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Fridi~April8,1~

.

Pac-12-The Daily Seminal

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

Baby boomers reach middle age ·
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Baby sus Bureau report, the median
boomers have officially reached age of the U.S. population rose
middle age, the Census Bureau from30'yearsln1980to32.1years
announced Tuesday, with ,the In 1987.
Suggesting there Is a "baby
leadln,g edge ofthe post-warchUd
surge passing the 40-year mark.
boom echo" - children born to
The Census Bureau also re- the large number of baby boo·
ported the population of the mers - the bureau said the
United States Increased to number of children under age 5
243,915,000onJuly 1,1987- a,7.4 grew by 12 percent. It noted
percent Increase over the ll)llny women born In the baby
227,061,000 people reported Apru · boom have entered their .prime
1, 1980.
. childbearing years.
"The repercussions of the baby
But the age group showing the
boom are many and varied," the sharpest decline was that of
bureau said. "They wUl continue people between 14 and 17 years ·
to affect the United States for old, which declined byll percent.
many years to come."
The groups 5 to 13 years and 18 to
Thenumberofmenandwomen 24 years also declined, the
aged 35 to 45 years pld grew by 34 bureau said, noting there were
pe•cent from 1980 to 1987, while 2.1 million fewer children of
the number of those aged 25 to 34 school age In 1987than there were
-the bulk ofthe baby boomers- In 1980.
Increased by 17 percent.
In a related report, the Census
Other age groups .showing Bureau reported the number of
substantial increases: "' ·
U.S. households grew by 12
-The number of people aged percentln the 1980to1987perlod,
85 and over jumped by 28 compared to the 7.4 percent
percent.
population growth - a growth
-Men and women aged 75 to84 largely attributed to the fact that
Increased by 20 percent.
baby boomers are out of college
-People aged 65 to 74 grew by or their parents' homes and
13 percent.
setting up{helr own households.
Overall, according to the Cen-

!Continued from Page 1 0) ·

opened on the date and
place specified above.
7. The Meigs Countv
Commissioners reserve the
right to accept or reject any
or all bids and / or any part
thereof.
Mary Hobstetter, Clerk
Meigs County Board
of Commissionert
(41 B. 15. 2tc

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
BITUMINOUS VENDORS:

Sealed bida will be received
bV the Board of Meigs Coun·
ty Commissioners, Court
House.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
46769 until 12 Noon on the
271h dov of April, 19B8, and
1he bids will be opened and
read aloud at 1 :00 p.m. on
' ~ tho 27th doy of April. 1988.
: for the furnishing Of bituminous materials for the Meigs
County Highway Depart·
ment; and each month
thereafter. bids will be re·
ceived and opened on the
last Wednesday of each
month for the following
month's requirement.-; e•.
tlmated quantities of liquid
asphalt requirad, approximately 500.000 gallon• for
the year.
SPECIFICATIONS FOR
THE BIOS :
1. Bid price par gallon f.o.
b. vendor's plant, the bid
price per gallon delivered to
the vendor's ponabletank to
. any location within the
county as designated by the
County En.oineer, the bid
price per gallon for applied
du•t control; for the various
grad11 of bituminous mate·
rials which ahall conform to
the pertinent State of Ohio,
Department of Highway
Construction and Material
Specifications and
the
Meigs County Highway De·
partment's Bituminous Spa·
cifications .
·
2. Vendors shall understand thai no guarantee ia
given to the actual quantitie• needed. but each auc·
ceasful vendor shall be re·
quired to furnith all or any
part of the County's requirements as ordered during the
bid period.
·3 . .Bidded pricas shall be
firm and in effect during the
bid period.
4 . All bidders must agree
to furni1h any bituniinous
materials, a1 requested in
Item 1, at the same prices to
all the Political Subdivision•
of Meigs County during the
bid period.
5. The envelope, containing each months bid, must
be,. plainly marked "Bitumi·
nous Bid".
6. Propoaals are 1o be returned on bid forms supplied
by the Meiga County Engi·
near: or obtained through
the office Qf the Board of
Meiga County Commlsaion·
ers.
7. The succe1sful vendor
will be required to furnish
i~ny lab work or design
grades as raqu!lstad by the
(

otica

Pu

Public Notice

At the same time, the report
said the average population per
household declined from 2.75
persons to 2.64 persons.
The report also said that, a~ In
past years, the black population
has Increased at a much faster
rate than the population as
whole, with the number of blacks
growing by 11.4 percent In the
1980-1987 period.
· The white population, ineanwhile, grew by 5.7 percent over
the same period.
.
The Census Bureau also said
the "other races" population,
principally American Indians,
Alaskan Natives, Asians and
.Pacific Islanders, grew at a
much more rapid rate -lncreaslngby52.2percent.Thatlncrease
"has resulted from extremely
high net~lvillan lmmlgratlon,"lt
said.
While the population as a whole
Is "graying," the burea.u said,
thl!,blackpopulationlsconsldera·
bly younger than the white
population with a much larger
share under 25. In 1987, the
bureau said, the black median
age was 27.2 years while _the
white median age was 33 years.
Notice

Public Notice

Meigs Cou
Engineer.
8. The Melgo Countv Com·

Volume 147, Page 389. and County Deed Records.
Volume 121, Page 136,
PARCEL FOUR: Com·
Meigs
County
·
oeed
Re·
mencing
at the southeast
to acc,pt or reject any or all
cords, and further bounded corner of the said lot of land
bida. or any part thereof.
and described as follows:
conveyed to Bernice Darst
Mary Hobototter. Clerk
PARCEl
ONE:
Beginning
by deed recOrded in Volume
Meigs County Board
at the southeast corner of a 168. Page 644. of the Deed
of Commi11ioner1
lot owned by Anhur Maddy, Records of Meigs Coun~y.
(4) 8. 15. 2tc
on Front Street, 121 feet be· Ohio. thence northwesterly
low the corner of Spring and along the east line of said lot
Public
Front Streets: thence in 8 ninety 190) feet to tho
nonherly direction 100 feet; nonheast corner thereof;
thence in a northeasterly di· thence southwesterly along
NOTICE OF INTENTION
rectlon and parallel with the north line of said lot,
TO DISCONTINUE
Street 38 feat; thence eighty-eight 188) feet to a
Front
OPERATIONS OF
in
a
southerly
direction and point; thence southeasterly
BRANCH OFFICE.
Notice it hereby given that parallel with Arthur Maddy and parallel with the ealtline
eatt line 100 feet to Front of said lot ninety (90) feet to
the City Loan Bank, an Ohio
Street; thence along Front the south line thereof;
bank having its principal ofStreet 38 feet to the place of thence northeasterly along
fice in Columbus. Ohio, haa
beginning.
the south line of said lot
received permission from
· PARCEL TWO : Beginning eightv·eight (BB) foot to tho
the Ohio Division of Banks
at the southeast corner of a place of beginnng.
to discontinue ita branch of·
There Is also conveyed
fica operation at 236 East lot owned by Mrs. Sara Jane
Smith
lsaid
lot
having
been
herewith
the ten (10) foot
Main St.. Pomeroy, OH .
purcheaed by her from Glen · strip of land that lieasouth of
45879 on April 30. 1 9BB.
Deposit account• held at nie Davia. and being a part of the lot above deacribed.
REFERENCE DEED: Vo·
that office will be trans- what was known as the Hor·
ferred to the City Loan ton Boat Yard property) on lume 298, Page 137, Meigs
Front Street; thence In a County Deed Records.
8ran~h office located at 26 7
northerly direction and fol· · Also the following real
East ·Main St., Jackon, OH .
lowing the east line of said estate situate in the State of
46640.
lotnlnety(90)feat;thencein Ohio, County of Meigs and
(4) 1. 8 2tc
a northnstorly direction and Village of Pomeroy, and
parallel with Front Street bounded and described as ,
P!Jblic Notice
thirty-eight (38) feet; thence follows. to· wlt:
in a southerly direction and
Beginning at the northeast
parallel with Spring Street corner of a lot purchased by
APPOINTMENT OF
·
FIDUCIARY
ninety 190) feet to Front laVina I. Downie from 1aid
On April &amp;, 1988; In the Street; thence along Front Glenflie Davis; thence in a
Meiga County
Probate Street thiny·eight (38) feet northerly direction and pa·
Coun, CaJe No. 25811, to the place of beginning, rallal with Spring Street ten
Pauline Snowden, 43946 and being pan of the prop· (1 Q) feet; thence in a wet·
Hartinger Road, Pomeroy, arty conveyed by
Mary terty direction and parallel
Ohio 467.69, was appointed Rasp, deceased, by certlfi· with Front Street thirty.
Adminiatratrlx of the oo~otel cate of ·tranJfer to Helen eight (38) teet; thence in a
of Elmer G. Sayre,
Rasp Meier, and dated Feb· southerly direction and pa·
ruary 8, 1941, and recorded rallel with Spring Street ten
ceaaed, late of 43946
ringer Road, Pomeroy,
inVolume147,atPage389. (10) feet; thence in an
46769.
Meigs County Deed Re- easterly direction and along
cords.
the northerly line of the said
REFERENCE DEED: Vo- Lovinal . Downie's north line
lumo 298. Pogo 137. Meigs thirty-eight (3B) loot to tho
County Deed Recorda.
place of beginning.
PARCEL THREE: BeginREFERENCE OEED: Voning at,thesoutheast comer lume 147. Page 389, and
Public Notice
oflot No, Two (2) in the on · Volume 121. page 138,
gle of Main Street and Meigs County Dded
Spring Street: thence along Recorda.
IN THE
Main Street southwesterly
The demand of tha ComCOMMON PLEAS COURT
forty-five
feet
to
a
lot
owned
plaint
is that the title to the
OF
by
Lavina
Downie;
thence
above
described real estate
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
back
along
and
upper
aide
of
be
quieted
In the name of the
MOUNTAIN STATE BANK
Lovina Downie's said lot Plaintiff, Mountain State
Plaintiff
ninety (90) feetto .the no1rtn •. 1 'Bank and/or the reforma- vs.eaJterly corner of
lot tion of said deed to include
HELEN RASP MEIER, ET AL
and
parallel
with
Spring
the above described real
Defendants Street; thence in an easterly estate
in Plaintiff's name
CASE NO. 88-CV-79
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION direction and parallel with alone .
You are required to
To: Helen Rasp Meier, ad- Main Street forty·five (45)
dreu unknown if living, and feetlo Spring Street: thence answer the Complaint
if deceased, her unknown along Spring Street ninety within twenty-eight 128)
spouse, heirs, devisees, le· J90) feet to the place of be· days after the latt publica·
tion of this notice which will
gateea. executora, next of ginning.
Also the following dea· be published once each
kin, administrators, and as·
signs, whose addrelaes arf cribed tract In eame Village, week for six 16) succesJive
County and Stlite; beginning WHks. The last publication
unknown .
You are hereby notified at the noRheatt corner of a will be made on April 29,
that a Complaint to Quiet lot owned by Lovina Dow- 1988, •nd the twenty-eight
Title has been filed in the nie; thence in a nonherly 128~ deya for answer will
Common Pleas Court of direction and parallel with commence on that date.
In case of your failure to
Meiga County, Ohio, Case Spring Street ten f101 feet;
No. 8B · CV-79. demending thence In an eatterly dlrec· an1wer or otherwise re·
tion end parallel with M•in apond as required by the
to quiet title of the following
described real astllte in St!'HI forty-five (451 feet to Ohio Ruleo of Civil Proce·
Plaintiff's name. and/or the Spring Street; thence In dura, judgment by default
reform•tion of Plaintiff's eoutherly · direction alona will be rendered against you
deed to include 1he follow- Spring Street ten (1 0) feet; for the relief demanded In
ing real estate which ia thence in a wuterty direc· the Complaint .
larry E. Spencer,
situated in the Village of tion and parallel with Main
Street
forty-five
(45)
feot
to
Clerk of Courts
Pomeroy. CoUnty of Meig1,
Meigo Countv. Oho
State of Ohio, and contained the pl&lt;lce of beflinnlng.
REFERENCE DEED: Vo- (3} 25; (4} 1. B, 15,
in Volume 298, Paga 137,
lume 298, pogo 137, Moigo 22, 29, 6tc
missionerp reserve tha right

Golf At Its Finest!
GREEN FEES

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18 Holes, Weekends ....................................... :........ $14.00
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9 Halest Weekends ......................................... ~ ......... $9.00
(Ministers and retired members same as published aboVJ,)

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273·3396
273-4121

By Dick Thomas
Page D-8

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Tlmes.Senllnel Slaff
POMEROY- Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, speaker of
the ·Ohio House of Representatives, wants to "set the record
straight" on the General Assembly's commitment to education funding. Riffe's h'e was
provoked by recent stat~wlde
television, radio and newspaper
advertisements criticizing the
General Assembly lor the fundIng levels provided to education,
prompting him to speak out on
the subject. The ads were sponsored by the Ohio Education
Association.
Riffe takes exception to OEA's
criticism, pointing out that "even
.!n the recent biennium, given the
limitations In revenue growth

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and the pledge of no new taxes,
education received the largest
appropriation In the history of
Ohio."
·
Riffe charges that OEA, by
suggesting through their ads that
the legislature bas been shortchanging Ohio's schools, has
attempted to mislead the public.
"These ads not only Ignore the
facts," Riffe says, "but also
Insult those of us In the leglsla·
ture who have been strong,
consistent friends of education."
Riffe's executive assistant, Ty
Marsh, points out that Riffe has
long been a supporter of educa·
tlon funding and higher teaching
standards.
·
On the other side of the coin,
the OEA Is sticking by Its ad
claims. Says Marilyn Cross,

state OEA vice-president, "the
facts as stated in the ads are
accurate and were verified before they were used."
.
The Issue that OEA wants to
bring before the public and
before the legislature, Cross
says, Is that "problems do e~st
In a· state where per pupil
spending can range from $10,000
per pupil In one school district to
$2,000 per pupil In another."
The $10,000 per pupil district Is
Beachwood Cl tY In Cuyahoga
County ·where $9,700 of the
spending figure Is derived from
local real estate taxes, Cross
reports. A little closer to Southeastern Ohio, Upper Arlington
In · Franklin County Is spending
approximately $7,000 per pupil,
she adds, while the $2,000 district

Is London In Madison County.
According to Riffe, spending
by the state on a per pupil ba'sls
has more than tripled In the past
10 years, "showing an average
annualized growth rate of 19.9
percent."
Locally. according to 1985·86
figures from the Meigs County
Board of Education, per pupil
spending Is $1,612 In Eastern
Local, $1,680 In Meigs Local and
$1,7781n Southern. On an average
In Meigs County, reports Treasurer George Collins, 65 percent of
real estate taxes goes to the
schools.
Based on comments from
Cross, It would appear that
OEA's gripe against the legislature has to do with the distribu tion of state funding.

{---1

lit~~..,_
-)~-ltArtto. . .
a-¥otltr... ,

RIO GRANDE - A seasoned
political observer will share his
views of the 1988 presidential
election In the next Community
Forum Series presentational Rio
Grande
College/Com.munlty ·
••
College.
- ~
NBC News national political
correspondel}t Ken 'Bode Is \o
speak In the Fine and PerformIng Arts Center auditorium on
Thursday·, April 21, at 8 p.m.
Bode, who frequently appears
on "NBC Nightly News" and
"The Today Show," has been
- with NBC since September 1979,
reporting on the political scene In
the nation's capitol and around
the country. For NBC, he CO·
vered VIPs, caucuses and state
delegations In 1980 and was a
convention floor reporter In 1984.
Prior to joining the network,
president. The actual constrncllon 11 by tbe M&amp;T. Bode was political editor for The
Conatruct1o11 and Excavating of BldweU. Pictured
New Republic maga:Zlne for five
liijllllt one small front oectlon of the extensive new
years. From 1972 to 1974, he was
structure. Approximately 90 people wiD be
director of the Project on Pres!·
employed at the facUlty when It opens. (Times·
dentlal Nominations for the
Senlln.el pholo)
Twentieth Century Fund Task

'"'

cuatom • • ~,._;

9 Section!: 66 Pages
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Riffe asserts however that the
Last April, Riffe appointed an
trend ts already for the state to 18-member committee to study
pick up a larger share of the tab public education In Ohio, lncludfor education. In 1975 the state In g p o s s l b I e fund 1n g
provided 46 percent of the nonfed· descrepancles.
eral aid to primary and seconNevertheless , Riffe feels
dary education, while local sour- , Ohio's schools and teachers have
ces provided 54 percent. By 1987, · fared well in thepastlOyears and
the ratio was reversed wtth the that the sta te's record of support
state providing ·54 percent and for education Is Impressive.
local sources 46 percent, he says.
He says that assisting educaOn a per-pupil basis, state ' tlon has been and continues to be
support has Increased much a top priority of the-legislature.
more than local support, he adds. "In fact," he continues, "we
· "I do not mean to suggest that have committed an unprecethe legislature has solved all the dented amount of state funds to
problems of our education sys· education."
"
Ten years ago the state spent
tern," Riffe says. "I merely want
to point out that the leglslat~tre Is 30.91 percent of the General
In fact providing tremendous Revenue Fund, nearly $2.7 bll·
amounts of state resources to our lion, for orlmarv and secondary
schools."
(See RIFFE, AI)
--....:..,

NBC correspondent
·.speaks at Rio Grande

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rain zero percent.

•
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Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. April10, 1988

Sttl

Alloy . . . . Itt,

OVERCAST
Increasing cloudiness .
lDghs In mid ~Os •• Chance of

House Speaker wants ·to 'set record straight'

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Page B-8 ;;;n:~;.:i)(i;.Ta;;

Vol. 23 No.9
Copyrigh11od 198B

1t1t

C-1

Inside:

'Beat of the Bend, By Bob HoeOich

•·

""
~~"'*
PROGRESS - Progress Is being made on the
COIIfllructlon of tbe sprawllng·new 100-bed nursing
home facility at 333 Page St., Middleport.
Scheduled lor completion by mld-aummer, tbe
SU mUHon facility Is being byllt by Meigs Center
LTD, of wblch Dr. Harold Brown of Pomeroy Is

Force.
Before his association with the ·
Twentieth Cer:tury Fund, Bode
was director of the Center for
Political Reform In Washington,
an organlza lion devoted to e lecUon law reform. From 1969 to
1970, he was research director of
the Democratic Party's national
Commission on Party Structure
and Delegate Selection. He has
atten~ed every national nominal·
lng convention since 1964.
Bode graduated cum laude,
Phi Beta i{appa from the Unlver·
slty of SOuth Dakota In 1961. He
received his master of arts and
Ph.D. from the University of
North C~rollna.
He was an assistant professor
ot political science at Michigan
State University from 1965 to 1968
and an asslstanfprofessor at the
State University of New York at
Binghamton from 1969 to 1970. He
has been published in numerous
periodicals, Including The New
York Tlme'l!nd Playboy.
"Ken Bod~nows more about

BODE
JfCKEN
correspondent
..

politics than almost anybod;Y In
television and more about televl·
slon than almost anybody In
politics," said David Broder of
The Washington Post. "The
combination would be dangerous, were It not touched with the
detachment and good humor that
he brings with him to every
story. ''

I

Manhunt continues in Ohio;
·Columbus sightings reported
'

By United Press International
Ohio law enforcement officers
have been kept busy lnvestlgat·
lng reported slghtlngs of a
convicted murderer who escaped
from a West Virginia prison last

- As· IS SPECIALS

a

HOURS

Reds defeat Astros, 5-4

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u.

Wf -

50 cents

Tentative
grilf course
opening J~ne 1

For Your Old Car or Truck
t

.

BOBBY DEAN STACY
Elcapee from W.Va.

88·87

60 mo.

86-85

54 mo.

84-43

48 mo.

BZ-Oider

36 mo.

strong lead.
Stacy escaped last Suriday
from the West VIrginia State.
Penitentiary In Moundsville
along with two other murderers,
Tommie Lee Mollohan and David
Williams. All three were serving
life sentences with no parole
possible.---'
Stacy, 37, was sent to the prison
for the 1981 murder of Huntington, W.Va., pollee officer Paul
Harmon. At the time of Harmon's slaying, Stacy was a
suspect In the wounding of Huber
Heights, Ohio, pollee Lt. David
Ford.
1n August 1981, Stacy surprised
Ford with a 12-gauge shotgun
behind a fast-food restaurant In
the Dayton suburb.
Ford was wounded In his leg,
side, and abdomen when he
confronted Stacy In a wooded
area near the restaurant. Ford
says a bulletproof vest saved his
life.

WHAT'S ON THE WAY! - Thla teuer
billboard can be seen In aeveraJ IocaiiOIIllln GaUl a
CoUDty, heralding lhe cumin&amp; of a new bulllaeaa.
There 18 no ladlcatlon on llle biDboard of lhe
potential bullilleu, but 110me speculate on a
llbopplog center, wbUe olhers Indicate a slarle

eetabllalunenl. a related matter, TheGaJUpolls
Plaoillq ComliduiOD will have a public bearing
May 2on behaU of Roy Price ol Columbus and the
David J. Gllmcber Company of Columbus to
eatabllah a llbopplng center In a river commerce
dlmicl. (Time1-8enlilie1 photo by Geoff Os~ '
borne). See story on A... •

I

JVS levy will provide CQntinued senices for students, .adults
By MARGARET CALDWELL
'Dmn S~nliael 8laff

•Payment figured with down poyment of $1000 CIS~ lir tr,de plus Ill &amp; lrtle -

'weekend.
Bobby Dean Stacy, a native of
Columbus, reportedly was seen
In a grocery store parking on
Columbus's north .side Friday,
but pollee officers were unable to
confirm the report. ··
Officers received six reported
slghtlngs of Stacy In Columbus on
Thursday night, said David
Hanna, supervisor of the FBI
Columbus office.
''People were beginning to see
him behind every tree," Hanna
satd.
The reports probably were
prompted by the distribution of
150 wanted posters, Hanna said.
The FBI has assigned nine
agents to help In the search.
Stacy also reportedly \Vas seen
In the Urbana and Dayton areas
during_ the week.
FBI spokesman Bob Siller In
Dayton said the agency bas been
swamped with slghtlngs In Ohio,
but none of them amounted to a

RJO GRANDE - The GalllaJackaon·VIntoll" Joint Vocational
Scbool District has placed a one
mUI operatlnf levy for a contlnu·
Ina period on the May 3 Primary
Election baUot.
The JVS dlltrlct bas operated
under on the 11172 ort&amp;lnal twg
mDJa for ten years untn the two
mDJa were renewed In 1982. ·The
dlltrlct's revenue bas not kept
the .pace with the conlinuoua
Increase In operauna coati, and
• Ia faclnf a S234,000 delldt by the
end of the 1988-88 ICbool year.
The one mill should aeaerate

approximately $750,000 per year. centra ted on an energy manageA "Yes" vote would allow the one ment system to reduce energy
mill to be used to offset Inflation- costs.
ary coats, erase the projected
Other saving methods Include
deficit, provide for dally opera- preventative maintenance and
tion, and to replace worn and using the staff as much as
obsolete equipment that was possible for repairs. The district
purebasad with the opening of the has Invested funds recelvecl on
IChool.
the same day to earn maximum
The dlatrlct bas tried to combat Interest. And to assure proper
rlslna operattq coati In several stafflna, a 19116-87 school year
ways. Tbreecompetltlvebldsare staff analyst• by the Office of
req1111ted on equipment and School Manqement Indicated
1uppllel. The dlltrlct purchased that the district waa neither
Ita telephone srstem and overstaffed nor understaffed.
challpd from eleCtric to
"We need your support," said
bollera, both with 2 % years ·John A. Sbump, auperlntendent
paybac.b . 'Ibe dlatrlct bas con· of the school dlltrlct. "Your help

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with the Gallla-Jackson-Vlnton
J.V.S.D. one mill operating levy
will provide vocational training
and Job placement success to
both high school students and
adultl."
The Buckeye H!Us Career
Center II an Important educa·
tlonal link to the c!Uzeas of
Gailla, Jackson and VInton coun·
ties. BHCC provides 24 voca·
tiona! akW programs and six
special education classes to blah
school students as well as adult
education proarants.
Over 3,100 hiJIIIChoolstudents
have suceesfully completed ca·
reer programs.. With the p l to

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provide vocational education to
juniors and seniors In Gallla,
Jackson and Vinton counties,
students come to BHCC from
Gailla Academy, Kyaer Creek,
Southwestern, North Gallla,
Hannan Trace, Wellston, Jack·
son, Oak Hill and Vinton County
high schools.
An average of· 2000 adults a
year have participated 1n one or
more of -the adult school programs offered. More than 10,000
local Individuals have taken
advantage of the adult education
opportunities, Including full-time
employement training, commun·
lly computer lrlllnlnf, fire, EMT

'

and pollee training, financial aid ,
career counseling, job placement services, and customized
training provided to local businesses and Industries.
The North Central Assocla tlon
of Colleges and Schools granted
accreditation to Gallta·JacksonVlnton Joint Vocational School
District Adult Education In 1985.
The one mill levy would be used
to up-grade and replace equip·
ment aa needed and meet current
operatlna expenses, lncludlni
new textbooks, supplies, sa.l arles, equipment repair and bulld·
log maintenance.
(See JVS, AI)
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Commentary (a nd perspective

Page-A-2
April 1 0, 1988

Ex-Navy chief sees 'moles'__:___B_y_Ja_ck_A_n_de_rs_on

J

A Division of

WASHINGTON- Former SeThe early 1970s were the could have been anything by
He never had access to classicretary of the Navy John Leh- seedling years for these conser- now. An assistant secretary of fi ed secrets. but rubbing
man, now a national security vatives. several of whom·rose to defense- for maybe .state.
shoulders with those who did
adviser to George Bush, believes top positions In the Reagan
"I am convinced that there are gave him ' access 'to valuable
there are high-level So\llet administration. Lehman became others like him," I,ehman told
Intelligence.
·
"moles" in the U.S. government secretary of the Navy In 1981 at the autrlors. ''Righf\tere In this
R~; Third Al't'. , Gallipoli!-&lt;, Ohio Ill Cnurt ~t.; Pomeroy, Ohiu
In the mld-1970s, Sattler came
today.
(61~) H6&gt;!:U2
(6U) 992-2156
· the age of 39. Contemporaries building (the Pentagon). I am
to Lehman looking for a job.
Lehman speaks from an unset- Richard ' Perle and James P. convinced that there are moles Lehman was then deputy dlrec·
tling personal brush with the spy Wade Jr. became assistant se· high In the United States tor of the Arms Control and
ROBF.RT L. \\'1NGE'I''I'
business. A friend of his, whom cretarles of defense. According government."
Disarmament Agency. Sattler
Puhlish~r
Lehman came close to placing In to Lehman, Sattler fiad the stuff
Sattler's career took him to a told Lehman that he had also
a job that would have given him to do the same.
IIORART \\'IUiOJ\' .JR.
teaching job In New Zealand, a consulted their mutual friend,
PAT \\'IIITEIIEAil
access
to
nuclear
secrets,
turned
Sattler
also
had
some
stuff
But
F.x~·( · u•ivt• Editor
research
fellowship In West
t\."iSi!'!1an.l Puhli~hf'F-Controlh•r
James Wade, then a deputy
out lobe a spy, paid .and trained that his friends didn't know about Germany and a job with the assistant secretary of defense,
by the East Germans and work- - a mission to spy for the Atlantic Institute of Foreign
A MEMBER of The United Pri:$s International , Inland Dally Press Associ a·
but Wade didn ' t have a job for
Ing for the Soviets.
Soviets. ·
,. ·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclat!Qn.
Affairs In Paris, before he came · him .
·
The spy was American-born
Lehman broke the story during to Washington as a foreign policy
"We
all
knew
each
other.''
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sho uld be less than 300 words
James Frederick Sattler, . who, a lunch with journalists Norman analyst for the Atlantic Council
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with namt\ address and
during the 1960s, attended the Polmar and Thomas B. Allen· of the United States: The council Lehman recalled. "We hung
telephone number. No unsigned letters WUJ be publlshed. Lellers should be in
around together. We drank beer
tJnlverslty of California a t Ber· while still secretary of the Navy. Is a respected foreign-policy
go(xt tast e, addressing Issues, not personalities.
together. I thought I knew Jim
keley and then studied In Poland Polmar Is one of the country's organlza lion specializing In
quite
well."
and East Germany, where he le.adlng experts on naval affairs North Atlantic Treaty Organ!.zaLehman
had a job for Saltierwas converted to the Ideology of and has been a consultant to the tlon Issues. It works closely with
one
with
access to nuclear
the East~rn Bloc. At the request Pentagon. Allen was senior book Capitol Hill, the Pentagon and
secrets.
But
before Sattler signed
of the KGB, Sattler was trained editor at Natlona:l Geographic .the National Security Council.
on,
an
Easl
German defector'
· In Inte lligence by the East Magazine. The authors relate
"James Sattler was part of
tipped
the
FBI
to his espionage
Germans and then came back to Lehman's surprising story In that world, a political sclentlst
By LEE LEONARD
the
FBI came to
activities
and
the United States, where he made their soon-to-be-released book with access to high·level people
UPJ Statehouse Reporter
Lehm&amp;n.
They
wanted
Lehman
friends with a group of defense "Merchants of Treason."
COLUMBUS - In the 1960s, there was a Broadway play entitled,
and Ideas. an Intellectual who
to
convince
.
h
is
friend
to be a
. Intellectuals, Including Leitman.
"Been Down So Long It Seems Like Up To Me.''
"He was like one of us," had Intimate kmiwledgeofNATO double agent.
Lehman said of Sattler. "He policy," the aulhors write.
That would describe the Ohio House Republicans, only five of whom
The surprised Lehman gave It
have ever served In the majority. Few recall a spea,ker other than
his be~t shot. Sattler didn't deny
powerful Rep. Vernal Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, and like unforglven
he was a spy. He told Lehman
souls, they seem doomed to float around In their purgatory until he
that his East German controllers
steps aside.
,
had pushed him to get a govern·
While Riffe doles out a few bills and projects to Republicans to keep
ment job, although he dldn'twant
· them happy, and deals with Republican leader, Rep. Corwin Nixon of
to. He said he was an Ideological
Lebanon. he has made a science out of keeping his majority and being
defector, not In It ior the money.
speaker.
(I'n seven years he had been paid
It doesn't hurt that he has at least$1 million In his campaign kittyabout $15,000.)
money raised from Statehouse lobbyists who understand that to get
"I'll have to disappear now,"
on the right side of the speaker can help the·chances of your bllls; to
Sattler told Lehman. and he
get on the wrong side Is to kill them.
walked aut.
Riffe, who uses that money to help re-elect Democrats ln shaky
He later made a brief visit to
districts, can outspend the Republicans about 10 to one.
the Sovl'et embassy In Mexico to
The job of running against Riffe-backed Democrats Is so thankless
ask for help, and then· he came
that the GOP was unable to field candidates ln 29 ofthe99 districts this
back to Washington and che&lt;;ked
year, giving Democrats a free ride, save for write-Ins or
In with the FBI. Since . his
Independents. Just as important, It makes Riffe's money go even
espionage activities to that point
further If he doesn't have to spend it.
had been minor, the FBI simply
"It's difficult to convince people to run for state representative,"
forced him to register as a,
Jamen\s Rep . JoAnn Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, the minority whip
foreign agent.
assigned to field candidates. "Nobody likes to lose. There aren't
Sattler has dropped out of
many people out there· willing to be a sacrificial lamb.''
sight. Lehman heard that he
Just as the Legislature has become a year·round, full-time job,
went back to East Germany, but
Incumbent lawmakers have built up a tremendous advantage. They
another story had him marrying
want to stay elected.
the daughter of a Latin American
"In the old days, you had to have another job," said Rep. Robert
military official and settling In
Netzley, R-LauriL "We only got paid $5,000 a year. Now you get
her country.
$35,000. It's better than being a school teacher or a social worker or an
• alcohol abuse counselor. This Is the best job they ever had, and the
• Important thing becomes ; 'How do I stay here?'"
·
Nixon and his assistant leader, Rep . David Johnson of North
C,anton, are resigned to waiting until the next time legislative
boundaries are redrawn In 1991 to mount a challenge.
"The man (Riffe) has got the gavel," says Nixon In defending his
A best·selllng book from acadeWhy. then, Its popularity? It 's Newman Clubs for Catholics,
cooperative leadership style. "He's got the votes. I think he's been
mia means one of two things. probably because Bloom uses his Hillel Clubs for Jews, Hispanic justify his Inferences and opln·
very fair. When you're down as far as we are, you've got to take the
Either serious readers are de- respectability and his erudite , Clubs and Asian-American Ions. He argues that college
education Is pedagogically bankbest hold ' you can get. I know I'm taking the best hold as far as a
vouring Its literary elegance or mind to justify all of the mindless Associations.
rupt, that the MBA as "the moral
majority of my members are concerned."
dilettantes are pretentiously dis· Insecurities Americans harbor
Discussing his Cornell trauma, equivalent of the M.D. or law
Riffe backs his card-P.laylng buddy. "Even at times when people
playing It to demonstrate a about universities, university Bloom uses the terms "black
degree" Is a "great disaster,"
mom-e'ntary collision with graduates and black students.
don't agree with you, if they know you're being honest and fair with
militants," "black radicals" and that Walkman-wearlng college
scholarship.
them, they can live with that," he said.
"black students" lnterchangea· students are "spiritually detu·
The subtitle of his book Is:
Riffe says Republicans come to him privately and thank him for
Allan Bloom's controversial "How Higher Education Has
bly . (They all look alike, any- mescent" In their "primal
keeping the public squabbling between the two parties to a minimum.
best seller, "The Closing of the Failed Democracy and Impover·
way) . In a section on "The
"When you're a strong leader, everybody benefits," he said.
American Mind," seems to be a !shed the Souls of Today's Stu- Decomposition of the Univer- slime," and that "no public
The Speaker claims Republicans fare better than the Democrats
case of the !alter. During a recent dents." A more accurate subtitle sity/' he begins his incrimination career these days ... has much to
.
television Interview, for exam- would .be: "How to Punish Black by referring to "the guns of do with humane learning."
did when they had o0ly 35 House members 20 years ago. ''Things are
Not
so,
dissents
an
equally
better today," he said. "They are treated better than we were when
ple, the president of the Univer- Students for Traumatizing Cornell," a 1969 Incident when
we were ln the minority."
sity of Miami (which does not. Academia With Guns and Afflr· armed black students seized an distinguished scholar. In an
essay, "The Open American
"My record Is:out there ," said Riffe. "My performance Is out there
usually confuse pursuit of truth matlve Action."·
administration building.
·.
Mind," Wesleyan University's
to be read and seen .by all. The people ultimately make all the
with the conquest of athletics)
Throughout his incontinent
Bloom finally emerges !rom Henry R. Luce Professor of
decisions anyway as to whether you are doing a good job."
ostentatiously arranged a copy of jeremiad, Bloom Impeaches tohis antl·egalitarlan closet with Democratic Institutions, Robert
The people of the 89th House District have elected Riffe to the House
Bloom's book on his desk.
day's black students for the 1969 this line: "Affirmative action, at ' C. Wood, optimistically reminds
for 30 years and the people of the 84th House District have elected
Bloom's compelling work sins of black stu!lents during his
least In universities, in the source
Nixon for 26 years. but the members of the House have elected each of
should be read, but for the same tenure at Cornell UnlversifY. On _ of what I fear Is a long·term us that "Interaction In scholarthem to leadership. The people of Ohio have no voice In that decision.
reasons peqple read other dis- one page, he hails universities as deterlor~tion of the relations ship and teaching at the bounturbing magnum opuses that "melting pots.~· On the very next between the races In America." dary lines where disciplines
Intersect" requires "trust, not
influenced the history of intellec- page, he says, "a large black ·
Translation: Send the darkles disparagement of our fellows.
tual thought, such as Arthur presence in major universities ...
back to the plantation.
"Trust extends to the students.
Goblneau's "Inequality of the (has) proved Indigestible."
But a more dangerous omni- and that relationship Is also
Races," Karl Marx and FriedHe Indicts blacks for not presence repeatedly threads its
rich
Engel's
"Communist
Manimelting
"as have all other way through Bloom's epic. He reciprocal."
the high school advisor who spent
To the Editor:
Bloom's problem Is that deep
festo" and Adopt Hitler's "Meln groups," but winks his moral eye falls back on an elitist obsession
• I recently learned that Gallla a tremendous amount of his own Kampf." For Blbom has written
down
ln his scholarly gut, he
at .other ethnic and religious with Plato's "Republic" ("for ·
Academy High School placed 7th time assisting these young peo·
really
doesn't trust democracy.
ten a racist book.
encalves on college campuses- me, the book on education") to
In the state In the recent Mock pie. Mr. Howell Is an .example of
But then, neither did Plato.
Trial Competition. I would like to the type of teacher who can make
extend my congratulations to the difference In our educati8hal
those students who were in- system.
Finally, I would like to express
• volved. These students spent
my
appreciation to Rio Grande
over 40 hours In the classroom
They called it by '!II kinds of tered similar complaints.
music "that only a professional back ln.
College/Community
College and
practicing and untold hours
People In evangelical, non- muslcan can sing" and hymns
uncomplimentary names One thing Is evident In all this.
preparing themselves. We often the Emerson Evans School of
" three· ring clrc~s," "show biz liturgical churches are more
"that make singing a struggle The ministers and choir dlrE!c·
Business
for
allowing'
Ben
Wills
' hear of the problems that face
thne," "ring around ti\e sanctu- likely to enjoy this Rotary Club rather than a joy."
tors who pick the hymns and
young people but this was an and myself the opportunity of
ary" and "fruit basket upset," geniality In the midst of the
The
discord
Is
not
confined
to
choir anthems are out of touch
excellent group of h_igh school working with the Gallla
the ·latter being a parlor game service. They -have been doing It Lutherans. When the compliers with what the people In the pews
Academy
Mock
Trial
Team.
students and a credit to
similar to musical chairs In for yeflrs, while It Is a rather of the new United Methodist want to sing and hear.
Sincerely,
Gallipolis.
which all the players dash recent development in the liturgi- hymnal announced they were
Nor do thye have a strong leg to
William j!. Medley
I would also express my
around frantically when a signal cal churches, where It may also
leaving out "Onward, Christian stand on When they Insist, In their
Assistant
Professor
• congralulatio~s ~o . Rick Howell,
Is given.
be an endangered species.
Soldiers," so many Methodists own defense, that what they pick
of Economics
What these distressed church
protested that It had to be put Is "better music."
I recall hearing \he "Old·
people were referring to In such
derogatory terms is that part of Fashioned Revival Hour" on the
the Sunday worship service radio ln our home when I was a
filled out wrong and people are
To Whoni It May Concern:
known as "The Peace," when boy. At some point In each
Many people have been misln· having tp pay back money.
members of the congregation are service, Rev. Charles E. Fuller
I only asked for a marker for
formed In Gallla County about
asked to greet their neighbors In would tell everyone In church to
• the Veterans administration of· my husbands' grave. I am paying the pews by saying, "May the "turn around and shake hands
PARDON ME ...
back money I did not ask for.
flee in Galli a County_
peace of the Lord be with you," or with your neighbor behind you."
I had trouble then picturing
There Is a toll.free number you
There is a Veterans Service
IS THAT THE
just "Peace."
that
would
wcwk,
and
I'm
how
organization In the court house. · can call In Cleveland at the
One of the respondents In the
CHATTANOOGA
They are run by Gallla County. Veterans Office. Which wlll
recent poll conducted by the stlll not sure. rr 'you turned
around
to
shake
bands
with
the
The are not associated with the answer your questions.
magazine of the new 5.5·mllllonCKOO Ct\00...
Veterans administration In
Jean Hammack
member Evangelical Lutheran person In the pew behind you and
• Cleveland, Ohio.
R t. 1, Box 19513
Church In America mockingly he at that moment was turning
There ha&gt;~e been many forms
Gallipolis, Ohio
described the ritual as "Peace around to shake hands with the
whe~ there Is no peace," an person behind him, and so on
allusion to some of the more from the front of the church to the
enthusiastic participants - In- back, It occur~ to me that no
cluding pastors -who Indulge In one would be shaking hands with
To All Chester Parents, Staff, music teacher, was the director.
anybody.
She worked very hard In coordi- aisle-hopping and emotional hug·
and Students,
If there were many heated
glng and kissing, "fomenting
Thank you for your help during nating the program. J
comments
generated by "The
mayhem."
.
Hats off to everyone who gave
the Chester Operetta. The oper·
Peace"
In
the Lutheran poll,
Lutheran magazine reported
etta was a great success because their time. and friendship In
there
were
even more comof the di!dicatlon of many parent, making this year's operetta a · that the major objection or Its plaints about the hymns JUng In
readers to "The Peace" was that
the staff, and the students. The success!
they
considered II to be Jarring church.
operetta consists of many long
Sincerely,
The latqent Is an old one.
lntrustlon Into the mOOd of
Ca therlne Johnson, Principal
and. hard practices that . the
People
want to sing the old
reverent worship. Many Cathol·
students put tl!elr best effort Into.
Chester Elementary School
hymns
to
the old, famlllar tunes.
¥-A
lcs and El!)scopallans have regis·
Mrs. Maxine Whitehead, our
Instead they are ror~d to sing

GOP seems to be in a
perpetual minority in House

.POL.Ii\C~L TURNP'l..

CoNTIN~D AL~
NI5~T... OPR1S1T!0N
lEADERS KAve CAL~D
FOR Ml~ ReMOVAL.

NOW li
J..CUKsAS IF
AclioN HAS
TAKeN PIAC~-·

The closing of Bloom's mind __ch_uc_kS_to_ne

•

Letters to the editor

·

Praises GAHS students

•

Do handshakes mar prayer?_---=-Ge::...:...:..or.!O!..;:...ge.:.....:.Plog.:.:E.._e_nz

Says people 'misinformed'

Berry's World
BoY,

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Chester pupils get 'thank you' .

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

Area deaths

Thelma 0. Capehart

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April 10. 1988

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an~. 2rper!!:~~ ~~uyno~~.·

in

Suits filed
GALJ....IPOLIS- Central Trust
Co., Southeastern Ohio, 358 Second Ave.,Galllpolls, fil ed three
suits Friday In Gallia County
Common Pleas Court seeking·
judgements totaling $6,672.65.
Defendants named In the com·

father, John F. Hjll, are a sister ,
Tamara Leachman, Long BotNEW HAVEN - Thelma 0. tom; grandparents, Mr. and
Capehart, 86, New Haven, died Mrs. Ben O'Dell, Millwood,
Thursday, in the Carehaven - W.Va., and Mrs. Opal Leach·
Nursing Home, Point Pleasant.
man, Ravenswood, W.Va., and
She was born Aug. 17, 1'901 in severa 1 aunts, uncles , and
New Haven, a daughter of the !ale
preceded In death by a
Lewis
and
Arlena
Pounds
brother,
Jeffrey
Lynn Leach·,
Capehart. She was also preceded in
man,
and
a
grandfather,
Brooks
GALLIPOLIS - ·one person .
death by her husband , Burt Elmont
Leachman.
was
fined and 18 others forfeited
Capehart in 1937 and her son, Burt
bonds
for appearances Friday In
Services
will
be
held
at
1
p.m.
Lewis Capehart, in 1942.
Monday
at
the
Ewing
Funeral
Gallipolis
Municipal Court.
She worked at the New Haven
Home
where
friends
may
call
Richard
K. Jagers 33, E .S.R.,
Porcelain Corporation and she was
from
7
to9p.m.
Sunday.
The
Rev.
Gallipolis,
was fined $100 and
also treasurer and recorder for New
will
officiate:
Burial
Don
Archer
costs
.
'!.!!
a
cha,ge or driving
Haven.
will
be
In
Meigs
Memory
Jagers also
under
·suspension.
She attended the New Haven
Gardens.
received
a
suspended
six months
United Methodist Church where
jail
sentence.
she !aught the Live Wire Bible Ethel Sarson
Forelt!ng $41 bonds on accident
Study class. She· was a member of
citations
were: Charla Watson,
the American Legion Smith·
RACINE - Ethel Sarson, 88, 26. E.S.R., Gallipolis, for an
Capehart PosC140 Auxiliary and . 299 Third St., Racine, died
also the VFW Post 9926 Auxiliary, 'Friday at Veterans Memorial · Improper lane change; Chris
Price, 18, Rl. 1 Point Pleasant,
Mason.
. Hospital following a brief Illness. .failure to maintain control;
She is survived by one dau~hler,
A homemaker, Mrs. Sarson
Mrs. Lawrence "Doris" 0. Le1ving, was born at Mount Moriah. a Chandra L. Wooldridge, 18, Rt. 1
Boiling Spring Lakes, N.C.; one daughter of the late Charley and Bidwell, failure to ; stop within
brother, Ray Weaver, New Haven; Sylvia McCroy Pickens . She was the assured clear distance; and
ti\'O grand children and three g;eat· a member cif the Methodist Mark A. Higginbotham, 19, Davis, W.Va .. following too closely .
grandchildren.
Church, the Auxlllary of Racine
Forfeiting bonds on c harges of
Services will be Monday at 2 American Legion Post, and the speeding were: James L.Mllnar.
p.m. at the New Haven United Meigs County Senior Citizens.
Methodist Chun:h with the Rev.
Surviving are three daughters ,
John Campbell officiating. Burial
Sylvia Margaret Wolfe, Racine;
will foUow in the Graham
Flossie Louise Meredith, Belpre;
DAYTON. Ohio (UP!) - By
Cemetery.
Virgie Susan Ours, Racine; three
next
fall, Clark Technical Col·
Friends may call at Foglesong
sons, Wheeler Sarson Jr., Grand- lege in Springfield should be
Funeral Home, Mason, from 6 p.m. ' View, Mo.; Charles R.L. Sarson,
offering the first two years of a
to 9 p.m. Sunday and also at the
Apple Grove; Ralph W. Sarson, bachelor's degree, made . possl,
church one hour before services.
South Point; a gral)ddaughter; ble by an unusual conversion of
Juanita Justis, Belpre. whom she
Minnie Clark
reared , and three sisters, Jessie Its status as a technical school.
The Ohio Board of Regents
Llsk and MaceJ Baker, both of Friday approved creating a
COOLVILLE- Minnie Clark, East Liverpool and Mildred
.86, of Coolvllle, died Saturday Parsons, Racine. Also surviving community college district to .
afternoon at Arcadia Nursing are 41 grandchildren, 46 great- encompass Clark .Technical, the
first step In lhe college's tra nsHome.
grandchildren and 41 great- formation Into Clark State ComArrangements will be made by great-grandchildren.
munity College. Final approval
the While Funeral Home.
Besides her parents, she was of the change Is eJ&lt;pected in July.
preceded In death by her husClark Technical would become
)essie E. Kerns
band, Wheeler Sarson In 1959, only th~ second technic al school
three Infant daughters; . a son,
in Ohio to become a state
. GALLIPOLIS - Jessie E.
Harold S. Sarson. killed In World community college. Columbus
Kerns, 86, of 402 Fourth Ave.,
War II, and several brothers and Technical Institute was conGallipolis, died Friday at Pinecsisters.
verted last July to the two-year
rest Care Center .following a
Graveside rites will be'held at Columbus State Community
lengthy Illness.
·n a.m. Mortday at .the Letart College.
She and her late husband,
Falls Cemetery with the Rev .
The Clark State Community
Garrette Kerns, operated a farm Lloyd Grimm officiating.
College
will offer two-year assoIn Cheshire Township. They were Friends may call at the Ewing
ciate of arts and associate of
married on Oct. 20, 1920 at Funeral Home from 2 to4and6to
science degrees, In addition to
Gallipolis, anjl he preceded her in 8 p.m. Sunday.
the current technical degrees in
death on June 28, 1978.
applied
science and business.
. Born Aug. 25, 1901 In Harrison
As a state community college,
Mary Lou Wellington
Township, she was the daughter
students will be able to tra nsfer
of the late Charlie Boster and
NEW ORLEANS, La. - Mary whole programs to - four-year
Emma Cooper Boster.
Lou Wellington of Algiers, La., schools and ,start in their junior
Surviving are one son, Marlin
died Wednesday, March 30, 1988, year.
Kerns of Gallipolis; two grandat Mercy Hospital , New Orleans,
children, three great grandchildLa .
. ren; and two sisters, Cleo SteBorn June 21, 1931 ln Vinton,
rling . of Cleveland and Ann
she was the daughter of the Late
,Notter of Gallipolis.
Meredith Clair and Elsie B.
She lived In Gallipolis since
(Harmon) Wellington of Bidwell.
1951, and was a member of Grace
She Is survived by one son,
United Meihodist Church;
Richard (Ricky) Geiger of Pen·
former member ofthe Daughters
nsylvanla; four daughters ,
of the American Revolution, and
Donna
Kay Marie, Vickie Mllls.
the Ladles Auxlllary of the
Lou Bridgewater, and
Marva
Lafayette Post of the American
Mrs . James (Susan) Eames;
Legion.
Services will be conducted 1 nine grandchlldren; and three
p.m. Monday at Waugh-Halley- brothers, Wendell, of West VIrgi· Aimee ·
nia. Boyd (Gene) of Bidwell, and
Wood Funeral Home, Rev. Joe
Color: Chino
Leo of Vinton.
Hefner officiating. Burial follows
A wake was held on April 4, at
In Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call ai the funeral home Murray Henderson Funeral
Home, Algiers, with the funeral
from 6 to 9 p.m. on Sunday.
Pallbearers will be BIU Angel, on Aprll 5, with the Rev .
LAFAYmE MALL
Lawrence St. Cyr offlcla tlng.
Harold Thompson, Merch Riffe,
Interment at Westlawn Park
Bob Poling, Tom Pasquale and
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
Cemetery, Gretna, La.
Carlos Wood.
·

co~~~~~s

Sunday Tim&amp;II·Sentinei-Page-A-3

Gallia CoJn
$1.'2!!0.
plaints, and_amounts the bank Is
se eking, are:
est from April 5; and Lonnie
Roy J. Fox, Clifton, W.Va.. Howell, Pilgrim, Ky .. $3.186! .67,
$2,250.33, and 10.9 percent Inter- and 12.49 percent ln teres 1 rom
est from April 5;
April 5.
Bobby Herdman and Sandra K.
Two couples filed for dissolu·
Herdman, Fit. 4 Gallipolis , lions of their marriages. Brenda

Bonds forfeited in.MuniCourt I

THE SHOE CAFE

'

49, Detrlot, Mich ., $47; Kenneth
S. Rogers, 33, Upper Arlington ,
Ohio and Joey J . Oller, Holly wood, Fla., both $44; Marvin ·E.
Ellls, 28. Man. W.Va. and Jeffery
Justice, both $43; · Kathtrlne D.
Lane, 30, Rt. 2 Bidwell, $42;
Bonnie C. Skidmore, 22, Belpre;
Kenneth R. Adkins, 27, Oak Hill;
and Shawn M, Potter, 25, Dayton,
all $41; Robert .J. Sylvester, 61,
Hurrllcane, W.Va., and Sandra
K. Mitchell, Bldwell,both $40;
Timmy J. Roush,18, Rt. 2 Letart,
W.Va.; Jo.n D. Hess, 22, Lima,
Ohio and George T. Hunie, 36,
Byron, Ill, all $39.
A charge of theft was dIsmissed against Terry Williams of
Gallipolis. The charge was dis missed at the request of the
complaining witness, Carla Lambert, Gallipolis.

The Down Under Restaurant
OFFER S

''Start to Finish ., Dining
A GID &gt;s o f s~tec r ~cl House Wine
Cur of french Oni on So up Au Grat in
Tossed G,1 rckn Sa lad
Choi ce of Roa; r r: rime Rib or
Fil ll t of S&lt;ik Alm,lndine
H,,k"cl P o t~fo
Fre;, h l~ l3aked Rolls

I

ChuwL11c Mous ;,e

\

LONG BOTIOM - Gregory
Allen Leachman, 19, 46977 State
Route 248, Long Bottom, died late
Friday night at hts residence.
He was born Jan. 23, 1969 at
Ripley, W.Va., a .son of Royal
Brooks Leachman, Buckhannon,
W.Va., and Mary Jane O'Dell
Leachman Hill, Long Bottom.
Surviving In addition to · his
father, his mother and step·

.unba!? t'imtt~ • .Wrntind

High Top
$2200

SAVE
OFF
VISION SHOES, T. SIIRTS
and SHORTS

Published fi!ach Sunday, 82.5 Third Ave.,

Low Tops
$)800

Gallipolis, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, lnc. Se·
cond class postage paid at Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631. Entered as second class

mailing matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post

Member : United Press International,
Inland Dal.ly Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association, National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales. 733 Third Avenue,

SAVE

20%
Chuck's

Sunday ................................ ~ Cent•
No subscrlptJons by mall permitted In
areas where motor carrier service Is
available.
The Sunday Tlmes·5entlnel wUI not be

responsible for advance payments
made to carriers.
MAIL SUBSCBIPTION8
Souul"l' Oal)'

One Year ................................. $32.24
SIX months, .............................. $16.90
Dallr ud 8uada,
MAIL SUBSCBIPTIONS
Inside Co•&amp;y
13 Weeks .................................. $17.29
26 Weeks .................................. 134.06
~2 Weeks .................................. $66.56

RatM OUII&amp;Ide Counl)' _
13 Weeki ................................. QB.:IO

26 Weeki ................................. 1.16.10
~2Weel&lt;s ......... , ....................... $67.60

1\c&gt;t:C\ ,II i" n' Suggested
5: 00 p nL - 10.00 p.m.

Mothet ol the YeaI' Confegf

j'un ders erved"

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL
APRIL 10-APIIL 16

POTATO
GRANDE

S1 94

ONLY
Remember: Wednesday &amp;
Saturday nights after 4 p.
m. Lorge Pepperoni Pizzo
for
Only S$.00
446-TACO

The Gallipolis
Association
is sponsoring a write-in contest for
"Mother of the Year"
Entrants may submit on essay of 100 words or leu,
explaining why their mother should &lt;be selected
"Mother of the Year".
These essays should be sent to our office at 16 State
Street, and must be postmarked by April 30th. Entries
must include name, age and phone number. The winner
af our contest will receive two tickets to our Mother's
Day dinner cruise, plus o dozen roses for the mother.
I~----------------------------,
.
ENTRY BLANK
I
1I Name: ........................ ,.......... ·-··-·--··-··-·-.. ··-.. ···-··-.. -· .. ·- I1
· ·- ..........
•
1I Address; ........................................................

I1

l Ph~ne: - · · -

l

....... ·- -· ......

~~e~, ·;:;;-~;-·i;,i;;~..(i~;·-e;~;:;,

Let Haskins· Tanner share in your
special prom evening. We have a large
selection of the latest styles and complementing accessories to make your
night a night to remember.

BLURRS .&amp; TRACKERS
Was 1126 NOW $105
SMITH BlUIRS
SElECTED
&amp; VENTURE
BOARDS Was$114 NowS98
REDUCED
AlVA

z

•i l

Was $102

$29 95

Register to Win -one of
these three prius:

~VIR

OnP Year ................................. S31.20
SINGtE COP\'
PRICE

Monday, April I I rhru Thursday,
April 14
. .

PRICES START AT

Office.

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier ar Motor Route
One Week ............................ 60 Cents

reach

$] Q50

Night to
Remem b er "

(USP m·800)

New York, New York 10017.

"This will allow many• more
people to start a low-cost, quallt~
education right here at home.
said Albert Salerno, Clark Technical president.
The first students will be'
accepted In the program next
fall. Within four years. 600
students ar&lt;! expected to enroll
for the new degrees, expanding
the current enrollment of 2.000
students.
Clark Technical began sludylng a conversion In 1976. A survey
of the school's service area of
Clark, Champaign, Logan and
Greene counties found the.percentage of area students who
went on to college was higher
than the state average.
In addition, the region has a
high proportion of older adults,
single parents and minorities
who can benefit from a nearby
school, Salerno said.
William Coulter. chancellor of
the board, said the regents were
pleased with the plan's efforts to

L------- ---------- -----------•

· Gregory A. Leachman

0

Gallipolis , and Gary Reynolds.
Gallipolis , filed for a dissolution
of marriage. Donald Brtan Sowards , Gallipolis, and Kelly
Sowards , 29 Nell Ave., flied for a
dissolution of their marriage.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ii;;::;;~;::~;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;~;;,

Clark Tech offers 2. years of degrees

.

43 Cen tral Ave.,

NOW

•FREE TICKETS FOR TWO TO
KING'S ISLAND
•FREE .TICKETS FOR TWO TO
CINCINNATI REDS BALL GAME
•FREE DINNER FOR TWO
No PurchaH Necttsary. Need not be preHnt to

win.

$75
Open Monday &amp; Friday ewenings till I p.m.

