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                  <text>1988
.-:Pat:_g~~Loca:!
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·-

2

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lls 'Th ursdaY
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;· ~

J.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Thursday; Tuppers Plains at 9:57 a.m. to Chester for James
Bailey to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:08 a.m .
fo the sheriffs office for Tim Davidson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Syracuse at 2: 13p.m. to Route 124 for Norman Terrell
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 5: 35p.m. ID Elm St.
for Edna Deem to Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·

Water tank drained
Residents of 'Racine VIllage are being notified that the water
tank Is being serviced and drained for the next few days. The
water will be distributed directly by line supply. No problems
are expected In the process but If some do develop·the draining
will be the reason, officials said.
Continued
page_
1
n.en B
. ode. .. . ____,__
_from_
__

17

Nevertheless, Jackson has 1964, said the 1988 campaign Is
drawn votes from blue-co Ua r ·'dominated by unnatural
whites affected by the recession. events." He cited as examples
Bode said. On the other hand. the Introduction of the first Super
Bode observed that some white Tuesday primary, the fact the
voters may choose Jackson be- Iowa caucuses and New. Hampcause they dislike the other shire primary have not produced
candidates, or that a vote for a long-lived winners, Gary Hart's
black man would be a "reilemp· entry and withdrawal from the
live action" for conscience- Democratic race and candidate
Joe Bfden's exit from candidacy
stricken whites.
"For the first time In a long due to chargeS of plagiarism.
On the GOP side, Bode fell
time, they (white voters) want to
Bush will not differ from Pr.est ..
f~l good when they leave ,the
polilng place, to feel that this dent Reagan over poliCies during
, century-old problem of race will the campaign. "But every pres!·
be solved by our generation," dent has the right to change his
mind when he gets his own staff
Bode said.
Bode covered Tuesday's New and advisers," he said.
Bode predicted Bush will "t,alk
York primary and rapped New
York City Mayor Edward Koch, a lot about the duty of citizens to
claiming Koch stirred up racial their government" and educa·
animosity between the Jewish tiona! priorities to deflect con·
community and Jackson, who troversy surrounding the Iran·
Contra affair and other scandals
has been critical of Israel.
"Koch followed the age-old that have plagued the Reagan
street game In New York of admlnlsttatlon.
panicking the Jews," Bode said.
''What he did was a disservice to
his co-religionists. By placing the
Issue In the headlines and on Dance tomorrow evening
television, he brought American
The Belles and Beaus Western
Jews to the frontline of racism, Square Dance Club will host a
and most American Jews are not dance Saturday night from 8 to 11
racist."
·
• p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Bode, who has allended na· Center. All western square
tiona! political conventions since dancers are Invited to attend.

Announcements

Stocks
Dally &amp;lock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bl')'ce and Mark Smith
of Bluat Elllfl &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .... ... ... ...26'(,
AT"-T ............ ......... .. ......... .26Jis
Ashland 011 .... .. .. .. ............. ,69~
Bob Evans ........ ................. .17¥.
Charming Shoppes .............. 11 ~
City Holding Co .... .. ............. 33
Federal Mogul .. .... .... ...... .. ... 40
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ................. 63~
Heck's Inc .... .. ...... .. .. .. .... .. .. . !¥,
Key Centurion ....... ....... :.....39~
Lands' End ........ ........... ... ... 22'!1.
' Limited Inc. :.. .. .... .... .... ...... 19 ~
Multimedia Inc .......... .. .......66¥,
Rax Restaurants .... ...... .. ... .. : 4¥..
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .. ..... ...... 11
Shoney's Inc. .. .. .. ...... .... ... ... 24%
Wendy's Inti................... .... . 6~
Worthington Ind ..................20%

Services for former Pomeroy
resident Beulah V. Bass Lemley,
66, of Lancaster, were held
Thursday at Gravel Hill Ceme·
tery In Cheshire. Mrs. Lemle)!
died ~arUer this week at her
, home.

Born AprU IO, 1922 In Ripley,
W.Va., Mrs. Lemley was a
daughter of the late Latham and
Frankie La they Bass. She was a
retired waitress.
Survivors Include one daugh·
ter, Cheryl Lemley, at home at
111 Supman Court In Lancaster;
and two brothers and sisters-In·
i law, Roy and Eleanor Young of
Lancaster and Leo and Jean
Bass of Oklahoma.
Besides her parents, she was
I preceded In death by her husi band, Harold Lemley; three
• brothers and one siSter.
: Friends' wishing to do so may
i make memorial contrlbu !ions to
a favorite charity in Mrs. Lem·
ley's name.

I
I
•
•
•

: Hallie Gordon
•

HaJUe Gordon, 98, Chillicothe,

! formerlyofCodlvtlle,dledThurs·

day at the residence of Lundon
: and Ruth Holbrook In Klnpton.
, A homemaker, Mrs. Gordon
• was born In Gilmer County, W.
; Va., a daughter of the late
: George and Landona Griggs
jCoDDOUy. Sbe was a member of
' the First Church of God In
•Chlltcothe.
' Surviving are a son, A. Page
'Gordon, Chillicothe; a daughter,
,Mra. Brennlce Arendt of Muskogee, Okla., nine grandchildren,
•alx ereat·granclc:blldren, five
ereat-great-granclc:hlldren and
'several nieces and nephews.
• Belldel her parents, she was
In death by her hus·
•band of 74 years, Roy M. Gordon
'tn 1981, two sis ten and four
brothers.

preceded

I

Hall was reported late Thu.rs·
day In northeast Colorado and
northw.es t Kansas.
Up to 21nches of snow. fell over

southern Wyoming with up to 4 ' morning tor an 8-inch total Dumont, Iowa, man
hi f joked
hi ast
Inches reported at the east Thursday. In Utah. Alta received snow piled up on s res Y cu
entrance of Yellowstone Na· 71nches of snow by mid-morning lawn.
·
d
at
·Brighton.
The
out-of-season
con
and
5
Inches
fell
Ilona! Park. An Inch of snow was
f
t 1 thelllons
De
measured at Scottsbluff, Neb.. Three Inches of snow was on the prompted a orecas er n
s
ground by afternoon In Sioux Moines, Iowa, weather bureau to
early today.
.
1n a spec1a 1 a dv 1sor y·.
As much as 3 'to 5 Inches Is Falls, S.D., and linch at Mason, remark
Iowa.
" I sn •t M o ther Nature
eXJX'Cted over the higher eleva·
"Sure Is a beautiful sight," a wonderful?"
tlons of the Nebraska Panhandle
and eastern Wyoming today ,
FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 4·23-88
forecaster Dan McCarthy said.
30
Rain showers and thunder·
storms were scattered from
northern and central IlUnols
through the lower Ohio Valley
Into southwestern VIrginia and
northern North Carolina. ·
Late Thursday, Isolated showers fell over the PaclflcCoastand
the southern and central Callfor·
ni;I valleys into Oregon and 50
Washington and Montana.
Nearly an Inch and thr~
quarters of ·rain had fallen as of
early 'today at Zion National
Park In Utah since late Weilnes·
day afternoon, with 5 Inches ot
snow measured at the east
entrance of the park Thursday
morning.
Cold, snow and rain were
reported across northern Wyom·
lng during the morning and the
.. !,·,,,'. lsNOW
'&lt;.8';'~: RAIN
SHOWERS
weather service advised stock·
men that they may need to
FRONTS: "
Warm "Cold
. . St3tic "Occlude1
sheltef their young or weak
t.li!:o s'":&lt;Jw:; :T. ~~-n ·~ ~ ~~ ~ oer L1 '.J~es A~ .; J5 ~ 5C '., a~ J ~ y s ~.Joed a rea S ~cre&lt;::Js t
livestock.
UPI
Four Inches of snow fell at
WEATHER MAP- Showers !Uid thunde"'torms will occur over
Flagstaff, Ariz., In an hour In the
the Rockies and Intermountain West; Rain will occur across the
Pacific Northwest. Showers and thunderstorms will spread across
the central Plains and much of the Mississippi Valley to the Ohio
and Tennessee valleys. Thunderstorms will be widely IICattered
Winds will be from the east 10
over the GuU coastal states. Rata will be mixed with snow !rom
to 20 mph today and tonight.
northern Wlscolllln acr0118 soulhern Minnesota and South Dakota
Extended Forecast
.
to
northwest Nebraska. Snow sllowers wUial80 be scattered across
Sunday throu~:h Tuesday
the higher elevations of the central Intermountain and Paclftc
A chance of showers Sunday,
Northwest regions. Rain !lhowers will occur over the mid·Atlantic
with fair weather Monday and
states and North Caronna.
Tuesday. Highs generally will be
In the 50s each day. Overnight
lows will range from the mid 40s fl()~er
~c~o~nt~ln~u~ed~fr~om~p~a~ge~l---------------to the mid 50s early Sunday and
baseball. He completed a corres·
from the mid 30s to the mid 40s
In 1965, Cloud's legislative
pondence course with the Callfor· career ended abruptly when
Monday and Tuesday mornings.
nla Institute of Law.
then-Gov. James Rhodes named
Cloud ran for the local school him to a vacancy. Cloud then
boar4 and won - the first of a defeated current Democratic
string of 15 successful elections. Auditor Thomas Ferguson In
In 1940, he beat out 11 other 1966.
good speaker," said Morris.
candidates for county commls·
Cloud won a free-swinging
"He's a good candidate and I
stoner and was re-elected four Republican primary for gover·
thl)ak he'll do a hell of a job. I'm
years later.
nor in 1970, but became Involved,
w.a'ltlng to see Jackson (next
Cloud ran for the state Leglsla· through his position as auditor, In
w.e'ek In Toledoq and I'll make my
ture In 1948, and quickly became a controversy Involving Imprumind up a bout both of them
Republican floor leader In the dent state loans by the state
then."
House. He headed the Republl· treasurer.
Dukakls also· attacked plant
can delegatlon (or the rest of his
Clouq's office Investigated the
closings In a speech Thursday In
career and was speaker for nine lnveslments and recommended
Cleveland.
years - a record until current prosecution which brought four
"As a New Englander, I've
Speaker Vernal Riffe of New Indictments on bribery charges.
seen what happens when good,
Boston broke It in 1984.
No state officeholders or Hepub·
decent, hard-working people lose Bec~er leads loop
!lean candidates were Indicted,
their jobs. I've seen what
but Cloud asked two GOP candl· ·
happens to their families and to
MOUNT VERNON - The dales to get off the ticket because
their communities," Dukakls latest release from the depart· they had accepted campaign
said. "I saw It when carpenters ment of sports Information for contributions from partners In a
and briCklayers and Ironworkers the Mid·Ohlo Conference shows firm that helped arrange the
had to leave their homes and former Meigs High star and Rio
questionable loans.
families and travel hundreds of Grande Freshman Donnie
The scandal defeated Cloud by
miles to find construction work In Becker leading the league In .340,000 votes and gave Demoother states.
home runs.
crats a stranglehold on state
Becker has pounded ten round· goverrunent which th~y have yet ·
•'Over the past decade, In trippers to edge teammate Trey
communities all over Ohio and Seibel who has 9. Both have to "relinquish.
A funeral will be held Monday
Pennsylvania and Indiana, played 27 games.
.
In Upper Arlington.
we've seen the same kind of pain
Joining Becker on the Rio
and agony and uncertainty that Grande squad are Eastern's
to
we·llved through in New. England former all-stater Ed Collins and
during the '50s and '60s and early
Scott Gheen.
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
'70s," he, said during his speech
Rio Is currently second In Eagles will play Its Alumni In a
at the City Club of Gleveland.
conference play with a 5·1 mark baseball game at the high School·
and 15·11·1 overall.
,next Wednesday,Aprll 27,beglnThe United Press International
nlng at 5 p.m. Any Interested
Derby 8d Saturday
delegate count following Duka·
alumni should call Scott Wolfe at
kls' win In New. York Tuesday
·
the High school.
Forked Run State Park Is
shows him with a 140-delegate
gearing up for Saturday's fourth
lead over Jackson.
'annual fishing derby which will
get underway with registration
Bring Meig• County law
at 8 a.m. The derby ts open to
Enforcement Up To ~AR
anglers of all ages and prizes will
passed the Senate, more than be awarded In the variOus age
Elect a college graduate with
two-thirds necessary to override categories. 'Ucenses may be
20 ytal1 law tnfarctmtnt
a veto.
purchased and boats rented at
tlptrienct as
If the veto Is not overridden, the park's concession which will
YOUI SHEIIFF
the Senate may not have time be open all day.. Anyone wishing
because of Its complex rules to more Information on the fishing
ROBERT E. BEEGLE
pass another version of the bill - derby may call the park at
without the plant-closing amend· 614·378·6206. Forked Run Is loFOI SHEIIFF
ment, Byrd said.
cated on Route 124 near
Pd. bJ Candidltt. ... 72

EJ

1

-----------VVeailier-----------sOuthCentral Ohio
Mostly cloudy today, with a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms and highs near 60. Show·
ers likely tonight, with a low
between 45 and 50. Occasional
showers and a chance ofthunder·
storms Saturday, with highs In
the mid 60s.
The probability of preclplta·
lion Is 50 percent today, 60
·percent tonight and 80 percent
Saturday.

Hospital news

I

..,__

Alumni

play

Byrd wams against veto

(

50 cents
'

·Rio Grande signs more athletes

Helping
others...

Special consideration by IRS?
Beat of the Bend, By Bob Hoeflich
.....,:;p;.;; e B-4
In Our Town, Jackson has chance!
By Dick Thomas

-D-1

Union leaders
support
the
plant-closing
provision
as a mat·
ter of simple fairness; the
business community opposes It
as an unprecedented govern·
ment Intrusion.
Although the Senate will take
up the bill today, a vote Is not
expected until next week.
·The White House had no
official comment after the House
vote, but Reagan told the World
Affairs Council In Springfield,
Mass.; shortly beforehand that
he still wanted a trade package
only without the plant closing
provision. "If I do have to veto It, I will
Immediately call on Congress to
adopt a trade bill but without
those .things added on," the
president said.

~~Reed~s;vl~l~le~.~~p-;:::::::::~~~~~H~~Rh~St~.. ~Roc~ln~t.~Oio~io~~

r-;;;:::::::::::::::::::;1
"NEW OWNERS"
OlD GREEN LANTDN

NOW

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KORNER
OPENFOIIIUSMSS
SA'RIIDAY, APIIIJ, 19111

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·992-2156
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C-2

Inside:
Along the River .... .. ... 81-8
Business ......... .... ... .. ....E ·t
Comics-TV .. .... ....... . Insert
Classlfleds ... ......... .. ... D3-7
Farm .. ... .................... ,E -8
Editorial ......... :..... ;.... . A-2
Sports .. L .. ............. .. Cl-8

L_~------~~~~~~

Sunny. Highs In mid 60s.
Chance of rain near zero.

•

tmes .,

Vot.

23 No. t1 ·
Copyrighllld 1988

~

9 Sections, 82 Pages

MiddlepOrt--Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, April24, 1988

Who'll provide public health?

I

A Multimedia Inc. News.,.aper

•

What's the future of public healt;:::h;:-,service?
(Editor's note: This Is the final
of three Installments of "Who'll
provide public health?" Today's
article raises questions and re· fleets the concernsoflhepeople.)
By MARGARET C(\LDWELL
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The city and
county have had their say con·
cernlng the provision of public
health services to residents of the
city of Gallipolis . The age-old
problem stems from county and
city officials being unable to
establish a financial agreement
to provide public health services
for Gallipolis Cit" residents.
Although municipal officials
feel city residents should pay ~he
same as county citizens under

the .3 mill operanng levy, the
Galla County Health Board con·
tends more funds are needed to
provide public health services
for city residents.
What Are Tl)e Choices
Now that we've heard both
sides , what do we do? What are
the choices?
Compromise- The difference
in question is $10,000. The city
wants to pay $14 ,000, the county
wants $24 ,000. What Is the com·
promise? What would be the
political ramifications on each's
part?
1
No P~bllc health provisions-'
Neither the city nor the county
provide for city residents. AI·
though county residents must
have T.B. tests for food handlers

Dukakis supports measure

MAUMEE, Ohio (UPI) Presidential candidate Michael
Dukakls told workers at a Ford
Coin club
The OH KAN Coin Club will Motor Co. stamping plant In
meet Monday evening at the suburban Toledo today that he
Burkett Barber Shop In Middle- supports a measure that would
port. A social hour and trading require businesses to give 60
session at 7 p.m. will precede the days notice of plant closings.
Speaking to about 250 workers
business session, Election of
from
the bed of a pickup truck In
officers will be held. There will
the
plant's
parking lot, the
be a coin auction and ·
Massachusetts
governor said he
refreshments.
supports a bill sponsored by Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohlo.
Special meeting
"I want notice (of plant clos·
The Portland PTO will hold a
lngs);
mayors want notice; com·
special meeting at 7 p.m. Mon·
munlty
leaders want notice,
day at the school.
because we can't save those jobs
unless we know long enough In
advance to do something about
II," he said.
Dukakls said Ohio's May 3
Veterans Memorial
primary
Is an Important step In .
Thursday Admissions- Leon·.
hi&amp;
campaign
for the Democratic
dus Lee Sr., Pomeroy; James
nomination,
adding
that "Ohio's
Barley, Chester; Edna Deem,
a
state
that
Is
a
real
test for
Racine.
America.''
Thursday Discharges - Mar·
Sharing the platform with him
guerlte Sterns, Ricky McClellan,
were
Ltt. Gov. Paul Leonard,
Rosie Searles.
state Sen. Harry Meshel, the
Senate Del!locratlc leader, and
other local politicians.
Kevin Morrts, a worker at the
plant, said he was Impressed
Services will be held at 1 p.m . with Dukakls' speech, but has not
Monday at the White Funeral yet decided whether to vote for
Home In Coolville with the Rev. Dukakls or Jesse Jackson.
·Jeff Birdsall officiating. Burial
"I think he (Dukakls) Is a very
will be In the Coolville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .
Sunday.
WASHINGTON CUPII - Senate
Democratic leader Robert
.Floyd GrifrJth
Byrd warned today that PresiFloyd Griffith of Atlanta, Ga., dent Reagan might not get
formerly of Meigs County, died another chance to sign trade
early Friday morning In an teglslatlon and a veto of the bill
before Congress might doom a
Atlanta hospital.
·
He Is survived. by his wife, the trade deal with Canada.
"He had better make his
former Glenna Clark of Rutland;
decision
with the possibility In
a son, Ray of Atlanta, and a
mind
that
this Is It, that he won't
daughter, Kay, of Columbus.
get
another
chance," Byrd said
The Ewing Funeral Home is
before
the
Senate
took up the
completing arrangements.
sweeping reform bill designed to
pry open foreign markets by
Howanl Burris
getting tough with U.S. comHoward K. BUrris, 82, New merce partners.,
Haven, dieil Thursday, April 21,
Byrd told reporters a pres lden1988 at his residence.
llal
veto could hurt the chances of
Born April 21, 1906 in New
the
U.S.·Canada Free Trade
Haven, he was a son of the late
Agreement,
signed last year,
James W. and Druzilla Goodnite.
which
the
Senate
has yet to
He started as a barber at the age
ratify.
of 17. He served on the Mason
The pres !dent should heed the
CoiDity Bank as din:ctllr for 12
"Whopping
super majority" by
years, and on the Peoples Bank ad·
which
the
House
passed the trade
visory Board for three years. He
biU
Thursday,
he
said .
was a member or the New Haven
The
House
approved
the bill,
United Methodist Cbmdl and the
312-107,
despite
the
presld,
e nt's
Hustlers Bible Class of the church.
veto
threat
over
a
labor-backed
He was a member of J.O.U.A.M. of
provision to require American
New Haven.
He is survived by his wife, Clara companies to give their em·
El\as BiJITis; one son, Pete Burris, ployees 60 days notice before
Ne'w Haven; one half-brother, Roy closing a plant or ordering
Roush, Six Late$, Mich.; three massive layoffs.
Byrd poln ted out that the trade
gnmdchildren and three great·
bill received 71 votes when It first
gnmclchildren.
Services will be Sunday all p.m.
at the New Haven United
Methodist Cbmdl wilh the Rev.
Doyle Payne and the Rev. Joe
Marriage licenses have been
Grimm officiating. Burial will fol- Issued In Meigs County Probate
low in Graham Cemetery.
Court to David Wayne Withrow,
Friends may call on Saturday 24, and Sherri Jean Hal~ 20, both
from 6 10 9 p.m. at Foglesong of Shade; Ernelt Edlaoo Harris,
Flll1CI1Il Home, and one hour prior 59, apd Sara() Juanita Mahlman,
to services at the church on Sunday. 42, both of Long Bottom.

Area deaths
Beulah Lemley

8 Unl'-dPr-slnternatlonal
stor';;, sys(;m rolled across
the high Plains flinging rain and
snow through the West and the
nation 's heartland, and forecasts
called for wet weather to turn
much Of the rest Of the nation
soggy today.
Showers and thunderstorms
weri! scattered early today from
Colorado Into central Nebraska
as the wintry system gathered
steam over southeast Colorado,
sitting under a cold front, the
National Weather Service said.
Foul weather has plagued the
West since early In the week.
Southern California has been
drenched by rain, while heavy
snow has fallen In Arizona.
Rain mixed with snow at
higher elevations stretched from
the Pacific Northwest to the
Southwest and as far east as the
D.akotas, Minnesota and Iowa .
Wednesday.
\. _
. Up to 3 Inches of heavy, wet
spow fell Thursday In southwest·
ern Minnesota. claltnlng at least
· two lives In traffic accidents.
Showers and thunderstorms
were forecast by the weather
service from the Pacific Coast to
the mid-Atlantic states for today.

Sunday

·'6'

EFb'C'l'IV~ 1&lt;"JHI.6J981
WEWtl.J. ~ tOlftllli
111~ Allt..E 'l'O l'l\1)'\lfl)U
; PIDHJC m~tll'.il Slm\1' •
~ leU TO Cl'i'Y ·· . · .1 . ·. •

--=~

SIGN OF THE TIMES - This sign has been on display In the
GaiDa County Henlth Deparanent for some time now. It reads
"Ef(ectlve Fe. 6, 1989, we will no longer be able to provide health
service to city residents. GalUpoUs city has notified the GCHD that
they don't wish to renew the contract !Jir these services.'·'
(Tim.es·Senllnel photo)

permits, by state mandate, city younger man· went to the advl·
residents may be excluded.
sory council meeting to fill the
I The state steps In -The state position. She sald one of the
would point Its itnger l!,Dd dele· trustees tried to play dirty
• gate the dollar s without Input politics to discourage voting for
· from the community, boards, or the man.
officials . Once the state steps In,
She said that Lee Rose, presi·
It
will
remain
a
force
over
public
dent
of the Gallla County Health
1
health.
Board. often falls asleep during
t: .. . .•.
"What Us"
the board meetings and is nudged
What if the city decides to awake to sign papers.
eliminates T.B . tests for food
"(The county health officials)
handlers permits. That solves do things their way. They're not
· the problems for city residents Interested In helping people. I
who work in the city. County feel we need someone who is
residents have to have the tests Interested In people."
no matter where they work. That
Another county resident said
. solves the problems with food
she doesn't understand why the
handlers permits for the Fourth county provided services before
of July celebration.
. the contract but refuses services
But what about city residents after the contract. She said
that work in the county? What although the county health deabbut county fair time? Will city partment Is good, some of the
residents work at the fair?
people In the county department
The city schools have some are "some of the rudest people"
students that are county rest· she's encountered.
·
dents. What about lmmuniza·
She said nine times out of ten
lions for city students? What · when she goes to thedeparlment ,
about athletic physicals for city . the office Is closed. She said she's
students? Will county students seen the three county heath
who attend city schools be nurses close the ·office to give
permitted to receive· these services to two kids.
services?
Another county resident said
EMPTY ROOM - The Gallla County Health Department had
What about city resid ents who
he felt there was no difference In
very few visitors when this photograph was taken last week. The
own county property and pay for the &lt;::tty of Gallipolis and Gallla
department no longer services GalllpoUs ~lly residents due lo lhe
·.county health services? What
County. Gallipolis should be
cancellation of a contract betw.,een with city and county health
about county residents who don't considered as Gallla County and
hoard to provide services to those within city limits.
own land In the co"Unty to pay
should pay under t.he .3 mill
(Times-!'\endnel photo)
I ..
through the levy for the services
operating levy.
,
·
they receive?
He said he thought the prob· lng against county residents.
professional, said the city off!.
What about that young girl who
Iems between the county and city
A city resident said that If the clals are responsible for provid·
are politic problems that go back city officials provided for servl· ing services to city residents.
tried to get Immunizations shots
years. Thecltyandcountyhealth ces in the past, why can't they do
for her baby and can't because
"It doesn 't matter where the
the city doesn't have public
commissioners were at each It now. She said she can under· services come from , it's imporhealth services? What about the
other and since then there has stand why people don 't move to tant that they are offered. The
elderly gentleman who needs his
been problems, he said.
Galljpolls when they aren't being services should be made availa·
blood pressure checked and can't
"Gallipolis and Gallia County offered anything.
hie ," she said.
get the service · at the Gallla
are the same. Why should there ·· Just because the city charter
With the inc reases in the
County Senior Citizens Center
be two departments?"
said the city doesn 't have to offer elderly and those on fixed in·
because he Is a city resident?
Other Opinions
services , why did they provide comes , many people can' t go to
Public Responses
But there are differing opln·
services in the past? Why did the larger establishments to pay
they waste the money in the for T.B . tests or blood pressures
A county resident said she had Ions as to who is responsible.
Why was I taken away ? checks . She said see fee ls $5 per
past?
problems with the county health
One 'county resident said he
She
said
she is anxious for person Is "extremely minimal. "
board. All the members are In believes In the equal pay for
their 60s, 70s and possibly 80s . equal services , He said he feels answers.
Only six residents responded to
"! think a bout the teenage the issue over a two-day periodShe said that when board the city officials are crying now
pregnancies and I feel they need It could be apathy or political
member Frank Ruff died, a
that the shoe is on the other foot.
He said It has come down to help. These people with no money fears .
where the pay Is going. The city - where are they to go? I think
The issue remains unresolved
takes all they can from county It's a crime. We all pay taxes."
with little or no progress over the .
residents on sewer and taxes.
Feels City Responsible
past few months.
The city officials are differential·
Another city resident, a health

--

I

r

Class. action denied against
Meigs County Local Schools
POMEROY - Permission for
an action by Wesley Max Whi·
tlatch, et at, against the Meigs
Locat Board of Education, et al,
to proceed as a class action, has
been dented In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Judge
1 (:harles Knight. Ju.d ge Knight
cited In his opinion, which has
been filed· In the office of the
Meigs County Clerk of Courts,
several reasons why the action Is
not an appropriate class action.
Based upon both Ohio and
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure,
"one •or more members" of a
class may sue or be sued as
representative parties on behalf
of all, only If; the class Is so
numerous that joinder of all
members Is Impracticable;
there are questions of law, or
fact, common to the class; the
claims or defenses of the repre·
sentatlve parties are typical of
the claims or de lenses of the
class; the representative parties
will fairly and adequately protect the Interest of the class.
In regard to the first require·
ment, Judge Knight states In his
opinion that the plaintiffs allege
only In one paragraph of their
complaint that they are repre·
sentatlves of a "class so numer·
ous that joinder of all members Is

Letters deadline
Letters to the editor dealing
with pollctlcans or political
issues to either the Dally
Sentinel or the GalllpoUs Dally
Tribune must be posanarked
no later than Monday, April 25.
PoUtlcalletters later than that
date will not be published.
'

.

Impracticable ."
be the parents, and "by assump·
At no other point In the lion," the children of those
complaint do the plaintiffs sup· parents who elected to withhold
port this allegation the judge student attendance during the
states. Plaintiffs do rely on strike. However, as pointed outln
additional allegation In another documents from the defendants,
documen 1submitted to the court, there could be and are many
however, the complaint alleges reasons why children were with·
that the class Is "themselves and held from school durtng the
on behalf of their children and all periOd In question.
other parents and their children
The third requirement Is that
similarly situated In the Meigs claims 'or defenses of the repre·
Local School District ." In gen· sentallve parties must be typical
era!, states Judge Knight, the of the claims or defenses of the
class would then be all parents class . It Is Judge Knight's
who elected to withhold their opinion that the interest of
children from attendance at freedom ·of speech and right of
Meigs Local Schools during the association, which are alleged In
Meigs teachers' strike of this the plaintiffs' complaint, directly
current school year, and, by oppose the right of the Individual
assumption of the court, all the parent and child to obtain full and
children who were withheld.
complete public education, mak·
Mere allegation, according to . lng 11 "virtually lmiiosslble" to
the judge, Is Insufficient to show weigh Interests In a class action,
that the crass Is so numerous that rather than Individually.
joinder of all members is
In regard to the final require·
Anthony and Chief Jeff Darst on the large boat.
READY FOR SEARCH - Members of the
Impracticable.
ment that representative par lies
with David Acree and Dave Hoffman In the
Middleport
l'lre
Department
prepare
to
search
The judge has decided there
fairly and adequately protect the
smaller
craft. ('flmes.Sentlnel photo)
the Ohio River Saturday for two men ml88ing: and
are no facts to support numeros· Interest ot the class, Judge
presWlled
drowned
overnight.
From
left
are
Joe
ily since all potential plaintiffs In Knight opinions that while the
the class reside within the repn:sentatl~es "fully and fairly
geographic borders of Meigs represent their particular Inter·
County and jurtsdlcillon of the ests.'' they do not necessarily
Meigs County Common Pleas represent the interest of the
Court.
class.
Although tl)eabove determlna·
The action by Whitlatch, et al,
tlon alone terminates the class was filed In Meigs County Com·
action possibility, Judge Knight mon Pleas Court In early Februfurther addresses tile remaining ary. Requested In the action were
Apparently , when the James
A third man· In the boat was
By MARGARET CALDWELL
class action requlreptents.
a temporary Injunction, a prell·
K.
Ellis tow passed the small. flat
rescued.
·
Times-Sentinel Staff
The second requirement Is that
mlnary Injunction and.. upon
bottom
boat at the Ohio River
Shain Smith, 18, near Salem
CHESHIRE - After a two-day
questions of law or fact be final hearing, a permanent In·
Mile
258
tnear the Kyger Creek
search, two Meigs County men Center, and Pete McDonald, 19,
common to the class. The judge junction enjoining the defend·
Plant)
the
8-foot boat over·
remained missing Saturday ev· Dexter, remain missing after a
does point out that "this provl·
ants from enforcing an attendturned.
Brown
was rescued wh~n ·
barge tow apparently swamped
slon does not demand that all ance make ·up policy and taking enlng, and are presumed dead
Gavin
Plant
employees
on the
their boat. The third tnan, John
questions of law or fact raised In
any adverse action against the . after their small boat capsized
barge
heard
yelling.
a dispute be common to all the
plaintiffs, lncludlna the class. for Friday night on the Ohio River Brown, 24, Langsville, was
Brown was reportedly treated
parties."
·
not attending school durina the near the Kyger Creek Power rescued by Gavin Power Plant
workers:
Plant .
PlaintiffS pro~ the class to strike.
(See TWO MEN, A$)

T~o

Meigs County men still
missing after boating mishap

'

'·

,,

�April 24. 1988

Commentary and perspective
'

.

Page-A-2
April 24, 1988

Loyalty' Day celebrated May 1

:

Bush needs more respect ___B,;__y_Ja_ck_A_n_de_r~_on_

A Division of

!l25 Third Aw., Gallipoli•. Ohio Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
( 61~) -116-~il ·l~

(614 )

992-~156

ROBEI!T L. WINGETT
Puhllsh&lt;•r
IIOBAI!'I' WILSON

.II{ ,

Ext•t·utiV•• Editor

PAT WHITEHE,\0
Assistant Puhll•her-Controller

' A MEMBER of ThE' United Press International, lnla"nd Daily Press Assocla·

~~On· nnd the American New spaper Publishers 1\ssoclatlon.

·

',. -r t~TTERS OF OPlNlON are welcome. They should be less than 300 words

long. AIY'Ictters are subject toe.dlt lng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In

good taste; addressing Issues, not personalities . .

·

Letters to the editor
•

••
•
•

•

(Editor's note -The foUowlng
letter was submitted for publication on Tuesday momlng, April
19, prior to the lllb\g of the
decision on that date.)

WASHINGTON- Vice President George Bush stirs fond
feelings In all the Cabinet
members who have served with
him in the Reagan adminstratlon. But when it comes to
political clout, he gets little
respect.
We surveyed 33 former and
current Reagan ·Cabinet ·
members. They watched Bush In
action at Cabinet meetings and
they talked privately with him
about issues.
When we asked them to rate
Bush as presidential material,
the maJority confided, off the
record, that Bush's one-time
rival, Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan.,
would be the better president.
We took our survey before
Super Tuesday. while Dole was
still in the running. With Bush
no~ a virtual shoo-In for the
nomination , the Cabinet
members, who are all Republicans, are bound to toe the party

line. But .when the race was a
tossup. many of them confided to
us in personal Interviews or
through their designated spokesmen that they had qualms about
BuSh. Those off-the-record responses differed markedly from
the formal letters the. Catiinet
members wrot e - most either
begging out of the survey or
damning Bush with faint praise.
We asked for concrete "examples of policy decisions or actions
In which the opinion or work of
Mr. Bush made il'd!fference over
the past seven years." It they
chose, the Cabinet members
could also give us a personal
"assessment of . Mr. Bush as
presidential material. ''
Thirty of the 33 responded in
one way or another. Only five
came up with examples of Bush's
work. The two ·most enthusiastic
responses came from former
Education Secretary Terrel H.
Bell and former Energy Secre- •

•

••
•
•
•

Feels decision overdue

· sir
The Constitution of the United
. States guarantees every citizen
; the right to a fair and speedy
. trial. But most of the time. the
: Meigs County Common Pleas
·Courtroom is empty and quiet
·and you cannot find the Jucige.
· Meanwhile, the future of two
young men from Meigs County
' hangs In the balance forwantofa
,decision that is long overdue. The
•bottom line In my opinion seems
, to be that the political career of
· the Judge is more important than
the lives of these young men.
' Yes. I am prejudiced because
·one of the young men is my son.
· First , the boys were e~pelled
,!rom school by the Meigs Local
-school Board and I contend that
·the board violated its own rules
:and regulations and illegally
-expellPd these boys. I followed
"proper procedures and fjled suit
to restore my son's legal rights.
Then, you wait and walt some
more for a decision while Judge
Chuck Knight Is spending what I
think Is practically all his time
running for reelection.
So my son's education Is
slipping by the wayside and no
one In authority seems to care. It
is our right to see tha t Judge
Knight renders a declslpn in a
speedy manner.
Is It asking too much for him to
render a decision? We' re doing
our part. I don't think the judge's
court calendar is full bu.t his
personal schedule apparently is.

Meanwhile, two young men are
being deprived of the chance to
complete their educations. All
I'm asking is for my day in court,
and we're entJtled to that!
I didn't want to go public with
this, but time Is important and so
Is education. I think the Judge
should quit campaigning long
enough to do his job properly, and
render a decision.
.
Just for the record, I am not
running for any office. But I'm
not running scared either.
Dennis McKinney

{Editor's Note: Contacted for
comment In regard to Mr.
McKinney's charges In his Letter
to the Editor, Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge
Charles H. Knight said: ."Mr.
McKinney's suit, filed on March
28, 1988, by law required an
answer from the Prosecuting
Attorney, who represents the
Meigs Local Board of Education,
before I, or any Judge In Ohio,
could act on II. I received that
answer on Monday, AprU 11. I
"God looks after fools, drunkconsidered the suit and dictated
ards
and the United States," an
by decision on April 18. That
anonymous
philospher once obdecision was signed and IUed on
•
served.
Add
a fourth object of
Tuesday, April 19. Unfortudivine
protection:
smokers.
nately, all elected officials - up
They're
a
lot
closer
to the
to the President of the United
scurrU!ty
of
fools
and
drunkards
States- must at times campaign
lor reelection. However, I have ·than the nobility of the United
States. Besides, God likes to do
been In the courtroom every day
things In groups of four (four
and I have neither delayed nor
seasons,
four points of the
neglected any court matter due
compass).
to the election."}
It's not my intention to Impugn
smokers.
Some of my best
•
friends are smokers. I wouldn't
care If one moved In next door to
me or married my daughter.
· Most of us would not move that three toxic waste incinera·
It Is also a self-evident truth,
from our homes because of living tor plants Intend to locate ln a
that all smokers are created
·on an earthquake fault or for fear county near us? Forget that a 40 equal, that they are endowed by
of another flood . We have learned mile-or-so radius Is involved in
their Creator with certain Inalieto live with many new man-made any hazardous consequences
nable rfghts, that among these
dangers in this modern world. that arise! Forget, too, that such
rights are death, tyranny and the
We may even fly regularly on Incinerators and a depot for pursuit of scabb!ness. Each year,
large commercial airlines des- collecting toxic materials from
smoking contributes to 320,000
pite recen! reports that alarm us. other parts of the country will be .premature deaths, according to
within a mile of a grade school,
the U.S. Of!!ce on Smoking and
We take most risks rather accessible now only by the Heal! h. But the tobacco Industry
complacently these days. We narrow road some of you now ·continues to con smokers with
don' t get terribly upset when we take when you go the the advertising designed to associate
read the report of the Offl.ce of Barboursvllle Mall, and within smoking with sophisticated IaTechn o logy Assessment feet of the Ohio River. That's
(O.T:A.) and find that a large THEIR problem, you say?
fraction of the 144 chemicals
Let US go on dreaming of
found to cause cancer In National tourism for our area, heedless of
Cancer Institute-funded studies the history (a relatively short
Do you want to "become a
have not been regulated by the history) of what has happened In
better
person, a faster-growing
federal agencies who are respon· other parts of our country as a •
Christian,
a better parent and a
slble for protecting the public result of such Industrial
pastor"?
better
development.
•
from these dangerous chemicals.
If so, get a divorce, a Lutheran
None · of the four agencies
II the plants that we already
seems t9 be saying In an
minister
Studied by the O.T.A. - the proudly ci aim In this area have
article
In
a denominational mag·
F .D.A., tne E.P.A., the O.S.H.A., not sufficiently revitalized our
azlne.
''Gotng
through a divorce"
or the C.P.S.C. - has done an econQmy, Is opting to bring In
has
made
him
all these things, he
adequate job regulating the many more the answer? Let's
says
In
the
opening
paragraph.
cancer-causing chemicals which forget that M11son County Is the
It
Is
such
a
glowing
testimonial
fall under Its jurisdiction.
second largest producer of milk
to divorce that one · wonders
The O.T.A. report, "Identify· In W.Va. Should the food chain be
wl)ether we should even walt for
lng and Regulating Carclno· affected there- and here-, we
cracks to show up In ·our
gens", documented serious gaps could surely find some other,
marriages before we take this
lp Individual federal agency uneffected source.
joy-lllied step.
regulation of carc.J nogens ..
So -let's bring in the tourists!
There are shades, In this
Am'ang others, It was pointed aut They wlll, hopefully, replace the
article, of the 1970s.
that the E.P.A. has developed economy that may be lost when
During that unlamented pewater quality criteria for only 13 many professionals, and any
riod, people would get divorced'
of the 27 (52!il ) oft hose chemicals others who can afford to,
.
and brag about how they hlld
regulated under the Clean Water LEAVE .
grown as a result. Growth was
Act which have been found to
Sincerely,
the buzz word In the "human
cause cancer. Should that worry
Bobbie Holzer
potential" parlance. If you felt
US, though? Should WE worry
your marriage wasn't letting you
grow, you "got out of It," never
mind what that did to the other
people Involved, !Ike your spouse
and children.
Usually, an unhappy husband
By Unlled Preu lntenatlonal
or wife who wanted out of a
1 CK.ay Is Sunday, April 24, the 115th day of 1988 with 251 to follow,
marriage could manufacture a
'!le moon Is waxing, leaving Its first quarler.
good case against a spouse. And
'rhe morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
when It came to their children,
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
parents eased their consciences
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include
with little lies {big lies really).
English novelist Anthony Trollope; actor Leslie Howard In 1893;
Lies like:
artist Wlllem DeKoonlng In 190\1 (age 84); American poet laureale
- "Sure, divorce can be hard
RDbert Penn Warren In 1905 {age 83); actresses Shirley MacLaine In
on children. But they get over it.
1!134 (age 54) and Jill Ireland In 1936 {age 52), and singer-actress
No one Is more adaptable than
Barbra Sttelsand In 1942 {age 46) .
'
•
kids."

