
$2995
$1«)995

'

IIOOWR.
DIDalla 110"

Quit smoking
clinic slated

·~,., O..plete It• ...Ia etrelttre"

25

..._ .

~

Hoover Concept One

NOW OPEN

•

,

. ALSO ON SALE:

attend. Refreshments will be
served.
•
•
OES meeting
;
MlDDLEPORT - District 25,;
Order of the Eastern Star, annual.
. LONG ~M- Mrs. Mary meeting and school of lnstruc-:
Folmer of LQng Bottom will be tion, Middleport Masonic Tern·;
the speaker at the Feb. 2· meeting pie, Wednesday, with the Harrl··
of the Long Bottom Chapter of son ville Chapter as the host unit.
Flame Fellowship to be held at The afternoon meeting will begin
7:30 p.m. at the MI. Olive at 4 p.m. with the evening session.
·Community Church. · Long Bot· to be held at- 7 p.m. All Eastern
torn. Suzanne Bush 'is president Star members are urged to.,
attend.
•
, and Invites the public.
•
Trustees meeting
POMEROY - Meigs County . • ROCK SPRJNGS - Salisbury'·
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, will Tonwshlp Trustees will meet
meet at l : 30Tuesday at the Drew Thursday, 7 p.m.,atthetownshlp:
t
hall on Rock Springs Road.
Webster Post Home, Pomeroy.
Flnanclal aid
RACINE - A college financial
· POMEROY - Members of XI
Gamma Epsilon Chapter of Beta al.de meeting will be held at~
Sigma Phi Sorority are to meet Southern High School at7p.m. on•
Tuesday, 6: 15 p.m., In the upper ThurSday .as part of the parent·,
Pomeroy parking lot before teacher conferences . Diane;
going to the Down Under Restau- Kinder, financial aide director at'
'Rio Grande, will be the director:
rant In Gallipolis. ·
·
~ant of health
.
·:
The
Gallla
~
GALLIPOLIS
.
MIDDLEPORT - The regula r
County
Board
of
Health
meets
meeting of Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM will be .held 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, 9 a.m., courthouse; ·
.
Tuesday. Members are asked to· basement.

Games, quilling, sewing
Friday- Games, quilting,
sewing_
The Senior Nutrition Program
menu for the week Is:
Monday·Baked stealc. mashed.
potatoes , brussel sprouts,
pudding
Tuesday-Creamed baked
chicken, carrots, three bean
salad, pineapple
, Wednesday-Hamburger gravy
on biscuit, mashed potatoes,

.

ttie Hollers do all of their own
attiflcial Insemination, genelically mating each cow to one of
ttie 400 top bulls In .the United
States as listed In the Holstein
Redbook.
:They currently have 284 head
of cattle and are milking 83 cows
producing 4600 pounds of milk
ey~ry day. · They feed &gt;.000

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GALLIPOUS - Revival at
Calvary Christian Center. con lin:
ulng through Wednes!1ay, Feb. ~­
Services 7 p.m. Evangelist wlll
be Ray Knapp and his wife.

"
OVAL~boQkmobik schedule

~~t~u~~e;:~eption of heifers.

. . .,.... _... ... ..

Community calendar

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flelp the helpers•..

~~~.1 nft;!~r ~~~~. h:~~· ~:: ~:~:

~-

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8iat of the bend

of silage, hay and water' con·
sumed by the herd. Besides the
grain dispensed in the feeders.
the cows pick up their minerals
and salt In ground corn In the
milking parlor. Each one also
eats about 40 pounds of silage and
1&amp; pounds of hay and drinks about
2P gallons of water.
·The amount of food consumed
by each 'cow shows up on the
computer printouts and can
signal what's happening with the
animal.
. Eddie says that sometimes
when a cow Is having a health
problem or going into heat she
won't eat all of her ration. When
reduced consumption of a partieular cow shows up ori the
24-hour·a·day monitoring sys·
tern. they are alerted to .the
situation Immediately.
The computer provides all the
i!lformation a dairy farmer
needs to know about each cow how many days she's been

..

Jan111ry 31, 1988

Pomeroy Midclaport-Galllpolis, Ohio Point Plllllnt. W.Va. .

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1oa·w. MAIN

POMEJOY,
.9.91-3307

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�Page-B-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel .

·EASTMAN'S

Ohio-Point

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

Your Independently Owned
·
Low-Priced Supermarket

PRICES GOOD IN:
•POMEROY
•GAWPOUS

MONEY
S

OIDEI
EACH

Wt V.'f , 1:11 Mi \~ i 1: ,\
f LUl i:iil IIJlllJ Sl Ar•1PS

W.Va.

-eAWPDUS

:79(

.PY. ftUSAIIR
.PDTRDY

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HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A' ·

WHOLE BONELESS

Mixe·d ·
Fryer Parts

Tavern
Hams

'

FOODLAND ·

Round White
Potatoes

King Site
White .Bread

89

e

BONELESS
CHICKEN
BREAST

.Meat Master
has the Answer!
Assorted · .
Pork
LB.
Chops .... 10!'KG.

Bulk

$1. s· 90
_

DELICIOUS!

Flanders
Beef'
LB.
Patt1es . . . . . . 10PKG.
•REGULAR •HOT

Mountaineer · ·.
Pork
LB.
Sausage .. . . . .10PKG.
•STICKS • FILLETS

Schooner
Breaded
•
LB.
fiSh
.. . ... 10PKG.
TENDER

Boneless
Whiting
•
LB.
Fillets
. . . .· 10PKG.
DELICIOUS (10-LB. AVG .)

Kentucky .
Border

sggo

sa··g·o·.

•REGULAR •HOT

Superior
PoHsh
LB.
Sausage . . .10PKG.

•

~~

20 oz.
LOAVES

Yellow
Onions ....

1s
.

69
Apples . . . . . ·.
D'Anjou · .· . 6
Pears ...... La.

~l~· $149 .Delicious
.

California
Carrots ......... ~M.
5 LB.

$1290

WASHINGTON STATE JUMBO
EXTRA FANCY eRED •GOLDEN

.

Sl 49·

·

LB.

Flor~da .\.; s LB. '189
Grapefruit .:. BAG ·.

.

CRISP

•PINK •WHITE

FAMILY FAVORITE!

$1290
$1590
$790
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TAStE TREAT!

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97

Fresh . · ·
Broccoh ••••• ~ •••~v-••• ·

~

$490
s·2·290
$2290

10 LB.
, •• PKG.

ON·COR.

·• ·

Chef's
Pantry
LB.
Turkey . . . 10PKG.

•

1LB .
PKG.

·seven-Up .

99C

2utER
BTL.

99C

.

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Cl~ster

Buns

La.

SMOKED SAUSAGE

$199

•REG. •THICK

$1 89
'

12cT.

SUNBEAM

Country Style
Pan Rolls · 11 oz.

Kielbasa .......... ~"· _. ·

69(
s·9(

HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY

'

EXTRA STRENGTH

Bologna ...•.•• ua•••.

SERVICE DELl
SHAVED

Turkey
Breast ·
LORRAINE

·

Swiss
Cheese

LB.

~

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S.329

t~.~339
.

IN-STORE BAKERY

$2

PURE

·C
69

Turkey
·- Franks ••••.•••• J3.~K-..

·

. $4

EFF.ECTIVEI

\

GLAZED

Tylenol
·
$399 Jumbo . . .· 10CT. $189
Caplets
....
~:X· ·
Donuts . . . . ·PKo: ·
. ~:~~~~.: ••••••••• lqN.
49) CHEWABLE •REGULAR •GRAPE
DELUXE GERMAN
,
Children's 3 ·$249
~~o!e.~...~.......ul~.. $199 Tylenol .· ... ~5:· .
~::~o~~~~ ~ ~K~~ 29
SWIFT

59&lt;

Luzianne Tea

.

Eckrich ·
$ 189
Franks •••.•••••.. t~~·.

89

Delidous Cookies

.•
.•'-

MEAT•BEEF•CHEESE

•

Pineapple

DIET OR REG. A&amp;W

•

SUNBEAM

Bone-In
Round Steak

ASST. VARIETIES SANDWICH

•

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BAKED GOODS

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE
FULL CUT

DELMONTE

-·

Breaded
Chicken
Nuggets . . . 10PKG.LB. · ·
•NUGGETS •STICKS

1

oz.

Frozen
Turkey
Drumsticks
.

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Hygrade ·
· GriHmaster
LB.
Fran ks .... 10PKG.

.

10 LB.
• • • • . • • PkG .

g~~:~ ··.. WK~·

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PRODUCE

$ ,

TENDERBEST QUALITY COUNTRY STYLE

.. ! ..

•

MEDIUM

TENDERBEST QUALITY SLICED

.."..•
...
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.

3

14·17 LB.
AVERAGE

$

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MICHIGAN U.S.• NO. 1

.

SQUEEZE PACK

Sweet
Sugar

Del Monte
.catsup -

•REG: •DRIP ,•ELEC. PERK ·•ADC
l

Maxwell House Coffee

4~ OFF LABEL!

•

Tide
Detergent

6

PEANUT BUTTER

Co·Tylenol
· · 24 CT.
· ·$399 Fres~ ·' · ooz. $119 .
a
T8 blllS , ... BOX
'
Cookies . . . PKG.
.·

.

' 4,4LB;

lAG ·

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nmes-Sentinel

DAWNINE JONES
JOHN WILLIAMS 10

--Cunningham-Venoy .- POMEROY - Jim and Bev·
eriy Cunningham of Baum Addi'
lion , Pomeroy, are announcing
the engagement of their daughter, Brenda Lynne Cunningham•
to Kevin E ."Venoy. soc of Ed and
Janet Venoy, Pom~oy.
•
Miss Cunningham is a gradua te of Eastern High Sc hool and Is

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employed as a secretary at Twin
Cllles Ma'c"lt•lne S hop
Middleport.
·
Venoy also graduated from
Eastern High School and Is
em ployed as an operator at
Estep Recovery. Little Hocking.
A late s ummer wedding Is
being planned.

She attended Ohio Oniversity
a nd received a bachelor's degree
in art ·. a nd. scie nce. She . is
c urrentl y working as m 0 nager of
thl' At.hens Hair Depot and is
.;t a rting her. ma ste r 's in political
science at Ohio University. ·
Furbee Is a graduate of Southern Loca l High Sc hool. He
received a bachelor's .degree in

Communit)' corner

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

January 31. 1

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Don Jones of Gallipolis are
a nnouncing the engagement and
up coming wedding ot their
daughter Dawnlne Sue Jones to
Jol)p Marshall Williams Ill. son
of Mr. and Mrs. John Williams
Jr .. also of Galllpo.lls.
Miss Jones Is a pharmacy
technician a.t Hoizer Medical
Center.
·
Williams Is employed at Mitchell 's Firewood Processing at
Bidwell.
Both are graduates of Buckeye
Hill's Career Center.
An open church wedding will
be held at the Good News Baptist
Church on Feb. 13 at 7 p.m. The
Rev. Marlon Williams will offl-

Love 'is .not ·buying
everything kids ·want
kids hate to beer their jlarmts or,
worse yet, their IJ'8fldparents say,
"When I was your·-." rn.-.1 don't
..,.. ' " " '
believe you ever were.) lklt here is a
letter that is worth riskifll their

'-v

sense

of the word. They are !Jlt)re
like nonaaressM&gt;n pacts.

ANli LAIIIIERS •

1

. •l088. t.o'. Angotos
Cmtar• S!n*ll•

r- S!nticlt•

n1

rJ;::::::::::::~===;==~~~

Dear Aim Landen: This letter is
for
young people
who think' life is
wrath:
.
hard -bec:ause they can't have a car
when they are in h¢ school:
In 1947 when · I was 12 I lwl a
paper route in Terre Haute, Ind. It
was one of the hetlviest routes in
tpwn. I had 265 customers.
Since it was a morning route, my
dad went to the station at 2 a.m.
cl~\e.
seven days a Week and •picked up
A reception will follow at the
the papers. He and my mother
church's fellowship room.
folded the papers and packed the!.n .
.·in two ~lags. On~ bag I put on. \he
Rainin• a•atD 7
fender of my bicycle. The other one
e •
was strapped 1o the handlebars. At
The rainiest place in the world, Tbe· 4 a.m. I was on my way. .
~
World Almanac reports, is MI. Waia· · I had to return for more papers
leale, on the island of Kauai, Hawaii. twice (three times on Sundays) and
It receives about 460 inches of rain was usually finished by 7 a.m. I
each year. '
· then went home, had breakfast and
rode my 'bicycle to school. Cl~WeS
started at 8 a.m.
The paper route netted me $20 a
e lect rical engineering imd a
week. My parents let me keep SO
mas ter's degree .in computer ~l)ts. The rest went toward clothes,
science and m&lt;~themalics irom school bookS. food for the family
Ohio University. He is a progra m ·
design engineer for Unl$ys in .
kept payments
that routetoward
·an through
highI
and
.our farm.
Paoli. Pa.
·
school. It was a terrific experience
· An open church· wedding is
imd shaped my entire life.
planned for Saturday, Feb. 13. at
I've had an interesting career and
1: 30 p.m . a t the St. Paul Ca tholic
retired
in 1975. I am not a
Church in Athens.
millionaire, but I have a lovely
home and a comfortable income.
By the way, my dad sold the farm
six years ago for SIOO,!XXl.
I hope all the teenagers who .are
reading this will come to under· ·
stand that parerits don't do their
aggressive a ttitude, these thin!(s children any favors when they buy
· bols ter the immune system and them everything they want. As I
he lp get people through diseases . . look back I sa! how much I learned
I'm convinced tha t it works·."
from that paper route. It taught me
Steve, who's · now at William s
how to p:· a businessman. It also
Air Base in Phoenix, is waiting gave me a sense of responsibility
for an a ssignment which he
and a feelirig of accomplishment. I
believes will come in the spring.
didn't realize it at the time, but it all
He hopes to return to Plattsburg.
He says he wants to go back to comes dear to me now. - F.L.
the same base. the same s quad - FROM SPEEDWAY, IND.
DEAR SPEEDY: Thanks for
ron. the sam e plane. beca u se h~
some
down-home wisdom. Actually
believes the whole business will
your
letter shpuld be read by the ·
not be over until he's back where
pjlrents rather 'than the children.
he left off in 1981....,:..
They are · the 'ones who need to
Reno.vation.pf the Senlor- Clti- .. kn9.w tltC imJ)o~ of aivitll .
zens Center is expected to get
young people a dtallense. Nothing
underway so metime within the can compare with achievement
nex t couple · of weeks a nd be
when it comes to building self-es·
completed in early April .
·
teem.
The Meigs County Council on
Ag ing received $200,000 for th e
Dear Ann Landers: My fiance
project which will be used to told me that his parents have been
ex pand the kitchen. purchase
married for 35. years' and never
new kitchen equipment . enclose
have exdtan!!ed a harsh word. Is
the back patio to provide a
this possible?- LOUISVILLE
meet in g room·. add some more
DEAR LOUISVILLE: Yes, it's
storage s pace and another office.
possible, but as William Graham
It may be a little inconvenient
while the construction is under- Cole said, such marriages are not
anything to brag about. They are
way. The kitchen is expected to
be closed for a bout two weeks.
but during that time ·the Center
pla ns to contra c t with someone to
prov ide food so that there will not
be an in,terruptlon in the nutrition
program.

He lps Pilot Defeat Cancer" a nd
rletailed the story of Steve' s
ba ttle agains t Hodgkin' s disease,
a form of ·Cancer wh ich a ttacks
the lympha tic system.
.I t was in 1981 while Steve was
aren't.
sta tioned at Plattsburg Air Force
Faye Wa llace
Base in New York where he flew
of Middle port
KC- l35's that the diagnosis was
lost her wallet
made. For the next three years
w ith money and
most of which he spen t in
· other va luables
Pomeroy near his pa rents . ·M ary
In it on the s treet in Middleport
a nd Gerald Powe ll, he under went
recently. Within 30 minut es her
che motherapy and radiation . Hi s
wallet wilh it s conte nts intaCt
s
ig hts were firml y set on the goa l
was brought to he r · home by
of
flying aga in. Steve ha s always
We ndell Allen William s-of Hyse ll ·
contended
tha t anything else was•
Run Rd . w ho ' had found it . He
no
t
a
sui
ta
ble
a lte rnati ve.
r efused the reward tfi at Mrs .
The the r a py worked and the
Wallace tried to give him .
ca ncer was put into remission .
As Faye says. "It's nice to
By Sept. 1984. it was gone. and
know that there a re s till good
Steve began the process of
honest folk s around ."
e xe rc isi ng. running. a nd hiking
to build up his strengt h so that he
Laura Mae Nice has just
could
pass a physica l.
re turned from .a visi t wi th her
While
m edica l Ichnology w ill
son. Kennth Hartu ng in Louisthe credit for saving
be
give
n
v ille. Ky. ShP went &lt;'spec ia lly to
Steve's
life
, he be lieves altitude
s ta v with her two gra nddaughers
he
lped
pull
him througtf.
while Ke11.net h a nd his wife
As he stat ed to th e in te rviewer
traveled to Hawai i on bu ~ ine~s.
doing the story. "If J'd have
Jncident a lly , Kennet h was reres igned m yse lf to sitting there
cently promoted to vice presi sta ring out th e · window. I'd
dent of B. Bar B. Co .. a plas tics
proba bly s till be the re or be dead.
concer n. i n Louisville.
I rea lly be lieve to a large ex te nt
that a person's state of mind ca n
Steve Powe ll was the subj ect of
aid
the hea ling process.
a feature s tory in the.lan. l &gt;issue
"
And
now there 's research to
of U.S. Air Force's "Wi ngs." It
s
upport
th
at a sense of humor. a n
was entitled "Posi ti ve Att itude

Date: .February 16 _
nme: .6:30 p.rn.-8:30 p.m.
Fee: S33.00 plus SUpplies ·.
Instructor:
Debbie Siders ·

, 'J'ICKENS 63rd ANNIVERSARY - Eber W: and Goldie V.
•Pl ckens will celebrate their 63rd wedding anniversary on Friday,
Feb. 5, They have three ~hldren, Effie Pickens, Racine; Hazel
,Sellers, Portland, and EberT. Pickens, Racine, lour grandchldren
;and six great-grandchldren. A c ard shower Is being held In their

••.henor.

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DJ'S

CANDY, CAKE &amp;
CRAn SUPPLY

MR. and MRS. JOHN J. MYJ9t8

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Myer~ to observe anniversary
LOGAN , Ohio - john J. and Loga·n, Ohio, and Carole Ann
. Naomi (Clark) Myers will ob- Martin of Swoope, Va. They also
serve their 50th wedding anri!ver· have seven grandchildren. ·
He retired from Anchor Hock·
sary · at home on Feb. 19. They
lng
Glass Company of Lancaster.
were married Feb. 19, 1.938 at
·
Ohio
In 1978 after 43 years.
Gallipolis and ·are members of
The couple lives at 1351 Charles
' trinity Lutheran Church.
They are parents of two daugh- St. , Logan. Ohio, 43138.
ters. -unda Kay Bensonhave, of

529 JACKSON PillE
446-21_34

Early Shoppers Sale ·
THURSDAY, FEB. 4 &amp; FRIDAY, FEB. 5
DOORS OPEN 8 AM.·· 7 P.M.
· BLOUSES
SWEATERS

...

SKIRT$, JEANS
&amp; SLACKS

$695

$995

GIOUP .OF

GIOUP Of '

Observance Set

GARRETI' and CHLOE FELLURE

~

_fellure anniversary planned
· NORTHUP - Garrett and
Ghioe T./Martirll Fellure of Rt.1
N-orthup, wlll celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary, Sunday,
Eeb. 7, from 2 to 4 p.m. ,' w.tth an
open house reception at ·Patriot
Masonic Lodge Hall , Patr iot. :r~e
e vent Is hosted by their chlld rE'n.
- ! They were married Februa ry ·
5, 1938. in Gallipolis, Mrs'. Fellure
Is the daughter of the late Meteer
a'bd Minnie Martin. He Is the son
of the late Alva and Vllona
~llure.
~.lfhey are t!Je parents of two

.

sons . Robert W. and Gerald M.
' F ellul'e of Gallipolis , and one
daughter Mrs. Clifford (Linda)
Eggers of Columbus. Theyhave6
grlmdPhl[dreri a nd one great
grandchild.
·
· The couple requests gifts. he
omitted.

POMEROY - Feb. 1·5 Is can provide for America' ~ stuNa )ional School Counseling dents. Today's students are
Week sponsored by the American faced with more educational and
social choices than ever. School
School Counselor AssoclaUon. ·
The theme for this observance counselors. as trained profesis "Sometimes the learning pro: sionals, have skills to help.
·cess needs a helping hand . That's
Counselors in Meigs County's
Why we are here. Your school schools are i..eah Ord, Southern;
counselor·spmeone you can . Tom Kelly. Eastern: and Martha
count on ." ·
Vennarj arid John R e dovlan ,
Purpose of the week 1~ to focus Meigs High School.
on the services school.counselors

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BEnER
SKIRTS, DRESSES,
SLACKS, BLOUSES

Wieners

Bacon

$999

$4"

sa••

S lB.. OCEAN PERCH

Chicken
Patties

Popper Loaf... s1.1h.
CllaFFid ham .. 51.19 ._
lllilocl Ham •••. SUh.
l.H. Ch111t ..... S I. 79 tto.

S16''
Ll. SIIRlDDED

S1495

50°/o OFF AND MOIEII

.-.•

.o A.

·WALL
TO

WALL

WHOLE 01 HAlf

Fol~r's

Co ee

ss••
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
3 COLOIS

24-IS OZ. WCI'S .

10

Monorella
Cheese

Pinto, Navy, October,
RAMI llidney .._

Pork Chops
End Cuts

$945

$1050

$999

101 SU((S Of

24-IJ OL

American
· Cheese

lC. Colli. l'lpli. Dr. Ptp]Ill. Mt. Dnr, 7.IJp Dill

$650

.$595

~!:;.9: '139995
0

u.

$6
9
9
95
Dining· Room Su1te ••• . ..
BE,ROOM

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION .
(Including Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)
Sta,te Bank No. 983

STU-DIO 9·9

The ·Commercial and ·Savings
Bank ·of Gallipolis

STATE ST.
.GALLIPOLIS, OH.

fashion Accessories

Federal Reserve District No. 4
Gallla County In the State of Ohio al the close of business on December 31, 1987.

'

OUR VALENTINE'S . GIFT TO YOU!
A FRESH! LJYE CARNATION FREE
ANY PURCHASE •.GOOD FEB. 1

•

SAVI UP
TO

50°/o AND

. MORE...

~=· ssoo '

• ASSETS

FEB. 13

Time ·for Valentine Dances
GOOD SELECTION

CHAINS &amp; CHOKERS
WITH MATCHING EARRINGS

SPRING
FASHION BELTS
"IMITAnON UZAID PRINTS"

51L

•• Wltlt':'Z"

Sau111g1
Patties

S1J95

$899

ROCIIOnOM
PRICES ON

FLOOI SAMPLES!

.
IUCILIS
'It" TO 2" WIDTHS

.

$ 70o TO $2 500

EARRIN.GS AfliD CHOKERS SOLD SEPARATELY.

· JUST .ARRI~ED

JUST ARRI~EDU .·

OW LEATHEI
WRH POUSIIID 01 COYEIED

5U.

7:30 Lm.. Sunday

;·._

'

$399

e

SIIOW AT 7:30P.M.
ADMISSION $1.00

NEW ASSORTMENT OF
STYLES
2 AND 3 PC. SETS

DON'T FORGET
90 DAYS
SAME AS CASH

BROYHILL 7 PIECE

Radle ·
MI!*Miir From
Thr Blhh•

Dally • WJEH
11 155 •. "'.

.fOR 1 EAR ONLY II

IAILY AMEII CAN

Blhl• Study

7t00p.m,

-~,·~~~~~~~~

WALL

Bacon

~~ ~nf'llday 1

'

; The Ford ' Motor Company
ral!ed Its basic daily wage from
$~. 40. for a nine-hour day , to $5
f6r .an eight -hoF day on Jan . 5.
1914.
'

3 u.

KITCHEN PRIDE

Chapel Hill Church of Christ1
Sunday Ennln111 :
Wonhip 6:00

''FINANCING AVAILABLE''

3 LB. IONELUS
WHITING FILETS

for Free Bible Coffl!Spondenct COune, Write •..

.

WALL .

10:.._1 Ll.

i

But.. mRoad • P.O. Box 308
Galllpollo,Ohlo 45631

· : Near-ly 275,000 blacks served in
tll'e .united States armed forces
during the Vietnam War. the
\'[ot ld Almanac· reports . And
'5;!&gt;81 were killed in combat.

TO

10 LB.

William B. K ugh•
•
In the Greek, "teaching" is used rather than "doctrine." Duchbw
· means teaohlna. and is used in both the puol• and ..ti•e senses in the
New Testament. When it is used in the puol.-e sense. it has reference to
that which is taught , and expresses authority. When it is used in the 8dhe
sense. it denotes the act of teaching.
. .
_ Paul uses the - " • sense in 2 Tim. 4:2 , "Preach tM word: be instant
in seaSQti, out of .season: reprove. reb.uk.e. exhon witlt .al/longJufferi,.g and
dtx;trine, " Paul is instructing Timothy to patiently apply the authoritative
doelrtno (teaching) to his preaching ,. tn favorable ~nd ullfavorable
situati.ons. reproving the false teachers, rebuking the sinner, and encourag·
ing the weak with .all patience .• Paul uses the toetl.-e sense in 1 Tim. 4:13,
''Till/ come. giw arrenda,ce to reading. to uhort,ltion, to doctriM. ·•
Timothy was to study. instructing himself, and being obedient to that
which he learned . By taking heed unto himself in teaching and in C&lt;l ntinual obedience. he was saving himself. But, it did not stop there. He
was to go beyond himself. After improvinR himself by teachin11: and obey._
in g. he was to seek to improve those without himself, teS£hingand encour·
aging them to be obedient to the cleetrlne. This was the 8dhe set)se in
which "doctri•e' ' is used. Timothy was to be faithful in what he laught by
adhering to the "doctrine " and he .was tO faithfully engage in the act of
.
teachlna (doctrine).
The 'singular "doctrine .. is always used when reference is made to God's
word . Jesus. the Great Master Teacher, astounded His hearers by "'his doc·
trine .. ( Mt . 7:28). The apostles imparted "tire doctrine .. (Acts 2:42), tilling
Jcrusal~m with "the doctrine" (Acts 4:28), and astonishing some with "tire
ductrin.e ofthe f-ord" (Acts 13 :12). "The doctrint· which is according to
godliness." (I Tim . !d). is oound; that is, it is complete ~nd lleaJtby (1 Tim.
I: 10: 2 Ttm. 4:3: Titus l :9; 2: I). it must he ohldlod (I Ttm. 4:13), .......t (I
Tim . t :3). and obeyed (Rm. 6:17; I Tim.4:l2,16).
.
The ~I ural "doctrine!' is always used when referring to that which is aot
ol God. but of men. "doctrines and comma•dment• of men " (Mt. 15:9;
Mk . 7:7: Col. 2:22): of the de&gt;D. "doctrines of devih" (1 Tim. 4:1), and of
"maug&lt;" doctrines " (Heb. 13:9). "Docrri•n"·,are of the devil and the
world . ''Doctri11rs" make for vain worship, causing many to depart from
the l'aith.
. .
To transgreu the doctrine is to go beyond or aside from the doctrine of
Christ. To go beyond or aside from t~e doctrine is to ·enter the realm of
doctrlnn . To enter the r'ealm of doctrines is to depart from God and
Christ . John declares. "He thai abiderlr in tire doctrine of Christ, he hath
!xJtll lite Fath er and the Son " (2 I no. 9). We .mustnot he part of the one or
&lt;~nes "·ho go beyond the doctrine. teaching the doctrines and command· :
mcnt s of men. devils, and strange doctrines by bidding him God speed ·.
\\·hCn rcceh:ing him into our house (2 Jno. 10.11).

.
Bi~cks
in Vietnam
·•

RUTLAND FURNITURE COMPANY

Check
Out These
Values!!

mashed potatoes, penny carrot
salad, whole grain bread . frult
cup with coconut.
Thursday - Creamed turkey
over biscuits, broccoli, harvard
beets, biscuits. yellow cake with ·
cherry topping.
Friday - Baked chicken, buttered rice, seasoned green beans,
dinner roll . lee cream.
Choice of coffee, tea, lema·
nade, milk, or buttermilk with
each meat:
·

THE DOCTRINE

- Advanced
Knitting Classes .

__

a nice week!

noon; Herbalists, 12:30 p.m.
Friday - Art Class, 11J.noon;
Craft Mini-Course, 1·3 p .m .
Menus consist of:
Monday - Assorted meat,
scallOPed potatoes, kale with
vinegar, whole grain bread ,
lemon pudding with mini marshmallows.
Tuesday - Macaroni/Cheese ,
cabbage and sliced carrots,
cornbread, .pineapple crisp. •
Wedn·esdl!Y - Ham loaf ,

A Message From Tire Bible .. .

·~:~::::::::::::::::;::::~

Honesty still exists, at least here
By CHARLEJ'!E HOEFLICH .
There are s till Jots of honest
people around . It's just that we
hear mote about
those that

GAl.LIPOLIS -Activities and noon; Chorus. 1-3 p.m.
menus for the week of February 1
Tuesday - S.T.O.P .!Physlcal
through February 5, atthe Senior Fitness, 1(1: 30 a.m:
Wednesday~ Card Games,1-3
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson
Pike, are as follows:
· p .m .
Monday - Ceramics, 9:30Thursday - Bible Study, 11-

not really marl'ilqjt:5 in the true

PEAR READERS: I know that

7

Sunday

Gallia County ·Senior ,Center plans .w~ek

Ann
Landers

--...;...._--~-Cllrter-Furbe'P'e-----RACINE - Mr: a nd Mrs. Paul
E. Carter. Radcliff. announce the
e ngageme nt and approaching
marriage of · thei r d.a ughter.
Tammra Carter. to -Richard L.
Furbee of Racine. son of Mr . a nd
Mrs. Raymond Furbee. Racine.
Ms. Carter is a graduate of
Vinton County High School and
Buckeye Hills Vocationa l School.

-· -

,;

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

JonesWilliams

BRENDA CUNNINGHAM
KEVINVENOY

'

SPRING BAGS

··

oo ·$1500 SCJ00 ..S16s00
TO

I

.

I, the undersigned officer, do hereby declare that this Report of Condition has
been prepared In conformance with official lnstructlon·s and Is true to the best of
.my knowledge and belief.
..
· Allee K. Stover
Vice President and Comptroller

.,

•Acid Washed Denim
•Canvas Stripes
•Mini Shoulc* Bogs
-Metallic Mesh

·

.'

Cash and balances due from depository institutions:
Nonlnterest-bearlng balances and currency and coin ............... .... ... 2,082.000.00
Securities ........ ................. ....... .... .......... ....... ................. :.... .. ..... ...... 10,537, 000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements
to resell in domestic offices,of the bank, and of Its
.
. Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and in IBFs ..................................100,000.00
Loans and lease flnan¢lng receivables:
·
Loans and leases, net of unearned income ................ 47,410,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ...... .. ........... 532,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income,·
allowance, and reserve ......................... ...... .. ........ .. ...................... 46;878,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) .... ....... ........ 1,176,000.00
Other assets .••. , ........... ......... .. . :...... ... .......... .. .. ................. .... .... ........... 831,000.00
Total assets .......... :..... ... .. ............................. ...... ................. .. ......... 61,604,000.00
LIABILITIES
Deposits:
.
a. In domestic offices ........................................... .................. ~ .. .. 56,420,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest·bearlng .... ..... ................................ 6,261,000.00 ·
(2) Interest-bearing .............. .... ..................... ......50,159,00!).00 ·
Other llabllltles ................. .. .. .... ...... ... .......... .......... ,,, ., ................... , .... 494,000.00
Total, llabllllles .......... ,, .. , ...................... ,............. ,............ ...... .......... 56,914,000.00
.
.
.
.
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock (No. of shares) a. Authorlzed .. .... ....... 1,800
·b. Outstanding ........... 1,800 ............ .... .. 900,000.00
·surplus .. ............ ..... ........................ ........... .... ........ ..... ...................... 2.850,000.00
Undivided profits and capital resetyes ............................. ..... ......... ...... .940,000.00
Total equity capital .. ................................... ............ ........... .............. 4,690,000.00
Totalllabllltles, limited-life preferred stock,
·
and equity capital ........................................................................ 61 ,604,000.00

FASHION SCARVES .,. TO 1210

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of·Condl·
lion and declare that it )las been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge
and belief has been prepared ill conformance wtth official instructions and is true
and correct.
Scott J."Hinsch, Jr.
Daniel P. Davies, Jr. - Dlr~tors .
D. Dean Evans
State of Ohio, County of Gallfa, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 26th day of January, 1988 and I hereby
certify that I am not an offiCer or director of tills bank.
·
1
EliZabeth Rumley, Notary Public
My Mnmlaalon expires April 12, 19110. '

••

•

•·

�Times-Sentinel

3~ 1988~

Ohio-Point

Section

•

January 31, 1988

crow11

Wt ltsti'Vt The lipt To
li•it Quutities

STORE HOURS

·Tar Heels
~lip past
Jackets ·

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., FEB. 6, 1988

By MIKE RABUN
UPI Sports Writer
SAN DIEGO - The Super 89wl, a mere athletic contest that
mutated Into a cultural phenomenon, makes its annual appearance
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (UPI)Sunday
before a nation largely unaware of the competitors but
Jell Lebo sank 5 consecutive
by the spectacle.
captivated
3-point ·$hots In the filial 4: 17
The
Washington
Redsklns and Denver Broncos ;_,ill compete for the
.Saturday, rallying No. 3 North
championship
of
the
Nation9l Football League in an event that has
Carolina to a 73-71 Atlantic Coast
long·since
outgrown
the
environment In which It was born. ·
COJ1ference victory over Georgia
Countless
Americans
who can name no more than one or two
tech:
·members
of
either
team
-or
perhaps none at all- will be drawn to
. After forward Duane Ferrell
television sets simply because it has become the thhig to do.
scored on a layup with 4: 21 left to
Kickoff was scheduled for 3 p.m. PST at 73.500·seat Jack Murphy
give the Yellow Jackets a 64-58
·
Stadium,
a 20-yl!ar'Oid arena host to the game for the ·first time.
'lead. Lebo scored the Tar Heels'
Denver
was
a 4-point favorite.
.
·last 15 points. Th·e junior guard
Those
whO
watch the game in
scored 17 in the second lialf and
person
will
have
paid either the crown with a 17·10 decision over
·fjnlshed with 20.
.
$100
face
value
for
a ticket or paid Minnesot"a.· The Redsklns have
North Carolina, coming off an
a scalper up to 15 Urnes that won five of their last six, are 13-4
upset loss Thursday to Wake
amount.
CornedianBobHopewili . for the season a'rid hope to
Forest,_ Improved to 4-2 In the
take
part
in the pre-game enter· counter Elway with a pass rush
ACC and 15-3 overall. Georgia
tainrnent
and the Radio City that sacked Vikings quarterback
Tech, lit dropping its fifth
Music
Hall
Rockettes will be Wade Wilson eight times In the
straight to the Tar Heels.
featured
among
the 1,500- conference title game.
dropped to 2·3 and 14·5.
member
cast
in
the
halftime
But since neither the Broncos
'
The Yellow Jackets were led
SkULL
SESSION
WashiDgton
Redskin
Super
Bowl
drills.
AI
Gibbs'
right
is
Doug
show.
nor
the Redskins are considered
·· by Tom Hammonds.' 24 points.
mentor Joe Gibbs is shown dla!J'&amp;mmll)g a play at - WIUiams (17) . (UP I)
·to
be
overpowering clubs In this
Each
member
of
the
winning
· Lebo's first two 3-pointers tied
team
will
receive
$64,000
as
strike-plagued
season, hope
' the s,r ore 64·64 with 3: 30 to play ..
reward
for
three
cumulative
·
among
football
fans
is that they
Brian Oliver hit two free throws
playoff
games.
Each
lqser
gets
string of
will
break
the
growing
Freshman Jay Edwards added necticut 's 1ate George missed on
ior Georgia Te&lt;;h at the 3: 10 · · score 53-53.
one-sided Super Bowls.
$46,000.
'
·Baskets by Ferrell and·Oliver 22 points for Indiana · while a running jumper .a s Georgetown
mark to make it 66-64. Lebo
An
estimated
$1
biJJion
will
be
"Hopefully," said Reeves,
Stephens
scored
19
for
the
helped
Georgia
Tecl1
take
.Its
improved to 14-4 overall and 4-3
countered from .the right side to
"this
will be the kind of rnatchup
wagered
on
the
game
legally
Boilermakers.
6-point
lead
with
4:
21
remaining.
·
in the Big East.
put the Tar Heels ahead by 1. but
and
illegally
..
that
people
dream of. You never
Hammonds completed a 3-point
"Yes."
agreed
Washington
is
going to happen, but
know
what
ladlana 112 Purdue 79
South Carolina 97
Oklahoma 96
play with 2:02 left, giving the
Charles
Mann.
"it
surface
it looks like it
defensive
end
on
the
BLOOMINGTON,
Ind.
(UPI)
Mississippi 78
Iowa Slate 91
·Yellow Jackets a 69-671ead.
is
just
a
game.
But
it
Is
the
might
be
a
high-scoring
game."
COLUMBIA. S.C. tUPI)
AMES, Iowa (UP!) - Stacey
: · Lebo hit .from the right corner - Dean Garrett capped a 31biggest
game."
The
game
figures
to
be high
'with 1:46 remaining. bu't Tech point performance by scoring King scored 36 points and Mookie Terry Dozier scored 20points and
Washington
Is
trying
for
its
Denver
and
scoring
because
_regained the lead with 69 seconds with . five seconds remaining Blaylock added 20 Saturday to Darryl Martin added 19 points second Super Bowl title, the Washington had the second and
to go on a 15-footer by Oliver to Saturday, lifting Indiana to an power No. 100klahoma loa 96-91 and 13 rebounds Saturday to lead .Broncos their first. H11vlng
third most p~oductlve offenses
82-79 Big Ten vlctbry over No. '2 Big Eight victory over· No . 17 South Carolina past Southern
.t nake it 7]-70.
coached
the
losing
team
last
respectively In the NfL this
Purdue
that
ended
the
longest
97·
78
in
a
battle.
for
Mississippi
Iowa State, the Sooners' secorid
After North Carolina called a
year,
De!lver
Coach
Oaf\
Reeves
season.
streak
in
Division
·1
first
place
in
the
Metro
winning
vjctory over the Cyclones in four
timeout with one minute rernainhopes to avoid becoming the
Only eight teams, mear)while,
.
Conference.
days.
'ing, the Tar Heels freed Lebo for basketball at 16 games.
back-tosecond
coach
to
lose
gave
up more rushing yardage
Gatrell's career-high perforSouth Carolina. which never
Oklahoma. 18·2 overall and 4-1 .
a 3-pointer from the right corner.
back
Super
Bowls.
The
Redskins
than
did the Broncos while
The shot put North ' Carolina mance helped the defending . In the conference. ended Iowa trailed, improved to 13-4 overall will be guided by the first black Washington 's overall defense
national champions improve to State's home winning streak atl2 and 4·1 in the conference. ThE&gt;'
ahead 73-71.
Jl-6
overall and 3-4 !n the BigTen. games. The Cyclones. 16-5 and 'Golden Eagles. corning off a' quarterback in Super Bowl was ranked 18th out of 28 teams .
Georgia Tech spread the court.
history .
Any number of matchups in
but did not call a timeout until The Boilermakers fell to ' 17-2 2-3. were 10-0 at Hilton Coliseum victory over Louisville. dropped
All
of
th&lt;tt.
however,
is
of
little
Sunday's
game could be critical
to 15·3 and 4-2 and watched their
only 5 seconds remained. Fer· overall and slipped to 6-1 in the this season.
to
those
who
will
simply
interest
to
the
outcome,
but the Qne which
nine·game winning streak end.
Jelt. Grayer set a new Iowa
rell's inbounds pass was de- conference. dropping . Into a tie·
treat
the
event
as
a
reason
to
will be most watched Is that of
flected out of bounds. taking one with No. 8 Michigan for the State career seodng record with
Badgers
80
Wildcats
59
gather
and
entertain
on
ArneriElway
and his cast of receivers
conference
lead.
30 points. Grayer came into the ·
second off the clock. On the next
MAD!SON,
Wis
.
tUPI)
ca's
most-celebrated
unofficial
's hard charging
vs.
Washington
· effort, Ferrell tried to pass to
Purdue. which recovered from game needing just 5 points to tie
Jones
and
Trent
Jackson
holiday
Super
Sunday.
Danny
defensive
line
1
keyed by Dexter
Dennis Scott, but the bail . a 21·point deficit on 18 for 21 _ Barry Stevens' career scoring
each
scored
23
points
Saturday,
The
week
-long
b!lildup.
of
the
Manley)
.
liounded off North Carolina's · shooting ~ the floor In the . markoi2,190points. He broke the .
helping Wisconsin snap a four· game and the spectacular pro·
Given time to throw the ball,
' ., llc:Qst. WJJIII~Qa ~ .,Wbo reco- • ~ half; took Its largest lead mark on a layupwlth'lO: 48lef~ in
ga'll~
l;!lg
Ten
l~sillll
str~.
a
k
.lljllh
....,
dpctions
which
go
on,l&gt;efore
the
.Ji:4way
",can be almo.st
, ve~e~f.lt m·end the game. ·
.•, Bt '79:.7l· on 11' -3-point bas~ by · the f!r.st half. ·
·
an
80-(19' victory
over'
contest
and
at
halftime
make
It
unstoppable.
' J.R. Retd scoi-ed 15 of his 19 Eve~tte Stephens with 1:50 to
Northwestern.
difficult for the players to con·
"I have never seen a quarter·
Georgetown 80
• · points In the·!lrst hall to give the
play· ,
·
Morris,
playing
his
100th
.
centrale
on
the
task
at
hand.
Shon
back
as . dangerous as John
Connecticut 119
Tar Heels a 42-36 halftime lead. . But Garrett; a 6-foot -10.senior,
game
for
Northwestern.
Jed
all
"The
format
of
this
game
is
so
Elway,"
said Washington Coach
LANDOVER. Md. IUPII .
Ranzlno Smlth finished with 14 sank two free throws with 1:27
players
with
25
points
.
Wisconsin
much
different
from
a
regular
Joe
Gibbs.
"You see different
Anthony Allen hit a pair of free
remaining to pull Indiana within
points and Williams had 10.
3·4
in
the
season
game."
said
.
Denver
improved
to
9-8.
people do different things to try
throws with 12 seconds left and
Scott scored 15 points and
a point. Todd Mitchell, who led
to stop him and nothing works all
Charles Smith scored 18 points conference . The Wildcats linebacker Karl Mecklenburg.
Oliver 12 for the Yellow Jackets . Purdue with 24 points, missed a
"You have longer timeouts for the time.
Ferrell, who entered the game
free throw with 15 seconds to Saturday to help 15th-ranked dropped to 7-10 and 2·5.
_television and a 30-minute half·
"Usually, when a quarterback
averaging 19.7 points. tied his
play. &amp;,etting up Garrett's 8-foot Georgetown hold ·off a Ia te rally
time tinstead of the regular 15 starts to scramble out of the
jump shot with five seconds and defeat Big East rival Connecseason low with 11.
minutes) . It does help if you have pocket. you know what he is
ticut 60-59.
-North Carolina missed 17 of its
remaining.
going to do. Some are just
ADA;
Ohio
IUPII
_
Tony
been here before."
Pnil Gamble put the Huskies
first 21 shots in the second half as
A traveling call on Purdue's .
A projected 120 million people moving around trying to find a
Tony · Jones with two seconds ahead 59·58 on a running juurnper · Gholson sco,red . 21 points and
Georgia Tech's zone kept the bail
away from Reid. The Tar Heels
remaining gave Indiana the ball with 30 seconds left to cap a Q)tio Northern never trailed will waich the Super Bowl receiver. Some are going to run
· went almost five minutes without
and Lyndon Jones scored · al) fur.tous Connectlcu t· rally in the Saturday In rolling to a 60·49 Ohio .' telecast. a production that will 'the ball. But you never know
Athletic Conference victory over utilize · $50 million worth of what John is going to do.
scoring until Smith hit a 3-pointer
uncontested layup at the buzzer final minutes.
"Last year when we played
equipment,
'
After Allen's free throws, Con- Baldwin-Wallace.
with ' 9:52 remaining, tying the
to complete the scoring.
This year's telecasting net- them (in a 31·30 Denver victory),
work, ABC. will employ 22 John got off to a slow start. He
.
cameras. 15videotapemachines, didn 'I do much for the first
r7P7or 100microphonesand14.2rnilesof quarter and for most of ·the
~
. cable In .the never-ending battle second. And he still put 31 points
· '
to outdo its competitors. Those on the board . That shows you
Marshall inbounded I he ball witH
CHA'ITANOOGA, Tenn. tUPI)
the foul line. compared toChatta·
Wilcox· got tl\e ball in the efforts can easily be justified what he is capable of doing."
nooga's 16 points.
- Skip Henderson nailed a 7 seconds left and Henderson hit
corner and, despite heavy defen· since eight of the 10 rnost While Elway has received a hi! ·
3-pointer with 1 seco11d remain- the winning 3-pointer from the
sive pressure by OU's 6-foot-9 watched programs in the history of attention leading up to the
Central Michigan 67
ing in· overtime and scored 44 . top left. sid~.
John Rhodes, canned the game of television have been Super Super Bowl because of his
Ohio U 65
Marshall Is now 14-5 and 5-1
points Saturday to lift Marshall
·
Bowls.
accomplishments on the field. his
ATHENS. Ohio !UP[) -Torn· 'winner .
to a 95-94 Southern Conferenc~ and Chattanooga Is 12-7 and 3-3.
mie Johnson SCQred 32 points and
The game can be viewed In Washington counterpart has reCentral. now ll-8 overall .and
Henderson - who was l3 of 15
win over Tennessee-.
5-2 In the MAC, led 31 -2~ at Portugal. Finland. Nicaragua. ceived attention simply by being
Ed Wilcox hit a basket a I the
.
from
the foul line and 5 of 10 from
Chattanooga.
halftime and remained ahead . Australia. Luxembourg, China , present.
buzzer Saturday afternoon to
. After an 88-88 tie in regulation, 3-polnt range - broke the give Central Michigan a 67·65
The Redsklns' Doug Williams
until two. free t~rows by Paul and 42 othE:r countries . .
Henderson, a senior guard, put . Tennessee-Chattanooga Arena
"Snoopy'" Graham gave ou a
Super Bowl XXII will · be will become the first black ever
Mid-American Conference win
the Thundering Herd of Hunting- scoring record of 39 set this year over Ohio University.
brief 63·62 lead.
"" chronicled by more than 2.300 to start a Super Bowl game at
ton. W.Va .. up 90'88 on a layup. · by Tennessee State's Anthony
Johnson put Central back In writers . photographers and quarterback and has had to sit
The basket by Wilcox, a 6&gt;foot-5
Chattanooga went ahead 92·90 · Mason. ·
junior forward who scored 10 front 65-63 with his sixth3-pointer broadcasters part of an through a week of racially
M~rshall's Maurice Bryson
on baskets by Morris Lyons and
of the game and Graham tied !tat onslaught of humanity which was oriented questions.
point~·. came after another score
Benny Green, who had a team- and Chattanooga's Chris Beh- by the Chippewas' Chauncey 65·65 with 1: l4 to play, setting the expected to create an influx of
Williams emerged as Washing·
rends received technlcals for Scottl:was disallowed because of stage for !he controversial $141.2 million into San Diego's
high 28 points.
""
ton's quarterback afier a year, . economy.
.
Marshall's Andy Paul William- fighting' and were ejected wlth an inadvertent whistle by one of ending.
long duel with former starter Jay
8: 29 left In regulation with · the officials.
Graham scored 31 points to
Denver won the AFC cham- Schroeder and will be under
. son II~ it again on a layup after a
The official said he thought he pace OU, which fell to 9-9 overall plonshlp two weeks ,ago with a
rebound pass but Henderson and . Chattanooga up 68-64. The Mo·
Intense pressure to perform in
had heard the scoreboard buzzer and 4·3 in the conference. Rhodes thrilling 38-33 victory over Cleve· his . most Important game. The
Chattanooga's Lance Fulse ihen casslns led 46-38 a I· halftime.
Marshall shot 47 percent from 1 sqund and blew his '. whistle, added 13.
'
. land. The Broncos have won Redskins won the NFC cham · , missed ·free throws In one-andthe field l!lhlle Chattanooga hit 62. stopping play prior to Scott's · Central Michigan's Dan Maje· eight of their last nine games. pionship game even though Willione situations.
percent. The Mocassins led in shot. After a discussion, the ball · rle, the teague's leading scorer have a 12-4-1 record and possess ams · completed only 9 of 26
Lyons hit an 8-foot turnaround
assists
and ·rebounds but had was · given ., back to Central going into the game with a one of the brightest stars In pro passes.
. jumper from the left side to give
·seven
more
fouls, and suffered· Ml.chigan with three seconds put 24-point average, was held to 5, football - qua~terback John
the Mocasslns a 94-92 lead with 19
Some of that pressure could be
from
Marshall's
26 points from back on the clock.
all coming in the first halt:
seconds lj!ft. After timeouts,
Elway.
removed if Washington esta bWashington captured the NFC lishes a running game

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wins overt~~e game at bU

Toledo Rockets drop Miami five, 88-7 5
Branch and Jeff Haar had 14 with 17 points and Karlton , third player In MAC history to
. , Ohio (UPI) __.
OXFORD
Toledo, led. by Chad Keller with · eac h and Fred King added 10·
Clayborne with 16.
· reach the 600 mark. The others
19 points and Mark Ger1JU~n with
Miami, which fell to 4-1~
Miami's Eddie SchiUing had were Bowling Green's David
overall and 2-&amp;ln the MAC, was tlveasslsts,glvlnghlm600forhls Greer, the leader with 778, and
1,6. pulled away late In the first
half enrOiite to an 88-75 Midled in sco.,ng by Eric News&lt;)me - career and makln&amp; him only the
Tim Reiser or Toledo with 762.
American Conference win over
Miami Saturday afternoon.
.
The Rockets, now 12·5 overall
·
1
and3-41ntheMAC,Iedjust29-27
SYRACUSE, N.Y. IUPI) !Jig Wed sd t
. d Seto
with 5: 40 left in the first baH but
No. 13 SyracuR,ln a brief respite
Hall 87·?6'.e
went to the dresslq room with 1
from Ita loqh BIJEut echedule, Sherman Douglas directing the the Orangemen to 14·5 overall,
40-31 bulge.
Sunday faces an elghtll-ranked offense. 1
4-3 In the Big East.
Mlchtaan beat No. 14 Dllnols
The Orangemea will liave to
Toledo broke the game open · Michigan ~quad aa quick and
with a 14-5 run at the atart of the
stroJta u the Or'anpmen. .
76-64 Tlluraday In Ann Arbor, look good before a packed
half that Increased the
,
Rocket lead to 55-35 wttb 15:30 to ,
The Wolverl~ start three big Mich., to ralle Its record to 17-2 Carrier Dome and a national
piay. Miami never got cloeer
men, lnclucllq atar forward overalland&amp;-11atheBirTen.
television audience (CBS, 2:30
tbanl2 polnta the reatoftheway.
Glenn Rice, and an outatandlq
Syracuu, ranked No. 1 in the p.m. EST) If they expect to stop
·Three ·other Toledo players , ualor auard In Gary Grant. p~eon, bad !oat three of ·tts Grant and Rice .
. '·· .Ool'ed !Jidouble~rea. WIWatn
SyraeuJe hu 6-loot·ll ·center .prevlollatouraameebeforerally· .
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January 31. 18$8

•

Page C-2-Sunday TimeS-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio' Point Pleasant, W. va:

·;~Chiefs

remian on
top in SEO ,race

P'rt'moat sa Jew d. N IIIUmere- M
.........., Ill. "-'1Mrlenl71

Friday's scOres

GaiHfOibi 15, .\ll1c• U

G•Uow•;r M't.. U. .d 11, OIMII!!IK ~-1 (ol;)

F'raall Pvr Oren '11. lro•oa,.r S3

Caraw._v 'JS, M.J""'rn SJ

l"ra11dl1 HI• IS, WltlleMIII!

Guft"lbivllle n. 1\'oadrldJt• ::11
Gt&gt;a•ll'll't. &lt;k!it•p SM
GINN U, M~ln 5I

Fruklla ....... 1S. Twla \' aJ S St

PN4ertekMwti 'JI. CHt&amp;dlw 11

Tornadoes

UraawiiiiP N, ....._.. •• 11
Gr~....W 11. Wllm..... ll
f]rft . . .l'l OrHI 'ft. Mto.. 81pblad ~~
H•.......... tii,M .... P

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1986

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JACKSON - Warren Local
outscored the host Jackson Iron·
:: men '32·17 in the middle quarters
:. Friday night enroute to a 63·44
: SEOAL triumph.
, The win moves the Warriors to
· .· 2·5 in the league and 4-10 qverall
·: while the lronmen remain win·
:. less in seven SEOAL outings and
:: own a 3·11 overall mark, and
:: snapped the Ironmen's modest
,• two-game win streak.
• Senior Brett Rauch Jed the
•, Warriors attack with 17 points
, and snared eight 'of the team's 27
,• rebounds. He was joined in
.• double digit scoring by Jeff
,. Nicholson and Benji Full, who
-; each tossed in 11 points.
:
Mike Abrams and Chris Ervin
;. shared Jackson scoring honors
•" with 10 point~ each as the
' 'Iron men connected on just 13 of
• 54 shots lor a 24.1 percentage.
·' The Warriors shot well, hitting
on 28 of 47 shots for a 59.6 effort
; -·· a nd converted seven of 11 at the
line.

&lt;

..

The box score:
WARREN (63) - Jeff Nichol·
son 5·1-11; , Benji Full 5·1·11;
Kevin· Clem 4-1-9; Brett Rauch
8·1·17; Kevin Fausnau!ih 4-0-8;
Bob Neville 1·0·2; Scott Mitchum
1·0·2. TOTALS 28-7-63.
JACKSON (44) .:_ Mike
·Abrams 5-0-10; Greg Harris
1-2-4; Chuck Oliver 1-2- 4; Tim
James 1·3·5; Doug Kidd 2·5·9;
Chris Ervin 3-4-10; Chris Moyer
0·2·2. TOTALS 13·18-44.
Score by quarters:
.
Warren
15 12 20 16-44
Jackson
15 6 11 12-63
Reserve score - Warren 54,
Jackson 46

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Friday's scores

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~':u~1on

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. Elyria ( 'alh i&amp;, 'CI~ar Fork S7 ,
Elyrhlc " ' HI, Ollerlin Fln·lalld~o~, SH
&amp;!.ott Grerno• "· SprinK Nil' 81

ll.._brondect tie,;.

'

Euclid 6-l , M11yfleld 56
Fairflf'ld 61, Hu.mUton 59
Fort t' ryt.• 6!:1, Woodsfldd 8'!
Fort ·ft• nnlnK:!I K5, Nlllll'r City i9

fort Lommh• 'l'i. Sldnt'y Fairlawn U
t 'ort R('t'tlvt'r~· 9.1, Ml'ndon Union .lll
Fostoria 66. Orr ~eo n CIP.:V 65

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Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-3 .

Your privacy is respected
Your questions answered

•

..·' .
.•..
......•

hold~n,

-·-- -

saying, ''The real winner tonight . Southern soon capitalized with one very important offenslv~
By SCOTI' WOLFE
Tlmes-Seatlael staff
was Kyger Creek.,.. they played some Inside penetration .
board.
hard
and
really
had
us
covered.
1
Southern
also
reflected
its
true
SHS had Just 9 turnovers, 7.
RACINE - Just moments
just
glad
to
leave
here
tonight
·image
with
a
resurge
of
its
steals,3
assists. and 18 fouls. KC
away from a seemingly lnevitl·
pressing game that literally was 19,3,0 and 10.
ble overtime, Southern's Shawn with a victory."
"This Is the first time all year broke the tiring. "Bobcats"
Southern won the reserve
Diddle quickly exchanged his
we've hall the whole team go flat.
backs. Lacking some needed game 60-33 as Brad Maynard
basketball gear lor a "cape and
shield" as his game-winning When we get down someone else depth, Coach Stemple chose to continued his surge with team·
leading 12 points. Chad Taylor
jumper led the Southern Torna· always picks up the slack. If sUck with his starting five
does to a hard-fought 5j.51 there was any 'Plus' tonight It throughout.Tlred and weary the had 9, Roy Johnson a!ld Chris
Muq:thy 7 each.Nihert had 12 for
come-from·bE:hlrid victory over was thefactthatweshowed some Cat's broke, but did not give up as
character.
The
boys
really
dug
SHS
went
ahead
51-49,
but
a
KC and Price 7.
the Kyger Creek Bobcats here
down
deep
to
get
It
when
we
Loveday
goal
tied
the
score
with
·
·
Southern played Miller Satur·
Friday evening In an lmpportant
needed
to."
a
posSible
three
point
play
at
the
day
night and plays at Oak Hlll
SVAC contest.
line.
KC
missed
and
Turley
Friday.
·
For most of the game Kyger
In
the
o~nlng
stages
of
the
grabbed
the
rebound,
igniting
KYGER
CREEK
(51)
- Bill
Creek had stacked the deck on
ga'
m
e
Kyger
Creek
opered
with
a
southern's
flame
to
beat
the
Loveday,
9-2-20;
Mike
Bradbury,
the Tornadoes to lel\d'by as much
tenacious · man·to·man· defense, clock and to stage Diddle' s 2-1·5; Mike Reese, 4·3·11; Chad
as 9 points early In the final
.
Leach, 6·1·13; Alan Denney.
frame. Throughout the l~tter but despite limited success heroics.
Southern hit 19·40 ror 47.5 1·0-2; TOTALS 22-7·51.
stages of the first period to the dropped Into an aggressive 1·3·1
zone trap defense thatproved to percent and was 5·11 from3 point
SOUTHERN (53) - Chris
2:30 mark in the ' last round,
Kyger held Its lead and seemed be a near-killer . for the range. but just 1·4 at the line. KC Stout, 1·0-2; Dave Amburgey,
was 21·34 for 58 percent, 0-0 from 2·2-0-10; Shannon Riflle, 4·1·4-11;
Invincible. It was not until Toma.does.
Southern opened up to a 13-8 the perimenter, and 7-20 at the . Jeff Caldwell, 3-1·0·9; Dave
Southern's. preditor press 'shell·
McMillin, 0·0·0: Shawn Cun· ·
shocked the tiring Bobcats just advantage,but the tight squeeze. l.lrie for a meager 35 percent.
offered
by
the
KC
zone
nearly
KC
won
the
board-battle
33·25
ningham, 1.0·2; Kenny Turley,
prior to that point that Southern
SHS
offense.
led
by
Loveday
with
16,
12
6-0-12;
Shane Simpson, 0-0-0;
smothered
the
was even in the game.
4KC
coach
Scott
Stemple
had
.
a
ll
defensively;
Turley
had
12
fat
.Shawn
Did!jle, 3-1·7; Brent
. After Shannon Riffle tied the
comers
or
the
game
co~ered
.
a
s
Southern
and
Diddle
4.,
lncludlng
Shuler,
0-0-0;
.TOTALS 28-4..J.Ii.1.
score at 49-49, Southern . went
ahead 51-49 on a steal by Riffle
his troups took away all Tornado r;;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;;:;:;;:;::;;:;;;;:;:;;:;:;;;;;;:;:;;:;::;:;:;:;=il
..,
strongholds,lncludlng the vi·
and · ensuing lay-up to Jeff
brant fast break.
DO YOU SUFFER FROM:
"'
CaJdweU .
Despite
a
creditable
al\d
some·
LOW BACK PAIN
. Coach Howle Caldwell's troups
what
deceiving
shooting
effort
NECK PAIN S. STIFFNESS
ran the clock from 2:30 to 1:08
from the floor, Southern was
HEADACHE
!': TURLEY D.RIVES- Southern's Kenny Turley (34) who taiUed
after KC lost an opportunity, then
very
flat,missing
many
shots
It
MUSCLE SPASM
~ 12 points In Friday's 53·51 SVAC win over visiting Kyger Creek,
· called time. The Tornadoes ran a
•
'
usually
makes
from
both
lnsli!e
•• drives Inside lor a goal agaiDStthe Bobcats. KC defender on right Is
three-man weave until the 12 and oui.The key to the 'stat'
WHIPLASH
;:: Mike Reese (10) who seored 11 markers for the Galllans.
second mark when Dave Amburmisconception lay in thefactthat
SPORTS RELATED INJURIES
gey drove to the hoop, but missed
~~
·' ..
KC's Loveday and Bradbury
,Don't suffer needlessly. Chiropractic Cart can help.
allowing Diddle to cash In on the
dominated the boards, allowing
Cali for an appointment today.
follow through and thus win the
just one shot per trip.
-game.
At theendofthefirstframeKC
'
lrODrOdiC
Southern
Is
now
12,2
overall
,}
'
overcame Its earlier i!eflc!t to
.
992-21 68 - Hours by ).ppointmel)t
.and 10-1 In the league, while a
disappointed Kyger club drops to
lead 14·13.at
beforeSHSclalmedlts
flriallead
the buzzer for a 15·H ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
5·10 and 2·9 overall.
advantage
..
· Taking game· high honors In a
Meanwhile. KC's J.4 stack
OAK HILL' - Senior guard
Top scorers - Maynard (Oak well-deserving effort was Kyg.
offense
was also effective and
Eric Faye Jed a II scorers with 22
Hili) , 13 points. Fallon (Southw· er's 6·5 pivot man Bill Loveday,
r·•
proved
near
fatal to the aggrespoints to lead Oak Hill to Its sixth
. who notched · 20 points and
estern). 17 points.
sive Tornadoe defense, as Love·
~
straight league win, a 77-37 .
grab~ 16 rebounds. Up and
day
often spilt the middle on the
wipeout of Southwestern Friday
WUdcats 71 VIkings 61
coming Jr. guard Chad Leach
break-away
to score with ease.
•Services lndude:
MERCERVILLE - Hannan had a good floor -g ame to notche
Leach
also
split
the middle with
shooting was oversha·
Trace took Its third straight 13 points:· Mike Reese had 11.
Birth Controh V.D. Scr•ning;
much
success.
hitting
Inside
and
~ dmved .by the presence .inslde of . conference w'ln •with a 21-polnt
Mike Bradbury 5, and Alan
Cancer Scr•ning; pregnancy
also pulling up for the 10 foot
petformance from senior for · Denney 2.
junior center Jedd Rawlins,
.
teits; education and counslling
jumper.
hit the boards for 10 of the
ward Chris Petro en route to a · Kenny Turley was Southern's
KC
led·
28"24
at
the
naif.
after
for individuals ·ond couples.
n -'··· 28 rebounds and scored 15
71·61 win over Symmes Valley . top man with 12 points, Shannon
points. He and senior forward · · Friday night.
·
Riffle added 11, Dave Arnburgey. twice enjoying. a 6 point lead.
Southern made a run in the
•Sliding ftl scale.' No one refusad services btcauit of
Mike Hale, who also scored-15. .
Petro, ,who also had 15 of the iO, Jeff .Caldwell 9, and Shawn
thltd
period
on
two
occasions,
but
'
effective In neutralizing
Wildcats' 43 rebounds, wasn't the Diddle 7.
inability to pay.
couldp't get over the hump.
Coach Howle Caldwell proba·
H ~~~.:a nder center Shawn
only hero for the Wildcats, as
by frustration and
1 and holding the 6·3 senior center Rick Swain bly summed the game up best by Overcome
11o1
good
KC
defense
, the Tornadoes
:!.~);o~&gt;hmnolre to four points.
pumped in 20 points and pulled
slipped further behind to a 41-34,
only was McNeal was down 11 rebounds. The Vikings
then again at the buzzer to 45-38.
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO
~;~~v~~~~a~~hed inside by Rawlins,
wererr't as lucky on the boards, '
For those who traveled to
POMEROY
;.!
in the words of Highlander as senior forward Duane .
Hannan Trace last month,Satur·
GAUIPOUS
236 E. Moin St.
coach Gregg Dee I, "Intimidated McCarty only had seven grabs
day's game In many way's was a
414 Sound Ave. 2nd floor
Open 10:00 to 5:00
off the boards and senior center
EAST ·MEIGS - The Eastern
Inside and stayed out of foul
reflection. Despite Coach
troubl1e," but Dave Mershon, the Joe White had six.
High School Athletic Boosters true
Monday·Friday
Howle Caldwell's pleas, South·
~~~~hlllmders' Mr. Three-Pointer.
Viking senior guard Dallas wl!l sponsor Its annual filth arid ern's offense was often mls·
Exwpt Wednesday
446-0166 Mon.· Sai.
. a !lair of ~ong,dlsta_nce Tibbs tied Petro for game honors · sixth grade basketball tourna.
Closed
CLOSED
111URSDAY.
and lneffec.live. .
.
ookup5 on his way to getting with 21 points.
·.
. ment on Feb. 6 aild 7 at. th"'i aligned
Between frames and d~rlng
Also': Jackson, q~esapeake, Athens. Chillicothe, Logen
seven points . Teammate Mike
·' The Wildcats, who barely got :tastern High School: This will be time-outs the veteran mentor
Walker was left alone by the past the Norsemen 16:151n round
a single elimination tournament
, Oaks long enough to get 17 points . one, were down 33-30 at halftime wllh a 16 team limit. Entry fee Is made some crafty changes and
The Oaks ied 23·5 at the end of before Petro and Swain went to $30. There will also be a cheer·
the first quarter andoniy allowed · work. "We got It to Rick and leader competition. Entry fee Is
the Highlanders to score more Chris Inside, and "they did the $10. Contact Wes Arbaugh (667·
than 10 points In a quarter the
Continued on C-4
6427) to register your team.
rest or the way (the Highlanders
1
~ored 151n tne•second quarter .
• Oak 'Hill shot 34 for 72 from the
rleld and sank e!ght free throws
"Never co see the fa~e of a loved one nor wimess a
In 12 tries. Southwestern sank 13
buckets from the field In 49
. summer sunset is i!]deed a handicap. But I can touch a
·· ·attempts and went 8 of 16 from
· fac!! and feel the warmth of the sun. But to be deprived of .
:t': ~he. line.
·
·.
hearing the song of the fi!st spring robin and the laugh·
THE DEPENDABILITY PEOPLE
The Oaks, 9-1 in the conference. are scheduled to travel east
ter of children provides•me wit_h a long and dreadful sadto Cheshire to face Kyger Creek
ness."
Tuesday night. The Highlanders •
Helen Keller
. i' .
t-10 tn league play, will play
Kyger •Creek next Friday night.
Phone; (614) 592~2163
Office Houn By Appoi11f"111rt
OAK HH.L (77) Faye
8-1-3·22; Hale 7-0·1-15; Rawlins
'7·0·1·15; Howell 5·0-3·13; Copas
5·0·0-10; Morgan 1·0·0·2. TOTALS
•.:... 33-1 ·8•77
•, SOUTHWESTERN (37)
Walker 6·1·2·17; Mershon 0·2·1-7;
.,Hively 1·0·2·4; .McNeal 2'0.0-4;
Hammond 0·0·2-2; White 1·0.0-2;
!;)arne II o·.o.J.1. TOTALS -10-3-8·
.
'37
aids
, • Team fouls
'
Jllnt Ann !Carr, M. A. AudiOlogist, CCC·A
Oak Hllll6, Southwestern 14
Score by quarters
Oak Hill ........ 23 19 22 13-77
SWHS .......... 5 15 8 9- 37
Athens, Ohio 45701
603 West Union
Reserve game
Oak Hill 51. Southwestern 46