�.'

•

••

Page- A -4- Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

ORTA meeting plamled
GALLIPOLIS - The Ga llla
County Chap ter of the Ohio
Retired Teac hers Association Is
sponsoring a meeting to fa miliarIze active teachers ln Gallia, Meigs, VIn ton, Jackson and
Lawrence Cou nties with th e
benefits ava ilable under "the Ohio
State Teachers Retirement System (STRS),
The meeting will be held from 7
. to 9 p·.m. Tuesday April 191n the
James · A. Rhodes Stud entComm un ity Center ·at Rio
Grande College and Community
College.
Michael Haven, from STRS,
will present a general review to

be followed by a question and
answer period, and literature on
specific topics, such as: purchasIng service·c redl t, medical benefIts, etc., wlll be available.
The Ohio Retired Teachers
Associa tion especially urges attendance of those anticipating or
considering re tirement wl thin
the next fi ve years, however, all
active teachers and their spouses
are welcome to attend .
There Is no charge for th e
mee ting.
For additional Information,
contact 446-4388, In Gallla
County; 992-5811 , In Meigs
County; or your local chapter of
ORTA.

Acco-untant
charged
in laundering
of drug money
CLE VE LAN D (U PJ ) - An
accouilta n t and four other people

have been Indicted In U.S.
District Court for allegedly
la undering money through an
IRS agent posing as a drug
dealer.
Accoun tan t Robert Gross, 48,
of South Euclid, was named In a
nine-count Indictment for cons pi·
racy to defraud the IRS.
Also nl)rlied were Steven
Gross, 31, of South Euclid,
nephew of Robert Gross; Gary
Sherman, 44, a New Jersey

April 10,1988

jewelry salesman; and Howard lng cocaine.
Hurwitz, 40, of Pepper Pike,
The charges resulted from a
Identified as owner of Howard's 14-month Investigation by the
Jewelers In Maple Heights.
IRS and the FBI. Assistant U.S.
All the defendants except Sher- attorney Roger Bamberger said
man pleaded Innocent Friday .
the undercover IRS agent told
In a separate case, Robert Robert Gross he wanted to
Gross was IndiCted with Leslie launder money to make his
Lopez, 39, Strongsville, on Income from drug dealing apcharges of conspiracy to defraud· - pear legltlma te.
the Treasury Department and
Gross helped the agent set up a
filing false tax returns. Lopez dummy corporation to pay the
was also charged with dlstrlbuf- agent a salary, said Bamberger.

·~
Jv.,.:,

BUCKEYE - POWER
TAKE-OFF, 350 ENGINE,
4 SP.
READY NOW

..._~·:::f!.

a

llam Denlhan , In
letter to
Guthrie late Friday, said the
model agency was created two
years ago through a consolidation of services at the BMV's
headquarters . He said It Is the
department's concept iJf how
every deputy registrar office
should operate.
He said In 1987, 41,000 transactions were conducted there.
He also said the department
never In tended to staff proposed
state-opera ted license agencies

(From JVS, Al)

Sunday Times-Sentinel-. Page-A-5

;J.~f.e
(From HOUSE, AI)
R "J'
···-----.:~::.::=.:::~-----------

T
8X
Tl•p$

.~~~ 10 Ft. Dump Bed

1:;~

... _______

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

Vocational Benefits
tlonal cost per year; and prop- education for the two-year large part of the Increased state rl~nced teachers now being pa ld with the mem.bers" of OEA, but
Vocational education doesn't erty appraised value of $105,000 budget period.
that OEA's ads have not painted
support has gone for Improving In the mld -$40,000 range.
cost, It pays. For every dollar would amount to$36.75 per year.
Riffe charges that OEA's ads a true pictu re of educational
For the current two-year pe- teachers' salaries . Between 1982
Invested by the state and federal
The average horne value In rlod, lawmakers have approp- . and 1987, while · the national ove rlook Important ac hieve- standards In the state, nor of the
government In adult vocational Gallla, Jackson and VInton coun· rlated more than $6.9 billion for average salary for teachers ments mad e by ·Ohio's schools legislature's part In those educaeducation, over $541s.returned In ties Is $30,000. The. levy wiU cost . primary and secondary educa- Increased by 38.5 percent, from and students . He says Ohio now tional sta ndards.
cost savings and Increased tax the average homeowner $10.50 tlon, or 30.85 percent of today's • $19,274 to $26,704, the Ohio ranks eleventh In the nation as
''Providing our young people a
revenues. Nationwide, unem- per year· less than one tank-full general revenue. And although average Increased by 44.3 per- far as graduation ra(e; ninth ' qua lity education requires more
played workers enrolled In adult of gasolln4! or one large pizza and the percentage Is about the same cent from $18,577 to $26,814. The among the 28 states reporting tha n just Increasi ng the flow of
vocational education were re- four drinks per year .
as 10 years ago, today's figure Ohio average now exceeds the ACT scores; 32nd In national money from the state. It also
, employed after training at a 98.6
An operating levy Is a tax from represents a vast Increase In national avera.:e. "SI'nce Ohio
pupil-teacher ratio ranklngs. The requires the actl'fe Involvement
percent.
which the proceeds may be used actual dollars. ,
started from a lower base, the 1987 pupil-teacher ratio In Ohio of all Ohloaf\S, Includ ing parents,
In' Ohio nearly 7700 vocational for any legal expenditure of the
Riffe says that despite the achievement Is even more slgnlf- was 18.1 pupils per teacher.
students, teachers and ~c hoo l
cooperative students earn nearly Board of Education. The major- rlslng demands on state tax lcant," Riffe says.
Riffe says his complaint "Is not administ ra tors.' '
$61 mllllon while working part- lty of the funds received from dollars and major swings In the
According to other statistical
time and attending vocational operating levies are used to state's financial health over the sources, while the government's
job training classes . Overall finance the dally operation of the past ten ·years, primary and Consumer Price Index was rising
employment figures ior people school .
secondary education's share of about 75 percent, the average
If you cannot have your·tax return
The district Is expecting to the rapidly growing General teacher salary In Ohio Increased
age 21 and under are 18.8percent
ready to file by Aprill5, you can
compared to 8.3 percent for those rf'Celve a one percent Increases Revenue Fund has remained more than 100 percent over a
who complete secondary voca- In state funding for 1987·88 and relatively constant.
10-year perfod, with some expefile ·an extension, but estimated
tloilal job training programs.
should. receive a three percent
Since 1980, Riffe says, the p:::;.: :;::;::;::;===::;::;:;l
taxes must be oaid in full.
Employers give high ratings to ' Increase for 1988-89. Adulteduca- legislature
has appropriated It
vocatlonal school graduates. For tlon will receive no Increase In more than $24 billion for Ohio's
For complete, professional individual and business
high school vocational school f\lndlng over that two-year schools, nearly $60 million more
graduates , 81 percent of employ- period.
tax preparation assistance call
than the funding levels Initially
ers rate work attitude as outRevenue from federal, state recommended · by the
614-221-0888
standing and 87 percent rate and local levels Indicated In the administration.
work quality as outstanding. For 1986-87 general fund receipts
Riffe also points out that a
ATIORNEY -AT -LAW
adult vocational school gradu- show local-48.18 percent, stateales, 87.4 percent of employers 46.84 percent, Investment
336 S. High St., Columbus, OH.
Certified Public Accountant
rateworkattitudeasoutstandlng earnl.ngs-3.17 percent, and
LOCAL CONSULTATION
736 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
and 86.6 percent rate · work federal-1.81 percent.
in Pomeroy 992-6417
Since the renewal of the two
quality as outstanding.
In Pomeroy, with
(614) 446-8677
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Two
Vocational education often mills during the 1981-82 school
ATTORNEY D. MICHAEL MUllEN
Open 9-5 weekdays, Evenings and Saturday by Appointment
llelps students stay In school and
year, the district's revenue has suitcases crammed with nearly
Serious
Inquiries,
Call
Coiled
$650,000
were
seized
from
a
Increased 29.3 percent while
Improve their grades. The nationa! drop-out rate for pregnant. _,operating costs have Increased traveler who arrived at Los
girls and/or young parents Is 8u-- 80 percent. Renewal of the Angeles International Airport
original twD'ITlllls brought collec· but he was released after denypercent. In the Graduation, Realfty, and Dual-role Skills tions to the full two mills In local Ing the· money was his, authori(GRADS) program In Ohio has a
money plus Increases In state ties said Saturday.
"It's not against the law to be
drop-out rate of 12.08 percent.
foundation funds accounted for
carrying money In suitcases,"
· Occupational Work Adjustthe Increase.
The schools have only three Sheriff's Deputy Van Mosley
ment (OWA) students benefit
from vocational education. Figavenuesofmeetlngthelncreased said. "There's no law that says
operating costs: new construe- you can't·do that."
ures show the !allures decreased
by 47 percent, absenteeism detionoftheschooldlstrlctaddedto ,---......:.----------1
.creased by 24 percent, and
the tax duplicate; legislature
'Suspensions decreased by 34
lpcreaslng state support to
percent.
schools; and local residents
Home Economics Impact proapproving additional school
grams are an aid to students In
property tax levies.
Ohio. Approxlmatey 2430 sutilents showed Improved attne·
dance, and 3096 students showed
i:rade Improvements. Parents of
HARRISON FORD
studnet enrolled In Home EcoIN
nomics Impact programs reported their children have more
'positive attitudes, better attend·
ance and Improved self-Image.
JVS revenues
A millis one-tenth of a penny. A
mill would produce ten cents In
tax lmcome for every $100 worth
of property It Is levied against.
IIIJIIR
I'AT/IICK SWAYlE JENNIFER 6REY
For example, a mlll produces $1
ONI !VINING SHOW AI 7•30 PM
In tax receipts for every $1,000
Must see to appreciate- one of a kind - one careful owner. We sold it
ADMISSION $1.00
ADMISSION.$2.00
worth of property. If a house has
new! Tilt, cruise, AM-FM stereo, Vinyl roof, 31,000 low miles.
an appraised value of$45,000, one
mill additional tax will cost
$15.75.
Property appraised value of
$25,000 would amount to $8.75
additional cost per year; property appraised value of $65,000
)VOuld amount to $22.75 add!-

1988 CHEV. CAB CHASSIS.-BRAND NEW!

New co~t figures are
cited for registration
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The cost of using state employees
to r un the motor vehicle registration syste m could be $5 million
more than originally believed,
according to the Ohio Legislative
Budget Office.
The LBO's memorandum to
that effect was released Friday
by state Rep. Marc Guthrie,
D-Newark , an opponent of replacing the prlvalely opera ted
deputy registrars' offices with
state-ru n field offices.
The budget office said that
b.ase(l . on a "model " deputy
·reg istrar 's office atthe Bureau of
: Motor Vehicles' headquarters In
Columbus, personnel costs In the
fir st year of operation could
range from $19.8 million to $25.1
million.
Gov. Richard Celeste's task
force, which In 1987 recom . mend ed the change to state
employees, estimated personnel
expenses for 150 field offices at
$16.8 mllllon a year.
The Ohio Senate passed a blll
last year proposing to eliminate
272 deputy registrars and replace
tflem with 150 state-operated
field omces. Under Guthrie's
leadership, the House voted to
res tore th e deputy registrars'
offices and make them more
Hflclent.
Guthrie and House Speaker
Vernal Rl!fe Jr., D-New Boston,
. sa id It would cost too much to
staff the offices with state
employees and that convenient
local services would diminish.
They said the license plate fees
would have to be raised to cover
the cost.
• Senate Bill 1 Is now In a joint
conference comml ttee for negotia ti ons between the two
chambers.
The LBO said the task force
·report was based on clerks In the
field offices making $15,428 a
year ar\d supervisors $19,319. It
said under Senate Bill 1, the
clerks would make $17,438 and
t he supervisors $24,294 . .
If the "model" office pay scale
were used, LBO said, clerks
would have to be paid $21,645 and
supervisors $35,889. Otherwise,
LBO said, the public employees'
union would object to the pay
c lasslflcations .
The sa lary costs In Senate Blll1
wer-e $20.3 million for the first full
year, with an assumed 5 percent
annual Increase. Based on the
new figures, LBO said, the cost
would!&gt;!! $25.7 mllllon, and would '
rise to $28.3 million by 1992.
" I am confident (the memo)
supports my position of the last15
months," said Guthrie. "The
' auto registration service dellverr system cannot be moved Into
the public sector without Increas.
ing fees."
' Motorists pay a minimum of
.$20 for registration, plus an
optional county fee ranging from
$5 to $20, plus a $1.50 deputy
:registrar's fee, which would be
.dropped If state employees took
over the operation.
Highway Safety Director Wll-

I

April 10, 1988

BANKRUPTCY
L. W. CENNAMO

JIM MINK

Lynn E. Angell .

Traveler disclaims
cash in suitcase

CHEV.-OLDS.

1616 Eastern Ave.
446-3672
TRUCKS 446-6400
GALLIPOLJ~, OH.

1-------------------:=::=---:---:-----------,--------=====:

with employees
In the
classification
of those
who same
work I
In the model office.
·
"A new classification · of 'license agency clerk' would keep
us within the current operating
budget," Denlhan wrote. "The
new classification also presnts a
substanlallncrease In salary and
benefits to thecurrentemployees
In the 272 deputy registrar offices
without being cost-prohibitive."

rr::;;;;:;;;;::::;:;:;;;;;;;;;;j

..-------------4
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' Zaccaro, 24, was convicted of
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Page-A-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

,-----Area news briefs _______............______-...
Emergency.calls answered

Pike, Ga.lltpolls, will receive a liquor permit allowing the store
to sell beer tor carry-out.

POMEROY -' Seven calls were answered by local units on
Frlcjay, the Meigs County. Emergency Medical Services
reports.
·
Mlddlepoit all2: 34 a.m. took Dick Young from S. Third Ave.,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 4:32p.m. took Ethel
· Sarson from Main St., to Veterans· Memorial Hospital; Racine
at 6:31 p.m . took Woodrow Hall from Bucktown Road to
- Veterans Memorial; Middleport at 7:18p.m. took John Mulford
from Township Road 375 to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland
went to Strong Run Road at 10:20 p.m. for Jerry Lambert who
decllned treatment; Pomeroy at 10: 57 p.m. took Tammy Klein
to Holzer Medical Center from Welchtown Hill, and at 11:13
p.m ., Syracuse took Norman Ferrell from Route 124 to Veterans
MemoriaL

Mobile home fire reported
POMEROY -The Pomeroy Fire Department was called to a
mobile home at 106 Brick St. at 3:17a.m. Saturday. Fire Chief
Danny Zirkle sa id a motor on a furnace burned out. There was
only smoke damage. The home Is own~ by David Campbell,
Chief Zirkle reported.

Man found dead in garage
LONG BOTTOM- Gregory Allen Leachman, 19, 46977 State
Route 248, Long Bottom, died late Friday night at hls residence,
apparently from a self·lnfllcted gunshot wound to the head,
Meigs Coroner Dr. James Conde reported . .
Leachman's body was found In the garage at the restc;lence at
about 12:45 a. m . Saturday by hls stepfather, John F. Hlll, who
was returning home from work and noticed a light burning In
the garage. A shotgun was apparently used to lnfUct the wound.
Time of death was set at about 11: 45 p.m. Friday, Conde said.
Conde, Sheriff Howard Frank an~Deputy Jlmmer Soulsby
were called to the scene early Saturdaymornlng along with the
Tuppers Plains Emergency Squad. Conde said that an
investigation wlll continue although It wlll probably not change
the lnltlal rullng.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Monday at the Ewing Funeral
Home where friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday. Burial
wlli'be In Meigs Memory Gardens.

CSX to fix railroad crossing
CHESHIRE - The CSX Railroad will begin reconstruction of
the rallroad crossing on S.R. 7 between Cheshire and the
Gallla·Melgs County llne.
There wlll be one-lane !raffle during the mornings and
afternoons when the workers will replace crosstles and pave the
approaches to the tracks with asphalt. Two· lane traffic wlll be .
restored In the evenings. The work Is scheduled to take four
days .

I Accidents reported in Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS- City pollee Investigated a two-Car collision at ·
10 p.m. Friday at First Avenue and Sycamore Street. No one
was Injured but one driver was cited.
Pollee said Christopher J. Cohollch, 24, of Allison Park, Pa.,
was headed south on First Ave. and attempted to proceed
south,at the "do not enter" Intersection. Cohollch's car struck
another vehicle driven by Emmett W. Bostic, 36, Rt. 4
Gallipolis. No one was Injured. Pollee cited Cohollch for failure
to yield the right of way.
Pollee also Investigated an accident at 8: 20 p.m. Friday at
Second Avenue and Olive Street, and cited one driver. Pollee
said Grover L . Turner, 68, South Point, headed west on Olive
Street, failed to stop at the Intersection and co!Uded with
another car driven south on Second Avenue !)y Kandt E .
Boggess. 17, Rt . 1, Crown City. No one was Injured. Pollee cited
Turner for failure to yield the right of way .
No one was Injured In a two car accident at 3:22p.m. Friday at
Third Avenue and Spruce Street. Pollee said Betty J . Gilpin, 31, ·
Rt . 2 Proctorovllle, headed east on Spruce Street, failed to stop
at t!w Intersection, and collided with a car driven north on Third
Avenue by Shannon Mayes,19, of21Ne!IAve .. Pollcec!ted Gilpin
for failure to obey a stop sign. ·

Ion theri

April10, 1988

Man pleads guilty to
Meigs arson charges

hamber tonic ·
.tter controlr

Gllmcher

Company

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also · of

VMH rep·ort

POMEROY - Litter control
. Veterans Memorial
Ill be up for discussion when the
Admitted Mary Jones,
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Com· · Pomeroy; Dale Smith, Pome·
merce meets at nobn Tuesday at roy; Woodrow Hall, Racll)e.
Trinity Church tn Pomeroy.
Discharged - Janet Jenkins,
Kenny Wiggins, Meigs County Allee Balser, Lyda Harbert,
Litter Control employee, and Harry Glllland.
Larry Cooper; District IV coordl·
nator with lltt)e control, wlll be
speakers. The program Is In
conjunction with Clean·Up Ohio
week, Aprll 23·30.
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CLEVELAND (U!'I )_ - J:rl·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
464.
Tick et sales totaled
$1, 720.489.50, with a payoff due of
$411,349.50.
PICK-4
7886.
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$272,526, with a payoff due of
$122,654.
PICK·4 $1 straight bet pays
$5,136. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$428.

POMEROY - Norris Delash· counsel and prosecution by In·
mlt, 52, of Middleport and most dlctment, and pleaded guilty to
recently, of Point Pleasant, evidence as contained In a blll of
W.Va., entered a written plea of Information. Crow recom·
guilty to arson when he appeared mended a two-year prison sent·
Friday before Judge Charles ence for Detashmlt.
Knight In Meigs County Common
After questioning the defend·
Pleas Court.
ant to be sure of his understand·
Delashmit was charged with lng of his rights and the plea
arson In connection with fires set bargain, Knight accepted the
March ·28 at an apartment plea bargain and sentenced Debulldlng on Beech St. In Middle- lashmit to the recommended two
port where hls estranged wife years. Delashmit was remanded
was llvlng.
. to the custody of Meigs County
In a plea bargaining arrange· Sheriff Howard Frank, pending
ment with Meigs County Assist· transportation to an appropriate
ant Prosecutor Carson Crow, state prison raclll(Y.
Delashmit waived hls rights to

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BIG ROLE - Horses play
blg role In the life ol Thorn
· Winner. Not only does he use
horses on hls small farm to tlll
the land, but much of his
Income comes from the sale
and repair of harness. The
lamUy has a hundred-year-old
buggy and can occasionally be
seen enjoying a ride along
Sand Ridge Road In the buggy
pulled hy lhls horse.

OHP inves~igates accidents
GALLIPOLIS- Charles K. Burris, 44, Rt. 2 VInton, was cited
for failure to maintain control of hls vehicle after an accident at
11 a .m . Friday on Kerr Road, one mile west of SR. 160, In
.
.
Springfield Twp.
The State Highway Patrol said Burris met another vehicle
and hls car went off the road, struck some trees, went Into a
ditch, and then hlt some tree stumps.
Damage was moderate. No one WII_S Injured.
The patrol also ln~estlgated a car-deer accident at 8: 15p.m.
Friday on SR 218, about three miles south of the j\lllctlonof SR 7.
Troopers said a deer w~s kllled when It ran Into th~ path ofilca't
driven by Jennifer Wood, 19, of Ellenwood, Ga. No one was
Injured.
'
The State Highway Patrol investigated only one._accldent
Friday In Meigs County. The accident occurred at 5:45 a.m.
Friday on CR 5, just south of SR 124, where, according to the
patrol, a car driven by Daniel E. Cunningham, 48, of Pomeroy,
struck a deer. The animal was not kllled. No one was Injured.

soo

I•

TO ..GALLIPOLIS, OHIO '
DIET TECHNIQUES
WEIGHT CLINIQUE

,.

·~ HEAP

·Traditional leatherwork artist
;keeps past. alive through tooling

deadline is April 15 ·

commerce district. The comml·
slon wlll consider granting a
conditional u~ perJlllt for a
trafflc·orlented commercial use
In a river commercial district.
Last Tuesday, City Manager
Dale !man told the Galllpolls City
Commission there Is a posslbllty
of a shopping center locating In
Galllpolls. It would be 150,000
square·feet, consist of 18 to 20
stores with two major retallers,
emplo}'ing 500 to 700 people and

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POMEROY Times are
; tough, and for a traditional artist
·trYing to supplement his small
pension wl th money from the sale
or hls art work, It can be
discouraging, but Thomas
Winner Is determined and hangs
• right In there.
Living on a small farm on Sand
Ridge Road near the Meigs·
Athens County llne. this disabled
veteran Is one of only a few
traditional leather artists In
Ohio.
He does handtoollng In leather,
, designing western wall hang·
lngs, belts, pocketbooks,
cl·
'
• garette cases and checkbook
.; covers, &lt;!S well as making bar·
• ness and saddles, and creating
: buckskin clothing and traditional
; Indian shirts. He's also Into
, repairing horse harness.
; In both 1986 and 1987, he was
: selected by the Ohio Arts Council
.; as one of the top master leather
: craftsman In the state, and was
.; given grants for apprenticeship
. ; programs.
; These programs where skllls
•i are handed down from master to
:: apprentice Is one way In which
; ' the Ohio Arts Councll works to
•, ensure that folk art In Ohio
: doesn't dle.
But apprenticeships are few
and far between In the art field ,
and grants are small . So In
addition to teaching their sk!ll,
artists have to rely on selling
their work as well. And that's
hard, particularly If you happen
to llve In a rural area.
Thomas Winner has found that
out. But he's survlvlng.... and
he's not complaining.
It's just that right now he neejls
some help, "not a handout, more
llke a partner or sponsor", he
says.
Winner was one of 250 Ohio

T
RUTLAND· fURNI URE

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By OHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff

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THE DEPENDABILITY PEOPLE

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SALE
INTRODUCING THE
HELENE CURTIS
HAIR
SPECIFICS PERM IN REGULAR OR
EXOTHERMIC.

WE NOW CARRY NEXXUS
WALK·INS WELCOME

10, 1988

I

PERM

REG. S40

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HAIR HIGHLIGHT'S SPRING

Lottery numbers

Section[ID

'mimts· ientine!

!

•SAFE, FAST GUARANTEED WEIGHT LOSS
•NON-MEDICAL PROGRAMS
CHESHIRE - The Gallla·Melgs Community Aclton Agency
announced that Frida)', Aprll15 Is the deadllne for the HEAP
(Home Emergency Assistance Program).
•NO DRUGS
The program allows a one-time payment of up to $200 per
heating season to restore or retain home heating services.
•NO SHOTS ·
Residents
have
one
week
left
to
apply.
Brown's Market gets permit
.
For more Information, Gallla County residents can call the
•VERY AFFORDABLE
Agency's
office at 446-0611 or 367-7341. Meigs County residents
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Department of Liquor Control
can call at 992·5605 or 992·6629.
recently announced that the Brown's Market at 391 Jackson
•3 OFFICE VISITS PER WEEK
•INDIVIDUALIZED COUNSELING
Planning c~mmission to meet May.2
··
•GROUP BEHAVIOR SESSIONS
GALLIPOLIS- The Galllpolls Municipal Building at 518 Second Columbus.
·
cost approximately $10 mllllon.
City
Commission
· will Columbus
Ave., on behalf
RoyDavid
Price of
The
applicantscenter
desireIntoaestab·
h~~~~~~~~~~~======~~~~~~~~~~
ave Planning
a public hearing
Monday,
and ofthe
J.
llsh
a shopping
river ~-~C~o~ns~t~ru~c~tl~o~n~w~o~ul~d~b~e~g;in~l;n;1988;~·
to be completed In 1989.
2 t 7 p .m In the Gallipolis
, ay • a
·

•

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NOW

$2650

Hair Highlights
Gallipolis, OH.

Rt. 7

. 446-4597
"Across from Bob's Electronics"

'

artists selec~ frqm nearly 1,000 .·he says, whlle the balance after
applicants (the only traditional ·expenses would be shared.
A native Athens Countlan with
leather artist, he says) to partie!·
pate In the Columbus Arts nine years In mllltary service,
Festival which will take place on Winner and his wife came here
the Scioto Riverfront In down· from Florida after he· was
town Columbus, June 3·5c Last discharged a few years ago .
year It was estimated that more Since then he's farmed on a small
than 600,000 peopl~ attended the scale, traded horses , and done a
festival, so the opportunity for variety of other things, while
trying to get himself set up In the
sales Is tremendous .
To encourage hlm to come, the leather business.
He operates . out of a 12x12
festival council has waived judg·
, tng and exhibit fees. Winner's building and most of hts work
problem Is that he jus~ doesn't now Is making new and repairing
have the !llOney to buy the old harness for the numerous
leather to produce the 60 .or 70 draft horses In this area.
But he wants to do more' 'fancy
pieces, some to sell and some to
show and take orders for, he art.''
Winner has a degree In art
would need to take to Columbus.
As It Is now, he has only a few education . After high school he
things on hand since he either a !tended the Jackson Technical
waits until he has an order and School studying drafting and
then begins the work , or he sells engineering for a couple of years,
what he makes almost later went to the American Art
School in San Diego, Call!. for
Immediately.
The profit he makes usually two years, and then finished at
has to be added to hts..veteran's Florida Presbyterian.
"Artwork Is really alll'veever
pension and other small Income
sources so that the family which done," commented Winner. Be·
Includes a· multiple handicapped sides leather art, he says he does
child and a pre-schooler can some work In leaded glass, gold
and silver jewelry, wood carv·
survive.
There's little left to buy more lngs, sculpturing, and glass
etchings.
.
than a minimum of supplies.
Winner has also been Invited to
Winner says he wrote to every
leather suppller explaining his exhibit leather work at The Dairy
problem and hls needs, and was lilarn In Athens, but says he can't
turned down by every one with afford to do that either.
The man Is confident about hls
the exception of Weaver Leather
.
sjtllls,
he's sure hls leather art Is
In Millersburg. That company
saleable,
and he feels that taking
. sent a small box of leather' and
agreed to give hlm an additional part In the Columbus Arts
50 pounds of leather every two Festival could really launch htm:
He also knows that going there
·months as long as he needs lt.
But that doesn't takecareofhls .without lots of things to show and
lmmedla te problem ..:.. money to . sell Is futile. Leather Is expen·
buy the leather siJ that he can slve, Winner's funds are llmlted,
make the things he would need to and he sees an opportunity for the
go tp the festival. He says he exposure he needs sUpping away .
It's not easy sometimes,
needs about ·$2,000 worth of
Winner says, but when your
supplies.
First profits from sales at the hear.t Is In your creative art, you
festival would go to the Investor, just have to hang In and hope.

DESIGNING IN LEATHER- In both 1886 and
1987, Thomas Winner participated In the Tradl·
Honal Arls Apprenticeship Program ol the Ohio

Arts C!luncll. Emphasis of the prosram Is to pair ;
masters with apprentices so that the time· :
honored arts traditions of Ohio will be preserved .

,

'

What Is Cystic Fibrosis?

J

CYSTIC FIBROSIS ta the number one genetic killer of American young
people. It Is a disease that primar11y attacks the lungs and dtgeative

system.

SPECIAL
LIFT CHAIRS
TO ASSIST YOU

IN
SlniNG &amp; STANDING

ON SALE ·

$500°0
THE

Starting At

MEDICAL SHOPPE,
INC.
566 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-2206

•E:v,JY day, C'YeJY live houra, a child Is born with Cf;
•Every day, """'Y etght hours, a chUcl or young adult dtea from CF.
•At p~nt, there ts no cure or long·tenn control for CF.
•An estimated 10 mtlllon people &lt;'one out of """'Y 20 Americans . are
• symptom-free, currently undetectable camera of the gene that causes
CF.

•

YOUR SUPPORr will &lt;:nable the Cysttc Ftbroata Foundation to:'
·
•Conduct ba.otc reaearch and cilnlcal atudteo nece&amp;SIU)' to find the cause
of thts fatal disease,
•Support more thani25 CF medlcal treatment centers.
•Educate health profeoatonala and the publk: about CF and tts
devaatat!ng consequences.

•

For further lnfonnatton about CF,
contact your local CF Foundation Chapter
THAN~S TO everyone who helped work or participated In the Cystic
Fl.brosiS Drawing lor $200.00 worth of Free Groceries, March 28. The
w1nner was: William C. Thomas, Rt. 2, jlox 392, Point Pleasant I

'

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FlEE EXTENDED WARRANTY,

RECONSTRUCTING -BeIleve It or not theae two
wheelbarrows contain tile har·
neaa for two draft honea. A
Iarmer brought the leather
pieces Into Winner who wiD
recondition the leather and
reconstruct the h....-a.

•

MAVTAG GIVES YOU A 1 YEAR WARRANTY ON LABOR AND
2 YEARS ON THE PARTS.
RUTLAND FURNITURE EXTENDS IT TO 2 YEARS ON THE
LABOR AND 6 YEARS ON THE PARTS FREEl

Times-Sentinel :•
photos by :
Charlene Hoeflich;

•

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A SPECIAL THANKS TO Bob Eastman anq Foodland Stores, Point•
Pleasant Moose Lodge 1731.
1
Remember tha Cystic Fibrosis Blk•A·Thon &amp; Walk-A- Thon Itt May
This has been a very big success In thelast2 years, so let's make this year
an even bener one IThe Point Pleasant and area chapters was # 1 tnjthe
KYIWV C.F. District
THANK YOU VERY MUCH
Rick &amp; Debbla Buck &amp; Family. For Info.: 675-786!)

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Page- 8· 2- Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 10,1988

Wandling-Betz

]oh Bank available
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Job Bank, 220 Jackson
Pike, Is In need of applicants, 50
years of age or older seeking full
or part-time employment.
Finding enriching and mean·
lngtl!l activity, as well as secur·

floor-length taffeta gowns of teal
green, and carried bouquets of
teal green and white roses,
car nations and baby's breath.
The flower girl was Cynthia
Wandling, niece of the groom.
She wore a long taffeta tea l green
gown. The ringbearerwas Dustin
Dec kard, cousin of the bride. He
wore a silver-gray tuxedo. The
ringbearer's pillow was made for
the bride by Mrs. Terri Long.
The groom wore a white tuxedo
and his boutineer was ·a white
tw m and David Brow n.
Given in marriage .by her ros e with teal-green baby's
parent s and escorted to the alt.a r . breath.
Best man was Robbie Allhy her fat her , the bride wore a
gown of ivory clarmlse satin brigh l. Groomsmen were Jeff
fea tu ring a flowing skirt and a Price, Jim Daugherty, John
semi-cathedral length tra in. Her Daugherty, and Phll Wiley.
oval picture hat was covered In Ushers were Willie Wood a nd
ivory satin trimmed with Venlse Tim Plan t~. All were sliver gray
lace, pearls and an ivory ' pearl Tuxedos.
. Kim Betz, sister of the bride,
spray. The back pouf fingertip
veil was ivory illusion.
· registered th'e guests.
A reception was held at Grace
She carried a heart -shaped
t)ouquet of tea l green and white United Methodist Church. Assistroses, carnations a nd baby's in g at the reception were the
bride's aunts Kim Deckard,
brea th.
Maid of Honor was Lori Sa und·· Kathy Deckard, Pam Bob, couers. Brid esmaids were Denise sin of the bride and Betty Putney.
Marlin, Allison Woods, Julie
Smith and Sonya Haten. Ail wore . The couple is residing In
,,
Charolette, N.C.
GALLIPOLIS - Angle J. Betz
and Kerry P. Wandling were
~ni led in Marriage Oct. 31, 1987
Jl Grace United Methodist
Ch urch in Gallipolis. The Rev .
Joseph L. Hefner of!icia ted.
The brtde is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry M. Betz of
Caili(J9lis. Tht&gt; groom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Senneth Wan·
til ing of Poin t Pleasant, W.Va.
Organist was Mrs. Edith Ross
nd vocalists were Kelly Gra-

•

April 10, 1988

ing gainful employment are
problems confronting older cltl·
zens, especially during present
day economic conditions .
Call 446-7000 or 446·8156 a nd
discuss your employment prob·
!ems with our job counselors.
The Job Bank Is open Monda y
through Friday from 8 a. m. "to 4
p.m .

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Invites you to hear ....

Aprill0-13
SUNDAY
9:15 &amp; 10:30 A.M .
6:00 P.M.
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY
7:00 P.M.
*Special Music
*Bible-Centered Messages
*Supervised Nursery
*Transportation
Provided

BEING INSTRU(;TED -Students from Gallla
Academy, Southwesiern and Kyger Creek high
schools listen to Quiz Bowl jnstructlons from

Lance CIUford, coordinator, a8 they anxiously
await the start ot seaslon one. Robin ~arris,
vocational evaluator, served as moderator.

KERRY and ANGIE (BETZ) WANDLING

Senior Center activities
.announced for next week
GALLIPOLIS - Ac ti vies a nd
menus for the week of April 11
through April 15, a t the Senior
. · Ci tizens Center, 220 Jackson
.: Pike, will be as follows :
· ' Monday- Chorus, 1·3 p.m .
•
Tuesdi!Y - S.T.O.P.!P hysical
:-Fit ness, 10:30 a.m.
•
Wednesday - Card Ga mes, l -3
p.m.
· : · Thursday - Blood Pressure
: Chec k, 11 :00 a.m. ; Bible Study,
: : 11-noon; Herbalists, 12:30 p.m .
. · . Frlday - Art class, 10-noon;
; · Craft Class, 1·3 p,m.
• : · Me nus cons ist of:
: : Monday - Baked Steak with
: . eravy ' has hed brown potatoes,
buttered broccoli, whole grain
; oread, butterscotchpuddingwlth
• lopping.
: Tuesday - Spa nish Rice, but·lered waxed beans, pear hail
with grated cheese, rye bread,
brownies.
Wednesday - Egg Salad Sand-wich, scalloped potatoes, but·
rered kale with vinegar, dill
Qlckle slice, whole grain bread,
fruit cup with mandarin oranges.
: Thursday - Ham and Pinto
Beans with onions, tossed salad
with carrots /red cabbage, oil &amp;
~lnegar , cornbread, jello and
erushed pinea pple.
: Friday - Macaroni &amp; Cheese,
buttered cooked cabbage, penny
cil rrot salad, whole grain bread,
lieanut butter cookies.
· Choice of coffee, tea, lemonade, milk, or buttermilk with
e)lch meal.

rings, a diamond necklace, and a
blue garter.
Julie Lochard, Wellston, was
maid of honor, Tanya Young,
Vanessa Young, Tina Slater, and
Rita Slater were bridesmaids .
They wore floor-length royal blue
dresses, with chiffOn over taffeta
and a softly gathered skirt which
pulled up In the back.
Flower girl was Jennifer Teaford In a gown Identical to the
other attendants. She wore her
hair french braided with baby's
breath entwined. She carried a
white wicker basket with flower
petals. Royal blue ribbon outlined the basket.
Thl! attendants carried bouquets of sUlk flowers with royal
blue carnations, miniature white
roses, forget-me-nots, with royal
blue and white streamers. ·
Paul Roush was best man and
ushers were Troy Manuel, Glenn
Young Jr. , Bill Hupp, and Gary
Kapp. The ring bearer was
Andrew Co!fman. The groom and
his attendants wore white luxe·
dos with royal blue boutonnieres.
· The mothers ot the couple wore
blue dresses with carnation
corsages.
Guests were registered by
Trlna Young, sister-In-law of the
bride. Hostesses at the reception
were Carrie Roush, Opal Hupp,
and Julia Norris. The bride's
table held a three-tiered fountain
cake topped with doves .
The couple resld,e s on Rowe
Road, Racine.
The bride, a graduate of
Southern High School, Is employed at Pomeroy Health Care
Center.
The groom, a graduate of
Southern High School and Ohio
University, Is employed as an
engineer at the Ohio Department
.'" .
ot Transportation In Marietta.
'"
A wedding rehearsal dinner
:'~r
was hosted by the groom's
·."·'j parents at their home.

-

· POMEROY - The Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center,
: Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, has
: the following activit ies sche·
· (luled for tile week of Aprilll-15:
: Monday - Round and square
· da nce 1-3, Exercise Cla11s 3:15
: Tuesday - Chorus 1·2
. Wednesday - Social Security
· Representation 10-12, Bi ngo 1·2,
: Bridge 1·2, Bowling 1: 30, Exer. else Class 3:15
· Thurs(jay -Quilting, games
: Friday - Quilting, games
· Leafy Chasteen is available to
· assist senior 'citizens with flllng
' 1987 Income Tax returns, call the
· Center a t 992-2161 to schedule an
: ~ppointment.
: The Senior Nutrit ion Program
menu for the week Is :
. Monday - Barbecue ribs,
· aorn, mlxed ,frult
Tuesday - Chicken patty
sandwich, mixed vegetables,
: perfection salad. cookie
Wednesday -Wiener, sauerk·
raul, mashed potatoes,
: pineapple
.
. Thursday - Sloppy Joe, tater
: tots, cole slaw, cake
• Friday - Veal Parmasian
: buttered noodles, peas, pears ·
: Choice of beverage avallable
with meal.

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Two new booklets "Dining Out"
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NEW MEMBERS: PLEASE ARRIVE 45 MINUTFS EARLY FOR REGISTRATiON AND WEIGH IN.

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·--Rock of Ages offers you a choice of I different colorecfgranitel.
Whatever your requirement• may be, complete Mtilfoction 11 ••·
au red with Rock of Ageo. •
WINTER HOURS: Friday 9:00-3:30
Other Hours by Appointment-448-2327 or &amp;93-8688,

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~~

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·

BOSTON (UP!) - Canadian
researchers Wednesday pinpointed the part of the brain that
appears most damaged oy Parkinson's dlseilse and probably
offers the best target for an
experimental, controversial
transplantation operation. .
Researchers at the Cla~ke
Institute ot Psychiatry In Toronto examined the brains of
eight patients who died from
Parkinson's disease and ~ound
most of the ~aO)age appeared to
be In a part of the brain known as
the putamen.
As many as 1 million Amerl·
cans suffer from Parkinson's
disease, which causes a devastat·
Jng, progressive loss of muscle
control due to a lack of the brain
chemical dopamine.
Scientists had long known that
cells ln a part of the brain known
as the striatum died from Parkinson's disease. But the striatum
Includes sections known as the
caudate and the putamen and
doctors were uncertain which
was most aftectoo.
In 1985, doct\)rs In Mexico
transplanted pieces of two Par·
klnson's patients ' adrenal glands
Into the caudate sections ot their
brains, apparently Improving
their condition. Doctors believed
the adrenal tissue acted like tiny
c hemical factories, replacing the
missing dopamine.
Since then, more than 50
Parkinson's pallents have undergone the operation In the United
States, and the Mexican doctors
have performed a similar operalion using fetal brain tissue.
Although the results have been
mixed, doctors who performed
the operation maintain It ap·
pears to benefit at least some
pallents.
Dr. Stephen J . Klsh, who
headed the latest research, said
he was skeptical about the
operation's benefits. But Klsh
said his findings Indicate It Is
more likely to be effective It the
tissue Is transplanted Into the
putamen.
"We're suggesting that logically, whatever Implant Is used
should be directed to the putamen and not the caudate, which
Is what most surgeons have been
Implanting," Klsh said In a
telephone Interview.
The finding that the putamen Is
most affected Is consistent with
what has been.tound In anlnial
studies and makes lll!nR since
the putamen Is the part of tbe
striatum believed molt Involved
In motor control, said KlaiJ, wbo
reported his findings In The New
England Journal ot Medicine.

APPLICATION WINNER
- WlnnlnJ! the joh application
completion contest at the 1988
Quiz Bowl was Tommy Miller,
Southwestern High School.

S9995

PRICED
FROM
GREAT NEW
Diamonds ••••• 2S% Off

Watches .:..... 2 S% Off
14K Gold ••••• 30% Off
Giftware •••••• 20% Off

By ROB STEIN
UPI Science Writer

imperial

20%taster in the fi rnt lew weeks

participation during the three momlng sessions.
Teachers served as proctors, (L to R) Irene
Surber, Jan Ratliff and Tim Dunn.

FILLING OUT AN APPLICATION - The job
application contest drew a large number of

RICHARD and SANDRA (BROWN) DEMOSS

~,''', ~·JI tlf.I'Jl

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SAPPHIRES

•

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Serving as maid oi honor was
Karla DeMoss. Best man was
T.T. Simmons.
Instrumental and vocal music
was presented by George Haltie ld of Gallipolis.
A reception honoring the couple was held following thecerem·
any at the club house.

POMEROY

Anniversary
Sale

Gallipolis, Ohio
446-0324

..

POMEROY Sandra K.
Brown and Richard 0. DeMoss
were married on March 19, at
4: 30 p.m. at the Kyger Creek
Club House by the Rev. Robert
Kuhn, Gallipolis.
The bride was given in mar·
rlage by Eddie Fife, Pomeroy,
brother-In-law ot the groom.

~¥'~~~~~.~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~t~

Third &amp; Locust

''

DeMoss-Brown

marked the second consecutive year that the
Southwestern team has WOII the career education
contest against teams from GaiDa Academy and
Kyger Creek high schools. The series between all
the schools Is now tied at two championships each.

•

·RACINE - The Racine First
Baptist Church was the setting
for the Oct. 24 wedding of Carrie
M. Young, daughter ot Mr . and
Mrs . Glenn Young Sr. and Robert
H. Roush Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert H. Roush Sr., all of
Racine.
The double-ring ceremony was
performed by the Rev. Steve .
Deaver. Music was provided by
John Coffman, . organist, and
Steve and Denise Coffman, singIng as a duet.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a gown of
sheer polyester over taffeta
fashioned with a fitted bodice,
flounced scoop neckline with
chantilly laee accents, and simulated pearls and full putted
sleeves with lace accenis. The
·tiered skirt, bordered with lace,
!lowed Into a lull length train.
The bride wore a full length veil
headpiece which featured lace
appliques and a row of pearls
across the top. She carried a
bOuquet of royal blue carnations
white roses, and white forget-menots, with royal blue and white
streamers. She wore pearl ear-

•

CHAMPIONS - Members ol the Southwestem
High School Workstudy Quiz Bowl Team won the
sixth annual PAWS Club event at Buckeye HIUs
Career Center. Team members are (L toR) Tina
Massie, Bobert McCarty , Tommy MIUer, Carrie
Hatfield, Jeanale Cade, and John Edwards. This

'

Roush-Young

ROBERT AND CARRIE (YOUNG) ROUSH

Sunday limes-Sentinei-Page-8-3

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W.Va.

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I

· In· the service

WIUiam J, Parsons Jr•
Wllltam J. Parsons Jr. , son ot
Mr. and Mrs. Wllltam Parsons of
Racine, enlisted In · the Air
Force's Delayed Enltstment Pro·
gram , according to TSGT Steven
Elfrink, Air Force recruiter,
Athens.
Airman Parsons, a 1988 gradu ate of Southern High School,
Racine, Is scbeduied tor enlistment In the Regular Air Force In
January 1989, Upon graduation

from the Air Force's six-week
basic training course near San
Antonio, Texas , Airman Parsons
Is scheduled to receive technical
training In the Mechanical career field . .
Airman Parsons will be earnIng credits toward an associate
degree In applied sciences
through the Community College
ot the Air Force while attending
basic and technical training
schools.

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••
Confidential Services:
'Birth Control
V. D. Screening
Cancer Screening ·
Pregnancy Testing
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·PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

POMEROY:

GALUPOUS:
414 Second An~ 2nd Floor
992-5912
446-0166
1:30 tt 5100 Monday-friday 1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
236 E. Main

St~- 2nd

Floor

CloM Wednt1day
I

1:30 to I 2 Saturday
ClosH Thuntlay
Athn, Chllicotht, Logan &amp; McArthur

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342 SECOND
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
446-2691

�-

Page...:_B-4- Sunday Times-Sentinel

/

-

April 10. 1988

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

April 10, 1988

Grocery stores filled building

James Sands
Hy JAMES SANDS

toasting under qUICk, Intense
heat brings out the sealed-up
goodness of the grain. They do
not mush down when mtlk is
added. They don't crumble or
chaff in the package or the dish.
There's substance to them."
Actually It was rather Ironic·
that the Postum Company would
criticize the old cold cerea ls for
they were t he originators of the
old cold cereal. One of the first
cold cereals in American history
was invented by Pos tum founder
C.W. Post In 1897, It was "Grape
Nuts." The product neither then
nor now. contain grapes nor nuts ,
but wheat and malted barl ey. It
wa s In 1904 that Mr. Post
Introduced his first corn fl akes .
He called them "Elija h's
Manna". Tllis name brought
down the wrath of the clergy who
thought it distasteful to use the
Bible to sell corn flakes. The
name was quickly changed to
" Post Toast.les". Mr. Post's
other great money making product In the early days was
"Post um " ce real beverage
which he Invented In 1895 afte,. he
had spend a year recuperating
from illness at a Sanitarium In
Ba\tle Creek ruQ by a Dr.
Kellogg, who made his own mark
In the cereal world,
For several' years "Postum",
" Grape-Nuts", and "Post Teasties" were sold by Post as health

The building we fea ture today
is loca ted atl52 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. It was erected about
1915 b y Dan
Sha fer to b e
used as the mid bloc k grocery
store . Th.e rewas
a lready a groce ry on the
cor'ne r of Third
a nd Vi ne and one on the corner of
Thi rd a nd Grape. The Vandens
ra n the for mer a nd the Shaws the
Iotter.
In one of Sha-fer'·S·• flrsl ads he
s ta ted tha t he had t he "New Post
To astles" for sale at 3 packages
for 25~. The "New Post Toastles"
was patented in 1915 by - the
Postum Cerea l Company of Battle Creek. In the following year
we note several quarter page ads
in the Gallipolis Daily Tribune
a nnouncing this new product.
Stated th e ad: " Old style corn
flak es do not possess much real
fla vor of their own. Old fashioned
methods of making did not bring
it out. They depended largely for
their taste on the sugar and
r ream or milk you ate with them .
You were never asked to taste the
flavor by eating t hem dry. The
new way of cooking, rolling and

Photographers'
work honored
GALLIPOLIS- Date E. Lear,
C. P .P . and Randy Houllashelt of
Lear Photography recently at tended the Professional Photographers of Ohio annual convention In Columbus. The convention
is The Mid-East regional convention including seven states.
A print compet-Ition was held
and Lear and Houdashelt had

sevPn entrie's which were chosen
for display . One of Lear's portrait s received a blue ribbon. It
was one of 111 blue ribbons
c hosen from 1117 - photographs
ent e red .
The Mid-East competition is
one or the largest print competitions in the country .

GALLIPOLIS - Bookmobile
Sc hedule for the week of April
11-April 16, 1988.
Monday: Lewis Drive 9:4510: 15; Sun Valley Nursery 10:2510: 55; Pinecrest 11:00-11 : 15; 35
Wes t Apts. 11 :20-11 :35; Scenic
Hills 11: 40·12: 10; C&amp;S Bank
12: 15-12:30.
1st Truc k: Kerr 4: 15-4: 45;
Bidwell Old School 4:55-5: 30;
13idwell (Nolan's ) 5:35-6: 00; Bidwell (Phillip's 1 6:05-6: 32; Bid·
wel l ( Henry's) 6:35 -6:55;
Hatcher 's 7: 05-7: 20; Deer Creek
lf'ulk's) 7:30-7:40; Deer Creek
Church 7:45-8:15.
2nd Truck: Cochran 's (Adamsville Rd .) 4:30-5: 00; Rio Grande
Village 5: 15-6: 30; Rio Grande
Estates 6:45-8:00
Tuesday:
ls i Truck : Eno Store 12:151: 00; Africa Rd . 1: 05-1: 20; Kyger
T (Mary Sisson) Kyger II (Cora
Rupe) Roush Lane I 3:15-3: 35;
Roush Lane II 3; 40-4: 10; Fosters
Mobil e Home Park 4:30-5:00.
2nd Truck: K&amp;K Trailer Park
4:15-4: 45 ; Kanauga 5th Ave.
~ : 50-5: 20; Georges Creek 5: 406: 00; Georges Creek 116: 00-6: 20;
Addison 6: 30-6: 45; Cheshire (Ol d
Sc hool) 7: 00-7: 30; Cheshire
(River Bank) 7: 30-8: 00.
Wednesday: No Route Maintenance Day.
Thursday:
l st Truck: Mudsock 3:15-4: 00;
Patriot Post Office 4:15-5: 15;
Cora 5:30-6: 00; Centerpoint 6: 307:30
2nd Tr uck: Cadmus 4:30-5: 00;
Ga llia 5: 15-6: 15; Centerville
6: 45-8: 00.
Friday :
l si Truck : Fast Stop 1:00-1: 15;
Banes (St. Rt. 218) 1:20-1: 30;
Young (St. Rt. 218) i: 35-1: 45;
Franklin (Clay Chapel) 1: 552: 10; Ma.ry Myers (St. R~ 218)
2:20-2: 35; Church's Store 2: 45·
3: 15; Mer.cervllle 3: 20-4: 00;
Swains Store 4:15-4: 45; Dinner &amp;
HOMEBOUND 5:00-6: 00; Ohio
Townhouse 6:30-7: 15; Teens Run
7: 30-8:00.
2nd Truck : Eureka 4:00-4: 30;
Crown City 5:00-6: 00; Kenny's
Carryout 6:30-7:00.
Saturday: Crousebeck 9:3010: 00; Galli a Metro Estates
Office 10: 15-10: 40; Gallla Metro
Esta tes Htll 10:45-11: 15; Allee
1:00-1: 30; VInton 1:45-2: 15; Morgan Center Road 2:20-2: 50; Morgan Center Church 3: 00-4: 00.

,- ---

.

Matthew E. Riffle
Matthew E. R1f!le, son of Mr.
Ronald E. Riffle, and son of Mrs.
Linda Bates, both of Pomeroy,
enlisted In the Air Force, accordIng to TSGT Steven Elfrink, Air
Force recruiter, Athens.
Upon successfully completing
the Air Force's six-week baste
mll!tary training at Lacktand Air
Force Base, near San Antonio,
Texas, Airman Riffle Is scheduled to receive -technical trainIng in the mechanical career
field.
•
Airman Riffle, a 1985 graduate
.
... .

.

every day and chatted with him as
if he were just sick.
How come the body didn't decompose~ - INCREDULOUS IN
ROCK ISLAND
DEAR ROCK: I spoke with the
forensic pathologist on the case, Dr.
Larry Blum of Mcl:lenry, Ill. He
said it is possible for. a body to
mummify and not decompose if the
temperature is sufficiently wann.
Under these conditions, the body
dehydrates and can last indefinite-

sure your kids have food, clothing,
fuel oil' and all the things that kids
need. Your check is not a gift. It is
your responsibility.
I hear tbe government is going to
crack down on fathers who weasel
out of paying child support, I say
it's about time. -jUST TEJ(AS

DEAR JUST: I coullln 't agree
more. Now that the law is going to
pui some treth into this mandate I
hope the deadbeats feel the bite. I
ly.
also hope you kids are over the
And people ask me if I make up hurt. Carrying around baggage
letters.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a male in · from the past serves no useful
my mid-2(};. I was barely IS when purpoo;e.
fatherd iwas
a real jerk. When
myMy
parents
VO reed.
·
he divorced my mother he divorced
us five kids, too. We never got over
the hurt.
If you ·arc a divorced father,
think about this. Your children did
not ask you to marry their mother.
Nor did they ask to be born. They
are in pain because the two people
they love most hate each other.
When you write the support
check you are not writing a check
to your ex-wife. You are making

:It~

....

-

THE FRAME BUILDING AT 152 Third Ave., was buill about
1915 and has housed several grocery flnns from 1915 to 1976,
Including Dan Shafer, Kerr and Gooch and Dale's Market. One of
the hottest Items In 1915 here was New Post Toastles.

of Meigs High School, will be
earning credits toward an associate degree In applied sciences
through the Community College
of the Air Force while attending
basic and technical training
schools.

Florida's Sea World amusement park is owned by the
publishing company Harcourt
Brace .;ovanovich.

Stephen A. Binion
Marine Sgt. Stephen A. Binion,
whose wife, Connie, is the daughter of Woody Smith of Langsville,
Ohio, recently completed the
Noncommissioned Officer Leadership Course.
_
During the course Binion studied personal adminstratlon,
Marine Corps history and tradl-.
lions, military courtesy and the
principles and techniques of
effective leadership. He also
participated In close order drill
and a rigorous physical fitness
program.
·
He Is currently serving at
Marine Corps Development and
Education Command, Quantico,
Va.
A 1977 graduate of Philo High
School, Philo, he joined the
Marine Corps In March 1985.
·

To make your
special evening
complete see our
line of beautiful

PROM

Starcada '87

'

Dancera
Death Wiah 4
Date With An Angel
Night Flyers

(=laabdk ;:1::
MEN'S WALKING SHOES

. '

I

PHASE I T~NNIS

THE SHO,E CAFE
·

LAFAYETTE MALL

GAWPOLIS, OH.
446-4222

make State Farm
hon1eowners
insurance a good
Our Sfi!rvlce makes it even better.
Call me.
UROll SNOWDEN
Corner o'f Third
Ave. &amp; State St .
· Gallipolis, on.

Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4518

--""\

MERCERCILLE - Hannan
Trace ·PTA meets Monday, 7
· p.m., at the school.
GALLIPOLIS - First Church
of God Is In revival with Willard
Wilcox, 7: 30 p.m.
RUTLAND - A missionary
meeting will be held Sunday, 7
p .m.. at the Church of Jesus
Christ Apostolic Faith, qn New
Ll!'M Road near Ruttand. A
missionary from Liberia will
speak.

.I

:·v

'':

--LONG BOTTOM -

The Pythlan Sisters of Rockland Temple
at· Long Bottom will have prac!Ice for Initiation on Sunday at 2
·p.m. The stated · meeting and
Initiation will be held Monday
evening at 7:30 p.m. Officers to
wear fonnals,

;I

,,

---

•

TUESDAY
Lafayette
GALLIPOLIS
White Shrine meets Tuesday,
7:!!op.m.

-

---

-

LaLeche
GALLIPOLIS
League meets Tuesday, at the
home of Liz Brybaker. Topic Is
breastfeadlng ~ overcoming
difficulties . For onnation, call
446-6314 or 2116-4 .

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

Furniture Galleries

--GALLIPOLIS- GFWC/River-

side Study Club meets Tuesday 1
p.m., Down Under for a no
hostess meeting. Review Is by
Elaine Rouse on an autoblography of Marian Anderson.

--GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County

Second and Grape St
r.alllpolls, Ohio
ALL OAK

CURto ·
Lighted pecan
curio with mirror
back. 25"x71"

Reg. S299

ONLY

'

&lt;

•
j

~ .~

.,

.

..

'

branch of the American Heart
Association meets Tuesday, 7
p.m., home of Madge Neal.

---

GALLIPOLIS- Gallla County

ENTERTAINMENT
UNIT

Second "' Grape
Gallipolis, Ob.
Hours: 1: S0-5: 00 DaHy
t: 10-8: II Mon. 6 Fri.
(Cioted Sunday)

LOw rates

MONDAY
PATRIOT- Fellowship revival at . Salem Baptist Church,
Monday, 7 p.m., led by Rev.
Stewart Jamison and Cheshire
singers.

1

GAWPOLIS, OH.
446-4446

PIISDVI fOil 110111

MIDDLJ:;PORT- The Middle- ·
port Amateur Gardeners will
meet Wednesday at 8 p.m . at the
home of Marjorie Fetty . Gladys
Cummings will be co-hostess . Jo
Ann Stewart will give a demonstratton on spring arrangements.