Bring in the tourists!

Forces Treaty. It was a temportary James Edwards. Both had
come out publicly for Bush ary blow to Bush. When we asked
before Super Tuesday.
him about Bush, Howard Baker
Treasury Secretary James . demured: "As you may know,
President Reagan has, on sevBaker, a longtime friend of Bush,
eral occasions, discussed the
did not respond. His friends told
us his response would only be
Important role the vice president
dismissed as coming from an
ha~ performed over the past
avowed Bush supporter.
seven years. I can think of no one
Former Secretary ofTranspor.·
better positioned to examine the
tation Elizabeth Dole was said to
job that Vice President Bush'has
have the opposite problem. Aides done than the president
said any assessment she might
himself.''
give us about Bush would be ,
Former Agriculture Secretary .
disregarded because she is mar- John R. Block responded to us by
ried to Dole.
phone, but failed to come u.p with
Behind the fancy footwork by
examples of Bush's work. Block
some Cabinet members to aphad already pubUcly endorsed
pear unbiased is a pattern of
Dole, who was responsible lor
support for Dole.
putting Block In the Cabinet.
White House Chi~f of Staff
Former Labor Secretary WilHoward Baker, Dole's predeces- liam E. Brock resigned his
sor as Senate Republican leader,
Cabinet post to be Dole's cam·
was reportedly behind the campa!gn manager. He told us he
paign photo opportunity In which
would feel "uncomfortable" rat·
Dole and Reagan joined forces on
ing :Sush's performance.
the Intermediate Range Nuclear
Former Secretary of State
Alexander Ha!g's disdain for
Bush was common knowledge as
soon as Ha!g joined the preslden·
ttal race hlmself. When he
dropped out, he threw his support
behind Dole. Asked then about
Bush's accomplishments, Halg
said, "I think he's been there.
Period."
Former U.N. Ambassador
Jeane Kirkpatrick came out In
support of ,Dole on March 3
because she had "more confidence In his handling of foreign
policy and other Issues."
Attorney General Edwin
Meese has problems of his own
right now. He did not respond to
our letter. But sources close to
Meese said he still harbors
animosity toward Bush from
early Cabinet battles when Bush
and fellow pragmatists battled
Meese and the conservatives on
administratiori policy.
Former Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger did not respond to us, but sources close to
h)m told us he had no great
respect for Bush as an admln·
stration player.
' •
We w!ll continue the report of
our survey tomorrow. ·

If you smoke, don''l 'exhale._'_

____.._By_C_hu_ck_S_tone_.~

dies and hot fun in the
summertime.
The real reason smokers suck
the cancerous weed with such
obsessive Intensity is not its
addictive qualities, but the delayed fulf!llment of a postnatal
deprivation - the su~kling need.
Some psychologists even contend
that extended nursing ingrains
an early serenity that can stall
later -anxieties and thereby inhabit smoking.
In 1988, I can't think of a single
defense of smoking, except that
this genocidal act provides a lot
of jobs. But so does the cultivation of marijuana, which Is
·America's fourth largest selling
crop.
The good news - if you read
Time magazine's recent cover
story - Is that we're starting to
win the war against the tobacco
industry:
- The latest sctent!llc evidence from the Surgeon General's office Indicates that passive
or Involuntary smoking (when a
nonsmoker Is In the same area as

Airlines became the first majot••
airline !o ban smoking on all oflts
domestic flights. The effect on ,
me was Immediate. Planning a
II ight to the West Coast for a
speech In July, I had three airline '
options. I bought my ticket from
Northwest.
But the tobacco Industry· Is
fighting back. It could lmmobll· .,
iZe the anti-smoking war If the 74
percent of non-smoking America
doesn't prepare a counter·
offensive. ·
After the Northwest announce, •
ment, a furious RJR Nabslco
(which manufactures everything .
from Camels, Wtnstoils and
Sal ems to Or eo cookies, Fig .
Newtons and Life Savers) lmpe- :
rlously canceled $84 million worth of advertising with the ad ·
agency that had prepared
Northwest's anti-smoking TV
commercial. That's First :
Amendment dirty pool.
·•
RJR Nabs!co ·has made its
statement. Nonsmokers, make .
yours.
And smokers, It's OK to smoke. •
Just don't exhale.
•

people who are smoking) can
cause a greater pi"rcentage of
pregnant women to miscarry.
- Some 26 percent of American adults smoke. down from 38
percent 30 years ago.
- Thirty-one states and more
than 200 communities, Including
Beverly Hills, Calif., Cambridge.
Mass., New York City, Pl)!ladelphla and Pittsburgh, have passed
anti-smoking ordinances in var·
Ious public sit uatlons.
- Major corporations (most
notably the ubiquitous and Insomniac Cable News Network)
are refusing to hire people who
smoke. (Way to go, CNN!)
- Congressional legislation Is
In the pipeline to ban all print
cigarette advertising, double the
federal excise tax on packs of
cigarettes, and end cigarette
companies' eligibility to claim
advertising costs as a taxdeductible business· expense.
(This Is known as hitt!n' 'em
where they live).
- In the most farsighted and
courageous act of all, Northwest

GALLIPOLIS- The Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4464 and
the Ladies Auxil iary have announced the annual celebratio n of
Loyalty Day on May 1.
VFW ·Post 4464 and Ladies Auxiliary will host Loyalty Day
activities April 29 at the Post Home. Following dinner, the
program will feature state VFW Commander John Moon as
speaker.
Loyalty Day, a tradition for the members of the VFW and the
auxiliary, became a law tn ' 1958. Designed to Involve the
community in displaying it s loya lty, the day is planned to be
filled with act ivlties and fes tivlt ies ..
Special Americanism projects are scheduled as ongoing
activities of bo!h organization t.o ·teach t)le mean ing of loyalty
and patriotism.
Last year more than 400,000 American flags and more than
one million pieces of literature were distributed to schools and
'
community groups. ·
· Ail citizens are encouraged to take part in the activities to
display their loyalties.

Police report two accidents
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Police Cited one driver in an
accident at 9 p.m. Friday at Second Avenue and Locu . I Street.
Police said Cheryl A. Riffle, 21, Middleport, stopped in traffic .
Her car was hit from behind by another vehicle driven by Glen
T. Cassady Jr .. 19, of 150 Fourth Ave .. Gallipolis. No one was

Hospital
news
.

Emergency calls

Veterans Memorial
POMEROY - Admitted
Shirley Stephenson, Racine ; Alice Balser, Racine; Wilda
Brinker, New Haven; Michael
Hewitt, Pomeroy; ; Lawrance
Scarberry, Racine; Fred Willison, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Leondus Lee,
Cora Birch, Glenn Scott.

POMEROY - Six cal ls were
answered by local unit s Friday,
the Meigs · County Emergency
Medical Services reports .
At 7:40a.m .. the Rutland unit
took Delores Donahue from
Route 143 to Holler Medical
Ce nter; Tuppers Plains at B: 17
a.m. took Lucy Barringer to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
from Route 681; at 12:02 p.m .,
Pomeroy took James Stewart,
Mulberry Ave.. to Veterans
Memoria!; Rutland at 6:43p.m.
went to Side Hill for Debbie Fau ,
taken to Veterans · Memoria!;
Pomeroy at 5:13-p.m. took Fred
Willison from an auto accident on
Butternut Ave., to Veterans
Memorial.

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Holzer Medical Center
. Discharges April 21: Leah
Angell, Esther Baker, Jeremy
Banks, J ean Bostic, Mrs. Jona
Burris and daughter , Iva Bush,
Betty Carter, David Clagg,
Louise Eden, Zachary Fulks.
Mary Huffman, Teena Kelly,
Lawrence Leonard, Summer
Martyn, Donnie Mayes, Carolyn
McCoy, Mrs. John Merica! and
daughter, Judy Musser, Merch
Rife, Larry Snyder, Patricia
Tomlinson and Glennis Wallen.
Birth April 21: Mr. and Mrs .
Earl Darst, daughter, Leon,
W,.Va .

rooay in history

It didn't affect them.''

True of false?
The Boston Globe has recently
reported on a study at Wellesley
College that challenges the view
that parents' divorces have an
only a minimal Impact on young
adults.

. ARE
YOU

t&gt;OING?

\

Three accidents cited by patrol
GALLIPOLIS - The State Highway Patrol ci ted Mat thew
Kingsbury, 29, Clayton, Wise., for failure to yield the right of
way after an accident at 3:40p.m. Friday at the intersection of
US 35 and SR 160.
.
Troopers said Kingsbury's car turned left in front of another
· vehicle driven by Lynn!ta J . Newbury , 30, of Rt. 1, Bidwell.
Damage was minor to both vehicles. No one was injured.
One driver was cited after a rea rend collision at 4:39 p.m .
Friday on SR 7 in Cheshire.
Troopers said Arthur Johnson, 74, Rt. 4,- Gallipolis. stopped in
traffic. His car was h!.t from behind by another vehicle driven by
Clarence E. Ash, 70, Marietta. No one was injured. The patrol
cited Ash for failure to stop within the assured clear distance.
Lewis J. Karschnik, 44, Scott Depot, W.Va., was cited for
failure to yield right of way In an accident a t 11 : 05 a.m. Friday
on SR. 7 at the on-ramp to the Sliver Bridge.
Troopers said Karschnik turned left in front of another car
driven by Rhea R. Adkins 45, Rt . 2, Pedro, and the vehicles
collided, with minor damage to both. No one was injured.

Ohio treasurer speaks at cookout
GAL LIPOLIS- Mary Ellen Withrow , Ohio Treasurer , will be
guest speaker at a Democratic cookout at 5 p.m. Saturday at
Raccoon &lt;;reek County Park, according to &lt;:harlotte Seamon,
Gallia County Elections Director. Withrow will speak along
with other local Democratic candidates. Hamburgers and
hotdogs will be served. Admission is a $10 si ngle donat ion or $20
for a family . The public Is encouraged to a ttend.

Police arrest Dayton woman
GALLIPOLiS~ Gallipolis Police arrested Brenda D. Fry, .11.
Dayton, Frida y on charges of driving under the influence.
possession of marijuana and carrying a. concealed weapon.
Diana L. Reynolds, 27, Point Pleasant, W.Va .. was cited for no
operator's license, and Allen A. Cox. ESR. Gallipolis, lor no
operator's license. All three will hearings in Gallipolis
Municipal Court.

GALLIPOLIS - Douglas M.
Cowles was sworn in as a trustee
for the Ohio Academy of Tria!
Lawyers (OATL) Friday. Cowles
Is the first OA TL trustee ·from
Gallipolis, representing the 4th
,
appellate district.
'The OA1;L is a statewide
organization representing trial
attorneys throughout the state. It
alms at maintalnmg and ImprovIng trial skills through education
and promoting the best Interests
of trial attorneys and the general
public.

Mayor will release
Metzenbaum details

RUTLAND - There will be a
free pickup of trash in Rut!aild all
this week in observanc.e of
cleanup week in Ohio. Unwanted
articles are to be placed on
sidewalks lor pickup.

Cl-EVELAND I UP!) -Cleveland Mayor George Voinov!ch,
who Is trying to unseat Ohlo Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, said he
will release details of his position
on international trade next week.

ROMA F.
WOOD
FOR

Cowles sworn
into academy

By Un !ted Press International

GALLIA COUNTY

\

RECORDER
CAPABLE • CONCERNED

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Roma enjoyed and appreciated the opportunity to meet many Gallia County residents
during her 27 years of employment in the
field of banking, working locally as a secretary and teller, and in the bookkeeping, auditing and ITJOrtgage loan-departments working
with deeds and legal documents.
Gallia County residents are hard-working,
caring people, who know the need to continue efficient and well-organized record
keeping in our Recorder'·s Office. Roma feels
that she is well qualified for the position of
Gallia County Recorder.

Douglas M. Cbwles

Paid for by Candidate. Rama F. Wood
Thelma Elliott, Tr .. 464 Jackson Pike. Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

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ount

Ociet

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ose

The findings were that "dt- :
vorce clearly had a broad and:
often protracted effect on most of ·
the college students. For these·
students, divorce shatters the:
foundation of home and family
and leaves them adrift. They feel'
abandoned, anxious and angry." ; _

.'

...,''

.,.,

Berry's World
Wt\AT

Injured. Police cited 'Cassady for failure to stop within the
assured clear distance.
Police also investigated an accident at 1: 22 p.m. Friday on the
Ga!Ua Academy High School parking lot. Pollee said Chadd
Nunn, 16, of 640 Fourth Ave .. Gallipolis, was attempting to pull
out of a parking space and struck a parked car owned by John
Pierotti, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.

Trash pickup free
for cleanup week

Divorce: still big issue.__---,-__B...:._y_Ge_or-=-ge_P_Ing_e_ni
- "Children are better off to
have two separated parents who
are relatively happy than two
parents who stay together for the
sake of the children but cannot
love each other."
But neither of these statements
are true, according . to the eminent child psychologist Dr. David
Goodman, who wrote "A Parent's Guide to the Emotional
!leeds of ChildreQ."
"What parents contemplating
divorce want to hear," said
Goodman, "Is 'Go ahead with
your divorce. Your children will ·
get over it. There are mllllons of
children of divorce In America.
They all get over it.' "
But the wise counselor won't
tell them this, said Goodman,
"because he has seen too many llf
these children putting up a brave
front of sophistication and !ndlllerence, but never really losing
the look of Irremediable grief In
their eyes."
The most pervasive · fact to
· emerge from the study was the
enormity of the grelf all the
. children studied felt over their
parents' divorce. They were sad
beyond measure. "The pain was
there, hard and hurting, In every
one of the 131 youngsters," the
study said.
"Ah, but they're talking aobut
.Younger children," choruses
another group of divorced par·
ents. "We postponed our divorce
unttl the kids went off to college.

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-3

r----Area news briefs------------------....------------1

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.iunba~ ~imes- Jentittel

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

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WELL.

IF IT'S ANY OF .
YOUR BUSINESS, I'M
GOifltG THROUGH A

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nc1nera ors
ason oun

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MIDLlFE CAREER
CHANGE . .

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Paid for by the Medical S~aff of the Holzer Medical Center·

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Page-A-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant.

'fl.

- - - - - - - A r e a deaths------Columbus, and Charles Anna grand children and six step- daughters , Mrs. William (San·
Powell of Ci ncinnati; son Josep h great-grandch ildren .
dra Kay) Strauss, Fleming, and
Powell
of
Columbu
s;
two
grand·
Services
will
be
Monday
at
2
Brenda Sue Ingraham, At hens;
COOLVILLE - Lucy G. Ber·
children;
one
sister,
Betty
Robin·
p.m.
two sisters, Mrs. Harold (Pau·
at
the
Bigony-Jordan
Funringer, 76, of Reedsviilf. died
son
of
Washington,
D.C.;
two
line ) Smith and Mrs . Ralph
eral
Home.
Pastor
Henry
~
·· Friday at Veterans Memorial
brothers,
Charles
Boyd
of
Mid·
Miilhorn
will
officiate
.
Burial
(Kathryn)
Bowen, both of Ma·
Hospital in Pomeroy.
dleport
and
John
Pat
Boyd
a
!Oak
rietta;
·
a
brother,
Charles H.
wi
ll
be
at
Wells
Cemetery
in
She was born on Aug . 2, 1911 in
•HilL
Pageville.
Ingraham,
Col
umbus
, five
Meigs Count y., a daughter of the
Services
;vi
ii
be
Tuesday
,'
1
Friends
may
call
Sunday
from
grandchildren
and
one
great·
late Samuel H. and Sophia
p.m.
at
Ewing
Funeral
Home,
granddaughter
.
•
2
to
4
p.m
.
and
from
7
to
9
p.m.
Deeter . She was a homemaker
burial following in Middleport
SerVices will be held at 1:30
Donations may be made to the
and attended Joppa Methodist
Cemetery
.
Friends
may
call
Hill
a.m.
Monday at the Eells-Leget t
Athens
Area
Ho
spice.
Church.
at
the
funeral
home
6
to
9
p.m.
on
Funeral
Home in.Lisbon with Dr.
She was preceded by one·
Monday
.
Frank
W.
Montgomery official·
daughter. two sisters. three
ing
.
•
Burial
will be in Lisbon
brothers. one granddaughter and
Cemetery.
Friends
may call at
o ne great-gra ndson .
Floyd 0. Griffith
the
funeral
hOme
from
2 to 4 and 7
Surviving are her hu sba nd .
Su.nday.
to
9
p.m.
F.
Whitney
Ingraham
Floyd R. Berringer; three sons,
POMER.OY - Floyd O. ·Gt:if·
Floyd F .. Garoid R: and DorseT
fith, 65, 148 Waverly Way , NorPOMER.OY - F . Whitney Hilda Laudermilk
R. Berringer, all of Reedsville;
theast Unit 9, Atla nta, Ga ..
Ingra
ham, 72, 329 E. Ches tnu t
·three daughters, Betty Kearns of formerly of Pomeroy a nd Colum·
St
..
Lisbon,
formerly of PomePOMER.OY
Hilda
West Columbia. W.Va .. Donna
bus, died Friday morning at the
roy,
died
Friday
morning at' his La ud er mIlk · T errel i· Chalker,
(Dot) Gibbs of Letarl. W.Va ., Cra wford W. Long Hospital in
residence Joilowing a two year formerly of Pomeroy, died April
aod Lorri Smith of Reedsville; a Atla nta .
illness.
2 in Akron.
brother, Ivan D. Deeter of
Griffith was born at Pomeroy,
Ingrah a m was born Jan. 25,
Mariet ta ; and two sis ter s, Mae a son of the late William and
She is survived by a son.
1915 in Marie! ta, a son of the late Robert Te rrell of Lexington, S.
Otto of Pontiac, Mich., a ncl Myrta Jones Griffith. He was a
Charles H. and Clara Whitney C.,; a daughter, Jean Davis of
Thelma Balanes of Royal Oak,
retired salesman aild a retired
Ingraham. He had resided in Mogadore; 11 grandchildren; 11
Mich.
em ployee of the Ohio Depart·
Lisbon si nce 1953.
great-grandchildren; a brother.
Services wili be Tuesday a t men t of Highways. He belonged
He was one of the first lour Virgil Walker , Raci ne; a sister,
noon at the White Funeral Home, · to the United Methodisi Church
organizatio nal directors named Helen Cline, Akron; nieces, Joan
Coolville. Pastor Ja mes Rankin and was a veteran of World War
by the Ohio Far m Bure a u and McGee, Akron; Sherrie Louks ,
R.oach wil l officiate . Burial wil l 11. He was a membe r of t he
began
work With the De laware Long Bottom , and James
be in Wea therby Cemetery.
Vetera ns of Foreign Wars in
County
Farm Bureau in 1938 . He "Butch" Walker of Florida.
Friends may call the funeral Baltimore and of the Masonic
er e mployed with the
was
lat
She was preceded in dea th by
home Monday from 3 to 5 p.m . Lodge in Columbu s.
Meigs
Cou
nty Farm Bureau, and
her mother, Amelia Walker a nd
and (rom 7 to 9 p.m .
Surviving are his wife. Glenna;
Farm Buceau organizations in stepfather, Louis Walker, and a
a son, R.ay Griffit h, Allan ta ; a
Co lumbi a na and Gea uga Co un- . brother, Lewis Walker killed in
daughter, Kay Hull , Co lumbus ,
ties as well as the Oh io Farm World War 1!.
Hilda Chalker
and two sis ters . Agnes Eichinger
Burea u Fe'deration. He retired
Services were held in Akron.
and Norma Diefenbaugh, both of
·
June
30, 1980 after 41 years of
POMEROY
Hilda
Co lumbu s.
service with the Farm Bureau. 1
Laud erm Ilk· Terre II· Chalker,
Graveside services will be held
After retirement he was a
former ly, of Pomeroy, died April
at 3 p.m. Sunday at Beech Grove
collector and restorer of hand
2 in Akron.
Cemtery in Pomeroy with the
crafted organs. He was a
She is survived by a son,
R.ev. Ervin Lane of Columbu s
m ember and elder of the Lisbon
Robert Terreli of Lexington,
officiat ing. The body is a t the
First Presbyteria n Chu rch a nd a
S.C.,; a daughter, Jean Davis of
Ewing Funeral Hom e where
member of the Muslcal Box
Mogadore; 11 grandchildren; 11
friends may call from 1 to 2 p.m.
Society
International and its
great-grandc hild re n; a brother,
today.
APRIL 24-APIIL 30
mid -American Chapter. He wa s
VIrg il Walker, R.acine; a sister,
a member of the Columbiana ·
Helen Cline, Akron; nieces, Joan
Mahoning Co unt y Bee Keepers
McGee, Akron; · Sherrie Louks ,
Clarence D. Haning
Assn. a nd wa s a 4-H advisor in
Long Bottom. a nd James
Washington a nd Meigs Counties
"Butch' ' Walker of Florida.
ALBANY Clarence D. for 20 years . He was a former
She was preceded In death by
IShorty)
Haning,
71,
of Albany, charter member, a past presi·
her mother , Amel ia Walker and
died
Friday
a
fternoon
at hi s dent a nd a past trustee of t he
stepfather, Lo uis Walker, a nd a
home.
Lisbon Rotary Club ; a former
brother, Lewis Walker killed in
Remember: Wednesday &amp;
He was born on Aug. 10, 1916 in c harter member of the Pomeroy
World War I l.
Saturday
nights after 4 p.
Me igs County, son of the la te Lions Club a nd a former member
Services were held in Akron.
m.
large
Pepperoni Pina
Herlie and Margie Haning. He of the Meigs County Hospital
for
was a fa rmer and lor 25 years Board. He belonged to the Lisbon
Birdie B. Gibson
· was an equipment opera tor at the R.uritan Cl ub , the Lisbon
Only
Diamond Stone Quarry .
Cha mber of Commerce, the
WASHINGTON, D.C. -Birdie
Survivors include his wife,
Lisbon Historical P reservation
Boyd Gibson, 62, of Washington, Clara Etta Haning; four sons,
Comm it tee, the Lisbon Shade
D.C .. formerly of Pomeroy , died James Keith Haning, Wayne Tree Comm ission, a member and
Friday at her home .
Dale Haning; R.ussell Lee Haning . pas t presi dent and board of
Born Sept. 24, 1925 in Pomeroy, a nd Lyle Bruce Han lng, a ll of trustee member of the Lisbon
she was a daughter of the late Albany; four daughters , Bet ty Hi s torical Soc iety and was on the
Josep h and Wilsie J ohnspn Boyd. Pauline Wyant, Bonnie Charlene boa rd of d irectors of the Johnny
Surviving are he r husband, Whittington, Barbara Carol Cot· Appleseed FestJval In Lisbon.
Wallace J. Gibson; three daug h· terlli and Sharon Lynn Arlx, all of
Survivin g are his wife, June
ters, Sa lly Justice of Newport Albany; 21 gra ndchildren, eight
Kampfer Ingraham, whom he
News, Va. , Sherry Powell of step-grandchildren, three great·
married J uly 27, 1957; two

April 24. 1988

Va.

Lucy G. BetTinger

Two dead on
Ohio roads
By United Press lnte~natlonal
At least two people were killed
in traffic accidents across Ohio
during the· first day of the
weekend, the State Highway
Patrol reported . .
John Bagwell. 34, Of Bradford.
was killed at 3:15a.m . Saturday
when his car struck a tree along a
Miami County road. Bagwell was
alone in the car.
·
In Champaign Cou nt y, · De·
borah Mills, 20, of Urbana, was
killed at 5:45a .m . Saturday on
Ohio 560. Mills' car went off the
road, overturned aild she was
thrown from the vehicle.
(\. pa trol spokesma n said
neither victim was wearing a
sea t belt .
The patrol counts fatalities
res ulting from •accide nts on the
state's public roadways each
weekend bet ween 6 p.m. Friday
and midnight Sunday.

By United Press International
CLEVELAND !UP l l A
court-appointed watchdog of
school desegrega tion efforts In
Cleveland says even ts over the
last lour months have hindered
desegregatio n efforts .

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-5

·Thunderstornts, high winds hit Ohio Saturday evenmg
through central Illinois late Frl· 150 miles east of San Francisco.
and numerous funnel cloud s,
day, setting off thunderstorms in The 40 to 45 passengers aboard
authorities said.
the !our-state area, the National were pulled out of the vehicle's
Lightning struck the bell tower
Weather Service said.
windows, the CHP said.
at the Du Page County court·
areas.
.
"Behind this storm system in , CHP spokesman Steve Schnoehouse in Wheaton, late Friday
• The National Weather Service
the colder air, the weather took belen noted that rain, snow , and
igniting a lire that was put out
issued a tornado watch for the on more of a winter like personal· · wind had been hammering the
about two hours later, fire
eastern third of the state, but no
ity," forecaster Dan McCarthy · Nor thern California area in the
officials said. There were no
twisters were repm;ted as of 5 said.
past two days, and that roads had
injuries.
p.m . Saturday . The watch was to
Thunderstorms battered an
been slick.
A spring storm with lightning,
ex pire at 9 p .m.
heavy rain and hall swept over
area · from eastern Illinoi s to
A line of severe storms that
NWS officials said they re- southern Michigan today,lnvad·
Southern California Saturday,
tore a northeaster n pa th t hrough
ceived several reports of hall ing western Indiana wjth a flurry central and northern Illinois
causing some minor flooding but
measuring up to one-half inch in of hall , gusty winds and hea vy
Friday produced hail as large as
·failing
dampen
the enthusiasm
diameter and 40 to 50 mph wi nds.
of up toto10,000
people
particlpat·
rai n.
base balls, 70 mph winds and
A wind gust of 55 mph was
ing in a March of Dimes
Rain showers fell in ·c entral spawned at least two tornadoes
reported · in Pandora, Ottawa California Friday, and nearly
County, and 48 mph g usts were half an inch was recorded in the
(From TWO MEN, AI)
reported in To ledo as storms northwest part of the state.
...
moved through those areas.
A tour bus carrying a load of
A low pressure system located passengers home from a Reno. a nd released from Holzer Medi· Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire
cal Center after being trans· Department, and ·t he Ga llia
over southeastern lower Michl· Nev., gambl tng trip overturned
ported by the Meigs County Cou nt y Emergency Medical
gan and a n associated co ld front on an Icy highway Friday night.
Emergency Medical Services, a Ser vice.
extending to the south was Jnju.r ing 14 people, the California
hospital spokeswoman said .
LifeFiight 1, out of Columbu s,
responsible for the sta te's Hi ghway Patrol said.
The search lor the mi ssing men condu cted the first air search on
thund ers tor m s.
The "ga mblers' special'' bu s
began Saturday, 12:30 a .m .,· one side of the bank until the
The low system was expected flipped along tM&gt;stretch of road
it· move northeast Saturday west of Blue Ca nyon around 7 according to Robert Byers , di rec· he licopter ran low on fuel.
tor of Meigs Co unty Emergency Li feFiight 2, Wellston, conti nued
night , bringing more s ta ble p.m . In the Sierra Nevada, a bout
Medical
Service.
th e search the other side of the
·weather condit ions and an end to
The
search
for the men is be ing · bank at 3 a.m. until the searc h
the thunderstorms in Ohio.
co ndu cted by the Middlepo rt ended Saturday morning a t 3:30
A high pressure area was to
Fire Department, who is in a.m.
·'
move over ohio Su nd ay p roduc·
charge
of the search, the West
The search resumed Saturday
lng drier and cooler weather.
South Central Ohio
Virginia Department of Natural morning at 10 a. m. Hi gh wi nd s
While the mercury reached
Becoming mostly sunny Sun·
Resources,
the Point Pleasant cau sed some difficult y in the
into the 70s sta tew ide Saturday, day , with highs in the low 60s.
Emergency
Medical Service. search, Ryer sa id .
highs Sunday were expected to Mostly clear Su nday nig·ht, with a
range from the 50s to the low 60s.
low between 35 and 40. lncreas·
The forecast lor the beginning lng cloudiness Monday, with
of the work week calls for mostly
highs in the mi.d 60s.
s unny skies Monday , with highs.
The probability of preciplta·
ranging from 55 to 65. T here is a
tlon is near zero Su nda y through
chance of showers on Tuesday Monday .
and Wednesday, with lair
Winds will be from the northw·
weather on T hu rsday. Highs will cs tat 10 to 20 mph Sunday .
be between 55 and 65 Tuesday,
E"tended Forecast
a nd in the 50s 1\ ednesday and
Tuesday through Thursday
Thursday .
A c hance of showers Tuesday
Around The Nation
a nd Wednesday, with fair
A wintry s torm that barreled
weather on Thursday. Highs will
out of the West and across the
be between 55 a nd 65 Tuesday,
P lains rumbled across the Mldw·
a nd in the 50s Wednesday and
est, spreadi ng wind, rai n a nd hail ' Thursday. Overnight lows will be
through Illinois, Michigan , Ohio
In the 40s early Tuesday· a nd
a nd Indiana Saturday.
mainly in the 30s Wednesday and
The s torm sys tem moved
Thursday mornings .

Published each Sunday, 82."i Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub-

lishing Company/ Multlmedla, lnc. Se·
cond class postage paid at Galllpolls,Ohlo 45631. Entered as second class
maili ng matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post
Office.

'

Member: Un ited Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio New.spaper Association, National

Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sal es. 733 Third Avenue.
New York. New York 10017.

SUNDAY ONLY
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By Carrier or Motor Route
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•

By United Press International
, Thunderstorms rolled across
Ohio Saturday, producing high
wi nds and half-Inch hail in some

(USP 525-800) .

'

PRICE
Su nday .. ... ... ..... ................. . 50 Cents

walka than .
The ra in, falling a t a rate of up
to a haiHnch an hour along the
south ern foothills of Ventura
&lt;;ounty, caused scattered power
outages .'' minor !looding · and a
handful of lender-benders in the
l,os Angeles Ba s in , autho r ities
said.
Hail the size ot marbles pelted
Van Nuys, with s.malier hail
reported at · Malibu and downtown Los Angeles.

Ra infa ll figures were not im·
media tely ava ilabl e, but au thor! ·
ties sa id th e storm was not
expected to hel p erase the threat ·
of a s tate wide water shorta ge.
Des pite the rain squalls, as
·man y as 10,000 peopl e pa rtlc ipa t·
ingin the Ma rc h of Dimes 12·mil c
Wa lkAmer ica -o ne 9f a bout' a
half-d ozen around the count r y kept on walking, said Marc h of
Dim es spokes woma n Rebecca
Faja rdo.

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

Two men..

No subscriptlons by mall permitted In
areas where molor carrier .service Is
ava il able.
The Sunday T imes-Sentinel w!ll not be

responsible for advance payments
made to carriers .
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

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One Year ..... ... ... .... ......... ...... .. $32.24
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Dally a nd Sunday
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Inside County
13 Weeks ... ...... ........ ..... ... .. ..... . $17.29
26 WePks ... .... .... . ............. . .. ...... $34.06
52 Weeks .. .... ................. .. ....... $66.56

Boss .

Take your secretary tO lunch a nd en·
' .
D o wn Under Secrera ne s .
lOY o ur
.
Luncheon Spectal:

Plutnp chicken Brea st s tuffed with
W'ld Rice a nd topped wtth a M e lba

Sa~c~

Weather

Rate§ Outside Counl y
13 Weeks ...... .. .... .. ......... ... ....... $18.20
26 Weeks .. ... . .. .. .. .... .. .. . . .. . ..... .. $35.10
52 Weeks ...... .. ........ .. .. .. ........... $67.60

Let Ut Oge T~em Fot That
Special Occstion

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POI1leroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

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Six months ..

Watchdog reports

April 24, 1988

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SECRETARIES: Thank

your boss

Bring your Boss to _The Down \Under Lou nge
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Complitncmary H ors d'euvre

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300 ~nd Ave.
Gallipolis , ·
Oh io

10:00 p.m.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 PM EDT 4-24-88

S5,00

]ail overcrowding plan is unveiled
CINCINNATI !UP I ) - Hamil·
ton County officials hope to free
up 40 lleds In the county's
overcrowded jail by offering
in-jail co unseling - and ear ly
release- to offenders convicted
of driving under the influence of
drugs .or alcohol.
The 850-cell Hamilton Cou nty
Justice Center, which opened two
years ago,usually houses abo ut
1.000 prisoners; at leas t onefourth of them are serving time
for DUI -rela ted offenses.
Under a program an nounced
last weekend, the Jus tice Center
will provide an inte nsive 30-day ,
in-jail co unseling progra m for
sel ected prisoners beginning
Monday . Ca lled the Multiple
Offender Counseling Plan. the
program Is financ ed by a n init ia l
$83,000 a ppropriation by the
Hamilton County Commission.
"This is a Band-Aid approach
to the overcrowdi ng problem, but
. it . is a s tep tha t we must take."

Muskl.ngum
Coli
. ege names
president
NEW CONCORD , Ohio !UP!)
- Former state legislator Sa·
muel Speck has .become the 19th
president of Muskingum College.
Speck. 51, had been act ing
president of the liberal arts
co llege stnce Arthur De Jong
resigned las t Oct. 16 to become
president of WhHworth College In
Spokane, Wash .
A Musklngum graduate, Speck
said Friday he wants the co llege
to foc us more on progra111s a nd
classes that raise the va lues of
students and broaden their
perspectives . ··
"We have to help young people
apprecia te beauty, to broaden
themselves and to grow aestheti cally." he said. "Our aim Is to
turn out gr aduates who can
think. gradua tes. who ... have a
sense of the past and present and
possibilities of the future."
Speck served 13 years In the
Ohlo General Assembly, includ ing six years in the House and
seeven years In the Senate. He
also worked In the Federal
Emergency M a nagement
Agency in Washington lor 10
years before becoming a profes·
sor at Musklngum In 1983.

sa id David Albanese, presiding
judge of Municipal Court.
The co urts earlier this year
req uested about twice as much
money as the commissioners
appropriated.
Albanese said the program is
not for first-tim e DUI offenders,
who serve mandatory three-day
sen te nces, but for repeat offend·
ers who serve sentences of more
than 30 days.
Under the plan, sentencing

judges will nave the authority to
determine who will be eligible to
participate In the counseling and
who will be granted early re·
tease, Albanese sald.
Those released early will be
placed on strict probation and
required to participate in foliow up counseling and continuing
·rehabilitation. The county expeels to assign 17 probation
officers to work exclusively with
the program, the judge said .

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FRONTS: "

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officials s upporting Leone inelud e Democratic Rep. Mary
Rose Oakar, Cleveland Secre·
tary of Police William McNea
and Common Pleas Judge~
James Kilcoyne and Sa m
Zingale.
The officia ls said they pre!erred to remember Leone's
activit y In business and commun·
ity work in Clevela nd, before he
moved to Florida and, accord ing
to his lawyer, acquired a serious
cocaine habit.

r;.;;;;;;;;;::::::::::::::::::~~~;;;;;;~
ELECT

GENE H.
ABELS
REPUBLICAN

GALLIA COUNTY
CORONER
liONS:
•Practiced Medicine in Gallia County
Since 1961
•Past President Gallia County Medical Society
•Established Coronary Care Unit at Holzer Hospital in 1 !(J6 7
•Founded Medical Plaza with Drs. Kemp and
Vallee. 1970 .
•Board Certified Specialist, Internal Medicine

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Saturday
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Paid For. By Candidate, 47 Halliday Hts .. G,llipolis. Ohio 45631

-OPEN

WEATIU:R FORECAST- Showers and thunderstorms will be
.numerous from the 'lower Great Lakes through the Ohio and
Tennessee Valleys. Thunderstorms could be seYere over parts of
southern Indiana, central and southern Ohio, southwest
P ennsylvania, northern and western West VIrginia, Kentucky,
Tenneessee, northwest Alabama and northern Mlsslssippl. Snow
will be scattered from the upper Mississippi Valley i~to the upper
peninsula of Michigan with snowshowers most likely from east
central Minnesota through northern Wisconsin.

Officials seek help for Florida prisoner
CLEVJ;:LAND (UP I I - Sev·
era! Clevela nd officials are reportedty· trying to help a former
Cleve land bus inessman to get his
Florida se ntence for drug traf·
ftcking reduced.
The Clevela nd Plain Dealer
. reported Saturday the officials
have testified and writte n letters
o n behalf of John Leone, who
pleaded guil ty lastfall'of cocaine
traf!icking in Fort Lauderda le,
Fla. He was sentenced to seven
years in prison. ,
The newspaper reported that

-RAIN
Em] SHOWERS
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Occluded
Warm "Cold

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Second &amp;Viand Streets Point Pl!)asant, w·.

(304) 675-4424

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�Page- A-6-Sunday Times- Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport

Meigs County Court
_processes 35 cases
POMEROY Thirty -five
cases were 'p rocessed ir'khe court
of Meigs County Judge Patrick
O'Brien. Twenty-five of th.e defenda nt s either forfeited bonds or
were fined on speeding charges.
Forfeiting bonds were Thomas
Proffitt, Ra cine, no driver seat
belt. $35; Lois Stump, Albany,
S75; Carl Ware, Marietta, $47.
and James Hawtho rn , Long
Bottom. $55. all posted on speeding charges.
Fined for speedi ng were Kat hleen Bouma n, Athens, $21 and
costs; William B. Rya n, Jr.,
Marietta, S22 and costs; Scott A.
Morris. Cleveland, $25 and costs;
Carl L Weimann, Middleport,
$25 and costs; John G. Albri ght.
West Columbia, W.Va., $27 and
costs; Donald Offenberger. Pa rkersburg. $28-and costs; Cy nthia
A. Clendenen, Point P leasa nt. W.
Va .,$28and costs; Hershel Grey.
Chillico the; $23 a nd costs; Shane
E. Smith , Vinton, $21 and costs;
Pame la Warfield, Wheeling, W.
Va .. $24 and cos ts; Leota Wolle,
Racine. $23 and costs;· G. J effrey
Beaver, Middleport , $21 and
costs; Darren McKown, Murraysville, W. Va., $22 and costs;
Barbara L. Ha tfield, Pome~,
$22 an d cos ts; Donald B. Betz g,
Pomeroy. S22 and costs; D ra
Thomas, Pomeroy, $22 and
costs; Linda Robie, Maso n, $22
and costs; Larry Block, Belpre,
$21 and costs; Co nnie Rucker.
Reedsville. $20 and costs; Anita
Sm ith, Pomeroy, $21 and costs ;
Lisa K. Beck. Gal lipoli s, $24 and
costs; Russe ll E. Linn, Fort
Wayne. l nd., $22 and costs.

•
Others cases were Michael
W!ison, Parkersburg, failure to
yield from stop sign, $10; ·Kimberly K Krautter , Pomeroy;
fail ure to stop at stop sign, $JO
and costs; Danny Buffington,
Pomeroy, disorderly conduc t, costs only; Paul E. Wilson ,
Pomeroy, failure to co ntrol, $20
and costs; Tamera R Staat's.
Pomeroy , no operator's license,
$75, three days in jail, $25 or fine
suspended a nd three d ays in jail
suspended upon proof of valid
Ohio license; Shirley Jo nes,
Pomeroy, parking on highway,
$5 and costs; Danny Kesterson,
Pomeroy, driv lng under the
influence, $250 fine , three days in
ja il, 60 days Ohio license suspension, costs; Jo Ellen Wolfe, Long
Bottom, passing bad checks.
res titution a nd costs; Steven
Phillip Gray, Rio Grande, fa lsificatio n and theft , five days in jail
suspended , six months probatio n, a nd res titution ordered on
fa lsification c harge.

Gallipolis, Ohio

PO!i'!EROY - A marriage
license has been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Char les
Pa ul Gerard , 40, Middleport, to
Niese! Eudorah Duvall, 30,
Reedsville.