-post

:: Jackson's two-game
!i ·wins streak snapped

-

- --

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

Or""•vW. 11. 8 C'har.._...... SE tl

.River Front

SALE

•!,lanuary 31. 1988

GIIIIMI-~rr ltl. Nontnnod 1'1
OraiNII V.aa ft........ Ldpmultlll

. SALE ·
LOGAN -Despite n avalanche 53·49.
of eight three point field goals by
Logan earned the victory by
PADS &amp; SIIVICE 446-2641
SALES: 446-2240
43.3 Pike St.
Marietta the Logan Chlefta(ns·· holding Bentz to just seven
Closed Thurs. Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9·5
J'!lpped the Tigers 65·63 on Jon rebounds and 17 points, but Eric
Open: M-W 9 ·AM-6 PM
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
Tompkins' layup wtth just nine . Erb swtshed three three point
secoQds remaining In the SEOAL goals, Mike Roach and Donnie
contest Friday night at Logan.
Murray two each, and Justin Erb
.
•
J\
•
.•
. Marietta's Do4g Bentz had one to keep the game close.
knotted the SEOAL contest at
1988 DIRK BIKES
Doug Stlv,ers.on, a jUnior.
63-63 with 21 seconds remaining, paced Logan with 20 'POints
ca soo ..;..................... snoo.oo
!lUI the Chiefs worked the ball for (lnclu~ing the lone three point
·
'
.
Cl 250 ................... ~..... 1215~00 •.
the good shot until Tompkins goal) and led his team In
;~
Til 300 FW ........ S2950.00
broke free· under the bucket for rebounds with eight.
ca
us
·
........................
stcoo.ot •
II 600 ......u ................ 529,0.00
the easy layup . .
Logan shot 60 percent (27 of
Til
300 ........ ,.....S2 S00.0.0
The Tigers weren 't dead yet as 45), made 10 ot.l2 at the line, and
n uo ...................,..,.s24so.oo '
Til 2501 .............2815.00
XI 100 ..........................S1J....OO
they hustled up the floor and got netted 24 rebounds.
the ball to the 6· 7 Bentz, whose
Til 2501 ............ S2430.00
n ao .....................~ ... s11tS.oo •
The Tigers we-re 26 of 45 from
short baseline attempt out of the . the field for 57.7 percent, made
ZSO ......................... ~...... S7SO.OO '
Til 200SI .......... S2075.00
corner rimmed off the basket as three of four· free throws (all by·
1987
Til 125 .............. S1725.00
the final horn sounded.
Bentz), and had just 13rebounds.
11
2so
.........................
•2100.to
The victory kept the Chieftains
The box score:
II 200 ........................ '1775.00
stop the SEOAL standings with a
MARIETTA (63) . - Mike
Til
70
...................
S82
5.00
~rfect 7·0 record while the-much
II 10 ............................ S.f;i.OO •
Roach 0·2·0·6; Eric Erb 0·3·0·9;
h:nproved Tigers own a 3·4 mark Justin Herb 2·1·0·7: Brent
1986
•
· and a tie with Athens for third · McKenna 7·0·14; Donnie Murray
XI
600
........
~
.......
.
"
.......
S2200,00
· piace ln the standings.
1·2·0-8; Mike Wharff 1·0-2; Doug
.
XI 600 ........................ S2050.00 •
Logan had taken a 31·30 half· Bentz 7·3-17; TOTALs 18-8-3-63.
150..........::.: .. 1625.00 (chroN)
time lead but the Tigers' Brent
110~•
LOGAN (65) - Jerry Gabriel
McKenna scored the first six 6-0-12; Jose Medina 1·2-4; Doug
I '
IIEIISJSAIIIY . ., TISWilL
points of the third quarter to Stiverson 6·1·5-2'0; Sam EgglesWhe.....,r
~ride,
pieaoe
be
careful.
Get
boost MHS Into' a five point lead, . ton 3·0·6; Jon Tompkins 4·0·8;
qu~lified traimng. ReiKl your owner's rrumual.
which became a 41·35 gap mld·
Always wear a helmet, eye protection and prot••· ·
Randy Kuhn 1-1-3; Sean Spatar
way in the ~riod.
tive
clothing. Never drink And ride, or carry pa •·
2·2-6; Tim Moore 3-0-6; TOTALS
sengers, or ride on 1!3vement. Never ride alone.
Marietta was perched atop a
26-.J.l0-65.
And always supervJSe youngsters.
shakey 49·47 lead after three
For mort" safety inform&lt;ltion, see yoor Honda
Score by quarters:
dealer, or call the Specialty Vehicle Institute of
quarters before the Chiefs ticked
Marietta
14 16 19 14-63
America (SVIA) at 1·801J.447-4700.
off the first slx points of the final
18 13 16 18-65
Logan
period to take the lead for good at
Reserve
rletta
44. score:' Logan 48, Ma- · ~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

'

~'------·-

-~---·---

i

!I/

\

'"

------.--.-- ---------· -·- .. - .......