CROWN CITY - Easter' program, King's Chapel Church,
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 7:30p.m.;
postponed from earlier date .

LAFAYmE MALL

MOVIES 011 VIDIO CASSIIIII

HARRISONVILLE ·- · Harrl·
son ville Senior Ct tlze ns will hold

Gardeners to meet

---

Sister's Closet

'

EAST MEIGS~ Eastern Band
Boosters will meetTuesday,1:JO
p.m .;in the band room at the high
school.

a blood. pressure clinic on Tues·
day from 10 a .m . to12 noon at the
townhouse . Linda Friend, R.N ..
wlll supervise.

- GALLIPOLIS - First Church
'at God Is. In revival with Willard
Wilcox, 7 p.m.

20°/o
OFF

$500

_

asked to attend a meeting Tues day, 6 to 8 p.m ., at Zion Church of
Christ Anyone with questions
should call Brenda at 992 -5770, or
Shirley at 992-3289 .

CENTENARY - Centenary
United Christian Church will
h&amp;ve the Heaven Bound Four and
Narrow Way Singers In services,
Sunday, 7 p.m.

NOW_REDUCED

3 MOVIES
FOR

RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education will meet In
special session Monday , 7 p.m. ,
In the high sc hool cafeteria.

POMEROY
Spring mee ting
of the Meigs County Garden
Clubs Association will be held
Monday at Trinity Church in
Pomer oy, 7:30 . p.m. Cindy
Oliver!, Meigs County Extension
Agent, Will be the guest speaker.
The program will be presented ·
by the M!ddl~port Amateur Gardeners w\th the Middleport
Garden Club to serve as hosts .

DON'T FACE THE ijii11
H&amp;R BLOCit NEWTAXLAWSALONE.

--- I

DRESSES

wld...4., s,.... nll

Floware in the Attic

Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy.

,

Meigs County
bookmobile
/ fa~ slated
/

NEW RELEASES

Right to Life meets Tuesday, 7: 30
p.m,, St. Louis Catholic Church
hall. VIdeo "No Alibis" will bE&gt;
shown.

GALLIPOLIS- Dr - Samuel L.
GALLIPOLIS- Kevin John· · Bossard Memorial Library
· son will . be ·tn services at Board of Trustees meet Tues~ay , ·
SALEM CENTER - A repreProvidence Missionary Baptist 5:30p.m., at the library.
sentative of the Buckeye ProChurch, Sunday, 7 p.m.
. gram will be at the Pick and
PATRIOT - Salem Baptist Shovel Grocery StQre in Salem
_....._
CROWN CITY - Mt. Zion Church service led by Rev. Jack
Center on Monday from 12: 30 to
Baptist Church will have Kyle · Foul and Coalton Baptists, Tues - 2:30 p.m. Residents over 60 or
TUESDAY
Donn_ally In services, Sunday, 7 day, 7 p .m.
- Ail HarHARRISONVILLE
disabled persons are eligible for
p.m.
risonville
area
parents
a nd boys
the program. Proof of age or
Interested
In
c
ub
·
scouts
are
GALLIPOLIS - Family night disabll!ty required.
PT. PLEASANT - Grubb dinner Monday, 7 p.m., Scenic
Family Singers, plus others, will Hills Nursing Center; speaker
be at Gospel Lighthouse, Sunday. Dr. Bernard Nlehm from the
7p.m.
Arthritis Foundation.
•
VINTON - Turn Your Heart
POMEROY - The Meigs High
Toward Home film series begins Alumni Association will hold a
Sunday, 7: 30 p.m., at VInton meeting on Monday, at 7 p.m., at
Baptist Church. Sunday's film, A the Pomeocy United Methodist
Father Looks Back.
Chureh. Anyone Interested in
helping with the alumni is Invited
EWINGTON ~ Gloryland to attend t.h e meeting. &gt;
Grass will sing .at the Church of
Everybody's asking questions about the most sweeping tax changes
Christ In Christian Union, sunDARWIN- Bedford Township
hi story. Our experienced prepaFcrs kno w the answers. Vil e kno.w
in
day, 6; 30 p.m.
Trustees will meet In regular
th~:
new l:1ws ;:md the new form s. We 'll savt you _every do lla~ pos s 1~lc.
session Monday, 7 p.m., at the
And, you'll ge t rho biggest refund you have commg. If there se ver~
. MERCERVILLE - Mr. and town hall.
Mrs. Lawrence Grey, mlss!onar·
nme for H&amp;R Block, it's nO\:
les to New Guinea, w!ll be at
POMEROY- A special meet Mercerville Missionary Baptist trig o1 the Meigs Local Band ,
Church, Sunday, 7 p.m.
Boosters will be held Monday, 7
p.m., at the high school band '
WILKESVILLE
Landon room.
• Pomeroy
Golli11olis
· Pt. Ple~sant
Hope will be In services, Sunday
618 E. Main St.
Second &amp; Sycamore
419 Maon St.
through Aprlll5 at the Ch~h of
992-6674
446-0303 '
676 -1632
POMEROY - The Disabled
Christ In Wilkesville; services American Veterans and Ladles
Open 9 AM -6 PM Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.
M9nday through Friday at 7:30 Aux!llary will m~t Monday, 7
p.m., Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. p.m., at the DAV Hall on

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Child suppo~ i.r: responsibility

On Oct. 24, 1901, Anna Edson
Taylor became the first person to ,
go over Nlagra Falls in a barrel.
The hummingbird's wings enable 11 to remain suspended In
midair p~s It reaches Into flowers
tor nectar.

DALE LEAR and RANDY HOUDASHELT

Dear Ann Landers: I am sending
you a clipping of an Associated
Press story that blew my mind. It
must be true because the people are
identified, also the city and the
name of the county sheriff. But I
have a question.
It seems that a woman and her
two teenate children in Knoxville,
Ill., kept the body of "Dad" in their
horne for eight years. Knox County
Sheriff Mark Shearer said the
family had an abnonnal rei igious
belief in the power of healing.
The widow, age 42, and a gentleman described as her house guest,
age 56, face a penalty of 364 days in
jail and a fine of $!,!XXI for failing
to notify t~toroner of~ death.
Carl L·. Stevens was last seen alive
in May 1979. When he failed to
show up at his job an investigation
was begun. Mrs. Stevens would not
cooperate. After working with other family members, eight years
later, Sheriff Sht;arer was able to get
into the house.
They found Stevens' body in bed.
He was not wrapped like a mummy. According to Shearer. "He was
just lying there." The family
changed his clothes and bedding

SUNDAY
KANAUGA- Silver Memorial
Chu~ch Is In revival throUgh
Sunday. Services 7:30 p.m.,
nightly.

----In the service------

Gallia County
Bookmobile
·route slated

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8-5

Community .calendar

foods. In fact the company the account. So get ready to pay
Included with each package a less for your little jobs which
tittle pamphlet' written by C.W. - come every spring."
Post entitled : "The Road to
Shafer con~nued h!s grocery
Wellsville".
here probably to about 1924. In
In 1916 Dan Shafer advertised the early 1920's Shafer adver·
Old Relaible coffee, Sliver Sea Used a few other.. well .known
coffee and even green coffee. brand names: Palmolive soap,
Some people preferred to roast Lenox soap, and Fels soap. The
their own. Coffee sold tllen ffor store sold Arbuckle brand coffee
25~ per pound. The most popular.
for 35¢ a pound.
way to buy sugar was by the 25
About 1924, F.E. Kerr took over
pound sack which ran $2.20. Then this grocery business. The Kerr
there was red beans and white family would be connected here
beans, the former being 13¢ a until the 1940's and for part of
pound and the latter 10¢. Two that time Ray" Gooch was a
cans of pink salomn sold for 25¢.
partner In tl)e business. The firm
In July of 1917 Shafer advertised was known as the Kerr and
that he had lots of pickled pork Gooch Grocery. In the late 1940's
for green beans and whitefish the business · at 152 Third was
that people caul&lt;! cook for home to Hamilton's Market.
breakfast. '
Then In 1950 or so Dale Russell
Shafer's store opened at 5 a.m. began a long association with the
and closed at 8 p.m. everyday store. Mr. Russel! operated
except Sunday. Stated Shafer In Dale's Market here from about
his ad In 1917: " My Store Is worth 1950 to 1976. After 6 decades of
seeing, honest weight and honest serving grocery shoppers, 152
prices."
Third became In time home to
We not e the following from
Gallla Refrigeration Inc . and
Shafer's ad In 1917: " I have Pasquale Electric Company.
several accounts against people
who h~ve neglected to pay me.
These accounts can be collected
If you have some work for thes_t
Jerry D. Cremeaas
people to do. I will sell these
Nav:("Seaman Recruit Jerry D.
accounts. It will pay you to cafl
Cremeans, soli" of Loama M.
and look ove r them. If you have
Cremeans of 1182 VIne St.,
work to do this Is a chance to get It
Middleport, has completed redone cheaper by "butt!n In" on
,,
cruit training at Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, Ill.
During Cremeans' eight-week
training cycle, he studied general mtlltary subjects designed
to prepare him for further
academic and on-the-job training
tn one of the Navy's 85 basic
fields.
Cremeans' studies Included
seamanship, close order drill,
Naval history and first aid.
Personnel who complete this
course of instruction are eligible
for three hours of college cr~dit
In physical education and
hygiene.
A 1976 graduate of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy, he join the
Navy in December 1987.

,.

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

I

POMEROY - Bookmobile
Schedule for Week,pf AprU 11-15,
1988. 8ookmobile Service is provided In Meigs ·County by the
Meigs County Publ!c Library
under contract with the Ohio
Valley Area Libraries (OVAL).
Monday - Chester (Fire Sta1 tlon) 2:15-2:45 p.m.; Keno 3:003:30 p.m.; Burlingham (Mobile
1 Home
Park) 4:30-5: 1!1 p.m.;
1 Harriaonvtlle (Church) 6:1!1-7:00
·p.m.; New Lima Road (1 mi.
l South of Fort Meigs) 7:15-7:45
p.m.
I Wednesday - Reedsville
1 (Reed's Store) 5:00-5:3tl p.m.; .
Tupper's Plains (Lodwick's).
6:35-7:35 p.m.
The following stops have been
1 eliminated In 1988; Meigs
county, Ca!1J1!11ter.

1

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--------------------------,
50¢1

We know you'll love th~ unbe.ata~le new ~aste
of Diet Pepsi and Caffe1ne Free D1et Peps1. But, ·
we inv~e you to see for yourself!_ Save 50~ now
when you enjoy new D1et Peps1 or C~f~e1ne
Free Diet Pepsi. So, what are you wa1t1ng for?
Taste the unbeatables!
·
Diet Plpli nCitlt!M ffN Dill Pepli n regilllted trademarks 01 ~ , Inc.
Nutralwllllll • ndlmart&amp;: ol h Nunlweet Co
"In oonNnll' . _ " " ' 01ee Collen Cltfeint Ffee 01tt Coke oo not t:ltM Diet Pepsi and ca11e1ne Free DIM Pepsl. JeapectiYely.

SAVE 50¢

When you purchase any multlpack, 2·11ter or 3-liter bottle
of Diet P8psl or CaHelne Free Diet Pepsi.
TO -mE RETAILER: To receive payment. send thiscoupon to Pepsi·Cola Company. P0. Box 870122.
El Paso. Texas 88587o0122 . You will recetve face value IJ!us 8~ handllnQ whenyou redeem maccord·
ance with the terms ot this ofler. Invoices proVing purchase 60 days pnor to submossron ol sulltcrent
stock to cover coupons submiHed must be shown upon request Cash value of I 20 ol1 c. Oiler
void where prohibned or license required . One coupon 'per purchase. Any other use constrtutes
fraud. Customer must pay all deposits and.sales tax mvolved. Otfer expires 9·1-88.

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page-.:8-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

.·

. -·

Ohio-Point

April 10, 1988

W.Va .

Fellowship revival set at Gage church
Rev. Marvin Sallee a nd his
Vinton Baptist singers will lead
the Thursday fellowship worship
&lt;~nd Rev. Steve Deaver and his .
Racine Baptist folk will conclude
the meetings on Friday.
The public Is invited to all
services at the Salem Baptist ·
Church which Is locat ed near the
Intersection of Rt. "Hl and #325
at Gage.

GAGE- A week of meetings is
provide leadership.
planned by the Salem Baptist . The Monday evening service
Church of Patriot where Charles will be led by Rev . Stewart
W. Lusher Is paster. Sister Jamison and his Cheshire Bap·
churches of the Rio Grande tist singers. Tuesday will be
Baptist Association will provide under the direction ol Rev . Jack
leadership tor the 7 p.m . Foul and his Coalton congrega·
services.
lion and the Wednesday service
The first service will be Sunday will be led by Rev. Paul Stinson
when Rev. Paul White ana his. and his congregation at Gallla
Rio Grande Calvary Choir will. Baptist.

VolLUiiiTJm!Jtl! HONORED - Volunteers for
Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Meigs, GaUia,
Jacksoil and Mason counties were recently
honored at a reception, hosted by the board of
directors. These volunteers provide additional
adult companionship needed for children In
slngle·parent homes. Sealed from left are Lisa

Sowers, Debbie Irvin,
Gloria
Hinson; standing, Rick Wuerch, Tereaa East·
man, Lynnlta Newberry, Mary George and Dan
Shipley. They wiD be participating In the
upcoming Bowl for Kids' Sake at Skyline Lanes
with their I.Jttle Brothers and Sister, April 23.
ljrlmes.Sentlnel photo)
·
·

This is an important .
event in the life of
every Junior and
Senior. We rent
After Six tuxedos
from Master's
•
Tuxedo.

.

TEllRI L. STOuFFER
DOUGLASO.BROWN

INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE SEMINARS
PAIN/STRESS MANAGEMENT

DENISE G. COX
TERRY S. PHH.LIPS

"SERVING THE PATIENT AND THE PHYSICIAN."
HERMAN DIUON, MS, PT. CO.

wx-Phillips
NORTHUP - Gerald and
Wanda Cox of Rt. 1 Northup
~nnounce the ups_oming wedding
of theh' daughter, Denise Gaye
Cox , to Terry Scott Phillips. son
of Edward and Shirley Phillips of
RL 2 Crown City, Ohio.
The cofiple will be married at
the Phillips· home in a private
ceremony.
There will be an open receptton
following the wedding for friends
and family, at the Hannan Trace
Elementary cafeteria at 6: 30
p.m . on Acpri116.

Sheets' anniversary planned
. GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs . the Rev . Earl Cremeens o!ficiatWyman E. Sheets will be cele· ,lng.
They have one son, Dr. A. Keith
bratlng their 50th Wedding Ann!·
versary on April17 at their homE! Sheets , and three
granddaughters.
ori Lower River Road .
·
The open house will be held 2-4
Mr . and Mrs. Sheets were
married at- her home, near p.m., Apri117 .
The couple asks that gilts be
Crown City, on Aprill7,1938 with
omitted .

Th.e Mother- To-Be

YOUR FAMILY'S ONE STOP HAIR
SALON WITH FAMILY PRICES
STYLES-CUTS-PERMS

MEN - WOMEN - CHILDREN WELCOME
SENIOR CITIZENS DAYS TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY

Q

-HOURSMon.·Thur.·Sat. 9-5
Tues.-Wad.-fri. 9·8

- LOCATEDAt. 160 1 Mile North
Holzer Hospital

The Maternity Orchard
230 Broadway. Jackson • 286~ 2559
Open Tues.-Wed.-Thun-Sat 9:30-5:30
Mon. &amp; Fri. till 8:00

CALL 446·6144

are

SPRING
CLEAN-UP

• Powerful4.8 Amp motor

• 9 qt. disposable bag
• 2 position rug adjustment
• All steel handle
• 16' cord with wrap •
• No shock hood ·
• Full time edge cleaning
• Built-In carrying handle
• Non marking furniture guard

GARDEN CENTER &amp; FLOWER SHOP
453 JACKSON PIKE, GAUIPOLIS, OHIO
446-6681

01

Deep Cleans ~rpetlngl

REG. S99.9S

.'

--

HOOVER®
three speed
Ouik·Broom"'ll
All tt"l htndl• with grip

Powerful 5.0 Amp. motor
• 2 speed
qt. top.flll bag
4-potiUon rug euechmenl

I

at Christ United Methodist
Church.

You're l'nvited
Big Discounts!

--

..

HANK\' UNEN
Our price $3.t9.d.

SAl£

,.

to start a flock!

VETERANS MfMORIAL HOSPITAL
is ready at any moment of the day or ·night to prCIVide
you and your family with quality of service you would
•
•
the expect from those who dedic~ted to servmg you m
are the Httalth care field.

S4l£ 4 vos.f$1
FLOIIALS

Our price $3.99 yd. ·

SAl£$2!~

SAl£

1!~

C4RLA, CII.4NTli.D' UCE

Our price $3.19$.
.

SAl£

1~

QUINa' SHIRJIN6S
Our price $2.39$'

REG. $159.95

Tha Store With .. All Kindt of Stuff" for Pats, Stables, Large
and Small Animals and Lawns and Gardena.

REG. S69.9S

HOOVER .,

SAVE

Spirit TM
Canister Vacuum

su

$60

• 7 Vi qt , disposable beg
• Full time edge cleaning
• 16 h . power cord
• Handy topside swi1eh

\1),

"}

•
• BARoQuE SmN, 1lfH1l Our price $3.t9 yd.-SoU£ $2.49 YD.
• S\'MPHONY BROADClOTH Our price $2.39 yd.-S.t.l.E $1.99 YD.
• GEUWAW B.UlSTE Our price $2.39 yd.
S.t.LE $1.99 YD.
• EUUT Our prl... $3.9H4.79 yd
S.t.l.E $2.99 YD.
• CINDY IIVTERLOCil KNrTS Our price $4.39 yd.- S.t.l.E $3.79 YD.
• RIB TliiM Our price t~ ln.
S.t.LE 10(: IN.

·,-J

•.

VIsits)

• O~ua:e rug and fl oor

no.n:le:

Decade eo·
Cleaner with

S.t.W 25%
S.t.W 25%

• COATS I&lt; CURl( 11tiiEAD Reg. 70c·$t .39
• CONE THREAD IIACM Our price $8.99 ea.

8.t.l.f $3.99 E.t..

• 8¥•" sassoRS Our price $2.99 ea.

8.t.LE $2.49 E.t..

INCLUDES ATTACHMENT S!

Power Surge·
Switch

REG. S189.95

Cl'lrom•~M~ted .tMI hindi•
• fdtellgttt cN•nlng
• High performanc•

u Amp. mo1or

• fa8y •mptr dtf1 cont81ner
• 4-pot«km rvg adiYttmtnl
with lndk:ltQr

REG. S99.95

113995

• Comtorl dnlgned grip

•

• ~d~ftex TM 1git1tor
• BrutMd edge ciNnlng
• ll qt, diiPDNbfe Hg ,

S3433

• Automet!Aitv •d•pt.
to moet cttPel

REG. $229.95

Sl6995
SAVEl

$60

POMER9Y, OHIO

Eeay-empty Hll-thru dirt cup g~~
Edge cleaning
Convenlent switch
Hang-up tor 1toraga

SAVE!

PRINTS
Our prtce $2.39$

m

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.

•
•
•
•

HOOVER.

' i.

Peafurmance..

• PowerfU14 .5 Amp Motor

• Eny cord ralaase
• Built-In carrying handle

$9995

SAl£ 149
. 49
1
SAl£

Vacuum

V4413-042

\'D• .

• oU.L BUTTONS Reg. prlcet &amp;OJ·$2.25

SUPER SAVINGS ON ALL
PU~INA PRODUCTS

992 •2164

Our price $2.39.d.

1~~

E'WEI.ETTRIM
Our prtce 2 ydo.l$1

MAY 3, 1988
'

..

S4l£2/$1

CHICK DAV

ALL BREEDS
AVAILABLE ...
ALSO DUCKS!
ORDER DEADLINE APRIL 23, 1988.
ORDER YOUR BREEDS TODAY -

IJNBl£4CHED MUSUN

4 oz. T.\CK\' 6UJE
Our price 99e ea.

With our Staff of physicians, including many specialists as
well as the most modern, up-to-date equipment and
. highly trail'iia staff, we stand ready to care for you through
such services as:

Everythi og you need

• Comto11 grip wtd1

flnteniP contnll•
~

,.

INCLUDES
- ATTACHMENTS!

Pow•lklfll8

$199 95
¥3315

V4313

•

ahl
.,.,. . I'·--

Hotplt.J

\:7

•

Point Pleasant

Hours: Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-4:30p.m ., Sat. 9 a.m.-3 p.m.

SMELTZER'S

446-4848

FUN FOR THE WHOLE FAMILYI

./

675-6280

'Hoove~

RED, WHITE, PINK
AND BLUE
AMONG A TRUCKLOAD OF OTHER
PERENNIALS
AT .

and Pat Tackett. They
elected to board
memberships of three years. The curreat project
of the board Include tbe Bowl for Kldll' Sake on
Snturday, April 23 at Skyline Lanes, and a golf
· tournament at Riverside Golf Course In Muon,
W.Va., on, Saturday, May 7. (Times-8entlnel
phota)
·

CHICKI)AYS'88

399.W. MAIN

420 Main Street

WE CARRY NEXXUS

'

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph E. Williams of Gallipolis,
are announcing the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of
their daughter, Cheryl Denise
Williams, to John Michael Saund·
ers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Wise and Mr and Mrs. Tom
Saunders of Crown City.
MisfWIIIiams Is a graduate of
·Gallia Academy High School and
BucKeye Hills Career Center.
She is employed by Dr. Donald
Thaler,
Saunders is a graduate of
Hannan Trace High School and
Buckeye Hills Career Center a nd
Is employed by Wise Excavating
in Crown City.
The open-church wedding wJII
take place April 30,
6:30

•

Maiernit.y Fashions Froni ·Lingerie To Finer
Dresses For Special Occasions.
Infant Clothing 0-24 Months

CREEPING PHLOX

WilliamsSaunders

MICHAEL L HEMPHill, BS, lT

MR. and MRS. WYMAN
SHEETS
.

FAMILY HAIR CARE CENTER ,

DON'T WAIT UNTIL THE LAST
MINUTE - ORDER EARL Yll

'

EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Band Boosters will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday in the high school ·
band room.

· A Shop To Meet The Needs of

Huge selection. Many new styles
and knowledgeable salespeople
to ass"re you that you'll look
your best on Prom Night.

NEW
MEMBERS - New members of
lhe Board of Directors of Big Brothers and Big
Sisters of Meigs, Gallla, Jackson and Mason
Counties were recently accepted by the local
group. They are pictured with eKecutlve director
Judy Sofranko, front center. Front from left are
Karla McCabe, Mrs. Sofranko, Susan Banks;
standing, Rick Howell, Stan Evans, Gene Wood

RA CINE - The Racine Ele·
mentary School PTO wllll"eet at
7 p.m . Monday at the sc Hool.

PHYSICAL THERAPY • SPORTS MEDICINE
BACK REHABILITATION • WORK RECOVERY
CARDIAC REHABILITATION • ADULT FITNESS

: HAGE~STOWN, Md. - Mrs .
: Joel Schindler announces the
; engag~ment of her daughter .
; Terri Lyn Stouffer, to Douglas
:Osborne Brown, son of Mr. and
.Mrs . W.R. Brown .
~ !VIiss Stouffer is a graduate of
·North Hagerstown (Md.) High
: school, and Ohio University , with
:a bachelors degree in Commun·
.lty Health Services, emphasis in
:sports Medicine.
·
- Brown is a g raduate of Gai!la
"Academy High Schcmt"aftd Ohio
:University. He is employed by
·W.R. Brown Insurance as an
:associate agent .
: The wedding will be held at
-Paramount Baptist Church, Ha·
gerstown, Md. on July 9 at 1 p.m.

.'

Booster meeting ·

\

:Stouffer-Brown

DON'T FORGET THE PROM
RENT YOUR TUXEDO
FROM ELBERFELDS •••••

PTO to meet

·•.

.

•

Sunday

Va.

.\~

VETERAN$
ORIAL HOSPITAL

115 last •IHrlal Drive

Pomeroy

992·2104
..

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~Pei~~~~~~B-~8~S~unda~~y~Ti~tmes~~-Se~ntt~·~nei~=;::====~P~ome~~roy~
-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- Point

DAR

Beat of the bend

The Last Class?

play, a h!llbllly comedy, " Hea.
By BOB HOEFLICH
The Class of 1968 Is known as • din' for ~ Weddln'".
Cost of attending the dinner
" the last class" of Pomeroy High
Is $6 for adults with
theater
· School - and 1
-children under six being charged
suppose techn1·
$4 for the show and dinner. Those
cally speaking,
wishing both the show and dinner
It Isn't.
are to phone the high school no
However , the
la ter than Monda y to make
class graduated
reservations. The play, under the
alter consoUda·
direction of Gi na Tillis, will be
Uon. The Meigs
LOcal School District was In open to the public and those just
existence. Classes were held in doing the show will pay a lesser
the Pomeroy High School build· charge. Those going for dinner
• lng, now the Pomeroy VIllage a nd the show s hould be at the
Hall, and class members ha d high school at 6:30 Saturday
their own commencement in the evening, a nd those attending
Junior high auditorium. Dlplo· only the show are to be there at
mas were noted Metgs on the 7:30.
outside and Pomeroy High
If you are travellng 'to.GalllpoSchool on the lnsl&lt;le. However,
the sports program ·was com- lls durin g this week do keep In
mind that beginning tomorrow
bined tor Rutland, Pomeroy and
Middleport and cheerleaders employees of the railroad will
worked under the colors of begin reconstruction of the rail·
road crossing on Route 7ln Gallia
Meigs, maroon and gold.
Members of the class are the County between the VIllage of
last to be a part of the Pomeroy Cheshire and the Melg County
High School Alumni Association line.
One lane traffic will be In effect
and since It's the 20th year since
graduation this spring, there 's a during the !Jay with _two lane
great deal of activity underway traffic to be restored at each
night- the work will take a bout
to get the class together.
four days.
Accordl~g to present plans,
So, If you are traveling to
members of the class will have
an afternoon gel· together before Gallipolis under some· sort of
the big reunion of all Pomeroy time schedule, you might want to
plan a head a little since you
High graduates that evening..
In the day time could
apparently
Becky Nease Anderson, a live
a
bit by the one way
be
delayed
wire ol the class, reports that all
traffic
pattern.
membe~of .the class who are
stllH!vlng this area, are asked
Members of the Pomeroy Area
to aile
meeting at 7:30p.m .
Merchants
Association start the
Tuesda at the Main St. Pizza In
day
early.
They
'll be meeting at8
Pomeroy. At that lime, plans will
a.ni.
Tuesday
at
Bank One. By
be made for the afternoon
the
way,
the
Pomeroy
Area
gathering and to get organized
Chamber
of
Commerce
office
lor getting a btg turnout tor both
Memorial Day weekend will probably be moved by late
April into the Dorothy Amberger
reunions.
"We'd just love to have all building on E . Main Street- this
· members of the class who are Is the building between Rite Aid
still living In this area come out and the former Dollar General
Tuesday night to help make . Store location.
plans," Becky comments.
Lost your keys?
metal key rings holding
Double
Syracuse VIllage has wrappe&lt;j
some
16
keys
have been found In
up a neat village directory which
the
ultrasound
xray department
should be beneficial to a lot of
at
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
·people.
to
find
out
to
whom
and
efforts
The printed directory · is a
they
belong
have
been
In
.vain.
result of a house numbering
There
Is
a
Paul
Revere
lnsu·
project and lists every resident
ranee
Co.
emblem
on
the
rings
and the their house number and
also.
street. A map of' the town Is even
If they're your keys, get In
provided along with other pertln·
touch
with the department at the·.
enent 14lformatlon In the front of
hospitaL
the directory - a neat product!

If you plan to attend the dinne r
theater at Eastern High School
next Saturday evening, Monday
Is tlie deadline for making your
resesrvatton tor dinner and the

school

HARRISONVILLE- The Har·
rlsonvllle Senior Citizens Club
will hold a blood pressure clinic
from 10 a.m. to 12 noon Tuesday
at the town house with Linda
Friend, RN, to conduct the clinic.

S1

4l~

GROUND SEVERAL
TIMES DAILY

REVIVAL SET - Hope
Baptist Chapel, 570 Grant St.,
Middleport, wfu be in revival
service through April 15, at 7
p.m .. with Rev. Bill Messer of
Ashland, Ky. there wiD be
special slnglnp; and a nursery
will be provided.

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OU golf coach retiring after 41 years

In~

' Larry Mlze
LINES UP PUTI' - Defending Masters champion
lines up his putt for a bogey on the first hole during the third round
of the Masters Tournament Saturday afternoon. Mlze started the
round at 5 over par 149. (UPI)

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20

ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) -When wald, who seven years later won
"I like to kid my golfing "B!osserism or two" In his, says
the Mld·Arnerlcan Conference thePGA Championship ..
buddies and tell them 'I don't see OU Sports Information Director
Ohio University gollers kept
added goll to Its competition
as well as I used to'." he said. Frank Morgan who edits the
repertoire, Ohio University's at· · repeating as league champions,
"Don't bet on it."
newsletters.
hletlc director handed a gall ball losing It only In 1956, 1962, 1%6
Blosser needs help In locating
Examples of "Blosserlsms"
and 1970. They won It again In
to Kermit Blosser.
his shots and In estimating the that Morgan strives to retain
"But I don't even play the 1979 and '1980.
, distancE to the greens and the pin are: "It's really Intramural
"For many years I considered
game," Blosser began to protest.
locations . Then the old coach's (Immaterial) to me what they do
the job a hobby and that's why I
"You will," said AD Don Peden
radar system locks In and the with the golf course" and "It's
who also gave Blosser an NCAA stuck around as-- long as I have,''
shot generally hits the mark.
better to play and win than never
said Blosser. "But everything's
goll rule book.
During his years at Ohio to have lost at all."
got to come to an end."
That was In 1946. And In the 41
Unlverlsty, Blosser guided the
Blosser and his wife M1ldred
His retirement comes after the
springs since, Blosser fashlonM
Bobcats . to the school's first have been married 51 years and
the OU gall program Into the the Mld·Arnerlcan Conference Gall
natlonill championship Ill. are the parents of two children.
MAC's wlnnlngest. The 18league Championships which will be
wrestling In 1932. He's served as Son Dick Is in Athens and has two
held at OU this spring.
titles are the most of any MAC
an assistant In football and daughters , Tanya, a budd ing
He's 77, has been legally blind
sport or any coach In the league.
basketbalL
amateur goller, and Christina.
since 1977 and unable to drive. He
He quickly learned the sport,
He's been a meticulous record Daughter Carol and her husband
becoming a near scratch golfer, walks two miles to a downtown
keeper, which comes through In Joseph DeCamlnada live In De·
store each morning lor breakfast
and earning him a spot in the first
his annual alumni newsletter. It troll, but their son David, who
with his buddies . Even though he
class of the NCAA Gall Coaches
contains tidbits of news ottormer graduated from OU In 1986,
needs a powerful magnifying
Hall of Fame In 1980.
players that he gleans from his played for his grandfather. The
glass
to read, he still loves the
Blosser's first golf champion.
Christmas cards.
DeCamlnada's have a daughter
ship came ln1951 when one of the · game.
The newsletter generally has a Anne.
team members was Dow Finster·

roll over Royals, 11-4

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) ~
Ray Knight delivered a two-run,
pinch-hit double in a seven-run
seventh Inning and Jack Morris
pitched a six-hitter over eight
Innings Saturday, leading the
. Detroit Tigers to an 11-4 victory
over the Kansas City Royals.
The Tigers sent 12 men to the
plate In the seventh . · Detroit
slugged six consecutive hits ·and
took advantage of two Kansas
City errors -and a balk to break
open what had been a . pitching
duel between Morris and Brei
Saberhagen.
The two rlght·handers ba(tJed
to a 1·1 tie through five Innings
with each team scoring In the
fifth, Detroit on a leadoff double
by Tom Brookens and single by
Lou Whitaker and Kansas City on
a two-out home run by Bo
Jackson.
Morris, 2·0, gave up three runs
in the sixth and sent his club Into
the seventh trailing 4·1.
Saber hagen lett the game with
runners on first and second and
one out In the seventh. Bud
Black, 0.1, faced the next three
batters, allowing RBI singles to
Darrell Evans, Alan Trammell
. and pinch-hiller Luis Salazar
before giving way to Dan Qulsen·
berry, who !ailed to retire any of
the four batters he faced.
Knight tagged Quisenberry for
a two-run double down the
rlghl·fleld line and was replaced
by pinch-runner · Mike Heath,
who scored on a single by
· Morrison. Morrison then came
home on a single by Chet Lemon
and error by shortstop Kurt
Stillwell. Steve Farr relieved and
ended the rally with a strikeout

and popup.
Morris, 2·0, walked one and
struck out six in eight Innings.
Mike Henneman pitched the
ninth. Saberhagen gave up 11 of
the Tigers' 21 hils, walking one
and .s triking out five.
Kansas City reached Morris
for thi'ee slxth·lnnlng runs, scorIng on a triple by Willie Wilson
and singles by George Brett and
Jim F.lsenrelch.
Detroit scored Its three final
runs off Farr. The Tigers made It
9-4 on an eighth-Inning triple by
Trammell and a wild pitch by
Farr, then got an RBI single by
Gary Pettis and a run-scoring
double by Lou Whitaker In the
ninth.
Giants 3 Padres 1
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)
Will Clark and Kevin Mitchell
each homered Saturday to power
the San Francisco Gl!lnts to a H
victory over the Sa,n · . Diego
Padr'¥'.
· ~The Padres, who have"'been
outscored 25·7 this season, fell to
0-5. The worst start In franchise
history Is 0·6 In 1974.
Rick Reuschel , 1·0, allowed
nine hits In 8 1-3 Innings. Scott
Garrelts came on to Induce a
game-ending double play for his
first save. The Padres hit Into
three double plays.

· the Minnesota Twins .
Key, 2·0, scattered three hits
with four strikeouts over six
Innings and Ward worked the
final three. Twins starter Charlie
Lea, 0·1, was slugged for four
-earned runs on eight hits In 51·3
Innings In bls !lrst American
League appearance.
Phlls 9 Meta 3
PHILADELPHIA . (UPI)
Lance Parrish drove in live runs
with a three-run homer, a double
and a single Saturday to back a
three-hitter by Don Carman and
lift the Philadelphia Phlllles to a
9·3 victory over the New York
Mets.
Carman, making his first' start
of the season, picked up the
victory while giving the Ph !Illes a
second straight complete game.
He struck out five and walked
three.

Giants 3 Padres 1
·SAN FRA!';ClSCO (UP!)
Will Clark hit a two-run homer
and Kevin Mitchell delivered a
solo blast Saturday to power the ,
San Francisco Giants to a 3-1
victory over San Diego that
TAGGED OUT - GaUls Academy baserunner
error by Dragon left llelder Tom Burcham, who
dropped the Padres to 0·5.
tel Young's single sUp through after two runs
Rob Young, sliding, Is tagged out by Fairland
The Padres, who have been
crossed the plate on Young's hit. Alter four
third sac:ker John Booo In tbe bottom of the tblrd
outscored 25-7 this season, are on
Innings of play the Blue Devils were ahead Z.O.
Inning of Saturday's non-conference game at
the brink of the worst start In
Memorial Field. Young had rounded second on an
(Times.Sentlnel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
'
I
franchise history, which was 0·6
In
1974.
Blue Jays 10 Twins 0
"We'll just turn the page and
MINNEAPOLIS (UP!)
George Bell, Jesse Barfield, start over tomorrow," San Diego
Fred McGriff and Nelson Llrlano Manager Larry Bowa said. "Ev·
homered and Jimmy Key and ery guy's busting his butt, but we
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Cory dicker. Willie Upshaw's single to handed hitter Is batting .847 (11
Duane Ward combined on a can't guide the ball. As long as
Snyder
belted a two-run 'homer right scored Franco to make It for 17) with nine RBI and three
five ·hlttel' Saturday to lift the they're hustling, that's alii ask,
and
Cleveland
scored five runs In 4·0.
homers. His slugging percentage
Toronto Blue Jays to a 1().0 rout of and that's what they:re doing."
Pal Tabler singled to right, and Is 1.353 and his on-base percenthe second with the help of two
Mike Boddlcker balks Saturday Upshaw took third wh~n Joe tage Is .727 (16 of 22).
and cruised to a 12·1 rout of the Orsulak bobbled the ball for an
Daniels, whose swing is so
error. Joe . Carter singled' to graceful that It Is often called a
winless Baltimore Orioles.
Tom Candlottl, 1·0, pitched an center, . scoring. Upshaw and· " natural swing ," said weight·
elght·hltter to help the Indians to knocking out Boddicker.
lifting has given his stroke more
their fourth straight victory after
The J,ndlans again sent 10 punch.
dropping 1he opener. Baltimore, batters,-to the ·plate In the third,
"I've had this swing allmy life,
0-4, has been outscored 3().2 this scoring four more tuns. Snyder . so I'm not going to change It
season.
hit his third homer, a two-run now," he said . "I only hit three or
Snyder paced a 20-hlt attack shot to center off Mark William· four times all winter. I had a with three RBI and Caridlottl, a son, and Tabler had a two-run weight program I worked on all
knuckleballer, struck out six and single.
winter." .
walked three. He blanked Bait!·
Franco had an RBI single In
more lor eight Innings, running the Qeveland fourth and Snyder
Daniels homered in the first,
the Orioles' scoreless string to 24 a ~un·scorlng single In the fifth. walked In the third, singled In the
Innings before Larry Sheets' RBI Upshaw hit his second homer, a fifth and homered again In the
single In the ninth.
seventh. Despite all of Daniels'
solo shot, In ~he sixth.
Qeveland Is all to its best start
damage , the Reds still trailed 4·3
since 1966. The Indians lost 10 of
heading Into the bottom of the
Reda1Aatree4
their first lJ games last year.
ninth.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Kal
The Incflans sent 10 batters to Daniels, who has been red hot the
Chris Saba opened the ninth by
the pl~te In the second, scoring first week a! the season, turned In walking on four pitches off loser
five runs after two outs against a perfect performance at the Dave Smith, 0·1. Saba raced to
Boddlcker, 0.2. Mel Hall led off plate Saturday to lllmost slngle- third on a single by pinch-hitter
with II single and went to third on handedly lead the Ctnclitnatl Dave Collins and Barry Larkin
Snyder's double. Jay Bell lined Reds t.o a 5-4 win over the bunted for a single to load the
•
-' '
before Hall scored on a balk Houston Astros .
out
bases with no outs. Alter Saba
..
called by third-base umpire Dan
was
forced out at home on Jet!
Daniels, who had two homers,
Morrison. Snyder took third on a single and a walk IIi hJs first Treadway's fleld!!r's choice
•• •
the play and scored on Andy lour plate appearances, capped ground ball, Daniels promptly
~Allanaon's ground single up the his perfect day with a clutch drilled a line drive single to
middle.
nlnth·lnnlng two-run single to left-center to win the game.
Franco singled Allanson to provide the tytng and winning
"I shouldn't be walking the
PICKED OFF FIB8'1' - Balllmore'a Larry
Indian flnl bueinaa Willie Upllllaw, Clevelaad
third, and Allanson came home runs.
leadoff hitter," said Smith. "And
8heeU Ia c. .pt off tint by ·aevelaad'a Tom
won qaa, 1•1. ( VPI).
·
as plate umpire Dave Phillips
In the first four game~ of the . then comes Daniels, and he's
CudloiU. 0etUa1 roUlal lo make &amp;be &amp;aa Ia
called another balk on Bod· season, the smootb·swiJIIInlleft· hot."

AIMOUR
95"1. FAT 111£1

PRE-SLICED
BOLOGNA

·'I have as good a chance as
fellow Texan Tom Kite·was even
anybody tomorrow. Nobody has
more harsh, echoing comments
an edge. I can just go out and .. made Friday by Fuzzy Zoeller
swing the best I can."
who blasted Masters officia ls for
The lovely day was Ideal for the
what he said were almost unplaythousands of spectators whO
ble condition s on the greens.
spilled onto the Augusta National
" This Is one of the least fun
course to enjoy one of gall's grea I
Masters I've ever come to," said
specta~les, but despite the per·
Kite , who has finished In the top
feet conditions the players aga in 10 on 10 occasions but who stood
found trouble on the firm and fa st at 10-over 226 Saturday.
"I don 't want to think about
greens:
"There are putts out there you coming back here when the
can't even think about trying to cou rse is Uke this. Everybody
make," Crenshaw said. " They knows this (the Augusta National
need a fire truck at the 11th Golf Club) Is a dictatorship , The
green. The grass Is dying . There members can't complain and If
may not be !I living thing on that the players complain, people
think we 're prima donnas."
green by tomorrow ."
Crenshaw's longtime rival and

Kennit Blosser, 77

• Fret·Ooatln&amp; antl·sctlp mower Is axle-mounted and has rear full wldlh rollers 10 nilnimlze scalping

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DMini·Storage

April10,1988

.BY MIKE RABUN
He shot an even-par 72 on a •
UPI Sports Writer
warm, sunny and almost windAUGUSTA , Ga. (UP!) less day to pos t a 54-hole total of
Sandy Lyle, experiencing a taste 6-under 210.
of the pressure yet to come, lost
Crenshaw, the Masters winner
hall his lead on the back nine of In 1984, birdied the last two holes
the Augusta National Gall Club to shoot the day 's low score, a
Saturday and finished two shots 5-under 67 that brought him
ahead of Ben Crenshaw and within two shots of the lead at212.
Mark . Calcavecchla with one Calcavecchla , meanwhil e,
round to play In the 52nd Masters. eagled the par-5 15th and
Lyle, the Scotsman· who leads matched the 72 shot by Lyle to tie
the American tour In money Crenshaw for second.
'
winnings this year, bolted to a
"This was the kind of round I
four -shot advantage as he began needed to get myself In good
·play on the back nine Saturday, shape," Crenshaw said, ''even
but a wild tee shot at the always though I did not birdie any of the
dangerous par-513th and another par-5' s. That was the one thing
bogey at the difficult. par-3 16th missing on the round.
trimmed his advahtage.

•

OON,
INC.
:
Ws &amp;11/d: ·

DRetail Stores
DMig. Plants
DOffico 8ldgs.

oz.

BREAD

Indians, Reds capture

•

w~ns

..

10(

The fanit d ,..J 'onols
5

L--------~~-----·--'

¥

'

Section

Lyle grabs Masters lead

'·

April Showers Bring Special Financing

FRESH

ROUND
CHUCK

.
•

~--------------~ .

OWarehouses

j'unbau., 'mimes
- ~erdinel
,
-

•
•

"

$2 s·

LEAN

Clinic slated

outsta nding qua1lt!es of leader·
ship, dependability , service, and
patriotism. Each student se·
lected must compose a n essay of
personal activities and awards,
future · plans and c it izenship
e ndeavors. They must present a
letter of personal recommendation from a community leader
and complete a DAR essay test In
the presence of a facu lt y
member.

son, Scott, 6.
Rothgeb plans to continue
residence In the Shreveport, La .,
area, where his wife I~ employed
by the V.eterans Hospital.

FRESH. MEAT FOR FREEZER

We have Heritage Weekend
a nd Columbus has Pink Floyd and we don't have to stand In the
rain for hours to get tickets. Do
keep smiling.

MIDDLEPORT - The lunch
menu tor cafeterias of the Meigs
Local School District for the
·Week o! Aprllll·l51s announced:
Monday: hamburger with
pickles, corn, fruit, milk.
Tuesday: fish sandwich, peas,
cherry cobbler, milk.
Wednesday: spaghetti with
sauce, hot rolls and butter, fruit,
milk.
Thursday: creamed baked tur·
key, mashed potatoes and gravy,
bread and butter, jello, milk.
Friday: cooks' choice.

Training Ribbon ; Outstanding
Unit Award with Valor Device
and the Philippine Unit Citation.
He Is married to the former
Donna Porter and they have one

2# lonlloss Round Steak
2# Cubed Steak
4#
Ground ...f
3# Chuck loast
6-Pork Chops
1-Cookod Ham

Menu set
a~

Judy Anspach, Middleport.
Kyger Creek - Ja net L.
Stiltner, daughter of Joseph ;j.nd
Betty Edwards and the late Lee
Stiltner, Cheshire.
North Gallia - Blaine GU·
more, son of Andrew Gilmore,
Kerr.
. Ohio Valley c·hrlstlan - Gina
Jflmora, daughter of Dr. lsmael
and f&gt;ea nna Jamora, Pt. Plea·
sant, WV.
~ uthwestern Cheryl A.
Camburn, da ughter of Shirley
Ca mburn, Patriot.
This contest is sponsored ye·
arty by I he NSDAR for htgn
sc hool seniors who exemplify

Rothgeb retiring from USAF
BOSSIER CITY, La. - MSgt
James K. (Kenny) Rothgeb of
Bossler City, La., has retired
from a ctive duty In the United
States Air For ce after 20 years'
service.
Rothgeb Is the son of Glenna
Rothgeb of Route 1 Ga llipolis,
a nd the late Dale D. Rothgeb.
A 1%6 graduate of Kyger Creek
High School, he also completed
work at the Gallipolis Business
College, before entering the Air
Force. Currently he Is attending
Louslana Tech University In
Shreveport.
During his tenure In the United
States Air Force, Rothgeb received numerous decorations ,
Including Meritorious Service
Medal; Commendation Medal, 1
oak leaf cluster; Good Conduct
Medal, 4' oak leaf clusters;
National Defense Medal, Vietnam Service Meda l, 4 bronze
service stars; Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Crqss with palm;
Republic of VIetnam Ca mpaign
Medal; Humanitarian Service
Medal;
Air Force Short Tour Ribbon, 3
oa k leaf clusters; Air Force Long
Tour Ribbon, 1 oak leaf cluster;
Longevity Service Ribbon, 4 oak
leaf clusters; Small Arms Ex·
pert Marksmanship Ribbon ;

Sports

d - ~·
to
student
awal} g ven

GALLIPOLIS - Richard Stitt,
son of William and Eileen Stitt,
Crown City, is the French Colony
Chapter DAR Good Citizens
Con test winner for Ga ll !a
·County. Richard's entry was also
chosen a Southeastern Ohio Dis·
trlct winner too compete at the
state level. He Is a senior at
Hannan Trace High School .
Other participating h igh
schools and their Good Citizens
are:
Gallia Academy - Joy Jones,
daughter qf Tom and Marian
.Tones, Gallipoli s.
Galli a Chris tian- Genia Anspach, daughter of E ugene a nd

RICHARD STI1T

April 1 0, f988

W. Va.

'
•

I

i

�Page-C-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 1 0, ·1988

Pomer'oy-Middleport-.GaiNpolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va.

April 10, 1988

Glenville State captures Rio track meet ·
.

~Wiay 'tliAIRH

Majoril

at Moat real
New York at PhU.delphla
Lt:11 Aa1elft at Allulla
Ho•loa M OllCinnatl
Plc&amp;.burrh 11.181, Louis
San ~e10 al San FraneiiJ(lO
Q lc&amp;l'o

t\MEHIC'AN LEAGUE
By Unlt.:d Pre~~• lnk'rnatloNd

Ea ..

W L Pet." GB
3 01.000 -

New Yort
Cleveland

......

3
!

,'Kitw.u~ e t

t

Detroit

'l

Toronao

!it

I .'75(1

I .WJ

2 - . ~oa

t

-~

I

·a¥.:

NBA

f.:ulern CGnlereau
A.llaRtlc Dlvlllon
W L Pet.

'%

BaiUm•re

31 .1SO -..

Chkaso
Oakland

3

KaMaS Ctt t'

t%.~001

Mlnaesoca

1

Callloi'nta
Seattle

t
I

T'""

I

I .110 !

.:m

1%
,?.
3 .UQ '!
3 .2$0 'l

a .uo

Frkla,y'l lte1!1ulh1

New York

Philadelphia
New .te rae)'
x·Detroll
x·A.tlanm

ka!IMII Oly S, Detmlt!
lklllton ol, TeU!l 0

U.lca10 3, SeaUie 2
Oakland ll, C.lllomt. 2
Saturday '• Games
BaiUmore {Boddlctert-IJ a&amp;tleweland

08

:13 n .'U6 34 40 .158 l9
BJ n ,1441 !II
s:e n ·.4311 m~

,.Boston
Washington

II 57 ..'l411 85 ~

Central Dlvl!!llon
t1 2S .158 -

n ee .eu

n St .toO
n u .ut

K-chicaeo
Mlhvau.ltee

Clevl;!laad 3, Baltimore 0
New Yoril I, Milwaukee 4
MJnneiiO&amp;a 6. Ton~nao 3

,

Ni\TION.U BASKETBALL ASSOC •

1%

% .5110 1%
0 3 .0001

results

1

9
Cleveland
II 3D .480 IS
Indiana
~ D .H6 U
Weatera ConlereDCe
Midwest DIVIaloa
W L Pel. GB
)( ·Dalla&amp;
...
til 25 .8118 x·Denver
411 2fi .841
y,
)(-HOWICOD
42 :J(l .S8S 5\ol,

X·U&amp;ah
Su Antonio

14 .Sfl 81-\
!II 4f .378 HY,

Sacramento

U 52 .288 21'

Toi'Onlo (Key 1· 0) a1 MIMe80ta ll.t!al0) ; S:~ p.m.

Paelftc Dlvl!!ilon
)'-lA Lakers
58 n .78'7 -

Milwaukee {Hipera J.O) at New Vork
(LeUer &amp;.e), 1'! 30 p.m.

K·PorUand
48
x-8ea.Ue
40
Phoenix.
24
Golden St. ,
18
lA Cllppert
18
HIIDChed playoff bertfl
Y&lt;llnched dlviJion title

at

ChJ.

Bolton (Ciem•JVJ lt-D) At TexAI!I (HoUih

J.l), 8: S5 p.m.

Oakland !Stewart 1·8) al Calllomla
IWIUI-1), lt:Oip.m .
&amp;uwlay's Games
MJtw..ultH! .11 New York
Raltlmon at Cleveland
, Torvnto at Mlml!tluta
Seattle at O.lca1o ,
De~rott a&amp; KaMU City
Bu&amp;on a&amp; Texu
Oakland at CaHfomla
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eut

W L Pel.

GB

Dlk:aa:o
Phlladelpllla

s

l"ltt.bur&amp;h
New 1'odl.

2 I .Gn I
t i ! .SOOI \ot
1 3 .no 2\1

2

0 1.000 I .&amp;¥? I

Montreal
S&amp;. Lolls

03 .0003

Ho U.ton
Loa 1\na;ell!tl
SuiP'rUJ.
Cincinnati

S 0 I. too 3 I .1511
\1
3 I .'710
\-',
% 1 .H7 1

Atlaa&amp;a

o

4 .0011

3\-',

Saa Dlep

1

4 .0011

3~

Friday'• Re..ult.
PhU.delphla 5, New York I
Clllcap f, Montreal 4
Lot Aarele• t. AUan&amp;a 3
Ho181oll8, Clncln•U3, JIIIMIII(II ,
PIUabura;ll f, Sl. Lm.d11 S

San Praii(IIC&lt;I 5, San DieJO I

8atunlay'a Ga-•
Ko•t.on (Dai'Win H) at ClbCinna~l
(Run.uuen HI, 1: 15 p.m.
New Yortl C.4.ruJJen ~ ) at Phlla·
del~la (CarmauW), S:2t p.m .
Su Dlep (Grant0-e)atSanFraDd8Co
lfteu.cl_l!lo.t), 4:05p.m.
Cbtc&amp;111 (Schiraldi t-Gl a&amp; Monlreftl
(Martlnn 0·1), 7:31p.m.
"
lA I An plea ( Valenwela O~llal AtlAnta
(SmHh ~). 1: 40 p.m.
PIUebarJh (Walk 0-G) at St.. l.oul8
(MaDie11't G-Ill. &amp;: GOP·~·

1

_

I

4

(Candlottl 0-1), I:S5 p.m .
Detroit (Morris 1·0) at Kall!lal City
(Saberh,e:n &amp;.I) , 2:35 p.m .

Se&amp;lde · ~Lal(tt.on I-ll
eaco llforiOn 1·0)' '1': 35 p.m.

RIO GRANDE -:..... Glenville
meter run, the 800 meter run and
State's men's and women's track the 3000 meter run. Amy Dixon
teams took llrst place In a
took first In the high jump.
tr1ang1Jlar invitational meet F_r1·
Results of the meet were:
day oil Stanley L. Evans MemorMl' ,., Dii'L.t""
ni!Cui - ToddLayhew,GSC, IJ:IIeel,llnchel;
Ia I ,Fl e ld at Rl 0 G. ran de C0 IIege- Travil
RIU'I'ilo,' RGC, l!il feet , I Inch; Gordon
/ Community College.
Stephe-. GSC,lllleet,5Wtntbes: Brlaa Ko~,
WVS, It ~et, 9 Inc hell.
GSC s men s team tallJed 67
Lo•1 J..np - BerDie Bees, .G sc, ;o rm, s
Inches; Davl• R.lchadtofl, wvs. ao fed . 1Y.
po ints • with Rio Grande taldng ibChes;
Cllnlon 81111, WVS,lt feet , 4Jnebel; Tom
second at 65 points and West . Cal!lady, RGC, lB feel .
Virginia State third with 39. The
101 relay - wvs, 4U seconds; ~sc. 4,U
.,
·
·
lleC9nd8 .
Lady Pioneers totaled 80 points,
I~ meter run - Bobby Deot, GSC, 3: '19.2:
WVS h d 50 d th R d
Brian Lugnbeel, RGC, 4:011.1; Troy Ccchran,
a
an
e e women 4:1U: Tony Roas, GSC,4: 14. ,
netted 30 points.
Shot- Brttt Howard, wvs, 4&amp; feet , &amp;Inches:
,I
Gordon Stephe•. GSC, 41~ lnehea; Todd
twas a good meet and ·a very La)'hew, GSC, tlfeet, 6% htcMII; Tn."iaRambo,
good effort,'' Rio Grande Coach . RGc, st feel, 5Y.I.chea.
. b Will
t d "E
Ill meter hurdles - Tom Cuady, RGC, Ui.91
Bo
ey COffiJnen e .
Ve~
aecotlds; Sbaanon Par10na, G8C, I'UII~~econdl .
ryone gave a tremendous effort. .· i IDrhJump-llernle Ree~~,osc,ll reet,!lncbea:
Hubrook, RGC, 6 feel; VIc A•sdn, RGC, 5
It ' s f un f or Jh e kid s and it' s good . !Scott
feet, a 111ca.
for the school, because It gives ~e!:'a:~~~.:-t;u~;~~~c:.=s:~!t~·~~
the team a chance to show off a Herron, RGC. U.SiaeCGIHia; aorerWuson , wvs,
little On itS hOme track.''
5ll.tllsecoiWIA. •
lavelln - Gordon !i;tepheD!I, GSC, 154 feet , l
In its beSt showing Of the day, lneh; VIe A••Un, RGC, 1411 feet , 4 lnchet; Ken
th R d
WVS,l431eet; Travi!Rambo, ROC, liS
e e men won the 400 re1ay Maltoaey,
teet, 2 trJcbel.
With a time Of 3:27.16, While WVS
lot meier dash - Gary Suden, WVS , IUZ
tecondll; &amp;~ Mitc hell, GSC, li.U: Gordon
came in at 3:3 2.34 . For Rio SlepheM, o~. ll.Sll II!~Ondl; Ramly Mc&lt;:lay,
Grand~, Tom Cassady took first
nnc,u.n aeeoad•.
in the 110 meter hUrdleS
I!IPinete.- r~m- BobbyDenl, GSC,l: S'UD: Jim
Place
.
IA.Ite, RGC, 2:01.19: JeiiUDCald, esc, I::OZ.I8;
and 400 meter hurdles, Scott JUOII Roach, RGC. Z:OUt.
Hasbrook was first in the 200
tOO meter hurdles- Tom Cauady, RGC,IB.tll
ae:eoltdll; John Harrt1, RGC, 59.5Daeconds; ll)'an
meter dash and Brian Luger. bee I
Haushl. GSC, l : OUI: Shannon Panona, GSC,
was first In the 5000 meter run.
The Red women's Mary Dowler
captured first place In the 1500

II)

21 .130 10

M .541 11%
49 .328 12
S5 .247 38

58 .216 4G~ ,

·

Friday'• Result•
BoKoD 127, New derRy 90
Detroit tl, Phlllldelpi!La 86
aewli.IMIIH, MUwaU.ee 8:1
WMhltlllon 111, .. diana 1111
Chkap llll, New Yort. 122.
Dallu 118, Ulah 15
Denver Ut, San 1\nt.onlo LU, OT
lA LUers Itt, lA CllpperaiDi
GoldeaSCate IIZ.I,"hoenlx Ill
Seallle 114, Portland lOO
Sallll'dQ'a Games
Detroit at Atlanta, 7: 30 p.m. '
Dea~r at O.IIM, 8:90p.m.
lndlaaa at MUwaultee, I p.m.
Saeramelllll atPboenlx,lt: 30p.M.
lA Lakert &amp;1 Portland, 18: Stp.m.
HotMkla at BeatUe, 10: Sl p.m.
9ua.ay'8 Game11
Cle"elaDd 11 New Jeney
,Boi&amp;On a&amp; Phlllldelpbla
New Yorll. at Waablftl'lOa
Ho111ton at LA Cllpppera. nl1ht
Golden Stal-e at Sacrameate, alrht

t;92.H.
2Gt meier duh- Scott Hasbrook, RG C, 1!.12
seconda; Bemle Ree.. Gsc, u.M aeeoadl: Mark
lltlrbetl, BG C, h..IJ ~nd1; Erie MUcbell, GSC,

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

.