Municipal
court

· GALLIPOLIS-JamesWalter
Hembree, 22, Franklin ' Ohio '
was returned from Mansfield
reformatory Thursday for a
s hock probation llearing in Gall Ia
Co unty Common Pleas Court:
Hembree was -sentenced to
eight to 15 years for burglary. He
was indicted by the grand jury In
January 1987 in connection with a

.

burgla ry at the residence pf John
Russell. R.t. J , Bidwell.
At the hearing Friday, Judge
Donald A. Cox placed Hembree
on three years probation, fi ned
him $1,000, a nd tran,ferred his
case to Warren County . One
condition of his probation was
that he not retW'n to Gallla
County without permiss ion.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. &lt;UP!) The Internal Revenue Service
decision to revoke the bankrupt
PTL's tax exempt status may
breach the Constitutional line
separating church and state, a
televangelism expert says.
The comments echo contenlions by disgraced PTL founder
Jim Bakker, who Is trying to
regain control of the ministry
and sprawling Christian retreat
more than a year after he
resigned. in disgrace.
The latest- and ·perhaps the
most cr!ppl!ng - In a series
.blows to the bankrupt television
ministry came Frlday when the
IRS announced It was revoking
the tax exempt stat us of PTL,
alreadY saddled with more than
$60 million Ill debts. The IRS also
wants $55 million In back taxes.
·· " Not only Is Heritage USA In
· Jeopardy, but religious freedom
In general," said Jim Bakker ina
telephone interview from his
Palm Desert, Calli. home after
the decision was a nnounced .
"Any minister who has the call of
· God to do something dynamic Is
going to feel the chill. The federal
goverrunent Is wielding an awesome power."
"They're making a lot of rules
as they come along. They pick
and chose who they come alter."
Bakker Is not alone In his
views.
"I never thought I'd be agreelng with Jim Bakker on anything," said Jeffrey Hadden, a
televangelism expert at the Un!-

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e njoined from tres passin g upon
property owned by th em .(the
plaintiffs )_ A judgment of $1,000
is requested. for compensatory
damages a nd $25,000for punitive
damages. Also requested is a
court order for the defendants to
remove s teps which have allegedly been pla ced on property
of the plaintiffs from th e top of
the rive r bank to the river, and
that the property be res lored to
orig inal co ndition.
Reciprocal actions fo r ch ild
support have been filed by the
Sta te of Pennsylva nia and Beverly Ze nn (Hubbard) Hal l.
against Perry Randal l Hal l; and
by the State of Florida and
Vaptyolia Louise Aeiker agai nst
Lo nn ie Keith Taylor.
Restraining orders have been
issued against both the plaintiff
a nd defend ant In the case of Earl
' B. Chapman against Catherine
Chapman.
Fi na lly, an order to destroy
contraband has been filed bv the
court . The contra band consis ts of
a variety of illega l drugs .

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verslty of Virginia. "But I think
the IRS has acted terribly
lrrespopslbly In the whole thing.
It's a lynch-mob action. · It's
either malicious destruction for
Incredible naivete.
"!think there Is a very serious
ques don about the line between
church and state, " said Hadden
who has j ust completed a book,
"Televangelism, Power a nd Politlcs." "For Jim Bakker to make
lhese kinds of utterances Is
almost an element of hypocracy
here that Is ghastly, but at the
same time, he Is right.
"!'lakker Is the last person In
the world to even address these
matters. He didn't have the
slightest care or concern going
about so blatantly vlollit!ng ev·
ery good common sense rule of
financing and revenues."
Bakker admitted to a one-time
sexual affair with J essica Hahn
and resigned March 19, 1987,
handing the ministry over to
Baptist minister Jerry Falwell
for safekeeping. But not long
after, Falwell accused Bakker of
financial mlsmanagment, homosexuality and rape and forbid
him to retlU'n to the ministry he
founded 10 years earlier.
The ministry was financially
strapped when Bakker resigned,
but the sexual revelations
shockect donors . Donations dried
up.
Falwell, who rode down the
water slide fully clothed as a
fund-raising stuilt, flied for bankruptcy Chapter 11 protection for

PTL In J une and creditors began
working on a pian to help the
asset-rich ministry repay its .
debts.
Enter the IRS.
The tltllating national noteriety and complexities of the PTL
saga may cloud the far-reaching
implications' of IRS action, Hadden said .
"Certtanly a lot of groups will
see the lmpl!cat!ons here of an
aggressive IRS \'&lt; ithout the
sHgthest bit of consideration of
the consequences;" said Ha dden.
"Its a serious situation. Many
may look at It and fall to see the
precedent-setting action here. "

Woman taken
to Charleston
by helicopter

•

MAUMEE , Ohio (UP!) Trlnova Corp. announced last
week that its first-quarter sales
increased 16.6 percent to $452.5
ri)Ullon, compared with sales of
$388.2 mlll!on In the first quarter
of last year_
· Net Income Increased 10.8
percent to $18.8 mlllion during
-that time, compared with 1987
first quarter net Income of $16.9
·mmlon In 1987.
· Net income was 55 . cents a
share on an average of 36,139,000
•shares outstanding, compared
with net Income a share of 50
cents, on average of 31 shares
q,utstand!ng In 198'1.
Darryl F . Allen, president and
chief exeaut!ve officer of Trin-

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POMEROY - Divorce actions
have peen flied in Meigs County
Common P leas Co urt by Harry
W. Pickens . Sr., Pomeroy,
against Jeannie E. Pickens,
Pomeroy; and by R honaa J.
DPPue against Daniel M. DePue.

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ova, said the gains In the
company's operating Income aitd
margin In the power. and motion
control business oHset a decline
In the plastics business.
"Overall sales and income
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the strength of our balanced
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Divorce filed

Page A-7

Bakker from retlirntng to PTL,
believes the concept of Heritage
USA ls sound . But does not
believe the IRS threatens the
religious community.
"I have always felt that h is
concept was a good one," said
Fallweil. " He was th e problem.
The hotel, the conference and
grounds a ll of this was good. Hi s
behavior a nd greed presented
the problem ."
"! don't think ~nybod y at the
Billy Graham organization or the
Salvation Army or Jerry Fal well's office has an y concern at
all," said FalwelL "The IRS ls
not vicious and arbitrary_"

The IRS backs up tts action to on t)Je PTL newark originate.
revoke PTL's non-profit tax
Bakker contends. that Heritage
status with claims thai Bakker, USA is nothing more than a
defrocl&lt;ed by his church, and top jumbo-size, old-fashioln Penta c·
aides operated the Heritage USA ostal Christian retreat with reChrlstian retreat In Fort Mill, creational · opportunities to keep
S.C. like a business.
the kids busy whl!e tile parents
Heritage USA encompasses seek gtildance and worship.
thousands of acres of rolling,
"Everything that · we did at
red-clay hills of pines and oaks · Heritage USA has a precedent in
just south of the North Carolina Christian - cam p ·m eet in g.
line. It Includes several hOtels, grounds, " sa id Bakker. " From
campgrounds, a $12 mUllan wa- the lodging to the -retirement
ter park. retirement commu nity, hom~s to the foOd service and
condominlmum complex, shop- stores. I think PTL is being
ping mall and television studios penalized because It's big.
where "The PTL Club" and ;. Even the Rev. Jerry Falwell,
several other religious programs who waged a battle to prevent

Man files suit
against family

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Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

_IRS eQuid possibly set precedent in religious co1nmunity

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Meigs Common Pleas Court

POMEROY - .John Wayne
Stobart, Racine, a nd Sherry
Tacket t, Racine, have filed a
$250,000 personal injury suit In
Meigs County Common Pl eas
against Theodore R Davis, Mason, W.Va.
The suit s tems from an auto
accident on April 29, 1986, on
Wes t Ma in St. in Pomeroy .
Stobart was drivin g east on West
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to ma intain an assured c lear
dista nce and negligen{[y drove
his veh icle into the rear of their
vehicle. P la intiffs claim they
GALLIPOLIS - Morris D.
have suffered pain and permanHesson. 23. Springfield, Ohio,
ent Injuries due to the neglige nce
was fined SlOO and costs Friday
of Davis.
in Ga llipolis Mu nicipn l Court on a
Stobart has requested dam charge of no operator's license.
ages of $200,000. ·Tackett has
He a lso received a suspended
requested damages of $50,000. A
six -month jail sentence. Hesson
tr ial by a jury of eight has also
also forfeit ed a $46 bond for
been requested.
. ,
speedi ng.
In other cour t matters, a
Danie l R. . Berry. 26. Rt. 3,
forec losure ac tion has been filed
Bidwe ll, was fined $14 a nd cos ts · by Diamond Savings and Loan
'for speedi ng a nd Daniel R
Company , s uccessor In interest
·Lawre nce. 30. Charles ton.
to the Athens County Savings and
·w.Va .. was fined$20 and costs for Loan Company, Findlay, against
' not wearing a sea t belt .
Timothy J . Sayre and Lorra ine
Forfeiting $41 bo nds on acciK. Sayre, Alba ny , et al. A reques t
dent ci ta tio ns were: Kenneth W.
for judgmen t of $20,574.53 is
Howe, 61i, R.t. 2, Vi nton . and
i ncluded in the action .
JaniCe A. Hartman, 48, o f 410
Thomas Boggs a nd Betty
.Jackson Pike, both for failure to
Boggs, Reedsville. ha ve flied a n
stop within the assured clear
action agai ns t Marlon K Fugate
distance; Kenneth R Thornton,
and Eleanor C. Fugate, Athens,
. 26, R.t. 3, Ga ll ipolis, for improper
reques ting tha t the defendants be
: lan e usage. Alvie E. Pelfrey , 48,
•Jackson. no· acciden t invo lved,
forfei ted a $41 bo nd for improper
lane usage.
Forfe iting bonds on sppeding
, cita tions were;
Ru ssell P. Weirs, 41, Gra nd
' Rapid s. Mich .. $46; Edward J .
' Mullins. 20, RL 1. Ga llipolis;
GALLIPOLIS- Charles Sc had ,
Robert C. Love ll. 30. Bowling
Rt . I , De~ . and the Hartford
Green. Ohio; P a trick A.
Insurance Co., Cincinna ti, filed a
Cha nd ler, :JO, Mi lford . Ohio; and
$25,000 suit Friday in Gallia
Pa tricia A. McBride, 41 , Rt. 4,
County Common Pleas Court
Gal tipolls. a ll S43; Steven M.
against a Ja c kson County family.
Short, 27, West Ches ter . Ohio,
Named defendan ts in th e case
and Willia m J . Kear ns, 43,
were Kelly, James and Wilma
Andover. Mass .. both $42; Rita J .
Williamson of Wellston.
Unr·uc. 29, Canton: $41; Alice L.
The Hartford Co., paid off a
'Newsome. 44, of113Second Ave. , $25,000 underinsured m otorists
Ga l ti polis. $40 and Joh11 .) . claim to Char les and Thersa
Sommer, 23. R.t. 2, Crown City,
Sc had as result of an accident
Apr!l25. 1986, in Gallla County on
$39 .
SR 325 at the Intersect ion of CR
57B which involved the Williamson car.
The plaintiffs charge that the
owner of the car, James Wlllia mson, with negligent In entrus ting
the vehicle to -a minor, Kelly
Willia mson, who was driving at
the time of accident. Wilma
POMEROY - Bever ly Hayes
Williamson, the suit charged,
of Mason, W.Va .. was taken to
signed the probationary license
the Charleston Medical Center In
of Kelly Williamson, thus assumCharleston, W.Va ., by helicopter
Ing the. financial res pons!bllity,
early Sa turday morning. Receiv accordi ng to the Ohio Revised
Ing head Injuries in an accident _ Code. for a ny dama ges for which
on Leadi n ~ Creek Road. Ms.
her daughter Is found to be liable.
H,ayrs Wa'!l' fir st tak en to Veteran s' Memorial Hospital by the
~lddleport E mergency Sq uad.

April24, 1988

Court sentences, bans Hembree

Court arraigns man Marriage license
on sexual charges issued in Meigs
POMEROY - Earl Phelps,
Pomeroy, Indicted April 13 by a
Meigs County Grand Jury on a
cha rge of felon ious sexual p&lt;:'netration , an aggravated felony of
the first degree, in an incident
,.-last August involving 'a juvenile
under age 13. Phelps was arraigned on the charge Friday
morning in Meigs County Common P leas Court.
Phelps was originally bound
over to the gra nd jury from
Meigs County Co urt. He was
released by co un ty court in
October on a· $5,000 bond .
In Friday's arraignment proceedings, a bond of $10,000 was
suggested by Assistant Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney
Carson Crow. However, Judge
Charles Knight , no ting the seriousness of the alleged offense,
increased the bond to $25,000.
Phelps appeared before Judge
Knight on Friday with his court
appointed attorney, Steve Story .
Phelps is currently in custody at
the Meigs County J aiL

April 24 ,' 1988

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�Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

24, 1988

TRIPOLI, Lebanon (UP!)- A,
booby-trapped truck packed with
explosives blew up In a crowded
outdoor market In the heart of
Tripoli today , killing 52 people
and wounding 125 others In one
the bloodiest terrorist attacks In
Lebanon since the bombing of the
U ..S. Marine barracks in Beirut In
1983.
"It 's a real massacre .... It was
carried out by butchers," Prime
Minister Selim AI Hoss said in a
statement.
No group Immediately claimed
responsibilty for .the explosion in
the predominately Sunni Moslem coastal city of 500,000
people.
Police said a booby-trapped
pickup truck packed with 330
pounds of explosives exploded at
9 a.m. near a crowded. ancient,
open-air marketplace In the
center of Tripoli, 42 miles north
·
of Beirut.
Hospital and pollee sources
said 52 people were killed and 125
wounded by the blast, which also
destroyed a small hotel, at least
10 shops and about 30 cars and
star ted a series of fires.
In the marketplace shortly
after the blast, the bodies of a
number of people still could be
seen in the wreckage of charred
cars.· The streets were littered
with pieces of huma n flesh.
Wounded people dr.enched in
blood cried for help amid dead

bodies, rubble and shards of
"February ~th" group as saying
glass.
Syrian "agents" planted the
The - facade of the hotel
bomb. The group, believed comcrumb led and many Inside were
posed of an ti-Syrlan Su nnl Mosbelieved to be numbered among
lem activists, has claimed rethe dead.
sponsibility for past attacks on
Rescuers and firefighters
Syrian positions in Tripoli.
rushed to the scene. Syrian and
Tripoli has beeti under continuLebanese troops fired Into the air . ous co ntrol of Syrian troops since
with automatic guns to clear ·1976, when Damascus dispatched
hundreds of curious onlookers so a 30.000-strong force to Lebanon
rescuers coul(! carry victims to a . under Arab League auspices to
nearby hospital.
try end the civil war that broke
. The rescuers took at least 40 out in 1975 .
bodies to the nearby Islamic
Today's blast was the seventh
Hospital. Dozens of shocked · car bomb attack in Tripoli since
women, ·some of them relatives January 1985. A blast June 19,
of the dead, walled and cried at 1985 in Tripoli killed 52 people left
the entrance of the hOspital and 100 others injured.
beat their cheeks and chests.
The explos ion Saturday was
'Youths drove "P and down one of th e most powerful bombTripoli streets using bullhorns to ings in Lebanon since a terrorist
plead for blood donations .
blast at the U.S. Marine barracks
Some of the dead were at Beirut airport in October 1983
wrapped in large nylon sacks an,d killed 241 people.
taken by their relatives for
burial.
"It Is an indication that a new
round of violence would strike
Lebanon again," commented an
official In the Christian Lebanese
Forces militia.
IntroducAa a ReVolutionary
Nabih Berri, chief of the
New Product! Wallcoverings
pro-Syrian Shiite Amal militia
and Borden Protected by
charged that " Israeli hands"
were behind the explosion.
The Voice of Free Lebanon.
run by the anti-Syrian Christian
SeeThe ·
militia, quoted the shadowy

By United Press. International
· Frustrated smokers ate mints
and licked lo llipops Saturday on
the fi rst day of a smoking ban on
airline flights of two hours · or
less, lightin g cigarettes the minute they go t off planes. A dozen
puffers protested at Washington's National· Airport.
.
" I think it's a very important
thing to know this has already
gone too far, " said David Bren·
ton, head of the Smoker's Rights
Alliance. "This is (the government's) moral campaign. We
just wani to get along. Most
smokers are very nice people."
In Minneapolis, a franticlooking. middle-aged woman 'got
off a flight from Las Vegas ,
looked around the terminal
quickly and asked, ''Can you
:Smoke here? There are no
'a shtrays. " Someone pointed to
one on a table in a nearby bar and
she and two companions headed
for it .
' "I'm still shaking ," she said
:after lighting up.
• Alvin "Rawhide" Michaelson,
cowboy from Sturgis, S.D ..
);ald. "I think this is a dictatorship." On a stopover In Minneapolis, he said he quit last
December after puffing for 52
years, but "if a man wants to
Sll)oke they should provide an
area where he can. "
· Ray Hibbs of Minneapolis,
carrying bags of chocolate chip
cookies and Nicorette gum,
chain·smoked until the last minute before boarding a flight to
Boston and Frankfurt, Germany.
A nationwide ban against
smoking on airline flights of two
hours or less within the United
States went into effect Saturday
under a new law passed ·by
Congress . Violators can be fine
up to $1.000.
Northwest Airlines. based In
Minneapolis, went a step further
and banned smoking on all of its
domestic flights.
In general, smokers prote~ted
and non-smokers cheered. But
there were no reports of trouble.
A police spokesmen at John F.
Kennedy International Alrport
and Lagua rd ia in New York City,
!or example, said there were no
disturbances on or off flights
because of the ban.
Several ai rlines across the
country handed out mints and
gum to passengers to ease the
jitters of not smoking. Continental Alrllnes planned to distribute
more than 430,000 pieces of
chewing gum and 200,000
llllipops.
·
Northwest hired eight tempor-

ary employees to distribute
mints to passengers. One of the
eight, Lisa Reitmeier of Eagan.
Minn., said, "A lot of people say
they've been waiting a long time
for this."
At Logan International Airport
in Boston, members of an anti·
smoking group, the coal ilion for
a Smoke-Free Massachusetts by
the Year 2000 handed out lollipops and moral support to departing passengers.
A Dallas spokesman for American Alr.llnes said the airline was
passing out special candy products suggested by the American
Heart Association and American
Lung Association. The candy was
designed to curb the urge for a
cigarette. ,
At Seattle, Dan Mutz, waiting
to board a flight to San Francisco, said, "The han is a good
thing. If you can:t last two hours
without a cigarette, you need
help."

Prices
mashed

~--

Sale Has
Been
Extended To
Thursday,
April 28

Limited
Time Only .

DNR watches over -the firelands-

1979 Chevrolit CheveHe .......................... '3995
Automatic transmission, air conditioning

wallcovering from Im__peria.J is
protected with DuPonl Telton •

•

Splatters, stains, and spills- not
to worry! With this revolu·
tionary new product, cleao-upe
are a ana pi

__

imperial
.........,....
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WAS

1984 Renault Alliance ............................. 13995
1983
1985
1985
1986
1983

Toyota Corolla 2 Door ......................... '4995
Nisson Sentro XE ............................
s599 5
. .
Dodge 600 S.E... . .......................... '6595
Nlssan Sent111 XE ........... ....... .......... '6495
Ni11an Stanzo ............ : .................. '5995

Automatic transmission, air conditioning.

COt..UfiiS a AJ...... COIIMNf

1987 Chevrolet Sprinter ........................... '6995

20% .0FF
ON DISPLAY AND
AVAILABLE AT

Cruise control

1984 Nissan Sent111 Station Wagon ......' .............. '5995
1

One owner

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP
HUNnNGTON: Downtown
Huntington, Third Avo.
1-304-428-1065,

Across from Civic Centor
PARKERSBURG: Toll Bridge and
Garfield Ave.-1-304, 525-7090

CHilliCOTHE: Westorn Ave.-Central
C.nter-1-614-773-6700

1987 Niasan Sent111 2 Door ......................... '7495
1986 ford LTD (4 To Qoose From) .................. '6995
1985 Honda Ovic ...........'..................... '6995
1985 Mercury Marquis (Well Equipped) ................ '6995
1987 Chevrolet Eurosport .......................... 17995
1984 Toyota Willllow Van .......... , ............... '6995
1987 Chevrolet Nova 4 Door ... _.................... '8995

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A*12.00 ~ALUE

•Emergency Road Service
•Accident Service

•Personalized Auto
Travel Service
•Bail Bond

1987 Y.W. JeHa 4 Door ........................... '8995
1987 Nissan Sentra, Red ........................... '8495
1987 1Nissan Sentro GXE Station Wagon ............... 18995
One owner

1916 Pontiac 6000 L.E. Station Wagon ............... 18495
1917 Subaru 4x4 ................................ '9995

360 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PH. 446-0699

1984 Ford Thunderbird, Maroon ..................... '7995
1983 Chevrolet Van Convenion ..................... '8995
1979 Chewrolet Camn 1·21, Black ..........•....... '4995

Mazda a2ooo Trua .......................... '5995
Nlssan 4x2 Trvck ............................ '5995
Toyota. Truck,
wftiJ Cap .............. _.,..... '6995
Ford Ranger 4x4 ............................ '6995

I"

'4995
15595
'5495
14995

'99.00
1113.00
1113.00
1113.00

15995

1113.00

54995

'113.00

'6495
15995
'5995
'5995
'6995
'5995
17995

5124.00

'124.00
'125.00
'125.00
'136.00
1140.00
1157.00

17995

'157.00

'7995
17995
'7995

'157.00
'157.00
'
'157.00
.

'7995
13995

NOW

'4995
56495
15995

5113.00
1125.00
1140.00

*8495

1169.00

Dllllge D-1 00 CllltDIR Full Sind TJVck ........... .'1995 '7995
Nl•• 4i4 .lla dhlfr ......................... '9995 *8995
Nls• Pal.fLtdll' XI, W ................. .'12,995 111,995
..._ Palhft::Jer SE, led .................. .'14,900 •13,900

'175.00
1180.00

1977 ~-··· Ftry.
.*1995
1980,..... ~ ...................................... •1995
1979 Merary c.... D7 ................................. .'1995
0

BEVERLY GARRETT
FO. .ILY Of -HAEL &amp; FRIENDS
AND HAll HAPPENING

c.,,, More

' ttons for the start and spread of
' fires. In the fall when vegetation
Is dying, leaves are falling and
ground is dry, conditions are
again right for fires.
All of Meigs County_.and parts
of Athens, Gallia and Washington
Counties, over 400,000 acres, are
included In the Shade R.iver State
Forest Wild Fire Protection
Area. Shade River State Forest is
a part of District IV of ODNR.'s
Division of Forestry, which Is
comprised of 16 counties
altogether.

•'

1149.00
1162.00

•

Playing · major roles in the
protection of the Shade River
coverage area are 15 volunteer
lire departments. including
Chester Volunteer Fire Department which Is responsible for the
operation of a Division of Forestry fire plow .
Alrplanes, because wild fires
can be detected from the air
before they become out of control
on the ground, also play a major
role In fire prevention. Airplane
flights lor fire detection are
usually made on a daily basis
during fire seasons. One, and
sometimes two airplanes l'n District IV, as well as a helicopter
.used for actual fireflghting, fly
out of the Ohio University Airport
in Albany .
Jim Milliron, Shade River
State Forest manager, reminds
Individuals that a new state Jaw
has gone Into effect making It
illegal to burn between Ga.m. and
6 p.m. during the spring and fall

fire seasons. The iaw was a fire to escape to a ny woodland
enacted because people refused or brush is punlsha ble under
state law.
on their own to heed the formula
But in addition to being conthat less wind in the evening
cerned
about' fire prevention,
hours, plus higher humidity and
Ohio
forestry
officials a re also
cooler temperature. equals less
concerned
about
the managechance for fire to escape, spread
ment
of
Ohio's
forests.
and destroy Ohio woods and
When Ohio was settled in the
private properties.
1780's,
nearly 95 percent of the
But no matter when burning is
covered by fores ts.
land
was
taking place, there· are certain
Much
of
the
fore~ ts were cleared
safety rules to adhere to. such as
and
by
1905,
only nine percent of
being familiar with applicable
the
land
was
still forest covered, ·
laws and regulations. Only apSince
then,
large
areas of Ohio
proved trash burning receptafarm
land
have
been
abandoned
cles should be used for burning
and
allowed
to
revert
to trees,
and if burning on the ground, a
state
about27
percent
leaving
the
cleared area or plowed field
forested.
away from overhead obstrucRecent government studies
tions should be selected. -A water
.
have
estimated that domestic
supply and fire fighting tools
demand
for wood products will
.such as shovels. rakes. hoes and
double
by
the year 2030 and that
axes should be kept nearby a
.
world
demand
for fo~est proburn area, and plenty of manducts
will.
be
even
greater than
power should be on hand should
help be needed. "Above all;" domestic. Ohio plays a major
warns Milliron. ·'stay with a fire role in helping the United States
until it is out a.nd ctteck the · meet domestic and world deweather. Don't burn on dry, mands for forest products.
Nevertheless, most of the priwindy days."
'
vately owned woodlands In Ohio
Major causes of wild fires,
are unmanaged, producing only
Milliron says, are burning de- about one-half the volume they
bris, equiPment use. downed could under good management.
power lines and arson. Fortu- The rest of Ohio's woodlands are
nately, In Milliron's area, arson owned and managed by the state.
Is low on the list of fire causes.
In Meigs County, Shade R.lver
There have been a large State Forest encompasses apnumber of wild fires in the Shade proximately 3,000 acres, not
R.iver protection area this fire including Forked Run State Park
season, although this week's rain which is another 900 acres and
helped the situation, at least comes under the Parks and
temporarily.
R.ecreatlon Division of ODNR.. or
Milliron describes wild flres in West Shade R.lver Forest which
this area as ground fires, as Is another 150 acres of reclaimed
opposed to crown fires In the strip mine land in the western
western United States where the part of the county. The state
fire burns from the tops of the forest is open to the public for
trees. To fight a ground fire, It is hunting, hiking and enjoying. ·
usually necessary for flrefighMilliron, a native of Mlddleters to "get ahead of the fire and port, has been at Sl)ade River for
I ·"
cut off the fuel," explains Mil· 16 years. He and one other
Jiron. This means using rakes. fulltime employee. equipment
shovels or similar tools. or if operator Mike Pooler, depend
necessary, theflreplowoutofthe upon manpower from JTPA, the
Chester Fire Department, . to ·Summer Youth l!.itter Corps,
NECESSARY TOOLS ...:. Fire rakes like the one
make a cut which the fire burns general relief workers and the shown here by Jim Milliron, manager of Shade
up to and then stops.
Civilian Conservation Corps, to River State Forest, are often used to makeacuton
Although no homes in the complete all the work that comes the ground In front of a fire. The fire will bum up to
Shade River area have yet been with the operation of a slate
lost to wild fires, "1 have come forest.
' close," Milliron admits. Barns,
But despite its beauty, many
outbuildings and vel)lcles on the local people have never visited
other hand, are very often Shade River State Forest. Per·
destroyed by wild fires .
haps this spring or summer
Milliron and other forestry would be a good time t.o make
officials are deadly serious about that Initial visit and gain more
keeping Ohio green and prevent- '\appreciation for the beauty of the
ing fires. Published materials forests and woods.
In the meantime, remember,
from ODNR point out very
clearly that anyone who permits the prevention of forest fires Is up
to uyou."
·

....... -*~

)

·;

the cut and stop. Sometimes howev er. hand tools
aren't enough and a fire plow, owned by ODNR's
Division of Forestry and operated by the Chester
Volunteer Fire Department, is called Into service.

--···
- -···
NOW ..

IS INTRODUCING

M1klng Atllfh"

1

Pll MO.
117.00

By NANCY VOACHAM
Times-sentinel Staff
REEDSVILLE- Many people
at one time or another have seen
the cartoon character of Smokey
the Bear pointing a finger ·a nd
saying in a stern voice to
television viewers both young
and old, "Only you can prevent
forest fires . ''The message is still
true, but just to ensure that
"you" don' t forget your responsibility in preventing forest, woods
and wild fires. the Ohio Depart·
men! oi · Natural Resources,
Division of Forestry . keeps a
watchful eye during the fire
; seasons.
In Ohio, 99 out of 100 woods
: fires are caused by people.
' The lire seasons in Ohio are
March, April and May in the
spring and October and November in the fall. During the
spring months, the ground is dry.
vegetation Is not yet green and

~~;l::;o ~~=:;;~ !~;:ct ~~~c:ft~

-···

14995

ACROSS THE _S,RIET

\\She~,

-

'162.00
'169.00

1987 Nlssan 4x4 lldlody
. ..................... : .. .'1995

'··

1162.'00

'6995
'7495
57495
'8495

One owner

1986
1988
1917
1917

1-800-345-0946

185.00

'169.00
1197.00

Ona owner

24 HR . tOLL FREE PHONE

13995

•. 16995

1986 Toyota 4x4 Truck, Bile ............. " ....... ; 57995
1986 Nluan King Call 4x2, Blue .................... '8495
1986 Nlnlll HarAody 4x4 Truck .................... '8495
1987 Nlssan 4x4 lldtody ........................ .'8995

INSTALLATION • FINANCING AVAILABLE

'57.00

'180.00

Automatic transmission

24 ' X 15' Sv~nm Art!J
31' X 16' OuiS•CI• Ounens•ons

'2995

'8995

WAS

1986
1984
1987
1984

FILTER
FENCE
LINER
LADDE R
Sj.J N DECK
STE EL BRACI

134.00

57495

One owner

4ND MUCH MORE

12995

Automatic transmission, air conditlonin·g, stereo radio

1987 Mercury Topaz ............ . ....... : ......... '8995

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Automatic transmission, air conditioning

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a

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S t s m R 0 u t S t a ins rw

DETECfiON

- Small airplanes like this
one at the O.U. Airport in
Albany are used by ODNR's
Oivison of Forestry to detect
fires during the spring and fall
wild fire seasons. This plane Is
being serviced after returning
from a detection fli~ht.

During Taylor ·Nissan's
Annual Inventory Reduction Sale!

DuPont Teflon®
BOOK

24. 1988

AIRPLANE

IMPERIAL
WALLCOVERIN GS

Smokers protesting,
non-smokers cheering

Section tiD.

•

r;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=;i

in your kitchen and bath

·the ri er_

lo

52 dead ·in truck bomb blast
near crowded Tripoli market

I

I

0

00

0

t

0

0

till

0

t

I

I

I

0

I

00

o

01 ' 0

t

t

0

I

0

oo.,.ot

0

'Payment figured IIIIth downpaymtnt of 11000 cash or tradp ptus ri'x &amp; tltlt 11

BEVERLY WILL BEGIN WORKING AT
ACROSS THE STREO ON APRIL 25TH.

88-87
60 mo.

88-85
54 mo.

8-4-83
48 mo.

82-0fdtr
38 mo.

'1295
'1395
'1.295

8M~KE AND

w•

dileovered on a routine alrplaae
deleclion ftJahl ear!Jer thil aprtnr fire •-n.

Couaty

.\ -

\

~e

Cat•, elreletl tile area a few Umee to
MCerlaln II the lire wu under coatro!. In this
cue, the •Muat!on did ncM look promilltar and
Ca&amp;e1 contacted ftreftpters on the p-ouad.

1'1111: - Tilil fire In Vlllea PI!Gt,

PILOT AND SMOKE CHASJilR - Where
there'umoke, there'• Ore. The trick II to keep the
lire u!Mier control. VInton County rea!dent ud
pOol wllh miiiQ' :reara ol experience, ftya ud
looks for 1111oke Ia District IV of ODNR'a Dlvillon

of Foreatry. U Ca&amp;ee d - 1po1 a lire !ram the atr, ·
hem...&amp; ~rmlne whether or not the fire II Ullder
control or likely to become out-of-control. U
aecee.ar:r, Cates DOUflea llreflptlng authorities
to come to the ecene.

,.

�. ~age-B-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

. April24, 1988

April24,1988

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohkl-Point Pleasant, W. Vp :

POINT PLEASANT; W.Va . The . Pleasant Valley · Hospital
Auxiliary recently purchased a
gastrpscope for use by surgeons
performing endoscopic proce·
aures, according to Margaret
!-am bert, Auxiliary president.
. The gastroscope permits vls·
• (lal inspect ton of the contents and
walls of the esophagus, stomach
: and duodenum, which may be
• pertinent ln establishing a dlagaosls ot determining preferred
treatment of a disease process,
according to Keith Bragg, R.N.,
a staff nurse In the operating
. room.
· Gastroscopic procedures may
lie performed with local anesthe·
sta, with intravenous sedation, or
~urlng the course of a_procedure

being perfo rmed with general funds come from proceeds from
J~ n es thes la . Bragg said.
the Pleasant Valley Hospital Gift
Shop
and various_ fundrals lng
.The gastroscope, a t a . cost of
$11.000, ts just one of a number of activities Including the annua,l
pieces of hospital equ lpmen"t the Charity Ball and Spring Fashion
Auxiliary has purchased in the Show.
past sE&gt;veral years, Lambert
The Auxiliary also mans the
said. Other items lnclufie a information desk ln the front
$30,000 operating table, blood lobby, provides services to var·
pressure equipment, a body
tous hospital departments, In·
analyzer, carts, wheelchairs, an
eluding the Recovery Room,
exercise bike for Physical Ther·
Obstetrics and Pediatrics, dellv·
a py, anti-shock pants and a
ers flowers and newspapers to
birthing chair for Obstetrics.
patient rooms and volunteers for
Lambert estimates the Auxll·
activities at the Pleasant Valley
lary has made purchases and
Nursing Care Center.
cash donations to Pleasant Val· · For more information about
how you can become a Pleasant
ley .Hospital totali ng more than
$/u,OOO.
,
. Valley 'Hospital auxUlan or vo·
The majority of.l he Auxiliary 's
lunteer. call 675-4340. .
·

JET Nurse Day ·observed at PVH
-- POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.the International Assoclat ion for
Enterostomal Therapy (IAET)
observed Wednesday, April 20,
; as ET Nurse · Day. This date

••

marks the sixth anniversary of
ET Nurse Day.
·
ET Nurse Day was tnttlated In
1983 by the IAET as a means of
making the general public more
aware of the work of ET nurses.

ET nurses. numbering 2,200,
are nurses with advanced specialized training In the rehabtlttt·
alton of patients with ostomies,
press11re sores, tncontinE&gt;noe and
draining wounds.
Joy Cline, R.N ., ET, enterostomal therapist at Pleasant Val·
ley Hospital and a member of the
IAET, says that ET Nurse Day Is
being held to emphasize the
importance of the ET nurse in the
specialty arena.
"More than 20 mlllton Amert·
cans suffer from chronic dtges·
tlve diseases and disorders,''
Cline says, "and more than 14
million cases of acute digestive
dlsE&gt;asE&gt;s arE&gt; treated ln this
country e5h year."

::Fat
cats' high on the hog
•
. ; SUMMERVILLE, S.C . (UP!)
:
Two stray cats named
Grandma Jane and Nosle Rosie
,Will never have to claw through
· tile trash for food, seeing that the
:fat felines are the main beneft·
:c1arles of an estatE' worth an
·estimated $250,000.
.
·; The will of thel_r late owner.
Qtck Starkey, stipulates his
-!louse, where the cats roam
: l'reely and use two couches as
::.§.cratchlng posts. ls to be main·
• •" talned until the cats' natural
·' " deaths .
·: : . "He wanted to make sure they
· .· • were taken care of properly,"
: :said James H. Messervy, attar·
ney for the engineer's estate.
• Starkey's wife died in 1986.
: Rosie, 10, was a stray picked up
~- tt n Maine, while Grandma Jane,
• •19 was a stray plucked from a
: rp~rklng lot In Oklahoma, said
· :Doris Inman, a longtime friend of
~ the Star keys.
: "Any cat that wouldcomeupto
;· "their door, they would feed

:=

them," she said .
Inman 's daughter , Peggy
White, and grandchild Kattly
Eager help tend the pets. Young
Eager said the animals wolf
'down about 60 cans of cat food
each month, in addition to bags of
dry food and boxes or snacks and
treats.
· Both hefty cats. Jane came to
at 13 pounds and Roste "15 at last
weighing.
The remainder of the Starkey
estate - including seven dla·
mood rings, more than 100 pieces
of sterling sliver, and a 1985 ,
Cadillac Seville- Wiil be sold at
public auction this weekend, said
auctioneer Col. J.R. Stefani. who
was surprised when he learned
about the beneficiaries .
"When I firs t heard about It, I
couldn't believe tt," Stefani said.
"! thought he (the attorney)
meant somettllng else. 1 just
knew it couldn't be two fourleggE&gt;d animals."

SUNDAY
GALLIPOL,IS - Marc Sarrett
wlll speak at Pro~dence Mls·
slonjlry Baptist Church, Sunday,
7 p.m.
VINTON - Turn Your HE&gt;art
Toward Home continues Sunday,
7:30 p.m. at Vinton Baptist
Church, with Power tn Parent·
lng: The Adolescent.
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. ,. Bud
Hatfield will be in revival servl·
CE's through Wednesday, 7p.rn. at
Elizabeth Chapel Church. Spe·
cial singing; nursery provided.

RECENT PURCHASE- The Pleasant Valley
Hospital AuxUiary recently purchased an $11,000
gastroscope for the operalmg room at PVH.
Pictured above presentmg the scope to Keith

Bragg, R.N., staff nurse ln the operating room,
are Bessie Wilson, ·second from left, Grjlce
SomervUie, second from right, and Barb Barnett,
right.

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

HOBSON - Greg arid Teresa
Leeths, Clrclevllle, will speak at
Sunday 10: 30 a.m. services at
Hobson Church of Christ in
Christian · Union. Dan Tipton,
district superintendent of Clrclevllle Church, will speak at 7 p.m.
Sunday - services. Everyone ·
welcome.

The ET nurse has also become
a specialist in the treatment of
skin care problems associat~
with pressure sores and the
treatment of Incontinence. These
are growing areas of concern in
the medical community, accord·
lng to Cline.
Cline notes that the field of ET
nursing was formally developed
In 1968 to meet the special needs
or people who must undergo
ostomy surgery. It is a growing
specialty in which new developments are constantly occurring.
" ET nursing ts one of the most
caring of nursing specialities,"
Cline says. "We are celebrating
our 20th anniversary of the
Association this year," she adds.

RUTLAND - Vlrgll Phillips,
of Washington Court House.
fortnerly or the Pagevtlle area,
will speak Sunday evening, 7
p.m., at the Rutland Church of
God. Special singing wlll be
featured. Everyone welcome.
MONDAY
R.IO GRANDE - Rio Grande
BasE&gt;ball Association wlll con·
duct registration Monday, April
25, beginning at 6:30p.m. ln the
Rio Grande City Building.
· PORTER. - Valley Freewlll
Baptist Church wlH begin revival
services Mondax..J: 30 p.m. with
evangelist Blll Price and Miles
• Trout.

from state Farm.

GALLIPOLIS - Sliver Run
Baptist Church revival begins
Monday, continuing through Sat·

For qualified homeowners, we offer
discounts which can make our already low
premium even lower . Call for
Is.
WOU-DEN
. («llf at 'fllird
A"' &amp; Stott St.
Galipolis, 011.

~ ~ Airlines pacify smokers

DALLAS (UPI) - Airline _ duration, and we think that the
' : passengers denied thE&gt;Ir cigars lolilpops will bE' a 'sweet alterna ·
- and cigarettes because of a new tlve' to our customers as they gel
.: : government ban against smok·
used to the new federal regula·
~ : lng on flights two hours or less
tlon, " said Southwest vice pres!·
• • will be offered candy and gum on ·dent Don ValentinE&gt;.
:: two airlines trying to hE&gt;lp smok·
Continental wlll offer a special
: ; ers glide througtl nicotine fits.
gum tt says curbs the smoking
Soutbwest Airlines said It will urge to passengers through Its
' dlstrlbu te 200,000 lolllpops to its
: r:passengers, while Continental
Denver
and Newark,
threE' largest
hubs inN.J.
: : ~lrllnes of Houston plans to dOlE'
About 90 percent of Southwest
. ;: ~ut 430,000 pieces of "Ban
flights and 57 percent of Contin•' :Smqke" gum. Both airlines are ental' flights will be affected by
:: 11ased in Texas.
the new governmen~ smoking
; ~: "Most of Southwest's flights
ban.
.:·:average only about an hour In

'•

Phone 444·4290

ENlltES IIISl IE IECEIVED
1\' JUNE 15, 1911,

446-4511

~.::and

Chris Stout Mark Stout, president,

"-Presldl'd over the meeting. Chris Stout and

~ ". Iirell Baker Jed the pledges, and Greg
.''·.Greenlee had the devotions. Nancy Blev• ·.tns tal~ed to the members about the
"'-"~ha nge

tn the pigs weight to quality for the

: .:-1a1r and also reminded us of the officers
.. •.. training meeting. Beth Blevins had lht•
.....Jreasurers report, and also passed out·
.. . i,nlves and cand:v 10 sell for 'our fund
-:_..calsing projects. 'theo report on health was
...·.gtven by Byron Walters. The safety report
~·...-as gtven by Brldgl1 Darst. ThE' energy
, ·· report wns gtvrn by Josh Serbert. Old
/ 1:Jus1ness lnduded projects, pictures for
· ·-'Wr club bQok rover. fund raisers and

• ·low ling.