�- - - - - ----January 31. 1988

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

January 3'trt988

·Big Blacks dejeat... ___co_ntl~nue_df---'-rom
· _c-_4

It was his second 50-point effort
of the year, netting 54 last week
against Grace Christian. ·.

Valley Christian School knocked
off Marietta ChristJan 86-62 Friday night,

John Keenan. whose brother
Eric scored 14 and gra'b~ 12 of
the Defenders' 46 rebounds, went
17 of 21 from the foul line and
pulled down 15 rebounds . ·
The Defenders •started oft
·
matters
with a 19·12- lead at the
URBANA Host Urbana
percent.
added 5. '
end
of
the
first quarter, and
overcame a 25-24 deficit at the ·
Urbana sank all 8 tries at the
Rio ·Grande returns to MOC
posted
·a
38·29
lead at llalftlme.
half Thursday to edge the Rio free throw !or 100 percent, wh!le play Tuesday at 5 p.m . when II
The
Soldiers
were led by Aaron
Grande Redwomen 54-52 in Mid·
t he Redwomen netted 19 of 28 hosts Ohio Dominican.
1
Gander,
·who
sank two threeOhio Conference acllon.
attempts for 67.9 p~c e nt .
RIO GRANDE (D2) - Renee
pointers
en
route
to leading his
The Joss dropped the RedwoAlso scoring high for Rio Halley, 5-7-17; Holly Hastings,
·team
will?
32
points.
Teammates
men to 4-2 in th!l conferenc e and Gran_de were junior Lea Ann 3·2-8; Lea Ann Mullins. 4 11) ·4-15;
Scott
Kapple
and
Rob
Ray scored
14-7 overall. .
Mullins, who sc~red 15 points, 5 , ~th Con, 2-4-8;' !;.elsa Anderson,
17 and 10 points, respecUvely .'
Powered by senior Renee Hal- rebounds· ' and 2 assists. Halley 1-2-4. TOTALS )5(1)-19--~2.
The Defender$ shot 19' of 24
ley's 17 .p oint s, the Redwome n a lso recorded 9 rebounds. For
URBANA (M) - Tracy Redfrom
the line, while the Soldiers
stormed the Lady Blue Knights' Urbana, Tracy Redding added 12 ding, 6-0·12; Kelly Smith, 4-2-10;
went
10
ol17 from the stripe.
court looking for another win points and 8 rebounds, wh!le
Cathy Belcher, 3-2-8; Jean
John,
Keenan
was responsible
over Urbana , which had fallen
Kelly Smith had 10. Smith had 8 Twehues. 6-2-14; Ann Fride~-/
lor
t
he
Defenders'
only three60-56 to Rio Grand'e on Jan. 14 a t rebou nds and Fridenmaker
maker , 4·2-10. TOTAIB 23-8·114.
polfitt
bomb
of
the
night.
Lyne Center. Ci ndy McKnight 's
The win boosted the Defenders'
club mounted a strong defense
Continued on C-7
against the Redwomen and were
led In scoring by J ean Twe hues
with 14 oolnts.
...
ROCK SPRINGS- The wrestlers of Meigs High will get into
The Redwome n were successa~t.wn on Feb. 6 at Larry R. Mqrrlson Gymnasium when they
ful in holding Urbana center Ann
w1il host a tri-meet.
·
Fridenmaker, a 6-2, sophomore
Warren and South Point will be the gue~ts or the Marauder
who played a l11rge part in their
matm~n . who have_not participated In any meet. thus far this
offense in the earlier game, to 10
season. Actjon wlll' get underway at 10 a. m.
points. Cold performances on
Coach Kevin Sheppard also announced that Meigs, along with
field goals helped to stymie bOth
· other "!embers of the TVC, will travel to VInton County for a
tejlms, as the Redwomen scored
cqnference wide meet on Feb. 13 with the matches getting
on 15 of 53 attempts lor 28.3
underway at 10 a . m .
percent. Urbana netted 23 of 60
Later In the month on dates to be announced the Marauders
tries from the fie ld for 38.3
will be taking part In match es to be held at Washington
Courthouse in sectional action.

-

Pleuant Wlifonn.
Davis hit two foul shots for the
White Fak:ons, but Vickers avenged the
points with two or his own.
The While Fak:ons picked up the
pace of the game end Grimql hit !tis

Oaks ...

-::oIg
• BJackS d etea(
~

.: ah ama f I·ve, 90
.·\V

The Big Blacb of Point Pleasant
:·High School h.eid off a fourth quarter
:-rally by ihe Wahama White Falcorui
.'_Friday night tb win, 9().82.
'. · The game, played at Poinl Pleasmt,
was close lhrough the first lWO quarten
;ind again got close in the fourth
·quarter. "Both teams played hard,"
·:wahama coach Lew Hall said. "It's a
•
··good
rivalry when both learns and
. coaches cm play that hard 111d stili
_. shake hands afler the game," Hall said.
•-: That's the name of the game," he ad-dod.
'; · ..They 1ilayod .a good ball game,"
; Point Pleasant Coach Larry Markham
' &lt;S aid. ''They didn't play Jilce a [earn that
· hadn't won a game," he added.
. : "It was an enjoyable ball game for
. people to watch. It w.S old fashioned
, .running and gunning," Marl\ham said.
LO

Continued from C·3
job,'' sa id Wildcat mentor Mike
Jenkins, whose cagers move up
to 9-2 In the SVAC.
·
The Wlld c~ts will lake on
lror\tonSt . JoeTuesdaynightina
non-league rematch. J enkins'
charges started off the season by

play some."'

· -. "CAN

·. '88 ·Cadillac

86-51 on
The VIkings, who dropped to

:tontest, 90-82.

l'hrlon PIC!MIIIDI 10, Syc Mohawk M
lol l
M11rll ..ton 1'1. C. .... ('Pnl: C.tb N
l'brynlllfo 11, North U••• ~

COBB

'

Lnlnglon 13, Malbf~kt Madison 50
Uberty 17, Newlon F•ll• !I
U c ldng \'alit-)· M! Hu.lh 53
Uma Shawnl'f' tt, S4 !'hr)'ll ~

uma .,... mph• 1t:. nndlay Hert&amp;aat&gt; .,_ .
U~~eol•vlew 7f. URV. ~erry J7

Ulllr. Mllunl 57. Bhuw;:he!ler $8
Lodl Cloverleaf 71, Ben!• M
IA'lkan 111 1 Marletla IS
LoKan Elm 112, T eayt~ Valley OS
London 54, W~l·ll'Ue:rt~on 51
IA'lraln so , !lrrio rOI Rldll:t'\'lllf. 31
Lonlt!Luwn til, Blooinlleld !Ill
4'1NlhurMI BrUJh 88, Wlllo•hlJi S 6G
Macon Eln&amp;ern Kl, Rlpt.y U
MadfliOD $9, Geneva 5S
Ma.sfield Pekrs 61, Marl!dlt&gt;ld &lt;'hr U
Manslleld Malabar 'M , MIU"kln Hanlin"

"

:17

.

' Maplt•wood 70, South l~to n iii(OO
Marion Cath "/5, Galktn Northmor 81
Marion Loc• l "XI, DPipt\o!l Sl JohnK f7

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-

two points, giving the Big Blacks a
, fo ur point lead.
• Bart Dav is hil lwo for lhe Falcons,
: b~t Hensley answered wiih three points
fropt outside for lhe Big Blacks.

Retail Value

•

: Brad Bumgarner hit four quick'
: J&gt;Oints for the White Faloons to make it

a one point game wilh 4:27 remaining
in the first quarter.
Shane Miller hit lwo points for the
~ Big Blacks. but Jeff Noble hit a three·
: point shol to 'tie the game all3.

r«~ '4! ,, t.'ftl~

~1

l.

,,.

{ , ..,..,. •in 11' olol&lt;l ..,., m.· tuJ.I\· ,onJ
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Goodnite was fouled on his next

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SALE
1986 IISSAN Stanza ••..• ~...................................... $7995
1987~CHEVY Nova 4 door, white ........................ S8995
1987 CHEVY Nova 4 door, brown ....................... S8995
1985 NISSAN 200 IX, blue .................................. S799 5

·usED CARS SALE PRICED
-.
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Accessories

Vickers hit four points and Craig hit

446-0303

9 a.m.-6 p.m. Weekdays
9·5 Sat.

'

'

our offense and ihat hurt us," Hail said.
Larry Goodnite got the Falcons off 1o ·
a good start when he drew first blood,
. neuing llje Falcons two points.
Point fought back lhough, as Scott

sity conlelt saw the Big Blacks run
away with the game after trailina 13-12
at the ertd of the tint quarter.
Tho Jading rebouDder for the Big
Blacb was Brim Wamsley with 10.
Keith Gravely tiad six rebounds and
Sh111el:.eol)ard had four rebounds.
Tho leading rebounder for the
Wahalna team 'was Slwulon Bairett
with six rebounds.
_The big Blocks out rebounded the
Wahama team. 25· 12.
,
Point Pleasant will be back in action
Saturday night as they host Meigs and
the While Falcons will be back in action Saturday night as ihey host Witt
County.
POINT PLEASANT - John

l..tkhu,._ Falrt~kl 18. faJeUevl~ II

Score by quarters:
Wahama ........ 16 17 22 27-82
Polnt:........ ...
24 28 21-90
Reserves - Point Pleasant 72
Wahama 53

For Consulting end Information

POPUlAR DEMAND
Drag Push Of Pull

Chevrolet•Oldsmobile•Cadillac .
308 Main Street
614-992-6614
Pomeroy, Oliio

82.
Tho Big Blacks shot 52 percent from
the floor, the White Folcons shOt SO
pen:enL Point out rebounded the
Wahama team, 46-26. Tho junior var-

.rae bon Milton 88, ~welh111t&gt; ~!
KeMon .llidp ill, Urb ua 51
KcU Falnnonl 17, CenttorvtUe 4!1
Kimma• • •" a , Bro.adkl .. 4!
LILIIl'Uier F1sher II , Mlllenport 5I
Le11.vkt.bu.r'J LaBra,. II, Lakevlt&gt;w S3
Lebanon a, Lemon Moaroe H

WAHAMA- Brad Bumgarner
9-0-18; Robbie Grimm 3-2-0-12;
Bart Davis 9-5-23; L'a rry Goodnile · 4-4-12; J eff Noble 5·2·1-17;
Bobby Kincaid 0-0-0. TOTALS
33-4-10-82.

avacation from 24 hour care of

BACKB·Y

-JIM .

"We played well, but had a spurt

'•

Md)el'lftOit N•rtllwf.tl1." 1An1viUr It
Mcno.ald 41., lltrCirWu Bn-11
Miami v .. u. Dl)' Dllr 411
lllhldlelewn 'II, W O.eater Lako&amp;a II
Mlddlftow• On 11. Ctn st Hila -44

Maunu• 17, Anlhony W11.vnf' -17

'right before the half when we got out of

shot. ihe ball went · in and Goodnite
sank lhe foul shot to give ihe White
Falcons a three point lead.
: Point, on the shooting o!Todd Spta·
: ~ling and Scott Vickers look ihe lead at
: ihe cndofihe quartcr, l7·1 6. 1__,
•' Point ilnd Wahama continued to trade
: baskets and foul shots lhrough 'ihe stan
: of lhe second quarter. Point, on a three' point shol from Hensley tied things up
•

.

Davis hit two pointS to clcse lhe gap to
87-80.
.
On lhe next trip down lhe &lt;;ourt,
Bumgam« BOt langlod up in severo!
Big Blacks, defending the soli. Bumgamer, after a few minuleS, was able to
walk off-the oourt.
Roa&lt;;h hit 1 foul shot for the Big
Bial:b and Vickers hit tiwo poiniS for
the . Big Blacb to close out ihe Point
Pleuomt scoring,
Jeff Noble hil the .last two points for
the While Folc:ons to end the game, 90-

Hu nllna;lon n , raJol valley .tt
Indian Val S 13, Sbatbura: 1M

Roach 1-1·1-6; Brian Sayre 0-0·0:
Craig Hensley 6-5·1-28; Casey
HIU 3-0-0; Scott VIckers 16-6-38 ;
Shane Miller 2-2-6; Todd Spradling 1·0-2; James DeJarnette
2-0-4; Stephen He nry 0-0-0; ·
Bryan Faber 0-0-0. TOTALS
37-41-10-90.

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Rehabilitation Centers' under11tanding,
professional steff temporarilY. relieve you of
your heavy responsibility.
Acceptir:~g residents for short term respite care.
Call Son.,., Wolfe at 614-992-6606
'

LOOKING TO PASS • White Fako!l BUt Davis (34) looks to ·
th~ balllllside during Friday nigbt•s·game against the Big Blacks
Foin~ PleasanL Tbe Point Pleasant 'Big Blacks went on to win the

second duee-point shot of the game and

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~~~~~n;T:~~e-nr::.

fpiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij~

"Offensively we played well, defcn-

sivcly we started
'Markham said.

..

8 2 3·8 in the league, will host North
•
Gaiha next Friday night.
...
HANNAN TRACE (71) towards~ end of the second quarter.
Petro 8-0-5-21 ; R. Swain 8-0-4-2 0·
Point wertt on a 10 point tear at the Brumfield 5-0-3-13: Rankin 2-0-Jend of the second quarter, V"l!'kers, 7; Stitt 2-0-2-6; Cremeens 1·0-0-2·
Hensky and Casey Hill accounting for Je nkins 0-0-2-2, TOTALS - 26-o',
lhe points.
19-71
WalWna countered with only tWo
SYMMES VALLEY (61) - .
points and went Into the half t:o:ailing, Tibbs 4-4-1-21; Schneider 2-2-141-33.
11; McCarty 3-0-2-8; Cade2-0-2-6·
Walwna came out into lhe third Mootz 1-1-0-5; Miller 2-0-0-4;
quarter ready to play, but oouldn't keep While 2-0-0-4: Nelson 0-0-2-2.
up with t1u&gt; Big Blacks. The White Fal- .TOTALS- 16'7·8-&amp;1
cons were out-scored in ihe third
Team fouls
quarter,28 -22.
Hannan T race 17. Symmes
John Roach ,hit five points for the Valley 21
Big Blacks, three on an outside shOt.
Score by quarters
Hensley continued his scoring streak Symmes Valley 15 18 12 16-61
with 11 points, Hill hit two points md Hannan Trace .. 16. 14 · 22 19~ 71
Vickers, working underneath, hit nine
R·eserve game · ·
points.
.
Hannan Trace 44, Sy mmes
'l'lte White Foloom; whoSe shoo; just Valley·J9 ... :,
wouldn't fall in the ihird quarter, fought
Top scorers
Caldwell
' (Hannan Trac e ), 9 points. Mootz
Continued on C-5
!Symmes Valley), 14 points.

. By Matt Robertson

back with the lboolinl of Bwncuner .
end Davis.
Bumguner nelled six poinll llld
Davil ndled IIC\'011, Ooodnile oank four,
Noble bit a line-point ohot llld Rob
Orinun hit two poinfl for the Fllcons.
Tho Falcons trailed at the end of the
thin! quarter, 69-SS.
U the Falcons couldn't link a basket
in the third
they oouldn 't mias
in the fourth ·quarter, Illlying 27 founh
quanerpointJ.
~alwno closed tlu&gt; gap . 1o nino
·JlOUIII with a !&gt;uket llld foul shot from .
Noble llld two points from D.. il.
· Vicbn llld Hill hit four poinll for
the Bia Blacks.
.
Davia llld Vicken traded two buketa for the teamJ, then V"lcken and
Bumgomer tnded buketl.
Vicken, leodin&amp; the Big Blacla &amp;&lt;Or·
in&amp; tluou&amp;h the game, hit tWo poinfl
but Grinun nmowod the lead by one
with a three-point shot.
Hill hit two for the Big Bl~ks llld
.Davis hit two for the Folcons.
Vicken hit four lllrlight for. the Big
Dial:~ before Bumgarner hit two for
the FolooN.
J~~~~e~ DeJameue hit two for the Big
Bial:ts, his fourth point in a Point

q-.

Meigs grapplers to host tri-meet

KEENAN GE'nl TWO - Obto Valley Christian's John Keenan,
with ball, takes It to the basket as Marietta Christian cagersScott
Kapple (10) and Jeff Casey (22) . walc!h him gel two of his
game-high 50 poln~ In Friday night's river match In Gallipolis.
Keenan, whose brother Eric watches In lhe background, fueled the
Defenders to an St&gt;-62 win over the Soldiers.

Friday's scores

_--.,.....

Hud,on Kll. F1ekl i7

Rio .Redwomen lose. tilt to Urbana

"
::
•
:
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,

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-5 ·

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

Keenan scores 50 points in OVCS cage win
· GALLIPOLIS - Junior forward John Keenan led ali scorers
with a . 50-point effort. as Ohio

--------~

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. .

1977 PONnAC Grand Prix, sJiarp ........................ S1995
1912 TOYOTA Wagon, blue .................................. S1995
1910 PONTIAC Phoenix •••••;.................................. S1995
1.979 CHIVY Mon1a, iilver .......................... ~•••••••• S1995
1911 DATSUN 210, 4 door,blue .......................... S1995
·1911 MAIDA 626 ...........~..................................... S1995
1983 CHEVY Chevette ...........;..................,;.......... S3995
1985 POID EHort ••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••,................... 14495
1915 NISSAN Stntra, .blue.................................... S499 5
1915 DODGE Charger, red.~..............-................... S4995
198• ••cutY Lynx ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S4995
1979 PONtiAC Flrellird, red ................................. S3995
1986 ·FOlD LID, blue.~......................................... SJ995
1916 CIIIVY Nova, reti ......................................... ,S5995
1915 DODGE 600 S.E., brown •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S5995
1914 fOlD LTD Waton, brown .....................- ... S5495
1987 ~~IVY Spring .............................................. 16995
1'917 NISSAN S.ntra, reel ..................................... 16995
1985 CHIVY Cel..rity ...........~••••••••• ~..................... 16495
1986 fOil LTD, blue ...........................
. .::....
·•••••••••! 16495
.
'
1915 HONDA Ciwlc ·······~·····•······•·~··•·:•••••••••••••••••• S6495.
1914. CHIVY Callllro ..........................................~. 15995
198S MRCUIY Mart~uis...................._ ................. 16495
1915 OlDS Ci•a, trHII ....................................... S6995
1985 ClOY c_....o, rtd~...........................~........ 14995
1917 CHIVY SpectrUM .....................................~.... '7995
1916 PONtiAC 6000 U Wagon ......................-. S7995
1917 VW Jetta, •l•ck..,...........................~.......... Sl995
1979 DAISUN 210 II, OM OWIIII' ...................... $5495

1971 ···~101 ,..........~....................................,.. 16495
.1912 -SAN iiO IX, lilv•···························... •7.995

1917 .UN Stntra Sport Coupe ..................~~... 18995
1979 CAIIAIO' 1·21, het
•3995
15995
1914 TOYOtA

red-······.....................
V•--..·---..·-..-........
,,
.. c_,y Cel*lt¥ .........- · - - - · · - - ' ' " '
1916 rnUAJt l1111ra Stefl•• w·a•• .................. 17495

S34.00
S34.0Q
S34.00
S34.00

1914 PONTIAC Fiero ......·•••• ;~ ............................... S699 5

1916 NISSAN Stanza Wagon, white .................... S8495
1916 IUICI LeSabre ............................................. S8995
1916 NISSAN Stan1a GL, blue .............................. S8995
1917 NISSAN300 IX Turbo................-•••••••••••;..,S15,500
1985 NISSAN Maxima Gl......;. .........................~ .... S9495

S34.0~

134.00
SIS.OO
$17.00
S99.00
$99.00
$112.00
$109.00
$124.00
$124.00
$124.00
$126.00
S135.00
$136.00
SU7.00
S137.00
S1JJ.00
S140.00
S137.00
S149.00
S149.00
S157.00
S17S.OO
S110.00

USED TRUCKS
,·
.

SALE
1912 FOlD F-100 Pickup ..................................... S1995
1984 lOYOlA Pickup, tan ...........................~•••••••• S459 5
1914 NISSAN Pickup ............................................. S499 5
1914 NISSAN Pickup, ornage mist ....................... S5495
1914 NISSAN Pickup ••~ .....,...................~ ................ SS99 5
1915 CHEVY C·1 0 Pickup ..................................... S699 5
1916 NISSAN King Cab 4x2. Pickup...................... S7995
1915 FOlD Pickup, red &amp; white .......................... S8495
1912 CHEVY Scottsdale ....................................~... S6495

_...,.

PER MO.
S34.00
S99.00
$140.00
5127.00
$140.00
_S149.00
$175.00
$186.00

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~

S180.00
S109.00

.I 161M

--

$211.00

AS
-IS
.
SPECIALS
_1976 IUICI . .al.;....... ...,;... S395 1974 CHIYSLEI Hewport ...... S29'5

---

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

PER MO.
$175.00
$180.00
$180.00
$175.00
5169.00
$186.00
$199.00
5199.00

.

1977 PLYUIIOU11l Wagon ..... S495
1971 YW ,lajtllut,;...._,;.,... S795
197t fW li•• it -~ ........... 1995
1tl1 NU. .310, whit•-· 1995

1979 CHIYSLII Ltlaron ....... S495
1973 FOlD ·F-250 .................. S495
OLDS Cutlas1 Surpe~~~e ............ S695
PONTIAC Pltoe•ix ................... S995

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C-6-Sunday n-ae Sentinel

Ho\TIONAL B.4II&amp;S'ftALL

EutHwC....,...ce

•--*
h.....

.uaoc.
1

A&amp;UdcDiwWN

W L P et.
......
Plll•t I -

GB

...

U t1 .171
e! 11 .111
II !I .-111

Dnwr

......
Utall
SuiA.-tolllo
S.ramnlo

"'