4 ;:~-.:''.r;..?ae!:!~~,' ~~.'e;~
l.chea; Jtert..W Ducuu, wvs: S7 rem, 4%
ln~a.a: 8baaDGIIP.,.....,G8C,Hieel,ll.cbH.
Pole vaule- RuMeiiSteele, GSC.
5111 me&amp;er nm - ,Brll.n ~.,u 1 enbeel, ROC,
II: D.Z7; 'hiQ' a.., OJJC, Jf,; IUD; Ruatr Ede111,
ROC, tl:h.a&amp;; a.b FrMz, RGC, 18:4$.
4(11 relay-· ROC::. S: 17.11; WVS.I:at.St .
W&lt;m~rn '' D11 ·i 1 1.,,.

Sho'- TnCJ' RamlUoa, WVR, a! leet, 1 lneh;
11mborn WMhi~Wfon, wvs, H feet , lllnehel;
11• 'ullard, GSC,!9 feet,91oohel; ~mll.endo,
"~· 21 feet,4 h•ches.
.
HIJhJump-.o\myDlxon,RGC,51ee&amp;,Unohet:

Beth Chapma~ csc;z:•.lt: MoliM Beenar,
GSC, %:S8.8S; Lori BarterI GSC,I:».n.
4M mmr hurdles - Trae &gt; ~ toa, wvs.
1: JI .U~ DaWII Fartey, G8C, · .- ·
·
'" mo&lt;or • ..., - u ......... ""'· nJB

AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) -Scots·
man Sandy Lyle Is on a highland
fling through the American golf
tour.
·
Already this . year·~ leading
money-winner with U.S. earn·
lngs of more than $108,000 and
victories at Phoenix and Greens·
boro, Lyle, a former British Open

1 11 1

:;:·~::,;:,.;-:~~:&amp;:O~c'!-:.ter=~
Hammon, wvs, !s.t' ~reF•~.-: GIIC n '"'
1

TrlpleJ.np- u.wn a ....,,,
•
•
IDCbel; MluyFumlthoaaer, 08(:,31 hd ,4h•cltN;
Trary lllmlltGil. wvs, It INt, I taehn: Beth
Oppe, GSC, It reel, t . . ..
s . . meternaa -MaryDowttr,RGc~u:n.n:

Lod Barker,GSC, lt: ~···· llkehCIIapmaa. G8C.
1!: &gt;11.11.
4~ l'l!lay- GSC, 5: IU5.

Dla~aFarJey;OSO, UeM,81nches; DawaFartey,

41eel·, 1 tKhes.
Javelin
Rhonda FdJer GSC 9S fed 1
htebH;
Sehmelber,
~ 6lac~l;

Tracy Hamtuo., wvs. 811eel, 71DChe•; Dlau
Farley, G8C, 78 feet, s IDcltel.
Ult rela)'- GSC , lUI secolllla~ WVS, 1: II:UI.

1100 me&amp;er""' - M•y Dowl~r. KG(), s:a.H:

Lort S.riler, GSC,I: H.I; MonDil Bee111.11r, GSC,

s:ID.III: Gl• KJicherunan, aoc, 6:48.81.

lne~.~ 'h::,.H~.!:::,:w~:; ~~!=~~.:C~~

Ml•y Funkhou.er, GSC. 14 feet, t tnebell.
DIICIII-Tin&amp; Bullanl,ll8 feel,li lnehr11; Diana
Fartey, GSC,IJIHt, llach; Mlml Leado, WVS, 61
IMt, '11mborn Wublll8'toa, WVS, 48 fed, 8~
lnebea
100 ~ter hlrile~ -Dan Farley, GSC,IUII

secoadlll; AmylMxon, RGC,II.IIsecondl; Tracy
HamUt.on WVS 11.3! .eeoDda
400 meier

d~

-

Tn.C)". Hamllt.oa,

wvs.

1:1!.&amp;1; U..ta.lrons, wvs, t:OU1; DlaaaFarley,
GSC, I:O'l'.•: Beth Chapman, GSC, l:H.l8.
1011 meter dub - Uala lrCH!t, wvs, 13.U
~econd.ll; DaWII Farte,., GSC, lll.fl ae:ro.cll;
wvs, 13.111 lll!cenda; Rhobda
Felder, GSC, IS.'DJ econdl.
800 meter rW1 - Mar, Dowler, RGC, !:!1.29;

Tracy Hamllkln,

Your future
depends
on today's
planning

Extend
Gillen's
contract

'

(54.3).

Rlttinger, who was chosen the
1987·88 Mld·Ohlo Conference
Player of the Year, ended the
season as the second member of
the All·Distrlct 22 team behind
Defiance's Dennis• Bostelman.
" Bostelman was named to the
All·Amerlca second team.
A 6·6 senior from Chillicothe,
• Rlttlnger was a starting forward
In all games played. He scored an
average of 22 points and 7.3
, rebounds per game to help the
Red men on to a 27 ·8 season and a
shot at . the district champl.on:
ship, He scored a career high of
37 points against Cedarville on
Feb. 20.
Mullins was named the District
22 and MOC Player of the Year
for her efforls, which resulted In
Rio Grande placing fourth over·
• all In the district at 19·9 and
second In the conference with a
; 7-3 slate. She was also named to
·; the MOC first team.
·
' • Mullins Is a 5·7 junior from
• McGuffey In Hardin County who
played every game as a starting
•. forward. She fln~shed the season
•

•

fatten your wa~~et·
with awant fld

fighting off a head cold and a
ticklish cough. " Game plans the
night before don 't always work .
You have to walt and see how you
are playing. "

Ca lcavecchla started out with
seven stra !ght Nrs Friday en
route to hls 69·140.-and said he's
got to get oft to a better start
today.

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CENTER-

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Xavier
University basketball coach Pete
aa•ethall
GIUen has agreed to a two·year
NBA - S&amp;IIPt!ndetl Dallal eenl.er
contract extension th.at will keep
.lame&amp; Dona.ldll•n aall Pboealx. center•
forward Mark We~ I and ftnedeac:h H,oeo
him under contract through the
lor fla)Jtlnr; lined PIIOI!Ialx center·
NEIL MORRISON
forward RonMooreiMIOiorleavtnrbench .
1993·94 season.
P.O. Bo• 361
darlftl' Hlhl.
Rio Grande, OH. 46674
"I'm very excited that Xavier
CGuere
Phone: (6141 246·93;9
Xavier - ExleiMied bukeCball c01oeh
has shown the confidence In me
Pete Gillen'• conlract t: year&amp; aDd Damed
.
· him special a111stant to president for .
by entendlng our basketball
comm~,mtcy relatloa.
contract," Gillen said Friday. "I
Hockey
lndlaaapolll UHL) - Anneuaced
sincerely feel our basketball
team'11 u.le to Don Undbel'l and Hom
program and the Midwestern
chen.
LEADING THE WAY - A Glenville Slate men's track learn
Collegiate
Conference have a
M00£AN WQOOMI.N
USTA - Named NlckSavlanoNatlonal
Of AMERICA
runner
leads
the
way
during
one
ol
the
running
events
Friday
In
the
bright
future
together."
Coach of Player Developmt!nl PrOifn&amp;m.,
SNC£ 1~3
Terms of the contract were not . triangular luvltatloaal meet held at Rlo GrandeCollege/Commun·
A rR ... flRNAL
INSU!ANQ !iOCIUY
HOMl OfnCE R&lt;XIC ISLA...O, ILLINOIS
tty College. GSC took llrsl place In overall scoring for the men's
disclosed.
Xavier finished 264 this past and women's teams.
,..-----_::__ _ _ _ _ _1~==========~~
seasori and lost In the first round
of the NCAA Tournament to
set. Gilbert trailed 0-40 before eventual champion Kansas. The
fighting back to deuce, but he Musketeers are 70-22 In three
missed a volley to lose the game.
seasons under Gillen and have
It was the only break of the final been to the NCAA Tournament
SINCE 1933
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
set, giving Annacone a 3·2 lead.
all three years.
- Jayson Gee, the backbone of
"I wasn't hitting my forehand
University President Rev. AI·
the University of Charleston's
very well," Gilbert said. ''I didn't bert DIUJio also announced
capitalize on the opportunities I GIUen has been named special basketball program for four
446~2362
years, has been named to the
had."
assistant to the president for
American College Athletes Hall
SALES: ·
The winner of the tournament
community relations.
of Fame.
will earn $75,000. ·
Industrial V-Belts
Bearings
''The new appointment proGee, a 6·foot4, 200-pound seGiiQE!rt, leading 3·2 ln .the first vides him the opportunity to
Lawn Mower V-Belts
Pumps Seals
set, led 40·15 in the sixth game but utilize his talents In other ways to nior c.enter, never missed a game
Automotive V-Belts
Capacitors
Annacone came back to win the benefit the unlversl ty," DIUllo In 122 contests during his colle·
Electric
Motors
Brushes
glate career . That durability ties
game. Annacone then broke said.
Fan"Biades
Couplings
him for second on the UC all·tlme
Gilbert's serve on the next game,
Fuses
Pulleys
list with Gerald Martin; who
winning the game with a lunging
Regulators
played from 1964 to 1988. Bo'th
- volley at the net, to go ahead 4-3
I
Gee and Martin were only one
and served out the set.
ELECTRIC REPAIRS:
"I was ahea,d 3-2, 1540, and I
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) -Char· game short of all·time leader Jim
Electric Motors
Battery Chargers
lust played sloppy three games In
lie Brown drove three winners at Hayes, who played from 1965 to
Water
Pumps
Small Welders
.
a row,'.' Gilbert said.
Raceway Park Friday night, 1969. .
Aireators ·
Motor Controls
Gee, known for his Inside
Gilbert played much better In
Including Cheer Power In the
game, hauled down 8,44 career
AUTOMOTIVE ELEC. REPAIR: "
the second set and Annacone's
featured lOth race pace.
Cheer Power grabbed the lead rebounds; blocked 58 shots; shot
first serve percentage dropped
Alternators
.
Starters
at the head of the stretch and 50.6 percent from the field,
below 50 percent.
Generators (Tractor)
Troubleshoot Wiring
pulled a ;way to a 7-length victory completed 319 of 630 field goals;
37 Pine St., Gallipolis, Ohio
In a time of 2:00 1·5, returnlng$9, and averaged 55.8 percent from
the free-throw .
$4.60 and $3.20.
Tung Willy finished second and
with an average of 20.5 poinis and
paid $3.80 and $2.80, while G.T.
7 rebounds per game. Her · Rockey came in third and kicked
highest scoring night for the
back $3.
Redwomen was on Feb. 9, when
Brown also guided Hllan Time
she netted 37 points In a .conferto victory In the sixth race and
ence game with Malone, shatterCloset Case In the eighth race.
Ing the previous record of 26
Friday night's crowd of 3,022
points set by a Rio Grande wagered $258,714.
· •s-nAI LIIIITEO WAIRA.Tl. Warr111ty
forward In a single game.
..., •. , dependiq n ,q•isHunt
SMm:haMcl•nd 1t1111l wst. Dtlltls on
Rlttlnger, who will graduate In
ltqUHt.
SALE DATES: APRIL 17th thru 30th
May with a degree In business
m~~
management, Is the · son of
Ronald and Marilyn Rlttinger of
Chillicothe. Mullins Is a physical
education major and Is the
ON
daughter of Lon and LaVern
Mullins of McGuffey.
PROFESSIONAL MODEL GRAVELYS

Tl'IU18actions

~I

......

. Gee named to
Hall of Fame

·\

.,

Hinsch heads first Gallipolis
baseball camp May ·31-June 4
GALLIPOLIS- The Galllpolls
Parks and Recreation Depart·
ment Is now accepting reglstra·
!Ions for the First Annual Galli·
polls Baseball Camp according
to Mike Simmons, director.
Under the leadership of Scott
Hinsch, the camp wilt provide
Instruction to Improve baseball ·
skills In the areas of hitting,
pitching, Infield and outfield play
'a nd catching.
Hinsch, who w!ll serve as head
Instructor, attended Indiana Unl·
versity on a full, four; year
baseball scholarship and has
coached numerous baseball
.teams. Highlights of his coaching
career Include two Ohio Connie
Mack Championships, the 1975
National Amateur Baseball Fed·
eratlon Championship and the
1987 Gallipolis Pee Wee Tourna·
,ment Championship.
Purpose of the camp Is to teach
'baseball. Only .Instructional
games are scheduled during the
'last hour of each session. The five

JIM BILL'S

.

Toledo raceway

...
•'.

SALE

LAYAWAY NOW!

' :I

Off

G

Gi•vetr two·whttl trldor with optiOftll

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mowfnJitllchments.
·

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lnct01 wilti tilt
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'.

·'

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We Offer Excellent Service &amp; Parts To Beck Up Our Sales To You, Our Valued Customer
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BAPTIZED INTO (EIS) CHRIST
Wi/li&lt;lm B. Kughn
1

rh~

preposition "into" {eis), as used by Paul in Romans 6:3,4, and

Galatians 3:27, is used in its strictest sense, deriolinjr entrance into,
and means that, at baptism, one is brought into un1on with Christ.
Christ is the sphere where all the blessings of the gospel can be en·
joyed. In Him. there is redemption (Rm. 3:24; Ejlh. 1:7; Col. 1:14);
reconciliation 12 Cor. 5:19): .U spiritual blesolngs (Eph. 1:3): fo"'!'v•·
ness of sins (Eph. 1:7); and salvatl011 (2 Tim. 2:10). "Baptized into is a
part of the transition that puts one into Christ, and the act by which
one puts on Christ. This transition involves a change of state, or rela·
· tions. and of innuence. Therefore, when one is. "baptized into one body"
II Cor. 12:13), he chanl;l"es his state by passing from without t~e body to
with in it: he changes h1s relations in becoming a member of the body by
being inserted into it; and he changes his influence by subjecting himse lf to the head of the body, which is Christ (Col. 1:18). obeying the
head !Christ) in all things.
Paul emphatically and unmistakeably states that [1] we are "bap·
tized••to (eis) Jesus Christ" (Rm. 6:3): [21 we are "'buried with him by
baptism into (eis) death" (Rm. 6:4): [3] ali ''baptized into (eis) Christ
have put on Christ" !Gal. 3:27). The spiritual transition that takes .place
at baptism translates one "into Christ," and it Is wrought by the power
and operation of God (John I :13; Col. 2.: 12). Being baptized IDto Christ,
w&lt;• put on Christ, and are united in Him, enjoying the blessings and
nenefits of His death, contacting the blood . that is able to wash away
our sins. because it was in His death where He shed His blood (John
t9::l4).
The sam~ preposition '"into" (~tis) is used by John in describing the
,.co nd death. '"These both were cast al:ive into (eis) a lake of fire burn·
i11g with brimstone" (Rev. 19:20); "And whosoever was not found
w ritten in the book of life was cast into (elo) the lake of fire" (Rev.
· 20: 151. At this point, it would be comforting to belieye and teach that

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translated in , at, unto, toward," and carrying the simplest meaning
"refe rring to" or '"with reference to," allowing the passages to read:
"These both were cast alive into lreferrina to) a lake (or, pointing to a
lake) of fire, burning with brimstone." You add "referring to" or "point·
ing to.·· and you wrest the scriptures. Instead of being cast into a lake
of fir•. they would just be close by, or near enough with reference to,
so as to not be in it. I cannot teach this, and you would not believe it.
Why"! Because the Spirit by John uses "into" (ell) in its strictest sense,
nennting entruce into. pa88illl from without the "lnJce of fire burning
1.vith bn'mstone'' to within it. You can no more change the strict mean·
in~ of "'into"' (eis) in regard to being "baptized into (els) Jesus Christ,"
th:1n you cnn in regard to Ute second death!
,
For Free Bib!~ Correipondenee Course, Write ...

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,•

••

J

day camp will be held Tuesday,
May 31, through Saturday, June
4, on city baseball diamonds.
Ralnouts will be made· up during
the week of June 6.
There will be three levels o(
Instruction for boys: Age..;J.0-12
from 9·10: 30 a.m.; Ages 8 &amp; 9
from 10: 45·12: 15 p.m.; Ages 13 &amp;
over from 1: 30·3: 15 p.m.
Fee for the 1988 GalllpoUs
Baseball Camp Is $15, which
Includes an lnstTuctlonal hand·
book. If the participant wants a
Camp T·Shirt, an additional $5
will be charged.
Class size Is limited so early
registration Is recommended.
Registration forms will be dis·
trlbuted to boys In both The
Gallipolis City Schools and The
Gallla County Local Schools or
may be obtained at the Gallipolis
Parks and Recreation Deparment, 518 Second Avenue, Galli·
polls. Additional Information Is
available by calling 446·1424,
Ext. 38.

A Message From The Bible . ..

.•...

Sl-,00~

'

SANDY LYLE

GALLIPOUS ELECTRIC SERVICE

133 , . STIEn
t

C-3

992·3524
391 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
10 AM-6 PM MON.·SAT.

·Rio cage players honored
RIO GRANDE - The top
scoring players for the men's and
women's basketball teams a tRio
Grande College/Community Col·
lege have made the honorable
mention list of the NAIA's
Ali·Amerlca teams for 1987·88.
Ron Rlttinger and Lea Ann
"Mullins were Included In the final
ranking of top players In NAIA
schools across the country.
In addition, the NAIA listed the
Redmen fifth In the nation In
team field goal percentage

l ·under· par 143, fel t Zoeller was
being too harsh, saying, " We're
not playing a golf course that Is
unplayable when Sandy shot 67
a nCI Fuzzy shot 66."
Friday's weather- was a re·
freshing change from Thursday
when 30 mph winds sent scores
soaring; with 20 of the 89 golfers
who played the first round falling
to break 80.
Lyle, fresh off last Sunday's
playoff victory at Greensboro,
started Friday two shots behind
first· round co·leaders Larry Nel·
son and Robert Wrenn. Those two
fell back In the pack, Wrenn
shooting 75·144 and Nelson 78·147.
Three birdies In a flve·hole
span put . Lyle at 4·under, two
shots ahead of the field at
Friday's nine· hole turn. His lead
was three shots until Ca lcavec·
chla sank an 8·foot birdie putt on
the next to last hole.
"I can't say how 1'11 play It
Saturday,'' said Lyle, who Is

life insurance, annuities,
plus fraternal benefitsModern Woodmen can
help plan a better future .

Annacone advances to finals
•

champ, Is making a strong bid for third round with a 2·stroke lead
his first U.S. major.
.over Mark Calcavecchla and· 4
Shaking off an opening bogey shots better than Fuzzy Zoeller
with six birdies, four on the front and Gary Ha llherg.
side, Lyle overcame the glass·
Zoeller had the· besst round so
sUck greens of the Augusta far In this year's Masters. a 66,
National Friday to shoot a Friday, then blasted this tourna·
5·under par 67. At 6·under 138 for ment and the other U.S. majors
two days, he entered Saturday for "tricking up" their courses to
make them tougher . He cited
Johnny Miller's round of 6J·tn the
1973 U.S. Open as the turning
point.
"We've been paying the price
ever since," Zoeller said. "The
rough keeps getting- higher and
the greens sUcker. Golf Is sup·
posed to be a fun game, but I'm
not enjoying it any more.
·
"Why should we trick up gol!
courses just because someone
shot a 63?" Zoeller asked. "Let's
Jet the best player win. Let him
shoot the best score he can, and
then pat him on the back."
'J'wo.tJme Masters champion
Tom Watson, tied for fifth at

f/'ZU\u ·

ROC, ... •.

u.;

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page

Lyle fires 67 Friday for second round Masters lead

llf~

CHICAG6 (UPI)- Paul Anna·
cone found his serve In the .thlrd
. set S1,1turday to pull out a 6·3, 3-6,
6-4 ylctory over Brad Gilbert and
advance to the final of the
$315,000 Volvo Chicago tennis
tournament.
In the other semifinal Saturday
night, unseeded Scott Davis
played No. 2 seed Tim Mayotte.
The winner will play Anna cone in
the Sunday final.
Annacone, seeded eighth, hlt24
of 32 first serves - 75 percentIn the final set after making 50
percent of his first serves In the
first two sets.
"I was thinking It couldn't get
much worse,:• said Ann.tcone, of
Knoxville, Tenn. "l'tri still not
pleased with my service. It's
surprising for me to get to the
: final of an event and not serve
',;,. Well."
·
• Annacone broke Gilbert's
' -serve In thellfthgameoftheflnal

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

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
PH. 446-9335
DA YE MICHAEL -

MANAGER

�Page C-4 Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

•

•

Reds bow ·to Astros; Indians wm aga1n
By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
Tom Browning could have sent
hOme the fans at Riverfront
Stadium a lot ea rlie r , and happIer. had he been able to ge t one
key out. Instea d; the game las ted
seven Innings longer, and the
home - to w n cro wd l e ft
disap pointed.
Browning took a two-hit shu , tout in to the ninth inning, but the
left -bander allowed a two-run
homer to Glenn Oa vis wt th two
out a nd the Houston Astros went
on to defeat the Cincinnati Reds
8-3 in 16 innings.
" You' re not supposed to have
games li ke this In only the third
g~ me of the season," Houston
Manager Ha l Lanier said a t the
end of the 4 hour, 20 minute
marat hon.
With the score tied 3-3, winning
pitcher Larry Andersen opened
the 16th wt th a single off loser
·Jose Rijo, 0-1, the sixth Clncln·
nati pitcher, Andersen raced to
third when Rijo.made a throwing
error to first on Gerald Young's
bunt , with Young safe a t ·nrst.
Young stole second, and Bllly
Hatcher, hitless In his previous
six at -bats . singled home Andersen and Young to stake the
As tros to a 5-3 advantage.

Bill Doran kept' the Inning
going with a wa lk, and Davis
singled home Hatcher . Terry
Puhl hunted for a single to load
the bases; Rafael Ramlerz
singled home Doran, and Alan
Ashby delivered a sacrifice fly to
score Davis.
" It was one of those weird
games," Cincinnati Manager
Pete Rose said . "A 16-lnning
game that wtnds up 8·3 Is a we ird

.

game.·~

In the 13th, Ashby homered off
Frank Williams to give the
Astros a 3·2 lead, but Cincinnati
tied It 3·3 on an REI-single by
Eric Davis.
In other g;~mes, Chicago defeated Montri!al6-4, Los Angeles
topped Atlanta 6-3, Philadelphia
bashed New.York 5-1, Pittsburgh
edged St. Louts i-3 and San
Francisco downed San Diego 5-1.
In the American League, It
was : Cleveland 3, Baltimore 0;
New York 6, Mllwaukee 4;
Minnesota 6, Toronto 3; Kansas
City 3, Detroit 2; Boston 4, Texas
0; Chicago 3, Seattle 2; and
Oakland 8, California 2.
Indians 3, Orioles 0
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Both
Baltimore Manager Cal Rlpken
Sr. and Cleveland counterpart

Cleveland State basketball
program has second probe
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Cleveland State University officials
say a second Investigation of the
school's basketball program is
being conducted.
Athletlc Director Robert F.
Busbey says this lnternallnvestlgation concerns allegatlons of
the basketball program and has
been going on for the pas! month.
ft 's the second investigation of
the basketball program ln the
past year . The first one concerned a lleged recruitment violations, a nd the school has an
appeals hearing ln a couple of
weeks from that investigation.
" Issues have come to our
attention that we feel must be
investi gated fully ," said Busbey.
" We have been made aware of
rumors and allegations of viola tions of NCAA rules and regulations and we decided Immediately to launch our own
inves tiga lion to get an obejcttve
determinatlon of the facts."
The Investigation began the
week of March 7 and ls being
directed by a prolesslonallnvestlgator from outside the university. No timetable has been set
ior its completion.
Busbey said no evidence of
wrongdlong has been verified.
:· "We are not prejudging
.nyqne, " he said. "The rights of
the Individuals will be fully
PrOtected. Our Investigation wtll
· \!Ontinue until we get these issues
resolved. If remedial action Is
oeeded, we will take It."
· Busbey added that If any
VIola tion of NCAA rules are
discovered, they wlll be taken to
'
the NCAA.
~ "We do not believe that any of
the issues brought to our attention at this time have a bearing
on our pending appeals hearings
)V!th the NCAA," Busbey said.
. That
. which
out
of an earlier

set for · April 18 or 1~. This
Investigation has no bearing on
that first one, school officials
said.
The Cleveland State University athetllc dlr~tor said that
university officials have an obligation to Investigate rumors and
allegations about the athletic
programs as they become aware
of them, no matter what the
source.
CSU completed Its season 21-7 ·
and went to the National Invitation Tournament, losing a
second-round game to Ohio
State.

Sunday's pitchers
By United Press lnlernational
American League
Milwaukee (Birkbeck 0-0) at
New York (John 0-0). i. 30 p.m.
Baltimore (Peraza 0-0) at
Cleveland (Yett 0-0),1:35 p.m.
Toronto (Stottlemyre 0-0) at
Minnesota (VIola 0-1), 2:15p.m.
Seattle (Moore 0-1) at Chicago
(Reuss 0-0) , 2:30p.m.
Detroit (Alexander 0·0) at
Kansas City (Lelbrandt 0·1), 2:35
p.m.
Boston (Sellers 0-0) at Texas
(Kilgus 0-0), 3:05p.m.
Oakland (Welch 1-0) at California (Fraser 0-0), 4: 05p.m.
N atlonal League
Chicago (Sutcliffe0-0) alMontreal (B. Smith 0-0), 1: 35 p.m.
New York (Gooden 1-0) at
Philadelphia (Rawley Il-l) , 1: 35
p.m.
•
Los Angeles (Hershlser 1-0) at
Atlanta (Mahler 0-0), 2:10p.m.
Houston (Scott 1·0) at Cincinnati (Robinson 0-0), 2:15p.m.
Pittsburgh (Smiley 0-0) at St.
Louis (Magrane 0.0). 2:15p.m.
San Diego (Whitson 0-0) at San
Francisco (Dravecky 1-0), 4;05
p.m.

are awa re tha t pitching Is the
reason their teams are cons!dered mere pretender s In ·the
America n League Eas t.
"Most folks say Clevela nd and
Baltimore depend too much on
their offense to carry them , but I
don't buy that ," said Edwards.
"Scotty Bailes Is one of lhe
reasons."
The elder Rlpken agrees. After
watching Balles scatter just
three singles In Cleveland's 3-0
victory Friday over Baltimore
that represented the Orioles'
belngshutoutforthese condtlme
1 1 f
Rl k
n ts lrst three game s, P en
.praised the left-bander. ·
"He got off to a shaky beginnlng, but gqt himself back on
· track and finished strong;" said
the Orioles ' manager.
"Obviously, we're k1nd of
spinning our wheels right now.
We need to get Into a groove,
continue our good habits and that
first win will help. It'll help a
lot."
Balles struck out · four and
walked three In notching his first
shutout and first complete game
after 27 previous career starts.
The Indians , who drew 53,738 for
the . game, are 45-43 In home
openers.
"I'm sick and tired of hearlqg
that our pitching's suspect, that
lt stinks," said Balles, who made
his first apperance of the season.
· "To criticize us before the
season begins Is unlatr: we just
have to pltc h the way we know we
can, and we have . won thtee
straight games. Glvl'hg up three
hits Is the best of my (th ree-year )
career, and this shows our staff
. has talent."
Julio Franco's two-run single
capped a three-run seventh Inning off loser Mark Thurmond,
making his first start for the
· Orioles after being acquired In an

offseason trade with Detroit.
" I thlnJ&lt; I pitched weU, but
sometimes you do and end up
wtth nothing, " said the lt:.ttbander, " Untu the seventh, I had
good lo c ation and good
movement."
Cleveland loaded the bases
with two out In the seventh on

. April 10, 1988

DATE- GYMNASIUM

April10, 1988

LYNE CENTE!l SCIIEDVL&gt;l
Week of April II, 1988

s

Ohio Wlldlife Councll approves · dates for

Apr\1 13- Closed ... .................. ........ ...... ,.............. 12:30-1: 30

be anterless .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio Wildlife Council has
RJ/YC..NECKEO PHEASANT - ()pel• the flnt
approved the 1988-89 hunting and FrtdQ"Ia November CNov• .f,ltM)tolaa.t,lMt.
dlll1111 tl'le deer r• ....... Hour• are
· trapping season dates and new CIHed
oDe-lilalf llo• betDre uan.e 1o 11111-.!l, uupt oa
p-.Jk
b
..
aft. . d.-t• Nowmber wllen the
regulations proposed by the Ohio
1»ur1 wiD be 1 a.m. to I p.m. Dalb baa Umll !,
Department of Natural Resour- p~ llmlt ......... tint • .,.
FOX HUNTING - Nov. 7,1188. ttlntWih .r... 11,
•ces' division of wildlife.
· Of particular Interest to hun-. RACCOON. Q('()SSUM . 'iKUNit. . AND WEA .~ E L
HUNTING - OpeiUINov. 14, 1WI&amp;, throq:hJan.JJ,
ters is a special management tMt.
J&amp;.ntlnc helll'l lor raocooD •re I p.m. to I
anterless deer permit that allows a.m. Po.et1ion limit t raccoona while b..,t1111or
to or lnnn lluatl ...
hunters to kill two deer. :rhe truellna:
FOX. OPOSSUM, SKUNK, WEA SEL. I'I ND
•second deer must be killed In one Btt DGf:R TRAPPING - Opeu Nn. 1, 1188,
tbro.,b .ian. 11, 11111. No reab'leU..- on ho.-a, ••
:o! 11 specified counties and must daiiJ
b&amp;f Umlt, aad no pouKIIoa Hmlt.

·-

.,................................................ ................. 6-8 p.m.ICQllege ~wim
p.m./Fitness wlm

........................................................................................ c'K1ed

Aprii14-6-8..~.' ~.':.~~.1.1.~~~ .~~.'.::::::::::: :: :::: ::::::::~~.=.~.~.=. ~.G·~~~~o~~~~ ·Swl~
Aprll l5-S.8 p.mJ Open Rec ........... ..... .. ...... .. ...... 12: 30-1:30 p.m./Fitness ~wlm

u.,

tG-CJosed .... :::: :· ·: ·: .... :·:·;· :·:·:·: .... ::::::::::: :::::::::::: :::::~~ .~·.~.&lt;?.~~CJ~':

,....

DR. A. JACKSON BAILES

OPTOMETRISTS
DR. T. JAY BRADSHAW

MINK, MVSKftAT. AND RACCOON TRAPPI NG

Visual Examinations - Glasses
Children's/Pediatric Vision
·low/Geriatric Vision
C.ontact lenses - AU Types

·to first as Hall scored. ·Bell beat
first baseman Eddie Murray's
relay home, but Allanson was out
at third on a throw from catcher
Terry_Kennedy to shortstop Cal
Rlpken Jr.
TheOrioleswastedtwoscorlng
opportunities. Jeff Stone led off
the game with a walk and stole
second. Cal Rlpken Jr. walked
with one out and Stone stole third
before Murray grounded Into an

Roman
•
regams
crown

OPEN SATURDAYS- CLOSED MQNDAYS
Evening Hour By Appointment

TWO OFFICES FOR CONVENIENCE

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UPI) In a bloody battle of little men
fighting for small purses, GUberto Roman landed the big
punch to turn the bout In his
favor.
Roman won a bloody unanimous 12-round decision over Sugar
Baby Rojas Saturday night to
regain the World Boxing Councll
super flyweight title. Roman,
who earned $10,000 compared to
Rojas' $50,000, won bac~ the
115-pound championship he lost
last May to Santos Laclar.
''When you lose a title, you get
down for a whlle and· tl\en you
just want It back," Roman said.
"I figured my title was just on
vaca tlon for a while. It was on the
shelf and I had to come and get lt.
And that's just what I did. I came
to Miami and I conquered."
Roman improved to 46-4-1 and
Rojas, who won the title '!rom
Laclar last August, fell to 31'1-1.
Roman is from· Mexico, Rojas
from Colombia .
Roman took control of the bout '
with a crunching right that
bucked Rojas' knees just before
the bell ending the eighth round.
He dominated the final four
rounds to talle the decision.
Each fighter had blood streamIng from his right eye at the end.
Roman began bleeding In the
third round and Rojas was cut in
the ninth. The bout was dirty,
with the fighters pushing and
elbowing throughout. Roman
pushed Rojas through the ropes
In the 11th.

250 2nd Ave., Gallipolis - 446-3300
110 Mechar" ~ St., Pam•roy - 992-3279
•

~ln::n~ln~g~-e~nd:::l~ng~d~ou~b~l=e~~--...!------------------------~

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CJJINESE RestauRaNt

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Season
COMPLETE LINE OF VEGETABLE
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HANGING BASKETS, AZALEAS,
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Prices

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Gallipolis

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$240

446·7227

SYUCUSE- 992·5776

- Ope• Nov. U, lt88, tlaroiWII olu.ll, 1•. TJ.
• e - II fllW!IIded tlart•lll Mucb II, 1. ., ID
Err.t, Ol•wa. ... SIDIIuUJco..ae.aBIII•IMcM
CGIIIIt)',Uitoftllie Ma.-n.Rivtr. No rHbietiGM

on llo ..., no dalb' bac llml&amp;, and ao pot.IINI.I.n
llm.l.
BEAVER TRAPPfNG - Opene Jan. Ui, Jtll,
Ulrourb 111e . , dar or February (Feb. as. 11181).
'I'rlpt m•t be n~a~bei- I or larler. No baa Umtl.
B£AiiD£D JI'ILD TURKF:Y - Openti the lourll!l

MoiiiiQ In Aprtl {April

tt,

lB) to U.e tblrd

leUowtas 8hda1 IM&amp;J 13, •••• • fluDIIIII' II
,ermute•I•AdiMnl. Albia ... Alldabu.ta, Athe•,

•owa.

C.mO. Oerm0111, Cotl.mbl.aM, Colllae-

Fairfield, Gallll., GuerMey, Harrt.oa,
IUa~llll. Hocldas, Haknu, Jaelkloa, Jeflenon,

tea,

X.•~:,

La..,.ace, Ucld., Lopn, Melp,llolll'tle,

Moraaa, Mu*lar~m, Noble, Pen"J, Pike, Rlchla.J, a.., letolo, 'I?.nb..U, 'hle&amp;,.,WU,
Vlao~~o a .. W...1111•11 colllltln. 11o ... are
ID&amp;-IIIIIIU.. before
Co 110M .
.-oODCHLICK AND BADG£R HVNTIND - The"'
AeaMII Ia opu all year, with •o re~triciiO• on b•l
·
or ~•lion limit., elleepttbat ltlado.eddurlnl
anr of ..e: deer Jim IM!uoa. Hunt1n1 hOW'I are
o..e-half
before 1W1rtle to •uneel .
SQVfRREL - Opera Th\!l'fl!la.Y foUowiDK Labor
Day (~pt . 8, 1188) to the third 811turday after
Tbaakqlvlna (Deo. 10, 1111) . Clooed darhll Use
, deer pa oeuon. Ho.a are o•ball hoar before
suartle co s....et . DaiiJ baa llmtt t ,. potW. .Ion

••rile

•o•

llmM Bafter llle ftnt· day.

RVFFED GROUSE- Opea lle.ecood 81tW'day

ha OetOOer (Oet. 8, It•' to tile IMt day In
Fek•I'J (F'eb. 28, lNIJ , Clo11ddurlq the deer

pa oeuoa. Kellep hlaall ll cloeed to rulfed
aro- bilaU.C.
are ane-llalf tlo• before
awuUe to oun.t. O.IIJ baa lbnH S, IM'-,.eA ..on
JbnM 8 after the lint dq.
COTTOI\'TA/l RABBIT - Opeu the llrst
FrldQ" Ia Now.T.ber (NOY. t,liQ) toJsa.SI,lBM.
C1a.Jd durtnc llle deer aua atuon. Hours are

Ha••

Oltlf-ball hou befoftl: aW~riM lo J lllloel, l!xc ept on
p..,no h~aUnc areu durtac Nowmberwhu the
houn will be I a.m. kt 5 p.m. Dally btl Umtl· f.,

nempo Radial Arriva Radial

51 Radial* Eagle GT-Radlal

''

'•

~

•

LepJ weapoM are muulaloadl111 rifle ot uleut

pennllllll!d only oa atate public: b•tl• areu ald.
prhate lucia under a~emeDt wtl:ll the Rate Ia
Mama, AilleJ~t, Browa, Bluer, Oermot~l ,
cu.., Galpa. GNHt, llami!loe, HI piaad,
,. lubo•, Lewreace , Melp, Monl(ome,., Pike,
Preble, RoN. Scioto, aDd Warreneo...Ciea. lloun
are one-half boW' before: •.mrllle to 1uaset, exce pt
o• public llunt1n1 areu durlac November whe n
the houn will be Bft.m . loS p.m.DaUybagllmltJ,
p~loallmlt 8 alter the tll'll"day., ·
·'
DEfR L'o NG BO W ..4 ND CHOSSBOW HUNti i\G
- Ope• 'he 111"11 SalurdQ In Oe\OO er tO ct. U ,
1188) 10 lao. J1, IBM. Houn are one-half boW'
berore ...riM to oM-taalf hour altef'Juuel. Deer
of eWier ae• m17 be ldUed . Tbe lllllckw and
ei'OMbow aeuo• will be ~;lORd dv.rlq tile deer

taJI, loll( bow, a.S eroubow. llklck OIIIJ' may be
killed In Zotte P -1: Al.,n, Aurlalae, He•y.
Mercer, Ollawa, Publam, 8.1lllkJ, VM Wert,
aM Wood eo... IIH. Deer of etther IU ,rna)' be
tUJed In lberetnalnh11 COWitla of Z..P •l .. Deer
may be .Uied on K,elle)'ll Island durtc dte open
te&amp;IKin, e~ept wldl a 11.111·
DEER GIJN S£..4SQN ..:. The 1tate wUJ be.divided
. I,Dto ,t.lu~e deer :r.onn:
~~
- Zone A: Nov. ! B Cllro111h Dtc. 3 1orbucll only
wllb llml~d lree anlerleupermlta ln all co UIItl~.
lhuaten mWJI apply for a lree ankrlesa penn It
dleapplk:atlon at lllebottomoflhe deertlr.
Couatlet In Deer ZoDe A are: A.llea, .Autlaloe,
Butler, Oark, Obltoa, Cra1'Jiord. Dane, De-

FRONT WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

I

'

•Sot front whHI COS•
lar, 'amber, ancl toe on
cors with adjustable
·
suspensia~ while nfer·
encing thrust angle.
Chovtties, Fitros, ~ghl trucks, con r~t~uiring MacPherson Strut corrtetion exira.

Sl 895

.\ • Limited Warr•ntv for 8 months or
• 6.000 mila1, whichever comes firtt.

•

COOLING SYSTEM
RADIATOR
'
PROTECTION

ltance, Fzle, FilyeUe, hloa, Greeae,. Haatock.
llatdln, Helll')', lluroa, Ueaa, Madl.10n, Muion,
Mercer , Miami Mollllcomer;r, otla•a, Paaldlna.
Preble 1 Pulliam, sa,.htlk)', Se~~eca, Shelby, v ...
Wert. WIU'fto, Wllllam1. Wood, •ad Wyaadot.
-Zone 8 : No". U aDd !1, 1888 lor eldler leX .
No". JO thro..-h Dec. !, 1188, buck ollly. The
co111tln Ia Deer Zone 8 are : AI IIli buii, Geausa.
Trwnbull, and Maholl.lllJ.

312 '6th Street
Point Pleasant, WV ·

675·1160
Pre-Finished

PANELING

Panel· It
Yourself
And
Save.
WIDE
SELECTION.

J

All 4'X8' Panels

Sale Price

MIDWEST LITE BIRCH !5132)..........! ..........7.97
FRONT ST. OAK (3.0) .......................................
MIDNITE STAR !4.4).................................. 11.97
ARBOR ROSE (4.4).~................................ 11.97
WHITE BRICK (114') .................................19.97
SAVANAH HICKORY (3.6) .........................9.97
SPYGLASS BIRCH (4132) ..........................9.37
WHITE ASH (3.0) ....................................: ...9.87
JOANNA BLUE (3.0) ...........................:;... 13.17
SATNWOOD WHITE (3.0) ........................13.07
ALL PANELS IN STOCK • SALE PRICED
PANEL NAILS........................;.......... 99' perhox

.e--.

Creek 111 Se.eea CoW~lJ.

NOW THRU APRIL 16, 1988
Serving The Tri-County
;'lllllillllii... Area For 47 Years.

20°/o Off

Phone

- Zo ne: C: No\'. t8 tbro111h De c. 3, ltSB, fordee r
ol e ltlroer aoe11 . Zone C shall be 'h011e countl ~ aO
ln.:luted In :to.e A or zone B.
..
Huaurs p~~re hailllf: a apee lal manapmenl
aacerletl deer permit may kill two c~e&gt;er ,
pro\'ldlnc oM .. antoerleu and that dr.e deer Ia kiin
Ia I• one of llle foUowlnc eountlet: Allie•.
Frankl!~ J acboa, llaox , U ekJq, Melp, Moarooe, Mol'l••· Mu•laru.m , Noble, aad WMIIIII(·
to.. llaa&amp;ert wUb • apeet.al ·ma•cemenl
uierleM permit rn&amp;J •ot tlbmorethanoaedeoer
per dl)' . TllrbJallnJboura lordeerduri.theJUD
aeuoa ahall be one-half hour befon! aunrlle to
lllln.el .
I'OU.I\IG HUNTf:'RSSPF:CM LSf~ASO'V - The lwl t
lwo $ ~urdays ln OdobtJr (0cl. 2! and 29, 18M) (In
Berlin, Caesar Cree k. De laware, IHIIon , Gra nd
river , Oxbo w, Rl,adlave n, a nd Speoce r pliJUc
blllltlftl &amp;reM.
The wiJdlUe eo..-.oU approved ae veral odller
r eplatloU In .ddltlon lo hur~tlnr .... lrapplq
cbtea:
-A mlldmum lena&amp;llllmlt of 151-.chH will be
enecuve April n , 1118, lor lartemoUO. bau In
llirhli.DIItown, Zepetnlck, a nd Zo.r l•ll:e• and In
llle WeUlnpon South Re.erwotr.
A mlubman le~h llmli ol U Inches .will be
4itrectl~ April U, 1188, for lroul and ulmon In
Lake Erte and all &amp;he stream• In IU d ra lral~•
u .cept Cold Creek Ia Erie County and Be.ve r

ANNIVERSARY SALE
FREE
ELIVERY

ALL ARMSTRONG
CEILINGS IN STOCK
PLUS

• 20-year limited warranty.
• Rich variety of cclors.
• UL Class ·p; l1re rating
and wind-resistant rating.
• Sell sealing.

WIN! rPICI
...-::
a ·
C."l

Buy 192 square teet or mo':'!

of a selet1ed Armstrong cell·
ing to qualily lor your FREE
oltlcially licensed Indy 500
sportswatch ancl automatic
entry In the Indy 500 Pace

car Swet!pslakes.

tllf!"',:l
Tile Olftmtille Cllllss

$1897

eJ

~@~~

ROOFING
FELT

.

I

, ...

Long Lasting
Shingles
GEORGIA PACIFIC

OUTDOOR DECKS. A MIRACLE
YOU CAN MAKE WITH
YOUR
.
OWN TWO HANDS.
·:

CLASSIC®

PER SQUARE

OVER 30 DESIGNS TO CHOOSE FROM

$7~:""

, ,

I . - '
'/ " .... ·,~ .. ,'-·''
I; : -Ill If; I

COVERS 400 SQ. FT.

' ' tf,/11

' j-.1,/t .
.... '

VINYL SIDING
·Ourable
•Adds value to your home
•You'll never have to paint

.

·Treated Yellaw Pine

again

10'xl2' DECK PACKAGE
Paiz~e consists o1:

•

120'
24·2z6y12'

BOWLS 1102 SERIES Kevin Blankenllblp bowled an
802 aeries In a toumament at
Skyline Lanea on Saturday,
April !. On Suaday be represeneed Skyline Laaes on "Big 8
BowUnl'' on WSAZ-TV ud
rolled 11 coJIIIeCUtlve alrlkes.
He II lbe IICID of Harold and
Karen Blaakenllhlp of Rt. 2,
GaWpolla.
;

2·2x4xl0'
2-2x4x12'
1·2x4xl6'
1·2x6x6'
10 pound lb OTHER SIZES AVA~!-:f
galv.
K! SIMILAR SAVINGS
deck nails
FREE ESTIMATES

..

S549 5:::

C:;..".:

Umiled Warronty for 8 months or
8,000 miles, which- comes first .

limit~ Warranty for 12 months or
12.000 milee, whichever comes flrat.

$1 9

C..llllianal -

•

•

GOOD
·r

.............., ,..-

C&amp;A .AUTO
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

446·3816
HOURS: 8 A.M.-5 P.M. MON.-FRI.
SAT. 8 A.M.-1 p.m.

Stocked In
Double 4 &amp; Double 5

plenty.
Aturtllnt 'ltlldlator constantly
rap1aC11 hot IIIIC air. The light·
MtbletZIWIIIItan ntumlng·and
thet 111111111reunergy.
,

futolblllslorcoollngyourhome.
This
year, light back whh pink
Owen•Comlng Fiberglas"
Blankel" Insulation. The most
powerful roll of pink Insulation
voucan buy.

~.12

7

PER SQUARE

FOOT
KRAF1" FACED

X 15" ·88.12 Sq. Ft. Kraft Face (R-11) ......... $11.19
3112" X 23" - 135.12 Sq. Ft. Kraft Face (R-11 )•...$17.16
. TUFF-R
6114" X 15". 48.96 Sq. Ft. Kraft Face (R-19) ..•.•.•$11.26
INSULATING
6114" X 23" -75.07 Sq. Ft. Kraft Face (A-19) ...... $17.26 SHEATING
8" X 15" • 31.25 Sq. Ft. Attic Blanket (R·25).......$1 0.31
3112"

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

---- --·iol

,.,.,..,,, «&lt;I .. _, .....

INSULA11D
THAT

6-0 X6-8

I

(GOODYEAR EMPLOYEE REBATES)

*Goodyear Credit Plan lvallablt $1 0.00 A Month
We Honor VIsa &amp; MasterCard

·-----......- ....-........-.

.......

EVERY TIRE AT C~EAR.ANCE. SALE -PRICE
GALLIPOLIS' ONLY AUTHORIZED DEALER*

WHITE ONLY

Summer's here. AnCI so are high

fr:S.:.:l"
resurface front · roterL

*iw..tidos.
,Priclf wary fer front whttl drift. Cllliptr •••·
haul $22.50 tach If nttdtd. Hydraolic ,.,.;,1
wMIIM rtc.....,.ndtd If nttdtd for sale .,...••
liofl.
-

$39~~RE

up and radlatn doWn 10 1
below, poolshlng your I
conditioner. n can cost y011

11t11

KEEP COOL
THIS SUMMER

DISC BRAKE SERVICE

Dl'llin and refill the
radiator and coqJing
system with up to 2
·
gallons of coolant/antifreeze.
Protsurt Jut the 'tltm.lnsptct waltr pump,
ho10s, bolls, and lighl• al •-lioM.

)

·1:

u.a..-

DE£R SPECM L PHIMITI IIE WEAI'ONS- For
deer wllll uller•llacheo or area.ter. Ope• tile
lotrtll Mollday In October (~t 24, 1&amp;18) to the
loUowtr.-~JUurday (Oct . H , liiU) . Le1al wnpon1 ·
are m.a::del•dl• nne of at least Jl caliber,
muzleloadi!l&amp;: Moll:ua ulllq a 1lqle ball,
loqbow, alld.ei'OIIbow. Tbe letNn will be open at

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

l

.as cal her, mu:dehadlqlbotl• Qlq a llelle

I1111114!UOU.

,.,,..,r.,.._.,......,.
,.....,,.
n-o .... ,.,,__; ..

Center

Ope• dlle 111'1&amp; Tlunday , Prada)' , a.! Baturct af.
fOUowlna New 'fear' o day (olaa. S, I , and 1, IIIII .
Houn are ~;~ae-half hour before sun~ to sua~el .

BOBWHITE QUAIL- .Opea the first Frida)' Ia
N~twmber (Nov. f., IM) ta olaa. J , IM. Dl*d
cha1nr lbe jlef!r (WI ~MOn. Quail huattq

4-4x4x8'

•'
:·
':

~Nursing Care

DEER STAT(f'IO£ PHIMITIVE IPF.:A PO f\S-

CAROLINA LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY COMPANY

2X4
2X6

:

~PLEASANT VALLEY

Salt Fofk, Wildcat Hallow, a lii Sbawaee.

,.._eloo lbnlt8 after lie lin&amp; day .

14' 16' 18' 20' 22' 24'

i

A rewarding career. It can be found In the
field of long-term care. And that's the opportunity Pleasant Valley Nursing Care
Center is now offering registered nurses.
We 're a 100-bed skilled nursing facility,
accepting applications for full-time and •
part-time R.N. positions. Our salaries
begin ~t $9.61 per hour. Benefits include
flexible scheduling. tuition reimtiursement. medical and dental insurance, paid
vacations and holidays and more.
If yo11 are seeking a career change, or
looking to begin a new one, call us at (304)
675-5236. EOE/AAE

1988~9 season

·Sll year warranty

l,

I

Sunday TIITMis-Sentinei-Page-C-5

April 10- 1-3 p.m ./Open Rec... ........... ,.... ... ... .... ............ .. .. 1-3 p.m./Open w1m
6-8 p.m./College Rec ........................ ."........ ... 6-8 p.m ./College 5 w1m
Aprll ll- 6-8 p.m./College Rec . ...................... .... .. 12: JO.l : 30 p.m./Fitness ~wlm
.... ,..................................... ......................... 6-8 p.m ./CollegeSwlm.
Aprl1 12- 6-8 p.m .ICuilege Rec ......... .................... 12:30-1:30 p.m .IFUness wlm

Cory Snyder's single and walks
to Mel Hall and Jay Bell. Doug
Slsk relieved and walked Andy
Allanson on lour pitches to bring
~!!r home for a 1·0 Indian
·
Franco· followed wtth a slow
grounder down the third-base
Une and beat Rick Schu's throw

. Now Open For Spring

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

POOL

--

DOOR

$5~'~'X112'

WE ALSO CARRY

PRADO
INSULATED
UNIT

'48700
Complete With

Snen &amp; Key Lock
Ortdl Opltonal

BLACKBOARD
INSULATING
SHEATING

�I
. '

April 1 0, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipc)lis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Page-C-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Farm/ Business

• ••

Section

April 10,1988

.

'-

MYSTERY FARM - Tbls week's mylltery
farm, featured by the Gallla and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
Gatua County. Individuals wishing to participate
In the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
!arm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the Dally Sentinel, 111 Couri St., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, or the Gatupolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Ave:, Gatupolls, Ohio 45631, and you may win a S5

cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publl8hlng Co.
Leave your name, address and telephone number
with your card or leiter. No telephone caDs will be
accepted. All contest entries should be tumed In to
the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.
In case of a tie, the winner will be chosen by
lottery. Next week a Meigs County farm will be
featured by the Meigs SoU and Water donserva·
tion District.

Farm Flashes

Gallia County dairy fanns
·show increase in production
By Edward M. Vollbom
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture &amp; CNRD

WVAH·lV is moving up the dial to Channe111: So all the
great family entertainment you've enjoyed on Channel 23
will now be available to an even bigger audience with our
· VHF signal. It's great news for 1V viewers who aren't cable
subscribers.
To make this an even more special occasion, wfire
giving all our viewers a chance to play the big "LUCKY 11
SWEEPSTAKES!'
WIN CASH AND PRIZES The 11 trivia questions
below*" are all based on the classic family programming
on Lucky 11, WVAH-TY. Circle all of the answers correctly

•

some

•The channel on which you receive WYAH-TV may vary in
cable areas. Check
your cable ~stings or call your cable company to be sure.
"Look lor the special "Bonus Question"! Answer It correctly and we'll credit you

On "M-A-S•H:' name the

who made

two appearances on the

school that Radar paid
$55 lor a c:orraspond-.

''Andy Griffith Show~'
In Opie' Finds A &amp;fby and
Aunt Bee; The Juror.
a. Jack Nicholson
b. Lee Marlin
c. Eddie Albert

lsI
I
I
I

·Lv

·

a. Joe Morgan
b. Johnny Bench
c. Pete Rose

9 10

Name the"~
. "Ymlsller
who has re-claimed
1,
the heavyweight
'ii•.-' championship
title·
most often.
r ' 1.
a. Ric Flair
· '/
b. Dusty Rhodes
"'
• . c. Hulk Hogan

•.J

'

/

their

Name the neighbors and
location
to' AI and Peg Bundy on "MARRIED
WITH CHILDREN!'
a.~ and Mary/Next Door
b.~ and Mancy/Across .
The Street
c. ~and Maney/
Nan Door

(jJJr!)

Name the movie that was the tumi'll!
point in the comedy career of AbbOtt
and Costello.

Who'
Fi ?
a.
s 0!1 1rst .
b. Buck Privates
c. Abbott and Costello
meet Ma &amp;
Pa Kettle

8

BONUS QUESTlONI Gel this right and we'll
cnsdil you lor any .oilier wrong one! ·
"··
When did Wlati·TV first sign ·on the air?

v

A comprehensive review is

being made to be sure Ohioans
get maxlum returns for their
research programs . a review
team will visit the Jackson
Research Branch on Tuesday,
Aprill2, from 1·3 p.m. Members
of lhe agricultural communlly,
induslry and community leaders
are encouraged 10 a !tend.
A reminder of the 19th Ohio
Performance Tested Bull Sale at
I p.m. on Saturday, Aprll16. The

7.
8.
9.
10.

11.

Homo

s..

City

~=~8811982
c.

All' (JfN mwr W11 lb en,.,
.

P1M.'1M number

H I wtn the LUCKY 11 PRIZE DRNitNG,I...m Prize M

'

Moillo;LUCK'I11-,wwt;TV11,
11 81 oet ~lit Plul, Hurrtclne, WV 25528. Entrtts,muat

Seplamber

t. ,....,. by V'

*

.. -

18, 11111D bllllgible lor

I

.J

11 Broedc8at Plaza, Hurricane, WV 25526.
'
2. You mutt be 18 or older to entw. WVAH·lV Employ111 and their lmmedlate familia
WYAH·lV AcMrtl1er's emplo,ell and their Immediate fllmlllel are Ineligible.
'
3. Only ••trill wllh c:unw:t aiiS\IIWI to all11 queltionl, or ten cunec:t qu11tlon1 and
COI'niCt bonul qullllon will be II~. Enb In will be Mleeted by rendom drawings
for all11 PrlzM. ~ mutt be c:lllmed within 30 deya.
4. Enb ill muet be IKII'nd by -18, 1988 to be eligible.
5. Ocldl of winning will be dstlrmlned ~ numbsrl of •ttrlsa racelved.
6. No IUbltltutlunl for pri 1 nwy b8 granted to winners.
1. Wlnnere will be c:ontKiild vie phone or c:ertlfl8d mall.·
8. WlniMII't !MY be 11ll1d by W\att·TV
.
to uee their ri8me or lllalnlll fur
publicity or edMtlllng purpo1e1.
·
9. Only one winner per fllml~
charleston/.h~ntington

wva
·. h tv

'lbu can pick up adclltionlll formS It:

s~ "'~ ~~ FA'b~Wn

I

LUCKY 11 PfftZ! D11111MNC1

Interest rates

I
I·
1

Sweepstakes Rules
·'
1. Enter.- on.n u you lika. Photo copies are pennitbtd; orfor additional entry forms,
send a etamped, lllf·llddr11nd ••"'lope to: WIIAH LUCKY 11 9:; BIPIIakllll Request,

1. Lawn Boy riding tractor
·
.
2. $1100 gift certificate from Stone &amp; Thomas
3. $5000 gift certificate from Huntington Mall
4. $1100 gift certificate from Factory Outlet Furniture
Holiday . Pools . s~ . . .
.
Jet Ski water vehicle from Lavalette Sports Bam
1100 West Virginia Lottery Instant tickets
Chickering Spinet piano from Pied Piper
Apple 11-E computer from West Virginia Business Products
Blue Fox Fur from Belle's
·
$1100 of photo finishing from FOTO 1

LAVUN-BOV

. Zip

Holiday Pools

a wu!oiNIA
BUSINEII

P~ODUCTI

;

-

,

~diU ~1~
·
~

011. .i- ff..J;.. 4, flw

-

Magazine by May 2. Applications
and information on the award
program are available from
county soil and water conserva·
lion districts. Local. Soil Conser·
vatlon Service and Cooperative
Extension Service oflices a Iso
have details.