New business Included thedlscusskln of
..~olngtoa Red 's Gameandourrommunlty
:-::project . Their wert' two demonstrations.
··-The- first was given by Mark Stout on
• :Taistng and ca ring for rabbits. Chris Stout
..,..: demonstrated modPI rockets which
- ~)rouji!!hl our meeting to a close. Members
·.-:.present were: Bret S..ker, Beth Blevins,
" '-Chrtstopher, Byron, Leisa Walters, Jen·
: ·~Rtrer Harmon. Bridglt Darst, Shannon.
'..Justin Fallon, Suzy, Greg Greenlee. Lynn
:or ':-:(;Ill Tonv Hughes, Josh Sebert, Brian
\~hadle, c·hrls an,d Mark Stout. The next
:,.'}neetin!{ will be on Aprll18, at tQe home of
•. ·,l:huck North.
.
, ...~
News reporter-Chr istopher Walters
:,·

Ricky Chapman opened thP meeting by
leading the American pledge and Willy
Gilbert said the 4-H pledge. We discusse:l
projects &amp; the dPadlin e for projects to be
chosen. We also discussed candy sales and
t he dcadlln e for an imal projects. We then
elected a new trea s urer which was Renee
Hale. Then we ta lked about 4-H camp and
the 4-H offlcrrs training seminar that will
be held ar Buckeye Hills. Then Lanus
Gilbert dismissed t he meeting bY leading
the Lords Prayer. The nf'!t mpeflnS!: ts to
be Tuesday the 26th of April.
Newsreport(&gt;r-Ch ristopher Mlller
On March ]j !he Rio Stiver Thimbles had
thler second meeting. The meeting was
opened by Beth Brown !President I. Ther e
wer e also lw o new members.
Then• was an officer installation cerem·
a ny. The officers are Beth Brown,
president; Ka r en Kerns, vice president:
Dawn Coffee. secr('tary; Jennlter Stover.
Treasurer: Carrie Jackson, news reporter: Kelll e Kimble, Heal! h; Kristen Kerns,
Sarety: Michell(&gt; Grooves Energy, and Jill
Bias. devotions.
We have two new advisors. they areJo an
·
Kimbel and Roberta Hamilt on.
Ncwsreporter-Carrlc Jackson

MY PLATFORM:
Good business Administration
Response to· Calls
Respect of the People
Equal Enforcement of Law
Pd. for by the Cand ..

1 .. Bidwell, Oh. 46614

:t.
"" The meeting was held fll the Calvary
...,.J:laptlst Church at 7 p.m . Mard'l 2.1. 1988.

i

."~rad Thomas lead the PI edge of Alllgance
~ ~thE' Flag. Greg Blankenship lead the4·H
~ !-Pledge. Installations of Officers will be
... eonductecl at the next meetlnR.
: ...... This club Is In Its 9th yea r and we have~··Jiected IM orrlcers ror the coming year.
•'""'l 'hey are:
..._ Pres . Brad Thomas, Vice Pres. Mark
•::tweal. 5ec. Mark Coffee, Tres . Lee Brown,
...:~nergy Leader-Oarek Newman, News
"~ Rcponer -Greg Blankenship, Recreation
. ~adcr Matt White. Safety Leader-Brain
·i-a1112er.
·~~ Advisor: Larry Shang, Jimmy Thomas,
......•and Rick Altizer.
1
.. • .:,.
News Reponer-Greg Blankenship
....: TheTrlangle4·H club met on March 29th
""at the New Life Lutheran Church. The
&lt;# meeting was call to order by acting
: president Troy Duncan. The Pledges and
tord's Prayer were IM bt Robby Wood·
•ard, Jermy BelvUI e. and Todd Bryant.
tandy bars were distributed to the
..,embers. Camp dates were given to those
.woo wished to attend. The members
,. I!Mayed tag after the meeln&amp; tor recrea·
kon. The roll call wu read by adviSor,
"'Mary Pope. The meet Ina: was adjourned.
•The next scheduled meet Ina: laAprU 16th at
•1 p.m. at 0 .0. Mcintyre Park. Members
• aresent were Jeremy Belville. Todd
: .ryant. Troy Duncan, Jason and Billy
• jOreone. Kelly Smith and Rl&gt;bby Wood·
...,ard. Advllon preamt were Jackie and
"'eolenn Graham, Bill Greene. arid Mary
Pope. Mrs . Steve Bryant alsoatten~aa a

....,.-

' • TheRedsltln&gt; Borderllnerst-H Club held
':il!etr AprU meeting with thepledgeo led by
.:if&amp;sty carter. ROU call was led by the
.. Jiealth Of11cer Jessica Roach answertnt
"7.1 a vegetable. Old business was ctu&amp;
.Jtcrap book. community project. Fund
';ta~ and gu~t speaker. Oemom~trating
Gr ure ror dm.onstrauon was dis.
o,~seed . Meet inc tor otflcerR and ~lSor
.. .,Ill be next meeting. Mffl:lng tor all
members wUI be May 3, 1981\.
Newsreporter-Mlcheal ShaffB"

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TUESDAY
VINTON - American Legion
Post . 161 meets Tuesday. 7: 30
p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club meeting at Burkett
Barber Shop Monday evening
with social hour and radlng
session at 7 p.m. preceedlng the
business association; election of
officers, a coin auction and
refreshments.
POMEROY-:- Jaymar League
will meet Monday a l 6: 30 p.m. at
the club house for an or'gantza.
tlonal meeting. Anyone inter·
ested In playing Is welcome to
attend the meeting.
MIDDLEPORT - Big Bend
Ctvttan meets the first and third
Monday evening of each month
at 7 p.m. at theMlddleportPubllc
. Library. The group ls involved in
many worthwhile prolects but
needs additional members to be
able to take on other projects.
,Anyone interested ln Clvltan Is
Invited to attend a meeting.

---

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club wlll meet Monday
at 7 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Harvey Erlewlne. The plant sale
has been postponed. The pro·
gram will be on wildflowers
presented by Betty Wells of the
Wilkesville Club.
RACINE- Revival wtll begin
at the Mt. Moriah Church of God,
Mile Hlll Road, Racine, Monday
continuing through May I with
evangelist to be Rick Murphy of
Columbus. Services '¥lll be held
at 7 p.m. each evening with the
public invited. - - GALLIPOLIS
The Rev.

RIO GRANDE - Open Gate
Garden Club meets Tuesday,
7:30 p.m. , hOme of Paula Plant;
tour home or Professor James
Osborne.
CHESHIRE - Cheshire ChaptE'r OES meets Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. .
GALLIPOLIS
Raccoon
Creek Improvement meeting
Tuesday • 7 p.m. • Raccoon Creek
County Park. For Information,
call Gallla SWCD, 446 ·8687 ·
POMEROY - Jaymar Ladles
Golf League meeting, 9 a.m.
Tuesday at clubhouse; dues are
payable at this time and all
women golfers invited.
--.....
POMEROY -The Auxll iary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
meet at 1:30 Tuesday at the
ho~pltal. Members are reminded
to take things for an auction.
Commodity distribution
Free cheese and dried milk wtll
be distributed by the Community
Action Agency and Meigs Cooperatlve Parish for people with
yellow or green food cards,
Tuesday, at the usual sites,
beginning noon ln GalUa County
and 10 a.m. In Meigs.

'

MIDDLEPORT- Chapter 17,

refuHCI Hnim because of inability I• pay.,

OF SOUIHEAn OHIO

POMEROY:
236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
992-5912
1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed Wednesday

) , ,1L JilL

A Message Frum The Bible . . .

ENRICHED LIVES'
William B. Kughn
In order !'or our lives to be enriched with the heavenly blessings in
. Christ, God has made Christ unto us wl8dom. righteouoaesa, IIIUlCtlli·
cation. ann redemption. What Christ is to us, we are in Him:
I. Wisdom: Paul uses the word to express the knowledge of God's
plan. which had been hidden at one time, in which providing salvation
for all by the death of Christ, "In him are hid aU the treasures o(
wisdom and knowledge" (Col. ~:3). In Christ's life, teaching, and atone·
ment. the wisdom of God shines brightly. Christ. the author of eternal
salvation fHeb. 5:9) and finisher of our faith (Heb. 12:2) is 'the key that
opens our understanding to the mystery of God, making us wise in the
knowl&lt;•dg~ of God unto salvation. In li~ht of this kno.wledge, we learn
what we must do to be saved and the hfe we must pursue to remain in
the l'ellow•hip of God. Havin~ our minds renewed by the knowledge of
Christ.
will have more wtsdom, be wiser, and have a closer union
with Him.
2. Righteousness: This word expresses the quality of being right or
just. and was spelled "rightwioeneso" at one time. It denotes the rla:bt·
eousness of God being manifested in Christ's death, and without Him,
lh~re i&gt; no righteousness. All are sinners, and there is none righteous
(Rm . 3: 10,23; Gal. 3:22). Why'! Because no one was able to keep the law
of Mos., and tn offer the sacrifices to atone for sins ..Christ, the sinless
One (2 Cor. 4:21; Heb. 4:15: 1 Pet. 2:22), was able to fulfill the law of
Mose&gt; which required perfect obedience (Gal. 3:10,13), "being nuule a
curse for us" !Cal. 3: 13). His perfect obedience and the perfect sacrifice
provide the righteousness for us. When we, through faith. accept
Christ a&gt; our rigbteeusness and live according to God's will, we will be
able to be like Him in righteousness.
3. Sanctification: Purification and conoecratloo are set forth in this
word. In purlHeation, the heart and the life are made holy. In coaoecra·
lion, they are set opart for the service of God. To be sanctHied, we
must he new creatures in Christ (2 Cor. 5:17), partaking of the divine
nnturP, escaping the corruytion that is in the world through lust 12 Pet.
I :3). As new creatures In Christ, we, with a purP heart and life, are set
apart to God so as to walk in the newness of life. Our heart, soul, and
body are devoted to G.9d.
4. Redemption: Th1s word signifies the payment of a ransom so as to
buv one ou't of slavery or bondage. It expresses the deliveruce of one
out of the bondage .of sin and the wrath of God through the vicarious
death of Christ; therefore. Christ has been made our redemption. By
redemption, we become the purchased possession of God. Serving God
faithfully to the eqd, we will....,eive eternal life.
Genuine union with all its blessings is not of man but of God, and is
provided us through Christ. Being united in Christ and recipients of
these blessings, we will "gloruin the Lord. "Gloryin(i in Christ will pro·
teet us from murmuring and ingratitude; will mottvate a happy and
cheerful attitude; will inspire us to worship in spirit and truth; and wlll
encourage us to fi(ihttriumphantly against sin. We will "glo171 in lhe
Lord" in word and m deed, doing all in His name (Col. q:l7).
For Free Bible Corre1palldenee Cout"M, Write ...

AlSO: Jadc1011,

a..a!t•.

GALUPOUSt
414 S.CDIIII An~ 2nd Floor
446-0166

1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Frichiy
1:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thursday
Athn, Chilicothe, Logan &amp; Mrlrthtw

..

M

..•.,.....

·s.ason
COMPLm.UNE OF VEGETABLE
&amp; BEDDING PLANTS AND
GERANIUMS NOW READY.
HANGING BASKETS, AZALEAS,
FRUIT TREES &amp; SHRUIIERY

lllf3ls, not counting special orders
such as kosher or vegetarian. I serve
the meals and seconds on drinks,
then pick up the trays, all the while
dodging passengers who like to
stand in the aisles.
A third run·through with the
serving can, offering ice-cream sun·
daes and mints, preparing and
p!IS§ing out hot towels. collecting
headsets, picking up mountains of
garbage that have accumulated, and
responding to requests for blankets,
pillows. more drinks. etc.
The trick is to get everytlting
done before landing. The routine I
described assumes that everything is
normal. God forbid if there is
turbulence or a medical emergency.
Most flights are full these days,
what with discount fares and free

OPEN DAILY 9-5-SUNDAY t-5

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
·
SYUCUSI - 992-U76

4-H news report
The first meeting of the Cherokee Valley
4·H SaddleCiubwas held on March 8 at the
Clay Township Hall. New officers were
elected as follows : President : Srolt Hunt;
Vice President: Rodd Young: Secretary:
Neil Watson: Treasurer: Kim Betz: News
Reporter: Michelle Harrison: Recreation
Leader: Brian Hunt; Ht'alth and Safety
Leader: Paula Porter.
Dues were set: at 11.50 due by May 1. New
business discussed was selling M &amp; M's
candy Instead of mowing cemeteries to
raise money.
Newsreportt'r-Michellc Harrison

This letter is to inform the
Vinton Village residents that
the intent of the Village
Council is to expend the
funds raised by said tax fer
street lighting.
·
Vinton Village Mayor
and Council

LARGE SELECTION

"
•

·--Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 different colored granitee.
Whatever your requirements may bu. complete aatiofaction i1 as·
sured with Rock of Ages.
Hours: Mon., Tues .• Thur. &amp; Fri. 9:00-4:00; Cloeed Wed.
Other Hours by Appointment-446-2327 11r 693.6688

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS

that the airlines provided a Hight
auendant to sit with children

352 Third be.

PH. 4U-2327

G•lp•lh, 01.

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-

D.r ive carefree
for 90 days at \
Dallas ChevrOlet·.
Company
•

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College of Business Administration

thru

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''

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..

Executive .M BA

Program

The College of Business Administration of 9hlo University
Is currently recruiting the twelfth group for Its very successful
weekend Executive M.B.A. Program at Its Laacuter CampUI.
Classes will begin In September 1988.

For details, call 614/593-2028 or 614/593-2029, or
complete the coupon and mail It to:

........ •. ..............................................................·.
Dl~tor,

Executive M.B.A. Program

College of Business Administration
Copeland Hall, Ohio University

Athens. Ohio..45701·2979
Please send me lnformaUon on the Executive M.B.A. Program.

GM and
GMAC have
put together
an incredible
90 day deferred
payment progJam

May 31

Buy any
n.ew '87 or '88 GM
vehicle and ·make·no
payment for 90
carefree days

~:::::;~/

PLUS

REBATES.
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'750° 0

AND

lncredltable
Trade• In Value
On Your Used Carl

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'A't•d"t'!!tltn 1
Rihl.- ~hui~
i100 ., .....
H••n,,
Mt'l',...lll•' t 'rnn1
Thr Rihl..

Across From The Post Olllce
In Jackson

11 ;55 a.m.

.,

Now Open For Spring

current operating txptnsts.
Therefore, the only language that will appear on
the ballot will be for curr111t
operating expenses.

•

u.1 h· • " n :u

SHOWT-!THEMCMECHANNEltNC.
Cltlll. SHOWr.EfTHl MOYtECHANNEL INC.

a!

Dear Ann Landers: I am a flight
attendant who travels cross~oun·
try. My routine duties are as
follows: greet passengers, make sure
luggage is properly stowed, count
. passengers, monitor • catering to
ensure that all meals, beverages, ice
and supplies have been boarded.
Count bottles of beer, wine and
liquor. Check to make sure every·
one's seat belt is fastened, trays and
.seats in upright position and sre
that no personal stereo headsets or
TVs are being used. All this before
takeoff.
Then there's the hassle over seats.
Someone invariably complains and
demands that I find a better one.
Often 1 must ask a passenger if he
(or she) would mind changing with
so-and·so. 1. never stop being sur·
prised at how nice some people can
be.
•
Once airborne, 1 pass out maga·
zines, collect money for headsets,
run the movie. serve drinks and
snacks and offer a choice of three

We Offer Simple Service.

~und.,· fo:nnln11 :
W'ort~hlp fH041

IMOWT'IM! ll'd THE MCMI CtWINIL
...
......._.ol

throughout the entire flight. AI·
You have alSQ let the world know
though I try to keep my eye on that flight attendants. are not able
youngsters traveling alone. I have to serve as sitters, Thank you.
ISO other passen~rs to attend to. so
baby-sitting is impossible.
r----~-------1am appalled at how parents put
their children on a plane with no
TO:
reading material, no coloring books
and no money for the movie. How
Residents of Vinton V~loge
do they think a child is going to
FROM:
entertain himself for five hours?
Council
Vinton Village
Your assumption that the flight
attendants would be especially kind
SUBJECT:
and attentive to a child traveling
Street Lighting
alone is unrealistic. No matter how
kind and attentive we would like to
On February 11, 1911, the
be1 time does not allow us to devote
Council of Vinton Village
more than a few minutes to chil·
passed a resolution to place
dren traveling alone,
a levy on the May 3, 1911
We try to make every child's
ballot for additional millage
flight a memorable one, but we.
of 2.7 mills for the purpost
can't be full·time sky-nannies. ··US
AIR VETERAN OF 20 YEARS
of street lighting.
DEAR VETERAN: Flight attend·
Under Section 5705.19 of
ants everywhere will be pleased at
your description of the many duties
the Ohio Rnised Code, a
you must perform during a flight.
levy for street lighting is
You've made it clear that it's not as
placed under the category of
glamorous as it looks.

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VIsit ua toiMy or ceH now
lor -lnlormetlon.

Tuesday at the Meigs Junior
willlnmeet
at 7:30p.m.
• OAPSE,
High SChool
Middleport.
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Bulavlll Rood • P.O. Do, 308
Galllpoll•,Ohlo 45631

GALUPOUS, OH.
448-4517

GALLIPOLIS - Bossard Li·
brary · 'board of trustees meet
Tuesday, 5:30.p.m.

O'APSE meeting

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

Bob'•
Eleetro•l11
431 UPPER RIVER RD.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Ro·
tary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m.,
Down Under.

Ann

travel, miles. The airlines · work as .
ers to sign up for the "Toad few cabin attendants as they can
Brlckles Open" ts May 7. Entry legally get away with, even though
feE' ts $10 and includes scoring. many passengers need extra atten·
The oi&gt;en will be held May 14 In tion. I refer to the elderly, the
Middleport. Entrys may be sent handicapped, non-English speak·
to · Carl E. Searles, Box 19, . ing, etc., not to mention unaccom·
Middleport, 45760, or to Harry L. panied children.
Bailey, 1126 East Main St.,
I have actually had parents tell
Pomeroy. 45769.
·
me they were under the impression

PLANNED' PARENTHOOD

Pomeroy

614·992..66 1'4

JANE
SHERIFF

Sliding fH scale. No -

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VOTE:

COLLEY

MONDAY
PORTLAND - Special meet·
lng of-Portland PTO wlll be held
at 7 p.m. Monday at the school.

Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V. D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing"'·

CHEVROLR•OLDSMOBILE•CADILLAC
301 East Main

r~Area 4-H news reports
•-.. their March meeting at the hOme of Mark

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Houston. jp;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~

1

RODNEY - REvival service
wtll continue through Wednesday
at . Faith Baptist Church, with
Melvin Mock. Special music;
nursery provided. Services 7
p.m.

Charles Norris of Racine will be
evangelist for revival services
which at Sliver Run Baptist
Church and run through April 30.
Special music wlll ·be presented
by the Gabriel Quartet onAprll26
and 29 and by the Way Marks on
April 30. Services start at 7:30
each evening.

Family Planning
.It Makes Sense•••

JIM COBB
&amp;tate Farm Ftre and Casua~y Company Home Oll tce BIOOm tngton . liltnots

urday with evangelist Cbarles
North. 7: 30p.m. nightly.

1=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
De~me
I
Deadline for horseshoe throw·

(all:

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;::: Hope's Helping Hands 4-H club held

POMEROY - Meigs Genea'
logical Society meeting Sunday
at ·Meigs County Museum with
Chestesr F . Mach, King George,
Va., who will wear the Scottish
ktlt of · thge MacDonald Class
with, all accessories, as speaker.

Homeowners insurance
discounts

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Flight attendant, not sitter

Community calendar

PVH volunteers purchase equipment

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-3 .

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286-2171

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April

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

Page-8-4-Sunday nmes-Sentinel

24, 1988 .

April

Beat of the bend

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1\ATHLEEN BEEBE

TRACI BRAMMER

AMY MCCAIN

MELISSA PECK

Buckeye Girls State delegates,
.alternates selected from Gallia
GALLIPOLIS- Beverle Clark
and Becky Pasquale, America nism chairwomen of Lafayette
Unit 27 American Legion Auxil·
lary, have announced the names
of the five candidates from,Gallia
Cou nty to attend Buckeye Girls
State, sponsored by the loca l
auxiliary and four other organ!·
zatlons serving as co contributors.

T.he girls hav e been selected to
attend the 42nd annual sess!onnf
the American Leg!onAuxutary' s
Buckeye Girls State at Ashland
Ohio College. June 18-25.
They will be among the 1,325
young women who will particl·

By BOB HOEFLICH
The Meigs County Board of
The Internal Revenue Service Electlonsreports that the name
· Is giving special consideration to of Richard Gephart wiU appear
Pomeroy area
on your May primary election
residents whose
ballot. However, Gephart is out
income tax reof the race and any votes castfor
ports might
him will not be certified--which
have been lostln
means they will mean nothing.
t h e r ecent
Also the name of Jessie Jack·
break-in at the
son will not appear on the lOth
@.,
Pomeroy a I
Congressional District ballots,
Office. ·
which includes Meigs County, In
If you believe you r Income tax the primary. His papers were
ret urn might have disappeared filed too late for ballot placeas a result of the break-In, you ment, the board reports.
are to submit a duplicate docu·
ment and note at the top of the
Oops! In a report on the court
form, preferably In red ink, and of Pomeroy Mayor Hlchard
also make a note on the envelope, Seyler Thursday, il was stated
" Break-in Pomeroy, Ohio Post that Norman Milliron, Racine,
Office" . You are to send this and forfeited a $463 bond posted on a
any other duplicate documents to fictitious license plates charge.
the Internal Revenue Service, Actually, the forfeiture was only
P .0 . Box 267, Covington, Ky. , $63. Aplogies to Mr. Milliron.
41019.
Now, if you have to send
Richard Meiners Is looking for
anoth er check to cover payment family ph(&gt;to albums, Bibles and
of ~ny tax d~e. ask your bank to genealogy that were In the
stop payment on the original possession of the late Dora
check and note on the second Romine of Dexter at the time of
check that it Is replacement due her death in the early 1950's.
to the Pomeroy Post Office
These records wou ld have had
break-ln . These checks should be information on the Foldens,
cal led to the attention of Leah
(See SPECIAL; B8)
Hall, Mail Stop 281. at the
Covington address since checks
are Immediately separated from
the income tax return papers.
1,
If you are charged any penalty
Our 55th DiaMond
or interest as a result of the
Annlmurv
break-in, the IRS will ca ncel
these amounts.

GALLIPOLIS , - Announcement Is being · made · of the
engagement and approaching
marriage of Lorrl Ellen North,
daughter· of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
C. North of Route 3 Fairfield
Church Road. Gallipolis, and
Steven Dunning Patterson, son of
Dr. and Mrs. Richard G. Patterson. 47 Holcomb Hill, Gallipolis.
The open-church wedding will
take ptace Aug. 27. at the First
Presbyterian Church of
GalUpo)ls.
·
· Miss I North is a graduate of .
Gallla Academy High School and
atte nds Ohio University. She Is a
LORRIE . NORTH
member of St. Louis Catholic
STEVEN
D. PATTERSON
Chureh and the First Chu·rch of
God. Miss North Is employed at (iallla Academy High School and
Bernadine's .
attends Ohio University. He Is a
_ P~lterson is a graduate of member of First Presbyterian
Church.

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pate in the government workshop which is designed to educate the
designed to teach the respo ns!bil- citizens of tomorrow in represenit les of cit lzenship within a tat ive government. ·
two-party system. Tt Is here that
The candidat es are:
the government funct ioning begTract Brammer, North Gallia
ins and is carried out by each High School, daughter of Jerry
citizen participating in city, Brammer, P.O. Boxl11 ,Bidwell,
county and state government co-s ponsored by the Gall ipolis
activities, gu ided by numerous 'Kiwanis.
staff mem hers.
Kathleen Beebe ; Gallia
During the week, the girls will Academy High School, daughter
learn about caucuses, filing of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Beebe, 258
petitions, campaln glng, running Debby Drive, Gallipolis, cofor election and the dulles of sponsored by the Gallipolis J unpublic office. More than 46,000 ior Women 's Club.
gir ls have actively particip ated
Amy McCai n, Gailia Academy
In the Ohio American Legion High School, daughter of Mr. and
Auxiliary's largest project , Mrs. Carl Langford, 628 Fourth
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Clarke" Patterson
RUTLAND- Emma L Clarke
and Steven P. Patterson are
announcing their forthcoming
marriage, Saturday , May 21, at
St. Peter and St. Paul's Church,
Klngsutton, OK!ordshfre,
England. ·
· · Miss Clarke Is the daughter of
William and Irene Clarke of
Banbury, England . She Is a
graduate of Wllllnk Comprehen·
slve School, Burgfleid Common
and Is employed by the Drapers
Chamber of ·Trade as Data
· Processing Manager.
Patterson Is thesonofPauland
Rose Patterson, Rutland. He he a
graduate of Meigs High School
and Is a sergeant in the U.S. Air
Force. now serving In his third
year of an overseas tour·at RAF
Upper Heyford , Endland.

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HOLLY POPE

Sale

Ave. , Gall ipolis, co-sponsored by
the American Legion Auxiliary.
Holly Pope, Southwestern High
David Baker, Jr., new director
School, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
of the Ohio Department of
Jeff Pope , Rt. 3, Gallipolis,
Development, and Randy Ruco-sp&lt;insored by the Am erican
nyon, head of the new state
Legion.
agency, Office of Appalachia,
Melissa Peck, Kyger Creek will be.lnMeigsCountyThursday
and field exercises in several Far
High School, daught er of Mr. and to meet and talk with the county
East countries.
Mrs.
Howard Peck, Rt. 1, Bid· commissioners, as many mayor
A 1985 graduate of Kyger Creek
46 pL ......... reg. 1850 Now S595
well,
co-sponsored
by the Galli· · and village councilmen as possiHigh School, Cheshire, he joined
the Marine Corps in November polis Business and Professional ble, chairman of the county
48 pt.......... reg. 11100 Now $750
1985.
Women.
township trustees association
52 pt.. ........ reg. 11200 Now 5750
Alternates to the event are:
and chamber of commerce presi56 pt .... :..... reg. 11000 Now 5695
Jill Goddard; Southwestern dents
MARY C. WARD
75 pt ....... reg. 11650 Now 51195
A meeting to bring all this
Navy Seaman Recruit Mary C. High School, daught er of~ and
87
pt....... reg. 12000 Now $1395
Ward, daughter of Bonnie L. Mrs. Paul Goddard; Sandra Sue about has been set for 4 p.m.
Maxson of 37330 E . Shade Drive, Houck, Hannan Trace High Thursday at the Meigs County
ReedsvUie, has completed re- School, daughter of. Mr. and Mrs. Emergency Medical Service
cruit train ing at Recruit Train- Matthew J ohn so n; Denise Training Center which Is located
Pickens, North Gallia High
beh ind Veterans Memorial
422 Second Ave.
Ing Command, Or lando, Fla.
School,
daught
er
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hospital.
During Ward's eight-week
training cycle, she studied gen- Jack Pickens; Lisa Marie Mar- r---------=::-:----''":-::-------,----S
eral military subj ects designed cum, Hannan Trace High School,
d11ught
er
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Thor-~---•Ciip
to prepare her fQr fu rther aca·
demlc and on-the-job training In mas Galiaher.
The American Legion Auxllone of the Navy's 85 bas1c fields.
lary
, Unit 128, of Middleport w!l l
Ward's studies Included seamanship, close order drill, Naval host an orientation tea on Sunhistory and fir st aid. Personnel day, May 15, at 1 p.m. at the New
who complete this course of Middleport J?ost Hall Annex,
Bring .in any type of 8 mm film and we will
Instruction are eligible for three across from Pos t Office. for all
candidates
and
alterna
tes
or
transfer up to 50 feet of film onto VHS
hours of college credit In Physl·
District 8. A state representative
Tape. We have blank video tapes availa~le
cal Education and Hygiene.
A 1984 graduate of Marietta will ·attend to a-nswer any
for purchase, or bring in your own, unused
Senior High School, Marietta, questions. .
Parents
a
nd
guests
who
are
super high grade tape.
Ohio, she joined the Navy Reserves In January 1988.
Interested are welcom e to
Offer ·good with coupon only.
~
attrnd.
t----------------------j
Hurryl Offer npires 4-30-aa·
One coupon per customer.
Not valid with any other coupon.
BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY

- - - - I n the service---BENJAMIN D. BERKLEY
Benjamin D. Berkley, son of
James D. and Helen K. Berkley
of 151 Main St., New Haven,
W.Va., has been. promoted In the
U.S. Air Force to the rank of
senior airman.
Berkeley is a corrosion control
specialist with the 549th Consoli·
dated Aircr aft Maintenance
Squadron a t Patrick Air Force
Base, Fla.
He Is a 1983 graduate of
Wahama High School. Mason.
W.Va .
DAMON E. FISHER
Airman Damon E. Fis her, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fisher of
Racine, has graduat ed from a
U.S. Air Force turboprop aircraft maintenance course at
Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas.
During the course, students

were taught alrtraf! maintenance fundamen tals to r epair

and service aircraft with turbo
engines. Also, maintenance management and document a tion
were taught for assessing the
aircraft readiness capability .
Graduates earned credits toward an associate degree
through the Community College
of the Air Force.
He Is a 1987 .grad uate of
Southern High School, Racin e.
MICHAEL R. HATFIELD .
Marine Cpl. Michael R. Hat·
field, son of Charles R Hatfield
of Route 1. -Ru tland, recently.
departed on a six- month deploy ment to Okinawa, Japan, with
3rd Battalion, lOth Marines,
Cam p Lejeune, NC.
During the deployment, Hat·
field will participate In training

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531 JACKSON PIKE- RT 35 WEST. Phone

SUE

$249
WD.

CONE THREAD
NOW

2/$299

RIBBON REELS

Our price 15e in.

Our price 99¢ ea.

10~.

NWLON NET
Our price 63c yd.

SALE

EMBROIDER\' HOOPS

YD.

Our price $3.19 yd.- - - - - - S A L E $2.49 YD.

CINOW INTERLOCK KNITS
Our price $4.39 yd . - - - - - - S 4 L E

$3.79 YD.

lJNBLEACHED llll!SLIN
Our price $2.39 yd.
SALE $1.99 to.
GINGHER • EMBROIDER\', ORESSIIIJikER SHEARS
Comp. at $18.95 &amp; $26.95
SAWE 30%
SUIN BOW HANGERS 5et of 3.
Our price 99~ s e l - - - - - - - -'S.\LE 49C SETALL SEWING BASKETS

- $49.99 ea.

Order a DownUnder Burger in our
Dining Room and Choose from the
Following Toppings:

Raised on a fruit farm near
Lorain, Ohio, Leimbach has mn
End O'Way farm alongside her
husband , Paul, for over 35 years.
Leimbach writes a week ly
"Country Wife" column in the
Elyria Chron icle Telegram, has
written articles for "The
Farmer's Wife" and Is the author
of lh ree books : "A Thread of
Blue Denim", "All My Meadows" and "Harvest of Bittersweet ". She has appeared on
"Good Morning, America" .
In addition to being a farm
wife, author, newspaper columnist and speaker, Leimbach is
also the aunt · of Rio Grande
resident Karen Thomas.
For more information on the
m ~tln g call Virginia Covert at
245-5659.

American Cheese
Swiss Cheese
Provolone Cheese
Blue Cheese ·
Cheddar Cheese Sauce
Sauteed Mushrooms
Grilled Onions
Sweet Red Onion
Sweet Relish
Jal apeno Peppers

of me!

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~ 60"/o

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OFF

CORA MILL
Antiques &amp; Crafts
OPEN
HERB &amp; SCENTED
GERANIUMS
·SALE APRIL 29 &amp; 30
On Cora Mill Rd . at Rt.
325 south of Rio Grande .

)ust like making up your face,
Levolor offers xou color and
styles in Rivier;l' Blinds that make
your rooms come.alive, reflecting
your personality thru and thru.
'

WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET

ADULTS

S5 95

CHILDREN (Under 12 )

Westtrn Ave.- Cantril Center

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Guacamole
Crisp Bacon
Cajun Spices
Grey Poupon
Mayonnaise
Lettuce
Spinach
Tomato

(Served with Steak Fries &amp; Soft Beverage)

Downtown Huntington, Third Ave.
Across from Ctvic Center
•
, -304 ·428-1016
PARKERSBURG' 1· 304· 625-7090
Toll Brklge L Gerfle4d Ave.
CHILLICOTHE: I -614 -773-8700

S395

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.c.'

JANE
COLLEY

SOON: "CR ITTERS PART 2"

TO THE CITIZENS OF GALLIA COUNTY:
I have· been over the county the last
. three months to talk to many of you.l have
enjoyed meeting you and have learned
much about the need for honest, respected
law enforcement in our county.
Many of you ask if a woman can be
Sheriff. I believe the office of Sheriff is today an administrative office requiring efficiency and management. Being a woman is
no handicap to being an excellent Sheriff.
You have noticed that Caroline Clayton is
Sheriff in West Virginia. Our current Sheriff
also has at least two f~male deputies.
Honesty, hard work and management is
important. Being female has nothing to do
with serving the public with conviction and
honesty.

VOTE FOR HARD WORK
AND HONESTY.
ELECT JANE COLLEY~ SHERIFF
Paid for by the Candidlte, Rt. 1, Bidwell. Ohio 45614.
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Gallia County
· Sheriff
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March

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10, 1911

Dear Editor:
I'm very pleasld.to hear that you have a woman running
.
.
for Sheriff in your. County.
I'm Caroline Clayton, Sheriff of Webster County, W. Va. I
took office in January ltiS,Jind I'm running for re-election
this year. I'm ,writing this letter because a lot ~~ people art
a little bit IHry of ·having a woman for Shertff, but thty
shouldn't be. I'm 5'2" toll and weigh obout 126 ... but
that d011n' t k11p ,. froin doing my job. I really core about
tht people in my County, and I work Yery hard for them.
LAW ENFORCEMENT: I think this is the main lllld and
should be available to · the peaple and respond to them. I
hoYI my phone nullllllr in the book, Olld I'm avail. .le"to the
people any tin.l'll be there whlll they coli. I may han 1 or
2 Deputies with me, it depends on the iituation, but I'll be
there.
·
. ·
There •s numerous other tasks that a Sheriff has, but all it
takes is a c1Hp concern for your County, and a will to do the

fob.

Sincerely,
Coraline Clayton
Sheriff of Wllllttr Co.
l'lld lor ~ 1111 Clldl4llf, II. I. lidwlll. 01110 45114

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CoF!f.!'
to

st.
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!'V!j•ks your vote on Mft_l for
the o
·
a County llconljF,lf no·
NiiiGted and elected, ho wllservo all tho people In
• fair, iiiiiiCirt..., lllatlftOr,
I'll. tor Dr tilt Clllatlllt. Jlttllnll Shttls. Stctllary. 515 Olk Dr., Gallipolis.

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Recordi. Mr. ShHts has been a resident of Gallia
County all his life. He brings to the office of County
Recorder a wealth of experience in record kHping
.and serving the public. He has served as Clerk of
Guyon Township for 20 years and is presently
serving as Township Trust• of his township. Mr.
Sheets not :.J.:•Is he is well qualified for the
'Office of lee
, but also seeks it for sentimental
reasons. His grandfather, Lewis M. ShHts, and his
father, F. Taylor Sheets, served as County le·
corder, and he would like to be the third generation from his family to hold this .office. Mr. Sheets
also has 15 yean of supervisory experience
working · as 'urchaling ·agent ~ Assistant
Superintendent of the County Highway Depart·
....,.,, He has demonstrated as Township Clerk,
'Township Trustee and Assistant Superintendent of
the County Hlahway syst• he undentands the
value of a doJiar. He believes government is to
·a rve the people, and the public tax dollar should
be treated In· the ane• manner as if it were his
dolor, and he pledges a thrifty, c011servative' ad·
111inistration of the oHice of County Recorder •
Lewis M. Shee;s, with other IMII..,s of the Board
.of Trustees o Guyan Township, has been IMtru·
JHntalln establishing a VoluntHr Fire Depa11111ont
in Guyon Township, which now Ml'v• and fur·
nilhn fire protection to the Townlhlps of Guyan,
· Ohio and Harrison, and a mutual aid . , .• .........,
With fire depu h11111ts of Cltv of Gallipolis, Yllaae
of Crown ~!laad Wlnsdor Townlh~p of LawrHCe

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FOR

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ow you can discover the
love, laughter and
magic of The-Disney
Channel for less!

N

LEWIS M. SHEm is SHkiilg the office of County

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EUCT

1:00 &amp; 9: 00PM DA ILY.
SAT &amp; SUN MATINEES
1 ,oo &amp; J,oo

99fA.

Our price 2 f88e

l

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C(Build A Burger"Night

make them
a reflection

BEETLElUICE
ll'!llo•

Our price $3. 19 yd.

SALE

Upper Rt. 7 - Gallipolis

••••••••Clip and Save••••••..l

SUE

J.\FFET!\

$199

446-7390 OR 446-6939

Introduces:

N

EMMA I. ClARKE
STEVEN P. PATTERSON

446-2345

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

L£VOLOR

RIO GRANDE - The Rio lion with a stated purpose of
Grande College/Community Col- bringing America's collegians
lege Chapter of Students In Free and citizens to a greater underEnterprise were chosen Friday a standing of and support for the
winner In SlFE's regional com- ·free market economic system.
Partlcl pa lion In s 1FE is des lgned
petition In Cleveland.
As a result of their winning the to give students the opportunity
regional c6mpetltlon, Rio to study, develop and promote
Grande SIFE members will be Innovative, creative and effec·
competing In SlFE's lnterna'· tlve projects that re flect ecotiona! competition In Atlanta, nomic concepts, systems and
practices fundamental to the
Ga., on May 15.
SIFE Is a non-profit corpora- American economic system.

II

Boh's Electronics

300 2ND AVE.

MI CtlA( L· II.[AT Otl 1•,

9" SCISSORS
Our price S1.66 ea .

s.m 39~D.

II

A group of Rio Grande College- Lucretia Scott of AMB was the
/Community College students, Individual student who raised the
aided by corporate sponsors, most mo ney.
raised $2;156.04 for the Muscular
Corporate sponsors for the
Dystrophy Association during Superdan ce Included Superthe recent 24-hour Superdance America of. Gallipolis, Pepsi,
held In the cainpus Student Fruth's Pharmacy, McDonald's
Center.
of Gallipolis, Heiner's Bakery,
Co-chaired by Jeannie Manuel the Bob Evans Restauran t In Rio
and D. R. Smith, the superdance, Grande, Johnson's Superand annual on-campus event. markets, Kroger, Rio Mini-Mart,
exceeded Its goal ofralslng$2,000 Bodlmer's Exxon at Rodney,
to aid the fight against muscular Foodland, Domino's Pizza, Pizza
dystrophy. This year, the dance Hut. Giovanni's of Rio Grande,
was sponsored by the All-Greek the Bastille, Bronze Body TanCouncil and the Coaliti~ for ning of Oak Hill, !3ernadlne' s/ My
Handicapped Students.
·
Sister's Closet, Rlepenhoff Dis·
Because the event surpassed trlbutors, Wendy's, Thomas
Its goaJ.,...,the All-Greek Council Clot hiers, Network Video and
was presented with a VCR. The Carl' s Shoe Store.
VCR will be used In the Student r - - - - - - ' - - - ---,--:-1
Center, according to Ron Adkins,
college counselor.
Thirty-four students particimakeup my
pated In the Superdance, with
windO'WS •••
Alpha Mu Beta sorority raising
the most amount of money.

• •

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CALL AMY CARTER AT

I

Our price $1 .99 ea.

RIB TRIM

's.uE

446-4 52 ~

I

Sunday Times-

LWE MEMBERSHIP - David J. Griffiths, adjudent of
Lafayette Post 27, of the American Legion, presented life
membership card and pin to Harold Neal, Leglonalre Neal has
been a member of the post lor a number of years. He Is known for
his volunteer work and dependability for being called upon.

Superdance srudents raise funds

SIFE team wins compennon

1.
1.

I

ALL S[ATS $2 . 50 .
BP.RGA!rt NIGHT TUESDAY $2.50

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TROPICALS,
COMIERSUIONALS
Our price $3.59 yd.