Sl

~eaUifo

! I 11 .SM

~~~

a.n•

t

o.en..e-.r

Ia • I•)?U' eo.nct,

..

MI--.. .- Slalllftl plit.lller SttVf'
Cartloal• M l·rrar CH~ri.Lt.
Pltt:alla.p- ...... Otlt tlw R•l yr11r ·
of ~•ill Hewl«&gt; Haak'• r.lrad : pu.mPd
. Jor IAalftl ma.r-le!llflll" cMd.a._ I•

Portlud Itt, Phoulx lit

lllr11t'•or •• p,. . . . . . _. 8 11prl••,......_•••
, T«&gt;uw. - PUcliiK ,Jed Ru~~K~ellaportd let
• l ·ycoar "a .. ,.d.
ln~lal ..

llaKk.O.all
G•ldt•aSl~tlc - Al11oted lfllillnffhrtll
Mu Ill•: Ptt't'll pard 'l'aiiJ M'hllt• oa lht"

NHL results

IIIJUI'f'd JW; _

W L T Ph. GF G,\
!5 It ' H 17! m
13

Ill

c•••,.

.J1111'W'K Madllion - Ba!iltf'thall fo~u·h
.John TIIW!4a rt-tdPtcl.
Poltlalld Slat«&gt; ~h'd A"Killia!M
A~tetk· Dlnocter •tt)' Rulriln '""
AMI!it.llnt Sporbl _..lermatlon IMN'Ctor
,John Hallll, f'Ht&gt;t11W" .lu~~e 38.

NATIONi\L HOCkEY LEAGUE
" 'aJe.i.i Coaffl'f'nct•
Patrick DlviKian
1~-1

I U 't'7S II'!
1',1~ J~,.,..y
t :J N
S i1 1'714 IU
PllllihUra'lil
• U I II 2ft Ul
NY Ra..-••R
II U I .u
IN Ill
. . i\d IUJIPi Dlvi!iloft
Monlrflll
': 7 IS It &amp;.1 Ill II~
Bol'iton
!I IM, S 13 IN 112
llutfalo
ta U !! U 17! IH
H•rtfonl.
%2 21 ~ $1 IN 151'
Qul'bet·
!tl ~ · :s u 1~3 lilt

F•otbaU ·
M ....t.f'd It .-.uld not

Ho M!61on -

oner IM I'ODII'IU..'IK •• Ifill. I'll Ke 111 Hill,
*ftnlllvt' f'ad oleiW! Ballt&gt;r, olfen11ivt•
ll~~tman Vinci!- St,..., 1111frty Allen~dll)'

ud ce-Mrr •11y Kldll.

~ LA RUI~ - l&lt;'leiiM'd tlrht end David
Rill alllll d!lfftllvt elllll Reftle DOHN.

.

.

Hocby

N\' Ra ..t&gt;r~ -

rli mph~ fonlf'!"rhl'«'
" Norrbt DhiP~Iun
lk&gt;ti"Oil
!4 It ~ 55 IN 1111
!2 !l s ... Ill 173
st . I.Muilll
:l:t :!l :t .. ill'l2 'lt7
Otk·Mro

P~&amp;vt•JW

to

Selll dl'lt~n ,Jim

Colorade ef lhf' .. llfornlltlon~~l

IIMIIC'y Lupr.
Ptt&amp;Mbuflll - seo• ll'ft •1-« \\'MT't!n
Vo•111 10 MlllbKOft ot trw. ln&amp;e,..lloul

HodWJ Lurlll".

Local bowling
The- W~nesda y Nile Tlmbersplltters
a re currently e njoying one Of the ir be-st
years ~ve r . Th'e matches ~ a ve been
tremendous . with a whopping 19 percent of
all t ames decided by less th ~ n 20 pins. Ahd
this passed Wednesday was no exception.
Q&gt;ntral Trust started the evening b)"
dropping a 6-2 decision to a resurgent
Ma rchi's Carry Out five. Richard Elliott
paced the winners with a 223·558, whll ~ Ted
Adams led Central Trust with a 210-577.
Northup Dodge fell victim to some costl y
splits as they fell S.2 to Bodlmer'sGrocery.
Owe n Cantrell's 189-537 was enouth to lead
Northup. while Tony Werry's 20!1 and
Merriii 1Caldwell's 198-533 led Bodlmer's.
First-half champ Legion struggled early,
but managed a 4-4 split with pere nnial
power Tawney's Studio. Jeff Sommers ·
t222·578J and Bob Ttllis {210.593) showed
lhe way lor Legion, while Harold Blankenship (212-566Ued Tawney 's.
Paced by Je-ff Dyer t227-539J and T.J.
· Jones t224 -5951 , Elks 107tooka 6-2decislon
from S &amp; J Lumtier despJte a soJed 193-512
night from Therll ~lagg . Craig Barnes
shook off a . terrible start to rally
rronf.runne r UP The River to a6-2 trtumph
over the a lways-T ough bunch from Mitchell's Appllances. Craig paced UP The
Rive r with a 224·573, while David E lliott
(190-5151 led Ml rchell's . Ba lanced scoring
)Ca rl Hall 1190-5371. Bob Wood 1224-591 \
Harry Rav (218-552) l wa s the name of the
game for i.;FW as they took a n S-Odecision
lrom sna ke- bille n Kyger Dental. Aft er
fin ishing strOng the first ha lf, the " KD-5 ''
suffered their foUrth consecutive . 8-0
t hras hin ~.

'

By GEOFF OSBORNE
'I't~adllel S&amp;afl
VINTON - JuniQr Don Mays
scored 30 points ani! grabbed five
rebounds in leading the North
Ga.IUa Pirates to an 85-76 win
over Eastern Friday night.
" Everything Don put up went
in." said Pirate coactt, Bruce
Wilson of Mays, a 6-2 forward.
who used his strength Inside to
put in inany of the Pirates' first ·
points against a.n Eastern squad
who on defense looked surprised
to see him in the paint. Though he
was the bright spot In an

otherwise shaky firs I quarter for
the Bucs, tbe first points for the
Pirates came on one of his- short
jumpers 76 !econds Into the

.
ALLGAMES
TEAM
W L
P
OP
Hannan Trace .. 13 3 1196 996
-Southern .... ........ 12 .2 1168 808
Oak Hili ...... .... .11 3 968 ~
North Gallia .... . 8 .7 981 1131
Eastern ... .. ...... . .5 9 943 1053
Kyger· Creek ..... 5 10 938 944
Symmes Valley 4.· 11 924 1168
Southwestern .... 2 13 842 1116
SVACONLY
(Varsity)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Southern ........... 10 1 · 952 611
Oak Hili .:........ . 9 1 731 585
Hannan Trace .. 9 2 822 706
North Gallla ..... 5 6 752 824
Eastern .. ..... ..... 4 7 754 847
Symmes Valley 3 8 710 886
, Kyger Creek..... ·2 9 624 678
Southwestern .... 1 10 634 842
TOTALS
43 43 5879 5979
SVAC
.
(Reserves)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Southern ... ...... ... ll 0 651 463
Hannan Trace ... 10 1 576 418
Oak Hill .. .. .. .... .. 6 4 387 418
Soulhwestern .. .. . 5 6 485 512
North Gallia ...... 4 7 512 506
Symmes Valley . 4 7 473 490
Eastern .. ......... .. 2 9 427 561
Kyger-Creek .. .... 1 9 357 500
TOTALS
43 43 3868 3868

WEDNESDAY NITE TIMBERSPLIT·
' w..[I;,Rt'lll-88
•. ' Jl~l)!lan rr.~~e
.
" ley 61
TEAM
WQN LOST
Soulhern 53, Kyger Creek 51
Up
The
River
...
----·---"·-·
......
..
......
26
6
NOf th Ga 111a 85 , E as tern 76
Marchi' s Carry Out ....................... 24 s'
Logion.... ... ........... ..... .................. 22 10
Oak Hill 77 Southwestern 37
~me'.:'~'~':" ::::: ::::: :::
i~
Tn~ay's games
Tawney's Sludio ............ .............. 18 14
Hannan Trace al Ironlon St. Joe
Central :rruSI Bank ..... ............ .. ... 14 18
Oak Hill at Kyger Creek
M.l/&lt;hell s Appliances................... 14 18
N th G I
Norlhup Dodg•---·-----------------"·--.. 12 20
or
a lla at Huntington Ross
Elks 101 --·----- ........ ... ... ...... .. .. ...... to 22
Eastern 'al Miller

iHdcp\: VFW-3228.
High averaj{es In the league a re as

foll ows: Bobb y T lllls -193; Harol d
Blankenship-190: Cra ig Barnes-189: T.I.
Jones-188: TPd Ada ms-188; Rick Tench187 .
'
The complete standings a re as foii(]WS:

THE PLA,JNS - Visiting Gallipolis survived a third period
letdown, then went .on to defeat
Athens 55-53 In the Charles D.
McAfee gym Friday nigh!.
Coach Jim Osborne's lads had
opened up their largest lead of
the game - 11 points - with a
40-29 spread when the collapse
came in the form · of six costly ·
turnovers and 10 straight Alben~
.points over a stx· mlnule span.
•Then, II wasanybody's ball game
.from thai goint forward.
.
Berklch Hits Thomas
• Final outcome of the Southeastern Ohio League encounter .
- was nol decided until afler ihe
buzzer sounded following a ·
missed desperalion shot by
Athens' Thaden Brien! with one
5eCOfld left.
-_
·
Ga Illpolls c llnched the Victory
, following an Athens turnover
j. when Mark Berki. c~fed Jason
~. Thomas a pass un rneath the
:!· hoop with 28 second lefl. Tho:
• mas put It in to givetheGallians a
~· 55-53 advantage.
~' AiheJ1S' worked th~ ball up
•:court. AHS .Coach Fred Gibson
'. called time with 13 seconds left to
·;'set up a play . GAHS fouled o~ the

'
;~:

Modem
Woodmen

SEO, OPPONENTS
•
(All Games)
,: 'TEAM
W L P
· ·: , Wheelersburg .. .13 . 0 941
j; Portsmouth .. .... 13 1 1128
Gal!ipolis ..... .., .. 1,2 2 .864
Soulhern ...... ..... l2 2 1168
. Logan.~...... .. .... .12 ~ 2 787
; Chesapeake ...... 1~ 2 970
·• Waverly :....... ...11 3 895
; Athens ............. . 6 5 806
j Martella .... .. ..... 6 8 864
• South Point .. .. ... 5 8 896
.r- West .. .......... ..... 5 9 941
Pt. Pleasant ..... 4 7 723
• Warren .... .. ....... 4 10 810
: Greenfield ........ 4 12 ' 841
! Jackson ............ 3 12 771

Life

,t

Insurance
• Mortgage Protactlon

23
32

• Education Funds
• Retirement Income

•IRAs

t

• Emergency Fund

1%-:11-87

TE.\M
. WON LOST
Poola Plui ............ .... .. :, ... ,;... : ... .. .... 6 :l·
Rainbow tnn ... ..... .. ..... .. ... .. .': .. ·-····"' 4 ' 4
Royal Oaks Rolle-rs ...... .... ...... .. ... ... . 4 4
Railroad Junction ...... ..................... 2 6

..818 SHIPMENT

TUESDAY MORNING Li\DIES

Railroad Junction .............. .... .. .... 44
Royal Oa ks Rollers ...................... 43
Hl~h

84
71

.,

Sugg. Retail

Price SS9.00
Mao. &amp;Fri. til

Team Game: Pools Plus·577;

Rainbow Inn-578: Ra i1road Junctlon·514.
Hi~h Team Series: Rainbow Inn·1577;

Pools Plus-1484; Railroad Juctlon·1382.
Hi gh Ga me: Brenda Smtth-191; Cindy
Mayle-169; Sharon Card·l65.
High Series: Cindy Mayle-481 : B!'fnda ·
Smlt h-452; Sharon Card·407.
•

TH
•

WE HAVE
PRICES MORE FOR
THIS END OF MONTH SALE

MEN'S SUITS

SPORT COATS

20°/o
TO 33 OFF 20°/o TO 33 \OFF
Reg. sns.oo ..... Now s1oa.oo
11
3

Reg. S160.00 ..... Now
Reg. S225.00 ....,Now
leg. S275.00 ..... Now
S180 1/3 Off ... Now
1
... Now

1121.00
S161.75
S206.25
'120.60
S114.25

500fo OFF

REG. '19.00 .. .... ... .... ......... NOW •9.50
REG. 1 23.00 .................... NOW •11.50
REG. '30.00 ......... .. ......... NOW •16.00

·.· SWEATERS
I.. S42.50...-Now fl7.00
.... '45.00--Now fii.OO
.... 152.00--Now f20.10

·
(SEOAL Reserves)
_.; •TEAM
W L P OP
:;-: Logan .... ~ ............ 6 1 342 302
~. Warren .... .. .. ...... .. 5 2 333 297
.~ Marietta .. .. ......... .4 3 325 320
. ~ Athens ... .... .... .. :... 4 309 302
,, ' Jack~on .. ..... ........ 2 5 283 327
•· Galllpolis........ .... .l 6 282 3_19 ·
U 21 1874 1874
" • TOTALS
• Friday's results:
:;: Athens 40 G.tllipolis 29
"' Warren 54 Jackson 46
· • Logan 48 Marietta 44
•• . Tuesday's games:
."t Point Pleasant at Hurricane
,t Buffalo al South ·Point
., • Fairland at· Chesapeake
· ~ Trimble al Athens ·
;:: Meigs at Warren
.;.:: Friday's games:
• · Logan at Gallipolis
· • Jackson at Martella
' : "' Athens at Warren
~ West at Wheelersburg
• Portsmouth at Ironton
:' Huntington at Point Pleasant
)9 Southern at Oak Hill
:~;; Northwest at Waverly
~~ South Point at Wayne;: Rock Hill at Chesapeake
Miami
Trace at Greenfield
.
~;

a

ASSETS
Cash and balances due from depository Institutions:
_
a . Noninterest-beartng balances and currency a._nd coin .. ................ 4,161,000.00
b. lntere'st·bearing balances ................................. .. .. .... .... .. ... ... ..... 4,700,000.00
Securities ............................................. .. .. .. .... ......... .. ........ .. ......... ... 47,816,000.00
Fr deral funds sold and securities purchased under agreements
to resell in domestic offices of the bank and of Its
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and in IBFs ........ T . .................. 7,850,000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables:
Lo11ns and leases, net of unearned income ..... .. .. .... ... 98,600,000.00 .
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses .. .. .. ......... 1,100,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned income,
allowance, and reserve ..... .. .... ...., . .. .... .. :.............\ .................. ..... :.97,500,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (including capitalized leases) ................... 1,506,000.00
Other assets .. .. .... ........ .. .. .. ............................ n,·.................... .. .......... 2,115,000.00
Total ·assets ............ ............ ........ .:..._:.. .. .... ............ .. ............... _.. .... 165!648,000.00
UABIUTJES
Deposits:
_
a. In domestic offices ............ ............ ..... .. ...... .:.... ........... ...... .. ... 153,682,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest-beartng .... ........ ............ ... ...... ...... .l3,837,000.00 '
(2) Interest-bearing ........ ... ... .............. ...... ......... 139,845,000.00
.
Other liabilities ... .. ...... ...... .. .. ... ....... .. .... ... ................ ., .... .. .... .. .. .......,. 1,312,000.00
Total ·llabiilties .. :................. .. .... ............ .. ..... ............ ............ .. ....... 154,!!94.000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock (No, of shares) a. Authorlzed ..... ..... 293,326
· b. ·Outstanding ....... .286,530 .. ...... ....... 2,865,000.00
Surplus ....... ............. ...... ..... .. ...... .. .... ...... ...... ..... ... .. ....... .... ..... ......... 4,863,000.00 ·.
Undivided protlls and capital reserves .... ....... .... .. ...... ........... .......... .. 2,926,000.00
Total equity capltal ... ......... ........... ... .. .. ........... .... ..... ................ .... ... 10,654,000.00
· Total liabilities, limited-life preferred slack,
and equity capital .:........... ...... ................... .. ....... .. .. ... .. ........ ...... 165,648,000.00

:P

I '•

""~·

600//0
OFF

~

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Condi·

~

lion and ileclare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge
and belief has been prepared In conformance with offiCial Instructions a lid is true
and correct.
Keith R. Brande'*rry
Warren F. Sheets- Directors
James L . .Dailey

...'I'•'

';:

State of Ohio, Couaty of Gallla, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 26th day of January, 1988 and I hereby
certify~thaJ I~am not an officer or director of this bank.

•

I

.............__

~- ---

____......

·.
~

·

.

EAS'C
9~6 E. State
OpeN
I I&amp;.M·IOPM

Ca lver t. 0-0-0; Scott
2:1 -2-9; Br ia n Wa lsh,l -0-2; Jer~
Jones . 0-0-0; Matt Creer. 0-0-0.
·TOTALS 15-5·8-53.
-i
Score by qua rters:
(.
Gallipolis ............ .l6 20 6 13-5Jl
Athen s ................. l6 11 17 9-~
. Reserves- AI hens 40. Gai!ipmJis 29
:

''

record to 6-9.' They will host Elk
Valley Chrislan School ()f Elk
Valley, W.Va., in their game on
Monday nigh!, with the junior
. varsity game slartlng at 6 p.m.
OHIO· VALLEY (88) - J.
Keenan 15-1-17-50; E. Keenan
6-0-2-14; Johnson 4-0-0-8; Call
3·0·0-6; Patterson 2·0-0-4; Burgess 1-0-0-2; VanMeler· 1-0-0-2.
TOTALS- 3%-1-19-88
·
MABIETrA CHRISTIAN (62)
-Gander 11·2-6-32; Kapple 8-0·1·

17; Ray 3-0-4:10; . Casey 1-0·0·2;
Relcharett 0-0·1:1. TOTALS 23-2.·10-82
Score by quarters
Marietta . ..... ... ... 12 17 22 11~62 .
ovcs ........ ...... .. 19 19 19 29-86
Junior varsity
Marietta Chpslian 50, Ohio
Valley 46
.
Top scorers - John Quizon
(Marietta Christian). 22 polnls .
Dax Hill (Ohio Valley) , 21 poinls . .

'

I I&amp;.M·3J)M

.

_,"'.

........ ;

MONb&amp;.Y·O)URSbay

....

:

.1 I&amp;.M·I I PM .

SOU'CH

PRibay ij 9a1uJtl)ay

161 UPPER RIVett Rb.

MONb&amp;.Y·S8.1URb&amp;.Y

G&amp;.lliJ)OIIS

446•7227

Amenca's Dmner Table®:.

(For 1\vo) ·

Farnten Bank and Savings Company
ol Pomeroy, Ohio And Eorelgn and DomestlcSuJ&gt;sldlaries, at the close of business
December 31, 1987, a state banking Institution organized and operating under the
banking laws ell this •tate and a member of the Federal Reserve System. Publis hed
fn accordance with a call made by the Stale Banking Authority and by the Feder al ·
Reae..Ve -Bank of this District.
ASSETS
Cash and balances due from depository instilutlons:
a. Nonlnterest-bearing balances and curre ncy a nd coin ................. . 2,046.000.00
b Interest-bearing-balances _..... _. __ ....... _.. . _. __ __ .. -... -· ---- ..... ..... -· -- ........ 250, 000.00
Sec~ritles .... ... .... ........ .. ... ........ ..... .. .... .. .. ..... .. ___ __ -· -·-- _... ____ . _..... _. _. __ --23,829,000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables :.
·
Loans and leases. net of unearned income ............. ... 26,025,000 .00
LESS: Allowance for loan·and 'lease losses .,.... ........ .. ... 182,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned income,
allowance, and reserve .. ....... .... ... ..... .......... .. .. .. .. ........ .............. .... 25,843 ,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) ...................... 685.000.00
Other 'real estate owned .... .. ..·..... .:.. ...... ... ... .. ....... ....... ...... ----- -.- ·-- .. --·--.... .2,000 :00
Intangible assets ......... .. :: ................. ., .. .. .. ... ..... : ... ................ .. .... -.... , ... 182,000.00
Other assets ...................... .. :...... ... . ;.... ... ... ........ . :... ... .. .... .. .. :.. ....... .... .. 734, 000 :~
Total assets ........ , ..... ............... ... .. ...... ................ ...... ........ .. ... ..... .... 53,571,000.
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 18~(j) ... .. .. 53,571 ,000.00
• LIABIUTJES
Deposits:
. · ·
a. ·In domestic offices ...... ........... ... .... ... .......... ... .. ...... ......-....
48,845,000.00
(1) Noninterest-bearlng ........ .......... ........... ...... .. .. .. 5,013,000. (2) Interest·bearlng .. .. ..................... .. ... :.............. 43,832,000.00
Federal funds purchased' and securities sold
.
under agreemehts to repurch11se .............. ..... .. .. ........ : .... ................... 100 ,00~-~ ·
Other liabilities ........ .... .......... .. .... .......... .. ..... .......... ... .. ..... .. ............. ... 189,00 Total liabilities ....... .. ......... .:.............. .. . :............. __........... -........ ... -... 49 ,134 .000 ..00.
. EQUITY CAPITAL
'
Common stock ........ :..... ... ...... ........ .. .... ......... ... ... ........................ . ... . ... :500.000.00
surplus .. .. ..... ... ......... ............. .. ...... ...:.... ...... ....... ......... .. .. ................. 1,000,000,00
Undivided profits and capital rese rves .... .. .................. ..... .... .... .. ...... . 2,937 ,000.00
Total equity capital ............. ......... .. ........ .. ... ...... .... ........ .. ..... .... ..... ... 4,437,000.00
Total·equity capital and losses deferred
..
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1923(1) .... ...... ... .. .. ..... ........, .......... .. ..... .. ..... .. .. 4,437,000.00
Totalltabilltles. limited-life preferred stock, and equity capital,
and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C.. 1823(j) ..... u ·n~" = ... -- .53,.571,000.00

00

.'

......

I, RogerW. Hysell, Vice President of the above·namedbankdohere~y declare th ~~
this Reporl of Condition has been prepared In conformance with the mstru ct lons issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Sla te Ba nk·
ing Authority and Is t.rue to the best of my knowledge and belief.
.
·
Roger W. Hysell-Vice President

·.WES'C

0J)EN
I 18.M·IOJ)M

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Reporl ·of Co ndilion

.,

MONb&amp;.Y·'OIURSb&amp;.Y
II&amp;.M·I IJ)M

PRib&amp;.Y fi 5atURb&amp;.Y
CIOSEb SUNb8.Y

FOR CU.RJOut

19

c:an _

I -

.

'I

100 W. UNI~N

' LUNCIJ 'Dally

Ba,r At SHONE\0'

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF' CONDITION FOR

Now at

't17ttee .
LocatiONS!

t

•

J.ll,M_S

NOON-91JM·SUNbar
- POR CaRR70Jit Call
•

~--·---

__

•

.

2-4-8; Jason Thom as , 11·0-22 ; David Todd , 0-0-0; Billy Evans,
1-2·0-8; Mark Kimble. 2-3-0-13;
Todd Casey, 0·0-0. TOTJ\LS 18·5·
4-55·.
.ATHENS (53) - Cory Corrigan. 2·2·0·10; Thaden Brien! .
6-0·12; Scotl DeCaminada. 1-6-8;
Doug Skinner, 3-2-0-12; Da ve

'
Strickii lj...

-Offer Good At Shoney's of Point Pleasant &amp; Ripley-

Continued from C-4
......::::.::::.:::::::....:.:.::.::.:..:::...:..--.:

'

My commission expires March 25, 1991.

. ··----- -·-- ----.- ..........__ -----.-.

__

Keenan...

~-

~

\

'

"Where You Buy Your Glass Does Make A J?ifference"

6.1 junior Mike Marlin. were able · lOCker room with a 41-28 lead.
to ,go In vlrlually uncontested for
North Gallia will play Huntingseveral iayups and short ton Ross in Chillicotbe Tuesday
jumpers . They scored 19 and 14 nl11ht. Eastern 'will take a time·
points, respectively.
. au·i from SVAC play _Tuesday ·
- The Pirates dldn'l he'll' trom ,, niJht when they face Miller in •
6·5 junior pivot Rusly Denney Hemlock.
.
until he drove In for a layup with
-·NORTH GALLIA (85) - Mays
51 seconds left in the first 14-0-2-30; Bu'r nette 4-1-6-17; Denquarter. Denney, who scored 35 ney 6-0-3-15; George 2-0-3-7;
points against Kyger Creek last Gl!more 2·0·3·7; Glassburn 1-0-5week, couldn't get some ot his ' 1; Blackburn 1·0-9·2. TOTAL!linside shots to fall. resulting in 30-1;2~85
some of Eastern's 31 rebounds.
EASTERN (76) - Horner
The Eagles. In oulreboundlng 3-2-7-19·; Hendrix 5-2-2-18; Martin
I he Pirates 31-18, got themselves 6-0-2-14; Lance 4-0-1-9; Reynolds
in good position under the boards 3-0-1-7; Griffin 2-0-1-5; Fitch
·. on defense. they r,arely · got 1-0.0·2; Johnson 1·0·0·2. TOTALS:
second chances 9ff the offensive - 25-4'·14-76
glass, as the IaBer Pirates would
Sl:ore by quarters
go up and quickly pass the ball . Eastern ....... ...... 11 17 i4 34-76
· downcourt.
North Gallia .. .... 15 26 24 2()..;.85
In the second quarler the Bucs
Resene game
sent senior guard/ forward Keith
Nor-th Gallla· 55, Eastern 23
Burnet.te lo Ihe boller room.
Top scorers- Hammel I North
where he scored 10ofhis 17 points Gallia), 15 poinls. Flnla'w CEaslto help the Pirates sail to lhe ern). 8 points.

r·."• ~- 6~.!\!u~N ·

Cindy H. Joha1ton, Notary Public
AKA Clady L. Harrington

...

#

l

wl&gt;l'"'"'

f,

..~

I, the undersigned officer, do hereby declare that this Report of Condition has
been prepared In conformance with official Instructions and Is true to the best of
my knowledge and belief.
'
Madge E. Boggs
VIce President and Controller
,

.

~

1

Reg. S95 ....;... Now S76.00
Reg. S115 ...... Now S92.00
Reg. S150.... Now S120.00
.
~
113
Reg. S195 OlfNow 130.65

LAIGE GROll' IJEN'S

GROUP OF MEN'S SPORT
SHIRTS &amp; KNIT SHIRTS

• I Logan 65 Marlelta 63

Federal lj.eserve District No. 4
of Gallipolis, Gallla County, In the State of Ohio at the close of business on Decem·
ber 31, 1187.
·

C. I' I herydoy
low Prkt

Friday's results:

~; Warren 63 Jackson 44

The _Ohio Valley Bank
Company

1

1%-!!-117

Rainbow Inn ................................ 73 55

·~

EVANS PRESSURED - _ Athens' Doug Skinner ( 4) puts .
pressure on Gallipolis guard Billy Evans during Friday's SEOAL I
cage game at The Plains. The Blue ~evils won, 55·53.
•

With The Installation Of Each Windshield At Point-Mason Aut(!
You Can Have Breakfast On Us At Shoney's.

Pirates ....__...:.__:c:::o:::.n.l:.::in::..:ue:.:!,):..:f.:.:ro:.::m.:..c.:..-6.-_:-:----:--

-~ Gallipolis 55 Athens 53

Slate Bank No. 130

High Series: Cindy May\e-476: Joey
Wa llPrs -459; Tina Co\lins-450.

ON THE GO- GaiDa's Tim Nevlile (Zl) races back up court
after David Todd (SO, right) picked 'off rebound on thiS play against
Athens Friday. Bulldog giving chase ts Doug Skinner (4) . GABS
won·, 55-53.
·

4,.,

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Forelp Subsidiaries) ·

"Mayle-182: R}Jonda Stewart-171 . '

..

---

MOIIISCift
District . .IIIIINIIM
P. 0. lor 161,1io ...... OH.
' '"·· .14-245 -9119

'

High 'l'ea~ Gamt&gt;: Poob; Plus-621 ;
RalnOOw Inn-582; Rail road Junction·S82.
High Tea m Series : Pools P\us·1625;
Railroad Juctlon-1580; Rainbow Jnn-1535.
High Game: Tina Comns·185; Cindy

TEAM
WON LOST
Pools Plus .......... .............. .... .. .... 94 34

Saturday's mln-SEO results:
Greenfield 73 Wilmington 71 ·
o~~• Chesapeake 52 Coal Grove 50
"l •Pt. Pleasant 90 Wahama 72
" Portsmoulh 82 Russell 73
": Southern 53 Kyger Creek 51
: Wheelersburg 85 Minford 73
.. Waverly 73 Wesl 58
'). C-K 82 South Point 70
~·
~
)
.••
(SEOAL VARSITY)
l Team
W L P OP
:! Logan .... ....... ....... 7 0 430 365
'\oGal_!lpolls .. ... ........ 6 1 406 335
Atllens .... ...... . ... ... 3 4 449 432
• .l\!ll!rletta ...... :=.... 3 -, 4 ,.439 423,
~1 Warren ... .. .. .. .... :.. 2 - 5 · 393 442
., Jackson ......... ...... o 7 355 475
TOTALS
· 21 21 2472 2472

z

Swain General Store &amp; Carryout

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- C-7

OFFER FROM POINT - MASON AUTO GLASS

t

AT

TUESDAY MORNING lADIES

OP
699
852
721 '
813
686
7frl
739
742
915
962
932
767
925
980 .
991

a nd Billy Evans had eighl!!piece.
·Berklch. In foul trouble ea rly.
still managed 12 rebound s bu t
was limiled Ia a season low four
points by aggressi ve AHS
defenders .
Gallipolis connecled on 23 of 50
field goa l altempl s for 46 percent, was four of 11 allhe line for
36 percent, had 31 rebounds
(Neville .assisted Berkich wllh
eight) 'and · 15 c.ommitted
turnovers . .
Doug · ·Skinner and . Thaden
Brlent led the Bulldogs wllh 12
markers. Cory Corrigan , back in
actiQn after an ankle injury,
added 10. Scott Stricklin had
nine, Scott DeCaminada added
eight and picked off eight of lhe
Bulldogs 21 rebounds .
.
Athens hit 20 of 48 field goal
.attempts -for 42 percent . The
Bulldogs were eight of 10 at the
line for 80 percent. AHS had 13
turnovers.
After a 16-16 flrsl period tie,
GAHS led 36-27 at intermisSion.
AHS led 44·42 going lnlo the final
period. Bullpups Win
In Friday's reserve game,
Athens deieated the Blue ImpS;
40·29. Shad Patterson and Josh
DeWeese had 10 each for Athens .
Donnie Haynes tallied 10 for lhe
Blue Imps.
.
.
GAHS played. at Portsmouth
Saturday night. Athens played
Nelsonville at home in a makeup
game; AH,S will host TVC leader Trimble Tuesday and ·journey to
Warren Friday.
Friday's varsity box :
GALLIPOLIS (55) - Mark
Berklch, 2·0-4; Tim Neville,

•I

NOW PLAY .SUPER LOTTO,
THE ·NUMBERS &amp; PICK.FOUR
JCT. STATE IT. 553 &amp; 211 ·
OPEN 7 A.M. Tl. 10 ~.M. MOJIDAY IHIU SATURDAY
SUNDAY I Ul.. nl 5 P.M.
PHOiill 256-6600 ·

'ensuing i!l;_bounds play (bonus
Athens dropped to 6-6 and 3-4.
not In effect).
"We told our boys at halftime
Athens took it out. again and they had to be more patlenl. "
called time when the Bulldogs Osborne said. Commenting on
couldn't get it back In play. what proved to be the Galllans'
However. the Athenians were worst quarter of the year CAHS
whistled for a technical foul outscored GAHS 17-61n the thlfd
because they were oill of . canto) "I'm sure Athens caused
timeouts .
part of It ,by changing their
Jason Thomas missed bolh defense." He added. "1 though!
T·shots, but GAHS .got it out of' our team showed Its mettle when ·
bounds . Thomas was fouled with It came back after getting behlpd '
f9ur seconds left. He missed the late in th e game (50-49 with 4:34
'front end of a one-and_one. Then left) . I don't think we were ever
came the closing antics by shaken up or. ·nervous. We just
Athens. · Thomas fouled an AHS weren 't ready to play in the first
player-still no bonus . With one _ quarter and Athens was . They
second left, AHS took If out of really took it to us after we came
~ullds again, heaved a hall
back In the second' quar-t er ."
mary pass down court to Brlent
The Blue Devil mentor crewho iet go with a wild hook shot. dited Callla's defensive play 'for
but It was ali over.
keeping Gallipolis in contention
Logan Next Foe
for 'its second straight conference
Gallipolis impi'Gved Its mark to crQY{ri. "It's always nice to win
1~- 2 -overall and 6-1 Inside the
one at Athens,"· he concluded.
conference. remaining one full
,
Sfatlstlcs .
gam¢ behind Friday's next oppoJason Thomas paced the Gal!inenl , Logan. The Chiefs edged ahs' attack with 22 poinls. Mark
Marietta. 65-63 logo 12-2 and 7-Q. Kimble added :13, Tim Neville

''. SEO standings

with-

::li

END OF MO

.

shotS 10 fall in close, allowing the
Eaeles to get a 9-4Jead with lhree
minutes left In opening round .
·fhat lead evaporated l"ilh back·
to-back Jayups by Mays In the
.c losing minutes of the first
quarter. pulling the Bucs on top
and on theJr way to ringing·up a
15-11 iead at the eml of act one.
1n spite of such an offensive
ettort by Mays, the Pl~ates
allowed the Eagles to stay In the
game by laying l}ack on defen~
and giving the .Reedsville crew
time to set up outside ·and Inside
and get easy shols. Eastern's big
men , 6-0 senior Steve Horner and
continued on C-7

Family
Financial
Security

DRIVES FOR LAYUP -North GaUia's Don Mays (22) drives
past Eastera's Steve Honer lor one of hts many layups Ia the
second quarter of Friday night's SVAC game In VInton. Mays, who
at halftime had 11 points, finished the game with SO polllts to p118h
the Pirates to an 85-76 win over lhe Eagles. (Times-Sentinel photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va .

GAHS holds on to edge Athens, 55-53

t~':~e&amp; v:ai,.r;::::::::=:=======::;:::;l

S &amp; J Lumbe.r ... ... .... ........ .. ........... .9
Kyger Dental ............. ...................0

Pomeroy-Middleport~Gallipolis.

t

despite solid performances

!rem Ke n Kyger 1198-5581 . Chuck Johnson
(192-5381 and Rlck Tench (215-6081.
Som e lfpm s of note. at thi s point on the
season, some statis tics for those,who enjoy
th em:
HIRh ga me actual: Craig Barnes-266;
High series actual : BobbY Tillls-675; High
~a rne w/ Hdcp: Larry Moore-288; High
seri es w/ Hdcp: Rick Tench·720.
Hl~h rea m ga me actual: Central 'frusl·
1047; High Team series actual: Up The
Rlver-2873; High learn game mdcp\ :
Central Tru st-.1135;· Hig h team series

.
gj;O:Jy on the Pirates were
mjsslq a number of short
Jwnpen and had trouble eettlng

SVAC standings

AIWrl BaU

,......,.,. Mill!_Slnvna •• o.U&amp;ellltr Ty
Gal•y aKI"''fl)lo 1-,._a r rHirach•.

Golde• Stale ••· Uta II ••
!tllltdl,f 'lll Ga11M'
Plabdel~lll aU lo, con ·

l

1'71 Mil
171 ••
ltl w

.
Cl.:l-..1 - Slpd ~~N·•
bufmaa
Re11 OHtt&gt;r .. a&lt;*llraLi ,... N_..vlllrof
.. r Amerttu AMoelat-.a tAAA) .
Ho ..... - Pttt~r lua A.a;G!Mo,

LA Laiii!N1117, ~lafta lf'l'

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'!3 t!

•

..,...... to 11 l·~ar H.,.li .
Callfenla - sar..rw.p Dicit S..•Wiekl

II ~

DrtNil 1!5, . . . ..
Ch~ap ••· New Je-r.ey D
Danu liT, Seat.tlr ••
M'ltwa.. .,. t1; LA e.u,e.,. M

WwlildnKtvn

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13 tt .131 It
LA Clllll'f~
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It •
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Transactions

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II ft .Ill II 'r.
II tR .ut 11

.

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Plllla*l .. la_........... "".,.
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H II .'71 .. If II .nl Jl

a

II

. January 31, 1988

Pirates take Eastern int() camp, 85-76·

Scoreboard ...
NBA rtl8Uhs

•

Pomeroy-Midclaport-Gallipolla, Ohio-Point P181'18nt, W. Va .

and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge and belief has been prepared In conformance with the Instructions Issued by the Board of
Govemori of the Federal Reserve System and the State Banking AulhOrity and is
true and correct.
· 'lbeodore T. Reed, Jr.
Leslie F . Fultz -Directors
'
Paul G. Eich
State of Ohio. County of Gallla, 11:
Sworn to and aublcrlbed before me this 12th day of January, 1968.
.
- .
Jo Ann CriSJ;I, Notary .Public
JoAnn Crisp, Notary Public, State of Ohio. My commlssloJ! expires July 17, 1988.
'

'

..
.,

�.-.-..............
_..,...._.
--.-·
.--..................
.
. ......
....
...._. .
-·---··

January 31, 1988

Pon1810V Mldclapott-Gal•r:•· Ohio-Point Pleeant, W. Ve.
'

'

~-

. ").
....

-' ·

•.e=:t.::::.a.:rr
............

I

...

....-.....-.
.w.-.--111

•'

MrCttli-.._a. Mtr...._.ll

.\UO.r-. Allllatlllll

air II

Friday's high •• aa.•u
•..........................
.school scores ......
-•u-u
,.,.,.............

••c:.hmii.Mr~M

111

• ·

1\UIIuc....,aa,,.._,,. ........_
AUII\'IoD. . . .-

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--· _.
...........
-=....... ..

....._.Ciwtelcwaa.•c.I&amp;M
14, • . . _ . . . . , ..

Plklt11.' . , . , .

No Tripe! No Prizes!
No 8immieks!
No Add-On Stiekers!
FactOry htail

oaW. . . .niM.Utu~•
Cia Xawk"r l't, Ot a..Qreleve.t •• W.........
It

~.·-·"

ae•••• u

C.l.l&amp;PM.C.III ..... naktt
·
c.l ........,..., &amp;a. Cel PMrdt.. lld S2

--~~ ....... Nil ..

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a.~.,..

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C.l&amp;•••••r 71. c.••·"' n

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............ 'a

rwon ·

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Mal-ket gets boost

.... ,.
,

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c.... w.....,. aaw 11, Pl,m•lllll N

,.

• c.1eae1 cr.wr... 11, CareJ Sll
C.l ......... Crfttwtew M, S.Uirw LGt·

•-•kk'JI.rt.re•,....a

-

.

~

,i.

.

111,11110

Factory lttall
Discounts

..:..1, 9211

Sah Price

$9734

IETliL $20,647
DISCOUNT
-3,642

•

,'

Plus Tax &amp; title

$1 7 000
I

- IN NEW FACU.rrY- Volo ManUfacturers has
.,moved Its equipment all week ami should be open
for business Monday at Its new facility at 358
Jackson Pike, said branch managerJackLewlsn.

Plus Tax &amp; Titlt

Voto Is a sales company, distributor of mine arid
mill supplies; manufacturers of wire rope and
wire rope slinKS, and hydrollc hose assemblies;
and sales various distributlflg products.

•

~iCounty jobless rates .tncrease

EXTENDED .WARRANTY -NO EXTRA CHARGE·

••

Fact~ty Retail
.DisCliUIItS.

S.le Price

1987 OLDSMOBILE CUSTOM
. s11,292
CIUISER ST. WAGON
·3,292

BROUGHAM

Factory Retail

fully Equippec(

$1 5,000

•'·
COLUMBUS. Ohio iUP!)
, Ten counties in Ohio had un~m1 ployl)')ent rates below 5 perc~nt
In December, down from 16
' counties below that mark In
l. November and 17 counties in
October.
Figures released Friday by the
Ohio Bureau of Employment
§ervlces also showed that the
number of counties with· jobless
.·•. rates higher than 10 percem
: climbed from three in October, to
• six In November and to nlrie In '
: .December.
·
'The · state's unemployment
rate for December was 6.1
percent, a slight Increase after
two· str~ight. months at 5.8
percent. ln .December 1986. it
. ; was. 7.9 percent.
'
For the second month ln a row,
Madison County. a mostly rural'
-. county just west of Columbus,
't had the state's lowest rate, bul'it
; was tied ln December by Han:
~ cock County. The two recorded
• rates of 4.3 percent, up from the
#! .! ulUll m011th 1 w~ M~!l,lson
was at 3.7 percent and Hancock
at 3.8 percent.
·l
The highest rate was posted by
l Mercer Cobnty, which jumped
1 from 7 percen.t in November to
, 16.7 percent In December. Close .·
' behind was Monroe, with 16.3

1987 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88
Discounts

$14,250

S.le Prke

..

. STOCI #US

1988 CHEVROLET ASTRO
CL VAN

i

"DEMO" Fully Equipped.
FlCTOIY I~Tlll Sl7, 184
DISCOUNTS .

1988 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME

CLASSIC

(factory Official's Car)
Only . 4,000 mil~•·
bucket ooats. V-8, t11t, .

Factory Retail
Discounts

w/casutte. ·

Salt Prkt

crui'M. AM·FM 'lltiiNO

116,455
-3,055 ·

$13,400

-2,49
$15 '1 5

/

SAlE PRICE

1

flffNDI!I'-WAHANTY-NO

1il88 CHMOIET 5-10 .._MODEL

Plus Tax &amp; ntlt

fX~

CHARGE

Paw1r braklll, Tech IV 2,5
eng. AM radio, rally•
whals, rtar step bumper,
IIIII siUIP,Cirt tire, 5-lpHd

"-

'·

.

STOC1#1245

..

Ptus Tu &amp; Tltio

S7,538

I

'' Money Idem

''

•
•'

1987 ·oLDSMOBILE CUTLASS

Factory Retail
Discou•ts
Sale Price
Oltls Cosh Rebate

'I

SUPREME BROUGHAM

Net S.le Price

$]1,950

STOCUI19

Factory Rttal

-

V-8, Fully Equipped.

Discounts

Sal• Price

115,179
-2,279

Sl3,60~
Ptvt Ta &amp; rn1o
,.

1987 OLDSMOBILE FIRENU. G.T.
Factory 11tt1i1 113,969
Discounts
-2,1119

S.lt Prkt

$11 ,800.

ptlll

CHEVROLn CELEBRITY EUROSPORT

FuUy Equippotl:

Y-6, Fully ·Equipped.

.ti,tf

STOC:I .949

I

~

Factory Retail

114,920

Discount
S.lt Price
Cltev. Rebate

-1.920
13,000
-750

''

ByS'J'AN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS - The fixed
' income markets continued to be
: , stretched across
1
the maturity
spectrum .-While
•, short rates de' cllned moderately over the
past few weeks,
long-term' rates
• remained rPiatl•vp(v stable.
ever, on a day-to-day basis the .
' ' market's volatility has created
•• some attractive trading oppor: tunities .. As a result, the yield
• curve continues to be very
•• steeply sloped this late into a
; business expansion. Because of
• the large spread between long! term and · short-term rates as
I well as the meaningful spread
; between long-term U.S. Treasuries and AAA corporrates ,
private-sector demands for capl- .
tal will likely be funded at the
- short ·end of the maturity spectrum. Our forecast calls for a
i .. pickup In short-term bo.rrowlng
~ due· primarily ' to continued
I growth, albeit sluggish; in the
economy.
..
.
.
i The decline In both long- and
• short term rates over the past

'

Ptus Tix &amp; ntlo

t

THE WEATHER HAS BEEN COLD- BUT THE DEALS
ARE .
AT

l · GALLIPOLIS ...., The mpnth of

RED HOT

·Chef.-Oids.
CARS
446-3672

1616 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

TRUCKS
446·2000

.

-

OF

"The Ohio ~allev"
'

,!

: February 1988 marks the 40th
• oblervanceortheNatlonaiChlldren's Dental Health Month with
the national theme, "A Healthy
Smile Shows Your Style."
National Children's · Dental
: Health Month began In 1941 as a
'· local observance In Cleveland
· and Akron. It became a national
· p!'OII'&amp;m In 1949 and was observed in a si11Jleday.1111955, the
, oblervan~ waa extended to a
, week. and by 1881 to a IJIIIIIth.
• Throulh \1111 annual obler·
: vance. atate and laa&amp;IIOCIIUII
'· focus attentloll oa tilt. IOipcir·
, tance of detltaii!NlUI
~ varil!t)' ot I,'OintaiiiiJii'.WU• llrO·
1 crams and actMtlfi. The Reb·

,...._a

'

gain in the Dow of abou·t 100 to 200
points l.n the next month or two. "
Broad-market indicators also
gained on the week. The New
York Stock Exchange composite
Index rose 5.44 to 144.13. Stand- ·
ard &amp; Poor's 500-stock Index rose
10.57 .to close the week at 257.0'7.
Advancing lssue.s outpaced los-·
ers 1,372-546 among 2,158 Issues .
.traded . Big Board volume totaled 968,374,220 shares, compared with 775.~.300 last week
and 895,576,280 a year ago.
The week started on the pius
side as the Dow jumped nearly43
points on Monday, fueled by
renewed takeover activity that
attracted recently dormant investors back into the market In
search of bargains.
Analysis said efforts by the
N'iSE and some member firms .
to limit the use of computerdriven program trading. blamed
for recent volatility, also .contributed to the sharp upturn.
On Tuesday the market failed
to follow through on Monday's
strong gains as prices fell in light
trading. The Dow gave back 9.45
points.
Stock prices closed mixed
Wednesday after a daylong
struggle with two different interpretations of the latest economic

Named to po$t

I'··

Ohio· dairy fanners
tq get hit -in June
.

Officers reelected

.

'

\

I

•

•

I

..

·~

I.J .

data from Washington.
,
The government said the~.
national product rose at a :t;f
percent annual rate In the fo~h
quarter, slightly lilgher th)n
most forecasters had expec~.
and largely due to a jump of $4f.6
billion In non-farm inventor!~ .
While the .GNP growth ·rl!l\t~n
t.he quarter was better ti!f!n~
expected, the bond market saw
·the .buildup in Inventories a~;a·
sign or economic slugglshn~s ;
which could lead to a reductloirtri
Interest rates .
. tl :
·'For the bond market .the la~e
inventory accumulation sqg:
gests the economy Is not st~
and we might see lower lnte t
rates," a trader said. "But In e:
stock market they suggest::a
slowdown and possibly loW!lr
corporate earnings." ·
~~ As it turned out, the pros~s._
for lower rates became'
market focus.
~; :
· On the trading ·Uoor, South~ .
Co. was the most active NYll:: .
listed issue on the week, ~changed at 24.
•
Tenneco followed. up 1\ol , o
40\ol.
I
. ~j
Pinnacle West Capital ~s
third. down % to 28%.
!;~\~

-

1!o

P&amp;G repOrts
·quarterly profit · . . .
.,~

iNational
Children's. Dental Health·
'"
!Month observ~ 40th annive~ary
-

•

.
.By DONALD GALLAGHER
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK - The propsects
for lower ,interest rates provided
the stock market with a much. needed ·boost last week as prices
staged a broad advance despite
evidence of continued uncertainty and low investor.
confidence.
T~e Dow Jones Industrial average rose 28.18 Friday to close the
week at 1958.22. For the week, the
index gained 54 .71, or2.9percent.
"The market psychology is
clearly beginning to focus on
interest rates coming down, ..
said Ralph Bloch, senior vice '
president and chief market analyst at Raymond. James &amp;
Associates In St . Petersburg,
Fla . "The Federal Reserve
Board Is not going to sit back and
let this economy sink into a deep
recession .n .
•
Bloch said the Fed. regardleSs
of the economic numbers. would
be forced by the political pressures of · an election year to
launch a more accommodative
monetary policy leading to Interest rate relief.'
"Tne Fed is going 10 start to
loosen sooner rather than later, "
Bloch said . As a result , ' "!'he next
move in th e marke t could see a

percent, slightly higher than the Fayelte
8.0
10.5.
8 .~
16 percent It had the previous . Galli a
10.6
9.3
8.2
month.
. 12.5
Hocking
9.3
11.0
Also surpassing the 10 percent
Holmes
4.9
4.6
~
mark In December were Harri- . Jackson
ll
.7
9.1
9.3
son ('14.8 percent) , Pike (12.4 ' Lawrence
10.3
9.1
7.4
percent J. Perry 02.3 percent!. Meigs
8.5
7.8
12.6
Adams (12.1 percent), H'ocklng Pickaway
6.0 . 5.1 .
6.9,
01.0 percent). Scioto (10.2 per- Pike
17.8 .
12.4
ll .2
~
cent) and Vinton fll.l percent!
7.0
12.2
7.8
Ross
·
~
counties.
10.2
9.3
13. 3
Scioto
~~~
Columbus again had the lowest
]3.0
Vinton
11.1• 10.6
rate · among the state's major
11.2
Washington 7.5
6.3
~;
cities. recordln·g its third straight
7.~
5.8
OhiO
.6.1
J'1lODth at 5.2 percent. Cincinnati
~&lt;'
· CINCINNATI (UPI) - '!lie
was seCQnd at 6 · percent, down
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. repor~
slightly '' from 6.2 percent in
second quarter earnings of ~1
November.
•·
million last week, an lncreas&amp;;of
Again posting the highest rate
Sandra Jones Dunn, president
37
percent over flgurPs for Qle
among the large cities was
of Homestead Realty and Man- :
same
period a year earlier. .;:
Youngstown, with 10.2 percent.
ager of B.J . Builders of Point
For
the three-month periild
.Nearby Warren joined YoungPleasant, has been elected vice
ended
Dec.
31, 1987, earnings l)lir
stown In dQuble figures, posting a
president of Area 6 of the
share
were
$1.52 and sales ~e
10 percent jobless rate.
. National Association of Home
.'
$4.8
billion,
compared to ea~;~~ ­
Among cities. of ilt least 50,000
Builders.
population, the Dayton suburb of
ings of $190 million or $l.l ~..a
Mrs . Dunn, second woman to
share on sale$ of $4.3 bllllon ·r
Kettering had the lowest rate, 2.5
ever be elected to this office, was
the same period a year ago. 0:
percent.
'
named to the post at the Hqme
1;'.1\:G _official$ said the ln.c~e't:~e .
'The .,'l}'ea coun)y•bY-cDI1,nty
B,~ilders na tiona! con_veptlon
was due primarily to greater llrrlt
breakdown of unemployment
l)eld this month In Dallas, Texas.
rates, listing the unemployment
volume, and they said the gro.Vih
Area 6 encompasses West Virgirates for December 1987, No- . nia, Ohio and Kentucky.
in net earnings and earnings i:!(ir
vember 1987 and December 1986:
share benefited .from the lo~r
Mrs. Dunn is a life director of
County Dec 87 Nov 87 Dec 86
U.S. statutory tax rate provi!l!:'d
the local, state and national
Athens
7.1
5.9
8.6
by the Tax Reform Act-of 191!i:
board of . directors ·of . Home
Fairfield
7.8
6.9
9.9
Worldwide earnings for Ole
Builders and has served as
first
six months of the 1981;118
national representative of West · .
fiscal
year were $617 millloq::.&lt;lr
Virginia . She · has also been
$3.61
a
share on sales of $);5
National Build Pac trustee for
billion. compared to $463 milll6n
four years, served on the execuor $2.72 a.share on sales&gt;of $t,6
live committee of Build Pac for
'· - .
billion hi the same period a ~r
four years, has been chairman of . ,·
' .Jlf
~;;4
..
I
ap.
. ~
Public affairs and membe~ of the
-~
quarter !rom their early Octobef M9rtgage Finance Committee. . i&gt;;·;.. ·'
The six-month earnings .i\~­
''·
'
peaks Is primarily a function of
presented
a 33 percent increa~e.
More than 60.000 members
SALON IS OPEN_ Family Hair Care Center, on S.R. 160 near
the easy moneta;y conditions ihe · attended the January 12-18 NaWall
Street
analysts said bjg
Haffelt &amp; Son Custom Carpets, opened last week for business.
Federal Reserve pursued immeearnings
gains
were expectealer
tiona! Association of Home
Here, hair sty.Ust Linda (Jarrett provides customer Sherlll Klng
diately after the October 19 Builders
Procter
&amp;
Gamble,
bil t not~ as
convention. The associwith some of her service. Because the salon's hours have not been
crash. ' The further we move · ation has over 151,000 members.
great as were reported.
.:~
firmly established, eustoiflers should call Patty Metheney at
away from that period, however.
"Virtually
all
areas
of
·t)je
446-6144. (Times-Sentinel photo I ·
the more rates will reflect the
business v;ere strong." said Ji;y
Federal Reserve's policy reFreedman of Kidder Peabody. fz
sponse to the movement in the
Co. "In the United States, lhe
economy, the dollar's exchange
company benefitted from ·.\lie
value and the twin deficits.
trade doing Inventory stocking to
Both long- and short -term
advance of price lncreases..:ln
money rates are at important
orange juice and coffee and l!all~
points in their long-term trends.
~
.
very successful detergent
milk products. he says.
' COLUMI:IUS. Ohio (UPil The easing In rates that followed
motional program in
The J98a Food Security Act . quarter. "
the market debacle· Ms brought
Dairy farmers shouldn't feel the
full impact of a recent 50-cent dropped the support price for 100
the weekly rated down to !heir
pounds of Grade B milk and
drop in federal milk support
rising long-term trends. Short·
Grade
A manufacturing milk
· term rates began their rise In the
prices until June, Ohio State
testing 3.67 percent butterfat ·
fourth quaPter of 1986, , while
University's dairy policy specialfrom $11.10 to $10 .60 effective
long-term rates have been rising
ist says.
Jan. I. 1988 .
But Robert Jacobson says the
since the first quarter of 1987.
When adjusted.· to the price for
cut, coupled with increasing milk
The market will need some very
production. could drop Grade A milk with 3.5 percent butterfat,
positive news to · turn · these
blend prices by more than 75 the new support Is $10.33 per
interest rates down further over
hundred pounds.
cents per hundred pounds from
the Immediate future. If good
Now throw in recent Increases
news is not forthcoming, Interest
the c~rrent $12.40 average.
in
milk prpductlon. .
.
rates are vulnerable to anotheP '
He . says.. the cut may hu.rt
"We
currently
have
no
supply
·
farmers but It's good news for
turn upWard. '
· (Mr. Evans Is an Investment
consumers. The same factors . control program In effect In the
that reduce dairy tarm income milk industry," Jacobson says.
broker for The Ohio Company In
Its Gallipolis olflee.) .·
•
should fr1ean stable prices on "Since late 1987, production has
SANDRA DUNN
been building nationally faster
than the Increased demand for
dairy products. That excess
supply
is going to drive prices
GALLIPOLIS - David A. ·
down
substantially
by around
Vetter. president -of Civic Sav.
June
"
ings Bank, was one of several
senior oflicers re-elected to their · That's the worst possible tJming, he says, since milk producpositions at the company's an·
tion Is heaviest In June. Market
nual meeting last Monday.
JOINS STAFF
winkel Dental Society wlll bring
prices for milk used for ma'lu.racJohnna Jorgensen , D.D.S.
. Others continuing In their
Stansberry
has -r•!c~~~~i~
area residents a series of dental
"This ·month provides us with
office&amp; are 89b True, executive. tured dairy products will drop at
joined the staff of Scenle
health articles for children In
least as low as the support price,
th~ oppbrtunlty t~ get our mesvice. pnesldent; Ken Clark,
N1ni1111 Center . as Its ·
observance of National Child· · sa1e to as many people as Thelma Petry, Henry Stdllvan
possibly a little lower.
ttOOial ~~&amp;rvlce dlrecter.
·ren's Dental Health Month.
What shoulil make milk lovers · received a b~~eiHilor"s ·
possible," Dr. Jorgensen said. and Ann Sydnof, vice presidents;
In addition, they will sponsor a
happy ' Is the ' way the federal
"Prevention is ' a matter of Kathleen Walltck, secretary;
In IIOC(Ial worlc from
wide range of dental health education, and we want lb Dan Dobbins. Hugh Graham,
government went about reducing
Graade Callere ... a
milk supports.
'
actlvlllea tbrou1hout the month- provide learning experiences Tim Hyland. Sherry Miller, Pam
ter'•
Ia
of February, lncludi11Jadrawtng
The government reduced the
that are botn fun and
Palmer,' Steve Scott and Patty
contest amo111 all GaUia County
lnformatlvt'."
Strickland, assistant vice presl- . · price It pays milk processors for
and Gallipolis City Schools, edusurplus !!Utter, cheese and nonfat
A healthy smlle is Important to dents; Joa11 Al.brecht. assistant
cational mesllgl!J will be prodry milk. Processors then have
a person's emotional and physl- treasurer; and Jean Rusaell and
moted by u·11111 handouts and
less to lpend on raw milk, which
cal -well-being. Four , steps to 'Lois Russell, asslsta11t
dlslrlbutlng polllera, Children's
reduces market prices.
pniservlna dental health kre:
aecretarles.
Dental Health bookmarks will be · bruahlqandna.slnadally,dally
Since.the price of raw milk and
Otto Apel, Jr., and Mildred
the
avaUable for Ull! at tile Bossard
IQVI!I'nment price for milk
use of Cluorlde, a llllanced diet
Bfhl were re-electeclasdlrectors.
products
directly Influence the
Memorial Ll~and the Book· wllh a mlillmum of between· They wiD aerve4 with Vetter,
llltiiWt. aceo
to llie GaUia 'mQiihleb, and regular dental John G. trawtolld, WUI!im Gold- consumer market, Jacobson pre./ .
COuraty N.tlonal Udren'a Den· visits.
·
'
·'· camp, Jallll!l Strafford and: diets little change In retail prices
tal ~ealth Montb Chairman ..,.
· . I'
· through 1~.
Ralph Wisniewski.