Money Ideas

r

-..

sale will be held at the Test
Center near Belle Valley, Ohio.
Approximately 160 bulls from 11
breeds will selL
Cattle prices have averaged $7
to $10 a hundred weight above
year·earller levels for choice
slaughter steers at major
markets so far this year 11
stronger than expected last. fall
says Ohio State Unlvers(ty Agrl·
cultural Economist, Denny
Henderson.
Several factors have been
Involved. Cattle slaughter has
trailed year·earller levels, down
about fou1· percent lhrough
March. All of lhe decline has
been due lo smaller slaughter of
cows and non·fed steers and
heifers while marketing of fed
cattle have been up.
There may have been some
slowing of movement of led
cattle to market, due to wealher
problems during the winter,
which slowed slaugl)ter more
than expecled through early
March.
Henderson says prices have
also been helped by stronger
bl·producl values, ' with estl·
mated hide and offal values per
steer up by about a third from a
year ·earlier. The pork supply
grew less than forecast during
· the lsi quarter.
Pou!lry production expanded
more rapidly than expected, with
broilers up eight percent and
turkeys up 25 percent.
Looking ahead, Henderson
says chOice steer prices should
average in the low $70 range 'In
May and June, but !urlher gains
will be limited by relatively weak
consumer demand, poor packer
margins, and continued In·
creases In pork and poultry
availability.
'

Contest for fanners who conserve
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio farmers who do a good job of
managing their soil and water
resources are eligible for the
Ohio Conservation 'tFarmer .
Awards Program .
Applications for the award
must be sent to Ohio Farmer

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

.,

~

5.
6.

••

1
I
I
I
I
'

On "21 JUMP S IREE I!' name the
chlractar wtto rwplececl Clptaln Jenka
(1\ad&amp;ilck Fou..t).
a. Tom~ (Johnny Depp)
b. Doug 1'1111181 (l'llllr Del d !)
c. Adam Fuller (918weWII'ams)

\

.
·
l t. ~ ;.;
~- •

i
~

Name the famous 1'881-1ife grandparent ol Lleulllnant 'lllsha 'IBr on '
"smR TREK; THE NEXT
GENERIIIlON!'
a.DonAmeche
b. Bing Croebr

c. Barbera Blllr'.g1ley

·------.(j!J BigPrizes
.

..'

~:::=n::.

b. Famous Las Vegas
lMiting School
c. A.B.C'S U

6

4

a. Tom Bosley

College

.f

"

BUNCH:'

,

I

t~~

'&gt;

wore 1114.

Name the "HAPPY DAVS" alllr wttoappears as Dr. Porl8r on "THE BRAD\' ,

ence courae in writing.
a. IOiVI State Vhiter's

Name the Cincinnati Red great who

On
DAVS!' name
the social climbing cheer·
leader who became
Fonzie's wile.
a. Joanie Cunningham
b. l.alleme Defazio
c. Jenny Piccalo •

,

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our
---

Name the

GALLIPOLIS - Gal!la County
Dairy farms are showing lremendous Increases in production
per cow. Adoption of the lateslln
genetic technology along with
new management concepts, and
just plain hard ·l"ork, have made
lhese gains possible.
01 those dairy herds on tesl In
Gallla County, lhe average pro·
duction per cow has increased
some 620 pounds during the last
12 month period. First lactation
heifer records are about 1,200
pounds higher than last year.
Several ,Gallia County dairy
herds have shown production
gains In the 1000·2000 pounds per
cow bracket during the past 12
months.
According to Ron Orth. Exten·
slon Dairy Specialist at Iowa
State Universlly, " Production
per cow is the primary faclor in
profitable dairying".
What's the payoff in improved
production? Information com·
puled by Oklahoma State-Univer·
sily shows that for each tOO pound
lncrea~e In production. an addi·
tiona! $5.50 will be available for
family living and/ or debl retire·
ment. Congratulations to the
Gallia County Dairy Industry!

and you'll have a chance to win the prize of your choice.
Each day between May 11 and May 21, 1988 at 7:00 p.m.,
a LUCKY 11 Prize Drawing will be held, on the air, from
amon·g all correct entries for each of the 11 great prizes
listed below. Enler as o,ften as you like!
If you're stumped by one of the questions, try watching
that program on WVAH·lV 11 during the week of May 9-1 s;
19.8 8 ... and you just might find out the answer!

• for one inconect response!

Ohio Valley Bank
posts record e~•..tings

'

s

By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS It is
wonder that
fixed Income In·
struments have
been so quiet
recently; the de. cline in rates for
bo,th short and
long maturities
since mid·
October has been
sive. After such a stron2 run, the
n\arket nee&lt;led to r~st.
take
some encouragement from the
fact that market advisers during
this consolidation, have turned
Increasingly bearish on the out·
look for bonds despite the rather
narrow recent trading range.
The yields ·On long· term U.S.
Treasuries are In a storng
downtrend from their peak of last
summer. As we hav pointed out
In the past, we believed the
8.25·8.50 percent range would
likely to be the first stopping
point for the decline. We would
expect rates to consolicate In this
range before attempting another
move lower.
The recent perfonnance of
bonds versus JOid sugpsll that
I

concerns for accelerating infla.
lion later this year are not well
founded. Long·term bonds per·
formed exceptionally well rela·
live lo gold after the 1981
recession. The strength of the
dollar in international markets
led to a significant curbing ,of
Inflationary pressures, substan·
tlally lower Interest rates and
weak gold prices. Tbe strong
dollar, however, was creating
problems for the other Industrial
nations. As a result, In Sep·
tember, 1985, tlie so-called G·5
countries agreed
to actions
Initiating a decline In the dollar's
value, the trend of which Is still
Intact today. However, the
strong upward move of this ratio
over the past few monthS sug·
gests to us that the markets are
no longer as concerned about a
further decline In the dollar. If
anything, this ratio leila us that
the markets are looklna tor an
Improving dollar, an lmprovina
trade deficit and a furtber
ratcbetina down of Inflationary
pressures.
,
(Mr• Evana Ia a• lnves&amp;meat
brok• for The Oblo CompanJ Ia
l&amp;a Galllpollll oHioe),
I'

.

•

GALLIPOLIS - For the third
consecutive year. The Ohio Val·
ley Bank Company had net
Income alter taxes In excess of
$1,000,000, This announcement of
record earningS; along with a 25%
stock spilt and a sale of Ohio
Valley Bank stock highlighted
the Annual Meeting of Share·
holders in the Gallipolis office on
April 6,
Chairman of the Board Morris
E. Haskins welcomed approxl·
,, malely 120 people to the 116th
· . meeting of the shareholders. He
Introduced the directors and
officers of the bank. followed by.
special · guests: Mrs. Helma
W.hlte, Widow of Selwyn White,
long time bank . officer and
director; Dan Evans, Chairman
of the Board of Bob Evans
Farms; Rob Lucas of the law
firm Vorys , Sater , Seymour. and
Pease of Columbus and member
of the board of directors of Bob
Evans Farms; and Tom Fahey of
the accounting firm of Ernst and
Whinney.
Vice President and Controller
Madge E. Boggs gave the report
on Income and expenses for 1987.
She pointed out the bank had net
Income lor the year of $1,233,499,
an Increase of 3.17% over the
previous year, Earnings per
shar!' were $4.33. up from $4.2lln
1986 adjusted for the 10% stock
dividend of Aprlll987.
President and Chief Executive
Officer James L. Dalley followed .
with his annual report. He
explained Ohio Valley Bank
stock has been a good invest·
ment, citing an average annual
return of more than 17~ % during
the last 10 years with stock price
appreciation and cash dividends.
. He Indicated It was the board's
intention to pay $,40 per share

cash dividend quarterly. which
maintains the dividend at the
present level adjusted for the
1988 25% stock split,
The emphasis of Mr. Dailey's
remarks then turned to the
·significant change In the way
people now bank. "During the
next 5·10 years you will see great
changes at main offices of banks
our size. They will become nerve
centers and sales centers of the
bank, not the transaction cen·
ters. Weaverage815carsperday
through our drive·In windows , an
average of 230Jeanle (automatic
tell machine ) transactions per
day; that's more than 1,000
people per day not In our lobby.
Ohio State's Alma Mater ... Car·
man , Ohio goes "time and
change will surely show", and
with today's customers changing
the way they bank, change w111 be
appropriate for Ohio Valley
Bank, too."
Dalley concluded by praising
the efforts of the employees of the
bank, saying: "when you hear
about complacency In the work
force , it's not here; these people
are completely dedicated to Ohio
Valley Bank."
The shareholders then passed
the resolution so that the 25%
stock spilt and stock sale can
take place. 51, 166 new shares of
capital stock will sell at a prtceof
$29.75 per share. Shareholders
will be allowed to purchase one
share for every 7 owned during
the upcoming sale,·
Stockholders elected the !ol·
lowing members to the board of
directors: MOI'fiS E. Haskins,
James L. Dalley, Frank H. Mllls 1
Jr., Keith R. Brandeberry,
· Warren F. Sheets, Merrill L.
Evans, Robert H. Eastman, W.
Lowell "Buz" Call, and Jeffrey
E. Smith,
Reports of officers were given
to Illustrate past growth and
future direction of Ohio Valley
Bank. Michael Berridge, Vice
President and Manager of the
Consumer Credit Division, spoke

RECEIVES AUTHOBIZA·
TION - Mark Curry, financial service dlreclor for tbe
Wiseman Agency, Inc., recently received authorization
by the International Board of
Standards and Practices for
Certified Financial Planners,
Inc., to use the Certified .
Financial Planner (CFP)
mark upon· his successful
completion of Its education
and experience requirements.
He 18 an active member of the
GalllpoUs Rotary Club, the
Retail Merchants Association
LOUISVILLE, Ky . (UPI) and the Institute of Certified
·
Just
a few years ago the farm
F1naaclal Planners. A gradu·
credit
system was ,gettrng heat
By Patty Dyer
ate of Ohio State University,
from
farmers
for
their
Interest
District
Conservationist
he bas held his present job
rates
being
too
high,
but
now
they
USDA
Soli
Conservation
Service
with the Wiseman Agency
are
getting
It
from
competing
since January, 1984.
GALLIPOLIS - A common
bankers who say they are too low.
Charlie Bennetf, president of misunderstanding exists among
Farmers Bank of Hardinsburg, many farmers In Gallia County
said last week he recently lost when it comes to lhe term Sod
· two good customers to a farm Busting.
credit system lender.
Sod busting, as It relates to the
NEW YORK (UPI) -Chrysler
"Well, they came in and 1985 Farm Bill, means any field
returned to the Fortune 500's top undercut our rates substantially, brought. Into crop production
10 last week for the first time and these people (their fanner which wasn't used for crop
since 1978. while the group of borrowers) came to us and told production in any one year
preeminent U.S. businesses saw us, and they said we just feelllke between 1981 and 1985.
Its total profits soarby4lpercent we've got to move them (their
A field does not have to be
to $91 ' billion.
plowed to be considered sod
loans) ," Bennett said.
Fortune magazine reported
The Independent Bankers As· busting. It could be no·tllled or
Chrysler's August 1987 acqulsl· sociatlon of America has filed an .minimum tilled if it wasn't
tlon of American Motors boosted o!fllclal compla lnt In Washlngon planted at least one year out of
Its 1987 sales by 16.6 percent to with the Farm Credit System
$26.258 billion, enough to displace Assistance Board, saying It feels
Chevron as No. 10 on the farm credit lenders, using fed·
magazine's annual ranklngofthe , era! financial assistance, may be
nation's largest companies by lending at below cost.
sales.
That's not the case said Steve
American Motors, the last Montgomery. who Is president of
home grown U.S. rival to De· the Farm CredIt Banks of
trolt:s Big Three automakers, LOuisville. '
had ranked 113 on the 1986 list.
"We are not pricing our pro·
By John C. Rice
The 500's sales and profits ducts below cost," Montgomery
County
Ext. Agent,
appeared to have weathered the said. "We do !lave lhe margin in
Agriculture
October stock market panic with the loans which we are making.
little damage,
We do have adequate funds
POMEROY - Want to have
The magazine said the Rust available to meet farmers' needs
the
seamen checked on your bull
Belt recovery evidenced by lhe this spring...and we are trying to
before
the breeding season? This
group's huge profit Increase be aggressive In serving
can
be
done fairly easy now. Dr.
•'may be the light at the end of the
farmers."
Abfall,
a veterinarian located In
tunnel for Industrial America."
While
the
outcome
of
the
The
Plain~
. ha.s purchased an
Total sales climbed 9 percent
complain~ has yet to be deter·
electro·ejaculator.
This permits
to $1.88 trillion, but the more
mined.
farmers
seeking
credit
collection
of
the
bull
at your place
Impressive gain occurred In
these
days
are
experiencing
the
or
his
o!!1ce.
You
should have
profits, which jumped, by $27
on
D·8
Continued
facliltles
thai
are
able
to secure
billion from their 19861evel of $64
the
bull
safely
.
.
The
electro·
billion.
ejaculator Is a safe and easy way
to collect seamen .
Branch Review - Ohio State
POMEROY - Mary J . Rus·
University
officials Invite local
sell, New Haven, W. Va .. has
been notified by the Fraternal people to an open meeting at the
GALLIPOLIS
Billy S, Field Managers Association of Jackson branch of the Ohio
. Board, maintenance mechanic her successful completion of the Agricultural Research and De·
at Ohio Valley Electric Corpora·
fraternal sales training program velopment Center. The meeting
lion's Kyger Creek plant, retired and has been awarded the will be at the Jackson Branch, 19
April I after 32Y.. years with the designation Frilternallnsurance Standpipe Road, Jackson , on
company, according to plant Counselor.
Tuesday, April 12. from 1 to 3
·
manager Raymond H: Blowers
Russell is a district representa· p.m.
A review team is evaluating
Jr.
live In this area lor AAL, the
Board joined OVEC In 1955 as a
nation's fraternal benefit society these facUlties to determine
maintenance assistant' In the In terms of assets and ordinary future needs of the agricultural
maintenance department, where life Insurance In Ioree. To earn businesses affected by work at
·he advanced to hl8 electrician the designation, Russell com· these Ullits as well as future
specialty In 1971.
. pleted three examinations under needs of scientists with the
A native of Kingston, W.Va., the supervision of the Research OARDC organization.
Board served In the Navy from and Review Service of America,
Kinds of Information the com·
1944 to 1946. He Is a member of located In Indianapolis, Ind. The mlttee Is seeking Include - Has
Grace United Methodist Church courses included studies of life tnls branch been of value to your
and Is a member and past master Insurance fundamentals, con· agricultural operation or com·
of the Morning Dawn Lodge No. tract provisions and their appll~ munity? How? How would your
7. He and bls wife Agnes live 'a t cation to family financial operation or community have
4!10 Lariat Dr.
been affected If this branch had
problems.

about the rapta cnanges In
customer the client relationships
due to new technology that allows
customers to spend less time In
the bank . ".The day may come
when a person will never have to
come to the bank for another
loan ," Berridge said .
Wendell B. Thomas , Vice Pres·
!dent and Senior Loan Officer,
reported the Real Estate Depart·
ment has Its largest gain since
1983 with an increase in volume
of 11.6%. Real estate loans
totaled 28.3 million dollars at end
otl987, Thomas cited a decline in
Interest rates and quick loan
approval for continued growth In
the Real Estate and Commercial
Loan Department.
Leon Saunders, Senior Vice
President, Cashier, and Trust
Officer lndlcatect growth ha s
continued In the Trust Depart·
ment and Discount Brokerage.
'The Trust Department has assets
of $23.8 million; and despite the
volatitly of the stock market,
OVB has broadened Its base of
customers In the Discount Brokerage Department, and accord·
ing to Saunders most of those are
buying stock, not selling.
Saunders introduced VIce
President Wayne Niday, who Is
In charge of.Funds Management.
Niday spoke briefly and ex·
plalned how he works with all
areas of the bank In keeping all
available funds invested for the
best return .
Bxecutive Vice President Jef·
frey E. Smith reviewed tbe new
bank products Introduced during
the past year and future marketing strategy. Smith acknowl·
edged the tremendous success of
the . Golden Opportunities pro·
gram · for senior clients. "We
have banks calling from as far
away as New Jersey wanting to
know how we run our program,
they want to know how they can
start a program like ours."
Smith went on to say that the
bank also will strive to continue
Continued on D·8

c:

Farmers
•
expenence
bor1ower's Sodbusting common·
market
misunderstanding

Chrysler back in I
Fortune 500 top }0

the five m!!ntloned above.
If a producer sod busts a fi eld,
he mu st develop a conservation
plan and start following It Imm ediately to remain eligible to
participate lri certain USDA
pro~r·a~s. Those programs
which are affected include price
support payments, feed grain
programs, dairy lndemnlly pay·
ments, wool incentive payments ,
commodity loans, FmHA loans,
storage payments and facility
loans.
Farmers who are planning to
sod bust a field this year ar.e
encouraged to contact the Gallla
SWCD or ASCS offlce for more
Information .

Meigs County agent's corner ·

Beef producers in Meigs
area are issued reminder

Completes training

"

•

nol been available• What type of
research )VOUid you like to see al
thl~ ·branch or other branches
around the state ? Considering
future needs , what should be the
role of this branch be? What are
additional ways agricultural In·
dustry or governme ntal agencies
could make the faclliHes or
programs al Ihis branch bener?
Pesticide Safely - A pesticide
label Is a passport 10 safe
pesticide use. No producl on the
market ha s . as detailed label
information as pesticides. BPfore
using any pesllclde, read the
label and slrictly follow It s
directions .
Pesticides are poisons thai kill
or control pests. They Include
Insecticides, herbicides. fungi ·
cldes, rodenticides, dislnlectant s
and plan! growth reguialors.
Misuse them and you can poi son
yourself, you r family and your
neighbors.
Choose the leas I toxic pes llcide
to handle your pest problem.
Reading p pesllclde's label helps
you pick that product. A pesticide
label lists aclive lngredienl s.
target pests , directions lor use.
sites where the product can. ·lx'·
used, protective measures to
employ during application ,
proper storage and disposal .
precautions , and envlronomen·
tal or other hazards . The mos1
toxic pesticides have " dange r ~'
printed on the label.

.,

�'

Page 0 -2 Sunday Times-Sentmel

Apnl 10, 1988

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

April 1 0, 1988

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

Hijackers beat up· passengers. on Kuwaiti jet in Day 5

Junb&amp;Jl ~imes- ientinel

....

By YERVANT DE RPARTOGH

LARNACA, Cyprus (UP!) The captai n of a hijacked Kuwait
Airways jet· reported that the
terrorists heat up his passe ngers
early today , 11 hours after the
plane flew to Cyprus following a n
a enal showdown with Sy ria n
forces who refused to let the
• a ircraft la nd In Beir ut
The ca ptain s report came as
the hijackers one hour deadline
for refueling passed at 7 10 a m
Saturday (12 10 a m EDT) and
marked the seco nd time during
the fi ve day ordea l tha t hosta ges
were said to have heen bea ten
· The hijackers have started
beating up the passengers, ' the
pilot told the a1r traffic control
tower by radio, pleading with
offlclals to meet the terrorists'
demands for fuel and oil
Minutes before the as sault the
terrorists had asked for brea k
fas t for 60 people, newspapers,
minera l water and Ice tn bags, all
to be stowed in s trong boxes to be
hois ted a boa rd ' the plane by
ropes
The bea tings occurred 11 hours

after the Boeing 747 carrying
a bout 50 hostages a nd at least
f!ve ai r pirates landed in Cyprus
following the s tandoff over Bel
r ut a lrportin which the hijackers
repeatedly threatened to crash
the jumbo jet while air controlle rs told them, " go find
yourself another alrpor\ "
" If you don t give us fuel within
one hour we shall start to hurt the
passengers " said one of the
hijacker s at about 5 15 a m
' Cypriots and Kuwaitis will he
equally responsible for anything
that happens "
The hijacker also said six
people on the airliner were Ill and
the toilets were clogged When
the Larnaca control tower sug
gested exchanging the stck pas
sengers for cleaning the..sewage,
the hijacker said "no way "
With Its fuel tank nearly
empty , Flight KU422 stopped
c ircling Beirut airport about 7 50
p m Friday and touched down 20
minutes later In Larnaca on the
eastern coast of Cyprus, seven
hours after it left the northeast
ern Iranian city of Mashhad and
87 hours after the hijacking

ordeal began Tuesday
The jumbo jet came to a halt on
a runway near the main Larnaca
airport terminal After 45 min
utes of radio silence, the hi
jackers demanded 10,000 gallons
of fuel, Cypriot government
sources said
Officials, led by Cypriot For
eign Minister George Iacovou,
stalled In complying with the
demand for fuel, telling the
terrorists refueling could not be
arranged because Cyprus was
celebrating Its Good Friday
holiday and later saying the
ground crew was too terrified to
approach the jet •
"If I get fuel immediately I will
leave but no passenger will be let
oft," said a hijacker In a radio
message broadcast to reporters
"I don't want to remind you but
I've lined my aircraft with high
explosives "
An eight man Kuwaiti delega
tlon arrived In Larnaca, 25 miles
southeast ot the Cypriot capital
of Nicosia, early today to nego
!late with the hijackers
Kuwaiti Foreign Minister
Darar Razukl declined comment

on whether Kuwait had reconsl· Syrian anti a lrcratt batteries
dered Its refusal to comply with were aimed upward and airport
the terrorists ' demand for the tower sources said the con
release of 17 Shiite Moslem trollers tersely told thE! hi
extremists jailed In Kuwait tor Jackers, "go find yourself
the 1983 bombings of the u s and another airport because you
French embassies and other cannot land here "
targets
Toward the end of the day long
Airport sources said 30 Kuwal· standoff, one of the hijackers
tis were among the 55 people said, "I am serious a bout my
aboard the plane, Including three threat I am going to crash this
members of the royal family
plane Into the control tower, '
The remaining 25 are crew according to control tower
members or hijackers, but It was sources
Moments later, the Boeing 747
unclear how many of each
The landing at Larnaca ended rumbled over the airport at an
a tense standoff over Beirut altitude of not more than 500
airport, 125 miles to the sou- yards, shaking the entire field,
theast, wher.e Syrian officials witnesses said
who control the airport had
"God help us, we are goingt o
prevented the jetliner from land
switch off our radio and land,"
lng by placing obstacles on the said the pilot as he swooped low
runwayS and swi tchlng off air
over the airport control tower for
field lights, security sources In the 23rd time, b\lt the jet again
Lebanon said
nosed upward Into the night sky
Impassioned pleas from the
The Arable speaking hi
pilot of the jet and repeated jackers, brandishing pistols and
threats by the hijackers against hand grenades, seized the Ku
the passengers failed to persuade walt! plane Tuesday during a
• flight from Bangkok, Thailand,
the Syrians' refusal
As the plane buzzed the control to Kuwait, and forced It to land In
tower and circled overhead, Iran When It was hijacked the

plane carried 112 people
During the nea rly 80 hours the
plane was in Iran, the hija ckers
freed 57 hostages
Airport officials at Mashhad
finally removed obs ta cles on the
runway Friday after the hi
jackers beat a passenger, pus hell
one hostage onto the jet s stair
way and fired three shots In to the
air, then threw a hand grenade
onto the tarmac and threatened
again to blow up the plane , Iran's
official Islamic Republic News
Agency said
Western diploma ts In the Per
sian Gulf region said Thursday
that relations between Iran and
Kuwait, which supports Iraq In
its 7 Y, year-old war against Iran
appeared to he a t the breaking
point The United States has
backed Kuwait In Its repeated
refusals to release the 17 jailed
Shiite Moslems
In Beirut a previously un
known group Friday claimed
responsibility for the 'hijacking
and said the plane would attempt
again to land at the Lebanese
capital's airport

Public Not1ce

GANG CRACKDOWN - Suspects arrested
during a crackdown on violent street gangs
Friday walt to be processed at a mohll booking
unit set up near the Memorial Coliseum. Th,e lield

booklap trees officers lor more arrests. Vloleace
has coatlaued desplle the pollee sweeps, with
gaags blamed lor 387 kUIIngs In Los Angeles
County In 1987 and as maay as 8li so far Ibis year.
UPI

Boy heads hoine after nation flight
SANTA ANA, Calif (UPI ) After experienc ing airsickness,
visiting Elvis Presley s mansion
and touring the nations c~pltal,
a 9 ¥ear old schoolboy Saturday
began the last leg of a journey
that will earn him the world
record as the youngest aviator to
fly cross-country and back
Tony Allengena, a third grader
from San Juan Capistrano who
needs a special booster seat to
see over the controls of his
fathe r's light plane , took off from
Phoenix, Ariz , and was headed
• for a noon PST land lng at Orange
County's John Wayne Airport
'We re ready for him," said
Tony's father Gary ' He's on his
way and we ve got a big swim·
mlng party planned It'll he good
to have my boy home '
But whether Tony will stay
horne for long Is up In the air
Moments after landing In Pho
enix Friday, he and his Ins true
tor Ed Fe rnelt began plotting a

round the world flight
Tony had heard that John
Kevin HHIII, 11, of Texas, was
planning to break the world
record as' the youngest pilot to !ly
around the globe and was excited
about the possibility for himself
And even as Tony was !lying
home Saturday morning,
another 11-year-old, Christopher
Lee Marshall of Oceano, Cali! ,
planned to announce he will
attempt to fly this July !rom New
York to Paris In a journey
similar to the one taken by
Charles Lindbergh
"These three should get to·
gether,' Gary Allengena said ot
his son and the two other young
fliers
Tony began his flight across
the United States March 30,
taking off from John Wayne
Airport In a single-engine Cessna
210 accompanied by Fernett and
Don Taylor, a National Aeronau
tics Association observer who

will verily the record
Tony, a student at St Mar
garet's School, has already set
two records· On April 2 he
became the youngest pilot to fly
cross-country, and on March 13
he became the youngest pilot to
solo an aircraft
His trip across America has
Included stops In Tennessee,
where he visited Presley's
Graceland Mansion In Memphis,
and In Washlngton D C , touring
landmarks In the capital
Tony, who sports a crewcut
and wears braces on his teeth,
also tell Ill for a while After
leaving Memphis, he complained
of an upset stomach, an Incident
that lorced Fernett to briefly
take control ot the plane, and,
subsequently, Tony had to re-fly
that part of the trip to qualify lor
the record
Also, a bout with airsickness
led to a two-hour delay and an
unscheduled stop in New Jersey

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - An
all-out assault on violent street
gangs by a 1,000-member pollee
task force netted more than 600
• suspects, Including 334 known
gang members whose drug wars
have left scores dead, pollee said
Saturday
"We are determined to take
back the streets from these
hoodlums," Mayor Tom Brad
ley, a former pollee lieutenant,
said as the special force swept
across the streets ot the nation's
second largest city Friday night
In an operatlonunprecedented In
size and scope
Police Chief Daryl Gates, who
has pledged to curb gang vlo
lence, joined his officers In
making an arrest, collaring a
suspected cocaine dealer In
South Central Los Angeles
Assistant Police Chief Robert
Vernon, who also helped chase
down and arrest two gang
members, said the opera tlon
served to ''shut down 70 percent
of the dope dealing'' for the night
Since January, at least 85
people have been killed In gang
related violence In Los Angeles
County. A record 38'1 people were
killed In gang shootings, stabbings and other attacks last year
Gates stressed that Friday
night's deployment - involv!ng
about one seventh of the roughly
7,200 member pollee force- was
just one In a series of ant! gang
sweeps that began six weeks ago
and have netted 1,413 arrests,
Including 1,124 gang members
"We don't know that we are
going to accomplish any more

than we have the other nights "
Gates sald ''This Is just one
effort In the struggle to obliterate
the gangs We're going to wage
a warongangsandwe're going to
continue until It's finished "
With that In mind, o!!lcers
armed with shotguns, fanned out
across neighborhoods of hlgh
gang activity from four staging
areas, the largest of which was
the Los Angeles Coliseum, where
mobile booking units were set up
to reduce the time it takes to
transport suspects to jails
According to the latest avalla
ble ligures, of 634 arrests made,
the strike force picked up 64 gang
members In South Central Los
Angdi!o, ;)6 on the Eastside, 721n
the Westside and 102 In the San
Fernando Valley The remaining
300 people arrested were booked
on various other charges
Pollee spokesman Officer Joe
Mariani said 334 of the suspects
were known gang members
In previous sweeps, the
number of arrests made In South
Central Los Angeles has been
larger Pollee said the drop Is
evidence of their effectiveness ln
deterring gangs
But even the 1,000-member
strike force was unable to stop all
the violence
Although no one was hurt, gang
members opened !Ire on a house
In' South Los Angeles shortly
before 7 p m Friday, and gunfire
was reported when antl-gahg
Investigators and a SWAT team
tried to serve a search warrant
on a reputed "rock" house
shortly before 10 p m
Lt Fred Nixon ~ a pollee
department spokesman, said of

I

Surrogate case faces last round
By FRANCES ANN BURNS
NEWARK, N J (UPI) - The
2-year old girl who beca me world
fa mous as Baby M Is now legally
J ust another of the thousands of
. children with two fa milies and
· two sets of parents
• • A judge 's decision granting
• surrogate mother Mary Beth
· Whitehead Gould unsupervised
• vlsltswlthherweli-knowndaugh
ter appears to have put to rest the
: )ega! fight that began within days
• ol the child's birth March 27,
. l986
• · "Melissa Is a resilient child
who Is no less capable than
• thousands of children of broken
matriages who suc cessfu1ly ad
just to complex famly relation
ships when their parents remarry,' Superior Court Judge
.Birger Sween said In a seven·
: page opinion Wednesday
• Sween suggested the child,
born through artltlclalinsemlna
Uon alter Whitehead Gould
signed a surrogate contract
agreeing to bear a child for
William and Eliza beth Stern ot
Tenafly, may have an easier
time adjusting to dual parents
becau se she has not had to
e xperience the trauma of
divorce
"Her tender age has protected
her from ~e notoriety of t~e

much publicized trial, and her
parents have the opportunity to
plan lor her further protection In
the future should the need arise,"
he said ' She has not suffered the
agony of a broken marriage of
parents and will be able to
develop individual relationships
with her parents and stepparents
from Infancy "
Harold Cassidy, who repres
ented Whitehead Gould during
the custody fight, agreed
"Ironically, with all the discus
slon of harm to Melissa she may
wind up having the best of both
worlds," he said
Sween was appointed to decide
visitation after the state Supreme Court In February declared the surrogacy contract
Invalid and restored Whitehead
Gould's parental rights
By the time the Baby M case
reached Sween's courtroom, It
had been reduced to a relatively
simple custody dispute
The only Issue was whether the
welfare of Baby M- now known
as Melissa Stern- would best be
served by granting her father's
request to suspend visits until the
child was old enough to understand how she had come Into the
world, or by her mother's plea to
he allowed to develop a relationship with her daugbter
The Supreme Court and Sween
were both constrained by Super·

lor Court Judge Harvey Sorkow's
decision made soon alter the
child's birth that gave temporary
custody to the Sterns pending a
decision on the surrogate
contract
OSCAR IN THE AIR- A 24-foot O.car repUca
After that decision, Whitehead
Awarda Presentation Monday. A total of six
Is lifted put the Hollywood alp Friday enroute to
Gould fled to Florida with the
statues were created at the Burbank Studios and
the Shrine Auditorium where II will be pari of lbe
child and hid her for four months
each weighs one ton and l8 painted with elghl
exterior decor for the 80th Alinual Academy
before the Sterns tracked her
gaUons of metalllc gold paint. UPI
down
When the state's highest court
ruled In February, Melissa had
been living with the Sterns for 1
Y, years She had gone from
Infancy to the toddler stage, was
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) that there are more lobbl(lsts Increase (In the number of
learning how to walk and talk .
Lobbyists have been more active representing the health-care In
registrations) comes !rom IndeDuring that time, Whitehead In thls session of the Legislature dustry than any other private- pendent lobbyists," Philip Cole.
Gould has had two-hour visits than ever before, especially sector group
director ot the Agency Rules
with the child at a Berge!\ County health-care lobbyists, registraJamie Young, a legislative~ Review committee, said
children's home
tion fleures show
liaison for the state Health
Many of the lobbyists are
The Supreme Court justices
Lobbyists are required to reg
Department, said he Is not somewhat mercenary In their
and Sween showed far more ister with the Joint Committee on surprised that health care Is the solicitation of clients, using pollt
sympathy to Whitehead Gould Agency Rules Review fllr each "hottat area for lobbying."
leal connections instead of afflll·
than did SorkOw, describing her client they represent. Lobbyists
"With billions In health-care
allons with a party or cause, an
as a woman who reacted nor
represent ll),lny clients and dollars at stske, many hospitals ' unidentified legislative aide told
mally when she was threatened many companies and groups hire and doctors are hiring their own
the newspaper
with the loss of her chlld.
more than one lobbyist to repres- lobbyists Instead of relying on
The Independent lobbyists
But they said they could not ent them
lobbyists for a single, statewide
have Ifttle regard for the developtransplant Melissa, who was
In the current two year legisla- association," Young said. "Try
men! of long term state policy,
putting down roots In Tenafly.
tive session that began In Janu- to get In to a health committee
he said
"His (Sorkow's) Initial judicial ary 1987, lobbyists have regis
hearl111 You can't get a seat."
"Now what you've got Is a guy
error altered the outcome of the tered 2,025 times, thj! highest
Most lobbyists report they
paid a chunk of money to come
custody determination," Cassidy fleure In the Legislature's 185- spend no money on behalf of get one amendment to a bill
said "It the child was )eft with year history, the Akron Beacon public officials or employees,
We've gotten Into single Issue
the mother, I don't think there Journal reported Friday. In the though the lobbyists' fees generpolftics Republican and Demo
would have been one expert to last session, lobbyists registered ally run In the thousands of cract doesn't matter to these
suggest that the child be taken 1,824 times.
dollars
I\IYS they've become gunslfn·
away from the mother."
The commltiee•s figures show
"The biggest part of the
gers," the aide said

Lobbyists increase legislative activity

'

....

I

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF RIGHT TO
NOMINATE BY PETITION
The Farmer&amp; Home Ad
ministration (fmHA) 11 ac·

Section 104 the following

cepting

Program

11

ava1lable for public review
PV'88 / 89
GALLIA COUNTY &amp;
MEIGS COUNTY PLAN
(1) The Ironton Lawrence
CAO 11 the Admln11trat1ve
Ent11v of SO #24 JTP·Oh10
Funds The Galha·Me1g1
CAA •s the Subrec1p1ent of
JTPA funds for Gall1a and
Me1gs Counties
(21 The Galha-Me1g1 CAA
wdl deliver program aet1vi
t1es for the followinQ JTPA
T1tles T1tle 11A 78%, T1tle
11 A 8% Totle 11 B and 6%
lncent1ve
{3) the Oh•o Bureau of Emplovment Serv1cea will proveda •ntake and referral serveces to determ1ne and vertfy
the Identification of ehg1ble
applicants
(41 Gallia Me~gs CAA de
levers 1ts programs In accor
dance w1th the policy stated
1n 111 February 28 1988
publiShed EEO / AAP State
ment
All Federal and
State concermng
C1v11
Rights and Equal Opportunttv are followed and adhered
to
~ (51 Galha-Me1gs CAA uses
a double entry account•ng
system to tnsure sound f11
cal control, accounting au
d1t and debt collection pro
cedures and the proper dis
bursal and accountmg of
funds rece1ved m accor
dance w1th required laws
an'd regulations
(61 Program act)N1tees per
title are as folloWf: !NOTE
All apphcants/ parttctpants
recetve assessment as pan
of the JTPA outreach eHon
Assessment 11 ul8d to help
each client plan the achieve
ment of career I job goala,
and as a ftrst slap to the
county classroom tnumng
wattmg hat Auassment 11
used to help apphcanta/ ell
ents acceas other fundtng
sources and serviCes m the
event UTPA fundtng 11 unable to help due to fund lim I·
tattons )
(Acti\lttuts.
l:ength of Ttme )
A Totle 11 A 78% (1) Job
Club 2 3 weeks 121 Clos
aroom Trammg (CRT) varies
to a max1mum of 62 weeks
per program vear, but not to
exceed 104 weeks F~rst
consideratton will be grven
to fundtng chants posses·
ling leiS othan • JBabc~alaureate {3) n·the O rllft·
tng vartes per contract (41
Youth Try-Out 260 hours
makimum. (5) Pre Employment Skill Tra1n1ng for 141&amp; yaarolds, when approprl
ate per school ca..ndar
Special consideration will be
g1ven to dropouts. veterans.
and handicapped Individuals
through the "1 0% Wondow"
With tl1g1b1htv VBflfled by
OBES
B T1tle 11 A 3% Thts program Will serve Older Work·
ars ages 56 and over wtth
acttv1t1es Similar to thol8 for
11 A 78% but with the add Ilion of Work Expertence ac
tlvlty
C Title 1 1 A 8% This pro
gram wtll aerva adults 1n
long term tralneng at publicly
funded state 1n1titu~lons for
post htgh school training
Parttcipants 1n th1a tralmng
program must be 1n long
term trammg or perticepet
ing m literacy traln~ng
through ABE of SEQ or at a
state funded post·h1gh
school tra1n1ng tnstttution m
cOnJunctton With skill train•
ong Four 14) year degree
programs are precluded
D Title 11 B This program
serves eligible yout h 14 21
years of age during the sum
mer school break through
Work Expertence, Job Club
other career planning oaplo
ration activit•••· and rema
di.l .duc.loon '
E Tid. 6 ~,. Incentive 11
funding 1n addition to those
abOYe that II earned based
upon the performance of the
prevtous year Programming
~u~=~~~n.~ent upon spec if led
(7) Galllo Melgo CAA wtll
submit electronically IO the
SOA #24 Administrative
Entity the characteristics of
applocanu and pertlcipant•
h
.. I I
hi h lh
to t e ex n ° w c
e
actiVIties meet the relevent
performance standards
tBI All program funding
levels and performance
atondardo are oub)ect to Fo·
:~.::to~::••· and SDA • 24
Tho above lo ooummory of
Gollla Molgo CAA JTPA
programming for
'PY
88/89 ·
Complete pro
grammlng detollo ore avella
ble
review byInformation.
tho Public.
For forfurther
ploaoe call the GoiiNo· Mligo
CAA JTPA Admlnlotrotive
Office on Choohlre 317·
7342 or 992-8629
APJ!.L 10

fleers arrested six suspects and
seized cocaine, cash and three
guns at the house
In Lynwood, a community just
east of Los Angeles city limits, a
sheriff s deputy fired five shots
at a suspected gang member who
pointed a handgun at him The
suspect, Troy Williams, 21, barr!
caded himself In a house tor 90
minutes before finally surrender
lng, Deputy Van Mosely said
Several guns were found In the
residence
Friday night s task force
assembled by putting officers on
overtime at a cost of $150,000,
was the most ambitious pollee
action since measures taken by
the department during the 1984
Olympics
Gangs have long battered the
city, especially the minority
areas of South Central Los
Angeles
"The good people of the com
munlty are prisoners In their own
homes, · said Deputy Pollee
Chief William Rathburn 'We've
decided that that's an Intolerable
situation and we ' re going to
correct thaI "
But maintaining a high pollee
profile on the streets Is not the
ultimate solution and various
other tact~ II be employed, he
said without elaborating
Previous sweeps have involved
groups of 175 to 200 officers
Gates vowed to expand the
sweeps In the wake of a drive by
shooting last weekend that killed
one person and Injured 12
Earlier this week, a City Council
committee appro\'ed. spending
$1 3 million to Intensify gang
enforcement for six weeks

II

7

Pubhc Notice

In accordance With there·
qu~remanta oftheJobTra1n
mg Pannersh1p Act of 1982
Job Tram•ng

Police mount major assault on. gangs
By DANELlA WILD

•

,,

nom1nat•ons

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

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Yard Sale

SNAFU® by Bruce Beathe
11

Gallipolis

County

Gellipo1l1 Flea Market Former
Thaler Gar•ge Rta ;J&amp; • 180,
Gslllpolls Ohio Open Saturdays
&amp; Sunday• 9-6
Moving Sale- 2 l•ge badroom
sultn livmgroomfurni'turt Call
614 246 9170 or 3B8 9804
Movrng Sale Thurs . Fr1 &amp;
Sat t4th 16th 18th McCully
Ad Clothing h11f bed etc Cell
114 446 2914
Y•d Sale Sat April 9th &amp;
Mon Apr~l11 38 O.rfletd Ave
9 AM 5 PM

·pf -Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
PICKENS FURNITURE
Everv day Spec;11l1 lot• good
yard sale •terns in 1tore Close
out on uaed gu cook 1tove1
304 675 1•60 1f2mile-Jerr~cho
Rd

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on

Wedemeyer 1 Auct1on Serv1e11
ave•l•bl• at your convemance
and locatl()nt Marlin Wede
meyer Auct1oneer 614-246
5152

Public Notice

AuctionHr Col Oscar E Click
304 B95 3430 lie No 76•

PUBL!C NOTICE
THE ., CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY of Southeaot
Ohio NA tho legal holder of
the following deacr•bed per·
sonal property by virtue of
Secur~ty
Agreement date
June 26, 1987 doeo hereby
offer for 1ale on the23rd dey
of A pt~l. 1988 at ten o'clock
1 m 1n the off1ces of the In
stallment Loan Department
1n Middleport. Oh1o the fol
lowtng
1980 Ford Muotang
Soroal # OFQ3A167096
whteh may be tn•pectad by
appointment The bank offers this vehtcle Without war~
rant1ea and reserve• the
nght to acct1pt or reJ&amp;Ct any
oHer rece1ved Min1mum ac·
ceptable oHer must be grea
tar than •soo 00 Terms of
sale will be calh or cred1t by
prior arrangement
(4), 10 20. 2tc

NOTICE
SPECIAL MEETING
BOARD OF EDUCATION
NOTICE IS HEREBY Gl·
VEN, Thettherewilbeameet·
tng of the Board of Education
of Ga..._.. City' School Oil
-~
..
trict. Gallil County, Ohio on
the 11th day of April, 1988, at
eight o'dockA M • 81 Superin·
tendent'1 office kJcated .. 81
State Stfwl. Gallipoll. OH
45631 to consider the qu•tion of the rellgnation of the
reedetl-.w.. nd -..a 8
......... a to _,.,..oy

bu.,_

and

otiW'
which the ao.d eotllidlws neceaa.v to lrenuct
Apnt 8, 1988
Ellen M Barry
SUOCIIIOf'

APril 10

(Treasurer}

3 Announcements
Renkin R Picken• DO lo•d
Certified In O.ner•l PrKtlce I
will no longer eccept new
patients
Meigs County Humane Sudety
now tlls a large and belutitul
selection of c1t1 looking for
good hom• Long or lhDn: hair
All hen hMI shots Adoptlon
'"' •• II 00 1nd t1 0 00 for
r,~.~~z~3 02'it•;

gf: ~~211

11505 tor more detalll
To whom 1t may concern Lloyd
w
bl
R ••r• will not be r.-ponel •
foranydebtsotherthenhlsown

4

Giveaway

f!l

Aloe Pienta C1ll 814 441
_t_78_7---::--:--::-::---;:
1 gray 1mall Poodle 1 amall
mixed breed dog to giveaway to
lood home Call after 8 PM.
14 378 2410
- ,--....,-,--:--::--:::---:-1
11,1: yr okl mttle Coli•• mhc.d
dog. To good home Gf'Nt whh
children I 14·7•2 20t 2
1937 puaeno• bu1 cut tt up,
houl lt -•• phone 304 451
1042

waohoro. good for pano. 1
doyor 304' 871 ' 8•ee
Mhood brood dog. oH . - ond
2

opoyed

304 171-UOI

6 Lolt lnd Found

;=

Loot ,... of bovo clothing

3824

~~Jl;:.,~:'11~u;o;

88

Flick Peerson Auct1onHr h
cen.ed Ohio and Welt Virgu\la

Ettate antique term l~qu1da
tlon 1alea 304 773 1786

9

Wanted To Buy

VVe Prt ce1h for late model clean
uHd cars
Jim Mmk Chev Olda Inc
Bill Gene Johnson
614-U&amp; 3672
TOP CASH paid for 83 model
and new.,. u1ed car• Smith
Buiclt Pcinllac 1911 Eattern
Ave GaHipol11 Call 114 446
2282

Complete households of furn•
turl &amp; anttques Also wood &amp;
coal heat.,• Swain 1 Furniture
&amp; Auction Third &amp; Olive
614 445-3169
Want to buy Uted furniture and
1ntlque1 Will buv entire house
hOld furnishing Merlin Wede
meyer &amp;14 2415 &amp;1 12
Junlt C.rs wtth or Without
motors Call ~rry Uvely 114
388 9303
Wanted Standing timber Urge
or •mall acreage Call114 182·
7348 or 882-1218
Ca1h antique fireplace mental•
old gal light knodc down
w1rdrobe1, neon clock, things
from old bulkhng1 cabinet, bar
fhotur• old lldv.,lolng Aloo
needed 1 ._ge MOOM haad
Wooden Nickel Andquet 140B
Central Plrkway Cinn Oh1o
415210 Call 513 241 2981
Wanted to Buy U1ed Mobile
Hom• Celll14 441 0176
B~'fing dally gold •ltv• coin•
rings jewelry lttrhng were old
coin1 lerge currency Top prl·
ca• Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd Ave Middleport
814982 3•78
Dslton loggir'lg Inc Buyer of
standing timber and log• AI
beny, Ohio 114 198 8284

o"

11

Help Wanted

G 0 v E Fl N MEN. T J 0 a s
111040 e&amp;9 230/yr Now
hiring Your area 805 IB7
1000 Ext R 10189 for current
Fed•al hit
ASSEMBLERS wtnted brn
mon..,auembling Teddy Beers
Fr11 Information Write Jo El
Enterpr~ 181 p o Box 2203
KluimmH Fl 32742·2203

Help Wanted

AREA SUPERVISOR
LADIES House of Lloyd Super
Party Plan now h1nng area
supervtiOrt NO INVESTMENT
FREE trammg suppt1es &amp; k1t
Call Ktthy collect 614 373
1777
Someone to tak e care of my
huab1nd 9 hr1 a dey 5 day1 1
week must be able to do some
lifting $260 00 month plus
room and board Call 614 366
6231 or write 426 Centrallfve
Newark Ohio 43056
Mamed person or marr~ed ~o u
pie to 1111t1n milk1ng a nd general
farm worlc houamg furn1aked
aelary and benef1t1 depend on
expenence end atmude Reply
with 3 referaneea to Box P 8
care of Pomt Pleaaent Regtster
200 Mam St Pt Pit W Va
26560

&amp; Vicinity

for

Committee elec·
t1ons for Athens, Meigs and
V1nton Counties Th1s not•ce
11 111ued to inform ellg•ble
voters of lhe roghtto nomo
nate cand1dates by pet1t1on
Copies of the petitiOn and m
atruct1ons on Its complet1on
can be obtained from your
local FmHA off1ce
Parsons nominated should
have an Interest: In a farm as
Ian owner tenant, or sharecropper w1th1n the county or
area 1n wh~eh actiViiHtS of the
1countyorareacommittea•e
cerned out They mull be cot
tzens of the Umted Slates or
al~ens lawfully admitted to
the Un1ted States for parmanent residence. and be well
qualified for comm1ttee
work Spouses of those per110111 who meet the ehg1bihty
crrtena are also ehgeble for
nommatlon for e'-ct10n to
the county committee No
mtnations mult be received
on FmHA office, 106 Butter
nut Avenue, Pomeroy. Oheo,
no later than May 19. 1988
FmHA commmee elections
are open to aH eltgible voters
without regard to race. color.
religion. national or~gtn age,
political aH11iatton man~al
staltus sax. and/or handl·
cap
(4} 10. 1tc

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 0 -3

12

Srtuat1ons
Wanted
1

11

Hal Wanted

11

P

Help Wanted

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

AVON Sell Avon tor ALL ereaa
Cali 814 446 3358
Alcohol Drug Councalor Bache
lors degr.. CAC CDC preferred Job Search P 0 Bo;~~;
413 Gelhpoh1 Oh1o 46831 Bv
M1y 1 M/ F/ H E 0 E
WANTED Part time Community
Serv1ce Workerl18hours/ week)
for an lnt.,mediato care facility
for developmentally d111bled
adult1 m Gallipcllll H1gh 1chool
degree vahd Ohio dnvlf 1 h
cen" and good drNmg record
n•qu~red
axp•lence work1ng
with persons With mental ret_M
dat•on and developmental ..Ms
abrlit1es preferred h1gh energ11
level punctual, good communi
cation and organl1at1on akdls
end the ability to work •• part of
a team needed HOUI'I 9AM
BPM Sat / Sun ou1otherw11e
1cheduled 2 hour weakly steff
meeting Vacation/ lick Selery
14 26 / hour Send rnume to
Robtn Eby Buckl"'e Commumtv
Serv•ce•. P 0 lox eo• Jack
son Ohio 46640 All appllca
tion1 must be po1t marked by
4 13 8B Equal Opportunity
Employer
Resident Manager for apartment
complu Send rnume to !'Jit
278 R1o Grande Oh10 45674
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST OR
MEDICAL LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN Part time rotal
•ng 1hifts Mu1t be regi1tered or
reguJtrv ehglble New graduates
welcome Contact Bonnie
Schoonover, 0'81eneu Memor
ial Hotpltal Athens Ohio
46701 614 693 5661 EOE
Wanted Ambitioua d11nam1c
per1on cun1dentioua mgr tor
we~ght control chn•c m the area
Mgt end/ NI• experience pre
f•rad Career ot"iented State
wldt or nationwide lnyolvement
po11ible Income nftbot•able
Send r..um• 11 100n u pos1ble
to Dun Techniques 378Vz E
Main St .Jackson Oh1o 46640
ATT E D Pauhno MD

Apphcattona for london Pool
Manager will b41accepted unt1l8
PM April 16 1988 Resumes
are to be 1ubm1tted to Jenrce
U.wiQn Clet"k Tre1urer VIllage
of Syracuse Oh10 46779
Government Job• 116 040
$69 230 year Now h1t1ng Your
area 1 806 687 8000 E.Itt R
9806 for current Fedtrelllst

Han Styl1111 Across The Street
ltvllng salon ia ...king two
additional styl11t1 who are look
'"0 for more than just another
job C.ll Temet 614 448 9510
tor detad1
ANemblers wanted Eam mo
ROll euambl•ng Teddy Bear1
Free mformatton Wnta Jo El
Entetprasea P 0 Box 2203
Kllttmmee Fl 32742 2203
Geneal da1ry farm hetp Pos1ibill
ties to advance to herdsmen
manager or ahares State expe
r~ence and reference , 2 bed
room mobile home ave•lable
Wrtte Da•l"' S.n11nel Box 729R
Pomerov Ohio 46789
Re1p1te ••de Quahftcatlona 1n
elude expertence workmg w1th
the elderly and or a health related
field Must heve reheble tren1
portet1on end be wtlhng to work
f111J11ble hours mclud1ng week
end1 AnEOE ReplybyApril15
1 988 to Bo.11. 722 Pometoy
Ohio 45769
Government Joba 816 040
859 230 yr Now htnng Your
area 806 687 6000 ext R
9806 for current Federal ltat
AVON AU ere.. Cell Menlyn
Weaver 304 8B2 2646
AVON all areal ShRiey Spear•
304 875 1429
Local Northern Vlrgln•a Home
Manufacturer needt leborer•
who are looking tor steady
employment Guaranteed 40 hr1
per wa.k plus overtime Four 10
hour dtyl are available at well al
lodg1ng C.lverton, V• 1 703
WANTED Pan time Relief 7B8 4222 8 00 1m to 4 30 pm
Hou~emenagM fhv•lnl for an
mtlfmedhtte csre facility for
developmentelly dlubled edults
In Gallipolis Ohio H~gh ~ehool
degrH velld Ohio drwer 1 h
cen1e 1nd good driving record
required good organi11t10n end
commun•c..ion 1klll1 punctual
and able to work 11 part of e
tum nMd~ experlence.work•g
with Ptrona whh ment1l ret•d•
••on end developmental diseblil
tl•
prefen'ed Hourt 5 00 PM
Friday throueh 6 00 PM Sunday
MONEY FOR COLlEGE! Part
Of •• otherwl•e •cheduled. and
time job1 Jom ttte Wa11 Vlrgtnia
2 hour weekly 1taff meeting Army National Guard 304 676
Sal1ry 14 50/hour Yecellon 3960 or 1 800 642 3619
/Sidi;/Life lnsurence ban.th•
Send l'elume 1nd cover letter to Where are all the un.,.,ployed7
You can earri tB 00 per hour No
::~r;!bypBQck.::~~':"'J:'!" exp•ience
nec..•ary Cell Mr1
n
Oh
46640
Ae~umn
o
10
1
Doyle at 304 675 4268 Mon
mutt e.. post marked by 4 t 6 dsy
April 11th 6 8 30 p m
88 Equel Opportunity EOE
Emplover
Olen Milia haaaevertllmmediate
J bh
N
o
unting7
eed • okoll7 We openlng1 for t&amp;tephone sale•
uatn people for job
Auto people No exper1ence neoes
Mecham 011 C1rpanter1181Electn sery Al1o need someone
c1sn 1 Food Service Workers light deiNety work Apply for
to
Elac:tronic. Technre~an• Indus JoAnne Doyle, lowe a Motor
trial Maintenance Workers. Inn Pt Plee1ant Mon Apr
Asli1tent1
Order t1th 1 p m to 3 p m 7
1Nul'ling
•- anand
d weklers
p m 8 30 p m No Phone Calls
'" M ac hi an.ts
EOE
Rtglst•
now
for
cl•••
beg1n
nong Ap r11 4th Call Tr1 c ounty
Vocational Aduh Center at 713 Payroll clerk ADP Syatem Must
35t1 IJit lA A vanety of be fam1llar w1th IBM PC &amp;
funding tource1 to p_,- for Lotus Send resume to Camp
trlining 1re eyellable for those troll8f P 0 Box 270 Gallipolis
eligible
Ohio 4663t

Ellm Home 209 S Fourth
Mtddlaport OhiO Room and
board for semor Cl11zan1 Special
cere rn prrvate home 614 992
6873
All types of masonry Bnck
block stone and concreto Free
est1mate1 Call 304 773 9550
W11! do hoUie clean1ng spnng
clean.ng w1U babv11t tor small
ch1ld 304 n3 seo2

13

Insurance

us tor your mobile home
Insurance Miller Insuran ce
304 B82 2145 Also auto
home hfe health

Call

15

Schools
lnstruct1on

Top jobs reqUire top sk1ll1 Act
Now! Southeaatern Business
College-446 4367 AICS Accre
d1ted Reg 86 11 10558
1 B Wanted to Do

Jim 1 Odd Jobs
Sundecks 11d1ng p11nt1ng root
1ng carpenter work trailer re
pau Cell614 379 2416
Cleaf1mg House &amp; ofl1C8s Ret
erenc:es Call 61 4 446 8788 or
245 5383

do btby11ttmg tn my home
Heve reterencea Cell 614 367
7571
J &amp; R 1 Rooftng Stdmg &amp;
remodehng W1ll bUild gareges &amp;
outbutld.ngs Minor carpenter
work only 1B vean axponence
Call 614 446 6327 or 446
1912
Would hke to do houaecleenrng
C•B 614 446 8746 or 388
8472
W1U do hou1e olean1ng 1ns1de &amp;
out Pomt Pleaunt &amp; Gelhpoha
aree Clll614 448 6459
Wanted to do Cle1nmg Work
Cell 814 367 7773 or 367
Wtll