RIO GRANDE - Farm wife
and author Patricia c Penton
Leimbach will be the speaker at
Open Gate Garden Club's meetIng April 28 at 7:30 p.m. at
Simpson Chapel United Methodist Church in Rio Grande.
The meeting Is open to the
public and everyone Is Invited to
come and enjoy Leimbach's wit
and stories of her experiences
here and abroad that prove It Is a
small world after all. She makes
embattled farmeJs laugh at their
troubles and wives aware of the
devious distress· signals like
" Honey, are you busyT'
A speaker for the past 12 years,
Leimbach has a humor that will
lift your spirits and make you
glad to be a part of the hear tland
of America.

and ave•-----·

FREE
VIDEO TRANSFER

FUNDRAISER RECOGNIZED - Funds raised by the recent
Superdance 88 were presented by Rio Grande College and
Community College students and stafl to the Muscular Dystrophy
Association. From left are Ron Adkins, college counselor; Linda
Byer, MDA; D.R. Smith and Jeannie Manuel, co·chainnen of
Superdance; and Dean Brown, vice presid«:nl for student services.

II
Farm wife, author speaks to club

Tawney Jewelers

1I

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

NorthPatterson

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Page-8-6-Sunclay Times-Sentinel

April 24, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,
Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.
.
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April24. 1988

• Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Plelisant, W . Va.

]ames Sands

Sorority Founder's Day to be observed

The Sibleys involvement with Gallipolis
BY JAMES SANDS
William Gfddings Sibley owned
and edited the GalliAQlls Weekly
Tribune and the Galllpolls Dally
Tribune lor over
a quarter of a
century. He was
born In 1860,
worked In and
around Racine,
Ohio, graduated
from Marietta
.
College In 1881 and moved to
Gallipolis In 1890 with his wife
Frankie Roberts Sibley. Sibley's
writings In the Tribune are most
eloquent but ·frequently very
frank, a quality that not all
people appreciated.
One of Sibley's favorite topics
was · the institutional church,
parti.c uiarly the Meihodist
Church of which Sibley had some
familiarity . His delight in observ·
ing the Methodist Church
reached a fevered pitch especially every lour years when the
General Conference of the Meth·
odist Church was held. This year
the General Conference will run
from April 26 to May 6 in St.
Lou is , Missouri.
About General Conference,
which is the ruling body of the
now over 9 million United Metho·
dists in the world, Sibley wrote in
1912: "A Methodist General
Conference is a very lively body.

It contains delegates from the
selves, they wUI naturally turn the poor, the shams and frauds
entire civilized world, and is
against membership in a church and whited sepulchres, who
keenly interested In every mat·
which holds that it is sinful to cloak themselves In church
ter of human co•cern."
dance, to play cards, or to go to a membership as a cover for their
Sibley also noted that General
show? We have no doubt that willful sins. Let It get after the
Conference was observed closely
hundreds of thousahds of young men and women who have been
by the press and that the dally
people have been turned from the so many years In tbechurch, that
paper put out by the General
Methodist Church for this reason they nave arrogated to them·
Conference entitled, "The Chris·
alone.''
selves the right to judge and
tian Advocate" resembled In
"The world has passed the condemn and damn young people
many ways the Congressional
point where It believes religion as If they were delegated by the
Record.
should be a gloomy, forbidding Almighty to dispense-not his love
According to Sibley the big
and tear-starting thing. . The and charity-but the vials of his
issue of 1912 which he thought
religion of joy, of pulsating wrath." ·
would divide the church if not
gladness, of a~?undant good·
"And finally brethren, resettled was the repeal of the
times, of power to resist evil, Is member these things: there Is a
act ion of the 1908 General Confer·
abroad in the hearts of the religion for the young, and a
ence which stated that dancing,
people. We are working Intensely religion for the middle-aged, and
card playing a.nd attending mov·
In this age, and we must play In another religion for the old, and
iilg picture shows was immoral.
order to keep sweet. Take these each differs from the other, and
· Persons who violated this injunc·
three amusements In question. no man can make the one fit the ··
tlon could be tlrought befor the
No broad man can hold that other, for It Is contrary to Nature,
church and removed from its . indulgence lit them under proper and Nature cannot be denied.''
rolls.
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conditions, Is wicked. And com- (Sibley)
" The Methodist church" ,
pared with the actual conduct of
The Issue of these three amusestated Sibley, "has set Itself up in
so many who hold membership In ments continued to be discussed
opposition to the most common
the church without question, they for many years and they were
forms of amusement-cards,
become of trivial importance, frowned on officially by . the
dancing, and theatre-going-at a
and remind one of the long General Conference for several
per los when humanity has grown
departed prejudice against the more years. Stated one Gallia
to believe itself entitled to any
violin and the church organ.';
County Methodist clergyman In
innocent recreation in which it
"Let the condemnation of the response to Sibley, "No one had
has time to indulge, and is
denomination be visited not on ever been brought before toe
disposed against any religion · the happy, Innocent, joy-loving · church for participating in these
'which frowns upon a good time.
youngsters, but on the offenders amusements and that most pee·
Take the young people of the
in the church who do the really pie let their conscience and
towns and cities. Can anyone
wicked things. Let the church get common sense be their guide on
doubt that with churches ali
after the stingy rich, the venom· morals and not the General
around them which perrnit
ous slanderers, the oppressors of · Conference."
amusements innocent In them-

·Senior Citizen Day slated in Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS · - Plans are
almost complete for Ohio 12th
annual Senior Citizens Day In
Gall Ia County, Tuesday, May 17.
The theme for this year is "The
Celebration of Age".
Activities will begin in the
multi-purpose room at the senior
citizen center with a prayer
breakfast at 9 a.m. This includes
a program with the Rev . Charles
Lusher as speaker• and special
music. At this time the name of
the Outstanding Senior Citizen
wUI be announced.
This person will be chosen by
ietllrs sent in by people stating
name, address and what that
person has done for senior

citizens. Send nominations to the
Senior Citizen Center Box 441
Gall !polis, OH 45631. These will
also be the recognition of the
Golden Anniversary couples.
The dinner will be at noon, and
reservations must be in to the
Center by , May 10. At 1 p.m ..
guests will be introduced and
invited to speak. This Includes
county and city commissioners,
a representative from the Area
Agency on Aging from Rio
Grande alld Lee Wakeley from
the Ohio Department on'Aglng at
Columbus.
Awards wilt be given to the
Outstanding Senior Citizen and

the Community Service Awardalso chosen by letters - of the
organization. group. m· club, that
has done the most for senior
citizens.
There will also be a craft show .
of hand ·made articles of several
categories - crocheting, knit·
ting, weaving, embroidery, quilting. ceramics and woodworking.
There are entry slips at the
Center whih must be filled out
and returned to the Center by
May 1.
Also in the afternoon, there will
be special en tertalnment. The
Center Is seeking solos, duets, ·
quartets, plano and organ solos,

choirs, gospel singing, guitars,
banjos, dulcumers, auto harps
any musicallnstrunientailsts, In
addition to readings. Coniact the
Center 446-7000 if you would be
willing to help with this special
program.
Open House of tbe entire
buDding now housing the Senior
Citizen Center, will be an ongoing
activity as wilt the craft show.
Since May Is designated as
Senior Citizen or older American
month It is hoped that every
group, churches, clubs, lodges,
service clubs will "do something" special for their Senior
Citizen members during the
month.

·Senior Center activities planned for week
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center.
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy. has
the following activities sche·
duled for the week of Aprll25-29:
Monday - Round and square
dance 1-3, exercise class.,3: 15
Tuesday - Chorus to Ameri·
tare lor birthday party 1:15,
Painting class with Instructor
Lois Pauley,1 :00, theprojectwlli
be a pen an!llnk watercolor
Wednesday - Social 'Security
representative 10·12, bingo 11:00,
bowling 1:30, bridge 1·3, Blood·
mobile visit 1-5:30
Thursday - Monthly birthday
party, seniors with birthdays ,In
April wlll be honored
Friday Quilting, cards,
games
The Senior Nutrition program
menu for the week is:

Monday - Macaroni and
cheese, creamed tomatoes. cole
slaw, chocolate pudding on gra·
ham cracker crust
Tuesday - Ham~urger gravy
on biscuit. masMd potatoes,

cake
Friday Vegetable soup,
cheese wedge, gelatin with fruit,
cookie
Choice of beverage available
with meal.
·

corn. prunes
Wednesday - Chicken pattie
sandwich. oven browned pota·
toes, three bean salad, pineapple
Thursday - Meat loaf. seal·
loped potatoes, creamed peas,

..

THIS HOUSE ON Second Avenue In Gallipolis was lor mat?r
years the home of W.G. and Frankie Sibley . Mr. Sibley, as editor of
the Trillune, took to taks many institutions including the Method!\!
Church's General Conference. This house dates probably to 1865
and was once much larger than It Is now.

Bible' study scheduled
by Paint Creek Church
GALLIPOLIS . - A special
study called "The Challenge of
Being A Woman ", des lgned for
both married and single women,
will begin Tuesday, ,April 26 at 6
p.m., att the Paint Creek Baptist
Church, 8.15 3rd Avenue, Gallipo·
lis.
Classes will be held every
Tuesctay, from 6 to 8 p~m ., for
seven weeks. Ali women, regard·
less of age are welcome.
The List of studies will be:
"The Quest for Fulflilment"
(understanding our needs . and
how to begin to find real
fulfillment)
"Liking Ourselves" (under·
standing the cause for a poo r
self-Image and how to gain a
positive self· image) .
"Understanding Men" (under·

Genealogical
Society meets
POMEROY - Meigs Genea·
logical Society meeting Sunday
at Meigs County Museum with
Chestesr F. Mach, King Geo,rge,
Va., who will wear the Scottish
kilt of thge MacDonald Class
with ail accessories, as speaker.

'RATES

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

TERM

$36

32 DAY
91 DAY
6 MONTH
1 YEAR
2 YEAR
3 YEAR
4 YEAR
5 YEAR

HASKINS-TANNER
332 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

PORTLAND - SpecIal meet·
log of Portland PTO will be held
at 7 p.m. Monday at the school.

Coin club meets

.50

MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club meeting at Burkett
Barber Shop Monday evening
with social hour and radlng
session at 7 p.m. preceeding the
business association: election of
officers. a coin auction and
refreshments.

RATE
5.25%
5.80%
6.30%
7.00%
7.25%
7.50%
7.70%
8.00%

YIELDS

6.490fo
7.230fo
7.50"/o
7.76%
7.98%
8.30%'

A minimum depoait of $500 onall CO's.
Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal
Rate• Subject to Change

.50

•

CHESTER. The annual
science fair of Chester Elementary School was held Friday .
Judging was ~onducted during
the day by Bill Buckley, John
Costanzo, Charles Manuel, Mike
Lively. Howard Parker. and
George Stewart, and during the
evening an open house was held
for parents and friends .
Knowledge achieved, clarity of
expression. and originality and

•
,-1

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&lt;

Don't suffer
needlessly.
Chiropractic
care can help.
Call for an
appointment today.
••

SUPERIOR RATINGS - Tyson Rose, left, and Andrew Wolf
were amo111 the slxtb graders receiving superior ratings on their
exhibits In tbe Chester Elementary School science fair Friday .
Tyson's exhibit was on energy in modon while Andrew's display
featured ants as social workers.

Local students
Partici-nate'l'
in SpeUing Bee

Meigs
County
Chiropractic··
Clinic ·

HUNGTINGTON. w.va.
Both Gallla county and Galilpo·
lis City Schools were represented
by three area students In the
Tri-State Spelling Bee In Hun·
tington. W.Va .• on April16.
Representing the cuy schools
was Gabriel Stewart, son of Sam
and Donna Stewart of Gaitlpolis.
Gabriel is an eighth grader at
Gallia Academy.
Amber Montgomery and Me·
linda Spurlock represented the
County Schools. Amber is the

&lt;I '

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420 Main Street
675·6280
Point Pleasant
Houis: Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-4:30p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.-3 p.m.

OFF.
, ELECT

ALL

ROBERT H.

KARAVAN SPRING·::
FASHIONS ·.'·

"Bob"

*EASON
REPUBLICAN
FOR MEIGS COUNTY

APRIL 25 TO APRIL 30

TOP OF THE STAIRS.·
AND

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE.

ENGINEER ·

POtiiRO~

111 W. 2ND
992-6720

Paid for by the Committee to Elect Eaoon, John MuS9er, TreaiUn!r, Mulberry Hll.,

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creativity were the judging criteria, with ratings of superior,
exceiten t, good and satlsfa ctory
being awarded to the nearly 70
exhibits by the fourth, fifth and
sixth graders of the school.
In the fourth grade. students
receiving superior ratin~s ~ere
Melissa Dempsey. Brian Hof·
fman, Robet Hoffman, Jessica
Karr, Christ Michael, Jennifer
Mora , Robert Murphy . Nicole

Do you suffer ::
&gt;
•••
from:
:·
Low Back Pain
Neck Pain &amp;
Stiffness
Headache
Muscle .Spasm
Whiplash
Sports-Related '••,·
Injuries

Hours by
appointment

Member FDIC

her Is Cathy Johnson, principal of Chester
Elementary. An open house was held Friday nlghl
for parents and friends to view the 70 exhibits of
fourth, fifth and sixth graders.

Science Fair conduaed at Chester

standing why there is conflict in
human relations hips ; under·
standing the basic needs of men)
"Being God's Woman" (under·
standing our value as women and
our responsibility before God as
wives and "best friend s")
.•
"The Woman You . AlwjlY,s
wanted to .be" (understanding
the power source for successfUl
living)
·
. :·Building Love" (Learnin~t to
build love by accepting people as
they are, by · accepting ·o ur
responsibility, and by accepting
our present situations)
"Building Commu'ntcation"
(Learning practical ways to open
up the Communication lines and
keep them open)
For more informal ion you may
contact:
t"
Mrs. Karen Buffington at 4~6 0417.
•.

992~2168

"'Golf league meets

'

t'

BLUE RmBON WINNER - Acid rain and its
Impact on tl!e environment was the topic os Adria
Frecker's exhibit which received a superior
rating. Adria displayed samples of water and test
result infonnation on acid content. Pictured with

Nelson, Brandi Reeves, Crystal
Smith. Michael Smith, Heather
Well, and Lauren Young.
Given excellents on their projects were Chad Barker, Christy
Drake. Jamie Erwin, Renee
Gray, Erie Hill, Eric Hollon,
Noelle I;'lckens, Amy Smith, and
pebra Zeigler.
~.
Ratings of good were given to
Brook Beeker, Ryan Clonch,
Kristin Foreman, Ralph Foster,
Tracey Grate, Ryan O'Neil.
Michael Otto. Eric Tuttle. and
Stephanie Wood: while satisfactory . ratings were to Joshua
Casto. Michael O'Neil, and Kyle
Ord .
In the fifth grade superior
ratings went to Michael Bailey ,
Ryan Buckley. Joe Karschnik,
Lilian Nakao. Jamie Ord, Mi·
chelle Pooler, Stacy Staats, Jer·
rOd Van lnwagen, with excellents
going to Charles Bissell, Tara
Congo, Lee Connolly, Jamie
Ewing , Ryan Hollon, Danielle
Kibble, Sara Machir, Rebekka
Melntyre, Todd Michael, Jessica
Radford; Amy Beth R.edovlan,
Jeff Stet hem, Victor· van Meter,
and Michael Basim.
Ratings of good went to Jessica
Chevalier, Dina Combs, David
Fetty, Brian Frederick, David
Johnson, Stacy Woolard.
In the sixth grade the rating of
excellent' went to Penny Aeiker.
Andrea Dillard, Adria Frecker,
Tyson Rose. Amber Well, Andrew Wolfe. and Alicia Zeigler.
Excellent ratings weni to
Kenny Burke,
P. Davis,
Friend,
Debra J.Frost,
JaredAmie
Rid·
enour, Amanda Wells, good rat·
ings to R.ichie Arnold, Charlie
Brewer, Jason Cain, Joey Co·
ates, Stephanie Hoffman, Amy
Krautter, Jason Ryan, and Cyn·
thia White .
Michael St. Clair, fourth LD,
received a superior rating on his
exhibit.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Now all you politicians take
note.
There's going
to be a consignment auction at
the Carmel
Church Satur·
day starting at
10 a.m. to raise
money for the
building fund. Popular auctio·
neer Dan Smith has voluteered
his services and has come up
with what he calls some "monkey business" that he's hoping
will bring In all the politicians.
He'd like every candidate to be
there to buy a "post hole."
They'll be put on the auction
block every hour or so, all day, so
Dan says coming by anytime
during the day will be fine . there will · always be another
' "postliole" for sale.
Now, on the more serious side,
the Carmel Church has most of
the exterior of the addition
finished, but there's much to be
done inside.
Residents are being encour·
aged to consign things for the
sale and this can be done though
Larry Circle. John Rose or
RandyRelber.Butincaseyou're
one of those people who watt until
the last minute and then don't get
around to It, just bring what you
want to have sold to the church
grounds Saturday morning. It

CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-237-771•6

DILES HEARING (ENTER

will be accepted right up to the
time of the sale.
The children of the church who
are taught by Connie Little will
have a "special" to open the sale,
and the women will be serving
homecooked food all day and
running a rummage sale on the
side.
And speaking of politicians,
candidate's night at the Senior
Citizens Center was a big
success.
About 250 turned out and about
a thousand dollar s was rai sed
throug~ the dinners served and
the "penalties" paid by the
candidates lor speaking too long.
Incidentally, the kitchen and
dining room being renovated as a
part of the $200,000 project
underway at the Center was used
for the first time since It was
closed a few weeks ago.
Meals have been catered to the
seniors by Veterans Memorial
Hospital, but starting Monday,
the kitchen will be open again.
Most of the work has been
completed and nearly all of the
new equipment is in place and
ready to be used .

Now 85, his health has deter to·
rated to the place where he
couldn' t be managed at home
and the famiiy reluctantly decided on outside care. You might
like to visit thi s genial man who
brought personality to a parkin~
spot In front of Elberfelds every
spring and summer for so many .
years.
Ail you frustrated actors.
now's yo ur chance!
The Legion Players have roles
open in "Our Town" and audl·
lions are thi s afternoon, 1 to 4
p.m .
..
The play has been scheduled
for mid-June. but as yet the main
ro'.es for the male leads haven't
been cast, a nd there are still
several bit parts open.
So you work . The directors,
Shirley Smith and Dewey Hor·
ion , tell us they'll work rehear·
sais around work sc hedules.
Want more information, call
Shirley, 992 -3289 or stop by at the
American Legion Annex on Mill
Street this afternoon .
·

Dwight Spencer. who was a
familiar sight on Pomeroy's
Main St. for many years selling
plants, fruits and vegetables
from his car, Is now at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.

stg• nalJ· reeteveJ
.
• al
d
nattOn aWafi

WESCO
POOLS
MANY REFERENCES
UFETIME WARRANTED,
FIBERGLASS POOLS

Rl0 GRANDE- The Signals,
The Signals. with a circulation
the student operated newspaper of nearly 2,000, is staffed by Rio
at Rio Grande College and Grande students and is published
Community College has won weekly for distribution at the
national honors in the American college and in the community.
Scholastic Press · Associations's
Students participa te in all
1988 annual competition.
phases of the publication and are
The Signals took first place for responsible for copy preparation
overall excellence among col- and editing. advertising sales ,
leges with student enrollments photography, layout and design
between 1,000 and 1,700. The of the newspaper.
student newspaper received per·
The advisO!'Y is titled by the
feet marks for page design. college's Office of College Rela·
general plan, and content.
lions. This is the second year in a
TheASPA is a nationalschoias· row that the Signals has won first
tic press association that serves place in the ASP A's national

446-0498

~~o~v~er~1,~500:s:c:h:oo:l:s
~th:r~o:ug:h~o~u~t~th~e~~co~m~p~et~it~io;n~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~
countfy.

~~~~~~~~
If HEARING is your problem- and you feel that
hearing aids are priced TOO HIGH for your
BUDGET - than please contact us at ·DILES
HEARING CENTER. We have many referral
source• for assistance and you may qualify
whether you are regularly employed or not. It i1
our hope that NO ONE who can.ba helped 1hould
be deprived of better hearing. Let us be your ad·
vocate. ·
·

sas, together on April 30, 1931 to hours. The chapters have
form that sort of organization.
created their own International
Bela Sigma Phi began , and funds for purposes they select.
time provided Walter Ross 's idea Their Inter nati onal Endowment
a good one. Because the organ!· · Fund has donated over $2 million
zation has continued to meet to health resea rch groups, to
their needs Ross will be rem em· homes for u nderprl viiedged
bered by this largest Greek Jetter children, and to may other
sorority in the.world at Thursday wprthwhile ca uses . Through
night's observance. .
Beta Sigma Phi's International
Throughout the 57 years of Loan and Scholarship Funds,
their history, members of Beta members a nd their families
:i)igrna Phi have enjoyed pro· receive assistance.
grams for cultural studies and
Basic to Beta Sigma Phi,
numerous social events.' They however. are the socials for Its
have opportunities for personal members. One of the most
growth, and have. devoted U me important is th eir Founder's pay
and effort to service projects in celebration . Each year a theme
their communities .
is seslected to both challenge and
A typical year finds the chap· to exemplify each member and
ters donating over $3 million · this past yea r, the three has been
directly to local charities, re· '"Build Bridges of F r iendship.' '
fleeting over two miltion work

Building.fund-raiser

Community corner

CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT

or Any Formal
Occasion

Portland PTO
plans meeting

POMEROY - Jaymar Ladies
Golf League meeting, 9 a.m.
Tuesday at clubhouse; dues are
payable at this time and all
women golfers Invited.

POMEROY - ~·ounaer ' s Day
will be observed Thursday at a
dinner party to be held at the.
Sportsman in Athens by the lour
area Beta Sigma Phi Sorc;&gt;rity
Chapters, Preceptor Beta Beta ,
Ohio Eta Phi. Xi Gamma Mu,
and Xi Gamma Epsilon.
The observance will be held in
concert with 12,500 chapters of
250,000 members through the
world.
. It was 57 year. ago during the
depression that Walter W. Ross
thought young women needed
more in their lives than work,
responslbllty , and hardship. He
thought a social and cultural
outlet was needed and that he
was the man to see that It was
provided.
His efforts brought seven
young women in Abilene, Kan ·

~~~----~~~

rom ime

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-8-7

Need A Tuxedo
For The Prom?
NO PROBLEMTHERi'SfSTILL TIME!
The Bastille is still taking orders
for the GAHS prom (April 30), as
well as all area proms~

326 W. Union St., Athens, Ohio 45701
(6141 594-3571
1-800-237-7716
We featute aids from:

A good selection remains, including tail models in both black
. and
daughter
Mrs. Jo Anh
s~atn ~~~~~H~E;A;R;IN~G;T~E~C~H~N~O~L~O~G~V~.~I~N~C~.::::::~~ 41nd white. Make the look all
John of
Montgomery
of Crown
• City. She Is a sixth grader at
: Hannan Trace Elementary
·- School. Melinda is the daughter
yours by choosing from a wide
: of Mr. and Mrs. Don Spurlock of
VOTE
:: Patriot. She is an eighth grader
assortment of accessories, from
:: at Southwestern Elementary.
• Melinda correctly spelled
John L Belville fashion ties and cummerbunds to
:: "priority" In Round 1, but th~n
:- she was eliminated from the
gloveJ and canes•
. JOI
·: competition when she missed the
::
:•
.:
·:
:•
:
•
·;
:

word "lacteal" in Round 2. She
received 43rd place out of sixty·
two participants, representing
80,000 Tri-State area students In
grades 4 thru 8.
Amber remained in thecompetltlon untO Round 5 when she ·
missed the word "appetltost". ,
She correctly spelled "enjoya-

-ble", "blondJsm'\
:
:
'
;
,
;
:

~~forearm'',

and "climactic". Amber re·
ceived 15th place.
Gabriel stayed in the competi- .
tion untU Round 6. The word that
eliminated bim from the Bee was
"spacistor", He correctly
spelled ''doctrine", "thermome- '
ter", "scattered", "pragmati·
cally", and "docklzation". Ga·
brlei received 12th place .

•

SHERIFF.
..

REPUIUCAN

•340 Hours at Police Academy
•30 Years of Business Experience

VOTE FOR
JOHN L. BELVILLE
MAY 3, 1988 .
Paid for by the candidllt, Rt. l, Crown City, Ohio 45623
I

TUXEDOS PRICED FROM

S21·95

NO DEPOSIT
IEQUIRED ON
ANY TUXEDO

OHN FRIDAYS
AND
MONDAYS INftL
1:00 .... '

PHONE
446·77SJ

300 SECOND AVENUE • GAUIPOLIS, OHIO
J

�Page-B-8- Sunday ,Times- Sentinel

Katies korner

Bookmobile routes announced in Gallia

Discovering

a balloon
By KATIE CROW
My Apologies to Sammi
Slsslon.
Samml was a
member of the
fourth grade
basketball team
at Syracuse E lementary thi s
past seas on and
I might add she
did a line job.
Sammi did not attend the all
sports banquet. Therefore , her
picture did not appear with the
other team members. And w
make matters worse I failed to
add her name to the list and that
she was absent when the photo
was taken.
So sorry Sammi. You were a
dedica ted player.

.

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

GALLIPOLIS - Bookmobile
Tuesday:
Schedule for the week of April
1st Truck: Geiger 10: 00-10: 15;
25-30, 1988.
Ewlngton 10: 20 -10:50; Vi nton
Monday:
• (Dyers) 11:05·11:20; Eno 12:15·
1st Truck: Kerr 4: 15-4 : 45;
1: 00; CalHa Christian School
Bidwell Old School 4:55-5: 30;
1: 30-3: 00; Roush Lane I 3: 15"
Biflweli·(Nolan 's) 5:35-6: 00; Bid·
3: 35; Roush Lane II 3:40:4: 10;
well (Phillip 's) 6:05-6: 32; Bid·
Fosters Mobile Hom e Park 4: 30·
well ( Henry's) 6:35-6:55;
5:00.
Hatcher's 7:05-7:20; Deer Creek
2nd Truck: K&amp;K Trailer Park
(Fulk's) 7:30-7:40; Deer Cr eek
4:15-4: 45; Kanauga 5th Ave.
Church 7:45-8:15 .
4:50-5: 20; · Georges Creek 5: 40·
. .2nd Truck: Cochran 's (Adams- · 6:00; Georges Creek II 6:00-6:20:
·v111e Rd.) 4:30-5: 00; Rio Grande
Addison 6:30-6: 45 ; Cheshire
Village 5: 15-6: 30; ' Rio Gra nde
7:00-8:00.
Estates 6:45-8: 00
Wedn esday: No Route Mainte-

nance Day.
Thursday:
1st Truck: Mudsock 3: 15·4: 00;
Pa triot Post Office 4:15-5: 15;
Cora 5:30-6: 00; Centerpoint 6:30·
'
7:30
2nd Truck: Cadmus 4:30-5: 00;
Gallia 5:15-6: 15; Centerville
6: 45·8: 00.
Friday:
Is! Truck: Fast Stop 1: 00·1: 15:
Banes (St. Rt. 218) 1:20-1: 30;
Young (St. Rt. 218) 1: 35·1: 45;
Franklin (C la y Chapel) 1: 55·
2: 10; Mary Myers (St. Rt. 218)
2: 20·2: 35; Church's Store 2: 45·

April 24, 1988

Sports

Special...

(From SPECIAL, B5)
- Nelsons, Harmons; Wallaces;
3:15; Mercerville 3:20-4'; 00;
Kineys -a nd other families .
Swains Store 4: 15·4: 45; Dinner &amp;
Meiners thinks the items might
HOMEBOUND 5:00-6: 00; Ohio
have been " sold at auction,
Townhousc6:30-7:15; Teens Run
perhaps, in one of thoss "catch
7: 30·8: 00.
all" boxes and he hopes the
2nd Truck: E;ureka 4:00-4: 30;
purchaser still has them.
Crow n City 5:00-6:00; Kenny's
If you can tie of any help,
Carry out 6:30-7:00.
Meiners can be reached at 650
Saturday : Crousebeck 9:30·
North 300West No . 132, Salt Lake
10:00; • Gallia Metro Estates
City, Utah, 84103. The phone
Office 10: 15·10: 40; Gallia Metro
number os 801-359-7829.
Estates Hill 10:45·11: 15; Alice
1:()().1:30; Vinton1 :45-2:15; MorThe IRS has revoked the
gan Center Road 2:20.2: 50; Mortax~xempt status of the PTL
gan Center Church 3: 00·4: 00.
· mini s try --tough! Do keep
smiling.

April 24, 1988

RoyalS hand Orioles
17th straight defeat
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) Kansas City starter Fiovd. Ban·
Kurt Stillwell singled home the nlster for a walk and scored on a
winning run with one out In the double by Eddie Murray.
ninth Inning, Uftlng the Kansas
Kansas Ci ty tied the score in
City Royals to a 4·3 victory the third inning. S.tUiwell, who
Saturday and sending the Balli· had three hits, led off with a
more Orioles to their 17th · s ingle and scored when Kevin
straight loss.
Seizter doubled.
Ke n Gerhart g;ave Baltimore a
The losing streak ex tends the
m a jor-league record for losses to 2·1 lead In the fourth inning with
star t a season. The Orioles are his first home run of the seasonthree losses away from tying th e a line drive into the teft·fleid
American League record for seats. Th e Royals tied it in the
most consecutive losses in a four th when Jim Eisenreich
season, shared by the 1906 Boston si ngled leading off , took second
Red Sox, the 1916 Philadelphia on a balk and third on a fly out
before Jackson hit a sacr~ice !Iy.
· Athletics and the 1943 Athletics.
The Orioles went a.hea d 3·2 In
The modern major league the fifth. Billy Ripken doubl ed
record is 23 consecutive losses, with two out and scored on R.ene
set by the 1961 Philadelphia Gonzales' si ngle . Ka nsas 'Ci ty
Phlllies. In 1899, the Cleveland came back again, this time
entry of the National League lost opening the sixth with Singles
24 stra lght.
·
from George Brett · a nd Danny
Be Jackson ignited the ninth Tar ta buli before Mike Ma cfar·
inning with an opposite-field lane grounded thro1,1gh a drawn·
triple high off the fence in right in Infield to score Brett for a 3·3
off Doug Slsk, 0-1. Slsk then tie.
intentionally walked pinch hitter·
Thad Bosley to set the stage for
Pirates 5 Cubs 4
StUiwell, who singled up the•
PITTSBURGH iUPI) -Mike ·
middle past a drawn-In infield ·
La Valliere delivered a two-run
and In front of a drawn-in
single in the eighth Inning Satur·
outfield. Ted Power, 1·0, pitched
day to lift the Pittsburgh Pirates
four Innings for the victory.
to a 5·4 triumph and their second
Orioles Manager Frank Robin·
straight
come-from -behind vic son, who took over when the team
tory
over
the Chicago Cubs. , ·
was 0-7, was ejected In the second
With
the
Cubs leading 4-3 and
Inning. Robinson apparently dis·
Rich
Gossage
pitching, Andy
agreed with third-base umpire
Van
Slyke
singled
and Bcbby
Drew Coble about a balk call, and
Bonilla
walked.
Both
runners
was thrown out of the game
moved
up
on
Sid
Bream's
sacrl·
during a long argume11t. ·
flee.
R.J.
Reynolds
was
inienBaltimore scored In the firs t ·
tlonally
walked
to
load
the
bases,
inning when Cal Rlpken worked

Speaking of fourth graders Jay
McKelvey who also at tends Syra·
cuse Elementary was one of the
many students taking part in thf'
weekly reader writing pals balloon contes t.
Jay's balloon was fo und by
Anna Lee Piatt of Whipple, Ohio.
Jay received the follow! ng letter
which reads as follows : " I'm
glad to be writing to you for I
found your balloon contes t
remains.
"I live at Whipple. Ohio and
while checking our herd of
Hereford cows for new calves I
found It In a small tree a I a height
easy to reach.
"The hillside It was on over·
looks the village of Whipple on
the southwest side of the hill.
"We have a fourth grade
granddaughter who was and is
Interested in the reading pro·
gram at a school near Marletm
so · I know you are excited
someone found yours.
" Oh, by the way ·! also got to·
rescue a nf'w born calf from a
drainage ditch In which he was
doomed without help. "
The lady went on to explain
that she had · contacted the
' Marietta Times and tha t she had
found the remains of the balloon
on March 24 but had no idea how
long the balloon had been there.
Since Southern Loca l is known
as the Southern Tornadoes, .Jay
enclosed drawings of tornadoes.
The lady stated she aln;10st hated
to return his drawings . She
closedd by saying she would look
forward to hea ring from him .
Mrs. Piatt, Jay extends his
sincere thanks for ta king time,
no doubt from a busy schedule, to
let him know what happened to
his balloon that went up, up and
away .

BLOCKS PLATE - Pirate catcher Mike
LaValllere blocks the plate and puts the tar: on a
charging Andre Dawson of the Cubs as Dawson
tries to score on a hit to left center by Rafael

Congratula t ion s to . Jane t
Harden. daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Jim Harden of London ,
Ohio.
Janet is a fifth grade student at
Deercreek Elementary and was
recently named "Student of the
Year ."
Janet for the pas t four yea rs
has been awarded a prize by her
school bus driver for the best
behaved child .
Janet Is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ha rden,
Syracuse. Ke ep up th e good
work . 1

Section

Palmeire in the flrstinnlng of Saturday's game In
Three Rivers Stadium. The ball was fielded by
Andy VanSlyke, who made the relay throw to the ·
plate. (UPI)

Eagle Premier LX

I'm glad to see the wall go ing
·back up across' the s treet fr om
the Kroger Store. Kath ryn Mora
should be tha nked''for gei ling the
ball rolljng with her letter to th e
editor.

If $14,949* for a luxuriously equipped
AM/FM ETstereo/cassette, pONer steering,
Eagle Premier with LX Package sounds
pONer front disc brakes, pooer door locks,
good, its going to sound even better in
pONer windONs, tilt steering wheel, tinted
one second. Announcing a $750** Eagle ·
glass, light group, extra sound insulation,
Premier Spring Bonus! That's right. Make
cruise control, and on and on. Plus Chryslers
your best deal, then get $750 cash back
famed 7/70 Protection Plan.*** We're
direct from Chrysler. And when we talk
making great deals on the all-new
Jeep
about savings on a loaded Premier LX,
Eagle Premier LX..Come on in and
Eagle
we mean loaded. Automatic transmissave on European-engineered
sion, 3.0 litre V6, air co~ditioning,
Expect the Best. luxury today!

And so It goes .

Job Bank
advantage
GALLIPOLIS -The Job Ba nk
located In the Senior Citizens
building at 220 Jackson Pike have
job orders available for Senior
Cit lzens who are seeking work.
Mature employees have shown
themselves to be exper ienced
and dependabl e workers . Their
talents and skills can be utilized
In many areas in the community.
- - He all h studies sbow the longer
people are employed the better
their overall health remain s.
The Job Bank at the Senior
Cit lzens Center welcome employ·
ers to seek qualified employees
who are registered with I he Job
Bank. These people are 50 years
of age ·and older and have a
variety of skllis and talents.
Call 446·8165 for more Inform a·
Uon or come in and fill out an
application If you haven't al·
ready dane so we can inform you
as to what Jobs are available at
the present time.

Your Greater Ohio/Kentucky
Jeep/Eagle Dealers

•MSAP exdudiiYJ title, taxes, ard deslinatm dlarges.
Price.....,.. LX3 Of:&lt;'on G - Al.Jmrum- srown

we exrra cost
" Ga!h - - Cl'"f'Ae' Co!poolllOn may "" used in '/(&gt;.X
.,.,.,..,.,, Umilo&lt;llirre orl:y, See-!lealertirdelai!S.

···~ engine and ~n

·.

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tor 7 years or 70.&lt;XXJ rnles

and against l.l'ldef'body rust·tlltOugh 10r 7 ~ars a 100,1Xl0
{Tilles. Seeltmited WM'8nty if dealer. Certafl restnctiOOS Wy

By United Press International
Maddux, 1·0 with a 0.71 ERA,
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) yielded 9 hits struck out 16 and .
While most major-league teams walked two In 12 2·3 innings of
'
have been rattled by the enforce- · relief. ·
inent of the balk rule for falling to
"Mike has been p)4ced on
pause In the stretch position, !he medlca,tlon," Ph lilies team phy·
Dodgers and Phillles proceed slcian Dr. Phillip ,Marone said.
unaffected.
"We decided toputhtmon theDL
Los Angeles and Philadelphia
for 15 days to 'g ive the elbow a
were the only teams yet to be chance to rest. I'm fairly confi·
called lor committing a balk dent 15 days will be sufficient."
entering Sunday's games.
The PhUUes recalled outfielder
The secret? "(The umptres)
Keith Miller from their Maine
called them all spring," Dodger farm club of the International
pitching coach Ron Perranoskl League to take Maddux's spot on
said. "They senta messageoutin the roster. In 11 games with
the spring. All you have to do Is Maine, Miller hit .237 with one
tell them to (come to a stop) ."
home run and four RBI.

is a r&gt;gis10I8d • . Jeep
~Jeep Co!pooalioo.

Bucl&lt;ie ~ b- saloly.

'

Cfll !JNY T!ll ATHl

430 S. Lake Drive
Prestonsburg, KY
(606) 88&amp;3811

Boyd County J~/Eagte

Capitol Jeep/Eagle

2119 Greenup Avenue
Ashland, KY
(606) 329-9775

1002 Washington Street
Portsmouth, OH
(614) 354-3151

Turnpike of Gallipolis ·

Schafer Motors, Inc.

195 Upper River
Gallipolis, OH
(614) 44&amp;9800

Deskins Motor Co.

413 S. 3rd Street
Ironton, OH
(614) 532-7533 ~

148 Hibbard Street

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Pikeville, KY
(606) 432·1471

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PHILADELPHIA (UPI) · Phlllies right-hander Mike Mad·
dux has been placed on the 15-day
disabled 'nst because of an
irlfiammed right elbow.
Maddux, who hurt his elbow
Sunday. was placed on the
disabled 118t Friday retroactive
tf)Thursday, He can be activated
on May 6.

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scoreless In the bottom of the third. No makeup
date has been set, Also, the scheduled game
between ' the Boston Red Sox and Milwaukee
Brewers Saturday was postponed because of rain.
That game has been rescheduled for Monday at 7
p.m. EDT. (UPI)

Dodgers, Phillies unaffected
by new balk rul~ ~ majors

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Ed Walters Motor Car &amp;Truck

UPENDED - Braves' first baseman Gerald
Perry, hottom, rrimaces as he upends Reds'
second baseman Jeff Treadway as Perry was
picked off on a throw by . Reds' plwher Tom
Browning In the second Inning of Saturday's
Fain-shortened game In Atlanta. The contest was
postponed because of rain with the teams

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
first-place Pirates appeared on
national television Saturday for
the first time In more !han two
full seasons.
Pittsburgh's game against the
Chicago Cubs .a t Three Rivers
Stadium · marked the Pirates'
tlrst network telecast since Sept.
28, 1985, when they lost 3-1 to the

New York Mets.
Current Pirates R .J. Reynolds,
Sid Bream and Bob Kipper, whci
ali joined the club in September
of that year, were In the starting
lineup that day. Rafael Belllard,
Junior Ortiz and Bob Walk are
the only other Pirates remaining
from that team. ... Pirates
right-hander Mike Dunne, on the
disabled list with a muscle strain
In his left rib cage since April, Is
scheduled to start Thursday

Beck takes lead
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Chip
Beck scored a 7-under-par 65
Saturday to take a three-stroke
advantage over second-round
leader Lanny Wadkins Into t.lte
!Ina! round of the $750,000
USF&amp;G C)assic .
Beck, winner of the 1988 Los
Angeles Open, birdied the par-4,
430-yard 9th hole and led Wad·
klns by four shots at the turn.
Wadkins sliced that margin to
one with a birdie at the par·313th .