-Interest rates

I

$12,250

1m: &amp; Title

:I

'

'

'

•

•

lower interest rates

1987 OLDSMOBILE FIRENZA 2 DR.

Fl~TOIY

SALE PRICE

-

NEW CARS .- NEW ·TRUCKS
TUDE·INS ·
FACTO.Y OFFICIAL CARS FAOORY PROGUJI CARS

1987 OLDSMOBILE 9.1
REGENCY 4 DR. BROUGHAM
··
"DEMO"

""' TO. &amp; rnlt

'••&lt;'

Around!

We Have The Best

.

•

. i

with .-proSpeCts for

"

We Just·Want To Give You
The Best Possible ·price On A
New or Used Car and Truck.

~ Pric_! $11 1 189
.

\

e.

C•l• a ..
C.lllat*r 11
C.IW.a . . . . n.C.I ....,eMr.cl'lt
~.......... '71, Otl....,. ..
C.l
· - 'lt. C
l - ..
c...........
r.et.IIHrllcHft
u

.

113,2i9
-2,100

·Secti-on

C.l ( .'• IM..... "·tAl UIIIIH U

&lt;'•I

..,..__.a,.••n ... .
lpr'

•unbau ~twt ·· ~entiul

a ........ ••· ...... a" pin
n. .....,.. ...
cu••ll-"'•·•.... " ••n
r..1.k~J 11. •• ...... M .

••"'""" 'JI., ...........
W ear..a.aN'\1-II
•
..........