0434

W1ll mow lawns •n Galhpoha (m
town) Call 814 448 3658
Child care prov1ded In my home
Lot• of fun tnd ettent•on Hot
meal• Reference• prov1dod
614 992 7632
Wanted to do Babyaitt1ng m my
home 614 742 2220
All typn me1onary br~ck block
stone and concrete free eat•
mete• 304 773 9660
Lawn Mower Rpalrt
Lawn Servtcft
Small Gardena Plowed
304 676 1663
Will haul all trash $20 00 load
e.11.cept c~r bod111 304 676l.:.&amp;4_&amp;:_2.:.o.:.r.:.S.:.7.:.5_7_2_7_4____

Financial
21

Busmess
Opportumty
I NOTICE I

lNG CO
that you
~=~~~~§§§§:::!:~=====;====!:========~=-t THE
OHIOrtcommands
VALLEY PUBliSH
do bu1ines1 with people you

BR l'DGE

NORTH

• AK 965
• 73

1

Protect
your honor

4
•• Q
A 6 :; 4
WEST

EAST

+J
'I A Q J 6 • 2
+8 6 ~ 3 •

B James Jacoby
Y

South origmally Intended, after respondlng two d1amonds, to raise part·
nor's known five-card spade su1t as a
game Invitation But the concept of
correct b 1dding on any deal1s not embedded m concrete Instead, values
change as the opponen Is enter th e auc
lion, as does bidding strategy
Because West was not vulnerable,
he risked comins In with a two-heart
overcall He knew thai he wanted a
heart lead at any contract, but partie·
ularly II North happened to play notrump However, that butt-in bid by
West lwtlllfl South from supporting his
partner's spade suit to blddlnl notrump h11111elf In order lo protect his
heart king at trick one North carried
on to ••me In no-trump deaplte a minimum IJ.polnt opulng, because he up!P'Ided lfle;value of hla diamond queen
as a filling card In reepoader's suit AI·
thoup Weal did well not to lead a
beart, the favorablelocal(on of the dl·
amond 11:11111 made nine tr1cks at notrump easy for declarer

t t 88

+Q 10 t 3

•

t

+B 3

10 •
K;

know and
1endyoumoney
through
theNOT
mail tountil
have
lnvest•glted the offering

1000 ••nbed• toning ••bl••
Sunal
Wolff Puttve
Tennmg Exercl1
Bed1
SlenderQullt
era CeUtorfrH color catalogue
Ssve to 50 percent 1 BOO 228

8292
_ __:__ _ _ __ __

+QJ 10 9 7

A1:al Estalt:

SOUTH

+a 12

31

'I K 9 8

tAJ1092

+K2

Vulnerable North South
Dealer North
Weot

Norl~

1+
Pass

3 NT

Eut
Pass
Pass
Pass

Soulb

2t

2 NT
Pass

Opening lea~ • 8

•
Note that 1uuo •p•u•• oy North
would have short shr1ft w1th East
leading throllllh South's kmg of hearts,
but East's four-card spade holding 1s
also cruc1al to defeatmg a spade
game
I

t0

\r

Homes for Sala

3 BR hou1e bath garage
Btee~:ew•v outbuildtng Galh
polis area Call 814 797 3010
Tupper• Plains 3 BR eat In
kitchen lsrot living room full
balemam garage all ellctrtc
centraleir Call after 15 PM 614
4417418
Reduced U4 000 to 132 000
1981 S.Ction.el 3 BA 2 batl\1
new flreplsce utility room 1
•ore lend Call a14 388 9305
lllevel on Rt 31 Appro~t 1 BOO
sq rt ' IR 211.1 bath1 double
~r garage whh opener burvl•
&amp; fire 11'"" fenced back yard
•ao • Collet • 448 8328 oftor
&amp;PM

2 bedroom 2 bath• 2 car
gerage level lot on Rt 33
Swimming pool lttlllte cll)la
to Meig1 High Call 614 9923214

Card of Thanks

We would like to thank
famtly and fnends the
dottors of Holzer Hosp1
tal. ICU &amp; second floor
nursmg staff. all the area
churches. OVCS &amp; GDC
co workers, for all their
prayers and support durmg te Illness of K1mberly
Dawn Angel
Ronn1e , Joanna
K1m &amp; Chad Angel

The family of Edward C West
wiSh to thank ali Doctors
and stall members at Holzer
Hospital for theu care and
kmdness shown durmg the
short ollness and death of
Husband Father G1and
father and Great grand
father We extend a specoal
thanks to Rev Paul Whole of
Roo Grande Calvary BaptiSt
the women who served the
meal McCoy Moore Fune~al
Home Thanks for food from
Vmton lamlly church memb
ers cards flowers phone

calls

lood

VISits from

fnends ne1ghbors the

ve~

expresSions and thouihts
durt ng our sorrow
Our Thanks to You
The Edward C West Family
May God s blessmg be on all.
CARD OF THANKS
I want to thank everybody who helped ' m
the s1ckness and death
of my beloved husband, June C Cremeans who passed
away March 20, 1988
The doctors, Dr Lentz,
Dr Furlong, Dr Mansfteld and Dr. Brown,
also the nurses and
nurses a1ds and the
workers who came mto
see June We thank the
pastors who came to
see June and pray with
htm, Brothers Amos
T1lhs Herby Grate Sister and Brother Tolman.
Brother Evans and all
the other pastors I
didn't know who came

m

I want to thank everybody for the beautiful
flowers and the food
and cards and money,
for their kmd words
and help, Joan Stewart
for her health care and
all of our children and
grandchildren.
the
netghbors on Depot St
for the1r beauttful flowers and Tammy Fry who
was a lot of comfort
when she came to see
June 1n hiS srckness
and all of
Zelma'
fnends m New Haven
for thetr flowers and
money and prayers
Also the Emergency
Squads for the1r kmd
help, Rawhngs Blower
Coats Funeral Home for
their love and care.
June's brothers and
s1sters, Maud Sm1th.
nephews and meces, all
of my own children and
arandchildren for their
love and he Ip, flowers,
food and money, Rev.
Robert Smtih for h1s
consoling words and to
each and every one who
helped 1n any way, my
heartfelt thanks to all.
God knows best so
He took June home to
rest.
Iva S. Cremeans

1

Card of Thanks

Perhaps you sent a lovely
card

Or sat QUI!!ty 1n a cha11
Perhaps 10u sent a floral
PIP.Ce

If so we saw 1t there

Perhaps 10u spoke the kin
dest words

As an1 froend could say
Perhaps you were not thm
at all
Just thought of us !hat day
Whatever you dod to console
our hearts

We thank you so much what
ever the part
A specoal thanks to Francos
and Sally Waugh Kmg s
Chapel Church, Willis Fu
neral Home and all our spe
cia! friends
Allen &amp; ClafiCe Waue!t &amp;
the family of
L1z~ Burhnpme
The fam1ly of Lavm1a
Simpson w1shes to
thank Dr W1therel Dr
Hunter the Racme
Emergency Squad the
nurs mg staff of
Amencare. and
Veterans Extended Care
w1th spec•al thanks to
the Home Health
Nurses We greatly
appreciate the
emot1onal support of
the Reverend Roger
Grace. the prayers
cards food , flowers .
and other express1ons
of canng and sympathy
lrom relatlves and
fnends
2

ln Memortam
In lovmg Memory of

OSCAR GRIFFITH

Who Passed ,., Apnl 9 1983
Your aentle face and pahent

smole
W1th sadness we recall
You had a kondly word for each
And doed beloved by all
The VOitll IS mute .and Sttlftd
the heart

That loved us well and true
Ah bitter was the tnal to part

from one so good as you
You are not for&amp;Dtten loved

one

Nor Will you ever be
As lana as hfe and memory

last

We w1ll Jemember thee
We m1ss you now
Our heans are sore
As ttme

goes by

We TfiiSS you more
Your lovi ng sm1le

Your gentle face

No one can fill your vacant
place
Sadly m1ssed by Wife
Children. Grandchildren

feb
The rose blush
her chqb
And pa1n bedimmed her eyes
She prayed aloud to her hea
venly Father
To take her to her home on
high
Her dear famoly aalhtred
around her
As they wotchad thtor loved
one d11

Slowly duftm&amp; up on anael s

w1nu
Fir obove the clear bl,. sky
It s not for us to understand
Wht:ome thmas are munt to
So sleep 1n sweet peace

Mother
Untol WI come to thq
Choldoen londa Pottarson
Suo Haaer &amp; ~rry Cwelt
Husband Douclu Corelt &amp;
G11odthrldrtn

'

�'

'

Page-D-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel
• Homes

41

partment
for Rent

Homes for Rent

Government Homes from $1 .00
tU repair) Buy propeniettor back
taxes ! Info, repo ltatmg 1- 518-

469· 3546 ext. H 1622 24 h,.,
, Four bedrooms. 2 baths, Ned
Sam Addit•on, central air cond.
base ment , garage, fireplace,
SO's. 304-675 -6999 .

6 r9om house on 1 acre plus, city
w11ter, located Jim Hill Road.
$18.000,00 down payment requiled owner will fina nce, 304875 -4182 or675-2656.
Close to town 1 2 acres land. 3
bedroom house. central air.
house treiler and other eJ:tras,

304-676-7236

House for sale Gallipolis Ferry, 3
acres or more. 304-676-4688 or
615-2412

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
1979 Duke Crown Royal ,
14x70. Total ·e-lectric. 2 BR .,
Underpinning, CA, microwe\le,
porches. Partly furnished . Cail
61 4 -25 6-9340 .
1972 Hommet. 12J:52. 2 BR ,
Excel. cohd Cell even. after
7-614-448 -4409.
1980

Fairmont Bayview,
14t~~70 . Large IJ&gt;Jing room with
f1replace, 1 1fl b&amp;tha, 3 DR . Good
Cond . Call614-446-4158.

2 BR unfurnished,
mile -218. $200 rent.

buying pre 1980 '12'• &amp; 14' s ,
Pleau call 800-826-0762, ext

315.

Duplex - Nice J KH , hv1ng room,

Ref. Married couples. 0~;, ch"-~-J diqing

plus utilit•ea. Ref S. aec .dep.
Call 614 -446-0332.

6 14 ·446-7208.
country home. 8 mi. from Locks
&amp; Dam. Glenwood, W.Va. Call

614-446 -2914
2 BR home in country, water,
electric, trash furnished . 2 child·
ren. t260 rent. $150 deposi1.
Referen ces Ca ll 614-388-

614-379-2209 .

APARTMENTS, mobile homes,
hou11s. Pt. Pleasant and Gallipo lis . 614-446-8221 .

2 bedrooms, carpeted, stove,
refrigerator. Will accept one or
two children. Deposi1 required ,
No inside pets. 614·992 -3090.

Beech Street. Middlepon. Ohio,
2 bedroom furnished •pt. ut1li·
ties paid, references and depoti1.
304-882-2666.

14 acres. bam. pond. mile out. 2
bedrooms, centrel air, lease or
sell. t460 .00. 304· 676-6999.

one bedroom furnished apt ,
convenient location. 304-6762441
.

Smail two bedroom house.
$166.00 month plus utihtie11n d
deposit , no pett, 304-675-

One furnrahed and one unfur·
nished. 304-676-1365.

1284. '

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

u•;"""'""'d.
s;ngl•m•la.sh.,.
beth. Call -446-4416
after 7 PM.
Rooms for rent-week or month.
Startmg at 8120 a mo Gallia
Hotel -614-446-9580.

46 Space lor Rent

2 BR . mobile home-Kerr-3'h.
miles from HMC. 1 BR . apt. in
Rio Grande. Call614-246-9170
or 388-9604.

Commercielapace, 1 400 square
feat. corner Second end Pine.
Ample parking in reer. Call

Mobile home. 2 bedroom . nice
lot. Middleport. Utilities in cluded. 614-992-15-949 or 614-

446·4249, 446-2326 ., 446-

4426 .

992-9903.

RIVER LOTS

For Boating &amp; Camping-For Sale
or Rent . A-One Real Estate
Broker. 304-875-6104.

12d0 2 bedroom mobile home.
Near Racine. 614-992-6868 .

For sale. 2 propeny lou, 66.1166
tlllld 66x36 In Hockingport,
Oh-io Former sita or Hocking·
port Methodist Epiacopal
Church. Acron SR . 124 from
the Hock1ngpon Community
build ing. Cost to be decided by
seale&amp; bid . Bids to be received by
Apnl 22, 1988 . Send C· O Bidl,
Mockingport United Methodist
Church. Box 476, Hockingport,
Ohio 45739. Property being sold
by the A inistreti\le Council of
the Hocki gport United Methodist Chur . who reservea thr
right to raj
II bi •·
For ula: 94 ac , Meigs Co.
Ohio Grimm Ad off Co. Ad 36 .
Portland mail rt . Minerals and
tree gat. 6 mile1 kom Ritchie
Bndge. Good building ailel.
Hunters paradiae. $34,000 .
614-943-6186.
5 acres. Meigs Co. Ohio. SA
124 3 m1les below Ritchie
Bridge. New drilled well. trailer
hook -up. e~~:cvllent location for
home$20 ,000 614-843-5186 .

I

i

6 acres, Meig1 Co. Ohio. SR
124, 3 miles below Ritchie
Bridge. 6 room old house.
Seeluaion from hig hway. Excellent location. $25,000. 8614843·51 85. ~
Aahton. lerge building lot s,
mobile homes permitted, public
water. also river lots, Clyde
Bowen, Jr. 304 -676-2336.
Camping or building lots on the
Ohio RiVer. 6 miles from town,
304-676-2728 .
1 Yt acre lot with rural water at
Apple Grove, phone 304-676-

2383

2 actea , drilled well. Cell 304896 ·3554 after 5 PM .

I

I

W.Ve. Call 304-773-6661.

2 DR apts. 8 closets, kitchenappl. furnlehed . Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet, newly
painted, deck. Regency , Inc.
Apts. Call 304-676-773B or
876·6104.

Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
Park, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va .

304-676-3073.

Trailer Iota, At. 1 locust Ro1d,
back of K &amp; K Mobile Home•.
304-676-1076

New co mpletely furnished
apartment &amp; mobile home In
city. Adult• only. Parking Cell
614-446-0338.

Trailer lots for rent in Muon,
$36 00 per month. after 6 :00
pm phone 304-n l-6150.

BUDGET PRICES AT JACK-

SON ESTATES, 636 Jackson
P1ke from $183 a mo . Walk to
shop and mo\liH. 614-446Newly-remodeled apartments.
unlurniahed , one · b•droom,
stove and refrigerator. water
included. 8200. • 1226 . per
month. References and deposit
required . Maximum occupancy·
2 adults, 1 child. Call 814-4464249, 446-2326 or 446-4426.

AUCTION

SWAIN
FURNITURE 62

Upstaira unfurnished apt. Carpeted. utllitiet paid. No children.
No pets. Call 814-446-1637.

Green 3 cushion couch. Call

614-446·0614.
Unfurnished apt.-2 BR $186 .
Water paid. Stove &amp; refrlg . 1 1 36
Seconl::t. Gallipolis Call 4464416 after 7 PM .
For rent- 1 BR . upstairt. Newly
remodeled. Second Ave. Call

., 446-4927.

Sofa &amp; chair, Call 614-2&amp;6-

6795.6

Mallohan Furniture. Quality furniture &amp; carpet at lowest po11i·
bl• prices Financing available to
qualified buye.-s. Upper River
Rd . Gall. 0 614·446·7444 .

Furnished efficiency . t14&amp; . Utilities paid. Share bath . 807
Second. Gallipolis. Call 614·
448-4416 attar 7 PM .

One super tingle completewahtf
bed, n8\ler ustd , ca ll after 6 :00,

Garage apt., furniahed . 1225
Utilities paid. 29'12 Neil. Gallipolis Call 614-446-4416' efter 7

Used carpet, light green. 20x16
and 1lx12 foot and padding,
180.00 all. Phone 304-676-

PM .

2 BR . apt.-661 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis. $260 1 m9. piUs
utilities 1126 dep . Call 614·

304-448-7024.

Happy BirtMay

Allen

Ray Brickles

April 10, 1958
We were not there, Son
dear, to see you die,
To hold your hand or kiss
aoodbye,
But we'll remember our
whole lives throuJh.
The last few words we had
with you.

love,

11om, Dad.
Family &amp; friends

I

~~·-·

'
to
"

"It won't do any good
write your congressman...I.
AM YOUR CONGRESSMAN!"

PUBLIC AUCTION

SAT., APRill6, 1988, TIME 11:00 A.M.
The undersilned will sell all items of over 50 vrs. at brick
home at 8133 Dairy Lane, Athens, Ohio. To locate, take_U.S.
Rt 33 &amp; exit at St. At 682 North &amp; follow auct1on Signs.
ANTIQUES: Ornate wal. V1ct mt hall tree, ash &amp; t maple d.L
table; brass bed; 6' wire plant sa nd; rockers;stands; 6 pr, old
stall. dogs; lg_ami fine old dishes of all km~s; quilts; fancy·
work; bottles; pictures; oil lamps plu s other old 1tems. 1968
Chrysler Newport.
NOTE: Plan to attend lor a much. larger sale than list~d .
Fine antique items. Terms: Cash or aood check w/ID &amp;
-prior check clearance. Lunch Bunch. Auctioneer- MIKE
CLUM INC., THORNVILLE, OHIO 614/246·6851.
OWNERS: MR. &amp; MRS. JIM BRIDGEWATER

3 Announcements

245-9695.

Furnished apartment in town .

NOAH'S ARK
ANIMAL PARK
Schools, churches, company
picnics. birthday twties and
family reunions.
384-3060
1-800· 282-2167

G raclous living. 1 and 2 bedroom apanmenu 11 Village
Manor and Ri&gt;Jarside Apertments in Middleport. From
1216. including utllitiea. Call

614·992-7787. EOH.

NOW RENTING
OCEAN FRONT CONDO IN
GARDEN CITY, S.C.
(10 m1. so. of Myrtle Beach)
2 bedrooms/2 full baths,
complete kitchen, air condi·
tioned. private pool, newly
redecorated.
For more information call:
Jeannie Abels
446·4249

2 bedroom Apt. for rent . Carpeted. Nice setting . laundry
facllitiet available. Call 814,992-3711 . EOH .
1 bedroom, unfurnished apt.
new carpet . In Pomeroy. 814-

REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate opening for parttime registered nurses to work in SPECIAL CARE
AND MEDICAL/SURGICAL UNITS.
Salary commensurate with experience.
Excellent fringe benefits.
Sand Resume to: ,
Rhonda Dailey, R.N.
Director of Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Or Call ·or Visit
Nursing Service Office at Veterans
Memorial Hospital
614-992·2104, Ext. 213
E.O .E.

•

'•

90 Day• Slme u cash with
approved credit . 3 Miles out
8ulaville Rd . Open 9em to Spm
Mon. thru Sat . Ph . 614-446-

0322

From Gallipolis take Rt. 141, turn left onto Rt. 775,
turn right onto Cadmus Patriot Road. Watch for
signs.

Auction Thursday, April 14, 1988 at 7:00P.M.

J. S FURNITURE

14.16 Eutern Ave
Living room suitN 8179 &amp; up.
Bedroom suitet I 399 &amp; up.

Olnneues . beds, bedding .
dressers . chests. couches,
Chairs, lamps. coffee, end tables.
Every day Specutls. Y, mile out
Jerrlcho. 304-676-1460.

53

Antiques

Buy or Sell. Riverrne Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W 10e.m. to 6p m.,
Sunday 1 to &amp;p .m. 614-992-

Call 114-266-6261 .
SWIMMING POOLS - $988
ORDER NOW · PAY

LATE~R

Huge 31 ' oval pool With deek.
fence 8t filter. Installation &amp;
finsncing available. 1-800-3460948.

Aiding moweu : 8 HP Bolen, 8
HP WhMihoru. &amp; 7 HP Torre .
Call 114· 379-2.746.
Swlmm~ Pool Accauoriea :
Used but In exc•llent condition·
10' Sail White 10 foot 'h: mater
dtvlng board, 1200. Turquois
Aqua tlida, &amp;300. 1 'h HP
Amerlc.n Suction P.ump, t200.
Air Cluetlc flberglasi high capac·
hy sand fihe.-. t200. OR take ell
for a total. *700. Call61 4 · 446-

4637

Two prom dretses Worn once.
tn.oo each. Size 9 -1 o. Call
014-448-1478.
BNutlful white Wedding drell.
Small size 9 . 176 . Call&amp; 1 4-388-

9809.

SMITH'S ASHLAND- 118 VIne
St., Galllbolls. Ohio. Call 614·

448 ·9333. OIL CHANGE

CROWN CITY, OHIO
PHONE 256·6740
Not Responsible for Accidents or Loss of Property

PUBLIC
AUCTION
·April16, 1988

10 a.m.
Located at 218 Gallatin ''St.,
RavenswoOd, W. va. Selling the Inventory
from "The Collector's Shop".
ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES &amp; FURNITURE: Oak
Server Claw Feet, 2 nice oak wash stands, Early Walnut Curio Cabinet, Oak Flatwall cupboard, Empire
Cherry Chest, 6 Tin Pie Safe, Early Walnut 2 pieca
desk, nice 6 drawer seed cabinet, small Cherry store
counter, Oak Pump Organ, Pine ice chest, oak tables,
small Waul. Eve-Shop Show case, oak hall tr...
Square ak China whh Claw Feet, Pie Safe with Tins,
Baker'9 Table, Victorian love seat, decorated stone
jars with Bird &amp; Bee Sting, 2MCtion office files, 3 press
back chairs, large tin spice cabinet decorated top load
7 compartments, Oak Drug Store label cabinet. country table, shoe shine chair, red,white &amp; blue coverlet.
quik9, brass candlestick, telephone, Key Stone cornsheller, toy ferris wheel wind-up, Mariled J. Chain &amp;
Co., pin cushion dated 1909, Vt!V unusual Norge gaa
range green &amp; white porcelain, whh built-in canister
set, trunk, la~e kraut cuner, stoneware, phcher U. S.
Sta\\dert, stone jars, tobacco tins, Iota of advertising,
granheware, oil lamps, Iota of glaaaware, Carnival,
Depression &amp; others, Blue Fenton bowl, Granite Mail
Pouch Thermometer, Pius Much More. Partial Listing.
AUCTIONEEib RICK PEARSON
lM1Idi
- . wv
77J--S715
OWNERS, PliED • MAICINE RUCHES

...._lr - ....,__
Tna: Clil Of Chlel ... 0

~ llklldiiiRO.I YN,_

~ERNDlE,._ol .... _

_ _ _,_lllllillll'"-•
Dlo1111ollb-

Walnut, Oak etc. Vance Farm.
31f.t: milea off Rt . 7 on Leading
Cr&amp;ek Rd ."
Large color con1ole T.V. 1 91nch
BW TV. Both 1150. Call 614992 -5706. 877 Brownell A&gt;Je.,
Middleport, Oh .

SURPLUS DENIM. army , rental
clothing. Wlkl turkey te•on
soon,
green, bl.ck
whit•
NO checks.

59 For Sale or Trade
180 ft . No. 2 aluminum wire
undarground. New. 175. 304876-6490.

H.O. Trains. t400 value. Asking
1260. Skill Belt Sander like new-.
Gail Miller 614-992-31 98 .
rent, 304-876·7421 .

Good dean Greyco highchair,
playpen &amp;. cerry cradle seat .
36x38 Cro" Pane window. Cell
614-266-9323.

WAfl(~OUS[S

• R.fl N. • STORAG!
---,,,QWIIOO.IS • OHtCES 1 SHOPS
rEAR A,AOUNO CONSTAUCTIOP.
rH£ ENERGV PfRfORMER'"
FOR RJEl EFI!CifNC'

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

~,

Pole Barns
Gorages

Storage
Buildings

WORKMAN-

SHIP

PRI~ES

· Double~~\ Construction
DON MORGAN- 614-286·2498

.I PC. FIBERGLASS TUB &amp; SHOWER, white and colors.
1 159.95 ea. (2 for '300.00) (4 lor '500.00
WHITE STEEL BATH TUBS
'59.95 ea. (2 for 1100.00)
BLUE OR GOLD COMMODES '49.95 tl,_ (2 for '85.00)
BLUE OR GOLD PEDESTAL LAVATORIES ~
140.00 ea. (2 for 175.00)
KITCHEN AND VANITY POST FOAM COUNTER TOPS
6'·8'· 10'12' Pes.
'1.99 lin. It
2 GAL BUCKETS WHITE K-LUX MORTAR or WHITE TEX·
TURED WALL PAINT
2 GAL. $4.95
TEMPERED INSULATED GLASS PANELS
72"x32"x% $29.95 ea. 34 pc_up $25.00 ea.
STEH PORCELAIN SINKS. wtlite &amp; bone, sinJ.Ie bowl
21'x24" or 20"d6" $6.00 ea.; double bowl 21 'x32" or
19"132" or 16"x32" ($8.00 ea.) 12 pk. minimum.
WAFER BOARD SQ. EDGE (%x4x8 46 pc, lifts $6.95 11.):
7/16x4d-76 pc. lifts. $4.95 ea.); Toneue &amp; Groove (II·
$6.9S) W•-$7.95).
SHOP GRADE YELLOW PINE T·lll SIDING. o/ox4x8 - 56
pes. lifts $10.00 ea. ('ilx4x9- $12.00 ea.f.
PRIMED BEADED MASONIC LAP SIDING, 7/16"x8"xl6'
20 sq. lilts. $18.00 pr. sq.
15 WT. FELT ROOF PAPER. 20 pool lilts $5.99 roll· 90 lb.
mineral surface (7.95 roll).
PLASTIC COUNTER TOP MATERIAL. choice colors, 60~
SQ.

ft.

8 OR 16 PEN. NAILS 50 lb. box $15.95 (6 .box min.)
NATURAL/ GAS UP FLOW FURNACES Equipped for AC
.(75,000 btu $349.00) (125,000 btu $369.00) (15,000 btu
$469.00).
INTERIOR PREHUNG DOORS, choice of size &amp; finish
$29.95 ea.
EXTERIOR STEEL INSULATED PRE-HUNG DOORS $89.95 ea.
CLAD INSULATED WINDOWS (casement, awnin&amp;. double
huna. bows, at Wholmle Cost.

PENNS WAREHOUSE

WELLSTON, OHIO
OPEN 8 TO 5
CLOSED THURS. &amp; SUNDAY
PHONE 614·384-3645

Real Estate General

rowing machine. Call814-388 ·
83CM.

7,
SQ.
MORE OR L£SS
App10x. 4 miles
Gallipolis on blacktop road; 2 acres, 6
nice offices, 3 baths, a shower, loading dock with 10ft. high
electnc roll up door, 12ft. high electnc rollup door atthe s1de
enhance to the shop area. W1red for a machine shop With a
large parts storage area. LOTS OF USES - WHAT'S YOUR
NEED? SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY........ _______ , N668

loaded, like new. Would
that special son or
~.~~~~!~~! a nice gradua-

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
446·
446-9539

245-5369 or
245-5097

1983 Eacon GL, Air, aun roof,
new tires. heal. cond. 82600.

Call 614-246-6616.

1984

IRON HORSE SLOGS. 614332·9741.

1980 Coneord'DL , no rust, body
in great shape. runs good.
transmit~ion need s work. 1 460.
304-882-2056.

1978 Klllwuaki. 4 cyl .. low '
milet. heel. cond. call 614- 1
448-2364 , Leave maaaage.

CaftCI'ate bloclcs- ell sizet· yard
ordeltvery. Meson send . Gallipolis llodl Co .. 123 1/.t Pine St.,
Gallipolla, Ohio. Cell 114-448·

510 International tractor
w / plows, transport disc.,
13150. 2411ntarnetlonal round
baltr. •2110. Owner will II·
nance. Call814-281;8622.

1968 Chevy Chevelle. good
body and engine, $800 .00 lno
less] days 304-882-3134 and
evenings 882· 2481

51!

135 MF di•el. 590 hour• with
MF
Bounce mower. MF
raik•. MF #12 baler, 115850.
Owner will finance. Call 014-

245-5121.

2783.

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop·Pet
GroomlniJ. All breed a ... All
aty.... lams Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 814·441· 0231.
Dragonwynct Cet11fY

Kennel.
CFA HlmeltYan. Ptrtiltn and
Si4m... kittens. New AKC
Chow puppl... Cal 814-448-

241-6432.

R" Hot bargains! Drug dealet's'
cera. boeta, plene• repo'd. Surplus. Your Area . Buyers Guide
11)1106-687-6000 bt. S-9806.

~=· wH klda. Call 11 -446-

AKC Roglatared Slboflan HuafiV

puppiM,. 4 m..... 1 temaa.. Both
patenta on premi••· Shott 1nd
wOrmed. Call Mttnlngs 614-

949-2940.

Male h...-n puppy, AKC. lhota
st~~ned. wormed. t125 814·

8&amp;7-3866.

sate.
Talka. UIO. 814-992-7841 . •
Mynhel bird and cage for

Real Estate General

CROSS &amp; SONS
•
U.S . 31 Watt. Jackson.
814·281-8451 .

Ohio.

MesMy Ferguaon, New Holland,
BuM Hog Salet &amp; Servlc.. Ovtr

40 uaed trletors to chOOH from
line of new &amp; uMd

a compt ..,
~&amp;qulpment .

Llrgast teiKtion In

UTILITY BLDG. SPL: 30' x40 'x8.'
eave- 11'x8' tllding...._d oor &amp; 3 '
aenri~ door, 14987 ERECTED .

R SALE
1987 FORO BRONCO II XLT
•
LOADED

298·022.

1980 Honda 900 euatom with
extras. 1976 Pontiac Grand Pr\l(
need transmisaion $376 .00. 14
h elumn semi V bottom boat 6
hp air cooled motor $300.00.

Wanted: Fertilizer ltprua~r- can
repair, Farm All (A, fertilizer
IUIChmentfor Farm AM (A) . Call

1984 Delta 88. 4 door. V-8.
$6,996.00 . 304-675-8086

o.,...

Call

72

John Oeere4010. Has4020klt.
16200. Call &amp;14·843·6184 after I :OOp.m.

.PRICE REDUCED -

RUTlAND - · Owner wants to
-move thiS spring! Afarm as
nice as this needs afamily to
enroy. Approx. 60 acres of
Jand with a lovely 3bedroom
·home. Ornate original wood·
.Work adds to the charm_Modern kitchen, storage build·
:i ngs and much more! REDUCED TO $50,000.00.
RACINE - Unique I I; story
home w/3-4 bedrooms. Added
features include cen~al air,
DngJnal woodwork, fireplace,
family room, 2 lois and much
more! CaP for appoinbnent
ONLY $29,900.00.

:IIIST RIGHT FOil THE BIG
~liLT - 4 bedroom home
sitting on approx. 6.47 acres
ill ground. N~re big dimng
rOom, carport, family room
ind much moll!. Needs some
lfilrk_ASKING $29,000.00.

PIIIEROY- Possible trailer
lot - II! lots,all util~ies. Has
older homeon property. lm·
'£ned1ate posseSSIOn. JUST
$10,000.00.

.

-DEXTER - In the Country
- Approx. 98 acres, barn
and other buildings, pond,
fencmg, approx. 16 acres tillable, 35 acres pasture with
} two story farm home. All
for $32,000.00.

Now

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
446-36.44
I

Hl-1111

•

.ltaft Trauell '"" 949-HICI

Turner ..... HZ-!1112
fiiCJ Rlfflt .......949-0if~ce. ...-..........HZ-2251
lpttlt

A-JB
I'

1980 Yamaha IT 250. $626 .
Cellefter 3 PM. 614-256· 1657.
1987 Kawasaki KX-80
Call 614-446 -0964.

8800.

FARM FOR SALE BY OWNER
68 acres, mostly pasture and woods. developed spring,

Two sto~ restored home, large barn, graine~. workshop and more. Rural water, Rt. 160 near Mines, Gallia
Co. Shown by appointment.

· PH.

10

Real Estate General

·'

K•nworth and DeKatlb aeec1 com.
Soon Farm Greu Seeds. W L
variety AHallo. 304-17S·1108.
Ground ahall com 14.10 par
100. Eac round bela AlfiHe or
Olt h.y In dry •20.00. 8 :0012:00 dally, Morgan'• Woadlawn Farm. Rt. 31. Pliny, W. v • .

304-175·12811.

!lor Sale: CCC certlf~•- Ph.

304-175·2443 oftorl p.m.
lr diiSIIIJIIollllll

tr-..

PS, PB. CALL 114·448·1815,
oftorS PM-448-1244.
1171 lulotl Rogal. Ooad oond.
Call 814-446·01177.
1880 FIR ..,..,.. convertible
XI·S. lapel., low mlugo. Eaool.

-·

73

Vans &amp; 4 W.q.

1986 Ford F1 60. 4 wheel dr ive,
PS, PB, AC , auto, fuel injection.
long bed. $7, 160.00. 304-458·
1031 .

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

AUDREY F CANADAY. REALTOR
ROBERT GMOON. REAlTOR, 446·6116
2~ lOcUST STRHr. GALLIPOliS. OHfO

SPACIO~S

~Ills

NICE BUILDING LOT '"
SO, ne;r Holzer Hospital. •
' City water and sewer_ Price $12,500.
:
TWO -BUILDING LOTS IN RODNEY II SD. j for $4,300,.
' the other $5,000.
•

•e

NEW LISTING!!! - 41.5 acres, located along Hamilton •
Rd., Ohio Twp. No structures. Rural water a1ailable. 500 •
ft_frontage. Buy now. $11,500.00.

•

•

PICK UP FREE
•
REAL ESTATE LISnllt Ill OUR OFFICE OR ••
•
tOUR 8AIIIC OR OROCERt

...... Call 114·4441· 7172, 448· •
18110 oftor I PM.
t9S4 Mo,......... 110·0.

304-875-5639 .

BEAUTIFUL BRICK 4 bedroom home overlookmg the beautiful Ohm R1ver. Lower River Rd. Galli- •
polis City Schools. UO acres. Buy now lor $110,000.

•
•
•

•
Mo.
PI, PI, et.OOO •
mlel. •1410. Canbe .... attha
O.INpoll• Oalty Tribune or for •
more lnfvrmwtlon cal1114-441- •
2342.
•

19n Ford Cus1om F100 pickup
s hort bed. after 4:00 pm,

446-3636cA~

••
••
••
••

1983 cs-y. C~atlon . Am radio,

1877 Camara, Y-8, auto. trent.,

(IJ· +W.. ~t-

1984 Chevy. pickup. PB. air.
crui1e, full tire, 6 cyl. auto.,
$7600. ·complete waterb ed.
t175. Call 614-448-6460.

aday Realty

e•
e
e•

e•

71 Auto's For Sala

REwARI) $

1978 Subaru Bret. Call 614-

••
••
••
••
••
•

AND we ~vt..~r c;... t.u:,~c:. it"-- ~

Jl{o,Odl ~-

446·0749.

7 rr. oh:l r.gl11ered H1reford
Bull. *1200. Call 814-992- •

Hay l!o Grain

-fuJo bu'1€Y.S

1980 Dodge % ton V· 8 stand ~
ard Many extras. duel aJ:Ie
trailer together or seperate.
$3600. Call 614-446-4482 . •

Pure-bred Guernuy heifer.
BrMding age. 814-378-1488.

304·171-&amp;711.

'I(Do~ ~

614-446-1812.

246·9425.

Reglaterect
and white, I of&gt;!•''" ~'~""J'!!!•I
lsPrivateTready, caUafter

;VI.. {¥.e. -K~~e,. ~I&lt;
c:l·-s+rtc.:{-. We. M..II'C. ~

b.Jqer .(i)r- . o... hoMe.. ilL +he.

1973 GMC. 6 cyl.. half ton.
flatbed New fenders, rocker
penels, -.tarter, 1 new cab
cornar. Sliding gla11 window.
Completely tuned up. $900 . Call

Feeder Pigs for tale. Cell 81 4-

Fair lambs and pigl , 304·8915·

~I

1987 Ford pickup. Runs good.
$460. Call814-446-2004.

Livestock

3430.

Lsi:.. ~-s

1973 Ford Box Bed pickup.
$800. Call ~14 - 246 - 9801 .

UHd 800 and 800 nriea Ford
trecto11. New Holland Round
bal.,., rak.., mowen, nii'W' and
used . See us for all your treotor
and hay tool naeda. 0 P• cent
fln . .clng for oneynr on all new
Ford tractors and New Holland
equipment. K..ter'a Service
Centltf, St. At. 87. Lion, W.Va.

7880.

Trucks for Sale

614·446-1996.

Deutz·AIIis new 386 4 row
no-till planter. pt11e unlit. dry
fertillz•r. lnscet attach,
*7,500.00. U .. d AllieChafm•• 2 row three point no
till planter, dry fertilizer, inMCt
milCh, uHd approx 100 acrea.
exc cond, 12 ,600.00. Kaefer'•
ServiceC•nter, St. Rt. 87, Leon.
W.Va. phone 304-891-3874.

84

e2200.

1982 Olds. Cutla•• Clera . Excel.
cond . t4300 or make offar Call

SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG
CALL AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY

•

HOUSE OF

WEEK

STATELY MANOR- SPACIOUS ENTRY, WINDING STAIRCASE. THIS HOME ONCE
HAD A BALLROOM. LOCATED IN DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS. PERFECT FOR A
LARGE FAMILY OR COMMERCIAL VENTURE. DON'T LET THIS SELL BEFORE YOU
SEE IT! $69,900.

I
1

Emil. oond. Serloua inqulriM

only. Call &amp;14·448·23114. 1-a

Real Estate General

·-

FANTASTIC RIVER VIEW - BRICK AND FRAME BI-LEVEL.
EAT-IN KITCHEN, ATTACHED 2 CAR GARAGE JUST BElOW
CITY. A BARGAIN AT $44,000.

HillY E.' Cltlancl, Jr.

.

Motorcycles

1980 Chevy Cuttom, Oelu"e
pi ckup w ith toppet'. Call 614446· 7496 after 6pm .

John Deere baler aaminer Monday April 1 1, 7 :00 PM, factory
reps on hand to linawer qunttont. Agracon. Inc. 539 Upper
Rivltf RoM, Gallipolis, Ohio.

TUPPERS PLAINS - II!
.tory trams home with 3
bedrooms, bath, I car gar·
age siHing on a nice double
lot. ONLY $17,900.00.

re)

1987 jionda 4 wheeler, 8 f1
nuck toper, 304-676· 61 06 at·
ter 6 :00pm.

-

379-2798.

992-2269

,liEW LISTING ~ Are you
looking for a home in the
country but close to town?
.You can move right mto this
3 bedroom, 2 story home
with garage, vinyl siding,
'new thermo windows &amp;
doors, rear dec kin&amp; Approx_
I acre lot Call for an appointment. $28,000.00.

Kawuakl 125 KX din bike. Lilia
new . 11500. C•ll 614· 367 -

614-949-2969.

BO Chevy 4 ..4 pickup. 3A ton.
66.000 acutual miles. Ex. cond.
Alto , Oliver tractor . Call 6 14~

1101

.

Honda Areo 80 Seooter. 2 far
tlOOO. Low mileage, includes
several additional ecCIIIC»'iH.

304-676-4038.

814-256-1103a.

83
, POMEROY. OH.

1980 Harley Davidson Roedater . Good cond. Dep..,dable.
f2300 . Cell 614-379-2248 af ter 6 PM .

2664.

304·e96·3874.

• E. Moln . . .Mil

Motorcycles

614-992 -2866.

1969 Chevy Camero. exc cond.
phone 304-882-2896.

f .rr111 Supplli:o
II LIVI!Silll:k

S.E. Ohio.
Building Mat.rlalt
Block, brick. .ewer plpaa, win. dowa, lintels, ltc. CIM!de Winter:~. Rio Grande, 0. Call 6\4-

1985 Dodge 0 -80. New Radial
tires, ehrom• rims, 37.000
miles. EJ:cel. shape. Call 814·

74

•

1982 Harlev Oa&gt;Jidson FLH .
dress, e:~~tra chrofne. new i
stereo 86600. Will
trade for van. Call
2428.

- Good I
floor plan, 3 bedroom home
on a level lot Part basement,
carport, front porch, central
air and much more. Must
see to appreciate_FIRM AT
f29,900.00.

Tts, Tou Read It RIJhtl Owners
pnce previously to promote a prGmpt sale, but
now have gone all out - a further $2,000 reduction! The house isan unbelievable value in 1iself.
An II yr. old 4 bedroom bi-level, living room, dinmg room, k1tchen w~h range and dishwasher, 2
car garage, above ground pool, c1ty schools_But, on top of that, owners will include the maror
household furmture, most ol which is less than 5 yrs. old. (2 water beds, queen sofa sleeper and
matching chair, refrigerator, table and chairs, poster !led, Quasar 25" console t.v., etc.). This 1sa
once in a life-time opportunity!! $44,900.
·
•406

1969 Chevy Van. Stick shift, 6
cyl.. oood tires. runs good .
Makes good fishing van Cell

1980 Datsun 821 0 hatch back.
very good cond, 6 speed,
81,000.00 p Small truck alumn
toppar . hke new 8200,00, 304·
773-6028 .

•h•

·'MIDDLEPORT

Real Estate General

1972 Olda. Good work car Call
evenings 61 4· 949-2940 .

Motorcycles

0173.

7462 .

:'

71 Auto's For Sale

1982 Cutl•~t Ciere ; 4 door, PB ,
PS , AC , AM -FM cauatte
t3600 . 614-99 2-2208 or 614986-3637.

1987 Chevy Conversion Van.
M•rk Ill. 9400 milu. fully
equipped, burgandy, white eJ:te·
riot , burgandy and grav interior .
116,600. M•yconsider nicelet e
modet car with low milaage ••
part trade , 614-986-4418. par

74

1978 Kawaaaki 400. 6700
miles. 8500. Call 614•446·

·BARGAIN
ON LV
JJO,OOO.OO. Owner has reduced price for aquick sale.
New roof recently put on, 2
liedrooms, large lot, all on I
floor. Good starter home!
Call Today!

U\llng room sat. tw10 bed, dey
btd, exercise bike, 10 spd. bike.

1980 TRANS AM
TURBO

1984 Mercury Lynl(, PS. PB. AC
Good cond. 12600 . Call 614446-2297.

Vans &amp; 4 W . O.

1979 Oatson, body good cond,
$360 .00. phone 304- 675 7894

Copper nose female Beegle pup.
8 -wka old. Had thou and
wormed. t35. &amp;14-992-8349 .

BUILDING SUPPLIES-SAVE 500fo

1977 BuiCk Skylark. $700 .
814 ·9f!5 -3637 Ot 614 -992-

2208.

Coli 614-446-8697.

-::-::-----:----:-:--:-:~:-----:-·'1 H·farm All Tr1ctor. 3 pt. hitch .
2 Pleg. &amp; vur old white female
Good rur drU. •&amp;&amp;0. 814-843E..Imo S~itt clop. Very :entle. 61 B&amp;.

FREE
ESTIMATES

73

74

3e44 ahar 7PM.

LOW,
LOW

71 Auto's For Sale

' 76 Ford Mustang il , 302 euto,
8300 .00 or beatoft8f. 304-678 -

55' Building Supplies

.-

1984 Nlt~8n Sentra, 2 dr.
littback. PS. PB. 6 spd . manuel.
AM-FM -Cau., dark tinted win·
dows. 61,000 mil•• · 13395 .

Sunday

1987 S10 Blazer. kladed,jl'aho8
package, 304 -676-6912 .

pm.

Local Slles
Representative
Donna Crisenbery
E.S.R .. Box 166·Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Ph. 614-256-6518

1985 Lincoln Town car. Call
81•· 246-6628 or 286, 1872.

W. Va.

1981 Bo.ineville Brougham
Diesel engine. Excellent condi·
t1on. t2600. Cell 614-992·
7467 or 614-742-3154.

2 Saara air conditioners, 24,t)oO
btu t27&amp;.00, 1 1.000 btu
•121.00. 3 pc living room aulte
t121.00. s..,. w1ter aottenar.
Cell 304-075·7740
1:00

D.C. Metal Sales, Inc.
Cannelburg, Ind. 47519
Specializing in Pole Build·
ings. Designed to meet
your needs. Any size Choide of 10 colors.
FREE ESTIMATE on post
bldgs. and package deals.
Save hundreds. even thou·
sands of dollars,

71 Auto's For Sale
•

1974 Plymouth Duater. 318.
V-8 engine. auto. trans., power
steering, AC . Runs good. t400.
Call 814-256·8490.

Wurlitzer double keybo•rd organ
614 · 992- 7841 .

Gen•el Elect:ric window 1ir
cond . ~.000 btu. like naw: 2
used room tlze · carpet W·
padding. Mayteg tuto w"her, 2
&amp;&amp;•g... drum k.rostne: Whirlpool 5.000 btu window air
conditioner. 304·875-3411.

U Haul trucks and ttlilet'l for .

71 Auto's For Sale

1987 Marcury Coug1r 6600
mlln. PS, PB,alr, cruise, loaded .
t14,700. Call814-441p1478 or
876·3788.

•

For sale: Firewood, sutoned
hardwood, HEAP Vendor No.
7047, pick-up or deliver. Anytime814-742 -2426 .

SPECIAL- &amp; qta. Valvoline
10w30. oil filter &amp; gre•e. alt
fluid levels checked. 110.99 &amp;
ta~~: . Starting April 1 1 thru 16.
Eri-a tor 4.1l4't.

FOR SALE

Saturday

For aala. Standing timber. 200
tr881. 13 to 33 incheJ, Ash.

Veal Calf
Barns
QUALITY

ESTATE AUCTION

LI~cW~ASE~N

614-867-S836.

For sale: Six burner-grill-two
o&gt;Jen atove. commercial deep
fryer. Remodeling. Mtke offer. ,.
Can be sHn at Melga County
Senior Center. 614-992·2161 .

FURNITURE

todayl Factory: 1 (800)4230163, anytime.

Located at 104 Kineon Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio
The following items will be sold at Public Auction to
settle the Estate of Gladys Sowers. Gallia Co. Probate Case No. 18799:
..
Zenith TV, LR couch, stereo, antique pie safe w/boat rack
ends, walnut drop-leaf table, twm spool beds, Anderson
treadle sew1ng machine, Hepple white chest, Jenny Lind
bed, inlaid dressing ta ble, cedar hope chest, wicker back
rocke!, Sheraton chest, quilts, ant1que chairs, unusual light,
one large lot olladies jewelry, one lot of col lector's cains,
antique stool, wooden ironing boards, w1ndow air conditioner, coffee and end tables, lamps, pots and pans, automatic washer &amp; dryer, gas range, GE refrigerator, collector's
glasswa re &amp; misc. items_
Terms: Cash
NANCY P. SOWERS, EXECUTRIX

8 ft . white fibaralall pick-up
topper with sliding front g\aas.
ln tefior light, luggage rack .

Ohio-Point Pleasant,
Instruments

PICKENS

MOVING &amp; GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
Big Dakota farm home 3 BR ., 2
HOUSEHOLD, COLLECTORS, ANTIQUES &amp; MISC.
ba . 116,996 &amp; up. Models open.
Call 614·888-7311 .
,Couch &amp; chair. grinders, milk cans, lantern, fans, saws, rope,
crosscut saw, baskets, sewmg table, posthole digger, step
O.lu:~~e Sea King intl.table beet.
ladder, wheelbarrow, lamps, chiC ken feeder, hand tools,
Compound and racurve bows
Flahing gear. Call 814-446dishes, kerosene lamp, galv_buckets, Speed Queen wnnger
9636.
washer, color TV, 2 lull siZe beds, dresser w1th m1rror, Sideby-side refrigerator, &amp; much, much mor~.
RCA floor model stereo, 886 . 3
piece sofa. $76. Newbebyitems
Eats
Cash
Positive I. D.
· clothlng,etc Cell 614-246MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER
9101 .
614-245-5152
"AUCTION EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00P.M.
HALF PRICE! Floah;ng ••ow
signa, 12991 Lighted. nonLie.
and
Bonde4
in
Ohio
onaw,latter1l
02891 See
Unllghlod.
.__ _ _ _ _ _,.._ _ _...;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,j ·Fr•
locally.02491
Call

Saturday, April 16, 1988, 10:00 A.M.

t Plane Ticket to Ft. Myers. Fla .•
April 22 - May 2. Fo r more
information ca ll61 4 -388-9742.

April10, .1988

54 Misc . Merchanclise

Valley Furniture
New end used furniture and
applicances. Call 814 -446 7672. Hourt 9 -6.

Callahen 't Used Tire Shop. Over
1,000 tires, sir.es 1 2. 13. 1 4. 1.5.
16, 16.6 . 8 miles out-At. 218.

.....
L

Sofas and t:hairt priced from
U9S 1o t99&amp; . Tables 160 and
up to 1126 Hide -a-b&amp;ds 8390
to t695 . Reclin&amp;fs ,226 to
1376. Lamps 828 to 1126.
Dinettes 1109 end up to $496.
Wood table vv-8 chalrt $286 (O
$796. Desk t100 up to e376.
Hutches $400 and up . Bunk
beds complete w-mattresses
1296 and up to 1395. Be by bed•
t1 10 Mattr ..... or box s prings
full or twin tea. firm 178, and
S88. QuiJen sets 1226, King
tl&amp;O. 4 drawer chest 169 . Gun
cablnMI 6 gun. Be by mattresses
136 &amp; 146 . Bed tram• t20,
UO &amp; King frame 160. Good
telaction of bedroom suites,
metal cabinets. heedboerds 830
and up to 166 .

54 Misc. Merchandise

•

Call 614-446-1423.

lAYNE'SFURNITURE

2626.

2290.

Homes for Rent

Happy Ada

r

&amp;

Olive St .. Gallipoll1.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- t399 .
Uving room suites- 11 99·t699.
Bunk beds wtth bedding- 1199.
Full size mattraas &amp; foundation
starting· $99 . R ecllners
rtarting- 899.
USED - Beda, dressert, bedroom
suites. $199-$299 . Desks,
wringer Wllher, 1 complete line
of used furniture.
NEW- Western boots- 130.
Workbootl 118 &amp; up . (Steel &amp;
soft toe). Cal\614-446-3159 .

992-2094.

Nicely furnished small houae.
Adults only. Ref. required. No
pets. Ca ll 81•-448-0338.

5

51 Household Goods

Brooktlde Apartments: Located
off Bulavllle Ad .· 1 BR . spacioua
epanments with modern kitchen
and wnher·drver hookups. cable television available. Call
61.-446-1932

1 bedroom apanmenu. Furnit hed and unfurnished 1200 ·
8226. per month . Utilitiet furpished. C•ll814-992 -6724.

41

Mcrchamli se

E.O.H.

Real Estate
Wanted

Renlals

J

Space for small trallera. All
hook-upa. Ceble. Also efficiency
rooml, air and cable. Mason,

2 bedroom apartment on lincoln
Hill. Pomeroy. Call 014 -9926639 or 614-992 -3489

Wanta~ to lease, newer 3 BR
home with 2 plus acrea . Write. 1
Aspen Place. Huntington, WVa.
25706 .

--'---J

7479.

LOTS, one acre. level wooded.
c1ty water. Jericho Road, owner
finan ci ng. good term&amp;, 304372-8405 or 372 -2578,

36

I

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk,
Route 33, Nonh of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Ca ll 614-992·

Apartment
lor Rent

61~448 - 8619

.--......

Mobile home lot. 80 ft. or
smaller. 920 4th, Gallipolis
$75-water paid. Call 446-4416
after 7 PM .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

lh acre lot in Patriot. Cou nty
wa1er available. Reduced to
62500. Call614 -379 -2441 .

-- I

Furnished
room-91
9 Second·
( '"_ _.:..,_...;:::::;:::~~;;;;;~~~~::-:'--,
A&gt;Je
.. Gallipolis.
t126
• mo. II

In Eureka-2 nice &amp;. clean 2 BR.
mobile homes. t200 &amp; $226 per
mo. Oep required . No pets.
Adults only. Call 614 -246-

266~ .

J

&amp; Auction

12.1160 1976-Concorde with ac.
Renl or Sell. 304-675-3442.

Vacant lot on Pine St. In
Gallipolis. No Mobile Homes
perm rtted $4,000 . Call 614594-3833 .after 6 PM ,

1\'

45 Furnished Rooms

2 bedroom furn ished or unfurnrshed, deposit and references
required , 304-882 -2649.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

r1nges . S kag gs Appliances.
Upper 1 Rivet" Rd; beside Stone
Crett Motel. 814-446·7398.

Q. I

Two -four bedroom apanments
rn Pomeroy. Deposit required .
Call 614-992-6723 after 6 :00.

For rent- Home m cou ntry . Call

Two and three bedroom mobile
homes, lA mile out Sand Hill
Road. 304-676-3834.

1 18 acres ,_ 2 barns. outbuilding.
pond. good road frontage .
owner will finance, Somrville
Realty, 304-675- 3030 or 676·
3431

Wuhan , dryert. retrig.-ators,

Apt. for rent. 6 room• and b1th.
3rd floor. Middleport. Mustheve
reference. Call 614-992-6026 .

1615

1969 Mobile home. 12x60, two
bedrooms. 1 Y1 baths, extras.
$4,200.00 . Phone 304-5762 535 Of 576-2919 .

5 mllel from Gallipolis. 73 acres
with modern houae and barn,
614-443 -9517 or 814-4469436 ,
(J

-

GOOD USED ·APPLIANCES

992-6063.

2 BR . house-Chillicothe Ad
t150 a mo. Ref . &amp; dep . required.
Call 614-446-4038 or 446-

44

,.--

County Appl iance, Inc. Oood
uatKI appliances end TV se11.
Open SAM to &amp;PM Mon thru
Sat. 614-448-1899, 827 3rd.
Ave. Galllpolit. OH .

Nice 1 bedroom apt. t160
month Deposit required 614·

9686.

Mobile Homes for Rent. Call
814-446-06 27.
•

9181.

54 Misc . Merchandise

LAFF-A-DAY

1 bedroom furni1hed effeciencv
apt. _1 upstairs apt. with 2
bedrOoms. Kitchen furnith&amp;d . E.
Main. Pomeroy . 614 -992 -6215
or 614 -992-3 623.

House tor rent/ sale-Secluded

1967

1978 Bayview 14t~~70 trailer ha s
7J:22 eJ:pando, 3 bedrooms, 1 Va
baths, 304-773-6446 or 773-

kitchen.

3 BR . house for rent-218 Ca ll

6863.

1976 Wmdsor mobile home,
14x70, 3 bedrooma, central air,
diahwaSher, woodburner, un·
derpenning, 812, 000.00. 304676-5067.

large

utility roQm . 646 Second 1286

1974 " cameron 12J:56 Total
electric, 2 BR . Blocks. $3300.
Cell 614-256-6031 .
Buddy Mobile Home.
12:~~60 . Very good condition,
reasonabi!B. Call6 14-742-2037

room~

Call 614 -446 -9686.

c~.-.~h~fo•_y_o_u_
o_
uo~~
~h~
o~
m e-~N~o;

10, 1988

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

•

PRICE RlDUCTIOIII
Enrvone wants 1 quality buiH home in an excellent ·
. that is conveniently located .
Here's your chance! 4 larp bedrooms, large llvina room, beautiful kitchen and d1mng (pet1o
doors), 2 lull baths, 11rfv family room, full basement, 2 car :;raa8. If you want an extra lot, we
can pu1 that with it c·y water and schools, plus commun sewers.
NUS

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE - 446-3644
•

OPEN SUNDAY -

1100 • 4:30

IN GALLIPOLIS
5.78 ACRES
$72,000
OWN A HOME! PERFECT FOR A YOUNG FAMILL .3 BEDROOMS ... JAMILY ROOM WITH STONE FIREPLACE....
SCREENED BACK PORCH .... CONCRETE PATIO·P~.. --CONVENIENTLY LOI;ATED .... CITY SCHOOLS.... $55,0
'
LEGRANDE BLVD .... IMMACULATE 3 BEDROOM... .! ~ BATH
RANCH ... .FAMILY ROOM ...NICE FENCED BACKYARD ....
NEWLY PAINTED EXTERIOR. ... WITHIN YOUR BUDGET AT
$44,000.

OWNER IS RELOCATING AND NEEDS AN OFFER ON THIS 3
BEDROOM RANCH ....IARGE LIVING ROOM ...HT-IN
KITCHEN IS FULLY EQUIPPED ... .FAMILY ROOM WITH STONE
FIREPLACL..IT WILL SOON BE TIME TO OPEN THE BEAUT!·
FUL 16x32 IN GROUND POOL..CENT. ~IR COND.... 2 CAR
GARAGE, SPRING VALLEY AREL.ASKING $69,500.

I

.-

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

Times-Sentinel

74 Motorcycles

75'

Boats &amp;lld
Motors for Sale

10.

76 · Auto Parts
8t Accessories

76

Chevy. car pan• for ule. We
haulewl\f junk Clll'l. Will worll:on
cars. Celll14 - 441~7052 .