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bringing up LaValliere who went
4 for 4 Friday against the Cubs .
Dodgers 10 Giants 3
SAN FRANCISCO (UP I)
AI fredo.CJ,!;iffin hit a ~lases-loaded
triple to cap a four-run seventh
inn ing rally and Mike Marshall
.broke the game open with a
grand slam in the ninth to power
the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 10-3
victory Sat urday over the San
Francisco Giants.
With the score tied 1·1, Mar·
shall walked to open the seventh.
Los ing pitcher Mike Krukow, 1·1.
retired the next two hitters but
intentionally walked Mike Scio&gt;·
cia and pinch hitter Danny Heep
unintentionally to load the bases.
Steve Sax then dro pped a
beautiful bunt down the third
base line. scoring Ma rshall to put
the Dodgers ahead 2-1. Gri ffin
fo llowed by lining a triple Into the
r ight field corner, giving Los
Angeles a 5-1 lead.
Ore! Hershiser , 4-0, held the
Gian ts to four singles over six
in nings to record the victory . The
game was the Dodgers' firs t
after four stra ight rainouts.
Will Clark belte d his fifth hO!(le
run, a two-run shot in the eighth
off Tim Belcher to bring the
Giants within 5·3. The hom er
ex tended his hitting streak to a
career-high 11 games .
The Dodgers added five r uns In
the ninth on' Mickey Ha tcher's
RBI slngie and Marshall's grand
sla m, his fir st homer of the
season and sixth ca reer gand
sla m.

Cards trade Herr to Twins
for outfielder Tom Brunansky
By MIKE TULLY
UPJ National Baseball Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Very
quietly, the St. Louis Cardinals
have dominated the National
League In the '80s, winning three
of the last six pennants.
Just as quietly, one factor has
aided this domination. For six
years, shortstop Ozzie Smith;
center fielder Willie McGee and
second baseman Tom Herr
formed three-quarters of the
defensive core so vital to success.
That era ended Friday. Ttie
Cardinals, off to a 4·11 start,
traded Herr to the Minnesota
Twins .for right fielder Tom
Brunansky. No matter how the
deal turns out, Herr deserves his
place with the players who made
possible all those first-place
finishes.
"The common denominator of
a championship team is second
base, shortstop and center field,"
Herr said before the trade. "It's
no accident. Most people that set
up their teams try to be as strong
as possible defensively up ·the
middle. And If you get offense out
of those positions, you're better
off.''
Smith and McGee reached St.
Louis In 1982, joining Herr, who
had arrived three years earlier.
Ali three were swltch· hitters who
could run. The Cardinals won the
World Series that season, and
captured pennants in 1985 and
1987. Only the Ph lilies, with
pennants In 1980 and 1983, rival
St. Louis In this decade.
Until the trade, Smith, Herr
and McGee endured while most
of the St. Louis roster changed.
Besides that trio, only pitcher
Bob Forsch remains from the
1982 World Champions.
Since lhen, St. Louis added
speed In VInce Coleman and
power In Jack Clark. Manager
Whitey Herzog rebuUt his start·
lng rotation and assembled a
Bullpen by Committee. Todd
Worrell replaced Bruce Sutter as
stopper. But, while Tony Pena
·has become the Cards' catcher,...
Darrell Porter caught in 1982 and
'85- no change has taken place
In the other three middle
positions.
Smith, 33, has won most of the
attention. Since coming from San
Diego In a trade, he h.as won six
straight Gold Gloves and batted
.248, .243, .257, .276, .280 and .303.
McGee, 29, also came In a trade,
this .one with the Yankees. He
became the NL MVP In 1985,
hitting .353 with 82 RBI and 56
steals. Herr, 32, came through
the farm system. He usually escapes notice, even though he
carried a .275 lifetime average
Into 1988.
· "My role on this club has
always been virtually over·
looked," Herr said. "I\ took a
monster year '85 before people
really noticed I was here."

In 1985, Herr hit .302 with 110 through 1908. And Jimmy Slagle
RBI and 31 steals, making the played center from 1905 through
Ali-Star team. Unlike Smith a nd 1908.
McGee, he has never won a Gold
Around the Game
Glove.
-The list of baseball reference
Despite their record, Smith, books grows longer. One day's
Herr and MeGee came nowhere mailbag recently yielded the 1988
ne ar being the most famou s guide to the Professional Basemiddle In history. That honor bail Athletic Trainers Society.
may go to Brooklyn Dodgers Roy It's the second edition, contain·
Campanella, Pee Wee Reese, ing a glossary of medical terms
Jackie Robinson and Duke and a bio of all big-league
Snider. All are in the Hail of trainers. It also includes their
Fame and produced World Series pictures. For those of you moni·
teams in 1!149 and 1952.
taring affirmative actio n In the
In 1948, Brooklyn 's regular majors, they're all white males .
lineup inc'ludeq Campanella be-One respected NL manager
hind the plate, Reese at short and recently noted the thin line
Robinson at second. One year between disaster and a fun
later, Snider went to center and season. He recalled Atlanta's
the four played as a unit until Opening Day game, when the
1953. when Jim Gilliam replaced Braves summoned Bruce Sutter
Robinson . The trio of Reese, to protect a two-run lead against
Snider and Campanella re· the Cubs. Sutter failed, the
mal ned in place until 1957, when Braves lost10·9 in 13 innings, and
their slide reached 10 before they
Reese went to third .
Amoreobscurecoredeveloped won a game. However, Sutter
near the turn of the century. rebounded April 19 for his first
Baseball fans will recognize the victory in nearly two years.
easy part: shortstop Joe Tinker
-The day the United States ·
and second baseman Johnny destroyed two oil rigs in the
Evers are perhaps the most.~-rsian Gulf, one member of the
famous double-play comblnaU
MetssataloneinManagerDavey_
In history. They became
e Johnson' s office before the
Cubs' regular keystone in 1 03 game, watching the news. His
and remained so through 1910.
name• Keith Hernandez.
Over that span, the Cubs reached
-Through April 19 , Pira te
the World Series in 1906, 1907, right-banders Doug Drabek and
1908 and 1910. Fewer fans reallz~
Brian Fisher had each thrown a
that Johnny Kling served as the
shutout.
Cubs' regular catcher from 1901

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FINAL GAME AS CARDINAL - Cardinals secolid b u e -

Tom Herr stretchea to put tile 1a1 on the Meta' Kevin McRep,..
after lie beeame trapped between fin&amp; tllld second ID the lnnill&amp;of ~ al&amp;hl'a&amp;ame Ia Buch Stadium. The J&amp;me, which
the Meta wo• 4-1, wu Herr'slutas a Cardinal, as he was traded to
Ml.._ta Frldfl¥. (UPI)

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�Apri124, 1988
Page-C-2 Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Pomeroy-!\t1iddleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant W. Va.

April 24, 1988

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

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Marauders host WellSton ~nine in key TVC tilt r,Monday
The Wellston Golden Rocket s
baseball team will visit Rock
· Springs Monday afternoon where
they hope to retain their position
as the number one team In the
Ohio Class AA baseball poU.
The Rockets have attained that
position with a 10-0 season
record, ·garnering 261 points
from the pollsters with seven
first place votes . They , of course.
have a perfect slate in the Tri
ValleY Conference.
The Marauders, d,efendlng

TVC champions, are currently
- five of those runs came in the
8·5 on the season and 8-2 In the · first frame.
league.
The power of the bats of Matt
Conferences losses have come Baker, who had a roundtripper
at the hands of the Rock(ft s and and a single to account for four
the Trimble Tomcats . Both were RBI's. and Bryan Durst, who
close contests which could have delivered a homer, two base hits
gone either way .
and three REI"s, figured greatly
In their first meeting at Well- In the Marauder attack. Terry
ston, on a field alleged not to be In Fields and Wes Young, with a
the best condition. the Maraud- pair of singles each, and base
ers built an 8-0 lead at the end of knocks by Joey Snyder and
three and one half innings of play
"Cheez" McElroy contrlbu tet;l to

the Meigs cause.
Not to be outdone, the Rockets
mounted a comeback ·or their
own In their half of the fourth by
plating seven runs behind the
hitting of Mark Williams and Joe
Wittkemp ' who both connected
for fourbaggers. The Rocket
batsmen out hit the Meigs crew
13 to 11 but the hosts played
errorless bali whlle the visiting
Marauders committed three
miscu!'s.

.

Record 215 colts are

eligible for 43rd Jug

Although the Fostermen came arise .
up with two runs In the top of the
This game, without a doubt, is
seventh to regain the lead, a very critical one for both
Wellston matched that perfom- squads . For the Marauders, It is
ance with a pair of their own in a "must win" situation ifthey are
the lover part of the inning to tci keep their . hopes alive for
preserve the victory.
another TVC crown, or at least a
It is pure speculation. but look share of the- title. Should the
for Senior righthander Mike Rockets lose. it would knock
Bartrum to s tart on the mound them from their lofty position In
for Coach Foster's crew with the polis and open the door for the
Brent Bissell and Bryan Durst , Meigs cr~w to retain that TVC
waiting In relief shOUld the need crown.
'

DELAWARE , Oh io (UP I I - A
record 215 colts re ma in eligible
for the 43rd edition of th e Little
Brown Jug, the middle jewel of
3-year-old -pacing's triple crown.
scheduled for Sept. 22 on the
half-In lie Delaware County Fair·
grounds track.
Heading the lis t of 3-ye ar-old
tic, last year' s

from," Lawhorn added.
'Clutch Player For Us'
An honor student and a
member of the National Honor
Society, Schubert has been an
ail-around athlete, also participating In football and baseball.
"Basketball Is my favorite, bu 1
I like the other two equa lly as
well," Schubert commented.
Doring his high st:hool hoop
career, Schubert has averaged
22.2 points and 7 rebounds per
game. His playing was a key to
Bellevue winning Its last 10
games .in 1987-88, said Coach Lyle
Faulkner. In his senior year,
Schubert s hot 50 percentfrom the

field and 78percent from the free
throw line.
"Brad's been a c lutch player
for us, the kind of person we
needed in a pinch," Faulkner
explained. "! think Coach Lawhorn w!IJ be•very pleased with
what. he's gotten. I think B.rad's
going to go in there and play a lot

of basketball."
Schubert's honors Include beIng named to the Ali-State third
team for Division II, Ali-League
In basket ball and football and
being named an All-State punter
In football.
Schubert, the son of Sam and
Carol Schubertof Bellevue, said

COl'

he will major in biology at Rio
Grande. He 'said he also chose the
southeastern Ohio liberal arts
college because of its basketball
tradition.
"Coach Lawhorn is ail excellent basketball coach and I think
his past records prove that.'"
Schubert said.

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SAFE AT THIRD - Seattle's Rey Quinones slides safely into
third base as CaiUornia third sacker Jack Howell takes the high
throw from right fielder Chili Davis in the seventh Inning of
•'
, Friday's game in Anaheim. (UPI)

,.

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~ Orioles

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!1straight encounter

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HOLDS ONTO BALLL - New York Yankees catcher Don
Slaught holds onlo the bali as he tags out Toronto's Silvestre
• Campusano as he charges for the plate In the 12th innbtgat Yankee
Stadium Friday night. The Blue Jays scored three runs in that
innbtg to win 6-4. (UP I)
.

5 mtles SOUth or Stiver Illidge an Rt. 2

Gatltpotts Forry, wv
675-5332

••

RT. 35-RIO GRANDE, OHIO
PHONE 245•9111
·"CELEBRATING OUR TENTH YEAR"

Ch icago 4; Philadelphia 2, Mont ·
real 0; Cincinnati 4, Atlanta 0;
UPI Sports Writer
New
York 4, St. Louis 0; and San
. Until somecne from the OakDiego
3, Houston 1. Los Angeles
· land bullpen steps forward, Manat
San
Francisco was rained out.
.ager Tony La Russa will have a
Indians
11, Twins 6
. tough time convinci ng people the
At
Minneapolis,
Cory Snyder
· Athletics have more than one
and
Joe
Carter
hit
gra
nd s lams to
, reliable reliever.
carry
Cleveland.
After
the game,
·• With relief ace Den nls Eckers-Minnesota
announced
It had
'·ley given Friday night off, Er(c
outfielder
Tom
Brutraded
•.:J&gt;Iunk failed to hold a lead in th e
nansky
to
the
St.
Louts
Cardinals
.ninth inning and yielded a
for veteran second baseman Tom
&gt;two-run homer to Car lton Fisk in
Herr.
'.the lOth , inning, helping the
Royals 13, Orioles 1
· :,t:hicago White Sox down the A's
At
Kansas
City, Mo., George
· -7-5 at Comiskey Park.
Brett
knocked
in the first of nine
·• Eckersley, a solid starting
first-inning
runs
to power the
:·pitcher in the 1970s and early
Royals
and
hand
Baltimore Its
;..'80s, has been perfect In seven
16th
consecutive
loss,
exte nding
·.save opportunities this season
the Orioles' major-league record
: and had appeared in three of
for los ses to start a season.
' Oakland's previous four games.
'· So with Oakland clinging to a
Tigers 5, Rangers 3
·•
At Arlington, Texas, Tom
:-s-3 lead in the ninth, La Russa
· ·:turned to Plunk, the owner of the Brookens scored the go-ahead'
• pnly A's save that does not belong run In the third and then c rushed
a two-run homer to lift Detroit .
:to Eckersley, with runners on
Doyle Alexander, 2-1, was the
•f irst and second and none out.
winner and Mike Henneman
: • Alter striking out Kenny Willi·
;.., ms, Plunk gave up a single to notched his sixth save. Paul
•:OOnnie Hill that drove In one run . Kilgus fell to 2-1.
Blue Jays 6, Yankees 4
;pan Pasqua, pinch hitting for
At New York, Nelson Llrlano
;-cary Redus, then looped a drive
.:to center field that short-hopped delivered a pinch-h it single to
:I nto Stan Javier's glove and Fred score Lloyd Moseby , helping
Tomnto extend its winning
:·Manrique scored the tying run.
streak
to four games. David
• · Plunk struck out! van Calderon
Wells,
2-l,
posted the victory and
: ·a nd Harold Baines to start the
Tom
Henke
recorded his fourth
; :lOth, but he walked Greg Walker
save.
Tim
Stoddard,
1-1, took the
·before Fisk ended the game by
loss.
: hitting the first pitch into the
Mariners 7, Angels 4
; Jower left-field seats for his fifth
At
Anaheim,
Calif., Hey Qui• homer of the season .
nones
singled
home
the go-ahead
: · "Eckersley was unavailable
r
un
to
spark
a
six
-run
seventh
• for the game," La Hussa satd. ''It
that
powered
Seattle.
Steve
: ,makes . nd differe nce. We have
Trout
Improved
to
2-1
and
Bill
; plenty of ways to save a game
Wilkinson
earned
his
first
save.
• 'without Dennis Eckersley.
~· "It wasn't like Plunk had bad Kirk McCas kill. 1·2, was the
;stuff. He struck out the first two victim of Seattle's rallv .
·men he faced (I n the lOth ), two
~pretty good hitters . He just made
bad pitch to Fisk."
•: In other games, Cleveland
; cl ubbed Minnesota 11·6, Kansas
'City mauled Baltimore 13-1,
; Detroit defeated Texas 5-3, To~,-o nto outlasted New York 6-4 In
' '12 innings and Seattle beat
~"Ca lifornia 7-4. Boston at Milwau ; ~ee was postponed because of
• cold weather.
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:.
,. In the NL,It was: Pittsburgh 8,
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·. INDIANAPOLIS iUPIJ -The
:. Walnut Creek !Calif. l Aqua·
:- nauts' A team won its ninth
·~ consecu live U.S. Synchronized
:;swimming National Champton:-shtp Friday night at the Indiana
·: University Natatorium.
,•' The Aquanauts finished with a
:··$core of 165.47. Second place
·.went to the Santa Clara !Ca lif.) ,
: Aquamaids ' A team (152.40).
;. The other top finishers ln·:ciuded Ohio State (153.09), Santa
-~araB (151.82) , Walnut CreekB
~151.45), Ohio State B (147.95)
:and Tonawanda (146.88).
-: Walnut Creek's A team also
"finished flrs1 in the trio competition (164.36).

:nn•"'11 ~~tiZEm

•

CELEBRATION CONTINUES

&lt;lind more than 30 twice in ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
, Trlway 's final five ga mes prior 1
• games prior to the Co lumbu s
•: trip.
•
Drawn By Tradition
• Termed a ''tremendous com: petit or" by Montgomery, Slusser
• has been selected to the Ail·
; District team and Ali-League
: teams two years in a row, has
• been an AU-Ohio honorable men: tlon and was c hosen the league 's
: most valuable player for 1987-88.
- Both players said they were
: ~ttracted to Rio Grande because
; .,fIts winning tradition and the
•J'act they could both play toget he r
••J here.
; ·'I was looking at other schools,
SALE PRICED
• but I wanted to go with Scott,"
; Benning explained. "We've bet:n
AT ONLY
• teammates since junior high. '.
0
: Ever s ince we bega n at Trlway,
• we had winning teams a nd I
wanted to go to a schOol with a
' winning tradltlon."
Slusser a lso cited the "remarkable tradition'· at Rio Gra nde as
one of thP key reasons for his
decision to play there. The
.Redmen, who have represented
NAIA District 221n the Nationals
-in Kan sas City, Mo., In 1985 and
1987, were 27-8 overall, No.
~ ) -seeded In the di strict and
' co-champions of the Mid-Ohio
· Conference In 1987-88.
'
Respect For Program .
Both players said they have

California swim
•
team wms
crown

2-yea r-old sensatio n, a nd Albert
Albert, the l987cha mplononboth
mlle and half-mile tra cks .
Camtastlc. owned by the
Dreamarie Farms of Ruther ford , N.J ., won 13 of 14 starts la st
year , including his las t ll , and
pa ced a season bes t mile of 1:53
a ~ L ~xington 's Red Mile.
Continu ~d on C -4

OIDO VALLEY TIRE
OUTLET
.
.

Rio Grande signs three more top Ohio hardwood prospects
RIO GRANDE - The recruit always placed basketball first as
tng seaso n for the Rio Grande
their sport of choice. Beca1,15e his
Redmen basketball team ended
father had .been a head basket thl$ week when Coach John
ball coach in high school, Slusser
Lawhorn signed three top Ohio
said he's ''always been around"
athletes to play with the R.edmen
the game.
next season.
. "I've never been into anything
Set to play with the Hedmen
else," he said,
' ·
are Larry Benning of Wooster,
Benning said he's played footSco.tt Sl usser of Wooster and
ball and participated In track at
Brad Schubert of Bellevue. Ben- Tr iway, but added, "I like
n'tng and Slusser will both gradu·
basketball a lot."
ate from Triway High School, one •· Helping point the pair toward
of the final four teams in this
Rio Grande was Montgomery,
year· s s t a 1e b a s k e t b a I 1 who was an as sis tan t basketball
tournament.
coach at Walsh College, a MOC
The three will join Lawhorn's
rival of Rio Grande's, for three
years prior to becoming hea.d
two earUer recruits on the
Redmen squad: Doug Birchfield,
coach at Triway.
" I was interested In Rio
the 6-9 forward wit h the Ironton
F ighting Tigers, and Mark ErsGra nde as a school for Larry and
Jan of West Alexa ndria, a 6-2
Scott because I respect the
starter for Twin Valley South
program," he explained. "Coach
High School in Preble Co unty.
Lawhorn has a first-class pro• · Benning and Slusser will come
gram and I know the boys will get
; ~o Rio Grande from "a great
their degrees. Coach Lawhorn
;p r og r a m , · ' La w ho r n
was very professional in his
rec"r ulting and that had a Jot to do
: commented.
.- "We feel very comfortable
with their decision to go there.
: with these two outsta nding play " I ' m familiar with the tradi·
- ers and we are very fortunate to
tion at Rio Grande and I feel
: jlave them playing for us," he
these two young men will make a
: S:dded.
con tribution ," Montgom ery
•
Prep Standouts
said, ''They will help Rio Grande
:-: Benning. a 6-4 forward, has
get to Kansas City again."
; been a four-year starter for
Lawhorn's Comments
•;!'rlway and is the school' s
Lawhorn, whose record at R.lo
: 1ill-time Jeacjing scorer and reGrande since he came there in
•.bounder. Slusser Is a 5-10 point
1980 is 204-69, termed Benning "a
: Iiuard who has averaged 22.8
prolific scorer who will be an
: points per game.
impact player for us. He is a fun
; .• ; Together, they he lped _lead
player to watch. He really dunks
• .F.andy Montgomery's Tnway
the bail in traffic and is an
: squad to a four-year record of 73
exce llen 1 player. "
• wins anii22Josses and a trip to St.
Slusser Is " the point guard we
; -:John's Arena for the state
were looking for," Lawhorn
; tourney.
added. "He can score and he
• The son of Annie Benning of
makes good decisions with the
: Wooster, Benning has compiled a
basketball In hitting the open
; career slate ofl307 points and 927
man . He Is a leader and a
• rebounds at Triway. He has been
winner."
: named Second Team, All-State
At Hlo Grande, Benning lndi; and All-District for three years in
ca ted that he may major In
- a row a nd has been All-League
busi ness or communication.
: for four consecutive years. An
Slusser said his potential major
; honor student, he participated in
may be accounting ,
- the state's North-South game.
Schubert, a 6-3 guard for
: On the way to the state tourney;
Bellevue High School, is ex• Benning scored· 48 points in one
pected to "come right In and
' game and recorded 25 rebounds
contribute on day one," Lawhorn
; In another -both school records
said. ''That is normally very
• !or single games.
hard for a freshman to do.
: "He's a real impact player,"
"We feel he iscomtngoutofan
: Montgomery said.
excellent basketball program
• Slusser. son of Jeff and Kathy
a nd this gives him a jump on a lot
: Slusser of Wooster, scored more
of high school players because of
• than 20 points apiece three times
the type of program he is coming

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page C-3

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�Page-C-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 24, 19S8

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

April 24, 1988

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

Jackson blanks Atlanta, 4-0
ATLANTA tUPII -- Danny
Jackson's first National League
shutout left him grinning from
ear to ear.
Jackson , 3-1, pitched a sixhitter and rookie Ch ris Sabo
belted a three-run homer Friday
night to send the Cincinnati Reds
to a 4-0 victory over the Atlanta
Braves .
Jackson, acquired in an offseason trade with the Kansas City
Royals, struck out nine and
walked two in earning his second
complete game.
" It felt good," said a smiling
Jackson. "I felt like a couple of
outings before 1 should have had
a shutout. They got away from a
little bit in la te innings. It feels

good to get a National League
shu·tout."
·
There was litUe to feel good
about, though, in the Btaves'
lockeroom.
"I'm not trying to llgure out
any theory. I'm just trying to
figure out why we'renot hitting, "
sa id manager Chuck Tanner
whose team is 2-13 on the season.
Jackson said he got away with
some pitches that he might not
have If ttle Braves' bats had been
hot.
"The Braves are s truggl!'ng a
little bit.' ' sa id Jackson.
"They're not, I ,don't think,
swing ing the bats as well as they
could. I got away with a couple of
pitches tonight."
The Heds took a 3-0 lead in the

Cleveland .must rebuild defensive line

third off Braves starter and loser
Zane Smith, 1-3. With one out,
Jackson and Barry Larkin
singled. Sabo then drilled a 2-1
pitch over the left field fence for
his fourth home runof the season.
- The Heds made it 4-0 In the
fourth. Nick Esasky led off by
being hit by a pitch, went to
second on an infield out by Dave
Concepcion, and then scored on a
single to center by Bo Diaz.
There was a rain delay of 48
minutes in the'-top of the fifth
Inning,
Game 2 of the series tv as set for
Saturday afternoon. with Tom
Browning, 0-0, scheduled to start
lor the Reds against Atlanta's
Rick Mahler, 0-2.

ets blank Cards; LA rained
out; Padres stop Houston, 3-1
By COLLINS YEARWOOD
UPJ Sports Writer
New York's Howard Johnson,
swi nging lumber no one had
cared to scr utinize this season,
surrendered his first bat ·of the
year.
Johnson, who en_tE'red Friday
nigl}_t' s game with a .152 bat tlng
average and one home run,
slugged a three-run homer to
help propel the New York Mets to
a 4-0 victory over the St Louis
Ca rdinals. - After the homer,
Johnson's bat was confiscated.
Johnson. who hit a career-high
36 homers last season. was
accused last year of corking his
bat, an act which u,sually makes
a ball travel farther. He had his
bat confiscated three times last
season. including once on request
by the Cardinals.
" Davey said they' ll X·ray the
bat here but (umpire Doug)
Harvey said it goes to New
• York ," Johnson said. "It happened three times last year. You
can't let it bother you. There's
nothing I can do about it . l .just
live with it."

Mike Rahal
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla .
tUPI) - Mike Rahal , father of
two-lime Indy &lt;;ar champion
Bobby Rahal. wrecked a car
during Friday practice for a
historic car race at the new street
course for th'e Graand Prix of
Palm Beach.
The eider Rahal w;1s not
: Injured in the accident. which
took place during practice for
Saturday's race of historic cars

St. Louis Manager Whitey
Herzog sa id he is co nvinced
Johnson uses cork in his bats. ,
"It sounds different, " Herzog
sa id. "When I made the pitching
change, I wanted them to look at
the bat. They've got to look at it.
"Even if he made an out, I
wanted it checked," Herzog sa id.
Johnson· said the ballpark and
not the bat was res ponsible lor
the homer.
''The way I'm swinging, I'm
happy it went over," Johnson
sa id. "The bat is seco ndary. I
have nor swung the bat well this
year except against the Cardinals. I feel comfortable here.
"1 know it's not a home-run
park but I hit well here. I like
playing in St. Louis."
St. Louis starter Jose De Leon.
1-2, left with runners on first and
second in.favor of Todd Worrell;
Johnson greeted the reliever
with his second hom er of the
season. a shot on a J-2 changeup
that barely cleared the rightfield fence.
"That's the fir st tim e they
have brought in a Worrell-style

e~cape

Chaump named coach of year
soft-spoken coach, he said he is
By United Press In_ternatlonal
very in_tense, aggressiv e and
When an "obsessed" football
obsessed.
coac h leads his team to unex"Just ask my players. 1 can ' t
r pected he,ight s the rewards roll
get
football off my mind. "
In, " and that's why George ' .
Chaump
sa id . " I 'm obsessed
Chaump of Marshall Is West
It
every
waking day.
wilh
Vlrg's Co.llege Coach of the Year.
"I
may
appear
low key, but the
Chaump, 51, In his second year
football
fire
burns
ail the tlme."
at the Southern Conference
As
a
player.
Chaump
said he
school, wi,ll be honored at the
way,
was
the
same
42nd Victory Awards Dinner in
" I played ha rd. I wanted to be
: Morgantown on Sunday, May 1.
where
the ball was. That's what I
· The former wrestler and lootexpect
from my players. I get
bali player at Bloomsburg ( Pa. )
upset
when
they don' t hustle and
Stale will not be the only fi gur.e o n
give
It
all
they've
got."
Marshall's NCAA Division l ·AA
The former major college and
runner-up team receiving laurels
at the banquet in the Mountain- NFL assistant sa id his Intense
lai r on the Wes t Virginia Univer- work habits come naturally.
"From my early days, I
sity campus. Tony Petersen, th e
record-setting passing quarter- learned how to work," Chaump
back for the Thundering Herd 's said. "I came from a family of
hlgh-scor,ing tea m , will be ho- work·a·holics. A team won't beat
nored as the West Virginia us by outworking us."
Marshall finished 10-5, drop• Amateur Athlete of the Year.
While Cllaump appears as a ping a one-point decision to
mild-mannered. low .profile, Northeast Louisiana in the NCAA
1-AA finals at Pocatello, Idaho.
But at mid·season, tlie Thunder·
ing Herd's situation looked
bleak .

GAHS drops
tilt to PPHS

PO lNT PLEASANT -The Big
Blacks used a seven-ru n third
inning to overcome a 4-1 deficit to
put themselves in position to
linock off Gailla Academy High
School 13-8 in a non-league
baseball co rites t Friday evening.
Point's Hall was chased off the
hili alter the Blue Devils' Rob
Young cracked a three-run homer In the first. Inning to take a
3·0 lead. The Big Blacks returned
the favor in the third, when
Richardson launched a three-run
shot of his own off losing pitcher
Mark Haner to provide the
centerpiece of the Mountaineers'
comeback rally.
Point's Faber was 3 for 4
(double), while teammates King,
· Leach and Sayre each went 2 for
4. King and Patterson had the
: other doubles for the hosts.
· Young went 3 for 4, while GAHS
· teammates Scott Davis and Greg
· Roderick each were 2 for 4.
The Blue Devlls wlll travel
'. upriver to play Ravenswood on
: Monday and wlil host Warren
· Local on Tuesday.
• "une &amp;eore
: GAHS ................ 301 201 1-8-9-4
' PolnL. .......... 107050 x-13·12·2
WP- Bush
LP- Haner

I

~

,

SABO HOMERS- Reds' thlrd baseman Chris
Sabo, center, high-fives teammate Danny Jack·
son, left, a8 he crosses home plate after hitting a
three-run homer in the third Inning of Friday

pitcher to face me," Johnson
sa ld. " 1 ~elieve I hit Todd welL"

Record...

Pirates 8, Cubs 4
At Pittsburgh. Mike LaVa lliere went 4 for 4, including a
two-run double in the decisive
seventh luning, to help the
Pirates overcome a three-run
deficit,

-

Camtastlc's most Impressive
wlns , during a season in which he
earned $598,597, were the Breed·
ers Crown In 1:·56.2 and the

ALL MAKES AND MODELS

Lexington
In 1:54,Bluegrass
-He
ls drivenat by
Bill O' DonnelL
PhiUles 2, Expos 0
Albert Albert had 10 wins.
At Philadelphia, Kevin Gross three seconds and four fourths In
tosse d a sixchitter and struck out
18 1987 starts with earnings of
a career-high 12 to shut out $591,599
and a season record mile
MontreaL Gross, 1-1, walked only
:52AinwinningtheFoxStake
one as he hurled the seventh ofl
in Indianapolis. His best halfshutout of his career.
Reds 4, Braves 0
At Atlanta, left -hander Danny
Jackson surrendered just six hits.
for his first National League
shutout and rookie Chris Sabo
belted a three-run homer to pace •
Cincinnati.
Padres 3, Astros 1
At San Diego, Benito Santiago
hit a two-r_un homer In the sixth
inning to break a tie and defeat
Houston. The home run made a
winner of Jimmy Jones. 2-L

was passing a Jaguar and he
ca me up to get set for tlie turn
and
brushed
mycorner.
left side. throwing me
Into the
" It was like a bull fighter going
over the horns of the bu II and
coming up a bit short. I need to
have some more time in the seaL
Right now, I feel like I wa nt to
join the priesthood ."
Bobby Rahal, of Dublin, Ohio,
the 1986 Indianapolis 500 champion, got a chuckle out of his
father's misadventure.
"Yo u didn't really have to pass
the Jaguar. did you," Rahal
asked his father : :·I can't really
yell at him because I did the
same thing at Long Beach in 1985.
I crashed on the first lap."

night's game against the Braves,. In Atlanta, as
· teammate Barry Larkin, right, who scored on the
play, looks on. The Reds. won 4-0. (UPI)

** VCR Repairs **
** Satell•"te' Repa•"rs **
** Renf f 0 wn **
** Movie Rentals **

Continued from C -3

injury in mishap

at the 1.62-miie street course on
the western edge of West Palm
Beach. Rahal was dr iving a
Hoyai Carlsberg Historic Grand
Prix Lotus 23 when he crashed on
the seventh practice lap.
"1 was trying to see what my
new engine would do and had a
huge case of brain fade." the
elder Rahal said while his son,
Bobby, who is driving in Sun-.
day's Grand Prix, looked on. "1

ALL MAKES AND "I'
MODELS

·

.

BATTLE FOR BALL - Boston center Artis Gilmore, left, and
Atlanta center Tree Rolllns, right, battle for a loose ball after the
· Hawks stripped the ball during the first half of Friday's game in
Atlanta. The Hawks gained possession of the ball on the turnover.
(UPJ)

0
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~~~~~~ewasl:55.1atLoulsville

Among the other highly regarded eligibles for this year's
Jug, with a purse of $400,000, are
Even Odds, the top money winning 2-year·old pacer last
year with $950,108, and Concussion, who won 11 of 19 starts last
year with earnings of $372,419 .
The Jug's companion 3-yearold pacing stake for fillies. the
$200,000 Jugette, saw 133 owners
make the final sustaining
payment.
The. top Jugette eligible Is So
Cozy, who won 11 of 17 starts as a
2-year-old and had winnings of
$744,630. Lauper Lobell had the
best time for a 2-year-oid pacing

-

ONLY

$1 00

"When we heard the Pacers
won, we knew we needed to win
tonight," he said. "We're just
going to let it ali hang out."
That's exactly what the Pacers
did against Detroit A Stlponovlch 3·polnt play gave Indiana a
99-94 lead they never lost.
- "We could have lost tonight,"
Pacers Coach Jack Ramsay
sa id, "and it wouldn't have
changed things dramatically. We
sllll have to beat New York."
The Kn leks no longer control
thelr own destiny.
"We dribbled too much tonight," said Pitino, attributing
the Knicks' collapse to poor
ballhandling. "The more you
stand around, the more pressure
you put on yourself."
Elsewhere It was , Atlanta
thrashing Boston 133-106, Cleveland upset Chicago 107-103, Dallas defeated San Antonio 127·96,
the LA Lakers edged Phoen[x
117·112, Portland outscored
Denver 141-135, Utah beat Seattle
110-109, and Sacramento downed
Golden State 117-109.
Hawks 133, Celtlcs 106
At Atlanta, Dominique Wilkins
scored 35 points and led seven
Hawks in double figures against
Boston.
Cavaliers 107, Bulls 103
At Chicago. Mark Price netted
26 points for Cleveland, outshinIng Charles Oakley's careeer·
high 35 rebounds:

By DAVE FREDERICK
UPI Sports Writer
The most Important game of
the NBA season for Indiana and
New York, Saturday night at
lndlanapolls, galned drama Friday , wh en the Pacers won and
the Knicks lost in separate
games on the road.
The Pacers' 103-98 victory over
Detroit, and New York's 118-109
loss to Milwaukee set up a
showdown that can give the
- Pacers a pla yoff spot in the
competitive Eastern Conference
. race.
"We'd rather play Detroit than
Boston," said Steve Stipanovlch,
who made a J.'poJnt play with 1:20
left that sealed the victory for
Indiana . "We won here this year
and last year we won here once.
But we haven't won ln: Boston
since God knows when."
"It's not that we're thinking of
_who we want to play . We'll take
whoever we can get."
Howeve r, for New York, it is a
bit more complicated.
If the Knicks beat the Pacers,
they can still make the playoffs if
Washington loses its finale or if
Philadelphia loses one of it s
remaining two games. The
Knicks can also sneak in by
losing to Indiana if the 76ers lose
both of their remaining games
and the Bullets lose their final
game. Confused• So ls Knicks
Coach Rick Pltlno.

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

,..Sfi~ll~y~in~1~9~87~.~li
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Quoin's mile track.

On the New .Ieney T~Fiil

talned 6-foot-7, 291-pound defen- more talent.
sive end Chris Pike, who was a
Accorsl and Chip Fallvene, the
sixth·round pick of Philadel- Browns' director of player perphia's last year but never signed so nnel and the team's draft guru.
due to a contract dispute. Pike. shun discussing specific players
Sims and free agent defensive but the team has Interviewed and
erid Chris Pike ali wi II gel a tested defensive e nds Nell Smith
chance to take over a starti ng · of Nebraska and Daniel Stubbs of
role, but the draft may provide Miami.