-~,.,Clol

Arrllllelll 11, PMrlrt . _ , M

Dile-n.

~~~.

...., .. aruo.~
.... .

~II,UMir ..... ll

AM&amp;

...........,...11

�•

Farm

Page- 0 -2
31, 1988

.Jat;tuary 31 ' 1988

.

nounced two Incentives lor bri'::
lng In larger acreages whiclt;
wouid be tn effect ":lth the nex\
slgnup,
· .\
..,. . Et\- osion c r it e r ia~' are ·
changed from 3T to 2T or twice
the normal soil loss tole.rance for
producers opting to plant trees on
the contracted areas.
_ For producers opting to
plant trees, the highly erodible
predominance criteria has been
changed from two-thirds to one'

GALUPOLIS -Recently, Se·
cretary of Agriculture Richard
E . Lyne announced details on
COnservation Reserve Program
. (CRP) Initiatives which provide
Incentives for greater tree plant·
inp and f?r t"e Improvement of
the nation s water quality.
Filter strips wlll be eligible for
the CRP even If the soli erosion
criteria Is not met on this land.
Filter .strips are defined as
cropland areas 66-99 feet wide
With a permanent cover, next to
streams and lakes: Farmers will
now be able to use the CRP funds
for a cost-effective means of
controlling their nonpolnt 'source
POMEROY - The · United
pollution.
States
. Department of Agricul·
Offers are to be made ,during
ture
reminds
farmer s . w.Jth
the upcoming Feb. H9 slgnup lor
either 1988 or 1989 crop ye11i'. . · highly erodible cropland that
Lyng said areas design a ted ·as they have just two yea r~ to meet
filter strips must be adja~ent and the conservation requirements of
parallel to streams having peren· the 1985 Farm Bill and remain
nial flow, seaSonal streams. ffr eligil;lle lor USDA program
other water bodies of a perman· benefits.
Wilson Scaling, Chief of USent nature with water areas of
DA's Soli Conservation Service
not less tllan live surface acres.
(SCS), said those provisions
These filter strips must be
capable of considerably reducing requ!J:e farmers who have highly
damage caused by sedlmenta· erodible land to have a conserva·
lion plan approved by their local
tlon and related pollutants.
This new option may be of conservation district by Dec. 31,
. Interest , to landowners along 1989, and. have It Implemented by
Raccoon Creek.
Dec. 31, 1994, to remain eligible
Secreta ry Lyng said he "ap· for USDA farm program benet·
plauds those .whose diligent ef· . its, loans, or guarantees on all
their- land.
·
· forts helped to make the CRP One
of the largest tree planting
About 800,000 conservation
programs in history." He an·
plans need to be developed in the

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the GaiHa Sell anti Water
Co-rvaiiH Dlstrlet, Is locate~! somewloere In
GaUia Coull&amp;)'. llldlvldllals wlslolng to participate
Ia the weekly cOII&amp;esl may do se by pessln1 &amp;be
farm'• owner. Jut mall, or drop oft your guess to
the Dally SeaUnel, 11 I Cqar&amp; S&amp; ., Pomeny, Ohio .
417., er the GaiUpolls Dally Tribune, 8%5 Third
Ave., GaiBpolls, Oblo 45631, and yoa ,ma.v win\' S5

cash prbe from the Oblo VaHey Publishing, Co.
Leave your name, addreu and &amp;elepbone number
wl&amp;b yoar card or le&amp;&amp;er. No &amp;elepbone calls will be
accepted. All coa&amp;ea&amp; entrletlllbould be &amp;umed In to
the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.
In case ol a tie, the winner wiD be cbollen by
lo&amp;&amp;ery. Next week a Meigs Coanty farm will be
lea&amp;ured by the Meigs Soli and Water Conserva·
lion District.

Recreation emphasized o_n national forest .
'

As a resultof pul!llc comments,
IRONTON - Tile Wayne Na·
tional Forest Is one of the major the final plan adds ten additional
providers ol Ohio's outdoor re- miles tot he 50 miles· of hiking
creation. "Ohio has a large trail construction planned for the
population and a limited public next ten years. The North Coun·
land base, with only .05 acre per try Trail construction wUl be the
person of· public land, second locus or this trail work, and the
only to New Jersey and Rhode Forest plans for the remaining 43
Island In the east. With a 184,888 miles oltrall to be built within 20
acres, the Wayne National years.
Rivers and streams on the
Forest Is approximately half of
that," expalns Frank Voytas, Forest will be managed to
Forest Supervisor lor the Wayne protect their scenic and natural
and Hoosier Natlpnal forest. . values. One river on the Forest.
The new management plan for the LUlie Musklngurn on the
the Wayne Natlona Forest has Marietta unit, Is on a Nationwide
attempted to meet the needs of
many types ol recreation users .
One change from earlier man·
agement Is a new emphasis on
reducing the number ol forest
roads an providing areas where a ·
visitor can find a secluded place
In the forest.
.
, '
COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPI) The · Forest wiU emphasize The 1988 schedule lor Ohio State
undeveloped types of recreation
University's Ohio Agricultural
uses,-such as hiking, hunting, and
Research and Development Cen· ·
flsblng, Including the develop- ter field days has been
.ment of the North Country Trail· announced.
.
on the Athens and Marietta unit.
The biggest change this year Is
The only plans for addlllonal setting a Dairy Day on three
highly developed sites are lor the dates at tllree farms around the
construction or campgrounds at
state. says Charles F. Parker.
tile Leith Run and Lamping field day coordinator and Ohio
Homestead picnic areas on the State animal science chairman.
Marietta Unit.
That program had been ·a one-

Rivers Inventory l!y tile Depart·
ment or Interior. This status
requires that Forest Service to
study the river to determine If it
would qualify for Federal Wild,
Scenic or Recreation River ellgl·
blllty.
Voytas said, "For further
Information on anything regard·
ing the Wayne National Forest,
we Invite you to contact the
U.S.D.A. Forest Service offices
in Athens. Ironton, or Marietta."
Copies of the Wayne Manage·
ment Plan are available at many
public libraries.

Schedule released for ·
OSU's '88 field days

1

I

Farm flashes

Shiitake mushrooms being
grown in southeastem Ohio
•

GALLIPOLIS - Lear~ more
about Shiitake Mushroom Pro·
ductlon . The Shiitake mush·
rooms, one of Japan's leading
export crops. Is now being grown
In southern Ohio.
Steve Bratkovlch. District Ex·
.tension Specialist, will be teach·
lng a class on· the basics of
Sl!llt ake Production at a Wednes·
day, Feb. 10, 7 p.m. class. The
class will be held at the Ohio
Valley Bank, Jackson Pike,
Meeting Room. Mr. Bratkovich
began experimenting with Shli·
take Cultivation teehniques in
1985. The Is considered the
. leading ·resource person in Ohio
on this topic.
· Money may not grow on trees,
but Shiitake mushrooms grow on
!allen logs. The ·crop offers
potential to bo!h the home
gardener and the person looking
tor a way to generate more
family Income. A big bonus to
this enterprise Is that a person
~an start production with only a
limited amount of our pocket
~st. As ·with many other pro·
ducts, marketing at a profit is not
easy even though market quotes .
are real high.
· A Shiitake Association was
recently formed In Ohio to help
growers with ,a "unified market.
tng effort". We hope many Gallla
Countlans will accept this lnvlta·
lion to attend the February 10
.lilass. For details call the County
Extension Office at 614-446-7007.
No enrollment fee or pre·
registration Is necessary.
: Beef cattle producers should
mark their calendar for June· 23
ind 24. Gallla · County will be
llosting the Summer Rcundup of
llle Ohio Cattlemens' Assocla·
tlon. There will be a planned
pre-tour activities on Thursday.
The Friday evening activities
~UI most likely ·include a big
. name entertainer. This state:Mde acllvlty Is expected to
•pttract some 1,000 persons from
. all over Ohio and neighboring
West Vllllinla. It will ta~ a lot of
· ' 1eam work to pull this one off. We
;.will probably be asking for a lot
·or belp.
•

Sunday .Times-Sentinel- Page-· 0 -3:

'
1

· Farmers.have two ·more
,years to sign.up for benefits

.,

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

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333 ··

thirds of the. field ..
·
Under the voluntary CRP;
farmers enter Into contracts to
retire eligible cropland for 10
years. In retol~n. USDA makes
.annual payments and shares half
ll)e cost of establishing grass or
trees.
·
To date, nearly 23mllllo.n acres
of land has been contracted In the
program. The program goal is. to
re tire 40·45. mllllon acres by the
end of.1990.
·
'·

0

Government Farm Programs
play a major role in farm
management decisions. Most of
these programs are operatlid
through the local ASCS Office.
Applications are now being taken
lor cost-share practices under·
the ACP Program. Traditionally
this has been a favorite among
farmers, Changes in recent years. to c&amp;st-share only on practl·
ces applied to highly erosionable
land have limited ACP use, but It
is still a good · way to get help ·
establishing or · maintaining a
good f9rage ground cover. Soli
test results are required lor this
program. Applications for this
ACP slgn·up period will continue
until February 23.
The next bid period for the
Conservation Reserve Program
(C . R.P. ~ will be February 1·
February 19. ·C.R.P takes cropland out ol production lor ten
years. A few Gallla County
farmers are already under this
program. There is some SI*&lt;!Ula·
lion that during the bid period,
u:s.D.A. may raise Its bid to
meet acreage targets. The
C.R.P. Is meeting more compel!·
lion !rom Increased competition
of ·other farm programs and
rising commodity markets.
Sign-up for the 1988 Feed Grain
Program Is scheduled to start on
Feb. 16 and continue through
April 15. The 0/92 provision ·
sign-up that Is a part of the Feed
Grain PrOgram will continue
only until March 11. The 1988
program has lot of slmlllarltles
to the 1987 program. but some
changes have ·been made. Many
of the detailS are still not
available. I encourage you to
visit with Mr. Dave McKenzie or
his staff to see how any of these
prOgrams .could apply to your
farm .
Did you know? Japanese throw
away 130 million pairs of cbop.
slicks dally. This strains Japan's
timber supply. A creative Mlnne- ·
sola firm opened a plant to export ·
7 million chopatlcks dally tor ·
,export. Could Gallia County .
grown timber be used? ·

a

da1{ event.
During most field days. re·
searchers will present the latest
'findings In the specified areas of
stlidy. Sales are featured at other
'ftt'ld d8y$.' o.l.i~M ' cO "
The field day lineup includes: ·
-Swine Day: Feb. 20, Ohio
Pork Congress, Dayton Conven·
lion Center.
-Performance Tested Bull
Sale: April 16, Eastern Ohio
Research and Development Cen·
ter, Caldwell.
-GreenhOuse Vegetable Day :
May 31, Ohio SiateOARDC campus, Wooster.
-Dairy Day in central Ohio:
July 13, Johnstown area farm.
-Dairy Day in northeast Ohio:
July 14, Alliance area farm.
-Sheep Day and Performance
Tested Ram Sale: July 16,
Eastern Ohio Research and
Development Center, Caldwell.
-Dairy Day In western Ohio:
July 19, Wapakoneta area farm.
-Alfalfa Day: July 20, Ohio
StateOARDC campus, Wooster.
-Field Crops Day: July 28,
featuring corn and soybeans.
Ohio StateOARDC Northwest
Branch. Custer.
Program details are available
several. weeks before each of
these events from local offices of
the Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service. Farm locations lor the
dairy days will he announced
later.

.·

'
.
.·
.

By Constance S. White

GALLIPOLIS- One of the new
pac)\ets offered this year wt th the
Gallla SWCD tree seedling sale Is
the Flowering Tree Packet.
Contained in the packet are two
each of the Mountain Ash, Red
Bud, Lilac, White Dogwood and
Flowering Crab Apple.
The lovely Mountain Ash has
drooping clusters of brilliant
orange-red berries. These ber:
rles contrast against the soft
green leaves and make a most
distinctive ornamental tree. The
fleshy red fruits often remain on
the tr~ late into. the winter and
' are eaten by many birds and
mammals. A member-of the rose
family. Their mature height is 18
to 25 feet.
.
The Redbud Is sometimes
referred to as the Judas Tree,
blooms In early spring when
WASHINGTON (UPH
every twig Is "Covered with
Farmers will be forced to pay " a
rosy-pink blooms .. The blooms
tax they don 't owe" unless
are then replaced by large,
Congress blocks the governmen t
heart-shape leaves. Though a
from collecting higbway taxes on
member of the pea family,
diesel fuel. used on .. farms and
Redbud exceptional in not growranches, congressmen said.
ing njtrogen,llxlng root nodules.
"This isn't going to be popular
Only bobwhite and a few songwith farmers. I · predict, " Rep.
birds are known to eat the seeds.
James JQntz, D·lnd .. said WedThe grow to a height of 20.25 feet.
nesday . "Farmers are just now
White Flowering Dogwood Is a
becoming aware" of thP
small ornamental which pro·
problem .
":Ides filtered summer shade,
The budget reconciliation law
brilliant red berries and scarlet
enacted last year included an
leaves In fall. They thrive In any · attempt to crack down on abuse
well-drained, fairly fertile soli.
in excise tax collecllons . A
They are good wlldllle feeding
number of congressmen say the
stations. Mature height is apunfair side el!ecl is that farmers.
proximately 20 feet:
beginning Aprlll. will be forced
The Common Lilac is a large
to pay the 15.1-cent a gallon
shrub with long pointed, heart
highway tax on diesel fuel used In
shaped leaves. No other shrub
agricultural work and then walt
has heart-shaped leaves and
until t.hey file their i.ncoll)e tax
single bundle scars. And of
forms tQ apply for a refund.
course, the blossoms are very
· In the past, farmers had an
fragrant. Lilacs are easy to exemption from paying the exgrow.
else tax lor on-farm use of the
The crab apple Is classified as fuel.

BONANZA

Fanners won't be
happy with fuel tax

RIVER FRONT
HONDA
433 PilE ST.

"

r..

Public Notice . ·

NOTICE OF SALE
The Hocking Valley Credit
Union, Inc., 223 Columbuo .
Road, Athtno, Ohio 45701, 1
wit! otfw lor ute the lot-.
lot~ deocribed vehicle•. ' and cteer '01 alllitlno and en· '•
cumbrencu: 1
1985 FORD BROII!COttSe·
rial Number 1 FMCU14SB·
FUB01738 Moclel14 ·aron·

co u.

. .

J

19n GMC YANDURA'
Pauenger van, Seriel N.um~
ber TGL2117U511101
Model TG21305 ;
the aloramontlonod vehl·
cln oh.tt be oold by -led
bldo at the office of the
Credit UniOn at 12:00 noon
on Friday. February 5, 1188.
T._ -lctos lhall be ootd
to the hlg- .... Ia"
any lmpllod or ••·
pretled werrentiea. th... vehlclta may be ...,.. at the of·
1m. of the Crodh Union, 223
Columbua Road. Athena,
Ohio .up to the date of the

··

·

. ,..

RIDING MOWIRS

SENIOR CITIZENS ... we qare
•bout you ! Come t~ FIESTA
HAIR FASHIONS anytNne end
get • 10 Plf cent discount on eny
hlirc.re tervicea v1lued at t ·7 or
morel 322 2nd . Avit., acro11
.from Park.

venA

&lt;

need everything ·
steering wheel."

Nolice: Opening of Poor Man ' s
Gro&lt;*'f on Kinglbury Rd. February 1. Houra:·7 :00am . to9:00
pm .

a

fl'llnkfultzienow~r•uth•

~4==:;;:::::::;::::::::::::=
Giveii""!IY

Storm windoWa to glve.way.
Coli 1114-992-202t.

Kitten, neut~. 111 shots. claws
removed, dark gray t.nd white to
good home. phont-30. -875-

SMALL
WANT ADS

PACK
ABli PUNCH!

6038.

41t62
'KQJ

•s

WEST

EAST

.88765

• 10 5 $
.AI0432
K 6:;
• 93

. tQ7 2

.10762

.

+

FOUND: White. long hilired cat.
Firs~ Ava.1 Gallipolii. Cell 614·
448· 8368.

Found, bllck and white young
male dog In Bowm1n Run area.
Jamuery 28th. Call 614·949·
2226 or 614·949·2062.
Found: Boat dock in Ohio River
first of December. Describe 1t
608\7 E. M1in St., Pomeroy.

Yard Sale

...

..'W.~
'~ a¥111

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

COMMERCIAL

W..t

Nortll

Eaot

Your local Bonanza
builder Is ready to build
an attractive and efficient
building for a lot less-than ,
you'd think . .. see him to·
day for a free estimate!

Pus
Pass
Pus
Pass
Pass

2t

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Paos

BURT BUILDING CO.
RT. 2. BOX 71

3t
It

s•Pus

Soot~

2+
a
t+

( tlllJ! I' 1•

!

ti

CAll COllECT 614·664-3001
TOLl FlEE 1-800·637-2046
Malrin l:r• •i,- SaiN R i.'pre.rent~tir·r: .

• l!llli Amr:r"·an llnnd,. ~nt~w l:1l, Ill\:,

moyer, 8t4·24&amp; · &amp;152.
814·

Standing timber . Call 814-3792768.

Basement Moving Sale. Feb. 1,
2 • .t ............. ~ .......
acro11 hom Hubbard• Gr-.nhouae in Syrecuse. 9:00-.3:00.

Wented to buy: Horses a. ponies.
Call 814-446- 3889 or 268·
6808 .
Buying daily gold, 1sil...,er cains,
rings. jewelry, slerling ware, ol_d
coint, large currency. Top pn·
.,.., i.P lurk•tt Barber Shqp,
2nd. Ave. Middloport. Oh. 814·
982-3476.

Experleocad cook and pie mak~ ·
need~ al Kountry Kitchen Relt.,
R8w fur, beef aRd deer hides.
taurant in Recine. Approxl-.&lt;,w.
Gyn Sing end YelloW root. We ,· mately26hn. a week. •3 .2&amp;hr...
ha\11 wheat and nite lites.
Cell 614 · 949 - 2324 for ;.
1
Trapping supplies for Mle. (Buy·
interview.
·
ing ua:ed trapt ). Last day to buy
,,
fur , Feb. 6. 1988. George
Excenent wages for ~p~re time ~
Buc:kley. Hours 12·9 . 614-164- aaaembly work; electronics.'' ! ·
4761 .
crefts. Other&amp;. Info 1-604-841 -.. '/
0091 E1tt. 3021 . Open 7 days.,..--------~~~~ ~ ­
Complete households of furni·
~omen who want 10 earn elltfs-l 1 ,
ture &amp; antique1. Al10 wood &amp;
coal heaters. Swain's Furniture mcome. M uat be 18 or alder. l.f J .
qualified m-v •tart immediately, ..: ·
•
Auction , Third &amp; Olive,
c_.n_ •_,_4·•9
_ 8_·_
43_7_o.____~;.614-446·3158 .
-'
AVON • All erea1. Call Marilvll ~ '
Standing timber. Cell &amp;14-742·
Wea\llar 304-882-2646 .
-C:
2328.
R.N ., phylieians· office, plene,..J ·
send resume to Box C-16 care of ' ' .
Point Pleaaant Register, 200 :~ ­
Main St., Point Pleasant, W. Va .. ;.
25550

Fmptovment
Servrr.es

L.P.N .-P.H.

11

Help Wanted ·
BE A NANNY

S126- 8400- week

100's of positions a"'ailable
nationwide with preecreened
loving ftmiti... AIR FARE paid.
1-800-942-2278
National Nanf!vnetwork
Sell Avon . Get your own A\lon '
at • diaeount . CaH 614·4483358.
·.
EXCEllENT WAGES for spare
time assembly work: eleGtron·

iClt. creft1. Others. 11-.to. can
1 · 504-841 -0Q91. !~~~:t . 2987.
Open 7 day1 . CALL NOW I

i :·~

Pleaunt Valley Nursing Cars .
Center seeking energetic li· ._..
censed Practical Nur..s. lmme-... •
diate part time employment. ' ·.
bpe:rienced In long t&amp;rm eare .. •
prelet"red . hceltent fringe be-&lt;i
netit and salary package. Call·. ·
perso~nel ofica, Pleasant Valley ·;
Hospital. 304 · 675 - 4340 , ,
E.O .E.· A.A.

------- - ··
Clerical position .veileble; appll·

1
.':

cant mu1t be proficient with ~
calculator and tvpeWriter, llaw•r "
g!Jod sales and eustomer sltllls,
previous clericaluperience pre:J", ,
ferred. E.O.E. Send resUme tO:"i
R. 0 . Box 26, Point Pleaunt, wv;.·

25560.

.: •

- - -- ----"" "

"

Tired of paying too much for a new truck?
Stop in and see the new GM.C SIE.RRAS and
the S-15 JIMMYS at Smith's . GMC. Our
prices are low everyday. We'll ,give you mora
for less.
in and talk to Herb Smith .

BENNETT MOBILE HOME
HEATING/COOLING

' .r

.ANNOUNCES

AN INCREDIBLE TWO WEEK SALE ON
THE #1 PERFORMING FURNACE FOR
MOBILE HOMES•••

Announcing money-saving
news for State Farm drivers
50 and over.
°

st

YOU BUY THE

6+

FURNACE AND WE'LL
INSTALL IT

Opening lead: • 9

'
.

CAIOil SHOWDIN

So near
~nd yet so far

(or.

Third &amp; State

Gol"poli•
Phona: 446·4290
llante:

'

Service: 446·2648

..... , _ MtOfCC JIUIDR lUI ftd • • Call J .,.,.

SAUNDERS .INSURANCE INC.
I ll

=-'

'We Manage Your Risk"
U7 Second Avenue, Gallpoll•
Oppo1lte the Polt Office

'SINCE

1951

$$$$$$

ON INSTALLATION CHARGES
AUTO

.\'

SO HURRY,· GIVE US
A CAU.
446-9416

0

HEALTH

YOU IAYI-Y 11LL fll.
14,'1911

OROUP

·WI .CAllY l ,COJIPLITE

'

"

&gt;

Mori.-·TU.jtt~

Thul'lday &amp;·8ttlln:ttay -

$1'

Noon

JOHN M. MUNDIRt -IlTtY IAUNitillt 0-0AY
HOIIMRO IAICIR t .AUNDiil .:.. ~Nil HIMIIMILL

"'

'

;

FREE

SO IF YOUR GAS, OIL
OR ELECTRI(
FURNACE IS SHOT,
WE'LL INSTALL THE
NEW ONE FREE.
SAVE HUNDREDS OF

~me Office: Bloomington. llti11Qi~

•
P.Jl

·,;

'

(ON EXISTING FUEL SUPPLY)
DOESN'T INCLUDE FUEL
CONVERSIONS

II

446-0404

'

Went to buY : Used furniture and
antiques. Will buy entire house·
hold turnilhing. Martin Wede·

tur•. some •ppli•ncn.

i

Flrt' ''IJimtum Jlll.'rlom1ann· ~~IC'I t~~f1·1~··"\' n.•m twuM·n!l ~·nu ;....lh l !ht,• rlll"llcr't~ tmlllWII brfor\o ~inlllho unit .

Eastern

Wanted To Buy

446-2532

HOMIOWNIRS
.FARM

It's a Handa

1911

Us~ mobile homes. Call

HONO!\
pq ...... '

Buick-Pontiac.

WATERFORD, OHIO 45786

GENERATORS 650¥·4500¥
IN STOCK.
WATER PUMPS 1112"·3"
IN STOCK

Open M·W 9-ls, Closed Thurs.
' Fri. 9-6, Set. 9·15

:1i~.~:~~f:~;•on·

446-0175.

Middleport

133 Pine $t., Gallipolis, Ohio

We P•Y Cllh for tete model clean
uMd c1re.
Jim Mink Chev.- Oidl lne.

218 Third Ave.~ Feb. 1, 2, 3 . 9-?.
Curtains, drepet. furniture. pic.

.......P.om'iirov ........ ..

'

Wanted To Buy

Ave .. Oolllpoli• . Coli 614·446·
2282 .

9" 5.

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK
CENTER.
.

9

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

&amp; Vicinity .
Gallipolis Flee MarltM · Former
Thaler Gsrag... Rt1. 36 • USO.
Open Siturdevs li Sundey1.

lngSyatem
ConlldentioNty;
The Agency ohott inein·
teln oil financial raporto in ac·
cordance with ge~Mrally ac·
cepted accounting , princ ~
pies and procedures tBoard
Policy 8 .01.. 00.00).
JAN. 31

Wed.meye(a Auctio.n &amp;entice·
tvailable at your con...,enience •
and locations. Marlin Wede·
meyer Auction-- 114-24551&amp;2.

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used c.-1.. Smith

citltleo
Stato Building 'Codes
Quality Auurance
Clincial Recording-keep-

9

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

·······GallTpolii ....... ..

SOUTH
.AKQJ74

t A J 10
+AKQJ

Go,ernment Jobs. 11 6,040l :
$69,230 year. Now Hiring. Yo ~
Area . BO!H5~7- 600Q Elt:t. A· .
9806 for current Federal lilt. . I·

Lost and .Found

7

portunity
·
St1te Regiktration~ Carti·
fication. and Licensure ·of
Proleulonol Stoff and Fe·

Neltded: A person to live-in with ·
an ekterty lady. light houHWOrk: •
room. bosrd end salery. C1ll
814·446-1092 ahar 7 PM
•

1- J(J

8

bueine11 in the State of
Ohio;
·
The Agency ohallodhere.to'
oil -.1 and otate towo and
regulation• •• they apply to
laclllttos, odmlniotretlve op·
....... end mentlll health
- · delivery. inctudirig.
but not limited to:
Equot Employment Op·

l· H -11 ·

N1F

Free. while .upply l11t1l Male
and female puppies. mixed
brM:d. For information, call
614· 742· 2137. lea...,• name •nd
phone number.

&amp; Vicinity

'

Ladiet needed tor good P•Vi#
tempor•rv ~ffice · like work.
expet'ithee nec ....ry . AIIJO ntH ~·
ladies with c ar for light d ..lveriwork. Gas allowanee. Appty in per•on only fab1olutely NO ....
phone calls ) to: Mrs. Cartet",Room 14, Econo Lodge Mote1 1
Monday. 9 AM to 9:30AM :

Cut YO\.'t own firewood. Call
814-992-1194.

6

Public Notice

We carry tho complete line of
genuine Honda llno r.rts and
accessories for loll a power
· oqulatnont.
•

Merle

~~fr~~H.~Ns:,r .• ~:~~!~
dltble Salon" where you never
need en epointment t Call 44891&amp;2 now tor details on how to
dalm your priJel There' ll be
.nother winner neltt week!

$TilTING AI $45000

H11 3111 ..." ........2050.00
H1l 3009 ............. 1795.00

Attention E~rolux cuatomera.

got permenent. from

rized fKtory MIN end ;Mt'VIct
FIESTA HAIR FASHIONS. 322 · repr..-t.tiw. Far HrVice c1ll
2nd . Aw., acro11 from Plrk.
304-937·2272 anvdmt,

OTUA~

lwt

SELF PROPELLED MOWERS

We'\111

CONGRATULATIONS!

+sst

WALK BEHIND .MOWERS
•

Needed AKC registered m'in'-"
ture O•ehthund for stud aenrice.
3Q.t. 773·811&amp;.

Spires. you have won • FREE

tU43

NOW IN PROGRESS THROUGH MARCH 31, 1988.

H1 3113 .....""""••2150.00
H1 3810 ....."'""··*2395.00

3 Announcements

BRIDGE

GARAGES

HONDA POWER EQUIPMENT SPRING AHEAD SALE
SlAmNG AT $35000

3 AnnQuncements

Arrrwurm: rr11' nt ~.
\

*19 . 99 ~omplete l No
Appaintment•·Just W1lk lnl

GALUPOUS, OH. 45631

LAWN TRACTORS
H1 4313 ....."••~...•3050.00

'·

'2 'a~

· Tho Hocking Valley Credit
Unlcin. Inc. reHMI the
right to oiccopt or rejtc:t any
end oil bido and to whhdroPublic Notice
WIIIol the vehlclea tram ....
prior to confirmation.
Ttnno of Sofa; Caoh-Ctr· tlea.
· tiliod Check or financing
Priority-will be given to lfl·
conli,..tlon ot lhe time of ptk:anta whooe propoulo
Hit.
oddreu the needo of opec:lot
JAN. 28. 29. 31
populatlono, ouch •• oevere
mentlllly diHbiod.
ApPtlcotiono may be ob·
Public Notice
talned prior to February II by
catting 1114) 4411•3022 or
LECfAL NOTICE
may be plctced up at tho
The Mentil . Health Board Board ollicM at 414 Second
of Goltla, JackiOn Md·Melgo Avenue. Room 202, Gatti·
counties iil-ng propouto polio. Ohio.
lor the provlolon of llddhlonat
In eccordence with our
outpltient countellng ..,. Board policy. application•
viOh to be dotlveled prior to lhall be provided to ogencloo
July 1. 1888. In Meigl •"!I whoM organizatioMI atrilc~
Jackson countiee. Contracts ture. -•ting pollcleo and
witrbt awardtd to commun· procedu"'· and oervlce de·
ity oganctos who can provide livery adhere to the follow·
lot~ criteria;
.
· - · ouch ••·
••
outpatient
The Agency aholl be o pub·
counoeling.-dlognoatlc
tic or private lor-profit. or
· management.
omargency -end· not·lor·proflt. agency duty
~ce. caM
pra-holflitalizatlon -ina COflatitutod ~K&gt;der the Ohio
In Meip •nd JackiiOR coun· Reviled Code to conduct

NORTH

FARM / EQUIPMENT STORAGE

LAFF-A-DAY

-out

Flowering tree
seedlings good choice

Sales: 446·2240
. •·

next two .years,· Scaling said.
"The sooner' fa rmers ask tor a
plan. the greater the chance that
we w.lll get to, everyone by the
deadline."
\
Scaling said only 20 perceni of
the highly erodlb).e cropland was
placed under a conservation plan
as of Oct. 1. 1987. "Our goal is to
have 65 percent of this land under
a conservation plan by the end of
1988 and the rest by the end of
1989," h'e said.
Another option is to enroll
highly erodible cropland In the
Conservation Reserve Program
(CRP) . Under CRP, landowners
receive annual rental payments
for puttiqg highly·erodible cro·
pland ·Jn permal)ent cover such
as grass or trees. The next CRP
slgnup will be Feb. 1·9, 1988.
Since hlgllly erodible land Is
not always obvious· to the eye.
farmers should check with their
local SCS olllce to see If they have
land that meets the criteria.
" Contacting the local SCS
· office for a conservation plan
soon Is probably one of the
smal't!!St New Year's resolutions
an upright thorny plant. It is
a fa rmer can. make," Scaling
widely planted for ornament.
said.
"Most farmers who partie I·
Fruits are used in preserves ant!
pate
in
USDA programs cannot
vi~egar . Theya~e related to the ·
afford
to
lose those benefits; The
mountain ash.
eco.nomy
of
most rural communi·
This collection of ornamental
ties
is
dependent
on the financial
trees might make a lovely
farmers\"
.
health
of
its
addition to your landscape. In
addition to this packet the
following are available: nut tree
packet. fruit packet, White .
Scotch, .and Austrian. Pine, Nor·
way and Colorado Blue Spruce,
THE BRAND THAT
Hybrid Poplar, Canadian HamMAKES THE Dt!TERENCE
lock, a s well as Crownvetch
ground cover.
·
For more ·infqrmatlon please
contact our oflice at 446-8687.
Orders. must be prepaid and
made by March 16.
·

.

.

Sixth CPR signup Feb. 1-19··
B:r Cout•.,C., s. Wbl&amp;e

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,,

614-44'-'9416

·-

�'

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" -~ ..

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.... . ·: '" ..
~

I

Page D-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel
31

a.

your

your own boaa, wOrk
hour~ , Illes plotition, tonto

own

miAton. unlimit.d oppanunky,

in..-viewa Feb. 8, 1 :00. 2413
J1akaon Ave., Point Ple... nt.
W . Y41-, 304 -171- 1721•.

12

Situations
Wanted
'

I

Lonely pr•actrooler need• company. Will baby sit free anothar
pr•~oler couple hours drt
tl~ in I Mlddlepon. Grendme.

Homes .for Sale

4 ~R .. flrepl.c:e. fullbu• .,t. 3
m1. 10. of GeHipollt: t29, 900.
C1ll D•v•·IS1 4 -446-181 1 . after

s,oo. 44t - 124C.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1970 Clmbridgt 1b70. gu
hut, 3 BR, 1 Yli bath. Extra nice
throughout . tS90Q. Call 6'4·
4441 -0176.

January 31. 1988

Pomerov-Middleport-'-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

TMU DAILY C. f1'ii"' ,i\
,UUUI 0~ J.'QU
_ _ _ __:_.: ld;r.d by CLAY l!

51 Household Goods
PatLAN _;;....._ _ __

LAYNE'S FURNITURE .

.,

Furnished 2 BA . Mobil a Home.
Loc1ted at K • K MohiM Home
ref.
· Park· Eastern Ave. O.p.
required. Call 81•· 268·1 187.

Reo rronge fMe 6 scrcmbled
O words
below to ..,oke 6

3 '*~'oom- Me1ropoli&amp;en HoUs·
ing 1pproved. Children &amp; petl

I

a

sitnole word!
Print letters of
eocM in its line of squore$.

KAWEEN

'"lcom• kyoar CrMk Schc*s.
Coii'I14-4Ct-1410.

I II I

2 bedroom mobile home in
Middltport, Ohio. Reference
and Security deposi1 requlrM.
304· 882-3267 •• 304-773·
6024.
.

2

1- 1

From Gallipolis, take Rt. 141, turn left onto Rt. 775,
turn ri&amp;ht onto Cadmus Patriot Road. Watch for
signs.
.
•
.

.
L

I X A T, L Y

614-992-7216.

San.lor citizen. Room and bolfd
for one lady. Special care in my

BOWMAN INTERPRISES INC.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988 at 7:00 P.M.

I

EVERYTHING NEW.
PARTIAL LISTING: Tools, han- tools, household, whatnols, &amp; much, much more. ·

.

home. RtNOneble. Cell 6149992-6873.

13

Insurance

Call ua for your mobile home

33

home. life. health.

30 acre f•m: Moatly tillable.
Near Rio Grinde. Pond. barns.
good home. Call 614· 2469162.

18 Wanted.td Do
Will quilt your tops or make
quilts. Caii.Petty at 614 -446·
8393.
~ill

do Federal and Stale Income
Tuu; typing, booking, and
Notary service. Margaret Parker
614-992-2264 . .
Give piano. Casio Keyboard and
orttan leuons in my home to
beginners. advanced studenu.
Also teach chording and trans·
Pfling. If interested call 614·
992-5403.

Busirwss
Opportunity

35 Lots &amp; Acreage ·

370 acres. Apple Grove. W .Va .,

LuJiiury Tara Apartments. Ele-

Rt. 2 frontage, sand, gravel,
coal, l9cat,d 4 miles from Dam
site. Ideal ' for divelopmen1;
304 -529- 2360.

Renta Is
41

Homes for Rent ·

- - - - -- 3 BA . house &amp; garage. A -1 Real

1000 SUNBEDS
TO'NING TABLES
Sun&amp;l - Wolff Tanning Beds,
SlenderOuest Passiv• Exercis·
a rt. Call for FREE Color Cata·
Iogue. Save to 60 per cent ,
1-800-228 -6292.
Beauty Shop for sale in town .

Call 614-992 -3664 lor more
information.

.•

Real Estate
· 31

Homes for Sale

Bfand new 3 BR . near Gallipolis
LQ'cks on Rt. 7 . 2 car garage. nice
lr,U. Immediate PDIIeasiDn. Will
c.onsider trade iii of mobile
h:Ome, prDperty, etc. Bargain
priced. Cal1614-446- 8038~
2 bedroDm . 2 baths, 2 car
garage. level lot on Rt. 33.
SWimming pool, satelite. close
tO Meigs Higk Call 614 -992325 4 .
HOuse for sa le. Will se ll on land
contract with $6000 down.
Mking 524,000. Call 614-992·
2852 or 614-698-6817. Will
c·~f1Sider mobile home on trada.
7 " room brick house 1 carpet.
double garage. sto~o~e . and refrig·
erator . UJlper end of Mason.
304 · 773 -5397 '

F.Dr sa le: Bi·leVel, three bedroom
hOme. familY room. one clllr
girag e, 'situated on 1 '\'Cre m -1. lh
rn1. from Rutland . Call Hobstetter Realty , 614-742 -3092
1

room house 1 % bath. 4
bedroom on Gravel Hill . Garage.
l70 Ash St Middleport, Ohio.
G,all 614 -992 -5714.
~ bedroom, large living room,
9at-in kitchen, full basement;
9arage. elec. Central Air, in
Tuppers Plains. 614-446· 7496.

1 'h story, new equipped kitchen.
large family room, AC , con1.1ie nt
location, priced on ins.pection.
304-675 -5027

.J bedrooms . 2 baths, full
finished basement, new furnace
11 t)d central air. garage, fenced
yard. low 60 's, 241 4 Mt . Vernon
Ave .. 304 -675 -1774.

1

Card of Thanks

CARD OF
THANKS
·: At lhe loss of our
··brother. Eber Reiber, we
: gralefully acknowledge
: our thanks to the doc· tors and stafl at the V.A.
:.Hospital in Huntington.
:;with special thanks to
··the Rev. Paul McGuire
: tor his consoling words.
To the Carmel-Sutton
· U.M. Churches and to all
our friends, our heartfell thanks go out to all
'of you for the cards,
letters. food , and most
of all for your prayers.
To the pastor, Debi
Foster and her husband ,
.John. we give special
-thanks for their kind expressions of sympathy.

Nicely furnished smell housa.
Adults only. Ref. required . No
pets. Call 614-446-0338.
large 2·3 BR . house. Plenty of
storage. Henderson area . Call
614-446 -7026.
Nice 2 BR . house in Middleport.
OW, garbage disposal, AC, full
basement. Excel. location . Call
614-446-9205 a~er 5 :30. PM .
Furnished houae. ::1 SR. 29 Neil.
Gallipolis. 8225. Call446-4416
after 7 PM .

'

I0

'

er~m···
•"tr'
c

Fu·rnished apartment -7 Neil,
Gallipolis. 1 DR . 8226. Utilities
paid .' Call 446 -4416 after 7 PM.

44

0.1 SlliMSNY

46

Furnished Rooms

2 bedroom apartment on Lincoln
Hill. Pomerov. Call 614-992·
6539 or 614-992-3489.

46 Space for Rent

'

2 bedroom apt. for rent . Stove
end reJrigeretor are furnished .
Carpeted. Nice setting, Call
614 -892 -3711 E.O.H.

Commercial space. 1400 square
feet. corner Second and Pine.
Ample parking in reer , Call
446 -4249, 446- 2326 or 4464426.

5 room unfurnished apt. ior ren1.
CAll 614 -992-6434 or 304882 · 2566 .
1 bedroom apt. for rent . Utilities
paid. 3 1f.l miles south of Middleport. At. 7 . 614-367-0611 .

Mobile Home lot for rent. Total
electric. Priest Mobile Home
Park . Call614-387 -7438.

Clean 2 bedroom opt. New
Heven . 614·992-7481 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Call 61 4-992·
7479.

3 bedroom, 2 full baths. large
living room, dining room and
kitchen . Also laundry room. 2
c ar garage. central air. Eastern
School District . References re·
quired. Cell614-247. 4945 .

2 bedroom fu,nised apt, ref and ,
deposit. New Haven . W . Va ..
304·8·82 · 3267 or 304 -773 5024.

2 BR ., w / d hook·up. Adults
preferred, one child accepted.
No pets. Reference. &amp;165 plus
deposit. 174 Cole St ., Middleport, Ohio . 614 -992 -5597 or
, - 216 -836 -3952·.

Beach Street. Middleport. Ohio.
2 bedroom furnished apt, utili·
ties paid , references and deposit,
304-882-2666 .
Two bedroom apartment in
Henderson, 304-675- 1972 af·
tar 5.
Now accepting applications,
Mason apts, Meson. W . Va .
Contact Julie Johnson, 304·
773-5107.

2

'

Commercial bulldlnt tOr la1sa.
Downtown Pt. Plaaent. StOJes.
offices. A -1 Real Estate. Carol
Yeager, Broker . .Call 304-675·
6104.

APARTME,NTS. mobila homes.
houses. Pt. Pleasant and GallipQ·
,;,, 614-446-8221 .

3 bedroDm house. $175 month.
Mulberry Ave . Call 614 -9925587 or '61 4-992· 7450.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances ,
Upper River Rd. beside Stone
C_
rest Motet 814-448-7398:

5,oo.

11

Spaeloua mobile home lots for
rent . Family Pride Mobile Home
Park . Gallipolis Farry. 304-6763073 .

47 Wanted to Rent

Rocker recliner,. ·good
S95. 304·882 -2204.

cond.

Help Wanted

MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER

614-245-5152

SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE 82
Olive St.. G111ipalia .
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- $399 .
Uving room tultes- e199-t&amp;89.
Bunk beds wllh bedding· $189.
full siie m1ttraq 6 foundation
starting· t99 . Reclineu
ttartlng· 1~9.
USED· Btdt. drnHn. bedroom
sultet , t199 -e299 . Dnk•.
wringer washer, a complete line
of used furniture ,
,·
NEW- ,W~ern boots· •30.
Workboots •1s &amp; dp . (Steel &amp;
soft toe). C~II'&amp;14 · 44B - 3159· .

J • S FURNITURE
(FMm•lly P•nan' s Fumhure)
_
1415 Eestern Ave.
Uving room auitas from t179 •
up. B~room suites $481.85 &amp;
up. Complete microweve stands ·
t39.95.
Came Jn and m"t thi new
Ownel'l.

Cour\ty Appliance, Inc. Good
uNd appliances· and TV lett.
Open 8AM to IPM. Mon thru
&amp;St. 114-446•1899, 827 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH.
Amana side-by·side 22 cu. ft . .
tefrig , freezer- ice m111.-.
avoceda. O.E. electric r1nge '
with hood. 1vocado. C1ll
114· 246 -9521 a.fter 1 PM.
MlyT-oWringerwadl•. t100,
Sp......-uetn washer and dn..r,
........,.
• ....
t200, Salf-defroat refrigerator,
186, EIIICtfiC dryer, •100. Ci!ll
614 •742 . 2362 ,

"P·

Kenmore waaher-wh~. •7&amp;.
Kenmore waaher·copP,ertone.
$76 , CJ .E. WUher-AVICidO
19J!5 . 4 slde-by·lide refrigeratori
from e1715 . Frigidaire ratrlg•r•·
tor. t85. 2 door refrigerator·
avacado, tl&amp;. 30 ln. eleC.
rlng•harvelt gold, t96. 38 ln ..
,ttec. range-white, 176 . Gas
,.nge-avacado, t71 . Skaog•
'
Applianc:"
679 Up~r River Rd., 814·446·
.7398

53

For Full Jime Position•
Apply In Persori

446-4206

•

Bonnie Stutes
Jim Stutes

WHAT A BEAUTY! BRICK privacy, over 3.000 sq. fl. living
space, formal entry, living room &amp;formal dining room . 4.bed·
rooms. 2 ~ bath s. Beautifu l kitchen with handmade cabtnets,
double oven s, dishwasher, new stove top. Full finished ba se·