4 Chr?m• spoke wheels. 8 in. x
11.6 m. lr~nd new . t176 . Call
114-388-9780:

April 10, 1988

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

Campers

1978 Kawa,.k i 900&gt; 1 time
own~ . t 1. 000.00 or best off er,
deyt c all 304-676-2364 wen·
lnga .e?&amp; -2787.

1987 Honda CR600. ax e: c:ond,
call tor price 304-676-1780 .
1987 Honda Fo.u rtraK 250 A.

19 87 boat. take over payments

nothing dowfl, V-6 , 19 ft. 175
hp, e xtras. us ed 5 4 ho~n:l
304-676-2364 .
.

pm except on

.•

15 HP Saara outboard motor or
trade f or 2 5H P, 304· 773-629 6

76

cu~drb 9{. Q/mi/£'

LY CA ~1 B

I' I I I' I

·Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

Boats and
Motors for Sale

28 ft . O.yliner cru iser. 1986
wide beam. all 81ectronic. galley ,
canvu, etc. 360 V-8 _eng .,
aleeps 8. .Very low hours .
Sa7. 500. Call304-127·6890.

1985 19 ' Bayllner. 125 tiP
out~ard Power Trim and FM AM·C.., radio . Sleeps 4. Con·
vertlbla and camper top w/ 1985
Escort trailer. Owner must s ell .
C1ll 614-446-4072.

Olds .. 8uick. Ftontiac. Ch 8\l'f,
Chevy , tr~ c k , Ford , Chrysler·

transm i11lons. Call 614-4460966.

RESIOENfiAL ·

I I I I ·1

tranan'httlons (used) are internally inspected&amp; carrv 3000 m i.
or 30 day warranty (whlcl'te\ler
occur • firat) . W e buy junk

I

BUDG ET TRANSMISSIONS Uud S. rebuilt. all typ ~l tiuar~t.n·
teed 30 days minimum. Prlcea$99 &amp; up . Rebuilt torque•· ..
low at $39 . 350 c:onvet"sion kit1
to fit ~ - 10 ' s, C-10'1, metric &amp;
overdrive. Hard parts tor transmission &amp; transm J.. ion kits. Call
1-304 · 4230 or 1 -814-379 2220.
..

I

LECARP

I

1·

II

7

1

82

Plumbing

B5

8t Heating

General Hauling

304-875-6370 .
Paul Rupe. Jr. Wal &amp;r Service
Pools. cisterns, wellS. Clll61 4 44 6·3171.

Wl!tten on ' ' Wat er fiauling ,
reasonable rat es. imm edi ate
2.000 gallon delivery, cisterns,
poolt , well. etc . call 304-576-

2919.

87

tee. local reference• furnished.
Free estlm.tea. Call collect
1 · 61•· 237-0488, day or night.
A ogarslasement
W1terprootlng.

Upho lstery

.
61.·3&amp;7-0121 .

Tr.. a stump rltlnOVII , new
lawM, m~o~tch, stone, shade
lrMI, shurb•, AuiiM. Don'•
t..ndiCIP•· 814·448-964&amp;.

•

lrlck·llock Work· Foundations.

brick veneer, tkeplaces, repairt.

Real Estate General

rfttoretlons &amp; small jobs. Free
Mtlmates. 26 ye•r• a11.perience.

Cal/114·245·9652.

(

I
!

.&gt;tl:lOM A11V3H

S! Ae1d 1841 PU!j ueJPII\10 ~U!\11 t
·5U!WJ91 SnotJBS WOJj jS!IeJ 8 9J9M
I! 11 sa 1noqe pe~tBI U&amp;IIO Sf ABid

&gt;1/:iOM J.11'13!J
OUO!JfJ
a&gt;IOAN/
730/J'Id

_!:J}'O-J:',_I¥'~1\~IJ!~S~O~l;;..:.Sll;;i~M~S~N~'If,_...._.....l

. Game rm,

24&amp;4.

514 Second Avenue
lr .-\:\11\Y HtAf:K BURN

Bro!l-•·.r

Real Estate General

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
(614) 446--0008

ltZ46. NEW LISTIJIG: Ylry nice all brick home on lulaville Rd. oftus 3
bedrooms, 1Vt ~ths. and 1 clwminc coulrtfJ kitchen with lots oft~binets .
Totlltlectrlc w•th helt pump 1ncl1 wood burner in basement. 24~30 build·
In! can_be used as prea• or WOI'k!.hop. Owner lias recently reduced this lo-

COUNTRY
- Approx. I 05
acres w1th newer contemporary stone and cedar
home. Spacrous rooms m-ground pool, nice barn.
Rutland area. Call for details.
·
#2574
A LlnLE OVER 5 ACRES with nice 3 bedroom
home. 2 car detached garage. Interior is extra
nrce. Must see to appreciate. In Syracuse. Sells for
$39,900.
•
PRICE REDUCED - 2 bedroom, large attic, living
room has WBFP, basement with drive·in garage.
Nice carpet. $7,900.

GREEN TOWNSHIP - J38.000 - Ranch
style home offers 3 BRs, bath, kitchen, LR,
carpet, 1 car attached garage, close to Green
elementary.

THI.S COULD BE THE ONE FOR YOU! Ranch style home and approx. half an acre. 3
BRs, LR, kitchen:· FR, bath, fireplace, WB
stove, 2 car attached garage 16x32 pool
chain link fence.
'
'
$21.000- 3,5 acres, m/1, 2 story frame, 3
bedrooms, lrvmg rm., kitchen dining rm.
storm windows and doors, basement. Very

LOCATION! Seneca Drive! - Kids
school. 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, A-1 conclitior~_
CLOSE TO ·
eotra nice
i
I
bas.ement, 3 bedrooms, I 17 baths, i room ,
d1nmg room, 2 car garage. low maintenance home
srtling on approx. I acre.
#2556 .

MORE THAN YOU'D EXPECT. Very pleasant and
spotless. 3 bed~oom s, I bath lrame and brick
ranch. ~ngh,l k1tchen and formal dining area,
large 12 x26 family ro~m and attached garage.
Located mmutes from Sliver Bridge shopping for
convenience. Take a peep and you'll be
1m pressed.
•
#2542
WORDS WON1 DO IT 1bn this one. You'll have lo
see thiS home yourself to believe and appreciate
all the value that goes with itThis 2 story home
has features to compliment a lifestyle of gracious
l1vmg. 3 spac10us bedrooms, formal dining 2\o\
baths, family room with fireplace, attached 2~ car
.
lo boat ramp.
garage. landscaped lawn. Call today! 12565
nrce
starter
home
or
retirement home. Just the
a
.
LIKE NEW - Contemporary home. 3 or
trme
of
year
for
this
buy.
• 2552
CONTEMPORARY
EXTRAORDINAIRI
The
bedrooms, 2 full baths, office, large entertaining
room for the family or executive. Well equipped decor on thrs house has to have been done by a TAKE THE TIM_E TO VIEW this low maintenance
ranch. Featurrng great·room w"h lireplace,
kitchen and formal dimng area. Wrap·around profeslronal! Beautrlul stone and cedar conteni·
equrpped krtchen, formal dining room 3
deck facing beautiful valley. Multi·level system P?rary. Sunken Irving room, formal dining room,
3
~
baths.
fam~y
and
rec.
room
wilh
wet
bar.
Hot
bedrooms,
2 lull baths, deck. 2 car ga;age.
(coal, wood•. or propane gas). 3 car garage and
tub off master bedroom. 2 beautiful stone
workshop w1th approx. 3 acres of land.
$52,500.
.
112547
frreplace s, 2 car unattached garage. You must
WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE TO SCHOOLS is .a
"OUTSTANDING" - Approx. 114
come and let us show you all the amenities in this
s~ac10us 1,792 sq. It 3 bedroom, 2 baths home
$46,000. Older I \\ story remodeled home. 4 to 5 one!
.
#2549
w"h a lamlly room, living room, lormal dining and
bedrOOfl!S. Large llarn plu s sheds and other NEW LISTING!
GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE!
fireplace, heat pump/central air. Situated on over
outburldmgs. 2. pond s, hayfields, recently THIS Tl ME YOU CAN AFFORD IT! _ You will
an acre. Call lor more information.
12551
reseeded. Take t1me to view this fa rm today!
know the care_II has had as soon as you open the
FORCED SALE - Approx. 39 acres. 3 bedrooms,
#2557 d?or 3 lledroom ranch, bath living room eal·in
2 balh lrame bi·level, unattached garage. Owner
THAT WONDERFUL FARM LIFE IS HERE! In this krtchen, ut_
ifily, ap~rox . \-\ ~ere lawn. Storage
needs quick sale. Priced at $52,900.
*25ll
128 acr~ farm with a 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick building. Wrthrn 4 mrles of city. SR 218 Priced in
ranch wrth full basement. I 40x50 and a 36x84
.
. H2578
UNIQUE RUSTIC home and ~ererrge thai you
barn, extra income 2 bedroom rental apartment the $40s.
thought wuld never be lor sale! Cedar and stone
NEW
LISTING!
PROBLEM
SOLVER
Has
your
over milkhouse, 2 pond s and large tobacco base
exterior
of quality wood we seldom see in homes.4
and more.
#2552 searc\ for the right home been hopeless? You
bedrooms,
3 baths, great·room w"h open
don't want to soend lots ol fixin~? What aoleasant
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - 3 bedroom ranch surpnse
lireplace, formal dining and living rooms. The
1n
store
for
_
you.
Th~ 2 bedroom ranch has
spa_crous kitchen, living room, bath, formal dining:
features in this home are so many and unique we
ut111ty. Attached garage with elec. opener. Fenced had tender loving care! Decorated nicely, chain
suggest you call our office.
• 12561
back lawn, in·town location. Price reduced to hnk fence surrounds back lawn. Priced at
$29,500.
.
FAIRFIELD ACRES Is your piiCt lo bt - Good
$43 •000·
#2534
TAKE
ONE
LOOK!
Just
one
little
peep
at
this
3
location off Fairland·Centenary Road in Green
$43,000.00 - Like new 3 bedroom situated on ·
bedroom
ranch
and
you'll
be
sold.
2
baths,
family
School District. Attractive 3 bedroom brick and
SR 160. Owner has moved and wants to sell'! Call
room, lrvmg room, eat·in k"chen, 2 car garage, alum. ranch. Large family room with liieplace.
today a ~d make appointmenno see this one.
basement Approx. I acre, storage building, vinyl
woodburnar, plus 2 nice lots II end ol
#2548
srdmg. Pr1ced $49,900.
development lor added privacy. The best part is
I y, STORY FRAME HOME with 3 bedrooms living
the price. $42,500. Call today.
t2494 .
room, bath , dining room. Hardwood 'ttoors
YOU'RE
GONNA
LOVE
THIS
HOUSElocated in Porter. Call for ,more i~formation .
typrcal ranch. Owner has. done extensive FARM LISTIII8 - 160 acres. Private location.
.
#2506 your
renovation. Custom built oak cabinets w"h work Modern ho~se. 6 rms., I II baths. Private water
LOVELY 2 BEDROOM HOME WITH SPACIOUS
rsfand . Great room, free standing fireplace 3 system, spring develomenl TobiCCO blse, barn
LIVING ROOM. dining a'ea and kitchen. Mud
bedrooms, bath, all situated on approx. 3 ac;es. tie house, many springs lor liveslock water:
room to the covered patio. 'A basement I car
pasture, trllable land and ~oodl/11. Joins Wayne
Be the first to see this new listing.
attached garage, lighted closets front porch 1ac
National Forest. Good hunting and recreatron.
lawn. Located in Vinton.
'
. '
·
Southwestern sc~ools. Priced low $60s.
#2505
*2484

acr/la~~

mn

3 BEDROOM RANCH NEAR HMC- Other
features include eat-in kitchen, LR, bath,
laundry, attached garage, utility building,
n1ce flat yard . Call for an appointment. ·
PRICE REDUCED TO $39,900! - GREAT
BEGINNER HOME - This home offers a
large lR w1th fireplace, kitchen dining area
3 BRs, bath, full llasement, 1' car garage'
deck, fenced yard ju st minutes totown on Rt:
141. Call for an appointment. .

30 Becomes aware

REALTOR®

446-66·10

mce. ·

29.8 ACRES MI L VACANT LAND - Fronts
on Rt. 160. Build or put amobile home here
$16,900.
.

COMMERCIAL SITE FOR SALE- Located at
2206 Eastern Ave. All ulilities available.

BEAUTIFUL OHIO RiVERVIEW - 40 acres
more or less. Home sites, city school s. '

GREEN TWP. - 2.5 acres, m/1, very nice AFFORDABLY PRICED AT JUST $29.900home offers 5 BRs, 2 baths, k"chen, dining • Close to c1ty on Rt. 141 this home offers
rm., LR, carpet and hardwood, wood burning, kitchen, LR. family room. dining room and
lull basement. large un attached block
new furnace. Call for an appointment.
garage. Call for an appointment.
EXCELLENT $TARTER HOME - $39,900 TEN ACRES IN THE COUNTRY- 3 bedroom
Ranch style home just 5 minutes from town
home with 2 baths, kitchen, range and'
offers 2 BRs, bath, k"chen with stove and
side·bv·side refrig., LR, carpet and hard· refng., LR, carpet, woodburning stove
wood, carport and covered patio. Trailer pad several farm buildings. Call for an appt. '
on lot next lo house. City school district Call
25 ACRES MIL ON STATE RT. 160 - Old
today.
barn and concrete block garage on property.
CHAROLAIS HILLS - 3.24 acres more or Rural water ava1lable. Call today.
less. Owner financing available. $12,000!
EDGEMONT DRIVE - Very nice Cape Cod
style home offers 3 BRs, equipped kitchen,
OFFERS EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT
drnrng rm., LR, family rrfl. foyer laundry rm
-:- Close to school store and church. Very
2
baths, fireplace, gas heat, cent. air:
nrce home wrth 4 BRs, LR, kitchen, 2 baths,
unattached garage, city schools.
carpet, heat p~mp/cent. air, attached
garage, pool. Can lor an appointment today
THIS HOME OFFERS A VIEW OF THE OHIO
to view this home. ·
RIVER THAT JUST DOESN'T QUIT!!! - The
PRICE REDUCED BY $5,00011 ASKING front of th1s home faces lhe river and the
$54,900 - This home is situated in a very owners have used glass to "s full advantage.
nice neighborhood at the edge of town and Beautiful hvmg room with mirrored wall
reflecting the riv.er view, beamed ceilings,
offers approx. 2,000
4 BRs, I II baths
kitchen, din.ette, LR, FR, woodburner, gas stone lrreplace, dinette, eQUipped kitchen 3
heat. cent. a1r. aHached garage. City schools. or 4 bedroom s, family room, rec. room.' 3
baths •.2 car garage, central air.
Mak~ us an offer.

.

-•ott

11210. lEW LISTING:
IODUI.AR HOII on
looodlllon •
btdrms., 2 baths, fire_pl1ce 1nd prdtn tull . 1977 modtl 11ollile homt oft
ptivate lot r•ftts for UOO.OO. Remo1t uttllite syster1. All this In 1 secluded settina oldy 10 min. from town tor only 142,500.00.
VACANT LAND: l3acriS 111 rudy fo11 HW ~m1. 110 ft . tUtd wtll, toncrete eistern.ureator septic: system and flnithtd driVe. Quiet country loCitiOfl. Morpn Twp. $19,700.00.

sq."··

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - 9.5
acres m/1. Morgan Twp. Frontage on Rt. 160.
Cal1 for detarls.

69 ACRES VACANT LAND Tow.nship $23,000

COMMERCIAL BUILDING -PERRY
:- NEAR CORA - 6000 sq. ft. steel 1
OFFERS EVEYTHING YOU COULD WANT Close to school, store and church. Very nice ideal for anyone in trucking. drilling
home with 4 BRs, LR, kitchen, 2 baths, m1n1ng busrness. Owner may consider
carpet, heat pump/cent. air, attached leaSing . or fmancing. Call for
prage, pool. Call lor an appointment today to mlormatron.
vrew thrs nome.
. ·

."

.

.
'

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GUYAII TOWIISHIP - 108 acres m/1
located SCIII!h of Mercerville. 20A. tillable,
balance woods, tobacco base. Owner will
help finance.

.,

'-

'

PL.EIITY OF ROO II FOR EVERYONE- Lariat
O~v.e, bnck ranch, 3/ 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
equ!pped krtche~ . den. family room, LR,
sewrng room, dmmg, laundry, 2 fireplaces,
gas heat, cent. ~" · attached garage plus
carport, plltro, prrvacy fence, city schools.
Make an appomtment today.
.

•

I,

.'

"·

IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR AHOME that is very we·ll Ia·
ken care of and has it all look at this one. Features for·
mal living room w/fireplace. Complete kitchen w/applrances, lormal drmng, washer &amp; dryer included.
Large desk area lor summer cookouts or to sun your·
seH. I acre. City schools. Would be excellent starter
home.

REAL ESTAT!

BROKER
388-fl11i
REALTOR 378-2184
REALTOR' 441-0418
REALTOR 441-2230
REALTOR 441-8811
REALTOR 441-2707
REALTOR 742-3171

'

!ili#i ~~~~;~~-~~.--&gt;"".. ', -«.~;;,.. -.,· ·'.·='·,;, .~~;- ·fl

482 2ND AVE. REAR

446-0008
'

or
32 Therelora
33 Marry
35 A long braid
37 Ancient Persians
39 Movable airfoil
40 Brim
41 Spanish article
43 Retain
45 Clans
47 Latin conjunction
48 Manulactured
49 Countenances
52 Journey by ship
· 54 Leaked throUgh
56 Partners
57 Weaver/Raiser
film
59 Entreaty
61 Approach
62 Wilking stick
83 Yoongsters
64 Chromium
symbol
66 "L.A. -"
67 Arid
68 Intertwine
69 As far as
71 Consumed
72 Long, loose gown
14 Evaluates
78 Evergreen tree
77Cover
78 French article
79 Mock
8 t Strong desire:
colloq.
82 Region
83 Piece lor one
84 Bind
85 Rubber tree
87 Animation
89 Actor Phoenix
80 WOrld- or

ONE YEAR OLD RANCH STYLE HOME offers
3 BRs, I 17 bath s, kitchen w/refng. ran ge
DW, formal di,ning, lR, carpet, heai pump:
cent. a11, utility bldg., n~ce neighborhood.
Call today for an appointment.

.•

SOUTHEIN HILLS I.E., INC.

,

t Fragments
7 Narrow openings
12 -de ballet
17 Vehicle
21 Surgical sew
22 "FullJacket"
23 Clean by brushing
24 River In Germany
25 Faroa Islands
whirlwind ·
26 Allowance lor
waste
28 Frozen

Thi~~~

JUDY DEWITT
J. Merrill Carter
Becky Lene
Phylll1 Lovedey
Petrick Cochran
Sonny Oame1
Cheryl Lemley

y home to $54,600.00. Amust to sHI

ACROSS

YOU'LL WANT THIS ONE FOR YOURSELF!Lovely home just. minutes from town on

EDGE OF TOWN - 3bedroom house, 2 car garage
wrth effrc1ency apartment. Nice neighborhood
$32,000.
.
.2480.

RON'$ Television Service .
HouM ellis on RCA. Oua21r,
GE . Spec:laling in Zenith . Call
30•·&amp;78-2398 or 814-446-

REALTY

~~:~

SJ.:rl·IYV!J::JS

L';'·':_

with 1mple
COIIfona-

BLACKBURN

-~ ~:G::JNif7 .

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY

•

BASEMENT

Starks Tree and L..wn Servh:e,
lawn c:sre, landscaping. t tump
remonl. 304- 676 -284 2 o(
676-2903.

~ e., den ti al or commarcial w i r~
''!U· New service or repairs.
Licen..d elect rici an . E11imate
fr N . Ridenour Ellitctricet 3 0487 5•178 6.

P1inting, roofing, remodeling,
trM trimming. l)uUdings lorn
down. gen8fel hauling. Cell

Whe.n.you're selling or buying,
.it f)ays to work with Number 1

•

.

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarsn-

VIRGINIA SMITH. BROKER . 388·BBZ 6
RUTH GOODY, REALTOR , 379-2428
DIAN CAl LAHAN , REALTOR , 266-6261
BRENDA WRIGHT, REALTOR, 388-828 4
LEESA CLARK. REALTOR. 446· 3038
·-"'~··, . All~,!; ~AV , REALTOR , 388-8109

.vt

)

)

446-6806

TEL N A e

Real Estate General

•

iNVE~T;~~;~;·;~~:L . F~RMS

PROFESSIONAL S~RVICE MAKES.THE DIFFERENCE

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
446-3644
OPEN SUNDAY - 1:00 ~.M. - 4:00 P.M.

HOUSE, TENNfS.'COURT and 25 ACRES - Sl73 000
Will consider house, court and 5 acres for $155:ooo
Call for Appointment - 614-446-3386
Serious Buyers Only Please

. . bedrooms, spaciou s
dming room eat·in kitchen
porches. base ment barn
Private locat1on . Situated ai
today!
#2583

Home
lmprovemen~s

Rotary or cable tool drill ing .
Mott wells completed • • m•day .
Pump saltt and service. 304896-3802

R &amp; R. Waurn Servle6. Home
cisters, we'lls, pools filled . For·
marly James Boys Weters.Csll

.
READY FOR A BIG SURPRISE?
.
Thrs 2 yr. old home is about twice as big as it looks. 31arge bedroom s, largedining ar.J kitchen
area, 2 full baths. l.470 SQ. ft. plus a full basement. Ills nicely decorated and caroeled. On\-\ lot
1
m Rro Grande. $45,900. Owner transferred to Columbus. Immediate occupan cy
·
.
#108

FOR SALE BY OWNERS: Large spli t-level an d ten nis
court.
4-5 BEDROOMS: 3 baths, formal li ving and dining
rooms, gourmet kitche n, fam,ify room, game room,
stud ~.. mud / laundry room, 1ntl oor storage room wil h
additiOnal laundry facilities. 2 car garage, 2 firep laces ,
ce1lrn g fan s. wooden deck, full length of hou se. Many
extras.
BREATHTAKING VIEW of Gallipolis and Ohio River fu ll
length wmdpws for maximum vieW. Seclud ed for tolal
pnvacy. Crty school district. Located I ~ miles from
downlown Galhpol1s. On ly 8 miles from Loc ks and
Dam.
EXCELLENT home and grounds for lamily and / or en·
terfa1n1ng. Must see to appFeciate quality.
.

NEW LISTING:
and )OU can
storY, brick
hvmg room,
balh, 2 enclosed
garage. 17 acres.
surfaced road. Call

Serv ices

~d~Jkk

RA ~J E V E

75

9Vt ft. tlide·in truck camper.
Good cond ition . 1800. Csll

J

814-992-2288 atter 15 :00 p;m.

a:.:c cond, 304-676-3268 call

after 4 :00
weekends.

Real Estate General

1986 24 h . Ro ckwood pop-up
c amper. Uted 5 &lt;» t\ ti m n . Like
brand new . 83500. Call 614·
2 45-6616.

-.

169 Cubic meter
170 Woody plants
171 Bear

baseball '
92 Military lite
94 Orient
95 Provides, cooks,

DOWN

serves food

96 Quaver
97 Ripen
99 Tavern brew
100 Above
tOt Gunnery: abbr.
102 Detest
103 Guido's high note
105 "-In the
Darkness"
(TV movie)
107 Thulium symbol
109 Fish eggs
110 Distance measure
111 Decree
113 Covers
114 Haggard heroine
115 Reverse: abbr.
116 Belonging to me
117 Former boxer
118 Scottish cap
120 The two or us
12,. Barracuda
122 Clasaffy
123 Fish sauce
124 Highlander
126 Retreat
128 Steeple
130 Demands
authoritatively
132 Sound a horn
134 Tardier
135 "Spenser: For
"
138 Exists
t37 Pigpens
139 Trace
141 " Let It -"
t 42 Metric measure
t 43 Fairy tale opener
t 45 Shoe bottoms
147 Biblical weed
t 49 Sodium chloride
152 Sun god
153 Repeat
performance

155 At no time
157 Marjorie or Jack
159 FuHIII
t 60 Short jacket
162 "The Ram"
164 Goddeas or
growing
vegetation
188 Crowns
t 68 Indian weights

1 Pack away
2 Algonquian
Indian
3 Again: prolix
4 Suitable
5 Separate
6 Move about
lurtlvely
7 Sam8rturn

\

symbOl
8 Journey stage
9 Newspaper
paragraph
10 Stories
t 1 Skids
12 Cesium symbOl
13 Night bird
14 Shoal
15 Tolled
16 European herring
t7 Type of lettuce
18 Paid notice
19 Dwell
20 Figures of speech
27 "Family - " .
29 Reliance
a1 M, -, o, - ,a
34 Determine
36 Jump
38 Guides
40 Tardy
42 Majors and
Remick
44 Peile.l
46 Red duet
48 Horse's neck hair
49 "- Attraction "
50 Winged
51 Tin symbol
53 TV producer
Norman
55 Teutonic deity
56 Heavy hammer
58 Tallies
60 Off
62 Scene of first
miracle
65 Baseball stat.
68 Hold on property
69 Masonic
doorkeeper
70 Aromas
72 Repulse
73 Instruct
75 Hyson

76 G!lard
77 Paramour
79 Diurnal
80 Make happy
82 Passageway
83 Locations
84 Commonplace
86 Large bird
88 Chinese pagoda
89 Rants
90 Bogin
.91 Mistake
93 Forecast
95 " High Noon" star
97 Masculine
98 Mr. Wallach
102 Clue
104 Play segments
106 In what manner?
107 At that place
106 Measuring device
110 Mud
111 Chooses
t 12 Diplomacy
t 14 Treats maliciously
116 Additional
117 Word of sorrow
119 Frame of mind

121 Pierce
·122 Male parent
123 Cutilng tool
125 Clvli lnjury
127 Spanish article
128 Portions
129 Pittsburgh player
130 Usher
131 Choose
133 South African
Dutch
136 Peruvi an Indians
138 Cut
140 "Murder, She - ··
143 Switch position
144 Great Lake
146 Withered
148 Emerald Isle
150 Hebrew month
151 Defeat
153 Printer's
measures

154 Without end:
poetic
156 Female ruff
158 Father
161 Either
163 Selenium symbol
165 Steamship: abbr.
167 Q , - , S, T, -

�•

Paga D-B-Sunday Times-Sentinel

In Our TO'f.Vn

South Central Ohio
Increasing cloudiness Sunday,
with highs between 65 and 70.
Probablllty of precipitation Is
near zero through Sunday.
Extended Forecaat
Monday through Wednesday
Showers likely Monday, with
fair weather Tuesday and chance

National Rivers HaD-of-Fame
By DICK THOMAS

.-1

'

GALLIPOLIS - Mary Greene
and the Greene Family, prominent anclnnatl
river people, are
among 12' nom!·
nees for the Na·
tiona! Rivers
Hall or Fame for
1988 . The
Greene Family
was well known In the Galllpolls
area during the hey-day of river
packets. Four honorees will be
chosen by ballot and announced
at the National Rivers Hall of
Faine Museum on the banks of
the Mlss~slppl · at Dubuque,
_
Iowa, on April 30.
Captain Mary B. Greene. 1869
to 1946, was the dean of women
steamboat captains who received her first master's license
ln 1897. Together with her husband, Gordon C., and her sons,
Tom and Chris, the Greenes
operated one of the largest fleets
of steamboats on tne western
rivers.
Old time · Galllpolltans wlll
remember the most famous
Greene Line boats In the early
part of this century- the Gordon
c. Greene, the Tom Greene and
the Chris Greene; all named after
men of the Greene family . These
boats were a famlllar sight at the
·• Gallipolis waterfront . That was
when the cobblestone landing
extended out Into the river. far
beyond the low water mark of
1787.
In 1946, Captain Tom Greene
acquired what was to be the
Greene Lines' most famous boat,
the Delta Queen, bringing It from
Callfomla via the Mississippi
and Ohio Rivers to Pittsburgh,
where It w~ refurbished and still _
plies the Ohio and Mississippi
Rivers, making a couple of trips
past the Old French City each
year. Now, the captain on that
1946 voyage was Captain Fred
Way, Jr., of Sewickley, Pa. A lew
years ago, Fred Way compiled a
directory of all the packet boats
on the Ohio and Mlsslsslppl
Rivers, and I have a copy &lt;;&gt;f that
directory.

looking for lawns to mow.
Maybe, somebody'll read this.
Speaking of the Ga Ulpolls
pollee •department:a couple of
members have resigned. One,
you've already read about Patrolman Wade Henson who
quit on Tuesday after nearly six
years on the depar_tment. Henson
begtns·a new job tomorrow at the
Gallipolis Post O!tlc!!. I kld&lt;!ed
hlm about the 3 cent Increase In
postage stamps,and told hlln It
was ail his fault. He said,"! told
'em I'd have a little extra If !took
the job." Well, 11 couldn't have
happened to a nicer guy- Also
understand that Patrolman
Sandy McComb has resigned.
She also worked as a radio
dispatcher. Understand Sandy's
at home, unless she's taken
another job. It was just two
weeks ago that a couple of
dispatchers, Dickie Meadows
and Kevin Teaford, left the
Gallia-Melgs Patrol Post. Both
are training at the
Patrol
Academy at Columbus, and If
they make It, they'll graduate as
troopers come Sept.9.
I hear Henry Kiesling's going

to a Reds game at Riverfront on
Aprll2L I thought It was this past
Thursday but Henry set me
straight. The Reds are playing
the Giants that day In a 12:35
p.m., businessmen's special. l'd
like to go that day, but I gotta
work. Remember, I picked the
Giants to win the National
League this year, and besides,
Brett Buller, former Cleveland
Indian picked up from the
Atlanta Braves, Is a Giant this
year, Speaking of the Cleveland
Indians, don't forget that Tommy
Spencer Is first base coach for the
lndlans. By the way , Kiesling
hates It because he missed
Danny Jackson's 3 hitter against
the St. Louis Cards, and Eric
Davis' first home run of the
season. Big Bob Horner, back
from a year In Japan , slammed
his first hOme run In the eighth
Inning. I love baseball. It's the
trip home that bothers me.

Now from the river to the
Hey, all you drivers out there.
weather - If you don ' t like the Be especially careful starting
weather In the Galllpolls area, tomorrow when you're In the
stick around five minutes and neighborhood of Second A venue
It'll change. Well, maybe not that and Locust Street, In Gallipolis.
fast. Monday and Tuesday were Just keep going, no matter In
beautiful days. Wednesday and which direction you're headed.
ThurSday were not. Then Mother Because, starting tomorrow theNature smiled on us Friday with re'll be NO LEFT TURNS at that
another nice one. My car was In Intersection, from any direction,
the garage Tuesday for repairs at any time day or night. The
so I walked for a change-home· Intersection was discussed at last
to-the-office,
oftlce-to-down- week's city commission meeting.
town, ·down·town-to-oftlce, and It came about because someone
offlee-to·bome at the end of tbe wanted a left turn lane at that
day. I .passed 721 Second Ave., Intersection and City Manager
and who should be on the front Dale Iman said It would wipeout.
porch taking It easy but Wylie 10 parking spots to put In a left
White, retired radio dispatcher turn lane. So, I guess It was an
at' the Gallipolis pollee depart- administrative decision to make
ment. He lives next door to Jack It a NO LEFT TURN lntersec·
and Eileen Mink. Wylie said If I tlon. He can do that - you know.
knew of anybody who wanted to Watch for the signs to be erected
mow a lawn - to send them and HAPPY MOTORING.
around. Haven't seen anybody

OVB...

--

=="'

Sml&amp;b,

April 10, 1988

'layout of The New 18 Hole ·
Golf Course

'·
f,

CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT

RATES
TERM
~ow
FRONTS:

11 Warm

[ // j SHOWERS

-RAIN

"Cold

. . Static

fW Occluded

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will be
scattered over the southern half of the Plalns. Rain _showers wlU
reach from Minnesota Into centrljl and eastern Nebraska with a
mixture of rain and snow from eastern North Dakota to the
Nebraska Panhandle. Rain showers wiD also be scattered over
south Texas and northern Maine.

32 DAY
91 DAY
6 MONTH
1 YEAR
2 YEAR
3 YEAR
4 YEAR
5 YEAR

Farmers ... ----~Co~n:::tl~nu:::e:.:::d..!.fr:,::O:,::m:.:D:::.-=-1--­
rarity of a borrower's market.
The Louisvllie Bank for Coop·
eratlves provides credll and
financial services In Indiana,
Kentucky, Ohio and Tennessee.
The percentages of gross loans
outstanding per state at Dec. 31,
1987, were 50 percent In Indiana,
12 percent In . Kentucky, 32
percent In Ohio and 6 percent in
Tennessee.
The FCSAB was chartered last

Jan. 21 to provide assistance and
to protect certain stock of borrowers of system lnstitullons
through Dec. 31, 1992. The board
Is carrying out programs designed to restore troubled system
Institutions to economic vlablllty
and permit such Instltutlons to
continue to provide credit to
farmers, ranchers and cooperatives at reasonable and competitive rates.

'

RATE
-5.25%
5.80%
6.30%
6.75%
7.25%
7.50%,
7.700fo
8;oo%

YIELDS ~

'

&lt;n••QI !

&gt;

"

·'

6.49°/o
6.96%
7.50%
7.76%
7.98%
8.30%

-----.. __..--""'

'
·-I

I
'~./

A minimum deposit of $500 onall CO's.
Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal
Rates Subject to Change

Hole

'
~~

1

Yardage* 400
Par

4

-- _...----

2

3

,.
4

5

415 500 135 395
4

5

3

4

6

7

8

9

16

180 340_ 380 500. 3,235 525 380 220 160 330

345

160 350 505 3,075 6,310

3

4

4

5

446·0902

36

1983 CHEVROLET

AN

AM -FM-CasseHe, power windows and Locks. tilt, cruise. 4 new
ti(BS. Nice clean locally owned trade in I

WAS

$

4

.13

4

3

4

'
'

4

3

17

4

18

5

IN TOTAL

36

72

Cliffside Golf Course opening set June I

97 N. Second St.
Middleport. Ohio
992-8881

By GEOFF OSBORNE
known as the "Valley Nine," a
Columbus area, Mount Vernon,
Tlmes.Sentlnel Staff
par-36, approYJmate 3,235-yard
Cambridge, Galena, Medina and
. GALLIPOLIS - The Cliffside area.
Oxf6rd .
Golf Course, located off Mill
The other half of the course Is
The 19th Hole
Creek Road, Is only a few weeks
known as the "Orchard Nine," a.
In order for members and their
away fr()m 11 dream which par-36, approximate 3,075-yard guests to meet and buy gifts for
started back In June, 1983.
area In which last five holes are each other and .their friends, the
Actual construction, which got
set among Inclines , boulders,
Pro Shop, which will soon be
underway last spring, Is more
narrow fairways and terrace
added to Cliffside, will have a
· than three-quarters complete,
greens to provide golfers with the
snack bar, a cantina, a lounge
and the $1 .2 million course Is
most challenging portion on the · and a fully stocked golf pro shop.
tentatively scheduled to open on
course.It Includes three different
In addition, construction of
June 1, according to Ronnie types of golf play - hlllslde,
other buildings on the course will
Carm)chael, grounds chairman
waterholes and straight-away
have to be completed, such as
and member of the Cliffside Golf holes. ·
renovation for the clubhouse and
Club's board of directors.
The course, according to Carthe building of a sheller for
Dates for various tournaments
michael, Is "not only challeng· special outings.
: · will be announced Ia ter, hope·
lng, but one of the most beautiful
MEMBERSHIPS
fully a~ound July.
layout-wise In this part of the
There are six memberships
The Course
country." II was designed by
avalla ble for those desiring to
The course has six lakes which
Columbus architects Jack Kid·
join the Cliffside Golf Club.
serve as water hazards, 40-plus well and Michael Hurdzan.
Founder's Membership - For
sandtraps and several mounds
Among some of the courses and
a
donation of $25,000 or more, It . ·
on the greens to give portions of parts - of courses Kidwell has
Includes annual dues paid for
,.JliUI~vloualy flatl70.acre area , designed are 'th~ second nine
life, a seat on 'thellotiorary board ·
~ "some character'" accordlllt tb
holes of the Ohio University golf of governors, full club privileges
CarmJchaeh Most of these are course, the Oxbow Club In
(gnlf and social), . a plaque
found on the part of the course Belpre, and -courses In !lie
erected on a specified hole and

11 you' re·looking for a nice moderately priced uMd van. ~~Ia i_o it.
Custom Conversion by Rockwood. V·B engine, aor cond•toomng,

5

1l

--

"This is the Wh1te Tee Yardage ... LadteS and Champ1onsh1p Tee Yardage w1ll
' d•ffer.

Member FDIC

12

15

-

362 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

10

14

OUT

the same rights as resident
members.
Corporate Membership - For
a donation of $25,000 or more, two
options can be exercised. Option
I has a guaranteed league time of ·
five years (re-negotiated annually), one annual company outlng, discounted green fees for
league play for five years and a
guest card for one guest for five
years - no green fees . Under
Option II, no Initiation fee Is
charged for the three designated
employees who are eligible for
membership. The designations
are transferrable for five years,
and the same dues,_ as those
charged for resident members
wlil ·be charged for the deslg·
nated employees.
President's Membership For a donation of $10,000 to
$25,000, a five-year membership
wl)h full club privileges (golf and
social) Is available. A plaque will
be erected In the clubhouse,
listing all President's members .

Persons with such a membership Annual dues ...,,Jl oe charged for
will have the same privileges as that member . Formal recogresident members.
nized will be given.
Governor's Membership Resident Membership - Ali
For a donation of$5,000 to$10,000, privileges of the club are exercls·
a one-year membership with full able by the member, spouse and
club privileges (golf and social) unmarried -. children younger
Is available. A plaque will be than 18 years of age and depend·
erected In the clubhouse, listing en! children 18 years old and
all Governor's members. Per- older who are full-time students.
sons with such a membership
·The new semi-private course Is
wlil enjoy the same privileges as open to green fee players .
resident members.
Applicants should contact golf
Business Membership - For a pro Galen Herath at 446-GOLF
donation of at least $2,500, one about applications for memtoerdesignated membership will be shlps, which are offered at
made available for each $2,500 reduced rates until the course
donated. The member holding opens . Applicants receiving
the designated membership does memberships can receive schenot have to be an employee. dules on prices .

1982 CHEVROLET WINDOW VAN

12 Passenger seating. V·B engine. dual air conditioning and heat,
AM-FM-Caosette, tilt, cruise, a little heavy on miles, but well
maintained!

•Y.'IrUU

esecutlve

\'ir;e prtalcleM;

C. Leon

SaWMiers, senhtr ow lee pre~lclll~;~t, eMtlleraDd IruM
officer: Wemell B. TlroomM, "k:e prMidellt aiMI
selllor· loaD olfker; MHp B. Borp, vtc11
pft16*1K aNI eoacrouer: MlcMel L. Bentdle,
wke pl'hkle•l• eharle off•• muapme•;
Phyllb P , Wllcoxo•, UliiiUI 'oiefl pi'Hidn&amp; and
dlftctor ol Pf-niOIIMI; Larl')' E. Lee, ulll&amp;.al
vk:e pnsldtnt ... he.. &amp;ener; loJCetp M.
Barlow, ulill&amp;ant wlce preeldeat and •~rtctor l•r
tnlllll ....d culknner •nics: .. c ...... D. 8colt,

.U.a.&amp;aat VIce Pf'tllldeM aDII Tr•a Oflker;
Dellile .J. Burrest, ••tant c..a.ler .... lnasl
adml . .h"Mor: Ka&amp;tlryl! MUIIIe, u•&amp;.nt cMtl·

leraM mauaerolml.. baak; Mlct.eiC.Davb,

M.Ublnl cMhler aM m~•ser of IUo Grude
Branch: Kalrlllka V, Hart, ....... _. c....ler aad .
mauaer •' Jaclwoo PIR Oflke; Jeaaller L.
QlbGme, aui.IU.M c..tllrraDd l't!aleseate leiMII.,
ortku; Palrk'- Da\'tl, u.....,llt cMIIkr IUIIII
mauter dtla ,rocNMq; Br,aa Martla, ulllt·
... l cuhler and u.W.at bead teller; Bill)' Jo
Meadewa. ulllll.ftt CMIIIIer and maaapr of
boollkeepl• dr.. rbne• ud U•a PI)'IUie,
ullb&amp;llnl nalller aDd m••rer •I ,,..., 61raull.
Mr . S..,..era al110 wUI.ene u beard Henbrr.

"We Manage Your Risk"
43 7 Second Avenue, Gallipolis · SINCE
Opposite the Post Office
1951

HOMEOWNERS '
&amp; FARM

1982 OLDS

JUST TRADED THIS WEEKI

1974 V.W. BUG
Stick shift automatic. Runs good.

ssoo

4x4. oix cyl.. 4 speed. N- tires.

446-0404
HEALTH

,GROUP

COMMERCIAL $ PERSONAL
Mon.-'Tuea.-Wed.-Fri.-_8:30 till 4 :30
Thursday Is Saturday - 8:30 till 12 Noon
JOHN H. SAUNDERS- BETSY SAUNDERS CANADAY
HOWARD BAKER lAUNDER$ - CONNIE HEMPHILL

.

-

$4,995

fT IS IMPORTANT to keep the weeds, off the greens as
groundakeepers Dwayne Mays, Terry Meadows and course Supt.
Charles Scarberry demonstrate. They know that April Ia the heat
month to eliminate weeds whUe tbelr roots are sill! shallow, Ulus
eUmtnatlng the neceasll)' of laklllg up IarKe patches of grass laler .

4 door, blue on blue,

engine, air conditioning, AM -Fm·
Stereo. power windows and locka. tilt, crui,e, power seat, rear
defog .. aluminum wheels and juot 11 .000 mlleol

WAS

su,too

NOW JUST

$12,900
•.

1979 TOYOTA
LAND CRQISER

AUTO

ROYALE BROUGHAM

4 door, V·B engine. gray on gray, air cond .. tllt. cruioe, delay wipers. power seat. power door locks, vinyl top. wire wheel covers
and juot 58,000 miles!

Sl500

-

Section ·E

After u.e li$0ek.helden meeu... the bo..rd
elected lhe lollowhtl oftkert: MotTl!! E. Hull.l•,
chalnnan of &amp;he BOanl; olamH L. DaiRJ ,
Pftlldent .... eldef n.:ee~&amp;iw otneer: Jeffrey E.

HOWARD BAKER
SAUNDERS INSURANCE INC.
PJl

of rain on Wednesday. High will
be tn the 50s Monday and
Tuesday, and In the 60s Wednes·
day. Overnight lows will range
!rom 35 to 45 ·early Monday,
dropping Into the 30s Tuesday
morning and ranging from 35 to
45 again early Wednesday-

Continued from D-1

to reach the younger people. " We
want their first banking experience to be with us. They're our
future customers."
Mr. Haskins concluded the
meeting by reminding those In
attendance approximately 600
stockholders from Gallla and
adjacent counties make Ohio
Valley Bank truly a home owned
and operated bank. He asked all
shareholders for their continued
support to assure the bank's
future success. "Ohio Valley
Bank bas . been good for the
community and Its stockholders,
only through your efforts of
directing new business our way
can this continue," he said.

"e

Features

Weather

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 A.M. E'oT 4-lo-88

Mary Greene candidate for

.• t'

April 10, 1988

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

1979 OLDS.
CUTLASS WAGON
V·B, AC, AM·FM. Good dependable car.

$1200
1976 CHEVI VAN
V-8,autow.rdc. Partialconvondon

ssoo

1980 FORD GRANADA
4 door. V-8. Noedo tune-up

51000
1982 FORD EXP
4 spd .• sunroof, AC, AM-fM·Colsette

Good Tires, Needo Work

51000

_ WATCHES SWING - Galen Herath, right, 10U profeulonal at
lhe CJW.lde GoU Coune, watehea u student Tom au-u
tu. a •wtq ld lie ball oa
which II aeheduled ta

open Ill tate May. Herath will start goU classes at the course on
April 19 and 20. (Times-8enUnel photos by G. Spencer·Osbome)
'•

Walker won't be intimidated
CLVB PBO - Galen Hera&amp;h; a&amp;, .-mad dnUea u
CJW.Ide Club ProIa Mareh. A
n-year've&amp;eraa, Beratlleame
ta Galllpolla alter three yean
wiiJI the NCB Colllltry
Club Ia nap,., Be Ia a ..Uve
of BI'IIOII, lad., lllld wu a pro
ld .... PrtRwloll Gelf Clab Ia
Ja4 Uapel!a from lilt Ill. Jle.
ratll,
wile Kat~ aad
•!did .. Grq, 11 Uti Mlellelle, 14, are Iaiiie pr.c.a t1
movta1 ta tile Old FrfDeh
CJI)'.

lerVIee

u..

. POWAY, Calif. (UPI) - Col· no I the plllyer."
"I'm not going to say I'm golng
leen Walker, after taklng a
l·stroke lead over Lorene Rltten· to go out and charge for the
house and a trio ot seasonect lead," said the six-year pro from
veterans 111 third place, refuse&lt;! . Brandon, Fla., "but I am golnl
to be Intimidated Friday by the out and make as many birdies -.s
crowd chaslng her.
I can.··
Walker shot a 67 Friday for a
Walker said she Is past the
stage where lihe Is fodder for the two-day total ot 7-under 135,
atan ot the LPGA tour, and wu three strokes ahead of Sheehan,
ready to tackle the thtrd·place Lopez and Ku, and one shot
trio ot Patty Sheehan, Nancy ahead of Rlttenhoue, the
Lopez and Korean veteran Oh· openlq-round leader.
Kee Ku In Saturday'• third
Rlttenhouae, who won her only
round.
title Ia eJPt years In the 1983
"We have ~ dayi ot golf • United VIrginia Bank Cluslc,
_left," salll Walker Friday, who said lhe was composed after her
fiDIIhed lleCOJid at the Dinah acrammbllng even-par round of
Shore lut week. "You have to 71.
keep your mind on the course and

IN CRABOB - Cllarlea 8arbtrrJ, au~&amp;eadeat ot
Cllffllde Golf Coune, Ia llhowa llere lllaadlq ld lie No. 8 INMI,
Hll' -of the
!Ua. He IIIIa eharp of preparlalaad
maiJitalalq Ule falrwaya,llllldtnpa, the lakea &amp;ad tile oilier anu
of the ooane. The lakea are pt!rt of a run, automated frrtptlea
a,..&amp;em IIIII&amp; wiD water tbe coune.

-·•u

�''

•
April 10. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Poin~ Pleasant, W. Va.

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- E-3 .

I

Page E-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 10, 1988

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

Galbraith ·predicts lingering U. S.. problems

Fatniers must be aware of chemicals impact

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) - The
United. Sta tes will pay for years
to come for the large deficit the
Reaga n a dmlnlstra,lon has
created, economist John Ken·
neth Galbraith says.
" I wou ld say without hes itation
that we're having, &lt;1 nd have had
for year s, an economic policy for
which.we 're going to have to pay
heavlly In the months and yea rs
ahead," Ga lbra ith sa id Thursday night In a speech at Miami
Univer sity.
."I would have strongly rev- .
er sed present and past poliCies,"
said Galbrai th , former chair man
of the De mocratic economi c
advisory committee, and a n
advlser to several Democra tic
presid e nts.
"I think It's incredible that a
presumptively conservative administration should go In fpr'

COLUMBUS, . Ohio (UPI) his concern under current legal
The middl~ ~~o~~~p~~~r~~
Farmers might not consider the and propert y rI g hts something cal e 0 me agrlcultulmpact of their production me- arrangements."
lng - replac ng so
bo
!hods and chemicals on others
Farmers should be concerned ral chemicals with extra 1at! r
groups In society but times are with those other costs just as and crop rotations or accet ng
cbanglng, an agrl~ultural econo· their non-farm neighbors should lower yields lnt return for ower
m ist a t Ohio State University be concerned 'with the farm production cos s.
.
says.
economy, he says.
Frederick J . Hltzhusen says r---..:...:.._ __:________________:..__
public concern about the environ·
ment has started a ma.jor de'bate- 1
about what goes on In farm
country. ·
How Important are the Chern!·
cals farmers use to ri\lse crops
and livestock and what other
Impacts d() those -chemicals
have?
These are largely questions of
$12,00
economics, he says.
.
The debate Is about whose
•Emergency Rood Service iiPersonalized Auto
economics a(P. more Important.
Travel Service
•Accident Service
One side says "no chemicals"
while the other says "full speed
•Boil Bond
ahead." Hltzhusen says It's time
AND MUCH MORE
to find the middle ground.
' 'We have evidence that a lot o!
360 SECOND AVE.
the Impacts of farming fall
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.outside the !arm firm;" Hltz·
·husen says. "The rational ,
PH. 446-0699
farmer Isn't trying to do society
In, but costs to others just are not

APRIL SPECIAL

Join @ in April for $29
Cet an auooitte membership FREE!
A

VALUE

massive debt creauon and turn
us arou nd from be lng the world's
largest creditor nation to the
world's larges t debtor nation, a
policy I refer to as the Mexican!·
za li on o f the American
economy."
Regarding the Im port-export
bala nce, Ga lbra ith called the
changes towl!rd more U.S. car
exports to J apa n "superficia l"
and "highly symbolic, not something that anyone should take
serlous)y In the present volume."
At a news conference prior to
the speech, Galbraith said he
S!lpports Democra tic pres! den·
tlal candidate Michael Dukakls
and the Massachusetts governor 's economic pr0gram In that
state.
Galbraith added, however ,
that J esse J ackson ha s provided
an positive • dimension to the

- . '•pt;~·
J unlor Smith, rldlnng the Toro Turf mower, Is

being Instructed In Its use by Course Supt. Charles
Scarberry. See srory E-1.

In search of Sylvia Greenberg
.. By JULIE BRIENZA

when I contacted the winners (of
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Syl· the 1937 contest) they all said
· via Greenberg Is a wanted they had been thlnklng, 'Boy, It
really would be nice to see those
woman - for history's sake.
A Philadelphia history buff Is folks again,"' said RGberts, who
desperately seeking Greenberg, conjured up the Idea ln 1986 while
last known address Pittsburgh, · producing a touring, musical
to complete a reunion among show for the National Park
winners of 1937 and 1987 essay Service on the history of the U.S.
J
contests expounding on the lm· Constitution.
· Roberts has enlisted help from
portance of the U.S. Constitution.
Greenberg, who would now be the Archives, Philadelphia's Cit!·
about 68 years old, Is one of five zeus Committee on Public Edu·
winners of the 1937 national
contest, which was held to
celebrate the Constitution's
sesquicentennial.
But Greenberg Is the only
winner hiStorian Franklin Ro·
berts cannot track down for his
planned May 4 Washington meet Ing between the two generations
of essayists.
During last year's Constitution
bicentennial, two grand-prize
winners - Llza Johnson of
Portsmouth, Ohio, and Mahub
Majumbar of Richland, Wash. received $10,000 each In a similar
contest sponsored by Gannett's
USA Today, the American Bar
Association and the Commission
on the Bicentennial of the U.S.
Constitution .
. Tqr National Archives has
agreed to record an oral history
o! the winners' thoughts on the ·
U.S. Constitution onMay4, and a
.. day later they will travel to
Philadelphia's Independence
Hall where the early winners
were presented with full scholar·
ships to Pennsylvania unlversl·
ties such as Temple and Penn
State.
"These 17· and 18-year-old kids
• ·· of the present day are going to
confront these folks who did
something 50 years ago ," Roberts said. "The thoughts of
today may be very different than
the thoughts they wrote about In

cation and Pennsylvania Gov.
Robert P. Casey . .
Roberts said the 1937 winners'
entries were splashed In many
Pennsylvania newspapers, and
the group traveled together to
receptions and other festivities ·
for a week as part of their honors .
"This Is lntergeneratlonal
learniJJg," he said. "This Is
brlnglng Americans together
from dl!ferent times to share
their feelings .

May3rd

- Mays gets
DIGGING OUT WEEDS- Grouodskeeper Dwayne
down tAl the tBIIk of digging out young weeds before the April rainy
season ends aad gives plants a good chance to sink their ·roots deep
lnro the soli. See srory E-1.

W®Uffi il®[f

lJffi[f

dillE

Located within 30 minutes
from most areas

Fred W. "Rick"Crow Ill
Pd. by Candidate, 1304 College Rd ., Syracuse, Oh.

Your DoiiQr Goes Further At Taylor Nissan
'

$

·~·

The New
Golf and Country Club

s

.·

.-.'

.-

Honda No.I million
rolls off U. S. line
MARYSVILLE, Ohio (UP!)Honda of America ManufacturIng Inc. marked another milestone Tuesday, when the 1 mllU·
onth Honda manufactured In the
United States rolled off the
; production line.
-'
No. 1 million, a four -door Civic
sedan, was driven of! tbe line by
Allen Kinzer, the first-American
hired at the plant In 1978. Kinzer,
who began as manager of~dmln ­
lstratlon, is now vice president
and manager or the engine plant
In Anna, Ohlo, where the Civic's
• four-cyllnde'r engine was

..