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was sig ned during the strike and
reported willing but rusty .
"It would be great to obtain
that pass rusher to get 18 or 20
sacks: I'm not surMhere is one,
but it would be ideal ," said
Schottenheimer. "The defensive
line always is a concern."
As a res ult , the Browns ob-

to

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CLEVELAND (UP!) -Ernie
Accorsi, the vice president of
football operations for the Cleveland Browns, reveals few details
concerning the team 's approach
to the NFL drafL
Stlll, the former sports writer
knows how to placate an insistent
media. When asked what positions the Browns hope to shore
up, Accorsl had a ready grin.
~ "It's OK to say this: we ~re
perfectly satisfied with (qyarter- ·
back) BernleKosar, " hesaid. "It
is rather unlikely we'll draft a
quarterback."
That is understanda ble. Kosar
led ail NFL quarterbacks with a
95.4 rating and threw for 22
touchdowns as Cleveland went
10-5 but lost a second straight
AFC Champ ionship game to
Denver.
However, the Browns are concerned about a defensive line
that is beginning to show s igns of
battling the ultimate opponenttime.
Starting defe nsive end Car l
Hairston had his best season as a
Brown in 1987 with a team-high
eight sacks, but will turn 36
during the season . Defensive end
AI "Bubba" Baker is 31 and did .
not have a consistent year, the
same problem e ncoun tered by
32-year-old linebacker Clay
Matthews.
Moreover, defensive ends Sam
Clancy and Reggie Camp played
erratically·. Coach Marty Schottenheimer was dis;:uipointedover ·
the holdout and subsequent serious injury of top draft pick
Mike Junkin, a linebacker from
Duke. Darryl Sims.
first-round pick of

Pacers nip Pistons;
Knicks Milwaukee

A DAY

r------------1

ANNOUNCEMENT

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-5

399 W. Main

992-21'4

Potiiii'OJ, Ohio

FAMILY FLOCK HI!ADQUMTI!M

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April 24, 1988
April 24, 1988

lndi311s belt two grand slam .
home runs in-11-6 win Friday
MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) - The
followed with a two-run s lnglj!.
. "I th oug ht th at was th e turning.
Cleveland India ns went sla m
Brook Jacoby's single again point when we go t out of the
danci ng Friday night.
loa ded the bases to set the s ta ge Inning with a lead," sa id CleveGrand slams by Cor y Snyder
for Snyder's blas t over the la nd manager Doc Edwa rds .
ahd Joe Ca rter car ried the
centerfield fence. It was Snyd- " Codlroli a nd Jones did a great
Ind ians past the Minnesota
er's fifth home run of the ye a r
job."
Twi ns,J1-6, for their seventh win
and third grand slam of his
Carter 's fourth car eer grand
in their las t eig ht gam es. It wa s
career.
slam
In the eighth c ame after
the fifth stra ight loss fo r Mlnne·
Minnesota .came up with an
singles
by Andy Allans on and
sola, which afte rwa rds a n- unearned run in the four th when
Willie
Upshaw sandwiched
nou nced it had trad ed right- Kirby Puckett reached second on
around
a
walk to F ranco. His
fielder Tom Bruna nsky to St . Julio Franco's throwing error
thitd
home
run Of the year, over
Lo ui s fo r seco nd baseman
and scored on Brunansky's RBI
the
center
fi
eld wa ll. made the
Tommy Herr.
s ingle to make the score 6-J.
score
11-6.
Greg Swindell , 4-0 worked six
Cleveland upped its margin to
" It wasn't a bad pitch," sa id
innings for the wi n, with relief 7-1 in the fifth when Hail singled,
Carter
of the low fas tball from
help from Chris Codiroll and advanced when Snyder .was hit
Twins
re
liever Keith Atherton .
Doug Jones. Bu t it wa s the Indian by a pitch, and scored on Jay
"'But
1
wa
s looking for a pitch
ba ts which he ld off Minnesota Bell's RBI single.
there
a
nd
1
just happened to get It
after the Tribe nearly squan up
i
n
the
air-c ond.itloning
The
Twins
made
the
score
7-4
dered a six-run first inning.
stream :·r;·
In
the
sixth
when
Greg
Gagne
"Th is was one of those times
Cl eveland' s second g r and ·
when the hi tte rs werea ble to pick tr ipled and scored on Puckett's
slam
set a team record for two In
RBI
double.
Alter
one
out,
Gene
t.he pitc hers up," said Carter .
one
game
and t ied the major
Larkin
followed
with
his
fir
st
SNYDER BELTS GRAND SLAM - The
grand slam In the first Inning of Friday night's
·'Th ey ' ve been doing it for us and
league
ma
rk.
"'That's · a nice
Indians' Cory Snyder, right, gets congratulated
home
run
of
the
year
,
a
two·
run
game against Minnesota in the Metrodome. Th e
now we were a ble to do it. Tha t's
record
to
have,"
said .Carter. "If
blast
to
left
center.
by teammate Chris Ban do, left, after Snyder hit a
Indians won 11-6. (UP I)
wha t w inning Is all a bout."
we
do
that
ever
y
game we 'll be
"I
can't
get
much
satisfaction
The Indians ' scored six runs in
okay
."
because
we
didn't
get
that
'W'."
the fi rs t before any outs were
recorded by Twins s tarter and said Larkin, who has now gotten
loser Be rt Bly ieven. 1-2. Alter five hits in the last two days. "But
two h it batsm en sa ndwiched 1've been feeling good at the
aro und a bun t single by Carter plate."
Minnesota cut the margin to7 -6
loaded the bases, Mel Hall
614-221-0888
in the seventh. After infield
singles by Steve Lombardozzi
and Tom Nieto, Dan Gladden's
NEW ORLEANS (UP [),, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
back.
single
brought home one run.
shots better than his opening ·
La nny Wa dkins, who surged to
" When you see Lanny Wadkins ·
336
S•.High St., Columbus, OH.
After a walk to Gary Gaetti
round score.
.
12.under-pa r a ft er two rounds of
at the top, that just inspired me to
LOCAL
CONSULTATION
loaded the bases, another free
"Pati ence is what paid off for
the $750,000 USF&amp;G Classic,
go out there and move right in
in Pomeroy 992-6417
pas s to Larkin brought t.he Twins
cla imed no lead was safe and
there with him ," he said. '"It wa s m e today ," said Wiebe, who after
AT
HE
NS
Ohio
Un
!versify
is
In Pomeroy, with
within
one.
But
the
rally
ended
a birdie on the fits! hole par red
q uic kly was proved correct but is
a challenge."
offer ing two sesSions of its there when Jones struck out.
ATTORNEY
D. MICHAEL MUllEN
the
next
nine
holes.
hanging on.
annua l La dy Bobcat Bas ketball Brunansky.
Byrum, Ihe younger brother of
Serious Inquiries, Call CollectTwo-lime Clas sic winner Tom
Wa dkins fir ed a 7-und er 65 .fellow pro Curt Byrum, fired a
Camp for girls en tering grades
Wat
son
(1980-81)
s
ho
t
a
69
an
d
F riday a nd led . by four s trokes
5-12 for the 1988-89 school year,
bogey -free 66 on Thursday but
a Iter th e completion of mor ning s uffered a pair of bogeys Friday . was 7-under aft e r 36 holes, as
wi th lh&lt;' first being June 12-16 and
were several other players.
play. Whe n asked if he felt safe,
the seco nd oHered for July 17-21.
"Today was pretty close to the
Wadkins replied: ' T ve alwa ys sa ll"\e round I had yesterday ," he
Di rected by Bobcat head coach
be lieved that no lea d is big said. "It was kind of ditto. The
Amy Pr ich ard, the camp will
enough." He was rig ht.
nly difference was a couple
fea ture instruction in fundamenHi s lead shrunk fur ther and
bogeys."
tals, pos ilion wor k, daily video
f,iJ rth er as the afiernoon wore on,
Byrum, who at one point wa s
ta ping fo r shot improvement and
. ;U&gt;d by the end of the second within one stroke of Wadkins,
opportunities for competition
round, Chip Beck was one shot s;.id he misjudged the wind at the
within s kill groups and against
'
bac k with a round of 64, To
eighth and 17th holes- botlt par
the co ll ege playe rs present.
Byrum was two back and Scott 3s - on his way to bogeys at both.
The fee for on e sessio.n is $185,
Ver pla nk was three off the pace He overshot both greens with the
of which $50 is required in the
a ft er a lso shooting a 64 . .
wind at his back.
fo rm of a non-re fundable deposit
Wadkins, who wa s two shots off
V.erplank, who began play on
that is to be sent with the
the lead a fte r the firs t round.
the back nine, lit up the front side
application. A group rate of $165
tia tt!ed a light mis t. dreary skies with five consecutive birdies
is available for five or more
$ d gusty winds Frid ay morning be ginning with No. 2 to close with
a pplica tions sent in the same
GMQUAUTY
but sti ll preva iled. ;
a 31 .
SERVICE PARTS
e nvelope. The $165 rate is also
" f thoug ht yes te rd ay 's round
1987 Masters champion Larry
ava ila ble when ·two or more
(67) was kind of ug ly, but I hit it Mize, Mike Donald, Mark Wiebe,
c hildren from the sa me family
pret ty good today." Wadkins Greg Ladehoff, Dave R.ummells
a pply.
said . ""I m ade the putts I had to and Dan Forsman were four
For m ore information, contact
make. I pla yed pretty solid .I was s hots off the lead at S-under.
Amy ·P ric hard a t the Convocahll tlng at th e hole a ll da y. It was
Mlze fired his second straight
tion Center, Ath ens, Ohio 45701 j ust a good solid round of golf. 68 to.remain in contention.
2979, at 1-593-1193. For registraI
I'm vrry pleased with the way It
' .'1 played another good solid
tion, cont ac t. the Workshops
wenl. "
308 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
round. l kept the ball in play. I'm
Offi ce at Memor·ial Auditorium,
Wadkins. who s tarte d on the very happy with the way I'm
614~992-66.14
Athens . Ohio 45701 -2979, at 1-593back nine . birdied the 410-yard , playing," said Mlze, who com·
1764.
pa r-4 fifth a fter he slapped a · mltted to the USF.&amp;G at the last
wedge.J O feet from the cup to go minute because he felt his swing
12-under. but could do no bette r had improved dram~ tic ally .
than pa r on the final four holes .
Donald. who scored a 66
HUNTING AND FISHING EQUIPMENT
" It could have been lower . I des pite a nagging hook that
IN TRI:COUNTY AREA
could have made one or two forced him to scramble most of
(plrdi e putts) coming in." he the day , said each time he
sa id. " Wh en you're going good, glanced at the leader board,
WIN(Hfl!ER.' ,
you want to make all you can. "
" Lanny was one more (shot)
Bec k, w.ho sa id he was aware · under (par) . The thing about
what Wadkins had shot, birdied Lanny, once he gets the ball, he
-tlie final four holes on the front runs with it."
Model
Stiml·Autom .:Jtlc
48 /AL
side to pos t a 5-under 31 at the
Wiebe carded five birdies on
Ta ke down RHio
turn . He fired a 3-under 33 on the the back side to record a 67, two
LANNY WADKINS

Wadkins takes four stroke
lead in USFG Classic Friday

BANKRUPTCY
L. W. CENNAMO

LadyBolieat cage

school scheduled

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POMEIOY, OHIO

Solid Pt.
Yellow

Jacket

-~

Verbeek bas been a target for the win their first postseason series
Capitals since. Jie was Involved against the Canadlens In 45
fn several scuffles Friday night years, took a 3-0 lead behind hard
and the Devils scored on three checking and the steady play of
resulting power plays. Johnson Rejean Lemeljn In goal. Lemelin
got ali three, which gives hini a lost · hls shutout with 3: 42 left ,
share of the playoff record for when Montreal's Chris Cheiios
power-play goals in a game .
..scored.
Washington, trailing 4-1 at 2: 01
Lemelin , who stopped 22 shots,
of the second period, replaced said Boston's Game 3 triumph
goaltender Clint Malarchuk with was convincing, unlike the 4-3
Pete Peeters and drew within one
goal by 9:50.
The Devils
thena
outscored
the Capitals
3-1 for
7-4 lead entering the final period,
and Malarchuk ret4rned .
''TurnQvers ... 10 goals ...
you 're damn right I'm shocked,"
Washington Coach Bryan Murray said. "None of our players
played well. The forwards were
not convincing, · and (New Jersey) went right through our
defense."
Brendan Shanahan and Dave
Maley of New Jersey and Greg
Smith, Scott Stevens and Dale
Hunter of Washington all were
ejected.
Bruins 3, Canadiens 1
At Boston, the Bruins, trying to

Burson named
assistant SID
.

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&lt;

GAINESVILLE, FLA.- S.cott
Burson. a 1985 graduate of R.lo
Grande College, was recently
named the new assistant sports
Information director at the University of Florida.
Burson, 26, has spent the last
two years at the university as a
graduate assistant and was the
women's assistant SID before
assuming his present position. In
his job he will oversee publicity
for non-revenue intercollegiate
athletics.
Burson earned "Best in the
Nation" honors for his work on
the 1986-87 Gator tennis and
swimming media guides.
Burson is a 1980 graduate of
Athens High School, where he
earned three letters In baseball
and two in basketball. He was a
member of the 1980-81 and 1981-82
Redmen basketball teams that
posted respective records of17-H
and 26-7. He was the second eager
in the school's history to be
nominated for Academic All-

victory in Game 2.
' 'Th e other night we won a
hoc key game we probabl y
sho uldn' t have won," lie sa id .
' 'Tonight we won the game
because we deserved it."
Bob Sweeney of Boston scored
short-handed and added an as sist
while Moe Lem ay a nd defenseman Gord Klu za k a dded a goal
apiece.

THIRD &amp; PINE ST. Rich,..d &amp; Mary Ann Bowman
GAWPOLIS
-OWNER! ,

.·

446-7 283
.

I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

America honors when he was
placed on the national ballot in
1981.· Upon completing his playlng career at.R.io Grande, he
assumed sports Information

FISHING
TACKLE
SALE

r

STOP IN AND SEE O'R LARGE
SELECTION OF FISHING TACKLE

BAUM LUMBER

CHESTER

985-3301

Spo~ ~ed tOiurnE~Y~~re~spo~n;slb~ll~lt;ies~.;·;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

slated April30

r;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;j

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns are not offering a contract next season to
strong safety Ray Ellis, meaning
he now becomes a free agent, the
team announced Friday.
ElliS, a. product of Ohio State
University and Canton McKin\ey

&lt; GALLIPOLIS
Galiia
Academy High School's tennis
team defeated Minford for the
(lrst time in several years
Friday, 3-2.
: The victory left GAHS 7-4
overalL Minford dropped to 8-2.
·;Monday, GAHSwlll host Portsmouth in a non-league match.
Tuesday the Devils t~avei to
Marietta' to battle the Tigers In
final SEOAL match of the
year. GAHS Is 3-4 Inside the
conference.
Friday, Nell Kool lost to
Kallner, 3-6 and 5-71n one singles
match. Other singles results
foUnd Gallia's Dennis Cassanova
bt)ating Monroe, 6-2 and 6-4 while
Brant Pauley lost to Coriell,
2-6-7-5 and 2-6.
In doubles play, Troy-Johns(\n·
Scott Kisner beat Mason and
Warren, 6-2 and 6-2 while Terry
Wllcoxon-John Cremeans beat
Lebrunn-Mason, 7-5, 4-6 and 6-1.

High School, was sfi!ned by the
Browns as a free agent in 1986.
That year he started in 1~ games
while last season he started In 10
of 12 games.
Head coach Marty Schottenheimer said it was likely that free
safety Chris Rocklns will start
next season In pla~e of the
6-foot-1, 196-pound Ellis.
•'We do this now because of our
respect for Ray," said ~hotten­
hei"'er. •'It gives him a chance to
let teams know before the draft ·
that he Is available.
"If we had to play tomorrow,
Chris Rocklns would start at
strong safety. AI Gross will also
compete. and we like what we've
seen of Will Hill so far."

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ATHENS- Ohio University Is
sponaortng a sports media relations camp for hlp school
stUdents from June 19 to June 23.
Check In will be on Sunday,
June 19 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. ?"
.•'

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'It's humiliating'

OU to sponsor sports
media relations camp

We Offer Excellent Service 6 Parts To Back Up our Sale• To You, Our Valuad Customer
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3-9 Power

their arenas.
The other two quarterfinal
series resume Saturday night .
The Oilers lead the Calgary
Flames 2-0 as the Smythe DivIsion finalists shift to Edmonton;
The Detroit R.ed Wings hold a 2-0
lead over the Blues as their
Norris Dvlsion final picks up In
St. Louis.
·
Devils 10, Capitals 4
At East Rutherford, N.J. :'
records were broken, though,
almost Incredibly, no bones
were.
LINSEMAN CHECKED -Montreal's Chris Chellos (24) checks
A playoff- ~cord 62 penalties,
Boston's Ken Llnseman In the first period of the third game of the
totaling 231 minutes, including
Adams Division ilnals In Boston Garden FrltJay night, The Bruins
five match penalties, were
downed the Canadlens 3-1 to take a 2-~ lead In the series. (UPI)
whistled.
Patrlk Sundstrom broke the
mark for points In a Stanley Cup
game with three goals and five
assists. Mark Johnson scored
four goals .
"I can't believe it," said
Sundstrom, who had only 15 goals
and 36 assists during the season. ·
BALTIMORE (UPI) - The bumbling Birds.
''It's nice, but the only thing 1can
Baltimore Orioles have tried
' 'I'd like you not to cry. I am a
do
now is put it away and maybe·
every way imaginable to break good fan of yours. Please try
look
at it during the summer."
their record .- settlng losing again. Please make a home run . .
Sundstrom
assisted on all of
streak. An elementary school Your friend, Michael McQuade. "
Johnson's
goals
and broke
student may have the answer.
One bank executive from VIrgiWayne
Gretzky's
playoff-game
"He said the players should nia offered to send the club an
points record when he completed
take their 'c hewing gum and put"! I. hourlong
videotape on
his hat trick at 14:14 of the final
in their glove," said Patty motivation.
period.
Waters, who works In th~ team's
"He loved the team as a child
"Pat worked hard all year and
publlc relations department. and wanted to do anything that
couldn't
get goals ," Devils &lt;Coach
•'Everyone has a way to cure the would help," Waters said. "He
Jim
Schoenfeld
said. "Tonight he
streak. And I mean everyone."
said it's successful for the
found
every
hole
imaginable.
• Waters said the front-office has workers at his bank and he was
d
h
ed
lieen receiving nearly 400 calls a sure It could help the Orioles."
Everything e touch woun up
In
the
net."
day, mostofthempeopleofferlng
A witch doctor sent to Bal tlwashington played tor the
advice on how to cure the club's more from Philadelphia failed to
second
straight game without
woeful 16-game losing streak. bring a win. A local disc jockey's
lnfured
defenseman Rod LangShe said there has not been a Tuesday morning vow to slay on
way,
whose
leg was cut by Pal
single derogatory call.
the air until the Orioles produce a
Verbeek's
skate
In Game 1.
"'People here love their team victory has failed to inspire the
and honestly want to help," she team.
sal d.
With 16 straight setbacks, the
She said a Florida man called downtrodden Orioles are closing
with a unique way to end the in on the record for the longest
&amp;treak, which climbed to 16 losing streak In major league
J!'rlday night with a demoralizing history, 23 games by the 1961
MAR.IETTA - The second
13-1 loss to the Kansas City Philadelphia Phlllles.
annual Sports Med Class D
· Royals.
•'The calls don't stop. They softball tournament will be held
"He suggested each of the come· from around the country," . on April30 and May 1 at Buckeye
Orioles write down a player's Waters said. "Some suggest Park.
name on the other team, put it In mass hypnosis or positive thinkThe entry fee is $65 and one
his shoe and jump up and down," ing seminars. Women call up bali. Sponsor trophies, T-shirts
said Waters. "He was convinced crying, saying they can't believe and MVP trophies will be
this would break the other team's this Is happening to their team.'' awarded.
'
spirit.
Even · In China, some 12,000
For more Information. c~ll
miles from Baltimore, the club's Chris Wharff at 1-374-2705, Terry
"He was completely serious,"
losing streak has caused their Wallis at 1-374-2300 or Tim Zoller
she added. "He left his name and fans pain.
at 1-373-3470.
number and wants credit when
"You can say the Orioles have
his method works."
become an international laughElementary school classes Ingstock," said John Schidfrom around the city have sent lovsky, the Baltimore Sun's
the team letters on how to win a
bureau chief Iii Beijing. "'Eveballgame. Most letters convey rybody talks to me about it. It's
just plain sympathy tor the humiliating.

'

____
..

40 mm Lens

By LEN HOCDERG
UPI Sports Writer
The New Jersey Devils and
Boston Bruins chose different
paths Friday night, with each
leading to victory .
While New Jersey was slug. ging and scoring Its way to a 10-4
whipping of the Washington
Capitals in Game 3 of the Patrick
Division final, Boston took the
slow and steady route In defeating the Montreal Canadiens 3-1 in
Game 3 of the Adams Divsion
final.
The Devils and Bruins, both
underdogs at the start of their
Stanley Cup quarterfinals, own
2-1 leads in their respective
best~f-7 series. The Capitals and
Canadiens next have opportunities to draw even Sunday night at

GAHS netters top
Minford
Falcons
'

Modet19 .357 Mag.

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-7

New Jersey, Boston score playoff·wins

Ellis not ·offered contract

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�Page-C-8-Sunday limes-Sentinel

Rio Grande schedules summer basketball camps

Scoreboard ...
Majors

Rick Sfhu on lhe U·dQ' dltabled liM;
recalled outfleldH Ttlo La.trwn fr.m
' Roeh~r of the In~ rat tonal Lt ape

t\ME:R if' AN l-EAGUE

""'

.
Cle-\'f"lllnd
Nf'"'l l'urb

GB

12 1 .1541
10 S ,,67

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-1

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3 .IH3 -

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Torolll.p
Mll...-.uke.-

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1 .533

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Baltlme"'

0 16 .tlMI 13

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10

Oakland
Chicii,JIO

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9

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1~AH1'!

Clt3·

l~allfornla

89AOO:J
Sl'II.UIC'
1 10 .412 l
Mln~!lola
1 lA .::11&amp;
Frlda,y '• Rt'!iuiiN
BoM!tn :U Mllwuu lee, ppd., 1'1\IO
Toron&amp; o ti. Ne w for II -1, 12 Inn.
(.'!~"'I an !I II, Mlnrr~tota 6
Chlu,; u 7, Oakland$ , 10 Inn.
Kansas City 13. Balllmorr I
01'1 roll .!t, Tt'ltU !I
S..aUI" 7, CaiUornla -1
Saturdoy'!l Gllmes
Ro~lon (Boyd
2-0) at Mllwauke~
( Bir kheck I). I ), 1: 56 p. m .
Ba!Umol't! iPcnua 0-:t)lll Kun!lls City
(811annlsler Z.IJ, 2:33p .m .
Oakland (C.Youlljli; (1..0) at (hlcal(o
(LaPo int HJ,1 p.m.
Toronlo JCnuttl 0·0) at Nt'w \'ork
(Candt&gt;larla 1· 1), '7 : 30p.m .
·
Clevelllnd (Farn!ll a-O) IU Mln,.-!lotu.
(81yll'\'en 1-l) , II!05p.m .
lldroll (TII.Mna 3-0) at Texas &lt;W itt 1).

·~

~) ,11:]~

Placed pi&amp;(! her Ml~ '
IHa,y dlll&amp;bled II.&amp;;
rtn.lltd oullldder Keith Miller trom
Mai!W' Qf the (A.A.A) lnter~atlo•l .
PhUadelplda -

p.m.

Seattle (C•uTlliJell 0·2 1 Ill C.v.llfornla
( Petry 1-0), 10:05 p.m.
Sundl\Y '!I G.v.me!l
Toronlo at New York
Cleve! Wid itt Mlnr¥'tto&amp;a
Oll.kland at Chlcaso
Ro•ton at Mllwaulll'le
&amp;It more Ill Kan,_s City
Del roll al TeJCIL'i
..Sf'ui-111' u1 Cl!.llfornla

........

St. Lollis - traded ~~eeo nd bueman
Thm Htrr to Mln~«a tor •ulflehler
Tom 8ru111U18ky; · ulletl up teco rd
biUielll!lD LUIS All~a. H, lrom l..(lulnll)e
of the ( A.AA) AmerlcUI Aauclatlon;
oplloned o~tlh:ldl!r Rod Booker to
LoufA~IIe .

College

W
PlttshufKII
New 'fork
Chlc&amp;ltO
Monlft W
Phlladelphhl
Sl. Loulll

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OB

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Ch•dnllliU, Alluta 0
New York 4, St. Louis 0
San Dl ep 3, Houlton I
IAJ11 APR'!~e!l at San Frand~Jto, ppd ..

•

Sllturdq'!&lt; Game;
Clnl.'in111tl (Brownlnr 0-0) 111 A.tlantu
CMahAer 0--~). 1: 50 p.m .
Chicago (Niprer IJ.O ) at Pltbiburxh
( Fi11her ~t), I : 50 p.m .
Loll An tel ell I Her!lhlser U ) al San
Frantl'if:o (Kr11kow 1-0 ), 4:05p.m .
Montrul (Dop110n IJ.O) at Philadelphia
cRuflln :!-1 ), 7:t5 p.m.
New York CFernt.n&amp;-1; 11-11 at St. Loui !l
(Fouch 1).2), 11:05 p .m.
Houliion (Darwtn 1-0l at San Dlero
{HawldnM 1-1), 10 :05 p,RI.
Su r1b,y's GIHlll!'li

Named Hick Barnes

hl!ad hukefbllll C1)ac h.

,

Football

Clcvel!lnd - Announced liilf ... y Kay
tllh wm not be olfered a cortraci lorltSR
and beeome~t 11. free agent,
lnclanapollt - Slp d lree ar..nt now
tacllk' Joe KJ eclro and tree aiL'flt
Qllllrlerback Joe Ferruson.
Seattle- Acq ..-red Qlllll'lerback Kelly

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULJ!
\\'e ek of AprU 24, 1938_
DAT E-GYMNASIUM
POOL
Apr il 24-3 p. m.tOpen Rec . .................... .. ............... , ........... ... 1'·3 P-l'!l.!Open Swim
6-8 p.m./Col ll&gt;ge fu&gt;c ............ ...... .. ....... ,, .. ~ ......... 6-8 p.m ./Co ll ege Swim
Apr il 25-6-8 p.m ./Coll ege Rec-................. , ................ 12 : 30-1: JO p.m./Fitness Swim
....................................................... ... .......... .... 6-8 p.m ./College Swim
April 26-Ciosed ........ , ............ .... ... .......... ................ ... l 2: JO-l ::KJ p.m./Fitness Swim
... ... ......... ............... .... . .- ...................... .... .. .. ...... ...... .. .. .. .. .. ..... ... Closed
Apr il 27- Ciosed ..................... .. ..... ,.... ..... : ...... ........ ... 12: 30-1: 30 p.m J Fitnes.s Swlm
Apr il

28-ct ~~~:::: ::: ........ ,.: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: li "3i:i-'i ~ ·30 ·p·.-m·:iFii -~~Sc~~t~

.., ...... . ..... .. ....... . ......... .. ... ,., ......... , ... ...... ,.. ,.. , ........ ,, ......... .- ... .... Clos~
Apr il 29- 6-8 p.m .rOpcn Ree."., ........... ~ .. .................... l2:30-1: 30 p.m :/ Fitness Swim
.. ............................ ................................. 6-8 p.m./Open Swtm
Apr il 30- 1-3 p.m .fOpen Ree......... , .... .. .. ... .................. ..... .. ..... 1-3 p.m./Open Sw im
May 1-Clo scd/ Red -White BB Games .
. .. ...... .... ... ... .. ...... .... .. ...... ... .. . Closed
6-8 p.m.!Cpl lcgc f«:oc..
...... ....... 6-8 p.m ./College Swlm

Sloldfn from Ph oenb: tor 19K!lllfth·r o und
dralt c hcNcp and 198911r!lt- an dllf'l.h · round
pk:kll,

3-R's
For Continued

· NBA results
NATIONAL BASKETBALL AS90C .
f.:~~~;ier n Co nte react&gt;
Alla.nllc Dlvbi lo n
\\' L Pd . GB
y· flo!IIIIO
57 :a .'7(1 ~ New York
Ji H .457 00
WMhlnpon
:n U .457 00
Phlbtdoelphl a
31 4t .450 20 ~
Ne-w J eney
1ft 63 .222 39

Dlv~~lo~8

Highway Improvements
FOR

MEIGS I
COUNTY•

.tiM ...:.

58 81 .6 1'; 3
t9 at .603 -1
• ·MII•.-aukee
-1 2 39 :5 1!1 II
• · 0 evel and
U 40 ,506 If
lndana
~
:Jil n .41i9 l !'i
\lo'e!ik' rn Co nlere nce
Mldwl'l'lt Dhlslon
W L Pel . GB

11-Denwer

53 28 .GM 32 2t .6.12 I

~~:· Dillkuo

7
.15 S5 1113 7 '-1
•..San Ant.
31 ·50 .3113 22
Sacrameato
24 li7 .216 JJO
l'a clflc Dhlslon
y-LA Lakeu
il 20 .'753 • ·Portil1nd
U ~ .612 9
x.Se~~ttle
u 311 11 31 111
Phoenix
2fl U .346 33
Goldt-n Si.
~ &amp;I .2-l"l t1
LA Olppus
17 63 .1!18 UY.
:11:-&lt;'ll~hed

'

1

Hoiucon ut San Dle«&lt;
Ui11 An Jlell'!li at San Fnnd!iro

Transactions
Balle ball

Placed dllrd bMeman

FOR RESURFACING WITH

-IIi 35 11GH

playolr'hertb

y-cllnohed dlvt~lon tKie
Frldll,'t''s Resull.s

Atlanta ISJ, Bo.!llon 1011
Indiana IU, DetroM 98
Onl'hUid 101. Ollcaso 103
Oaiii&amp;8127,S IUI Antonlo941
MIIWIIU lEe 118, New YCJrk 109
LA LllkerA 111, Phoenlll 11 2'
Pordand 141, Drnver 13$
Ulah lit, Seatlle 109
Sacn~.meato 117, Golden Shtolc' Ull
Salurda,y'A Game!'
Milwaukee at Nf!w J er'le)' , i :3t p.m.

•

2.RoaERTS- FOR REPLACEMENT
OF BRIDGES.
3.RoaERTS- ~OR RE·ELECTION
MEIGS COUNTY ENGINEER.

Philip M.
Roberts·

Atlan&amp;a al Wlllihln«fon, 7:30 p .m .

·Phlbldelphh11 ac Cl('vei1U1d, j:3!J p.m .

Ch lc..:o IU Plttsbul'lh
Monlrelll at Phllad Piphl u
('Jnclnnall AI AUMtll
New York at St. Loul11

Balilmon! -

DropPed lt11 ~wlmming

li·Utah
• ·Houlton

~ .66'7 -

7.
1
~ 9
Atl~nta
'l 13
.
Frldii.Y's Re!U&amp;Itll
PU l!ltu ..-.:11 II, Clll1:a«o -C
l'hlladelphl a 2, Montreal 0

June 26-July 1, while the camp
lor high school students Is slated
lor June 2G·July 1. The girls'
camp, for students lngrades5-12,
will run from July 10 to July 15.
Conducted by Rio ·Grande

x-Chlca~;o

\\' e~&lt; l

· r.ln

Pro\'ldence -

11:-AtiiUUII

E,.t

Los Angelet~
Hou,a on
Cllk:lnmtl
SlUl FriUlclliCG
S IUI Dlep

Marshall provam .

y ·Det roll .. Ce nt r.ll

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Rio Grande College has scheduled three summer basketball
camps for boys In June and one
for girls In July.
The boys' camps for grades 5·9
have been set for June 12-17 and

M•d~~o: on die

7 , .U7t\lt

T""-w;

April 24. 1988

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

Nf'w \'nrlr at Indiana, '1:30 p.m.
1A Olpper8at Dea~r. 9:30p.m,
Hou:'tlon at Ulah. t : 30 p.m .
Portland at Suram~to, 10: 30 p.m .
Sui'IIIU''Ii Game~~
RoAton at Chlcaa:o
Golden Slat~ l.t LA Laker11
Dallu at San Antonio, nllhJ
Phllldelpliaa&amp; De&amp;rott, al&amp;f!l:
PhOf!niJI at Houlllon. nl~:hf
Sealtle at LA. t11ppen, nl&amp;tt

basketball head coach John rate . of . $160 per student Is
Lawhorn, the camps provide available lor seven -or more·
24-hour supervision with coaches students from the same school
and counselors, lectures;dlscus- district. Students w111 reside ln.
the campus residence halls dur·
ston groups· and fllm sessions,
weight training designed for the tng the camps, and meals w111 be
Individual student and the expe- · provided by the college
rience of top coacnes with proven cafeteria.
For more Information, contact ·
· records.
The camp costs $165 per John Lawhorn at 245-5353, ext
student, although a special group 294.

OVER 21 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN HIGHWAY,
BRIDGES, CONSTRUCTION &amp; MAINTENANCE.
Pd. for by Comm. to Re·eiect Philip 11. Roberts, Wallace Bradford,
Treas., 44060 Suny Hollow Rd .. Coolville. Ohio

Finl.tt~n £~~-~~2~iJI!ffitY!.~2~ in,!r~9.*m

local one owner just reached 30,000 miles and is

aaa•a••ng for a new home. Exped premium quality.

.

START WITH

~imu- ientiu.eJ

Section

D

April 24. 1988 ·

SUMMER
.BOWLING
LEAGUES
'

Tuesday 7 p.m.-Ladies Handicap Trio League
Wednesday 12:30 p.m.-Ladies Afternoon
Handicap League ·
·
Wednesday 1 p.m.-Family Fun League
(1 adult &amp; 1 child under 15 I
Wednesday 7 p.m.-Mixed Handicap
(2 men • 2 women)
Wednesday 9 p.m.-Mixed Beginner
Handicap League
Thursday ·1 p.m.-Mixed Seniors
Handicap League
Thursday 7 p.m.-Men's Trio Handicap
Thursday 9 p.m.-Mixed Church
Handicap League
Friday 7 p.m.-Scotch Doubles
1 man &amp; 1 woman
Saturday 7 p.m.~2-man Scratch League
Sunday 7 p.m.-Doubles Mixed League 1 man &amp; 1 woman

•

PROPOSED ADDmON- Ground was broken for alltness trail
at Gallipolis Developmental Center Thursday afternoon. Here,
Marilyn Shealy, Physical Development ' Activity Therapist
' Supervisor at GalHpoUs Developmental Center discusses the
· proposed trail prior ta the groundbreaking. •

VOLUNTEERING THEIR TIME - Many people volunteer
their tbne to Gallipolis Developmental Center throughout the year,
and some are piCtured above. Among those volunteers plct ured
are representatives of the GaiDa and Meigs County Garden Clubs

-

- Star Garden Club, French City Garden Club, Gallipolis Garden
Club, Cheshire Garden Club, Rutland Garden Club and VInton
Friendship Garden Club. The clubwomen take _turns visiting
Nature's Garden Club of GDC, where th ey have a monthly
program and project lor the residents.

Helping others enriches your own life, volunteers find
By LEE ANN WELCH
thing extra" of their time, Ms.
Tlmes-SenHnel Staff
Fitch said.
. GALLIPOLIS - Every day,
There were a total of 12,390
thousands of people nationw ide volunteer hours given to Gallipovolunteer thel·r time for some lis Developmental Center in 1987,
task - some visit with the which would •. roughly equal
handicapped, others do chores $99,000.
.
lor the elderly. Each In their own
Earlier In the day , plans were
special way makes life a little unveiled for a fitness trail on the
:more meaningful lo r a less grounds,. which is being funded
fortunate person, yet at the sam~ privately - by a volunteer. The
. time, enriches then· own lives.
Parents Volunteer Association
.: Ovec 100 people and organiza- ( PVA) provides many volunteer
tions were honored Thursday by hours to the residents. They hold
Gaillpolls Developmental Center fund·ralsers, contribute their
for their volunteerlsm to the own money lor many projects,
laclllty during 1987. Each pro- and provide additional manvided service - at their own power for projects of the faclllty.
expense- to the residents of the
The fitness trail Is a cooperacenter. Some spend time with the tive effort of community and
residents, others provide gifts at state resources, according to
special times like birthdays and State Rep. Jolynn Boster ·roholidays.
Gallipolls) . "The PVA has been a
Each improves the quality of jewel, working with the state,
life for the residents of Galllpolls GDC and local government to
Developmenilll Center, accord· make this a better place.for the
lng to volunteer coordinator· residents and the community ."
Sheryl Fitch.
Groups like the PVA provide
Many of those honored were an important funding resource
. employees of GDC who come for projects like the trall,.Boster
back after their work day is over said. With all the new requireto give residents a little "some- ments for programs, govern-

emaker; Rio Grande Garden
ment can't pay the enUre bill , she
said.
Club by Garnett Morris and
Pat Caldwell, state volunteer
French City Garden Club by
liason, said Gallipolis is fortu- Mary Harri so n; Ga llipolis
nate to have the kind of commit·
Garde.n Club.
ment seen at GDC. "I· see" the
Providing special rememberJove, caring, carin g, giving, and
ances at Chrtstmas and other
wha t It means to the residents ."
limes of the year in the Adopt-A·
Volunteers bridge the · gap
Cottage program were the Cit!·
between young and old, accord - zens Advisory Board of GDC ,
ing to State Sen. J im Michae l Commercial and Savings Bank ,
Long 10 -Circleville). He-told th e
Ohio Valley Bank, GDC Operanearly 300 people in attendance
tlons Department, Lu cy Earwood, Vernle Staton. Lee Ann
that "you make life better lor
other people. You make Ohio a
Welch. Old Kyger Freewill Ba·
better place to live."
pltst Church and St. Peter 's
Area garden cl11bs were among
Episcopal Churchwomen.
those recognized for their work
Foster Grandparents 'are a
with Nature's Garden Club. Each
special program for older people
in the area to be Involved with at
takes a turn at providing a
month!/ meeting lor the resi- GDC. They s!iend time with the
dents, 1at which the clubwome_l!_-resldents, providing al!ection
show .the GDC residents how to and companionship. Those recmak e a gardening-related
ognlzed were Gladys Walters,
project.
Gary Adkins, Helen Adkins. ·
The clubs honored were Star
Sadie Lewis, Minnie Garnes,
Garden Club, and president Neva
Ruby Saunders, Frances Lenior,
Nicholson; Vingon Friendship Laura Dowler and Myrtle Mink .
Speical recognition was given
Garden Club represented by
to several staff members by the
Esta Downard; Rutland Garden
Club by Pearl Canode; Cheshire
volunteer services for their sup·
Garden Club by Katie Sho·
port. r'laqt&lt;~s were presented by

Long and MRDD director Robert
Brown to Superintendent Pamela Matu ra, Program Director
· Rose Ramos, GDC Compliance
Officer Ruth Kirkland and Operation s Director Richard Houck .
Other volunteers recognized
were Linda Black, Wes Smith ,
Tammy Smith, Ruby Weddington, Susie Kinney, Chad Fitch,
Ca rola Keever, Stella Hess,
Marie Le adingham, Willis Lea··
dingham, Marilyn Shealy,
Rose Ramos, Lucy Earwood,
Madge Neal, Dorothy Hartley ,
Lee Ann Welch, Ruby Poling,
Ruth Mays, Mike Brown, Kimberly Typer, Bill Davis, Doreen
Middleton and the Parent Volun·
teer Association, Jim Middleton,
Wayne Wolfe, George Stover,
Allee Stover, Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Cra ig, Rev . Grover
Turner and Paint Creek Baptist
Church, Mark Palmer and Ohio
Valley Christian School, Juan ita
Wagner, Vada Mayo, Carol
Ritter ,
Yvonne Scally, Ted and Becky
Wooten, Noreda Gauze, Jay and
Cheryl Jarvis , Jackie Coonen.
Virginia Walters, Mr. and Mrs .

Gil Cunningham, Renee~ce ,
Lillian Rece, Matthew Miller,
Lola Smith, Betty Lou Gooldin,
Walt Brown,
.
Sharon Brown , Albert Peter-'
oskl, Darlene Burke, Bill Gray
and Ohio Valley Bank , Pam
Williams, Erma Finley, Greg
Miller and Rio Gra nde College
and Community College, Jamshu
Nuggud and Bonnie Stutes .
Members of the Citizen AdVisory Board were recognized,
Including Scott Hinsch, Tom
Childs, Tom Hairston, Chairma n
John Taylor, Lucy Earwood,
Doreen Middleton, J ames Middleton, Dr. Marcella Barton,
Thelma Elliott. Homer Pelle·
grinon. Nancy Mullins and Dan
Davies .
Members of the Workshop
Board recognize d includ e
Dwight ·Leedy of Rio Grande
College, Stan Eva ns of the Ohio
Company and Scot t Hinsch ol ,
Commercial and Savings Bank.
Each person contributed to the
betterment of Gallipolis Development1!1 Cen ter In some way , a nd ,
this was GDC 's manner of saying
thankS to them all, Ms. Fitch
said .

JJf£.~~~olfl~'\11£F.

Local
,l.Drs\at,
windows, door lodes, AM-FM-cassette, etc.

-

"88 REGAL TRADE" .

.19 8f•·
~. (acfory
Pontiac
Fiero
Factory List .

J3JJth!Jle¥,~~.t\tt9r WIDr~r.Mu :tW1
COMPARE AJ $14 9

Your cl10tce of

~ef]·

Feature

-

'

•

White, Jones share
women's golf lead
ST . PETERSBURG •. Fla.
with White at S-under-par 136.
(UPI) - Donna White Is plan· Kathy Postlewait, a 14-yea r
ntng a major surprise for her LPGA veteran seeking only her
daughter's seventh birthday- a
third career triumph, had a
victory.
chance to forge a three-way tie
Winless on the LPGA Tour · but bogeyed her final hole In a 69
since 1983, White fired her second that left her at 137.
consecutive 68 Friday to tie Rosie
First-round leader Heather
Jones for the lead midway Drew followed a career-low 66
through the ·$225,000 St. Peters- with a 72 to tie Tina Tombsburg Golf Cl assic . Scores rose Purtzer (71) and 1984 champion
slightly along with temperatures Vicki Fergon (70i at 138, two
at the 6,013-yard course ·Of the shots behind the leaders. DefendPasadena Yacht and Country Ing champion Cindy Hill, hamClub, one of the shortest layouts pered by a sore back, stood at
on the circuit .
1-under 143 following Friday's 72
Jones birdied the !Ina! two and Jan Stephenson (71) Is eight
hOles In a 69 that deadlocked her shots off the lead at 144.

.

SKYLINE
LANE'S

Beginning May 1, Skyline Lanes will follow
these hours of operation:
Monday-CLOSED
.
Tues., Wed., Thur., and Sat. open at noon
Fri. and _Sun. open at 3 p.m.
Sign-ups Daily at Skyline or call 446-3362

MEIGS COUNTY ENGINEER

.

•

demos, "Best Sports Car Buy Discount
In America".
Sale Price

GUIDING THE VOl-UNTEERS- A lot of work
goes Into coordinating volunteers around the statl!at various developmental centers. l;'lctured are
Cheryl Fitch, GDC volunteer coordinator; Pal

Caldwell, state volunteer coordinator supervisor;
Clllf Schjuster, assistant state volunteer coordl·
nator supervisor; and Lucy Earwood, retired
GDC volunteer coordinator.

FOSTER GRANDPARENTS- Membersollhe
Foster Grandparents program honored at GDC
Thursday night were, front from left, Helen

Dlredor Robert Browa, Stale Sen. Jan Michael
Lon~: baek, Roae Ram•, Marcella Barton, GDC
Superlnlendetat Pam Malura, ollm Middleton,
Doreen Mlddletoa and S&amp;ale Rep. Jolynn Bo•ter.

RETIRED, BUT NOT RETIRED - IAJcy
Earwood, · second frGm rtrbt, Ia lbe retired
volunteer coordinator ol Galllpolll Developmen·
tal Center, but aile 11111 tall• aa acUve role. at the
faclllty, volunteerln1 her time lor tH ...klenta
and the Citizen Advisory Board. She was

Adkins and Sadie Lewis; back, Francis Lenoir ,
Gay Adkins and Minnie Garnes.

All..fM-casntte with Cl rlllllo1 ek.

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• Comfortable. easy-touse cootrols.

•

• FuU one-year
limlted

I

ONLY

'

evtryth!ngl•. White Factor List
wtth rosewoOd tntertor.
A Bargain At

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OO

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CMSTD
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' •'

F~t!~ lm!u~~hd !Jiark Limited 4 Qr.

1988 PONTIAC
GlAND PRIX

.
,.

CmZEN ADVJSORY BOARD .... The Cltben
Aclvllory Board of GDC IVU: reooplaed Tllu...day, aiODJ wllb H¥enl dlallaplab.. peaiL
Prom left lll't Tam Balntoe, ....._..... S&amp;llle
MJU)D Director Pat Rafter, Scott Rln~eh, MRDD

presented with a special plaque and roses tor her
help and aervlce by Sheryl Fitch, volunteer ,
coordinator, rllbt. Aloo pictured with the111 are ::
Superlnleadent Pam Malura, left, and MIQ)D t:
Dlredor Robert Brown.
j,

•

�...

·-·
Pitga D-2

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio

24,1988

April 24, 1988

Point ·Piaasant. W.Va.