ment, lg. family room with woodburn ing fireplace. Heal
pump &amp;central air. large covered and screened in porch ..2
car garage. lots ol shrubbery and plants. large pond tn
back, all thi s setting on 3.61 acres more or less. Prrced under
$100,000.00.
.

.-

.

.. LISTINGS NEEDED!
We .have lots of good buyers
for your property.

, BUSINESS AND HOME- Need an EXTRAINCOME'Thisisa
. carry-out, grocery and bait busmess. A drive·thrqugh has
been re.c~ntly added Also a home only 11h 1ears old w/living
l ::· ::;i~r~and fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. lamily room and
h
kitchen, all appliances. Built-in microwave oven.
Stereo system.
·

SALESPERSON
.NEEDED

· EXCELLENT BUILDING LOT- 5 acres, more or less. Partially wooded. City schools.

2 Bedroom, Price
Down Payment, 1 0'12
Monthly payment 5266.89 P.l. ·

yra.

MODERN RANCH HOME - 3 bedrooms, LR. FR w/ wood·
burner. full basement, 'h lot. Kyger Creek schools. Priced
$40s. ·

STUTES REAL ESTATE

COOPER.
_CHIYSLER-PLYMOm-DODGE
MIDDLEPOn, OliO ·

Real Estate General

Model12 - 12 ga •. Browning 16
ga., Univtrtll 12 g'a., 31 Remington 12 91 . Cell 614-446·
3348 .

Vaat Cotf

SHIP

·

PRICES

$32,000- 4 bedroom home and ov~r 15 acres.
Living room. lg. kitchen with birch cabinets. Stor age bu ilding and some marketable timber. Call lor
more details.
#2504
TWO YEARS OLD AND QUALITY BUILT!- 3 bedroom colonial brick ranch and 1'4 acre m/ 1with 2
car garage, basement,lormal dining area, 2 baths,
fireplace, family room. den. Excellent location and
much more.
#2527

Double /1#1\ Construdion

LOVELY 1 BEDROOM HOME WITH SPACIOUS
LIVING ROOM, dining area and kilchen. Mud
room to the covered patio. 3;\ basement. I car attached gara ge, lighted closets; Iron porch. I ac.
lawn. located in Vinton.
#2505

fORCED SALE- Approx. 39 acres, 3 bedrooms.
2 bath lrame hi-level. unattached garage. Owner
needs QUICk s;jlet.PRICEO $52,900.
#25 38

Bidwell Cash Feed Stora now
re1dy for spring. In stock ell
tob1cco supplies, all fenilb:er.
fencing. garden Med •. wa1ar •
drain pipe . Call for latest prices614-388-9188 .

CABIN &amp; ACRES &amp; ACRES! PRICE REDUCED!!
Now as kin&amp; $9,900.00.·HuntinR cobin opprox. 5
years ora. wellrnsulaled. Secluded and nestled m
the wood. Rura l water available.
#24B8

PASTURE FARM Y/ITH 25 ACRES- Barn and
lovely ranch style home Home h~s 3 bedrooms, I
large bath, kitchen , breakfast room, formal dining
room, formal 'living room with fireplace, lamily
room, lurnace room and utility rm. Addi son Twp.
Priced in the $60s. ' !
#2496
2 LOTS. $5,000- Includes sept tc and rura l water. Call lor more details.
#2513

· SPECIAL'..,- Owner moving away,doesn't want to
leave thi s home empty, so to promote the sale
they are willing to GUIIhe price. Big kitchen, living
room. rec &amp; fa mily rooms, and more on double
sized lot. Reduc ed lo $55,000.00.
#2 485

Mi•ed hardwood slabt. t12per
bundle. Containi119 appruJl. 1\oJ
ton . . FOB . Ottio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. 814·992-6461 .

DENIM , C1rh1i1,
Rental Clothing. New heavy
coverall• $22.00. huvy new
work clothing, bootaall winler et
reuoneble prices, Sam Somerville',~;, Old Rt. 21 -juncdon
Independence Road, East Ravenswood, Fri, Sat. Sun; noon8 ' 00 pin. 304 -273-6866 .

Buildings

FREE
ESTIMATES

ni&gt;ECTI Very pleasant and
spotless. 3 bedroom, 1
frame.and brick
ranch. Bright kitchen
formal drntng area.
large 12'x26' family room and attached garage.
located minutes lrom Stiver Bnd ge shopprng lor
convenience. Take a peep and you'll be im·
pressed.
#2542

FARM- 147.5 acres more or less.- 2 story Ira me
home wtlh 4 bedroom s. living room. family room .
fireplace. 31arge rms.. mineral rights and tobacco
base rncluded. Harnson Town ship.
#24 69

Trimline Treadmill. £Keel. cond.

SUAPLU~

'

VACANT ACREAGE - Over 36 acres. Developed
spring. Several teet olroad lrontage. Call for more
information. $12,000.
#2478

MoviMg, must sell two cemetery
lots It Meigt Memory G1rdena.
Will sail both for 8600. C.l'
114-992·6240.

Garages
Storage

LOW,
LOW

LOOKING FOR SOME PEACE &amp; QUIET?- Then
come and see. this cozy log cabtn nestled on 42
acres more or less. 3 bedrooms,,living room. parlial basement, electric heat pump. Owne.r willin g
to help with the linancing. Inquire today' #2544

Cell 614· 448·81 89 after &amp; PM.

bo•••·

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY ~ Mobile Home
· Court -large building, very nice home. 10 mobile homes, 11 mobile home spa ces. lighted
streets, river vtew, great in come property. Call for
complete listing.
#2492

132 P".RES MORE OR LESS AND 2 STORY HOME
- Barn and bu ildtngs, tobacco base, pond. ApPrOx. 7 miles lrom ctty. Ca ll lor more deta ils!
#2535
FAIRFIELD ACRES is your place to be~Good lo·
cation oil Fairfield-Centenary Road in .Green
School District. Allractive 3 bedroom brick and
alum. ranch, large family room with fireplace,
woodburner. plu s 2 nice lots at end of develop·
men! lor added privacy. The best part isthe price.
.. $42.500. Call today .
#2494

20 cu. ft. Hotpoin1 cheetfreezer,
$160. 2- 8 ft. tool box.,·tide
mount for pic;k-up, t400. 8 inch
chimney blower for wood stove,
$1~0. Coll614 -266-1891 .

U Haul trucks and traHrs for
'""'· 304-676· 7421 .

I

LIKE NEW - Contemporary home, 3 or 4 large
bedrooms, 2 full balhs. oflice, large entertain ing
room lor the fam ily or executive. Well equipped
kitchen and lormal dining area. Wrap-around
deck facing beautiful valley. MuHi-luel syste m
(coal, wood, or propane gas!. 3 car garage and
workshop with ipprox. 3 acres of lan d.
#2463 '

'SWIMMING PoOLS - $999 ·
Ne""( left over 1987 Mode4
Pool•. Hugh 16x24 ft. swim
aret, 4 ft. dnp. Includes deek.
fence, fitter • werranty.lnlltlila.
tion &amp; financing av1llable. Cell
24 hn., 1·800·341-0946.

1976 OMC pickup 'h ton 16
Mrl•. 360 engine ~ Standard
trans. New clutch, motor runs.
but needs work. 1400. 4000
tobacco or .toruto aticka. 1 a
cents Hch. ,3 tobacco tNIIe
e100. for all, 10 pea.
uNCI tin rooting, 12.00 eec;h .
210 gallon wat,r tank . Horse
drtwn plows. Cell 114.3792437.

6-6610

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - 3 bedroom ranch.
spactouskilchen,living room , bath, formal dining,
util ity. Attached garage wtth elec. opener. Fenced
back lawn. ln,town location. Pr rce reduced to
$43,000.
#2534

Firewood fOr sale-All hard wood.
Delivered· 836 . C•ll 814-4461437.

1977 4x4 Chevy :IJi ton pick -up.
O.narel Electric cook stove.
Oliver tractor with end- loader .
Colt 814-379· 2798. ·

388·B166
379-2184
446-G46B
446-2230
446-B866
676-3988
446-2707
742-3171

NEWLY LISTED! 162 FIRST AVENUE - 2 story
Victortan style home wtth character an d style. 4
bedrooms, I I\ baths, lar ge foyer , nice woodw ork.
Nice corner lot. lovely view of river . Atti ccou ld be
linished lor additional ,space. Call f_or complete
listing'
#2543

By

Pink &amp; white full length pr'om
gown. aiie 3. 860. Call 304676-6491 .

•

SOUTHEitN HIUS U., INC.

AntiQuft, buy or Mil . Riverinle
AntJques, 1124 East M1in St.,

Keystone Cla11ic Maga- Dodge
or Ford . Exercise machine. Barr
generator, tools, knives. crefta,
terps. Call614·367-0841 ,

JUDY DEWITT BROKER ·
J. Merrill Caner REALTOR
Becky Lane
REALTOR
Phyllis Loveday REALTOR
Patrick Cochran ·REALTOR
liz Long
REALTOR
Sonny Garnss :·REALTOR
Charyl Lemlsy
R!=ALTOR

lediH have~ Jacket, tizl 12.
The Hldat in thil coat were
tr~pped In Ohio, Tanned in Ohio,
and the COI!t wu made In Ohio.
$360. Phone 814·949·301&amp;8
efter 6 p.m .
·

54 Misc. Msrchandise

QUALITY
WORKMAN-

REALTOR®.

Buy &amp; Sell Antiques. Buck..,.
Peddler, 114-448-7812, Even·
lngt &amp; weekends.

Callahan'• Used Tire
1.000 tiret, sites 12.
18, 16.6. 8 miiH out At.
Call614 -258 -8261 .

Real Estate General

I~

Antique•

t,

Sunday

Real Estate General

,and Wed. 10,:00 a.~ .-8:00 p.m.,
Pomerq.y.
· Mon ..p.m.
Tuaa ..
1 ,oo, Hours:
p.m.-8,oo
·chance or epPointment . .Russ
Moore. 114-992-2626 . . ·

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE - Qutel but convenient 4 bed·
room home. I \1.&gt; baths, living r~om and,.lamily room both lealure woodburners. lg. modern kitchen and laundry room. F.
R Home has 1504 SQ. II. living space. City schools. Setting on
1.4 acres, also 2 car garage unattached.

Real Estate General

.

BorM
Wanted 1o Rent· Needed immediately 3 or 4 bedroom house to
rent in Gallipolis. Call614· 767·
2762 after 6pm.
·

Antique Wino Back upholstery
chair. Queen Ann Legs. Pair of
Mahogany and tables. llood
condition. 814-992 -6861 .

Partial Listing; Sofa &amp; chairs, tables, stereosh~ooden desk,
gold &amp; silver nngs, dishes, hand tools, &amp;muc .'much more.
Gun s, J. Stevens 22 rill_e, Remrngton 221ongnlle, nylon ,66,
auto. Blackhawke.
Old Coins &amp; Money: One dollar silver-certificates .. Red Seal
two dollar bills, large si ze two dollar bills, large size two dollar
lederal ' reserve notes, Bulfalo nrckels, Mercury dtmes, V.nickel's, sealed half dollars, Franklin hall dollars, draped bust
type half dollars, seated ~u,arter, three cent piece,_two cen.t
piece, s1lver dollars, lnd tan head pennres, Nashvrlle Coc_
ac
Cola 7th anniversary one troy oz .. 999 frne srlver. sertal
#025548.
SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00 P.M.
DOOR PRIZES· GIVEN WEEKLY
Consignments accepted from 1:00-5:00 P.M. on Saturday.
Have something you want to sell? Contact Marlin Wed•
meyer, Auctioneer. Arrangements lor pick-up service
available.
'·
Barn and auctioneer available lor public auction on con·
tract. Contract includes hauling and lransportin&amp; all
merchandise.
Resident and business auction service also available.

-WANTED-

Space for small trailers. All
hook-ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms. air and cable Mason,
W .Va . Colt 304 -773-6661 .

3 Announcements

In Memoriam

PICKENS USED FU.RNITURE
Beds~ ' desks, lamps. 'tables,
coucha, cheira. dinnens. mise,
Half mile out Jericho Road,
8:00 -8 : 00 Sundays 12 :00 ·
304-67&amp;- 1460.

.

Office Space for rent. E~~tcal .
-downtown Gallipolil locatiqn.
Inquiries call814 -446-4222 .

3 bedroom house for rent in
Syracuse. Call 614-992- ~689
after 5:00.

Unfurnished house for rent . Fully
ca rpeted, nice, and clean. energy
efficient . Will except 1 or 2
children . 614. 992-3090.

51 Household Goods

Merchandtse

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . hDuse with fu ll basement.
Reference &amp;. deposit required.
Call 614 -446-0891 .

Convenient 2 8R conage in
Gallipolis. 5 rooms plus basement and garage. Call 614 -4461890 or 61 -446-2326 .

Al/Xtrl

N3&gt;1'13M
SE"'·VY\fi:!~S

If · I

51 Household Good• '

Saturday, February 6, 1988 at 7:00 P.M.

3f&gt;f1Ei0
' J.Yvlff&gt;IEI

14 n PII40PIIWJIIII86unoA Jill OIMJ

2 BR .. with firaplace &amp; 112 acre.
S250a mo. Call614-44§· 7881 .

Cottaoe efficiency, total electric, refrigerator. stove. nice.
HUD approved. 2216 Mt. Ver·
non A"" .. Pt. PfeaNnt. · 814992· 5868.

II I

3~Ntno

'-IJ'IJO P841jUOWp!l ,,'JIIqW8W81:f.,

Weakly. monthiV rat as, utilities
paid. Cooking facilities. Downtown location. Saniors wei·
came. Park Central Hotel. CaU
614-448-0756.

Lerge 2 SA ks. with s'ove &amp;:
refrigerator . . S225 P.er month .
Deposit ra«Juired . Vinton area.
Co11614 -388-8121 .
'

r I'

, ; 'NOUYNiE&gt;Y~I JnoA S!
SJ8fo\8ua A11snan l'ltiM 'BliOOU~ uotl81
· -dw81 UIMIM., 'elle11oo .101 dn pel!QliCI

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room · apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Apartments 'in Middleport . . From
$215 . Including utilities . Call
614-992-7787, EOH .

Furnished 1 BR . house. 936 First
A\le . $200 plus rei . &amp; $50
deposit. Call 614-446 -4038 or
446 -1615.

I' r ·I'
I I I I I

51 Household Goods

looking for merchandise? Try the Patriot AuctiOft Barn!
We have all types of new and used merc~andise- Ap~li·
ance, furniture. antiques and collectors rtems. S?methrn&amp;
for everyone.
·

;Q _.... • • , .. . ....

Unfurnished. one' bedroom ~ar· 51 Household Goods
age apanment In Huntington, ' - - - - - - - - - WV. Call 304 -625-1061 or 1·
614-446-7603.

Furnished 2 8R . apartment.
Adults only. No pets. Inquire ot
First &amp; Olive St., uk for Rose
Stilner.

FROM GALLIPOLIS, TAKE RT. 141, TURN LEFT ONTO
RT. 775, TURN RIGHT ONTO PATRIOT CADMUS
ROAD . WATCH FOR SIGNS.

~

Pomeroy-Middl&amp;pQrt-Gallipoli~. Ohio-Point Pleasant. ·Vv, Va.

7~67~2~:;H~o~u~ro~9~-6~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.l
General
s""·

W/:1\fSIG

3 room &amp; bath apartment. 114
Stall! St. Call 814-446 -3366.

age.
area.
PM .

1-J I

!

Dlnettn $109 and up to •495.
Wood tllble w-e ch1in 128&amp; to
$711 . Desk UOO up 10 t375.
HutchM $400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w ·mlttrassas
t291S and up to t396 .' 81bYbedt
$110. Mat:tre•~•orbo•apringt
full or twin tiS, finn t78, end
118. OuMn aeta e225. KinU
UIO. 4 drswer chest 1&amp;9. Gun
c.binett e gun. Ges Dr !I:Aectric
r1nge e3715 . Baby m1ttree•s
US • 146. Bed frtmes 820,
t30 • King frame $60. Goad
ialectlon of bedroom suites,
n'!etll ctlbinlts, headbolrdt t30
and up to tt6.

' '
Valley Furniture
New and used furniture and
applicences . Call 614 · 441&amp; ·

Complete the chuckle quoted
by till ing In the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

1 1· 1 1

Rooms for rent ; day. week .
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 814448-9580. Rent as low as e120
month.

3 BR . house. 2 mi. out 141 .
$350 a mo. Oep, &amp; ref . required.
Call 614.- 446 -9280 after 5 PM
&amp; weekends.

Granny to her youngest grancl-

NOI.L 'P'Nif&gt;lfVYI

Nice 1 8R. apt. R1nge and .refrig.
furnished. Water &amp; garbage
paid. Deposit required . Call
614·446-4345 after 6 PM .

LESS
Approx. 4 miles
I polis on I
road; 2 acres 6
nice offices, 3 baths. a shower. loading
with 10ft. high
ele~trtc rollup door, 12 ft. hrgh electrrc roll up door at the side
entrance to the shop·area. Wired for a machine shop wilh a
large parts storage area. LOTS OF USES - WHAT'S YOUR
NEEO' SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. :..................
11661
.

1\\ STORY FRAME HOME with 3 bedrooms.ltving
room, bath. dining rotim. 'Hardwood lloors.
localed in Porter . Call for more in formation!
. ~2506

' NESnED IN THE TREES- Brick chateau with 6
acres, 3 bedrooms, 21ull bath s, 2 f1re places,livi_ng
room . dintng area. full divided basement wrlh
room lor fam ily room . Priced in lhe $60s.
#2481

OWNER WANTS A CONTRACT!! - Let's make
contact to see this lovell 4 bedroomhome. living
room. fam il yand rec. room s. forma l dining. lots of
stora ge space. E•cellent neigh borhood ol nice
homes and professional families. Wanls to se ll
now! Call to see lodayr
#2512

' I '#HI (.',•nlul'\' :!I Rt•.lll:::.!,1h.- Lurp (}rlltion .as tru llh.'l' ll;r tht• NM'. !- ..nd •• -: tro~Jcmo~r._~ uf Cl.'nlury 21 Rt'.all::~talt' Corpor•lion . Equiil Housing Oppoi-funity.
.
·
EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENO_ENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED.

•

.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 BR ,. water. sewage furnished .
Beautiful rnter view . No city
tues. Foster ' s Mobile Home
Park . Call614·446 · 1602.
Nice 2 bedroom trailer. Urge
yard . Kanauga. Ca ll 614 -446 7473.
Nice 3 BR . Mobile Home.
Convenient locatiOn-At . 7 . Par tially furn ished. Water paid.
$210. Co11614 -245-5818.
3 BR . Mobi le Home in cou,-.try,
wafer furni shed. 2 children.
S165 plus S136 deposit. Call
614 - 3~ 8 - 9686 .

· In Loving
Memory Of
ARTHUR ORR
Who passed

GALLIPOLIS

FLEA MARKET
FODlER THAL£1 GARAGE

RTS. 35 &amp; 160

Away

OPEN EVERY
SAT. 8t SUN.
TIL SPRING - 9 -5

Feb. 2. 1982
Sadly missed by
wife Ethel;
Children and
randchildren.

So

&amp; Sho~

u.

54 Misc. Merchandise

CAKE DECORATING LESSONS
Taught by Sllirley Smith

5 Lessons $)6.00 Plus Suppli~

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
446-7699 or
Real Estate General

Call or Stop. in to Sign Up for Clans

VALENTINE SUPPLIES
COOKIE CUnERS, SUGAR LAY -ONS
"&lt;!!
. NEW PRODUCTS
Malt, Hot Chocolate "Drink Mix,
Yallow Cake Mix, Granola

IB

REALTOR"

er

742-3171

"ORDER NOW"
HOMEMADE VALENTINE CANDIES

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY

We will deliver Chocolate Ros~s on Feb. 14!1

.OHIO VALLEf BULK FOODS
514 EAST MllN

'

992-6910

POMEROY

Real Estate General

Thanks to the Raw·
: lings, Coats, Blower fu&lt;neral Home for their
lind words and efficie-nt
service. and to all oth·
ers who helped in any
~way we are eternally
..crateful.
May God bless each
~
one of you.
; Bob and Wilma Rei~er
&amp; Family
George and Ruth
·.
Reiber &amp;Family
:
Margaret Johnson &amp;
, FatiiY

I

I I Ill I
.L_L-l-.L.,--L-..1.-.J.
&amp; ;;.~... I' 12 I' 1•

gant, 2 Br. 2 floor, lully
carpeted, CA ·and heat. Private
entrance, 8nclosed patio, pool &amp;
playground . Start·$ 299 per
month. Utilities not included.
Co11614.- 367-7860.

Newly-remodeled apartments,
unfurnished, one-bedroom ,
stove and 'efrigerator. water
included. t200. · t226. ~er
month . References and depOsit
required . Meximum occupancy:
2 adults. 1 child. Call 814 -4464249, 446-2326 ., 446-4426.

"Remember," admonished

I
I 0

M I D -~ A s
~-.;.;...,.:;.-=.-.':'-:"..;....:..,-of

~ Sofu end chairs priced ftom
t3815 lo til&amp; . T•blas UO tnd
up to •121. Hid•a·~t U90
to 119&amp;. AtcUner. 122&amp; to
$371. Umpt t28 to 11215.

90 Day• ume •• ca1h whh
1pproved credit. 3 Mil" out
Bulevile Ad. Open hm to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 114-448 0322.

I_.JI. .·.. . . .

L...

11 acre lot m Patriot. Price was
83500 now &amp;3000. Call 614379-2441 after 4 PM .

1

624-245-5152

1----TC:::..-.::;.U~Q,.:;E;-N:;-:1:..,--tlege, . "when temptation
1--l-1--~..1'__..1_9.....
I ~n~~· what u~!liiY answers

. 676 - 6104 . ~

BEAUTIFUL APARTMEI\ITS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES. 636 Jackton
Pike from t183 a mo. Walk to
•hop and movies. 614-446·
2568. E.O.H.

MARLIN WEDEll EYER, AUCTIONEER

child as he packed up fOr colo-

-;;:;;;;;h;d-;,;;:-;;;;;(·

Estate, Carol Yeager-Broker.
304-675-6104.
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO . recommends 1hat you
do business with people you
know, and NOT to send money
through _the meil un'til you kave
investigated the offering .

2 BR. apts. 6 closets, kit~;:hen ·
appl. fumished , Waaher-Dryer
hook-up , ww ctrpM, newly
peinted, deck . Regency, Inc.
Apts . Call 304-675· 7738 or

39.4 acret: Two older houses&amp; ·
~~;;;
outbulldtngs, pond. Apj,Ox. 20
F i
apt. ·ned to lil;,a,ry.
'II bl
professional adult only.
acrestt a e. coun1yweter, Fon:t · Parking. C.ll &amp;1 4-446-0338.
tracto,. KygM Creek schools.
$36,000; Neg. Call 614-388·
2 BR . apt. Stove &amp; refrig .
9704.
furnished . Near Go Mart. Call
614-446 -7026 .

Financial
21

1-: -ls. . ,I,: . G. :;~. .:O~t:. . . ; . 7IFE,I--il

Farms for Sale

inturance: Mill er lnsuranc::e.
3 0- ·882 -2145 . Also: a uto,

31.1988

~

·. AUTHORIZED 'DEALER
ROBERT GOOCH
P.O. BOX 426 ,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
~H.: (614) 446~0003

,_

.

wor•
'

:LI
.... II R'l

.....

ASSUI,~Ilt lOAII - 3 BR hprne w~h characler. Ow1111
wants to
on lhis one.
12514
NICE LARGER COUNTRY HOME and approx . 31\.acres, pond,
2 baths. Owner will help wrth financrng.
12451
FARMI Approx. 41 acres wilh older, 2 story home. Barn and
several buildings. Mineral rights included.
12530
NEW LISTING- One floor. I or 28R, with partial basement,
l!e~ neal home. WoWd malre a rice first home or reliremsnt :
nome. tn I'Omeroy. Sells for $18,000.
12531
THREE BEDROOM RANCH -like new condition. Very neat.
Hutchinson Subd., Rutland. $33.500 00.
12531

® •nd"-rndrmarll• 11 fOIIIW'l' 21 ROar E:ilat• f - l o n.
fCiii Huontnr..olppvrrunitl lit
, ·'
~SH OPFICI JIIINDII'BN!In'TI.Y

... ~~~~~- BUILDING LOT in Milj;"so·~~~;·ji~j;~;-·tt;;SI'ital. City
w
and sewer. Price $12.500.
.
BUILDING LOTS IN RODNEY II SD. I lor $4,300, tile
S5.000 . .

PIOICIPPI8
RIM UT~TI UITWIIIIIOH OffiOI OR

' . . . . . . . . . . .1

AN EXCEPTIONALLY NICE PIECE OF
LAND - 12.43 acres m/1, all flat. Springfield Twp.

BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER VIEW - 40
acres, more or less, home sites. Cily
schools. ·
·

HOME AND ONE HALFACRHORSALE-·
1050 sq.lt. of living space.LR, kitchen, di·
ing rm., bath. $10,900. Call tor more inlormation.
·

ONE YEAR OLD RANCH style home oilers3
. BRs, 1'h baths, kitchen w/relrig., range,
pump/cent. air, utility bldg., nice neigh·
borhood . .Call today lor an appointment.

THIS COULD BE THE ONE FOR YOU Ranch style home and approx. half an
acre. 3 BRs, LR, kitchen, FR, bath, fire·
place• WB stove. 2 car attached garage,
16x3l pool, chain link fence.

GREEN TWP. - 2.5 acres m/1, very nice
home offers 5 BRs, 2 baths, kitchen, dining
, rm., LR, carpet and hardwood, wood·
burner, new furnace. Call lor an appointment.
·
·

RODNEY CORA RD. - Beautiful home on
12 acres m/1. This lovely house is surrounded by lrees and oilers aunique floor
plan. living room features woodburner,
open ceiling design, kitchen, formal dining, 3 BR, 217 balhs, If. patio off qining
area, 26~4D barn and 5x24 garage. Call
for an appoinlment.

THIS HOME OFFERS A VIEW OF THE OHIO
RIVER THAT JUST DOESN'T QUIT!!! The lronl ol this home faces the river and
the owners have used glass to its full ad•
vantage. Beautilul living room with mir·
rored wall reftecting the river view,
beam~d ceilings, stone fite'place, dinette,
equipped kitchen. 3 or 4 bedrooms, family
room, retl. room , 3 baths. 2 car garage,
central air.
• ,_
PRICE REDUCED TO $39.9001 :... GREAT
BEGINNER HOME - This home offers a
large LR wrth fireplace, 'kitchen, dining
area, 3BRs, bath, lull basemen!, I car garage, deck. fenced yard jusl minutes to ,
lown on Rl. 141. Call lor an appoinlment,
GRAIIAI SCHOOL ROAD ranch offers kitchen w/r;rnge,
displ..
lR.
balh,

COMMERCIAL SITE FOR SALE - located
at 2206 Eastern Ave. All utilities available.

25 ACRES, 1/l, ON STATE RT.160- Old
barn and concrete block garage n property, rural water available. Call today' •

GREEN TOWNSHIP- $38,000- Ranch
style home offers 3 BRs, bath, kitchen, LR,
carpet, 1 car attached garage, close \o
Green Elementary.

~OTS OltPOfE'NTIAL HERE - 2,000 SQ. II.
buil~ing with lrontage on Sl. Rt. 160.

YOUR FAMILY WILL ENJOY THIS HOME
- 4 BRs, 2 baths, equipped kitchen, LR,
attached garage, heal pump/cent. air,
whirlpool in master bath, above-ground
pool. Shown. by appointment
RIO GRANDE AREA- 20 acres, mil, very
nice home has been remodeled and offers
3 BRs, 117 baths, krtchen with oven , range,
woodburner, family roomf.dining combo,
LR, heat pump/cent air, 30x30 garage,
laundry rm ., 12x65 mobile home on property. SW school district. Call for appointment.
YDU'll LOVE COMING HOME TO THISAbeautiful log addilion has been added lo
this home and il is lovely. 3 BRs, bath, formal dining, krtchen, lamily room w/loft,
woodburner, stone chimney. This home is
situaled on 10 acres m/1, with quiet sur·
·roundinp.
'
YOU'LL WAIT THIS ONE FOI YOURSELF!.
- lovely horne just mlnules from town on
Lower Rl. 7 beautiful river view, 3bedrms.
, 2 balhs, ill. equillllldkHchen', family''"··
dinette, 2 firsplaces. aame rm., laundry
rm .. city schools, call today.

12x20 walk-i n cooler. 12ft. dairy case. Call
tor more delarl1.
AFFORDABLY PRICED AT JUST $29,900
-Close to c~y on Rt 1411hishome oilers
kitchen. LR: family room, dining room and
full basement. large unattached block garage. Call to! an appointment.
EXCELLENT STARTER HOME- $39 900
~ Ranch style home just 5 minutes irom
town offers 2 BRs, balh, kitchen w/stove
and side-by-side refrig., LR, carpet and
ll&lt;trdwood, carport and covered patio.
Trarler pad on,lol next to house. C.ity school
drstrrct. Call today .

..

DUPLEX 4 SALE :... Great investmenl for
the buyer. located on Graham School Rd.
Each unit offers 2 BRs, living room, bath,
krlchen and stove, refrig., OW and displ.,
laundry, large carport, central air and storage well.

TtN ACRES Ill THE COUNTRY - 3 bed·
100111 home wilh 2 balhs, kitchen, range
and rtfric., lR, carpet. woodburnina stove
SMrllllrm bu~rnp., Cau 1ar an 1ppt '

�"

•'

.

•

January 31. 1988

114 Mite, M.erchandiH

--·

0.. •• aaad C.l 304-111-

a717 ..... 4,30p,m, -

for

54 Mi.c. Merchandise
firtwood

dt!Wiu.c:l , ttllcll«&lt;.
lti31.00. M..on Cound... O.li·
paUl. other .,... withln re..on
.. .... dllcmtion. 304·1t5·

3446.

56

Pet a for Sale

111 F1rm Equipment

S-

...,. eo• 114-ne:nu

"MOMEi'' IJ'N ... - . . . , for
,...... holfte, comDiele with el

Snowtnc;bU., Moto $1250, 18
hp, good ·~ runs good,

Full Wooded
Sh....'"'l -

a
• ,.o

white

1,1•·441·1149. '
03&amp;0.00. 304·AZ·z817.
............ 304-111-2Get .
. PICK£N8 USED FURNITURE. ' New •xarc:llin' rnachina, makH. Ftm• Lh•.. Ap.o • fem•l•
304-171-1.tl0. Gus rena•• .~,., mtchm•. •es. 304- ftfret . Celletter lpm. 114-4414737.
.
a1.14.•30 ln., t7S.DO I up; 11&amp;·73111.
eiMulc. runge; reirigerato,.
•11.00 a up: Mevt-~ wringer
_ .........00.

1672.

_Fama ... -Boxlf
fawn. 10
-"·old,
304·17&amp;·1736.

55 Building Supplies

57

Goll eluba. phon8304-87&amp; -

BuUdlng Mtttrialt
lklck. bridl, __. pipet , wlndOwt, lin .. ll, etc. C ..ude Wln tert, Rio Grande. 0 . C.lll14·

Muaical
Instruments

S~S•~FICU SNG'5
1

11M NIOUNO CQ!ItSTAUCT~
TWI fNPG' PERFOMI~·
JOI R.ll lffiQENC'

--·Cftl
-· -···
,,~

_.,,Ill '
-llMIU-1611
11118.11 ....

............. L

IG0/447·7436

- - ..'"! '!'!'·~~

63

HorNs for ..

r..

Stlnd•db!od

I

14
44_6_·4_7_&amp;_&amp;_
_~_
_·_
. ----

One HampshiNI boar. 1 year old.

Colt 114·388-9104.

Ready mb. conc:rate and all
concrete supplies. Call us Valley
Brooll Cement and Suppliet.

304-773-5234.

be..ment, fireplace, com- ·
plate kitchen. $49,900.00, $2,800.00 down
peyment. 1O'h% fixed rate. Monthly Payment
$479.83 P.l.
·
.

STUTES REAL ESTATE

or81•·379-2137. .

.•
' -,

'

1971.C.m...~. 350, eutomatic,
=~h bodv . Runs gOOd. Good
car. Call 814-448-7211
aflerlpm.

.

72 Olda.

Dal" 88 . Good c:ondi·

tion) 8360. Calll14-24&amp;: eze4.

...

198.7 Olds, Cutlau Supreme.
Call, 304- 773· &amp;611!1 or na.

591-1 .

.

'74 Chevy Vefia.

304-576-2467.

t371!UJO

.

'

1971 Mercury Satillite Sebri~g.
blue. 2 door, 304-896 -3192.

'

1988 Chevrolet· &amp;10 pickup.
08,000.00, low miiOIIJO, 304·

1982 Ford Pick - up truck .

1966 350 ChiVY pickup, R'ep
bed. restored. t3,000. 304·

t32&amp;0. Call 614-286· 8522.

1987 Ford Ranger s. !I spd.,
AM-FM-Ceas. 8,000 milt~. Cell

..

'

992-2496.
882·3574.

1

f6000. Coli &amp;1•·141-2414 or
304-176-11193.

CJo in thaenow with 1 ToroniCio.
Front whe.. drive, 1979 Old1

Toronade loeded. 304-871 ~
4413 eOJenlnga.
·

876·8022 .

ti .

·304·773-6144.

'

74 Motorcycles
1....,_ _
_ _...:__::..__
19$4 Kaw.aeki KX 60 motorcy·
c:le. Excellent condition . t500.
Call

p.m.

73

814·192·6086

11t1r

S:DO

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1982 Dodge 250 Rem. Cuatom
convetlion. Trailer. ready: Call

-

'r

12n.
76

IAIEMENT
,WATERPROOFING

CARTER'S PWMIIING
AND HEATING

Uncandlrionll llfedrite oueren·
tee. Loc.t ref•enca furnllhH.
FrN Mtlmatu. Cell coNed

1 - 814-237~0488, day or ntght.
Roa•reBasemanl

Wotorproollng.

SWEEPER ·and teWing machine
,..,.ir, part a, end auppl._, Pldl
up end detivery, Dev4t Vaouum
Cla1ner. one helf mile up
Oooro• Crllk Rd. Coli IT 4 -

448-0284.

Cor. Fourth tnd Pine
011-1, OIIID

PhGno 814-441-3111 or 114·
441:44n
84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Anldential or comm.-cill wir·
lng . Ntw ..moe or ,.._.,..
U-IICI oiiCirlclon. EHim...
lroo. Rldonour EIO&lt;tricol, 304-

171·1718.

•RON'S i Televl•!an Servh:e.
UHd.6 rebulh trJnuniulons. All · HouM cell• . on RCA, Ouilur.
Internally insPtded • gu1m· OE. Spectellno In Zen..a. . Cell
- · Clll 11··441·0916. WI
304·178·2311 or 114·441·
buy Junk tran•ml•~ne.
2454.

L.and L Tire Outlet t...etrucldold
NleFeb."1· 1 . 13k'leh-11.11noh.
from tl5 .00 up. Lot-'" acrou
from Sohkt ltetlan, Tuppers
Pleina, Ohkt. 614-112·1344.

merty Jam11 loyl Wa.:M.C.II

304-175-1370.

Paul · Rupt, Jr. WeMr Servia.
Poolt. cisterna. welle. Call14·

448·3171 .

Weneraon' 1 Weter HeuUng.
reesonebte retet. lmmedltte
2,000 gallon deltvery. dlteml,
poolt, well. etc. elM 304-176·
291 I .
· ---------

Col! ond um-.. dollvlrod.

304-175·3180 .

87

l•wn c...,, lendtcaPing, nump
removal . 30C-576· 2842 or

RIRWotorSorvlco. H.c:i•tera• .,.,..... paola fllled . For·

''

-.-,.-r-ki_T_r_H_ond_Lo_wn
__....,-...
578·2903.

General Hauling

J &amp; J Wtter Service. Switr'NIIing

poolo, clltorno. welt.. 1'11 . 614·
Z.S·9281.

Uphol1tery

Mowrey'• iJphollterlng MrVii'D
tri county aru Z2 years. The belt
ln fumhure upholttering. CaU
304·175·4154 for frte
Mtimates.

·79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1979 23 ft. GMC motor home.
Deluq. Nice lor tr~~vellng or
construction workers.· etc.
Priced to Hll. C.ll 614-388·

,•

1tis Plvn1outh Horlaen. 4 door.
euto, 78,000 mile.. t7150. Call
·51~1 814· 992·7403.
.1981 Dodge Colt. 2 door. runt
good ---•
,._
S
• ,_.,, mu 111er. 0660 · ~wt~ll
andya 814-992· 7403.

fully - · 11111. ......... 3&amp;
horN Mercury·Pow.r Trim. UQ
new . Gareoe kept. &amp;14-9t2-

&amp; Heating

85

1979 23 ft. OMC motor homti.
Dalu•e . Nlc. Of
.

614~4415·4383 dar.•. 448-0139
evant. &amp; "!'•ektnd,a .

."

9419 after lpm.

Auto Pert•
&amp; Acceaaories
1971 Royal Old• klodoct, '" 1.- - - - - - - - - ' --

1985 Chevy S -10, axte~d. cab. power equipped, exc. cond.
toNed, excellent condition. For •1 ,.19&amp;.; 1985 Jimmy Bllltr
ul' or take over .,.ymeRts. . 4x4 loeded, cloth interior eport
100
Contlict 814-986-4107 or 814· wh.la • . exc:. concl .

72 . Trucks for Sale

814-448- 2323 after 4 PM.

.

1981 Oat1un King C1b 4~4
pidl:-up . 15 tpeed. 70,000 miiH.
Runt good. UIIOO. C.ll Sandys
814-992l 7403 .

1184 Ni~a~n • WhMI drive.
Sport• Pllc:kege, metallic brown.

1179 Hydr11port 8111 boll, 80
HP Mere, •• ptap. Mere TM ,
lrMior. Spore, EC.Colll14-44f·

·Improvements

'

7

· pickup. ' Run•
Call 614· 2:45·

9448.

1::-:-::-- - - - - - 84 Toyota pickup-. . Excelltnt

Si!rVICI'S

condition. 84,000 miles. 4c:yl.l
spd. 84995 or t.ke over PlY·
ments. Call 614:44&amp;-6234 Ilk

81

Real Estate General

for O.ve.

Home
Improvements

i'&gt; Ltvl:,lut.k
stUmp

Rotlry or cable tool drilling.
Most walla completed 1emed•y.
Pump tal11 end aervlce. 304·

61 Farm Equipment

818·3802

2010 J .D. trectorw/ J.D. equip·
mBnt. 2 row pi enter, plows,
rotary hoe, post drl\ltr. '$3960.

Tree trimming and .removel, odd
joba. free eatimltft, 304-875-

C.ll814-288·&amp;522.

3312.

'

Real Estate General

RESIDENTI AL · INVESTMENTS CO~M ERCIA L · FARMS

RETIRE TO THE COUNTRY - Maintain arelaxed,
but active lifestyle in this friendly I\? story home.
3 bedrooms !upstairs could be finished into 4thl.
dining room, new vinyl siding, garage and several
outbuildings. 17 acres with 10·12 crop land.
$40,000 .
#250

450 2nd AVE.
44(1-6806

SUNDAY PUZZLER

PRICE REDUCED - Great Rivet View! -Only a
minute from town. this I\? story home has lots of .
potential to be your dream home. 2bedrooms w1th
room for 2 more, large dining room, living room
with lire place, eat-in kitchen and bath. Nice back
porch. 2 separate garage buildings plus carport
Reduced $9,000 to $59,500 Don't let this one
pass by'
·

.,•

ARE GOING TO LOVE lHIS HOME!- Located
,. on Jay Drive this bi·level h~me offers everything
·,you want for your family's comfort. Kitchen
· · w/DW. dispL, range, ralrig .. living room, family
• rm .. dininc rm., carpet, gas heat, cent. air and
: woocl' and coal burning stoye, 2 carga,rage, 12x16
: ~torage building, city school.s. Call today and
: make an appointf11ent-to see this nice home.

YOUR '

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 388-8826
RUTH GOODY, REALTOR, 379-2628
DIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR. 266·6261

5EAROf
IS OVER

RUlTY -

ACROSS

1 Item of property
6 Stack rote
10 Singing bird
t4 Stanza
19 Rumor
21 Sole
22 Leaae
23 Brimless caps
24 Take dimensions
of
.26 - General
(Chief medical
officer)
28 Caatee
29 Choose
30 Maiit.
32 Females
33 Body 0t -er
34 Split - soup
35 Nerve network
37 Sonnet
39 Short steep
40 Young horae
41 Sinewy
42 Secluded valley
44 Playground
apparatuses
46 Destiny
47 Household pats
48 Foray
50 Having no rest
52 Center
53 Decigram: abbr.
55 Cozy corner
57 Kilowatt: abbr.
58 Dlspalched
59 English baby
carriage
60 Fro's companion
62 Knock
64 Not· one
66 Printer's
· maaaure
68 Commat'ctal
69 Of an era
70 Seed container
71 Word of sorrow
.J3Swemp
·
75 SO'Mid
· 77 Michael of
"Houaton
Knlghte"
78 Canlldlln
panlntUia
eo Belo;1gtng to a ·
Chamberlain
81 Sin
~ UnexpeCted
Winner

Buy either of theM homes for these terma.
$8B,500.00 Down Payment, $8,900.00. Month·
ly payment $660.(i0, 30 yn. 9?fe% Fixed rate.

STUTES REAL ESTATE

446-0008.

448-4208, 387-7760, 448-3838

Real Estate
EASY ON' THE POC:KmOOK - Here's an
affordable home in city schools you'll e'njoyliving
1n. Complete with large eat-in kitchen, dining
room, large living room, 3 bedrooms, I bath and
partial basement. 1.6 acre lot includes garden
space, 2' outbuilding6, large lrQnt porch. Well
insulated, easy to heat.,$36.000. . ·

ASSUMP.TION - The Seller is doing
everything possible to make it easy to be the
owner ol thts brick frame, 4 bedroom bi·level
near Clax Elementar~ School. He wrll combine a
low, low down payment, loan assumption and wrll
even finance lhe difference with speci;l terms.
This is an exceJJent opportunity, especilllylor the
first lime buyer. flome also includes kitchen' with
set·ofl dining area, large unfinished lower level
room. above ground pool and 2 cai garage. Call for
more information . $46,900 ..

#406

60S

E. MMn 'I ~~:;:.:;.l.l:...ll

POMEROY. OH.
992-2259
NEW liSTING - . Litlle
house, little price, in town.
Lot with old house that
needs lots of work. WANT
$4,900.00
•
NEW liSTING - Cheap
house that needs repa ir but
will make good r.enlal rn

We offer you lhe
profe.ssional experience
to meet all of your
real estate needs.
.May w.e be of service?

wa nt

NEW liSTING - Here rt rs'
A-flame with over 3.200 sq.
n.of space. 4·5 bedrooms. 2
balhs, large rec. room &amp;
situated on 2 ~ acres ol
llfOUnd. 2 car garage with
storage. Many features. Only
serious buyers should call'

SPRAWLING COUNrRY.SPLIT-lEVEL- Got a big
family that needs a liUie room? This 4 bedroom
home will suit your needs. Everything for the
aclive family including family room, rec. room ,
large living room, eat·in kitchen, 2 baths. Large 2
car garage plus sturdy outbuilding. 1.3 acres of
flat yard. Green Township. Only 3-4 miles from
town. Owner doesn't want to lool around- priced
at $69,900.
.

N£W ll STING - Large
older home in town. 4 bed·
rooms, basement, large lot.
ONLY $14,900.00.

!104. NEW liST!itG -~DOlSON - 1 IC .. 2
arn. Ntw carpeted livina rm. and ~Ill ~~~:~1./
•146. INVESTORS, 3 unit duplex apls ..
ard. 1 lllth, I bedrm., kitchen. dinina rm .. lll. very printe.
1.100 to $1.200 per 1110. Close to schools.
~145 . THINGS DREAMS AI( MA.D£ OF: un iq11t round 2 story home. 3
bednns .• 2 full baths. aat-in kit .. fullltsrwt . liOO sq. ft . wrap-around ljeck,
elec. heal . lac . m/ 1. woodtd lot. llleias Co.
•112. WAfH ~10EAWAT HllLS7 This cute little A·frlllt and a liHII WMt
could make 1 nice home lrith wooded sattinc. 2 bedrm . up. dOWJI l l't blths.

....

age at all. Very
otters character ol a 1930's"''"'" but with
all the modern day conveniences. 4bedrooms, I'h
baths plus ~ bath in lull basement, large living
room wtth flagstone lireplace, large formal dining
room and eat-in kitchen. Large closets, plenty ol
slorage, vinyl siding. insulation - good -tight
home. Central air. PlUS 30K42 metal building
IDEAl for hundreds of uses. 3 miles from town.
City schools. River view. $70s.

l

VI bsmt.. Ia. util.ity rm .. wash.er. dryer. rural water pd. , elec. hut and wood·
burMr. Male offer . A.ski~l $24 .500.

'

NEW liSTING - VERY NICE BRICK RANCH in
· quality neighborhood oilers 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, large living room with attractive flagstone
lireplace, large eat-in kitchen with beautiful oak
cabinets and large dining area. Covered back
patio. 2 car garage. Nicely landscaped flat yard.
$65,900. Charolais Hills area.

#221

#214

G1ande. SZJ.SOO. 2 lots available.

•til9. K.U'N MOBilE HOllE: 12•65 2 8A. 1 bath, pltlo. Ower 'It xra wi'th
cood Pt"hn spot. htra well built storate bid&amp;. Owner wanb QUICJ: Si\LE.
Clay schools. $15,500.
.
Jt213. OHIO TWP. 40 atrts, 2 tltdrm . Mobile home dHp frHzt. wuMr.
aryer. minerai richts. toll. bue. 1&amp;. barn. lit house. some timbtf.lruit
tr"s 1111d berriH. $25,000 .
0206. f~RM -73 ACRES M/ l - 1 HOIISE STAll BARN' l bodrm. homo. Ap.
prot. 5 mi. from lown. City schools.
lt116. SEUN SPRINGS, 208 AC. URI. Rudy for operation, includts ]
modem hot blms witll f1rrowinc houus. Other llrp barns tor toblcco
p.nt•n. timber. fruit. Jfapes. lc. tobltCO Hse. Jhce CO\II'IIJJ 3 wrm:
home.

buoon Twp.

1198. LAIGE FARM- 314 ac:. 11 / l. Minerai riJhts. 1ppror. 100 at. Iiiii bit.