'

INSTALLATION • FINANCING AVAILABLE

O'DELL
awn

awn
~~~ CHIEF.

Where new Gallipolis course is located

Special

5-HP 22-ln. High-Wheel Mower wUh bell-driven blade,
blade, lront and back

baffles.

112

MULTITECH ELITE
RADAR DETECTOR
REG. S129.95

sTATE
5 speed manual transmission, dual wall cargo bed with rope l'lookl, fluatl mounted halogen
headiampo, radial tires, 3 puaenger bench Mat, headlight on Chima, row fuel warning light,

-•m.

5 spood manlllltfll.., 1 1 '· body iiide ..-g, 11n1ea gillS,
rings, aual i!Wnir1, halogon ~.
an ,..,n rodlolllru, rtcllnlno buckeiMIIS, VInyl Hit t~m wttn clOth lnstrts, full door trtm, full cirpetlng,
rear IOin&lt;tow &lt;llfrosttr Wllh timer, lntermlllont wipers, day/nlghl ~ror lloor console, t~p ... epllt foj4.
dawn rear Sill backs, 1.6 Iller OHC 4 cyllndlf engine, ottctron luellnjtctlon, lront &amp; rear staballzer bars,
power flonl diiC/rur drum brakes.

coolant temperature gauge, side window defogger, 2.411ter O.H.C. 4 cylinder anglne, elec·

Ironic fuel Injection, power brakes with vtntad front disc, malntononca free battery, 15.9
gallon fuel tank capacity, front stabilizer bar, 1o400 lb. payload, Independent front auapen·
alon, deluxe chrome atop bum par, bright dual outside mlrro,., sliding,.., wtndow, tinted
glass, wheell~m ~ngs, brtghl wheel·llp moldings, h""'bod)' special graphics, audio ayatem,
AMLFM stereo with caaaelle player, fuJ.I lace cloth bench seat, cui pllt carpeting.

$1 35°~*

"''"

sPEED

1988 NISSAN SENTRA 3 DOOR HATCHBACK

159.88
3.5-HP, 20-ln. Rotary Mowerhas

65

Per M $127 * ·Per Mo •
00

a

saddl..lype blade

atabMizerfadapter, one-piece steel deck, more.

L\M\l
3

4

5t

189J8
3.5-HP, 22·ln. Lawn

644.88

Mowerfealu,.sa~oong 1-ploco­

deck, Br!gg! &amp; Syranon engine

S3

with adj. depth, sturdy plow·
type handles.
GTR!.

'LAWN
'CHIEF

5 6

3-Hp Chain-Drive Tiller

1988 NISSAN STANZA 4 DOOR SEDAN

"The lde_al Family Vehicle"

FEATURES
I. Power LED
2. On-Off
Volume switch
3. X-BAND and
II-BAND lfD
4. Signal Strength
Meter
5. Alert LED
6. Highway/City selector
7; Audio Alert
8. External Power Jack
9. Earphone Jack .

5 speed manuallransmlssian (economy &amp; lu11ury), trim rings with center caRS, an season rldlal tires,

dual side view mirrors, body ~de molding, tinted glm, lront bucktl cloth rtcllnlng seats, rtri'Ottlrunk , .
1uet door opener. tilt steering column, analog clock, child satety rear door locks·. r•r window dlfralltr
wtlh timer, 2.0 '"" 4 c~lnaer enolne Wllh munl·port futllnltcllon, - r steenng, lronl ilid,..,. Slllliizer
bars, power front diS&lt;/ rear drum brakes.

0
$ 192~ *

5-HP Rear-Tine Tiller

W11h iold&amp;ng handle, hea"Y"duty
chain dtive.
11m

Per Mo

manufacture~~ .

"We owe our ability to produce
1 million cars In such a short
period of time to the teamwork
and efforts of our associates
' (employees) ," Kinzer said .
"They have proven that Honda
quality knows no geographical
boundaries."
"The production of the 1
millionth car slgnl!les the rapid
erowth and cusromer acceptance
of the quality products manufactured by our associates In Marysvine and Anna," said Robert
SimCOx, assistant auto plant
rnana1er.
Production began at the Ma·
rysv!Ue Auto Plant on Nov. 1,
1982 with the Accord ,._door
aedan.

Wil
0.
CER1tFtED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT

~~LAWN
1

1937. "

But, says Roberts, one question rema ins: · " Where Is
Sylvia?"
He said that to make the
reunion and Archives oral his·
tory a complete success he wants
to bring all winners together . He
said Greenberg's last known
address was In Pittsburgh where
she had retired several years ago
tram her job at the Veterans
Administration Hospital.
"The intriguing thing Is that

24 ' )( 15 S w tm All!il
3 1' X 16' Outs1'ae D11nens1on 5

=

'

The · IRS will automatically
give you until August 1S,
1988 to file your tax return.
All you have to do is notify
them in writing by filing For01
4868 with your local IRS Service Center no later than April

;:,

Hardbody

1988
4x2

FIL TEA
FENCE
LI NER
LADDER
S).JN DECK
S TEEL BR •'CIIN&lt;

1-800-345-0946

s

WHAT TO DO IF YOU
CAN'T FILE ON TIME

CAUTION: An extension of time to file your return isn't an extension of time to pay your tax bill. Write out a check for the es·
timated amount of tax you owe, attach it to Form 4868, and
mail it by April 1S. You will be charged penalties and interest for
paying late taxes if you wait until the e~tended due date to pay
the tax.
Calculate the tax as accurately as possible. When you do file
your return, interest is due on the amount by which you under·
estimated your tax bill. II you
William 0. Smelher
underestimated by more than
CERTIFIED
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
I 0%, a penalty will be
126 First Ave.
charged in addition to the inGallipolis, Ohio
terest. ·
446-4471

24 HR TOL L FREE PHONE,.

$ $ $ $ $ $ ·$ $ $ ·$ $ $

whole new group of people Into
the political process. I think
we're going to look back on J esse
Jackso n's campaign wi th great
approval ," Galbraith said .

IS, 1988 •

'

MOWING THE COURSE Is a big job at the new
Cll,fslde GoU Course, as maintenance !o~n

Democratic race.
" I think Jesse J ackson has
certa lnly been a good force In our
ti me. He has given voice to
people who previously did not
have. voice a nd Is bringing a

5-HP Chain-Drive Tiller
cuts 14 to 25-l n. path. Adj .
depth, sturdy handle.

Power Plus
Riding Mowers

199.881.6-HP, 10-ln. Cuhlvator

I

12·HP. 39-ln. Lawn llactor- asynchlo-lloJanc Briggs

R• Mountn Orou Cotchlf,...,

.......

•'

9

&amp; -1/C engine, ele&lt;:lrlc 111111. 2-gol. OUI"fiH gos -

53GT

71U8
8·HP, 30-tn. Rear Engine Riding Mower

corrleo a

· ,.., Briggs &amp; Stranotllt'C engine, 5-speed lnlnt lrlntmUion. m
.. tn.ll Sldo-Oioohorgl lltnt•· ,,,...,
148.11

weighs just 24 lbs. bOt 1has the
power to weed, make compost,
and tum tollll soH. 6·1n. heattreated stWtlnas, loldl ~g
handle for IIOring.
111-m

...... !

"Paymenta figured lor 72 montha wtht down payment of 11,000 oaell or t r - ptua tax
·
plua tax
tltte,_dMtlnatlon ohargee, oaatl baok.

a

IATIUITI
IARTH
tTATION

Bob's

Eleetronle•
UPPII IT. 7
GAWPOUS, OH.
•

'
"'

1/'

,,

•

�Sunday

Pcx4-Middleport- Ga1Jipolia, Ohio-Point

~aant, W.Va.

April10. 1988

Exile dares to
be different
SHOOT TO KU..L- It 's good to
have veteran and able actor
Sidney Peltier back on the screen
~ again , and his contribution to
" Shoot to Kill " helps make this
actlon·thrlller set In the moun·
fa in wilds of the Northwest a
~ltck and satisfying fllm . Dl·
reeled by Robert Spotlswoode,
" Shoot to Kill ' ' Is fast .paced and
visually riveting; the tlgllt edit·
lng of each scene helps to bulld
the suspense. Also starring Torn
Berenger and Kirstie Alley .
Rated R.
SHE'S HAVING A BABY Director John Hughes, whose
s uccess stems frGill a series of
wise and witty movies about
teenagers, takes a small leap into
the world of young adu.tts In his
latest fllm. The characters re·
present Hughes ' success at mak·
lng the ordinary seem unique and
· Identifiable at the same tlme . He
did this ln his movies about high
sc hool aogst (''Breakfast Club,"
" Sixteen Candles," "Pretty In
P ink" ) and this film proves he
also can handle llfe on the other
side of graduation. Starring
Kevin Bacon and Elizabeth
McGovern. Rated PG·l3.
THE LAST EMPEROR Directed by Bernardo Berte·
Iucci, the film Is mesmerizing In Its lush depletion of the-reign of
p u Yl , who was crowned em·
peror of China at age 3 a nd died a ·
poor and forgotten gardener In
1967. "The Last Emperor" Is
sa tlsfylng both as a spectacle of
history and as a chronicle of a
l.o nely and proud man who both
feared and longed for freedom
for himself and his great country
during the )'ears of World War II.
The emperor Is played as a.
youngster by Richard Vuu ; as an
adolescent by Wu Tao, and as an ·
adult.by John Lone. Also starring
Peter O'Toole. Rated PG·13.
.5 CORNERS - A new movie
directed by Tony Bill, the fUm
tells the story of a small and
Isolated neighborhood in the East
Bronx, N.Y., with affection and
wit. But the movie Is more than a
collection of neighborhood tales.
In the tradition for which · the
movie "American Graffiti" Is
•
best remembered, "5 Corners"
also manages to create a slngu.
larly American story. With excel·
lent performances from Harry
Fitzgerald, John Turturro , Jodie
Foster, Todd.Graff and Elizabeth
Berridge. Screenwriter John Pa·
trick Shanley ("Moonstruck")
sa id th~ story represented his
dream "to go back to one's
childhood and get It right." It
seems he did. Rated R.
~
RENT-A·COP - Starring Burt
Reynolds and Llza Mlnnelll,
"Rent·a ·Cop" gives both'· these
mega·stars yet a nother oppor.
tunlty to do a role they 've done In
countless ways before. "Rent·a·
Cop" Is a waste of their talents.
Yet, because they already know
what Is expected of them, they
deliver In a dutiful, a nd yes,
entertaining way. But "Rent·a·
Cop" barely packs five bucks
worth of action, suspense a nd
romance. Rated R.
FOR Kll;EPS - Molly Ring·
wald's newest movie · has ' an
offbeat perspective on a serious
subject - teenage pregnancy.
That perspective - _inc lud ing
several hilarious scenes of teen·
age bliss turned Into domestic
hell - should have saved this
movie. But It doesn't , and what
results Is a dreary television·
movle·of.the·week drama, Car
beneath the considerable talents
of the mostly gifted cast. Dl·
rected by JohnAvlldsen, a nd also
starring Randall Battnkoff.
Raged PG·l3.
.
MOONSTRUCK -Directed by
Norman Jewtson, a nd containing
Cher's best performance yet, this
Is a loony movie a bout over·
wrought, wonderful characters
who find- and rediscover -love
under the magical Influence of a
big, bright full moon. Also
starring Nicholas Cage, Danny
Aiello, Olympia Dukakls and
Vincent Gardenia. Rated PG.
GOOD MORNING, VIETNAM
-:- Directed by j3arry Levinson,
this film ·gJvehomedJan·actor
Robin Williams plenty of'l'oom to
strut h is Inventive and Ingenious
stuff as a n outrageous Armed
Forces Radio disc jockey In
Saigon In 1965. The plot revolves
around his growing a nger at
censorship as the war In Vietnam
~ranks up. But the film Is all
Williams: he has a field day with
this character and this country
and this period In history, wt th all
Jts horror- and comedy. Rated
J;l..
RAW - Eddie Murphy Is just
that In this concert film directed
by the talented Robert Townsend
and written by Murphy. The
comedia n proves himself aga in - as an unfailing mimic
with astounding energy. The
material is lewd, loud, offensive
and never very far from the
mark - be It black or white.
Murphy also has a steady eye on
the battle of the sexes, and
though he seems to be a bit
war·scarred, his loss, when
translated Into. some raucous
humor, Is our gain.

•

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TOILR TISSUE :
4 ROLL

NASHVILLE, Tenn . (UP() Snap qu iz; Who has 10. No. 1
country reco rds, but no maj or
award s from the Count ry Mu sic
Assocla tton ?
You're righ t If you said Exile.
This f lv e· m e mber gr oup , ·
based in .Lexingt on. Ky ., dares to
be different and nobody but the
people likes It.
.
First of all , the members of
Exile are th ei r own music ians in
the studio while most count ry
acts. use studi o picker s. Second,
their music is as far away fr om
traditional country, th e new
rage, as any a ct marketed out of
Nashville. Third , their root s are
In pop and rhythm and blues.
So how come they are doing so
well with country fans?
"I don't think it wa:; ca lcu·
lated. It 's just we do ou rselves
and people bu y that kind of
music," explains . keyboard 1st
Lee Carroll .
Carroll was on ha nd for a
recent inte rview, a long with
Sonny Lemaire. bass guitaris t
and vocals , and drummer Steve
Goetzman.
The other two members are
J .P . Pe nn ington, lead guit aris t
and lead vocals, and Les Taylor,
rhythm gu ita r and lead vocals.
Lemaire , who with Penning·
ton. writes most of Exile' s
material , described their mu sic :
·:1think we' re coming up wi th
good songs. We have a real fresh
approach to the music because of
our musicianship. That's one of
the things we've stressed for a
long time Is the fact that we do
play on our records. That's wh a t
defines ·our sound ," Lemaire
said.
Goetzman was asked if being
dlfferentls necessary for success
In country music.
" I don't know If it is required to
be successful , but I do know tha t
on most of the records that come.
out of Nashville the music IS
performed by studio musicians:
They are like a little clique of
musicians that are p,retty much
on a ll of the records. Conse·
quently !!11 the music on the
Nashville produced records
sound a like," Goetzman said .
"We have a true affinity for
country bu t we have a lot of R&amp;B
In our sound which gives us a new
flavor and freshness and sets us
apai't.
Goetzm'an said there is a
strong parallel between R&amp;B and
country music.
"Tiley both touch our bas ic
core.. Both music formats go for
the lowest common denomlna·
tor. Both talk about the real
things In life and there Is a lot of
pain In both types of songs."

2f$1

lillllt 1 "' ( l i l t e-1 CW, At PoWt11'1 hp nnarll1t
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• •••••••••••••••

'·

•

'

Exile also takes a dlfferen t
approach toward arranging their
music.
"J.P. and I are the ones that
are mainly com ing up with the
songs. We'll get an Idea or hook
and write around that. We'll take
the musi c and the lyrics to the
rest of the guys and everybody
has Input," Lemaire said .
Goetzmann adds:
"As a group with no designated
leader, we are a mlni·democracy
If you will. It carries over Into the
creative aspect . There Is a lot of
give and take. If there Is 'an
Impasse, we vote on a particular
passage or arrangement. It nor·
mally doesn't come to that."
Ca rroll said the main thing Is
trusting the people you work with
to come up with good ideas.
"Yo u can walk In with the
attitude tha t this guy is going to
mess up my song if he tries to do
anything with it, or you can come
with the attitude that this guy Is a
good player and maybe he'ilhear
something I don't. It's an open
attitude like that."
That same Idea carries over to
Exile In their telatlonshlps with
one another. Naturally five guys
who are on the road sometimes
two months at a time are going to
have some disagreements.
Goetzman said it Is diffflcult
being so close together all the
time.
"I'm married but sometim es I
think I'm marri ed to the band. If
someone Is feeling badly towa a·d
another member of the band for
any reason,., it's not left alon e. It
does n't fester. That person who's
mad may g o to the other
members and complain, but he's
always e~couraged to talk to the
person who Is botherJng him .
That 's what always happens and
It gets. alred and fixed," Goetz·,
man said.
Although Exile cherishes their
following In country music, they
believe they would be accept ed In
adult contemporary.
,
Bur crossi ng over now Is much
more difficult th a n It has been In
the past.'·
"I don't even know ·what It
takes any mo,re, The lines are so
'defined ," said Goetzma n. "From
the • first day we became a
country act we knew enough
about th e market and the metoo·
ric rise and fall In pop. We have
really e njoyed the steady draw Of
country music. The country
decision was the right one. ·•
But sti ll, why no recognitio n
from the lnd?stry'?

..

�Ptge

E-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel . ·

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

April10,1988

..

I

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant,

·.deadline victims

Tax therapist ·counsels I
them.
Many of her clients have not
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -When
the Internal Revenue Service filed tax returns for 10 or more
unveiled Its TV ad about the years, Rebhu~ reports, and at
taxpayer s!alked by . his 1040 least two are 35 years In arrears.
But none of her people are tax
!arm, it tacitly admitted what
everyone already knew: filing a evaders, she Insists. "I screen
out people who have been dlshontax return can be terrlf)'lng.
With April 15 closing In fast, es t. The only thing I have going
tax phobia Is rampant. Joyce for me with the IRS · Is my
Rebhun ts familiar with the credibllliy, so I won't go In with a
symptoms, like depression and crook.''
The root of tax phobia, says
paranoia; In most . cases, she
Is Insecurity stemming
Rebhun,
prescribes a healthy dose of
from
Ignorance.
•·we:re forced to
Information and a shot of confidence. Sometimes, she steps In cope with a form that we don't
understand and that changes
and Intervenes.
from
year to year. It .can make
Rebhun Is · a $200-an-hour Inyou
feel
terribly afraid."
come tax therapist. She has all
Cash
flow
problems also add to
the right credentials - a 20-year
tax
woes,
she
says. "People are
tax attorney who has worked for
not
living
within
thejr means.
the IRS, a certified public acVery
often,
they're
desperate for ·
countant with a doctorate In tax
cash
so
they
claim
too many
history- and something more: a
exemptions
and
don't
have
determination to salvage the
of
their
.
e
nough
money
taken
out
lives of people she calls "tax
paychecks."
victims.''
Many of Rebhun's cUents are·
"People come to me, not so
victims
of inept tax preparers,
much for tax 'therapy' but for tax
like
the
business professor who
'rescue,'" she says.
,
"I help people who are burnt- never examined his return and
out, who have gone Into hiding • didn't know his preparer had
because of their tax problems. I counted his university Income
don't think we know the depths of twice.
And, of the 10 to 15 new cllents
despair some people have."
Over the past three years, she accepts each week, Rebhun
Rebllun has counseled nearly says six to eight "come in with
1,800 delinquent or problem tax the same story: they're men who
lUers, most of them well- have been devastated by divorce
and who can't get their ex-wives
educated and well-heeled.
She's gotten desperate calls In to turn over financial records so
the middle of the night from they can straighten out their
physicians thrashing around In
, By KATE CALLEN

divorce
webs,U.S.
foreign
entrepreneurs with
,holdings
who
didn't know they had to pay
· uncle Sam, absent-minded prolessors who put their 1040s In
desk drawers and forgot about

returns.''
Whatever their ~ircumstances
are, tax victims have the same
Immediate challenge, says Rebhun- they have to get over their
paralyll's and take action. Which
Is where she comes ln .
Rebhun 's course of therapy
starts 'fllh a direct appeal to the
IRS for leniency and more time.
"I pick up the phone and call, or
make a personal visit, and I say,
'Look, I have somebody here
who's In real trouble.'
"And they always respond. All
of my success stories have come
about because of the kindness of
the IRS."
Kindness? The IRS?
"You have to r~member,"
says Rebhun, "that you're talkIng to another human being.
They're not devoid of emot!Qn."
Once the IRS agrees to delay
the scheduled action, be It an
audit or a levy on wages or
property, Rebhun's next step Is
to prod the tax victim out of his or
her stupor.
"I must be firm with them,"
she says. ''They have to help
themselves. Wemakeallsto!the
things they have to do, like go to .
the bank and get back copies of
statements.'•
Most tax victims only need a
little prodding, she says: "When
they see me take over, they shake
off their depression and become
more confident. Sometimes I see
a complete change of
personality."
,

Rebhun's advice to pe&lt;)ple now
"I had nightmares thatJ lost
suffering the mid-April jitters Is because they 're intimidated.''
all
my records - and I keep
She
should
know;
It
happened
to "read manuals and try to help
·records . Finally, I
meticulous
to
her.
When
she
got
a
notice
that
yourself. When we get thrown by
said to myself, 'You're .In the
the
IRS
wanted
to
audit
her
1983
something, it's usually because
you have to deal with
we don't have enough Informa- tax return, Rebhun recalls, she system;
this
like
everybody
else."'
·
hit
the
panic
button.
tion to feel confident and ask .
ques !Ions."
r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;~
To avoid stress and shock down
the road, she says, bone up now
on cha(!g'eS In .the tax laws,
especiall~ In the amount of
Itemized deductions that can be
taken.
"That's going to make a huge
d!1ference, especially to people
In the middle Income ranges who
have a lot of credit cards and
medical expenses. The IRS says
It's dropped the tax rates but with
all the changes, you're going to
come out with fewer
deductions."
And never assume that sheer
Intelligence or expertise In any
other field .will come In handy In
the psychic jungle of Income tax
filing. Rebhun says that some of
her most accomplished clients
"have a mPntal bll~oc~k~a~bo~u~t~ta~x~e~s1~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~

ZENITH 19 IN. COLOR ·TV
WITH .REMOTE

'$338

r-;=::;::::::::::=======~====:;:===::;-1

.
Machlne
guns get
15~ears tacked on
to sentence

CLEVELAND (UPI) _ A
federal judge In Cleveland Frlday sentenced an Inmate In the
Kansas State Penitentiary to 15
years In prison for llrearms
violations, Including the possession of machine guns. ·
Maurice Bernard Moore, 34, Is
already serving a 30-year-to-life
sentence lor shooting and serlously wounding a pollce·omcer
In
Kan. Jan.
1986.

If HEARING is your problem- and you feel that
hearing aids are priced TOO HIGH for your
BUDGET
h
1
DILES
- t en P ease contact us at
HEARING CENTER. We have many referral
sources for assistance and you may qualitY
whether you are regularly employe_d or not. It is
our hope that NO ONE who can be helped should
be deprived of better hearing. Let us be your advocate.
CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800·237-7716

No. 895

1988 Chevrolet S-1 0

-

We feature aida from:
HEARING TECHNOLOGY. INC.

No. 909

1988 C.hevrolet Sprint
•

1988 Chevrolet Spectrum

•

Payment based on sale price of s7,200. Cash down or trade equity is
s5oo. Amount financed is s6,700 for 66 months at 9.5%APR variable rate.
Simply add tax and title. All to qualified buyers. Rebates to dealer.

.\
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1988 Chevrole.t· Celebrity
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t.IIOMLIC'ftON

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1. RIIORI AND A1l'mll

.IMCI.TOUICI
tuflll voU MIIAtllfiiiD

-~

•'

other things, expanding our
What's lnte.r estlng to me Is that I We read Stendall.
horizons," says Lerner with a
always
thought
of
book
clubs
as
Or
as
Cohen
of
Washington's
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
sigh. ''Because In those days all
very
happy
to
see
Politics
and
Prose
puts
It
,
;'peawomen.
I'm
call came to the olflce In the
we
did was take care of our kids;
are
having
their.
own
pie
need
to
be
stretched
ln
book
that
men
middle of a missed deadline and
we
had to worry about PTA,
book
clubs,
and
co-ed
book
clubs
groups."
jangling phones.'It Was my friend
taking
care of the house. Nobody
are
happening."
·
The
Idea
to
start
our
group
had
Amber, all excited about a book
In
those
days worked .outside the
Cohen,
who
has
had
an
In-store
been
pj!rcolatlng
In
the
mind
of
club 's he was starting and wanted
home
and
this was something
club
lor
3
¥..-years
that
meets
Amber
Scholtz,
our
organizer,
me to join.
that
was
just
purely lor us, our
twice
a
month,
finds
most
of
the
·since
a
few
years
back
when
she
I looked at the pile of papers on
own
enrichment
and ·our own
customers
who
come
In
for
their
quit
her
longtime
job
as
the
my desk. I glared at the sketchy
pleasure
from
each
other's
"dorl't
have
administrative
assistant
·
to
a
club
selections,
story on the computer screen. I
comp!!_ll)l
,"
.•
_,
..
,
read
very
eclectlcongressman.
themes.
They
thought of my health club memThe Club lasted {or 16 years,
cally. I'm very strict with my
"When I stopped working, I
bership that never gets used. I
meeting
monthly "during the
book
group.
I
won't
let
them
go
to
decided
to
read
all
the
classics
I
groaned at the prospect o! still
afternoon
when the kids were In
popular
bestsellers
like
'The
4.
had
never
concentrated
on,"
she
another night of carry-out.
school."
One
person was desigPrince
Of
Tides.'
·we're
reading
remembers.
''And
there
was
so
Book clubs? Aren't those for
nated
each
session
to present a
things
like
'Portrait
Of
The
Artist
much
In
Thomas
Hardy
I
wanted
housewife moms like mine who.
of
the
book,
which
ranged
review
As
a
Young
Man'
and
'Bone
to
talk
about
and
no
one
was
In the suburbs of the '50s and '60s,
'!rom
bestsellers,
to
religious
People.'
reading
lt.
It's
like
eating
a
craved these afternoon schmooliterature to- Upton Sinclair and
"One of the nnlcest things Is chocolate truffle, the language Is
za ihons? Career women of the
Ernest HemingWay . Husbands
they
are
very
mixed
in
age,
30
to
so
velvety
and
beautiful.
So
I
'80s don't book club; PTA lifers
were welcome only once a year to
.65,
and
they
are
from
all
over
the
thought
about
putting
a
group
do. Right?
attend a special dinner.
Washington
metropolitan
area.
together."
'
.
Amber kept hammering, and a ·
Anita Tyndall. of Washington;
It's just a ·big spread of people."
While there Is obvious value to
. lew phrases got my attention North Carolina, population 9,000,
Stuart
Brent,
propi-tetor
of
the
expanding
one's
literary
reper••oneevening a month'', ''a small
Is still with the book club she
group of smart women, from a 40-year-old Stuart Brent Books In tolre, club members from Bozejoined when she was In her 30s:
Chlcago
calls
It
"an
extraordiman,
Mont.
to
Washington,
N.C.
sex therapist to an administrator
"And I'm now 65." she admits
nary
resurgence".
His
bookstore
affirm
that
the
tr-aditional
feof a cell biology' unit", "homewith a great, ringing Southern
cooked meals" and an "anything sponsors a club that has been male comradery Is also a strong
laugh. "Oh yes indeed, I love my
for
22
years,
one-third
of
lure
to
signing
up.
It's
a
quality
running
goes" reading list.
book club,'.'. which Is now reading
them
original
members.
Every
that
sustains
the
generations.
It was beginning to sound
"A Taste For Death", by P.D.
"So far, what I have gotten out
enticing, quite dlflerent than the month some 150 readers meet In
James. The group of 19 women
his
bookstore
on
Michigan
of
It Is the comradery of women
stories I had heard about rural
members, down from the Ot-lglthat I used to have ·everyday at
Southern towns where the Avenue, and Brent lectures.
nal 20, meet twice a month. "We
He
waxes
philosophical
on
the
the
workplace,"
says
Scholtz,
women read only 19th-century
all raised our children all to"I
think.
It's
who
Is
In
her
30s
.
"It's
Input
on
.
b
ook
group
revival:
novels and come to meetings
because of people's absolute Issues and politics and how It · gether," she adds.
dressed like the central characIn this small town In North
discontentment
with the present relates to the way we're living.
ters. OK, sign me up.
Carolina, there are about "eight
far
more
than
a
literary
culture.
Realizing
that
their
It's
We seven women aren't alone
or nine" thrlvtng book clubs,
dreams ·are not fulfilled by . boost. Our last book, 'Beloved'
In Washington. Welcome to the
says Tyndall. Her group always
marriage
alone.
(the
1988
Pulitzer
Prize
winner
money
and
'90s- book clubs are back. Carla
meets for a luncheon, and In fine
"These people realize one by Toni Morrison) did not get
Cohen, co-owner of the city's
Southern style, the women unveil
terrible
truth,
thaUhe
Individual
rave
reviews
with
the
group,
but
Politics and Prose bookstore,
their best . recipes, china and
Is vanishing and the lnsltutlon Is we still had a great meeting."
finds "an awful lot of people"
silver lor the occasion.
taking
over
and
that
reading
Is
"We
had
good
times,"
says
lately are combing her store for
"When we were younger, we
the way to get perso!:'al.
Sylvia Lerner. a grandmother
their monthly selections. "It's
were a lltlle more literary than
"There
Is
a
great
hunger
out
who
started
my
mother's
book
gaining," she says.
we are now," continues Tyndall.
there; they are turning to Ute~:,a- club In Oak Park,,DI., In the late
At The Hungry Mind In St.
"In my case, It was an outlet
for
strength.
At
our
club,
'50s
after,
!Ike
Amber,
she
read
a
ture
Paul. Minn .. owner David Un- don'tdollghtwelghtbooks. Wedo book she was bursting to talk
from just babies and housework
owsky senses a simlllar surge,
and that type of thing. I must
.
books that humanity rests on. We about.
and not just for women: '"Relaugh," and she does, "we used to
read
Bellow.
We
read
Cheever.
"It
was
fun
to
get
together
with
cently It has been Increasing.
• We read Kafka. We read Proust. the girls, and It got us thinking of
By IRIS KRASNOW

flush If the Infrared beam Is
ControL"
ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) - In
"Our market today Is commer- broken only brlelly. But 11 the
balhroom heaven all the toilets clal," Shaw . said, "those places beam detects a user - a body In
swish themselves clean after that use a lot of hand washing and place for an appropriate time · every use and faucetless "smart need to consume water and have flushing begins when the body
· sinks" deliver controlled some concern about touching moves away, timing the flush to
preclude the annoying "splash
amounts of soap and water.
handles . ·
All routine bathroom func"Hospitals have a genuine factor" experienced with other
tions, even drying and drinking
concern with their requirements automatic toilets.
Toilet !lushes can be delayed
are accomplished without touch' - about washing. At restaurants,
lng a single button, lever or gas stations and rest stops we all for up to three minutes, a feature
handle.
have a concern because that's President AI Bauer said makes
the system Ideal for use In jails.
Utility bills plunge with re- just how It Is."
duced water and water-heating
The patented Bauer fixtures, Prisoners would be unable to
demands . There Is less strain on still lacking a catchy trade name, either dispose of contraband
the environment. Public res- spring Into action when an during surprise Inspections or
!rooms no longer stink, flood or adjustable Infrared beam Is jam their toilets with bedding to
visually repulse.
broken by some object, such as a flood their cells In acts of •
And supervisors In hospitals hand. The beam passes through a vandalism .
The sensor housing fits Into
and restaurants reduce the panel of bullet-pro&lt;if plastic surspread of.dlsease by monitoring rounded by a chrome-plated existing holes In any standard
sink, toilet, urlna1, · drinking
employees' respoJ!se to' recom- brass housing.
mended health habits. For In
.In the demonstration lab sink, fountain, shower or air-blowing
bathroom heaven the sinks beams activate the water when hand dryer, easing the process of
count the num~r of times anobject,suchasapalrolhands, retrofitting existing fixtures.
they're used.
Is placed In the basin. Merely
Prototypes of the devices have
High-tech hygiene has arrived standing In front of the sink does worked flawlessly In about 20
public rest rooms for 10 monihs
on Earth In the three-pronged not bring forth water.
entrepreneurial collaboration o!
A 30-second'"tlme out" cycle Is at the Polynesian Village Resort
an epidemiologist, a former Incorporated to halt the !IO'f Hotel at nearby Walt Disney
defense contractor engineer and before a sink can overflow World.
Fixture manufacturers are
an Inventor with a background In
because, Shaw said, "We assume
this Is going to be used In high negotiating to produce the Bliuer
plumbing.
..
"What we have here Is a schools and restareasandpeople product line. . Bauer said the
plumbing · revolution, " said Dan are go\ng to do evecythlng they manufacturers believe conventional products are now obsolete.
Shaw the technician behind the
can" to tamper with the device.
A
local hasp! tal has also ordered
auto.;atlc fixtures, as he gesTank toilets and urinals don't
lured around his working laboratory In the offices of Bauer
Industries.
Flushomatlc urinals and
toilets, Ieverless drinking fountains and slnks that gurgle forth
·on cue are much more than
gadgetry, although In an era of
they are shown for 100 days
TV remote control bathroom
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) -The beginning In mid-May.
wizardry has a sort of couch
Toledo ZOO will receive two ·
The Chinese originally planned
potato appeaL
young pandas from China be- to send Shan Shan and Mel Mel,
Disease control Is the major
cause the first pair designated who are 20years old and 17 years
goal o! the fixtures regulating
for an exhibit may be too old to old, respectively.
how long one's hands arewashed
travel, a zoo official said. .
"Their Intention was ·that
and ellmlnat(ng the need to touch
Edwin Bergsmark, president
maybe Shan Shan and Mel Mel,
sinks, toilets and drinking
of the Toledo Zoological Society,
because of their older age, would
fountains.
said the Chinese decided to
not be active enough," BergsThe medical community has
switch pandas, and will send Le
mark said at a news conference
long lamented the problem o!
Le and Nan Nan, both of which Thursday.
nosocomial Infection, or diseases
are 8 ~ years old.
"And to Insure that we give a
acquired during hospital stays.
Bergsmark said the young very successful exhibition In
It's estimated up to 6 percent of
pjlndas will ~ more active and
Toledo, they are now sending us a
all hospital patients contract
provide a better exhibit when new set of pandas."
such an Infection.
•
Nosocomial Infection not only
can kill, but the cost or such
disease has been placed' at up to
$10 billion per year . ·
"The simple task of going from
patient to patient within the
hospital - such as changing the
I.
sbeets, moving the linens - puts
bacteria on your skin, which Is
translen t bacteria that can be
washed oft," y.ld Dr. Lee Adler,
a specialist In Infectious disease
and Bauer Industries' medical
director .
.· Yet publlsbed studies show as
few as 30 percent of doctors and ·
only about 60 percent of nunes .
~amply with band-waahlne
~~~ Oe~plet•
euldellnea calling for, among ·
Other thlnp, a 111-aecond scrub
after eacb patient contact.
• HOlE OlYIO
• lifT C1W1S
"Contact spread via the hands
•llllllCIIAIIS
•lUllS
of botpltal per10nnella a maJor
•IIMDIC IU,UES
•HOIPIYAL • • •
mode of , tralllmlasloa of nOIOo
IMY OTIII lYEII
·•1110111 IJODIS •
comlaliafectlona. ConsequenUy,
handwuhlni Is COIIIIdered the
It .. ••=•III• ull IIIII llhlr ._.., '- '"'
IIIJ1ile molt important procedure

Payment based on sale price of $1 0,500. Cash down or trade equity is
$1,000. Amount financed is $9,500 for 66 months at 9,5% APR variable
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. Bowman's

Hoinecare Medical Supply

••• llttltti Oe_re ltere"

..,

MASON FU.RNITURE CO:
2nd Street

(304) 773-5592

Mason, WV

group of professionals.
'"This ls a serious book group,"
says Rei!. "We meet, eight
o'clock at night. once a month ,
exchange pleasantries In the
beginning, then we plunge right
Into discussion for a good two,
two-and-a -hali-hours. We come
to talk aboul the book . not
chit-c hat."
Whereas others pick books by
co ncensus, Relf's group chooses
by " total dic{atorshlp. The host
picks the bookk~,
rlod. The result
Is you wind u reading a lot of
things you w uld not otherwtse
read."

·

Along with preparing a "light
repast" ' the host must also
research the perfod, the author
and the book, then make a
presentation. Overexposed bestsellers aren't allowed . Rather ,
you find this group . reading
things like "Pride and Prejudice" by .:Jane Auster..
Rei! , who Is In her early 40s, is
the oldest one In the book group.
As for the presence of men, It's
not the hindrance the women
imagined It would be. "We were
afraid that the men would not be
as open, or that they would
dominate the sessions. Both
stereotypes have proven to be
false.
"We have found that people
who enjoy discussing literature
have a certain com mona II ty of
appreciation !.hat transcends
their sexuality.''

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more than 1,000 of the sensors for
testing.
The February opening of a
Coalition for the Homeless temporary shelter in Orlando
marked the first lull line Installation of Bauer products.
County officials assessed the
shelter a $15.000 Impact fee,
based on 75 people each using a
projected 90 gallons of water a
day, but the new devices have
kept consumption well below
those forecasts.
"With our system we haven't
heen able to get them past 30
gallons," Bauer said.

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discuss our children. Now our
conversation a lot of times Is our
aliments ."
Jokes aside, Tyndall offers
hearty praise •to the cerebral
benefits that have kept her In the
club for all these years: " It keeps
your mind active as you get on In
years. It keeps you from getting
stagnant and keeps you up on
current things."
, Marilyn Klrcchhoff, a mother
of six grown children from
Bozeman. Mont, has been a
member of a club for three years.
They meet once a month in the
morning over coffee and muffins,
and their last read was "West
With The Wind," the bestseller
by Beryl Markham. Like
Lerner's group In Oak Park, Ill. ,
the women are predominantly
housewives Involved In communIty affairs.
Kirchhoff, formerly the secretary to the president of nearby
Montana State University. finds
the club "really Increases your
desire to read more." One
highlight was reading a biography of Abraham Lincoln and
holding the meeting In the
archives of the university, where
a professor of history · led the
discussion.
This Is the kind of serious stuff
that book clubs should be about,
says Washington attorney
Wanda ReU, whose group just
celebrated its fifth anniversary.
In true 'BOs-mottf, hers Is a co-ed

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�Page-E-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

I

Apri110,1988

No conscience kids
-might lack early lov~
By JILLLAI
"Tbe teenage mother_ and achedchlldrenbecomeviolentas
there are over half a mllllon a did convicted killer Ted Bundy.
United Press International
The child who for one reason or year - Is trying to get her own He says that psychopaths can be
a nother receives no consistent Identity together and has natural · found In almost any profession
TLC In Infancy Is well on his or · anxiety. She is aot as mature as ranging from businessmen to
he.. way to being a psychopath regular mothers and she'll con- polltlclans and even clergyman ..
"You can have an educated
and mlghtbeperfectlycapableof vey that to the Infant.
"We ·must educate teenagers. person, the person who commits
commlttlng murder at an early
age, says Denver psychologist We can't put 'Just Say No' white collar crimes, as . well as
Ken Magid.
stickers on cars and see the someone who robs a 7-11. The
The key, Magid feels, is bond' problem go away. We must start tendency Is to think of psycho· ·
lng, the process by which child- educating In the 9th or lOth grade path as violent but that 's not the
ren develop a strong Unk with about bonding for. those who will case, Bundy could have been a
lawyer·, or politician.
and love lor a parent. A child who be mothers," he said.
forms no such attachment may
"If a couple has great financial
Psychopaths are able to mask
become Incapable of love, ot ffsponslbllily, and they have the their problems with characterlsdeveJoplng relationships with fi!ant, plus stress In Ufe, that tics such as being manipulative,
society and may possess no sometimes carries Into what gllb and superficially charming.
c 0nsclence and thus be capable goes over to the Infant. While
"High Risk" l!sts the average
of crime.
adultsareargulngorflngerpolnt· family as people with gOQd to
"The exact numbers ~of such log, the needs of babies are leU average bonding, "sUck saleschildren) are not really known, untended," said Magid, who has men" and "some" pol!tlc!ans as
and there has been no clear study been studying the problems of having sllghtly Impaired bond·
but I do know that the pollee, unattached chlldren lor 15years. lng, drug pushers and thieves as
He cites other reasons lnclud· those wltlr a very weak bond and
teachers and others on the front
line are reporting unprecendent ing chlld care centers where the serial killers and sadists as those
numbers of chlld murders," .chlld-careglver ratio Is so high whoareextremelyunbondedand
Magid said In a telephone Inter· that babieS are frequently left unattached.
The fact that.Amerlcan society
view from Denver. "Recently In alone for hours. Even extended
Boulder, (Colo.), a 2-year-old · hospltal!zation In Infancy, such seems to accept and excuse some
critically wounded his younger as for premature babies, may actions of pol!tlclans and sales·
brother."
affect bonding If the chlld does men just because what they do
Magid cites many other cases not get sufficient time with his · conforms to the accepted Image
of chlld violence ranglqg from parents.
worries Magid.
arson to murder In· his book
In his book, Magid says that
"Part of the problem in this
"High Risk: Chlldren Without A even foster parenting, generally country Is the acceptance of the
Conscience" (Bantam, 361 pp., looked on favorably, as potenc J.R. Ewing syndrome. That Is a
$18.95). ·
tlally damaging to ·children In values question that needs clarl·
Dr. Stanley Greenspan. a cl!nl- that they are usually short term !!cation. Moral fiber needs
cal professor ot psychology at and therefore cause breaks in strong redirection."
George Washington Medical bonding.
For parents concerned about
School, agrees with Magid on the
In the Interview, however, thelrchlldren's behavior, Magid,
Importance of forming relation- Magid said "consistency of care himself a !ather of three, pro·
ships early In life.
Is the Issue. The best thing Is to vldes no simple answer. In part
· "We must think Jn terms ot have .loving parents who take because not ma,ny therapists are
helping a chlld form a relation· · them (the children) lmrnedlately schooled to deal with unattached
ship," he said, adding that an trorn bJrth, with no transition chlldren.
..
early relationship forms the between hospital time and place•'I don 't have a central clearing
house, I don't have a solution.
basis "lor all subsequent learn· ment In a foster home."
lng-norms,consclence,letters, - "We should halve the bureau- Thewaytosolvetheproblemlsto
numbers, values and concepts." cratic delays and put (hospitals) prevent lt. What I'd like to see
Greenspan, who has studied tri touch with potential parents. If happen Is a national symposium
chll~ behavioral development for
It doesn't work, move the parent . bringing together those who do
more than a decade, feels-, but at least the child will have have experelnce and coagulate a
plan to address this cohesivelyhowever, that bonding Is just one some bonding.
step to forming relationships and
"A child Is at risk from the judges, social workers, parents,
that although the earl!er It start but It's still better to be teachers. Everyone who deals
happens the better, "I don't loved a little than not at all," he ~ with these chlldren not just
belleve there's any one period said.
psychloglsts."
(lor bonding)."
"We used to say if toddlers are
He says that llke cancer, the
Magid feels the critical period crying a lot, leave them, let them problem of unattachrnent Is one
is the first 16 months of life, cry 11 o)lt. That·~ not healthy. that needs to be , Identified and
although steps can be taken to They are crying because of a treated early.
help older children form need, a previous hurt. hunger,
If a parent must work and
attachments.
pain, or wet diaper. In the first depend on chlld care, "be a wise
Chief of psychological services yeir of Ute you cannot spoil a consumer," he suggests. "Pick
at Golden Medical Cllnlc In crying Infant."
out quallty care, a place with the
Golden. Col., Magid Is also
Magid recognizes a parent's proper ~child-caregiver) ratios.
co-director of the Behavioral · need to have time to go out II you can't afford It, do the best
Science Department for Famlly without the child or to have time you can. Hold Infants, give
Practice Physicians at the Saint alone and says that Is something children high quality time at the
that teaches an Infant that the expense of a career search or
Joseph Hospital in Denver.
Magid cites many reas'i&gt;ns for
parent wlll return "and that's your social life. Make up for lost
okay," but said a child has to time. Give loving physical
the Jack of bonding In the
know that his needs will be met. contact."
c h 11 d r en Mag 1d c a II s
" unattached."
He cautions that not all una It·
"Let's love our ~Ids."

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" No.238
Vol.38,
· Copyrighted 1988

at y

.

enttne
•

c

The E&amp;~~ter Bun,Y (BIU
Blower) WBII beld over lor a week after EBiiler In
Middleport In order to be o.n hand for the annual
e11 bunt of tbe Middleport-Pomeroy RAitary Club
Sunday afternooa at Hartinger Park- and be WBII
a pepular fellow 811 youngsters sought him out for
a hug or to gel a photograph taken. Pictured wltb

--·

"the Bunny" are left, Johnny Krawsezyn, and J.
c. BIIZIIIrd. One of Buzzard's egg finds contained
a SlO gift certificate tram a local merehant.
Ronald T. Atkln8 found one of $20 lift certlflcate
egp. oHered among the over 700 prizes to finders
ofegp.

.

.
un
eMI'JIJ'\!
d
Goverment
.
hearings
• _..,...-.J
.
.
maned to appear this week are
two former members or La Cosa
Nostra, Tommaso Buscetta and
Angelo Lonardo, both of whom
are under federal protecllon as
key government Informants.
Buscetta, a former member of
the Porto Nuova Mafia family In
Stelly, recently broke the code of
"omerta," or silence, In testify·
lng against several nowconvicted Itallan mobsters.
Subcommittee staffers said
Buscetta, who also spent time
with .the Gambino crime family
In New York City, could be
expected to detall connections
between the Slclllan mob and
related U.S. Mafia famllles,
Including the heroin trade that
was the subject of the movie
"The French Connection."
One committee aide said Buscella, as part or Mafia's old
guard, could offer Interesting
perspective on the history and
development of organized crime
In the United States.
"He decries what Is happening
with the mob today, especially In
terms ot drugs," the aide said,
speaking on the condition of
anonymity. "H~ is a unique link

1 Section, 10 Pagel

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newapeper

Second hostage killed;
hijackers demand fuel

.•

.

WASHII'JGTON (UP!)
Twenty·flve years after Joseph
Valachl exposed the Inner work·
lngs of the Matla, a Senate
subcommittee called a start
today to hearings designed to
assess the success ot the govern·
ment's war on organized crime.
The Senate Permanent Subconimlttee on Investigations,
which heard Valachl's. unprece·
dented revelations In September
1963, will examine how badly the
mob has been hurt by recent
prosecutions . or some of Its top
leaders.
"Some have described the
recent prosecutions of mob hierarchies as the final death knell of
La Cosa Nostra," noted Sen. Sam
Nunn, the Georgia Democrat
who leads the subcommittee.
"Others argue that these prosecutions merely remove one mob
hierarchy and replace It with
another - as powerful and
sometimes even more vicious
than the old.
"Flushed with these recent
successes, It Is Important we do
not prematurely declare victory
without first evaluating the im·
pact of these cases."
Among the witnesses sum·

raln .

•

LARNACA, Cyprus (UPI) .. - ""
Hijackers holding about 50 hostages aboard a· Kuwait Airways
jet dumped a body onto the
tarmac today after threatening
to klll one of three members of
the Kuwaiti royal tamlly If
authorities refused to refuel the
aircraft.
The hijackers, In radio corn·
munlcatlons with the control
tower at Larnaca International
Airport, gave authorities a 1 p.m.
(6 a.m. EDT) deadllne to begin
refuellng the aircraft.
"We hereby appeal to the
Cyprus government that we are
Intending to take off to a neutral ·
country. Therefore you are
kindly requested within one hour·
to start refueling the aircraft,
otherwise we will klll a personal·
lty related to the unjust Kuwait
regime," one of the hijackers
said. " ... and (we) hereby
remind you that we have r~·
leased one passenger as a good
wlll Intention, but It seems that
this good will Intention Is
unproductive."
The deadllne passed without
the plane being refueled, but
there was no indication any of the
hostages· had been killed. The
hijackers gave permission tor a
two-man negotiating team to
approach the plane, saying they
are demanding a "yes or no"
HELD OVER -

Variable cloudiness to!llghl. Lows In mid fGs. ·
Cloudy Tuesday. Chance of

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio,. Monday, April 11, 1988

•

Amusement parks set to
from Cincinnati to I .ake Erie
passengers, climb steadily above starting May 21.
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
tree level, then gllde along an
Americana, near Middletown,
United Press International
Ohio's amusement parks are 815-foot trough of water, only to has added a three-level pirate
putting the finishing touches on splash Into a lake, creating a ship In the -.. children's playpreparations for the 1988 season, wave that soaks riders and ground, put paddleboats on the
which wlll be the lOOth for spectators.
lake and moved the stage Into a
The park's stage show llneup covered location .
Geagua Lake Park near Aurora.
Americana, with rides, shows,
The Portage County park has Includes five new llve presenta·
added a new wooden roller tlons tllat entertain 111 such styles attractions and swl'mmlng, will
coaster and will feature several as the 1930s and early rock 'n' be open weekends beginning
roll. An lee skating show will be Aprlll6 and dally beginning May
.centennial activities this year.
26.
·
Meanwhlle, Cedar Point and presented again thiS year.
Kings Island will be open
Next door to Americana Is
Kings Island wlll feature new
weekends until dally operations Fantasy Farm which embarked
water attractions this year.
on a projecttolncreasethes!zeof
The new Geauga coaster Is begin May 27.
Cedar Point, on Lake Erie near !Is picnic grove and parking lot to
designed to run up to 50 mph
during Its two-minute ride. The Sandusky, opens a $3 mllllon accommodate larger crowds,
·coaster, tqe Raging Wolf Bobs, is . five-acre Soak City, which has 10 said park spokesman BUI
Robinson.
.
expected to be ready May? when water slldes,
the park opens for weekends. It Is
This new attraction l~ocated
The park. designed for families
patterned after the Bobs Coaster
between the Camper Vlllage and with small chlldren, will open for
at the now defunct Riverview
the Hotel Breakers.
weekends Aprll 16 and begin
Park In Chicago.
The serpentine slides are an dally operations June 4. During
"The Raging Wolf will offer average 525 teet long and some ·the past tour years, Robinson
tight corners and high Speed are as high as 70 feet, nearly as said, the park has made an effort
banked turns, representative of tall as the park's popular Blue to Improve adult rides and now
the original Bobs. style that
Streak roller coaster. At the end has 16 rides lor adults and 16 for
hasn't been dupllcated since the of the slides are splash-down chlldren.
1920s," said Geagua Lake Park pools where the water Is heated
The Beach, across Interstate
General Manager James Meikle. to 80 degrees.
71 from Kings Island, has put an
It will be the park's fourth
Also new at Cedar Point Is a addition on to Its Snake River ·
coaster. ·
pack ot seven .wolves, part of Rapids that opened last year.
Park officials also are 'plan- Jungle Larry's African Satarl.
The park begins dally operaning several centennial events VIsitors can watch trainers work tlons May. 28. Starting June 11
lor the summer . The park opens with the animals, all undera year will be a nightly presentation ofa .
lor w~ekends May 7 and begins old.
dancing waters show, called
dally operations Memorial Day • Cedar Point begins dally oper- watercolors-liquid fireworks.
weekend. The annual Oktberfest ations May 7.
· Fountains w!U shoot water25feet
on tM last weekend In September
Sea World, adjacent to Geauga Into the air and lights will shine
brings the centennial year to a Lake Park, introduces two Pa· on the water. The program will
close.
clfic black whales, which will be synchronized to music.
Kings Island, near Mason share the spotlight with the · Wyandot Lake, a water park In
north or Cincinnati, inaugurates popular klller whale Sharnu and DelawareCountynortho!Colurn·
the $2 rnllUon Amazon Falls when bottlenose dolphins.
bus, has an enclosed tube slide
· the park opens for weekends this
The black whales ate one of the called the Phantom Tunnel.
Saturday.
largest members of the dolphin' • Kiddie bumper boats are being
This ride, billed as "thewo.rld's famlly. Males can lrDW to 18 feet added, and the kiddie pool Is
most exciting drop or water," Is long and weigh about 4,800 being enlarged. A new magic
located In the Wlld Animal pounds; the females aren't quite show will be performed In an
Habitat and is the park's fourth as large.
air-conditioned theater.
A stunt show features Holly·
water ride.
Wyandot Lake begins weekend
"Amazon Falls Is cool, wet and wood stunt men as foolhardy operations May 14 and will be
wild," says Kings Island Markel· villains In life a board a open dally from May 21 throqb
lng Director Reule Whitehead.
riverboat.
. Aq. 28 and the first two
The ride's settlns Is reminisSea World will be open wee- weekends In· September.
cent of a South American jung~. kends beginning May 7 and dally
It has 16-foot boats that carry 20

Ohio Lottery

.

answer t8 thelr de mi nd !or fuel.
'
The hijackers gave no lndlcailon of where IIley might want to
go next If they got the fuel. They
originally diverted the Bangkok·
Kuwait ntght last Tuesday to
Mashad, Iran, where they spent
80 hours before embarking on an
odyssey across the Middle East.
Lebanon rrepeatedly refused
them permission to land and
Cyprus only relented when the
plane was.about to run out of fuel.
The Kuwaiti newspaper AI
Qabas said Algeria was also ·
taking part In the medlallon
effort at the airport, according to
Lebanese radio. The newspaper
predicted . that the hijackers
might head to Algeria under
guarantees that would lead to the
release of the hostages . Algeria
arranged the release of 52 U.S.
Embassy hostages who were
held by terrorists In Iran fol' 444
days In 1979-81.
The latest statemnent came
alter Cypriot arid Palestinian
negotiators made what appeared
to be urgent efforts to ward of!
more bloodshed aboard the plane
after an earlier 11 a.m . ~ 4 a.m.
EDT) deadline set by the hlj ackers passed without Incident.
The hijackers held about 50
exhausted hostages a board the
sweltering jumbo jet. for the
seventh day today as the clandes-

tine Islitmlc Jihad organization
In Beirut , Lebanon , warned It
wlll klll American and French
captives if the a lrllner Is
stormed .
The control tower said radio
contact was re-establlshed with
the plane about8a .m . today after
the hijackers and their hostages
spent a restless six hours trying
to sleep.
Control tower of!lclals said the
hijackers asked for breakfast
and complained that the aircraft's air condltloning system
had stopped working.
'J'he hijackers. who Sunday
said they beat one passenger and
threatened to harm others If the
plane was not refueled, said
today "not maqy people" were
feeling well aboll:rd the alrcr.a:rt .
Control tower of!lcials responded that they wol!ld provide
another air conditioner and
asked the hijackers to respond to
a letter dellvered to the hijackers
by a representative of the Palestine Llberallon Organization at
1: 30 a .m. today.
·
The hijackers said they wanted
a llttle more time to consider
their reply to the letter, which
contained a series of proposals
worked out by the Cypriot
government in consultation with
·
Kuwait.

Nixon predicts Bush will win
fall election after 'long night'

WASHINGTON (UP!) Former President Richard
Nixon, back before the television
cameras, predicts George Bush
wlll win the White House this
year but only if he starts
addressing the "restlessness
amldstprosperlty" many Arnerl·
cans feel.
Nixon, who resigned in dis·
grace because of the Watergate
scandal and then was pardoned
· by successor Gerald Ford, also
suggests· a good case could be
made for pardoning ligures In the
Iran-Contra scandal -but after
November's election.
In a rare Interview on NBC's
"Meet the Press," the 75-yearold Republican spoke for an hour
Sunday on politics, history and
u.s. policy. The program coin·
cided with publication of his
seventh book, "1999: Victory
Wlth.out War,'~ about U.S.-Sovlet
relations and he plans other TV
appeara~ces this week.

Sunday's program, though,
was the first major televised
Interview Nixon has given since
May 1977, when he was paid
$600,000 to answer questions
posed by British personality
David Frost. Nixon was last on
"Meet the Press" Nov. 3, 1968,
three days before he won the
presidency.
In reviewing this year's White
House race, Nixon predicted a ·
j'lush victory In November yet
warned of "a verylongnlght"for
the Republican vice president
and said Massachusetts Gov.
Michael Dukakis could become·
"a very formidable candidate"
for the Democrats.
"The best polltics is poetry
rather than prose. Jesse Jackson
Is a poet, (New York Gov. Marlo)
Cuomo Is il poet, and Dukakls Is a
word processor - that's what it
gets down to," Nixon said. "On
the other hand, (Dukakis) Is
cool; he's Intelligent; he's tough;

he's goo&lt;fln debates ."
Nixon cited Alexis de Toquevllle' s observation that a chief
American characteristic Is "res·
tlessness amidst prosperity ,"
and he said civil rights leader
Jackson has appealed to voters
because he speaks to that
restlessness.
"That Is what George Bush
must overcome,'' Nixon concluded, "and that's why I think
It's going to be a close election
rather than a Iandsllde."
Though he derided Bush ear·
Her this year as a weak candl·
date, Nixon said Sunday the man
who led the Republican National
Committee during part of his
presidency has grown through
adversity.
"Coming back from the defeat
in Iowa. he has wiped out the
opposition and he's developed
that Inner strength and t(l"Ughness that was not certainly there
beforehand ,'' Nixon said .

.
between the old Italian history of
·the mob and what's going on
today."
Lonardo, former boss of the
Cleveland mob, was Ciilled to
shed light on the relallonships .
between U.S. crime famllies. He
has testified In several trials that
focused on mob Influence In the
Teamsters union.
Committee aides said one
more high-level Malia mem6er
may testify at hearings sche·
duled Aprll21·22. Also testifying
this week will be FBI Director
William Sessions, Acting Assistant Attorney General John Keeney, Director Frederick Martens
of the Pennsylvania Crime Com·
mission and several FBI field
agents from BOston, Cleveland
and Kansas City, Mo.
"These hearings will not only
;..:..--....,.-..------------------,:--------::om~---,
try to determine If additional law
enforcement legislation is
needed but also whether the
federal government Is effectively using those tools that have
already been provided to them,"
Nm\n said. "In parllcular, we are
Interested In reviewing the re·
cent successful clvll and crlmJ·
nal prosecutions under the 1970
racketeering statutes ."
·

Racine Village-Council·names
Jane Beegle new village
clerk
..

'

AS IS SPECIALS

.

By SCO'l"l' WOLFE
SeniiDel Corre~~pendenl
RACINE - Friday evening
Racine Vlll~ge Council met In
I special season to discuss the
1 position of village clerk at the
council chambers In the Shrine
1
1 Club Park, where former clerk
t Jane Beetle wauppolnted to the
1
poaltlon vacated by Clerk-elect
Rhondll Lyons.
Mlnutea !rom tbe last meeting
were then releued, Including the
swearing In of Lyons, who took
offiCe Monday, Aprll _4 to begin
her four year term as clerk.
After much thought and discussion on the matter, Lyons submit-

I
I

..
"Payment li&amp;ured w~h down pa~t of $1000 cash or trlde plus llx &amp; lrtle 88-87
~85
84-43
82-0idtr
60 mo.
54 mo.
48 mo.
36 110.

I

.
ted 'her resignation and expressed thanks to all Racine
citizens who had voted for her.
Additional requirements enacted
by council as made necessary by
additional bookeeplng mandates
from the state were In conflict
with another job commllment
held by Lyons.
Council accepted the resignation as read.
Racine Mayor Frank Cleland
stated after establishing that the
additional duty of bond clerk had .
not been the deciding ractor or
the resignation, "It Is now In
order for me to appoint a new
clerk at this time, however, I
· !Jelelve that the people of Racine

Village have elected the
clerk ... my appolnlment is Jane
Beegle."
In the election last fall Beegle
and Lyons had tied after a
recount and the position was
chosen wl th a tie-breaking
process.
Beegle was then sworn In by
~yor Cleland.
Letters commending members
ot the Southern basketball team
were then signed by all council
members, along with letters of
special recognition, and letters
for area students honored at the
recent Southern Local Academic
Banquet.
Continued on page 10

NEW TRUCK ;... Tbe Pomeroy ll1re Depart,
meat received Ita new $1!'7,081 pumper truck
Frtdq atlta J!eadquarten on Butternut Ave. Oa
hand far the event were Cbarlee Lepr, former
fire •chief; J - W.Jton, vlllap clerk; Henry
Werry, a former fire cldef; Pomeror Mqor
Rlcbard Seyler; CouncUmaa John Antlel'IOD; Jeff
Walklnl of DIU. Fire anCJ Safely Equipment Co.,

Ra-ood,

~~eUer of the new vehicle, ...
preNIH fire cldel, Duny Zirkle. Pomeroy
relld•la lui year approved a two mUI Je.,- to
provide fundi for 'tbe lruck. Cblel Zirkle reperta
lbal an approximate 011e lilonllt trslnlnJ period
wiD lake p1aee lor Pomeroy firemen before 111e
new lnlck Ia placed Into service.

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