ponds , older 2 story holnt. flew metal ho&amp; barn and sheds. Ytt~ "" drivt
over IPPfOI. 300 ac. Good line ltt~ces.
, 1212. CLUN-COifOtT-CLASS toMts wit II rhis tll.ltlllft&amp; 3 btdrm .. bltll,
kitchen . storm w&amp;d. insulation In wallslfttl ceilinp.ahrll. sidiftl, Mil pa·
tlo. l acres m/ 1, $30,000. Tractor and trv.ct twaiiablt tor arkUtion11 cost.
1218. SHORT WALK TO EVERYTHIIG II !OWl: Jost ao idulllolll for eouptt or bqinntr. Very iNIKullte l bldrm.,l blth, Ll, utility rm. Wt hlvt2
ol these to 11n.
wt07. •EW l!SIING - INiESIORS - READ !HIS: Ronulloc- of $445
per - · 2 MObile ho"'n. lac:. Mi l.
·
flU. Sl~ll F.IM: ii111oo!l. 1ood lilm, part fitiablt t!ld pntY!t. 21.5

" · UI.OOO.

·

NEED A lOT Of ROOM, but don't have a·lot of
money? Here's the solution. For $44,900 you can
have 4 bedrooms, I 'h baths, eat-in kitchen with
apptrances, full basemen! with lamily room and
garage. Grve us a call, weII solve all your housing
needs.

-

~10

LeGRANDE BOUlEVARD - Clean 3 bedroom
home in great shape. Maintenance freehome has
had th~ best of care over the years. Nice
outburldrng-workshop included. Attractive lire·
place. Fenced·in yard. Move right in condition.
$51,700.
·. #307
OLDER HOME WITH MODERN FEATURES - I \?
balh, fuel oil forced air furnace, newer kitchen
cabrnets. Elcellent garden area. 45x45 barn,
22x24 garage. Extra lot for second home. All tor
$36,500.
11329

42 ACRES Of BARE lAND -Mostly wooded with
some saw timber. 4 acres m/1 of boUom land.
Good place to build. Water tap paid for, Located in ·
Vinton on Glenn Summit Ro~d. II mile south of
Vinton. ~sking $20,000.

" #338
ONlY 2 lOTS LEFT!!! - I mile south ol Rio
Grande. EKcellent llal land in a quality
neighborhood. City school$, county water.
#146

HERE'S ABARGAIN!! - 4 bedroomsand 2 baths
for $29,500! Very affordable home with the room
you need. Separate living room and dining room.
Vinyl siding. Family oriented neighborhood.
Gallipolis City schools.

li202
SPRAWLING RANCH IN THE PINES- This home
oilers enough space lor the large active family.
Mom Will lall rn love wrth the oak kitchen and
breakfast nook. Krd s can romp in the family room
dow. nsta1rs .while dad watches the football games
. rn the famtly_room upstairs. 2 ~ baths, formal
dlntng and Irving roof!!s, iaccuzzi off master suite,
hot tub _Included rn outstanding deck ofl
screened ·rn porch . Quiet and secluded.
$129,900.
11204

COUNTRY RETREAT - O~ . a paved Meigs Coup!f
road. Th1s tmmaculate 2 bedroom contemporary
home on 3.7 acres is practically maintenance free.
Its _umque desrgn wdh natural woodwork, spiral
sta1rcase and attached greenhouses will capture
your interest. Priced at $47,500.
.

11442
TREE COVEREP lOTS JUST OFF RIO
·GRAI!IDE...CEIITEI_paiU IIOAD - I mile west ot
Rto Gran~e. _
Res!r1ctive covenants. Quiet location,
rural water line tn place lor service to lots. $7250
to $11,450 . .
HELP WANTED!! ~ Need talented . owner with
decorating flltr /O make this hi1torical home
stunmn1. Warm ptne paneled family/diningroom
Large rooms. 3 bedrooms. AccepJ lhe
challenge ...$23,000.

'

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
(614) 446-3644

Hill! I. ClllMQ Jl. ... IIUIII

E. M. Wiseman, Broker

JIM TIUSSl\L ............ MI-HIO
DOntl rv•P ............ ttNUZ .·

naCY ••nr ....................

lffiCI ......................... IIt-1155

_,-..,C.
IOIOitllilo.--.- .... ,..... ,.. - - ·

10 Umlll: DIMIOIIIIIIIIIIIMI--11111-.wYIIC.
11/1. llllllllao I'M. llrr F t lolllotlao-

#220

PRICE REDUCED ON RIVER FRONT PROPERTY
- Outstanding potential lor 4·5 homesites witll
captain's view of the river. Approximately 28
acres along Rt. 7, 4 miles below town. Woods, Hat
ground and river ft)lnlage. $74,900.

BEAUTIFUl VIEW of Ohio River Valley and West
Vncmra htlls free w1th lhe purchase of th is 5
room home with lull basemen!. Nice kitchen, bath,
fuel 011 forCed a1r furnace, fireplace and hardwood
floors. 3 acres, m/ 1, of land. btra lotto sell or use
as garden space or some livestock. Holding at
$39,900.
'#303

Ul7. COMFORTABLE 3 bedrm. home. located across hom llooll'lllttd

School. 3 belkm .. bath. Ia. country kitchen. sunporch. 8 mile lrom Rto

DRIVE - BEHIND SPRING VAllEY
- 3 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS, FAMILY
WITH FIREPLACE. FENCED BACK YARO, 2 CAR GAR·
· AGE. $69,500.

••••

QUIET lOCATION SURROUrtPED BY WOODS County water. - Quality mobile home !Ox55
wtth good lOx 55 frame addition, all under one
roof. 7·rooms, nrce bath, fuel oil forced air furnace
and woOd stove. Also, one room frame school
house rn good condition and 2 other outbuildings.
Frurt trees. garden area, 2dog pens. 4 miles fo Rio
Grande, 3 miles to Thurman. Ideal place to live.
Holding at $17,500.
11315

$14,000.00 but make offer,
owner may help fi nance.

.·

•

#218

Real Estate General

A.m

•&amp;oo.oo. Before&amp;tOOcett

noo. Coli 814·912·2707.

V· B. Colil1•·441·71&amp;6.

I .trill SlljiiJIII'\

local Sales
Representative
Donna Crisenbery
E.S.R .. BoK 166
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Ph. 614·256·6518

SOUTHERN DISTRICT Ollly 4 months old. 26'x64 '
Nashua double wid e home
w/2 baths, 3 bedr,ooms, all.
elec., central air. eat·in
kilchen w/sky lights. formal
dining room. Irving room
w/cathedral ceirngs, garden
tub off the master bedroom,
located on appx. 22 acres.
You finish landscaping and
decks. Call for an appoint·
ment to see this one.
REALLY NICE! ASKING ·
$45,000.00.

'

1-304-676·4038 or 304-895-

'

'

1978 Ch.vy Truck . Atklng

3433.

·..

1971 Chevrolet Silveredo 1h ton
pickup, t1300. 1877 Ford F2!SO
four wheel drive, $1300 . Call

88 Ch.vroltt Ceprice. t1 0 000.

work,.

"•

&amp;14·441-1818.'

114·1·8-2801 .

1176 _Pontiac Grand Prill w.
new tires, needs trentmiQion

197,3 O_pel atation Wagon; uood
con•itlon. Call 814-379·2143

11t815 S-10, 4spd . t.a..rwlth 1ir.
AI,Jn• rterao . Prica t70(10 . Clll

1981 1 · 10 Blazer.' Grey &amp; elfver.
LoOdoct. 2&amp;,000 mRn. 5 opd ..

Boallt and
Motora for Sale

Fetty Tree Trimming.

Pets for Sale

11795.00
20l24x8
24x24x8---· ~ 1199S:OO
12295.00
24x30x8
1
30r40x10
3195.00

OWNER WANTS ASALE! Has
drastically reduced the price
on thrs 3 bedroom ranch
style home. Central air, large
lot, garage, porches. WAS
138,500. ONLY $33,500.00.

4-5 BEDROOMS: 3 baths, formal living and dining
rooms, gourmet kitchen, · family room, game room,
study .. mud/laundry room, indoor storage room With
·additional laundry facilities: 2 car garage, 2 fireplaces,
ceiling lans, wood~n deck, full length of house. Many
extras. .
BREATHTAKING VIEW of Gallipolis' and Ohio River,lull
length windows for maximum view. Secluded lot total
privacy. City school district Loca,ted 1\1 miles from
downtown Gallipolis. Only 8 miles from Locks and
Dam.
EXCELLENT home and grounds for family and/or en·
tertaining. Must see to appreciate quality.
HOUSE, TENNIS COURT and 25 ACRES'"" $173,000
Will consider house, court and 5 acres for $155,0QO
Call for Appointment - 614·446-3386
Serious Bu ers Onl Please·

·

75

Vans &amp; 4 W .O •
'

'72 V.W. 07&amp;0.00. '&lt;18 WIIIIH
~=·p 11 , 000 .00 . &amp;14-44862.
'
'
.
30•·I7S-l0&amp;6.

:i4:8::8::.·- - - - - - -

FOR SALE BY
· ~~
. OWNERS: Large split-level and tennis

•

73

Truc.ks for Sale

Sunday

.......... Col1304-676·1331 .

Package Specials

NEW LISTING - Little 'ole'
Muse 1n town. Little 'ole' price.
3 bedrooms, basement, garage
in basement Equipped kit·
chen, washer &amp; dryer. Needs
WOik. $7,900.00.

114·441·3204.

~.

•u 2oo'

Phone 814 ·949· 2810.

1912 Olda. Brougham Cuttiu
Supreme. 18,000 actuel mllet
2 dr. E~~al. cond. tl200 . Cali

·

114·596-5271 '

D.C. Mttll Sales, Inc.
Cl!nnelbur&amp;. Ind. 47519
Speclalizinl in Pole Buildinp. Desiped to meet
your needs. Any size Choille of 10 colors.
FREE ESTIMATE on post
bldp. and packap deals.
Save hundreds, even thou·
sands of dollars. .

NEW liSTING - Ranch
style home near Rutland.
Level lot. 3 bedrooms. family
room. garage. Needs som e
work. $27,900 00.

441 •1241 ,

Only 2000 mlloo.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
',
Real
.• , ·.~

Livestock

end Te"""... Walkets.. Call

Of

72

1987 Buick Somertet, 4 cyl.,
auto., P.S ' P .B., air , 16ke new

'

• ••

2181,

'

~room and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeda ... AII
styles. lam• Pet Food Deeler.
Julia Webb Ph. 814-4-t6·02.31 .

NEW liSTING - Approxima·
tely 27 acres of vacant ground
close to Pomeroy. Beautiful
building ~te for special home.
Firm at $16,500.00.

814·388·86•7.

Ch:y Ftrm' Suppty, 114·441·

Gallipolis. Ohio Ctll 114-446:

56

come in Pomeroy -

f1100. Coli

corn. Calllorletettquotes. Rf¥8r

cond. C.ll 61ol-388-8.t88 .

Cer\lin DC121 Lead Guitar
t371.QO . C.Mn ..,..kif ce·
KU~ Dried Ap~J~Ii.chiarl Herd- · binet with lour 12 Inch Celes·
WOOd · Lumber end Plywood.
tiona. t21&amp;.00 . Both e1tc Con d.
Mouldtng, t,rlm, buttons, plugs.
3041&amp;82·3231.
dow'tlt, toy -,.rts and u.otic
IPI&lt;IH. AOElMANI'l. ClARK. Piano t100. 00. Phone 304·
INC .• Rt. 93 N.; McArthur. 0 .
676·3869.

V·l.

Now buying lhell earn or ••

Nency Htrt piano. t900. EKcal.

Guitar u ..ontll lndlvidu .. inllructlon. Brunle~rdi'a Mulic.
Concrete bloat all siZ.t ytrd '" 114· 441-0887 or ctll Jeff
deiNery. Mtaon und. Gtllipolit · Wamaley inatructor. 114' 44181o&lt;k Co .... 123'1• Plno St. 8077.

' 2783.

Pl . PB.lW. Not Ol'flnlel . R41ecl'tl "'
Ia drive. UIOO. Ctlll1•· 38tl· ·'

62 Wanted to Buy

245·5121 .

'II.'Afi£HOUS!S 'AI'-'J~ 'ST~AI:IE

1975 Mome C.rio. EKc:et. cond.
In • out. 350 engine. tiiO. Cell

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
R~

puppy,

1179 Pontitc Orendpri•. 2 dr.• , •
auta . • &amp;&amp;O, C.N~14- 441· 1e11

'
1177. C.maro (red). 91,000

114·441·1616-Doy. 441-1244
1911 Ford Elcon, f2995. c.11
11 •. 211·SI22.

~

814·388·9789.

1150 Ford Coupe. 3"1
vo • a uto..

..... 5 Plloll .

!0&lt; ule. CIH

71 Auto'a For Sela

Coli 114-38S·8240.

outo..

71 Auto 's For Sale
1177 Blat:!' Monte Carlo. All
optione. Ntct car. t?&amp;O. Clll

OeiUpGiil D•lly Tribune or for

mH11,

Gtr~n~~n

..

1911 Ctvtlier RS. Uke new.
20.000 mites. Auto .. AC. PS.
PB , AM-FM·C...., titt. tiOOO.

'"""'tniG...,..Ion
coli 114·446·
2342

CMw

1 / 111h wolfj .....-.

71 Auto'a For Sale

1813Chwy. Ciation. Amntdto.
auto. varw .• PI, Pl. 11.000 ·
mMee. t1700. Cln be._utlhe

1fter 7PM .

P.-t white Ct.ow

i '.111 : !I'll 'dllllfl

H•y &amp; Gr1in

CFA Hlmoloyon, 11W1
k-.
AKC c.....,;
puppin. Coli 114·441-3844

41 let" of pulp wood, WIO'itl
LandownM, At. 2-Box 2915.
Clllllpollo. Ohio Ul31.

LPN ON runge t71.QO; 21 ln.

64

Dregonwynd Cattery Kennel.

MoiorC.- Cardol "-~
.. _.. -.oy. ........ tnllh: unL No one retuaedl For
lftlotm- cal ....1-315-733 . . .2 ..t. lloll28:!11.
'

31,1988

·Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

limes-Sentinel

Pomero\t-Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio~Point PleaSant, W.Va.

'

"'
·&gt;t
"'
'It

·&gt;t

.It .

-~ .

.

~~ ~:

HOUSE OF

CHOICE LOCAtiON, JUST MINUTES FROM C , BRICK AND FRAME.WITH VINYL SID·
lNG. LARGE FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, 3 BEDROOMS. GAS FORCED AIR FUR·
NACE, . PATIO. FENCED BACKYARD, ATTACHED GARAGE. A BEAUTIFUL HOME FOR
: •; $52,000.
'
'
.

·It ~~

* :·

,,.. t•

'

.

·"'t
"'"'

·i
!... .
.
-,

'

It :$45,000·- FIVE ACRES - NICE COUNTRY STYLE IJOME,
: ·IIJODERN KITCHEN, FDRM~l DINI,NG. 4 BEDROOMS, CAR·
If- ;JIORT/PATIO. f~t&gt;(TASTIC BUY!

MOBILE HOllE -197812X60l2BEPROj)MS I BATH NICE
SPACIOUS ROOMS. EOUIPPtD KITCHEN,' FURNISHED
ELECTRIC FURNAcE. GOOD BUY AT $8.000.
'

~ &gt;b"rHIS HOllE IS OI!IEOFTHELARGESTIN GALLIPOLIS·-

EN·
URMOUS FOYER wtTH BRIDAl STAIRCASE. BALLROOM 9
lt- FIREPLACES. YOU COULD HAVE AS MANY AS TEN BED·
lt- • JIOOMS, 3 fliGHT REAR STAIRCASE. wOulO CONVERT EAS·
' 1lY TO FABUI.l!US RESTAURANT, MINI MALL. DR IF YOO
Jt ".WANT A MAGNIACENT VICfORIAN HOME. THIS IS THE ONE
1t- ;YOU SHOULO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE! $69.000.
It ~

*

••
lt- J21,000 -

SPACIOUS MODULAR! lOCATED IN COUNm

~ " AIR SU6DIVISION, .3 BEDROOMS.~ BATHS, GAS FURNACE,

.;t: UN. AIR, LARGE LOT. GREAT PLACE FOR AFAMILY. KYGER
fREEK SCHOOLS.

NICE AID VERY AfFOI~£ _ LE GRANDE BlVD. ~
BEDROOMS I~ BATHS. LEVEI.lAWN,·FAMILY ROOM. JUST

,

'~ HOME WITH FANTASTIC VIEW OF ni£ OHI(l RI~R

~ANNAN

CE OPEN flOOR PLAI4 CATHEDRAl CEILJt«l STONE
EARTH WITH WOODBUkNER 2 BEDROOMS
ACE SCHOOLS. $28.900.
' ,

.

LISTED! $44,000.
.
SUPER. PEl BUY! BRICK AND FRAME RANCH 3 BEDROOMS.
·IN KITCHEN HAS RANGE AND REFRIG. TH·
ERMO P~NE WINDOWS. NIC£ LEVEL LOT. $26,000:.

fir

ItIf-

•··*******'*~****·*'*******'*********************
It"*******!'
..,,
/

l

'

84 Figure of speech
86. Room for action:
colloq.
·87 Natural height
89 Calli. time
92 Drawtng room
95 Mistake
· 98 Enormous
99 Cite
101 Helmsman
103 Entice ;
104 Native metal
105 "- of Night"
106 Running
107 Sliver symbol
108 Want
110 - Fr!lflCIBCO
111-garde
112 Plnlall duck
113 Arrowl&gt;!&gt;l..,.,
115 lutecium symbol
117 Platform
119 French article
120 Precious stones
121 Most comely
124 Turn over a
new- (make a
new start)
126 Commit
depradatlons
127 Macaws
128 Bear Witness to
130 "Sluggish
132 Performs.
133 Algerian seaport
134 Simian
135 M8. Teasdale
137 Allowance lor
waste
136 Guido's high
note
140 New York141 Declares
143 Spare145 Long, slender
llsh
146 Hand guns
148 Rustle
t50 Dreamily
thoughtful
152 Atlentlc and
Pacific
153 Hindu garment
154 Sound a 110m
156Shaped~

of bread
157 Trials
158 Object of
devotion
159 Pitcher
180 Lilt. .

DOWN
1 Prot~lve · •
covarlng
2 Llaked through
3 Besmirch
4 Dawn goddess
5 "-Grit"
6 Word for
Nanelte
7 Abetract being
8 H~ hard: slang
9 SmaH hand pump
10 Puppy
1t Ocho12 Sea eagle .
13 Neon symbol
14 Meal of calf
15 BlUer vetch
1811as1
17 Guides
18 Compoeltlon
20 "TI1e Parent -"
23 Blemish
25 God of love
27 Clutches
28 Nat King31 Rather's torte
33 Vessels
36Valve
38 Exploit
40 Heeve
.·
41 Heel
43 "The -in
Winter"
45 Most recent
46 Part of
aulomoblle
47 Fuel
49 Fate
51 L.._'s
document
52 Baby's bed
53 Unger on
54 Flleltve
56 Enlightenment
59 GaV.
60 Ripped
81 River In Germany
63

eour..

65.Great Lake
67 Edt.' concern
!J9 Actor Flenders
70.Anctent writing
materl-'
72 Msllce
74 Mr. P!ICino
76 Hotp. nn.
77 Ms. Belley
78 AUIII'IIIIen

blf'\1

83 Ram's mate
65 Turk'-h decrees
86 Diving bird
87 Footwear
66 Twl81
89 Plulontum
symbol
90 Scottish
teacakae
91 Doctrine
92 Haanh resort
93 Mala! tag of a
· face
94 Low Latin: abbr.
96 Spoken
97 Actor
. AuberJonOls
1DO Prefix: down
102 Faatan lightly
105 TV award
109 Expires
112 Obaerves
113 Country of Asia
114 Public
storehouses
116 Employs
118 Seaaonlng
120 Lubricates
121 SuppHcale
122 Rapeat
123 Former Russian
ruler
125 Pardon
126 "-ACademy"
127 Carney and
Gar1unkel
129 Stumble
13t He waa McCloud
132 Railroad
slatlon
. 133 Paln11ngs
134 Beol use
138 Son of Adam
138 lock of hair •,
140 Studies
'
t41 Danish Island
142 - White and
the Seven ·

.

.•'

•

.·

.
'

Dwarfs"

144 Supercilious
peraon

147 Make lace
148 Cushion
149 PlldBl dlgll
151 C~ln
monkey .
153 Yn, to Carlos
155 tnllt. of 26th
Prealdent

•

�. . .1

D-8 Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

January 31, 198Q:

Pomero.y-Midcleport....-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

-.

'Sprits' drive family ·from home -in Wisconsiri.
the last lew months .
• HORICON. Wis. !UPI) - Jn a
The couple said they saw
cue recalling the movie· 'Polterstrange glowing shapes and
aellt," a couple and their three
heard voices, that an apparition
cblldren Qed their home because
IIIey believe It Is haunted by . of an old woman appeared tp
· IIDwlnr splrttli who speak In their son, a chair and a suitcase
lllrNteatng voices and move moved by themselves and their
2-year-old daughter was so
objects In the house.
frightened
she awoke screaming
''Tbey've been -thr(lugh an
several
times.
ordeal that's mind-boggling,'' .
. The case recalls the 1982
Pollre Chief Dougl;ls Glamann
Steven Spielberg movie ''Polter·
said.
gels!;" In which a couple and
. He said he ~lleved the family
their three c)llldren ended up
was telling the truth when they
fleeing their home In a new
said "sonietblng" had possesst&gt;d
subdivision because It was
their home. "They are riot out to
haunted by spirits who destroyed
make money or write a bo!&gt;k," he
· said.
the house.
Glamann said he toured the
· · Glamann would not Identify
home
Monday nlaht with other
the family, but Horicon City
o!flce~s. a pastor and .one of the
Oerk David Pasewald said the
owners of the ·home but found
property was owned by Allen and
nothing unusual.
Deborah Tallmann.
The · curious flocked to the
Glamann said the family
small Dodge County community
.moved Into the three-bedroom
ranch house In a new subdivision -of 3,600 last weekend looking for
the "gl\ost hou5e." Glamann said
about two years ago and left it 10
days ago to ·s tay with relatives - police barricaded the· one-block
.after a series of unusual events · street because of the crowds;

~·

in

The Tallmanns', an Interview
Wednesday with the Milwaukee
Sentinel, said the experiences
heganaboutslxmonthsagowhen
a clock radio In their son's
bedroom kept changing stations
by Itself. "We thought. it was interference," Deborah .T allmann said.
"I looked at the radio and I saw
that the knobs were moving and
the red thing (station indicator)
was' going back and forth
across."
She said she removed the radio
from the boy's room.
Strange events continued, and
Increased In ' magnitude, the
.
couple said.
"There were nofses In the·
house that we could not account
for," Deborah Tallmann said.
Once, the boy's suitcase slid
out from Iinder 'his bed and back
again as though II wa·s moved by.
a . hand, she . said. Also, baby
sitter reported that a chair at the
kltche.n table .. "started rocking ·
back and forth" with no apparent

Ohio Lottery

Redskins
NFL champs ·

~

.

explanation.
right out ol the floor. It was gassy house searching for a prankste:r:.
Initially, the couple thought and foggy ... II rose up I here and and then went to the front steps&lt;-;
their children were making up that voice came out of there and
-"Then II started glowing lnsldt~
the 'stories. But in early De- It said 'You're dead.'
the garage, an orangish red-;:.
cember, the bOy and his 2-year"These green eyes appeared There weae flames coming out Ql-;old sister related similar, lode- right out of this thing and then I the overhead door. There well! -·
pendent occurrences.
.:.:·
. two·eyes In the windows.
saw flames, and. It was gone."
The girl awoke screaming
'I
said,
'My
garage
Is
on
fire~:.
.
•
The couple left the house jlnd a
several limes. her mother said.
few days later, consulted with Then I looked again- and the~ "She started screaming that their pastor, who went to the . wa$ nothing.'''
;. :..
there was fire on the door of her house with them.
Referring to the talk aroun41·
room. And these noises that
"He blessed our house, gave us town, Deborah Tallmann said;' :.·
would go 'shh ... shh ... shh," · communion In our house, gave us :'Don't they realize whatthey a~ ;:
Deborah Tallmann said.
·some tapes to play church doing to us? I don't know what'(•
She also quoted her · son as music," Deborah Tallo;nann said. worse,' living there or having I&amp; :;
. saying, "I saw an old lady
A day later. the events began deal with this. If this Is so funny:; ~
standing by the door In my room: again and th.e Tallmanns fled for why aren't we living there?" -:.,:;
A little old lady, really ugly, with good, moving In with relatives
Glamann s1ild his tour of the:;
-long black hair and a glow about who live out of town .
home found ' no evidence that anji..
her like fire." The boy also -said
Around Christmas, Allen Tal- pranks had been pulled on th£ •
he heard a sound like "feet lmann said he "challenged"
family.
·-::
moving across the carpet. "
whatever mysterious entity that
"We wanted to see It the I'!!··
The woman said no family was In the house.
were any recording devrces or;:
member was harmed or damage
"! walked In this house yelling . some kl~ of projection equip;done to ~he home.
at the top of my lungs 'Pick on
ment," he said.
The event that drove the
me. Leave my .kids alone. If you
Nothing unusual was found, lji!::";
. family from the house came
want to fight, I'll fight,"' he said.
said.
·.
~'
about' tllree weeks ago, Allen
' A day later,he said, "I had just
"My job is to !&lt;eel&gt; the peace IJ!· ·
Tallmann said, while he was In
put the key in the door and just
the neighborhood, secondly li&gt;-:;
his 1-year-old daughter's
like that, it · sounded like the
see If there is somebody screw in~.,.
. bedroom wailing lot her to fall
howling of wind, but there was no . around with these people;;, h~::
asleep.
'
breeze. 'II' said 'Come here!'
said. "If that comes• up ullo'-:;
"I heard this vacuum-like r~alloud.and rea 1 to the point."
founded, the res I Is somebod~~
He said he ran around the
else's ball game."
••Ism and mentioned my name. sound ... · and this thing came
They wanted to know what I wa$
teaching In my clasess."
"The agents alSo asked about
the woman I work with In Central
American Activities."
Knitter said thatwoman probably was his wile, who has
retained her•malden name.

'

Daily Number

375
Pick 4
7713
Super Lotto
5-8-21-14-22-38

.

Page 5

•

enttne

e
No.184
1988

'

members of the Coalition for
Public Sanctuary, a national
network offering support to those
fleeing wars in Central America.
For two years, Cornell was
coordinator · for the coalition's
Cincinnati unit_.
.
.
· Knitter said he was told by the
colleague that FBI ageJ;tts "said
they were concerned with terror·

..

-

·····.

..

Tribune - 446-2342 ~~
Sentinel -~ · 992~2156 ~~

Register·-

67~1333 §~

-

THE NEW

TUXEDO
LOUNGE
IN THE

DOWN UNDER
RESTAURANT

PARENTS GATHER - The newly formed parent support
group, Parents. For Education, mel Sunday afternoon at Meigs
Junior High. Many Meigs Local parents attended the meeting to

IS INTRODUCING

Jeff
Montgomery
TUESDAY
EVENING, FEB ..2
5

February Is
Presidents'
Month

·'

1987 PONTIAC STE
"TOURING EDmON"
Features anti-lock brake ayltem, steering
wMel radio controls, Hi-tech alacb ooic dnh,
16"x8" cast alum. wheels, opecial auspe!i- '
sion, quick ratio rack's pinion ltlterlng, power
windows, locks, antenna, etc .. low miles.

FACTORY UST
DIS(OUHT
SALE PIICE

'11,497.00
4,597.00

$13,900

1981 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

· As a country, we honor Washington and Lincoln.
As a company, we honor our Pres1dent, David Vetter.

Come Meet President Vetter
Thursday, February 4, 1988
10~30 a.m. to 12:00 noon
Open our Bmonth Presidentic;tl CD .
Special $5,000 minimum&amp;Special High Rate
· Effective February 1-5, 1988

discuss how participation In the organization·might h~lp them to
take a more active and positive role in the education of their
children.

President makes final push for Contra aid

Pitcher for the
Cincinnati Reds

to 7 P.M.
Autographs &amp; Pictures
Available .. Stop in, meet
Jeff and try our new
Tuxedo beverage.

1911 MARK-Ill
CONVERSION VANS
V-8 engine, C20 challia, S/WB. air. til~. ·
cruis&amp;, oak trim. 4 captain' a chaira, rear
sofa, good for light ~owing, Chevrolet
chassis. Brand new.
·

SALE PRICE

S16, 900 ..

1911 CHRYSLER
LeBARON, 4 DOOR.

Only 49,000 low miles, T-tops,
turbo angina, automatic. air conditioning. one owner.
WAS
'6495.00

Only 38,000 low milas. local one
owner, six cyl., auto., ·air condition·
ing. Good. clean transportation.
WAS
$4695.00

1978 JEEP CJS·

1984 OLDS OMEGA

GO IN THE SNOW
4 WHEEL DRIVE

S1495

NowS4200

'.

4 'DOOR

Local one-owner, auto., air condi·
tioning, front wheal .drive. blue,
.
economical. .
WAS S5495,00

$499·5

ontiac

26 Cents

Special panel
established by
Meigs parents

FBI denies investigating professor . CINCINNATI (UPII - FBI
officials have· denied that the
agency conducted an investigation Of a Xavier University
professor who has spoken out
against U.S. •policy in Central
America.
Paul Knitter, a theology ' pro·
fessot at Xavier. told the Cinc.ln·
nail Enquirer Thursday that he
was Informed by a-colleague that
·two FBI agents had been on
campus asking questions about
111m.
"Contrary to Information volunteered to the media ... Profe&lt;sor Knitter has never been
Investigated by the Cincinnati
FBI nor has lle never been the
subject of FBI surveillance,"
Terence D. Dinan. special agent
In charge of the FBI's Cincinnati
··· ·, offite; .. said Fhday , adding..th.a t
FBI agents never solicited information about Knitter.
' "Neither Professor Knitter nor
his political views are of any
Interest or significance to the
FBI."
Dinan also denied that thr FBI
has investigated the Friends
ReUglous Society, the Maryknoll
Sisters and the Church of the
Brothers in Cincinnati .
The Center for Constitutional
, Rights. a •New York headquartered lawyers group,
announced Wednesday that it
had received more than 1.300 ·
pages of government documents
showing the FBI had Investigated hundreds of organizations
and individual opposed to U.S.
policy In Central America.
Knitter and ..'his wife, Cat hy
Cornell, · have been vocal in
opposition to U.S. intervention in
Central America and are

2 Sections. 12
A Multimedia Inc .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 1, 1988

:=:-.

a

Chance of rain 90 percent
tonight. Low 45 to 50. ·

WASHINGTON !UPI ) - PresIdent Reagan is nearing the
moment of truth In his drive to
win congressional approval of his
$36.3 million aid package for the
Nicaraguan Col)tra rebels with
~Yitaj6f, -spttee~- befOre t-he
crucial vote .'
. Reagan planned to focus on one
of his · favorite subjects In an
afternoon speech ' today to the
National Religious Broadcasters
conven lion, considered a receptive audience.
· On Tu~sday evening. the eve of
the House vote on the Contra aid
request, the president will deliver a final !elevlsed appeal In a
brief prime-time speech.
Some undecided congressmen
.w ere expected to get telephone
calls from !he president, and he
rriay summon them to the White
House today and Tuesday to keep
the pressure on.
The aid package, includlng$3.6
million lor arms and ammuni tion, ~ould be the president's last
hurrah In a six-year effort to
promote the cause of the "fr!"edom fighters" battling the Sandinlsta government in Managua.
White House aides said they
expect a close vote. while Democratic leaders in the House
forecast defeat for the proposal.
Th~ president took lim~ out
Sunday from his ardent lobbying
tor the Contras to host with his
wife, Nancy, a Superbowl party
featuring the clash between the
football titans, the Washington
Redsklns and · the Denver
Broncos.
About 40 friends and former

campaign aides were Invited to
watch the football extravanganza in the White · f!ouse
theater. While the guest Ust was
not ·released, sources saia press
sec_retary· Jim Brady and his
·):VI{e,,sara~. ·y;er.e ~!llong' th9se
InVIted. · '
' ·
Dress for the affair was cas4al,
and likely burgundy and goli:llo
match the colors of the Washington team, and the menu was
down to earth; hot dogs and chili.
· The Contra aid vote Wednes day comes with the Marxist -led
government of Nicaragua in·
volved In direct cease-fire talks
with rebel leaders, a major step
toward possibly ending the
bloody civil ~ar that began in
1981.
The choice for the lawmakers
has never been so clear - .a
straight up-or-down vote In the
House. no amendments or
a.llerna II ves .
The Senate is to vote Thursday,
but the plan will be dead If it!ails
in the House.
, House Democratic leader Thomas Foley of Washington, a foe of
Contra ald.
told NBC-TV's
" Meet the Press" Sunday, "I'm
very sure we are going to win. " ·
But he added, "In Washington ·
nothing Is certain. The vote will
be close. But. I'm sure It will be

allowed to talk."

.

One or the men said they had
hand ·grenades, but he would not
elaborate on other types. ot
weapou.
·
"You can bet lilt are heaVIly
·armed and nobody had better try
to get here," he IBid.

1"

l

Iowa caucuses: One week to go
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) - Sen. Paul Simon of Illinois
claims a big boost for his presidential bid from the endorse111ent
of Iowa's major newspaper, and former Arizona Gov. Bruce
Babbitt Is trying to catch up to front-running Democratic rivals
through new harsh attacks.
.
.
With one week lefl before Iowa's presidential caucuses, the
stalled Simon cam~lgn hopes the coveted Des Moines Register
endorsement will put undecided voters Into the senator's camp .
in whal is shaping up as a lirht three-way Democratic race.
"U give's some momentum to our campaign," said ,Simon,
who quoted from the newspaper's praise In a speech to Black
Hawk County Democrats In Waterloo Sunday.
Rep. David Nagle, former state party chairman, said the
endonemenl should help Simon. "Paul needed a boost. I
thought he had been sllpplnJt," he said.

proper · channels within the
school system . . Parents For
Eduatlon hope to be able to
provide direction through those
channels.
Several parents st~tted during
open discussion tliat a group like
Parents For Education Is "much
needed." And although Parents
For Education came into being
because of the recent Meigs
Local teachers strike, parents
agreed it Is lime to "put the strike
behind us."
After discussion on several
other areas of concern, the group
broke up in to smaller groups to
choose the representatives -from
each of ihe schools. The panel of
represent~tives. along with an
executive council, will now com. prise Parents· For Education's
governing board.
It was decided that as soon as
. the new board can meet togethe r
to develop the direction in which
the group will now conlinu~.
another meeting will be sche'·
duled. At that lime. it is hoped ·
that information can be provided
to update parents of their rights.
and of current issues now affecting the school system ,

UMW, coal firms
teach agreennent
•

Both sides said they would
WASHINGTON IUP!) - The '
withhold details of the agreeUnited Mine Workers union and
ment until the pact was ratified.
the nation's biggest association
"I don't charac ter'ize the
of coal companlesreached agreement this weekend on a new agreement as positive or negative, " UMW President Richard
contract about 30 liours -gefo.re
Tr
umka told reporters . " It's in
65.000 miners had lhreaten'ed to
the
membership 's hands. It's up
go on strike.
to
ihem
,"
The announcement of Satur·
"These
were tough negotiaday's agreement , which must be
tion s, there were hard Issues. but
ratified by union rank and file
because of the good faith on both
plus each of the 15 companies
represented by the Bituminous sides , we were able to reach
Coal Operators Association, lol· agreement without a work stop page, " he said .
lowed contract talks that had
The union' had , threatened to
continued since Nov. 12.
strike
when their current con·
The agreement affects some
tract
expired
at midnight Sunday
65,000 of the union's 85,000
agreement was
unless
a
new
members in more than a dozen
by
then.
The settle ment
reached
stales. The miners had been
. working under a 40-month con- was announced aI 6 p.m .
Saturday.
tract. The length of the new
"The companies already had
agreement will not be disclosed
until it is ratified, negotiators . been notified ol a strike if the
agreement had no t bee n
said.
reached," UMW lawyer Michael
Ratification vote by union
.
Holland
said. .
membership was set for Feb. 8.
Noting
that
"1984
was
lhe
first
Union executives were to m eet
with local leaders today to lime we reached an agreement
without a strike in 20 years."
explain the proposed contract.
UMW spokesman Joseph CorcoOn Friday, the local presidents
will meet with their members .
Continued on page 12

Toxic spill closes
US 52 at Ironton

Indians seize
newspaper office
LUMBERTON, N.C. ·- Three
· heavily armed Tuscarora Indl·
ans seized the local newspaper
office and took 17 employees
hostage Monday. threatening· to
)!Ill theni unless thejr demands...
were rtu~t.
One of the three men told
United Press Internailonal they
were heavily armed and were
prepared to kill if anyone tried to
·come In the newspaper building.
He said they want action from
·the government. "Our people
have suffered long enough in this
county under a corrupt white
government," said the man, who
was not. Identified.
A newspaper employee who
answered the telehone at the
Lumberton Robelonlan office
said the sltualklll was "very bad.
He's prepared to kill. I'm not

rejected."
adviser Colin Powell. also ·on
Foley said Democrats have NBC. said he believes the vote
been "disappointed" with the .. ,-.will be "very . close . " He said
pace of 'the democratization of passage ·was needed to make
Nicaragua. but more aid to the sure . ('licaraguan President DaContras would undercut the niel Ortega does not go back on
.Guatemala, City: peace ptan _ap- hi.~ PJOmi,se tci.llJake refocms. ·
provedbythe•pres!denttbfCosta
Secret!lry of State George
Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Shultz. Interviewed on ABC-TV's
"This Week" and Powell di·
Honduras and Nicaragua .
"Frankly, I think from the verged In their responses to
beginning the . policy of the questions about a Miami Herald
administration has been the report tliat the administration is
overthrow of" the Sandlnlsta considering appeals to third
government, Foley said. "Their countries for Contra aid if
basic underlying hope is that Congress says no. Such a tactic
somehow they can bring . a was adopted ea rlier and exposed
as part of the Iran-Contra
military solution."
Foley said if Reagan's aid scandaL '
.
request is defeated, the Demo"I'm· not aware of any such
crats would support a package to plan . We will abide by the vote of
help the peace p)'ocess with "no Congress," said Powell.
. lethal aid, not a dollar for lethal
"We're running this very
aid."
straight up," he added.
White House national security

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentl'lel Staff Writer
Organizers of Parents For
Education are hoping that par·
ents in Meigs Local School
·District will look to their group
for information and support to
help ensure that all students in
the district receive the best
possible education.
The newly formed support
group met Sunday afternoon at
Meigs Junior High to formally
organize and to elect representatives from each of the nine
schools In the district to comprise
a panel for the group. Approximately 80 parents . representing
each of the nine schools, were in
atteridance.
Goals of the -organlzatiOJ; were
outlined with the primary objective being "to provide ,tbe best
possible school syste m for all
children In the district. " It was
pointed out that for this goal to be
realized. parents of the school
district "must get involved."
It was stated that the time for
complaining Is past : and that
parents must now lind solutions
to problems or answers to
questions . by going through

KIDNEY OPERATION ~
Ron Diles, Jr., a student at
Melp Junior Hilh Sebool, Is
conllaed to Doctors HOBpltal,
North; Colunibua, where-he 18
scheduled to under1o Hl'lery
for the rer~~oval of ri kidney
and polllbly other aurpry.
Ills coaflllemeat II expee&amp;ed to
be for ld leu&amp; a IIIHth and
)JIG 1UJ COIIId ru to t~everal
mothen. Rf1 mother,
'DIIII, II a&amp;tem,U.g
to Ita)' Ia «lllllm'- to be with
ller durllll thll period.
Row..er, 111e II Ia lleed of
lh•pclaJ ........ Coatrlllatlllll ... earMIIIBJ 1le f!MI
to Boom J11, Doeton Help!. tal, Nortll, Colllmllul, Ohio
· tltOt. The room pboJe
number II 181-4300.

l••••te

•

IRONTON, Ohio IUPI) - A
tanker trook loa!led with tOXIC
phenol stfuck a metal signpost
lying on the roadway early today.
puncturing the tank and spilling
the chemical, authorities said.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
closed a five-mile stretch of U.S.
52 after the accident, which
occurred about 3:30a.m.
Authorities said It was . not
known how many gallons of
phenol, a chemical used to make
explosives, leaked from the
tanker. The truck was carrying .
5,200 gallons.
The driver told police he was
headed east when he struck a
~eta! s.f~npost lying on the
highway, puncturing the tank.
Both directions of the highway
were to remain closed while
authorities cleaned up the spill.
Lt. Paul Rapp ·of the Ohio
Highway Patrol said ri hazardous
materials company would remove tbe topsoil and sand used to
halt the flow of the chemical.
The 'truck, owned by the
Chemical Leamen Co. of Exton,
Pa., was loaded at the Arl.ltech
Chemical Corp: In Ironton, and
. was head~ for Louisville, Ky.

LAND OFFICE BUSINESS - What with tbe
warm, 1111111)' wealber on tbe weeltead, the aew
Tropical Car W•b, located In the Full:llillftdfnc
oa W. Main St.,l'lmeroy, wu tlolng a land oUice

'

btmla• u ra~~~.- p&amp; t11e1r Yeldlll• cleaned
up. Tile aew ear ....... apu1 h IIIJ Balpll Day of
Mlaernllle, doel. llaDd wuldaa 8H waxlag of
veblclea ucl doel plclnlp 81111 dellvii'J Ml'vlce.

.

\

•

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