CLEVELAND 1UPI) - Rising
electric costs in northern Ohio
have prompted a number of
eommuntties to consider forming
fheir OW!I municipal power S)'S·
terns, but some communities are
iearing Interference from giant
[nvestor-owned utilities.
' • In Northeast Ohio, officials In
- !he cities of Parma and Medina
Dave already called for objective
~tudies on the issue, while in
Northwest Ohio, Deliance has
allocated S100,000fora feasibility
• srudy and officials In Archbold
are considering dropping Toledo
Edison Co.'s service and establishing their own municipal
power sys tern.
In Cuyahoga County alone, at
: )east seven communities are
; ;quietly considering municipal
· 11ower systems but are shunning
• 'publ Jelly durlng their research In
·order to prevent profit-making
,Cleveland Electric Illuminating
'Co. from Interfering.
• • Nathan Sooy of the Ohio Public
: ·Interest Campaign, a consumer
: ;.advocate group, said that durlng
• .a recent public hearing in Parma
: \on municipal power, CEI packed
• 'the hearing room with employees
• ·who oppQse such operations.
, : CEI denied that It ordered Its
: :employees to attend the meeting ,
• -but admitted that the company
: ' "Informed (CEI employees) by
• ;letter that . the Issue was being
: •discussed In Parma."
' : Sooy said he would not name
:the seven other Cuyahoga County
, :Communities considering munlc• ~ipalizatlon of power plants be, ;cause they want to study the
: :tssue in a "calm and deliberate
• ifashlon" before they bring it to
::the public.
: "Before we're going to surface
• &lt;in any other communities, we' i-e
• ~going io have our ducks In line,"
; isald Sooy. ''CEI Is a powerful
• ;corporation In Cleveland politics.
: ;They have the ability to mobilize
: i thelr employees In any
• •community.
; : "When we surface again, the
_ :-business and political support in
: ·~the community will be ready and
• "a grassroots network in place. So
when the pressure comes down
\ from CEI we'll be ready for

:~ them.''

· : Parma Treasurer Jack Krise
.; :-said at least two Cuyahoga
- i County
are farther
. incommunities
-, :' along
studying public power
: : plants ~han Parma but he .too
: •refused to name those
: rommunlties .
••
t •• "! promised them I wouldn't
' ! say anything because they are
~ I afraid of a backlash from CEI,"
; ~ said Krise.
; CEI spokesman Rick DeChant
:denied that there would be any
; ; 'type of "backlash" from the
·
: utility.
~ '
"That's a pretty strong allega' ; t!On," said DeChant. "He (Krise)
: ! might be upset that 225 CEJ
• : employees showed up at the
: hl!aring. And they were all
r • 'residents of Parma."
: Public officials studying the
, ; pllsslbillty of pulling the plug

.

connected to the Investor-owned
CE I say the effort Is to find
alternatives to rising eiectrlc
bills do to the Inclusion of the
Perr-Y nuclear (:Wwer plant and
Pennslyvanla's Beaver Valley
nuclear plant in CEI's rate base.
CEI and Toledo Edison, which
also owns Interest in Perry and
'Beaver Valley, recently filed for
an Immediate 9 percent rate
hike, the first of a series of
requests that would result in 40
percent higher rates in 10 years.
Proponents pf municipal
power plants point to the rates of
Cleveland Public Power, the only
municipal power plant In Cuyahoga County , serving about 40
percent of tho • city.
The average Cleveland Pupllc
Power customer paid about 20
percent less than the average
CEI customer during the month
of January, according to figures
from Ohio's Office of Consumers",
Counsel.
Durlng that same month, the
figures show, the average customer of Oberlin's public power
plant paid 48 percent less than
the average ·CEI customer and
average customers of Painesville's public power plant paid 44
percent less than their r;EI
counterparts.
.
The . average public power customer in Wadsworth that
month paid 18 percent less than
the average CEI customer and
average customers of Hudson's
pub! lc power plant paid 10
percent less than CEJ's average
customers.
But DeChant points to Cleveland Pub I ic Power as one murdclpal power plant that doesn't pay
taxes.
"What has Cleveland Public
Power contributed to the general
fund?" asked DeChant, ·also
arguing that profit-making companies are more efficient in
service than municipal power
plants.
"When the lights go out In
Parma, who do you call? Your
councilman? The mayor? The
light department?
"We generate our own power
here in Northeast Ohio. We deal ·
with Cleveland-area contractors
and provide jobs and support
businesses .
"We're not going to stop city
officials from looking into municIpalization but we want to make
sure when they look at it, they
look at all the issues and not just
one particular Interest group's
viewpoint."
The argument by Investorowned utilities that they can
provide service more efflciently
has not gone unchalleng~d.
"They have a lot of nerve,"
said Chrlster Holtze, general
manager -of a 14-story Hoilday
Inn served by Cleveland Public
Power. "Several times, CEJ
tried to get our business. But
when we got done comparing
(CEI to Cleveland Public
Power), I always felt that they
were giving me the business.
''My light bulbs and computers

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SECRETARY'S WEEK

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APRIL 24·30

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BEAUTIFUL ARRANGEMENTS
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F'RESH CUT FLOWERS
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OR LOVELY SILK$
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sMELTIE , 'S

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FLOWER SHOP &amp; GARDEN CENTER

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.tS3 JACKSON PilE GALLIPOLIS OHIO

can't tell the di!ference between
electrlcty from one guy or the
other. We've never had a problem with Muny Light (Cleveland
Public _Power). As a mailer of
fact, they always jump to help us

(PUCO) regulation like all the
other utilities rand) they have
the option of selecting the best
customers. They dont' have to
take the poor customer or the
customer who doesn't pay," said

out.~·

A plant manager at Electro
General Plastics Corp. in Cleveland said that about 15 years ago
there were~ome minor problems
with electrical service from
Cleveland Public Power but
recently, he said, there have
been no problems.
And the general manager of a
s mall steel distribution company
In Cleveland said the service by
Cleveland Public Power was
good and he had no complaints
but he asked that his company
not be ldentifiej) because he
doesn't ' 'want to get In trouble
with CEI."
The activity toward municipalIzatiOn is not limited to Northeast
Ohio.
In Northwest Ohio a number of
communities are looking for
ways to disconnect the lines of
Toledo Edison Co., which has the
hlgest rates In the state.
Archbold, located on the
Williams-Fulton County line, and
·Defiance .have both authorized
studies on the ,feasibility of
public power systems.
And the Citl:: of Clyde Is In the
process of dr01Jplng Toledo Edison and purchasing Its electricity
from the·Ohio Power Co.
Voters in Clyde last November
approved a $10 mUllan bond issue
to establish the city's own distribution system. The city plans to
break from Toledo Edison in
January.
The model for all this activity
In Toledo Edlson'sservicearea is
the municipal power operation In
Bryan, Williams Countv·.
That factllt:y's rates are half of
what Toledo Edison charges and
the publicly owned system experiences fewer outages than
Toledo Edison, said Bob Secow,
chairman of the Bryan Board of
Public Affairs.
But In order to keep electric
rates low, said Secow, the Bryan
operation must continue selling
Its purchased power outside the
city's municipal boundaries.
And that practice is being
challenged by a blll In the Ohio
House of Representatives. House
Bill 747 would prevent municipal
utilities from selling purchased
power outside city boundries.
The bill, · however, would not
restrict them from expanding if
they generate their own power.
"It's unconstitutional," said
Secow. "It's an attempt to set up
a monopoly for Investor-owned
utilities. As long as we can sell
power outside our boundries,
that keeps our rates down."
Since Bryan began selling Its
purchased power In 1984, It has
increased its customers from
3,960 to 4,520 and requests from
potential customers outside the
city have remained constant,
eroding Toledo Edison's customer base.
"It's a dangerous situation if
we continue to lose customers,"
said Jim Proctor, a spokesman
for Toledo Edison. "We're making every effort to retain our
customer base. We have to show
them (customers) that we're
doing everything we can to keep
our rates low."
Proctor said Toledo Edison has
asked the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to allow It 111
phase in rate increases in order

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VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 Memorial Drive • Pome~ OH.
.
(614~
-3632

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ye.,.experlence.

Call 114-«e-1327 ... 4481812.

Tuat.. Aprl28ar-. Aprll27.
Hair Hep,..,lng Stylng Salon.
Silver Bridge PI••·

114-318-8238.

HELP WANTED
Rapidly ••penllng company
looking lor emblliou• PIIOJ)it
who •• wiling to wen .,...
ings. Excellent.,.., good benll·

no. Call Mondor Only, 9 AM-2
PM, 448:7481.

Government Jobl. t18,040-

159,230 'I"•· Now hiring. Your
9801 for cu.-rt Fod... Ito~

area. 1·8015-187·1000 Ext. A·

H1ir Stylftts. Aaroea The Str...
talon lo -lng ont

lltylng

addltlonollltylilt who to lootdng
Juet .nothlr job.
Call T""l •t 114-&lt;Mii-1510 for
-Ito.
for more then

DEMONSTRATES CPR - An Instructor In
cardlopumonary res118CIIat1011 demonstrates the
technlq!K' of mouth-to-mouth brealhlng to family
members of Southern Ohio Coal Company
employees during a special program offered by
safety and training oltlclals !root the Meigs

Allem .... \A!Mied. Earn moMr IIMmbllng Teddv
FrH information. Write: Jo..EI
Ent- P.O. Box 2203.
Klttl-. Fl. 32742-2203.

••a.

Division office near Albany. In addition, there
were two Instructors In CPR - Donna McCarty
and Faye McPherson - from the Southeastern
Ohio Emergency Medical Service (SEOEMS) In
Jackson.
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Govemnw'l1 Jobl. t11,040 t59,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
M'ei 8~187-1000 n.t. R980&amp; for current Fed.-1 ltst.
E'xc:tptlng epplcll~ne for.,..,..
rlenced nunlnl •••lltlfttl
4~27·

8. Contlct
Amerlcere-~m•oy. · Nuralng
end Rehebllltltlon Center. No
phone calls pfa... E.O.E.
through

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156

P.r time AN Supervisor. dsr;"
shift. ICF·SNF long t«m ewe
fecfftly. Arcedle NuralngC.nter,

Main St.. COolvllo, Ohio 41723.

Register - 675-1333

AVON • An .,.... Celt Merll't'n

w. ... 304-882-2141.

Anrwuncemenls

4

3 Announcements
Am ,..,ching for lnfornwtlon of
AlMan der Bigp of ChMter ar••
whochd 11151 . HtdaonaAiron,
AI.: , T, John WIHan mel glrla

Rachel. Suun, Luceua In B•·
then, a. ..... Tu.,_. Plelftl. la
thtre 1 litOI ,..nion each

Giveaway

Twoblldl p~rtGrutO.nepups.
On• IMI-. one femlle. 'Oood

dot,...,,

5:00.

-tell dogo, oonUo.ln
need of • oaod home. Phone

IUmmltr7' Whenl' Alto •.chlng

evellllbfe et vour convenience
end location•. M~riln Wede-

tage lptnt. H.C. H~ne.· 227
Elmwood. Topeka, Ken ...

FOUND 'cMh In Point Pl... ant
area. C.ll .,. .. 7:00 pm. 304875-802&amp;;

5152.

&amp;81101.

4

Mete srneM white dog.. 1 blade

Giveaway

oyo .. d '"""'

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&gt;'

MhWIIture Deehshund to good
ha... Call 814-4411-8810.

3 rr. Dfd1h Oerrt~~n Shepherd,~
Elk Hound. Callafltr 5:30PM,

114-318-8141.

Two trMI ta cut a h.,lewey.
C&gt;Mk hoo- bod. Call 11444f.1 e 18 eft• e PM.
Puppl11 • 8 Wkl. old. Pert
Llbrldor Relrlw.,. Good with

chlldron. Calll14-448-1089.

May- •o"

To gtVI

electric

'"""'· Calll14-218·1435.
Gtr,_ Sh-d half Lab. to

giYe IWI'f. Mel&amp; Frl"'dlr with
chlldrM. Call II 4-441-5941.

O.tvlniad bern roof to glw
,..,, Good condh:lon. Cell

lt4-981i-3887.

304-1711- t 485.

Lost-between
New HliY.. &amp;
Mine No.3, onegr...,AI"''ny emo
""" with mite. Htnd . - .

A-ard. Call 304-882-2253"'
1711-8190. Owfohl,
LOST. l•v• amount money In
•m• folded brow" paper beg In
t1 00. bib, Point PIMNnt Gelll·
potil er• WedniiMiv. Wll rew•d for return. 304-a&amp;- 3515.

7

Yard Sale

·-----·Pome·rov--·· ·· ----·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
We Suv quUts. Pre 1950's. Any
condition. ltl-•4001. Need

--Call 814-992·5887.

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Auctioneer CGI. Oac~r E. Click.
304-8911-3430. Lie. No. 7114-

e-. Ed Burkott Borllor Shop,
2nd. Aw. Middleport. Oh. 814-

Ride Pearson Auction..,., 11oenaed Ohio and W•t VIrginia.
Eltete, entique, f•m. liquid•
don •••· 304-773-~785.

•••

912-3478.

f IIIIJiiiVIIII'/ll
9

12

S1:rv 1C1:s

Wanted To Buy
11

We p-v cesh for late model dun
und cera.
Jim MlnkChew.·Oida Inc.
Ill Gene Johnson

Help Wanted

11~3.

I now hlvt en opening tor e
eldtrt, women or men In ""'
prllme hom1. 17 ·yra. IJlpt-

ASSEMBlERS - - - Earn

monev •11embllng Teclftt Bews.
F,.. lnfarm~tlon. Writ~ Jo-El
Em.,.._, P.O. 11m! 2203.

Ave .. Gtlllpotto. Call lt4-4482282.

riMCI.

Tupplf'l

Plelnl Olhl.

114-117-3402.
Hou• pelnUng In tltlllpollt
F«ry •d Point Pl~t .....
... hr. Ph. 304-17S-3081.
WNI mow yerdl In Pof.nt Pie•
.....
A••
on an-·af
ytrd. Call """ 4:00, 304-17113179.
lolrulttlntl In my ••,...ton. Awoy from ...... with
oloy aqulpmtnt. Rot. ""ovldacl
304-n3-ee11.

KltoimmM, Fl. 32742-2203.

Depenct.We women i'tlieded for

Complete householdl of furnf.
1ure a lftttquft. Also wood &amp;
calli
Swain's Fwntture

child'*" Nght houHIIttplng In
mr home. Al'f•enON, .,..,por.
hMt••·
mtion otqulr... C.H 114-4411&amp; Auction. Third &amp; Olivo,
lt4-448-31 59.
11158 b t l - 8-1 PM.

•

'" Cell us tor your mobile home
tnauriln~: Miller ln•u,.nn.

304-112·21 48. Alao: .,to,

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home. llfa h. .h.

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At The Ohio Company, we'll lake the time to review your portfolio, taking into
consideration your financial objectives. Then we'll recommend what we feel is
your best course of action.

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WhatiM!t' we recommend, it will be designed to put you in the best possible
lax posture as far as your investments are concerned.
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Our consultation with you is without charge or obligation, so act now and set
up your priyala meeting for a review of your portfolio from a lax standpoint.
Pleooe feel fnla to bring your ·accountant or lax attorney along, so that we can
coordinate our efforts.

1-

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(Not)

~"'::~""'-.

IWI&lt;I

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s.., to 11011. 1·801).221-

In lovlnj memory of
ROBERT N. CLARK
who PISSed away
April 24. 1980:
Unsetn and un~d you
ue alweys ne•
Still loved and still missed
And still very de•
DHp il our htllts you will
elw•ys ster.
lOYIId 111d remltllbtred tv·
ery day.
.
Sadly mined by wHe, Lola,
end son, lArry and !emily.

2 bedrDOm. 2 balhl. 2 c•
g•ege. ..,.. lot on Rt . . 33.
Swimming pool, ~~t.ette, dose

to Mtlgt High. Call 114-9823214.
At. 7. Appoint,_, ontv. 114882-13~2.

3 bedroom ... c11. 188 llotdl
St.. Mddll)ort. Sinal• btth.
City lot. 118,1500. Call 114-

992-21108.

·-----..

For lilt or ..m, 1877 Unooln
H-'ghts. Pomeroy. 2 bect-oom.

llllng room. khcl1on. Ctll 114lilll-•to3. -

15 rooml. blth. c•.-. good
•hlp•
ctoee to lchoola .. d
chlrch. Nice verd and porch•.

bedroom, b•h wtth a•den t!AJ,

c•hedrll ceiling. eun lghl In
khchen, und•pinNng. EllCtllent
condh:lon. a. ... WUdlrmuth

114-882-7175.

Sky Ina 10x&amp;O. 2 btdrooml.

completely refurblthed. txc
814-112-72••.
cond. cMh onfw' or trade far
whlclat 11.100.00. -1-304,,...,_ o&lt;O!'f'IY lal ..... 813-8155.
Aa_.. hou.O. 2 lrr
with lr....,.ant. city, U7,1100. 1182 Knox, 12xlll. 3 boclroom,
304-8711-1331.
all .. .,.,Ia. moldy furr*hed.

-·to

Prlmt loc•5on At. , 2. Apple
Goo. . . locko
dam lui ' .... ball\
foroecf air funwce. nloe lot
County - • walllllrla. Prlaod
to
•38.1100.00. Call 304-

o......

..n.

117-2'B8.

3 be*-· 2

blthl,lullllnahtd

b•MMR~. n.W turrwce end
centMI air. g.,..&amp; fMaedyerct.

Wwl0'1.24t4MI. VwnonAw.
Pt. Pit. 304-1711-1774.

I)OrCh•endund•pennfng. 304-

nl-1808.
'
1811 Ballne tratl• 20 ft. Rtf.
at..,., shower end elr concltlon.
1180. Neglotoblo. 814-2881398.

1970 12x85 Wlncllar with
10Jl12 edd-on. woodburner.
wether • dr\W. llr oond. Mutt
be m-d. 304-8811-3102.

1173 Flamingo,

t boll. 3

be~

~Milled. d•dl. unit lir
cond arid und•penning in-

roonw.

5

HeppyAds

eludO&lt;I. •e.soo.oo. 304-871121711,
cond: 304-1711-1141.

In memory of

GENE TRIPLETT

33

who pueed away

Farms for Sale

Gent..,.,..

two years ago,

Fwm-18 . . . .
-A•tortd. twO-•OIV hom1 oo.,w.

April 24, 1981.
Remembered
with love.
Edna;

.....uy _, ........ d
kddng Raccoon
bern. work thop.

c...-

l.-gt

•elnery· .tc.

Coli 814-318·1810 fo•
eppoln-nt.

'•

(htlhire lcat lamp
OPENS 7:00 A.M.

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
cat•l-•tza

2 BR .• unfumlahed- 1 mit•-21 8.

1200...,t. • 180dep.&amp;roi.Ono

Homes for Rent

Nlcetv furnished sm111 h0ul8.

Adutts ontv. Ref. required. No

..... Call 814-441-0338.

Furnished Hou•. 3 BR . 29 Nell

child. Cell 814-646-9186.

•c.

Nice one BR ., furnlthed hOu...

No pelt. Ref. &amp;.
ctep.
required. Celll14-44.. 1759.

2 BR , l•ge IIYing room. yard.
1-..ndry. pltio, on Spring Ave.
No Pt~Jts , Dtpolh. Cell tftef 8.

Ave,. Gilllfpolls . 1225• mo. C.ll
J.H, Hotch• · 304-,711-4071. ·448-4411altor
7 PM.

814-992-8888.

2 ecrn • Rt. 180. Drilled well A
rul'll water-lap. ConcrMe tl'lll•

2 bedroom hou• in New Haven,

./

Rio Grllndt • ThrM tl&amp; nf.
unfumil._d home. f\11 c•PIC'
ful beaet:nent. Alit..,., ... •d

........ otqulrtd. Colll14-44119430.
44

Apartment
for Rent

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NOW RENTING
OCEAN FRONT CONDO IN
GARDEN CITY, S.C.
(10 mi. so. ol lrrtle Bueh) .
2 bedrooms/2 lull ballll,
tompltte kitchen, air cond~ _
tioned, private pool, newly
redecorated.
.I
,
For more information call: ·
Jeannie Abtl~
«6·4249

GALLIA CO. JR. FAIRGROUNDS

RT. 35, 4 MILES WEST OF GALLIPOLIS
Light fixtures, lawn mowers, bed ends, tools, pinball
machine, old picture frames, bottles, McCoy vases,
metal cabinets, storage bin with counter top, chairs,
TV, radio, record plaJer, storm windows, odds &amp; ends,
single shot shotgun, power saw, old porcelain, wire,
car wheels, items too n~merous to mention.

'

Sellin&amp; items from the very Early GALLIA COUNTY FARI oi '
the late NELLI£ TAWNEY who passed -.y recentJr at I~
age of 71 ye.-s. This sale hes beta ordered by tlllalltllor· ·
ity of LAWRENCE TAWN£"1, son ol the late Irs. l1W11ey .
and who was Commissioner of Her Estate. This t•m ule·•
will be conducted on:

Sponsored by Gallipolis Shrine Club
Process for Club Projects
Auctioneers: Bud McGhee &amp; Steve McGhee

P.O. Box 191, Gallipolis, OH. 45631. Ph.

(614~

446-0552

SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1988
AT 11:00 A.M.
Near GALLIPOLIS, OHIO. Easily located, take State
Route 588 about 3 miles West of Gallipolis. Farm is
located on State Route 588 or 4 miles E~st of U.S:
Rt. 35 at Rodney to S.R. 588.

PUBLIC AUCTION

THURSDAY EVEN., APRIL 28, 1988
5:30 P.M.

This earlY. 1800's GalliaCounty Farm has~ in the Tawney Family since 1916. Some ol the items in till btrn and
outbuildings were in these buildinp when tilll111ily ·
moved htre. Will be sellin1 from 2 LARGE BARNS, SEV· '
ERAL OUTBUILOINGS, and tllllarp old 2-STOIY FARM
HOWSE. lnterestinc sale. briellistinl follows:

Take St. Rt. 124 E. of Racine, Ohio to Co. R~. 28
(Bashan Rd.) to Nease Hollow Rd. tum right to end
of ret., turn left. Follow signs. llr. Brewer is retired
so has no use for the following items:
·
28' wood extension ladder, 15' extensioh ladder, 20' M.T.D.
push mower, 8 h.p. Wizard rider· needs repair, wheelbarrow, 10' awning, awning posts. eavespo4t._grmderw/motor,
tool boxes, Skill saw, miter saw, electnc ll drolls, pamt
sprayer !new). hand saws, ax, sledges, hyd. &amp; screw jacks.
misc. mot01s, coal heating stove, saw blades, door planes
and misc. lools, 2 stuffed chairs.
OWNER - ERNEST BREWER
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER-992·7301
Cash
· ·
Pos~ive ID
"Not Re~ponsibleJor ~ccidents or Loss~perty" _

FARM EQUIPMENT, TRACTOR, BALER: Very good New Hoi- .
land 268 baler (this baler is in very good cond~1on); J.D. 50
larm tracl01 w~h Freeman Iron! end loader; good Oliver PTO _
spreader, excellent J.D. 16' heavy duty hay wagon, another.
16' hiY wagon; J.O. #5 sickle bar mower; J.D. side deliverj •
rake on steel; N.H. 22 ensilage· blower; corn cuhivators; 3;1::
Mulkey elevator Jpto) also w1th electric motor; stainless st~:
300 gallon milk cooling bulk tank and compressor; stainless.
milk house sink; J.D. 2-row corn Ianter; 2-12 mounted plow~ •
J.D. grain drill oii steel; rubber tire PTO hay conditione~; A.G. :
combine; Kill Brothers gra,ity bed; and more!
'•

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HORSE DRAWN and PRIMITIVE FARM ITEMS: Old woode~ •
clod roller: Early hay loader on steel; outstanding early horse:
drawn wagon !transport) on large spoke wheels wrth so~ ·
origin~ blue painl remaining seat included with this wigo~~;:
set of 4-early sleigh runners; buggy frame wrth seat lnu •
wheels!; horse culti&gt;ators; horse potato plow; wooden ha~:
row; ox yoke; lime spreader; sin~e trees; primitive hanlf •
pulled top rake; 2-blacksmith vises; olefleed boxes from the :
barns; John Deere Hoor corn sheller. The walls, lofts, and lioors of the old barns are lull ol ea1iy primitive item~ whicl);
will sell at this auction. Wooden planes; large stack ol roel slate; De laval cream separator; corn jobbers; old carpenter::&gt;:
tool box: crates early wooden window shutters with old bluepaint; Deering Imp. seat; wooden well pump; hog han~~:
iron kettle; copper kettle; cross cut saws: copper wash boole~;.
slaw cutter; stone jars; lot ol primitives.
· ••

&amp;2·D~~!~.~~ION £
·-

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••• of •••• r
Slil'e
Flftr·•••f

In Memory of

HAZEL K. QUALLS
April 26, 1917
God looked down and
SIW YOU IUfftril&amp; lnd
said CGIIIt h011tt. your
work Is dont. I need 1
ron for my prdta 1nd
you're the cho..n 011.
BUT ONLY ONE
IOTHER - 1bt of Ill

11

Help Wllnted

WOII
OVEISIAS

llliCGUiku.IM!IIIIrOM

-llllllhill. . . .

• • call (lUI 110-3100

=·

or •dr•••to:

Global

S.dtr•t•br

~UIIIInd,

l••n ••'• 60

..

•••••

OTHER ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS will include:·
Painted oak 2-piece Sellers knchen cabinet with slag glas~:
golden oak single pedestal flat top desk; oak post office letter·
box containing 84-slots; 119" jewelry store cabinet case:
Jlhis case has been stored in barn and will need all glass, ·
_large easel; rockers; Bentwood twig rocking chair; 3-piec:e-'
1930 bedroom su~e; Aladdin Alic1te elec. lamp; and mut~
not listed!

AnENTION: Fair Pic
Projects For Sale.
FALLON BROTHERS
HOG FARII
379-2145 &amp; 379-2370

lajor U.S. COflllllli• lntnilwlna far TAXFlEE, Hlp Inca• Posl·
lions. Constntt:11011; IIIII
Pr-•lna. Security, Enj·
- . . h-"'llltlry, Dl•ll
lltchanlcs, Wtldlrl,lltdl·
cal, Food Slrvlct I ._,,
..., IIOrL larltlwltlt l.oCatftins, Pild Trwlll Full
...tilt hniP on Ill 11l)f!MMIL lef1011 lppll·

Olctlr, 101,
WIIIIM,
1111
IIIII .....
11111111
. ........llllclllkhtl.

'

FARM
AUCTION
Farm Equipment. Antiques &amp; HoaSIItald Gaods- ·

and US Route 42 . 12 m•leswesl of Columbus, 19 m•les east of
Spnngfteld and 40 mtles east of Dayton.

llother In ............

I.

Renlols

7 mdes norlh of Lo h don. Ohto at •ntersect•on of I· 70 (exit R 7 91

the other '-IM" 1111111
In 1111 COtllt by ......
tljtlas.brtb:Mtl
hutllllltla. ....., .,,..
ltln, 11111111. uUt.w,
llnllllallltld .........

Oalllpolla
444 Second Avenue
P.O. Box 328

- · Jr. 304-571-2338.

ln . PIMtt Subdivit6on-3
BR . rand\. UOO • mo. ·Cell
814-448-7123 Mornings &amp;
Evenings.
f.tJU •

Interstate Equipment', Inc.

'""

1111•• ..·u 'n"" Plrt no
mor•.
Sodtr 11lsud by •K• •d
lowtd
Jlln,

'i

NOW OPEN
JOHNNY'S IAIT &amp;
TA(ILE SHOP

In -.or, of
GEORGE A. TIPTON,who
piled ..IJ April 24, ,1973.
Wt h•• lost li pt"stioua to"d
o..
He ha bid his 1111 IDodb!o•
And ha 1011• to rtllwkh Jt·
SUt
In tliltlltppy Homt on Hi&amp;ll.
Oh, 0.. Ho-d, t1olll Milt

CARD OF THANKS
'
The Maail Bush hun.• ily ad lib to thanhll
·~ the friendsand neiahbors
;; who supported inil ~om-­

• fortetl us duri~ the ex', tended Uinta IIIII dllth
of our IIIOther, Jlllll·
,• motlllr ltld lJIIt"f''nd.·
: mother. Wt appreciate
•• the are and lttentlanli·
wn her by the sbff of
Sante Hills 8t11i~ Ctn~
Dr. Willock and Dr•

•

AlhJ;on. lwge buildiiiQ · lots.
mobile homN peunlned. pWIIc
w.ter, alto rlrlter loU.: Qyde

Homes for "-"t. ·

41

PUBLIC AUCTION

"II Fleming mobil I home. MC

In this siiiiUI world liltow
But sollltd., I know I'H mill

lllndpOII'II.

1~

Card of Thank•

·---------

~-:.;;;,rd.;;-tot;.-;_.-;.;;- .,1
1,...1)011tolio
!tum. tax
I
4/24/17
-1

II

_,,rat

3 bedroom hoU•. 1.9acr•. On

&amp;.nal
Bode,
SIMclerOueet P•sM EDrcll·
... Call for FREE Color Cete-

•'

To HI up rour prtvole conaultollon,
••II coupon, con rour neoreot ofllco or coli our loll..freo n11ft!bor 1-8DD-211·ti2S

11-

,

Homes for Rent

.w. Va. b•ement. g...g• no
pad. Numirous fruit trMI. 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
••· cell 304-882-3202 or
110.1500. Call 814-388-9304.
;::::::::::::::::; ~88~2~-2~6~8~2-________
2 ecr11 Rl. 124. 1h mile trMn
2 bedroom hou•. 3 room
CEMETERY LOTS
Hln'isFarmi,Porta.nd,Oh. 28R
g.-oge tpl , 304-1711-3030 ..trill•. 2 nice big edcltloMI
175-3431 .
FOR SALE
roams, g•ega. cell• wtth star·
I will accept sealed
age room, pl.,ty w.t•. o•den
bids for the followspot. o• wood burner, ou~de
8
Public Sale
I'
chimMr. See lo appreciate.
-inp,. described ceme&amp; Auction
Priced on in.,.ccion. 814-843terv'iotsat my office a1
&amp;424 call tor eppdntment.
463 Second Avenue,
20 ICI'es for llle. Hemlock
Gallipolis. Ohio until
GrOYI area. Electricity. water. 2
12:00 Noon on Mev
' buHdlng aites. Cell 81 ... 992·
16, 1988.
7297.
Being Burial lot No.
1'/a ecre lot with ruf'll water at
3-0, Graves 3 and 4,
··sATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1988
Apple Gr0110. phone 304-8711in
the
Garden
of
Devo2383.
10:00 A.M.
ton, Ohio Valley Me·
Hou• lots. Gallipolis Ferry.
mory Gardens.
304-8711-1808.
located from St. Rt. 124 east of Racine, Ohio take . Suzanne Mouhon,
Co. Rd. 28, Bashan Rd. approx. 4 miles to J.P. 109,
Administrator of the
lot and g. .gewhhtrtiltrhOOk
Ca1mel Chu1ch. This has been consiened and will • _
Esta1e Rosa Griffith
up, can be Men "'Henderson.
307 Hollo,.y St or cllll 30...,
take more till day of auction.
895-3098.
Super Mfar mall w/3 pt. hotch, J.D. lD' R.W. disk, Gravely - ·
mower, sulky, plow, rototiller, 122 Cub Cadet w/48" mower, ·.8
Public Sale
JC.
Penny mower, electric lawn mower, moped, 2 man inllat- •- ·
&amp; Auction
able boat, kerosene heater, Sm. trailer _type gas cooking - stove &amp;electric relrigeralor, chord organ, ping-pong table, .
Bundy llute, Smoker grill, broiler o'en, metal bed complete, •
AUCTION
B&amp;W 12" TV, color 21" TV, lolding chairs, bedside table •.
stand, toys, portable typewr[ter, elettric donut maker, 10 . Saturday, April 30, 1988 at 10 A.M.
cup c~flee maker, elec. boiler, puzzles, books, string trimm- "
LOCATION: VINTON TOWNHALL
ers, m1C1owa&gt;e oven, coffee table, linens. couch, Jersey bull .
DIRECTIONS: Clay Street in Vinton. 2nd street on the
call, ce1ling lan, Hearth Mate lireplace insert, woodburner, '·
- right, af111r crossing the bridge in Vinton.
misc. baby nems, high chair. waik!f, play pen, 1978 F350
The following will be sold at tile auction: _1974 rear chrome
truck,
1975 Oldsmobile Delta 88 w/350 engme, 1969 Dodge ·
bumper, porch awning telev~~n. ex~er10r do01, washmg
Dart
w/slanl
6 engine, 1954 2 ton GMC, 6 cyl., less than ·
mochin~ rooio, old metal bathtub, aor condttK&gt;n!f, rechargable
70,000
miles;
1966 GMC 2 ton truck. picnic table, flowers,~ , .llashlighl lamp~ bedspreads, telephon~ books, albums, buhp
grinder,
new
tools, brooms, rakes. shovels, and much - .
1113 u--, 14xl0, 2 BIL
reau, cake decorating set, household ttems, small kttchen applilurnlohtd. 181500. Cell 814more and appro!. 400 post 1
•
ances, pots &amp; pans, dishes and num!fous terns not_mentK&gt;ned.
317·0151 alter 8 PM.
Come
early
for
entertainment
from
Connie's
litile
ones!
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: This is a charity sale, wnh all pro·
Government homea from $1. {u
There
will
be
a
bake
sale,
rummqe
sale,
service
of
INn
-"
teeds fiOing to send Vinton Baptist Youth to Church Camp
nrpolrj. Dolin- .. property.
mowing, &amp; car washin1 lrom Jean's class. Homltlladt
this summer.
R..,ot~~tskms. Cell 806-881'open kettle vag. soup, homemade noodles &amp; pies, him,
Lunch also served.
1000 Ext. ClH 9108 fo&lt; cur'*"
hotdogs &amp; ham salad and etc .
repo lilt.
AUCTIONEER: LUNNI£ NEAL-614-367-7101
Vinton
Bapist-Pastor
Marvin
Sallee,
388-9017
Antique engine display. Something lor everyone. , :
1988 Brooktyn. 2 be*oom•.
Call if
have
donations.
.3100. 010. Muot be told. CoN
Come out lor the day and help the church.
;· _
114-378-1274 anyUmo.
DAN SMITH: AUCTIONEER-992-7301
!·
19781-10 BayvltwTraNwfor
To
consign
tall
Larry
Circle,
John
l
Rose,
lArry
Curtis
or
.;·
•Ia HI• 7k22 ft. ex.-ndo. 3
Randy· Rieber.
·
bedrooms. 1Yz beth. Nice.
A-Iced to 1111. Phone 304-773Cash
Positive 1.0.
Eats
54•8 ar 304-n3-8181.
"Not responsible for accidents or loss of property." . APRIL 30, 1988
10:00 A.M.
,len vont... Moblo Homo. 3

d..-••

13 ' l11111r 11108

Taxes-no one likes to think about them until they have to. But, if you put off
preparing for April15, you probably paid more than you should have. II you're
serious about minimizing this years tax liability, the time to act is now.

3 BR.,

Ellm Homo. 208 S. Fouo1h.

AVON- Sell Avon far ALL• ...

find n.W. u..t en. Smh:h
Buick·Pontiec, 1911 Eettem

Situations
Wanted

Mldclaport. .Qhlo. Room end
board for -larehtnna. Sptclal
'*'In prM1o homo. 114-112-

Ctll 814-448-3358.

lt4-448-3872
TOP CASH ptid for '83 model

10008UNBEDS
TONINO TABLES
• WOlfF T.,nlng

In Memoriam

Buying dfllly gold., silver coins.
rings, jtwetry, •ertlng w.e, old
coina. llrge currency. Top prt.

88.

do bu•ln- wtth piiDDle vou
know, Md NOT lo lind money
tJwough t,_ m.. until you hwe
invenlg•ld 1he off..ng.

a.-.

Uood Mobile H....... Coll1·814448-0178.

m.,er Auctioneer- 814-2415-

--dl

Chllham-

INOnCE I
OliO VALLEY PUBLISH· 131,000. Cttt 114-441-2205.
lNG CO.
lllot yoor

THE

....... Cell 114-2411-1118 ...
448:1543.

with or wtthout
Lanv Uvoly-114-

Old 1800'aloa c.bin orhou .. to
restore. C.lll14-241-1448.

W.demaver'a A..:tlon Servlce-

6 Lost and Found

1t73-1tn. Would repoy poo-

mever. 814-2.t.6-&amp;152.

moton. Cell
388-9303.
~~:8~42-2357 "' 114-742- "8,------.P"'u"'b'li,..c...,S"'a""l"e--.ld 1•o to buy: 4,000 or
&amp; Auction
&amp;,000 Ford Dietel Tr1ctor In
One eighth Wolfpuppl•. Cats tA
ooodgond. eon 816-448-3413.
all k\ndo.304-896-3083.

for d..c.,dMta Dr. John Cor·
nell end Chr)ltl.,. who died

2021

elr cond .. new roof, llumklum
siding. Excetlent condition.

m• •

hold furnilhlng. Mflrlln Wede-

Junk C.n

Bus ln . .
Opportunity

• -.ulpment. Help wtth flnaotolng equlpnwtt II ewell eble. Le ••
on buillno to-- tn Galtlpoh,
Ohio.
lnqulrt• D~Wir'

antiqu ... Will buy entn hou ...

Furniture. ..tiquea. gi . .Mre, ·
etothing. etc. 4 tamill81. 10:00..

21

lmel grooery ltOr. wlrh acll·
lent
dell dept Inventory

w... to buy: u..d furnkurelft d

April25th.21thand27th. 1 mile
north of Chtet• on 51. Rt. 7.

41

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION "

Would vou lk1 1 ftiM' look lor
sprlng?CeUMeryKeycoMUitent
lor ofr,ttlsclal-

off•. Ctll814-448-l980.

Camp the • tl'lil•for -'• on
Blue Lake &amp; Raccoon Creek.

remodlltng, Will build a•-a•.
• outta~Mclnr· Mlnorc•pem.,

wOitt ontt . 1

Gellis H.S, •35.000 or bet1

Sunday Times-

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

41

50ecr•· Y2mlteoff 11150 p..t No.

(&gt;

lope to : HOMECRAFTS. P.O. 304-171-1412 ... 878-7274.
Box 7802, Huntington, WV
25778.
l...llww'nt Qlt and trhnmtd. Call
114-«e-8381.
Hollct.{-lnn It Gellipoh now
aecepUng epplc8tlo.. for Hot· J &amp; A'o Aaolng- Siding &amp;

W~nted Menegw: Full 1llfVIce
· ttvling Mlon. W-t• J)lu1 commf•llon. pefd holklllf a we•
tion. lnsu,.nce l'lllebla Apptw'

"Muntclpat power plants don' t

AVAILABLE IN EMERGENCY ROOM ON REQUEST

D

\WI had my ldnd Dftruh •ctpt
e.- bodl•- •20 olclcup--Call

Cent•.

~~~~r:~!'s~posatts In the interest

Gallbladder, Thyroid
Fracture Surgery
Appendix, Hernias
Pacemakers
Artery &amp; Vein Surgery
Lung Surgery
Gynecologic Surgery .................... :................ Veterans Memorial Hospital

(614) 446-4351

No experience Ne~•ry. Send
setf-eddreaaecl, t111mpad .,v•·

Farms for Sale

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Its. Apptvet ~enlcH•II Nuraing
At. 2 Box 282. Bict.etl.

And last month, he said, Toledo
Edison's parent firm, Centerlor
Energy Corp., cut dividends to
shareholders by 37.5 percent as
partofamovetohoklratesdown.
Centerlor has also drastically
reduced the number of CEI and
Toledo Edison employees In a
budget-cutting move.
State Rep. CUI! Skeen, DAkron, sponsor of House Blll747,

GENERAL, ORTHOPEDIC &amp; VASCULAR SURGERY
Breast, Colon, Stomach
Hlp &amp; Knee Replacement

pair. Caiii14-379-2•18-

CI...ing-Hou• • offioM. A•f·
EARN A8 MUCH at •300 .,.,_
Cell 114-«e-1718 or
WEEKLY, euwnbfying procltctl 2411-1313.
In your home. ltert right away.

i~~~~~me~::~~~inflationover

Fracture Cure
Orthopedic Exams
Hemorrhoidal Treatment
Second Opinions
(By Referral)

"'m'•

Odd Jobs
Sundlckl. elding. peinting. 10of·
ing. c•J)Int• work. Ml• re-

good leed . . hlp • m.,"ttrMRt

OUTPATIENT SERVICES &amp; SURGERY

I

customers, that costs all of my
constltuen_ts who buy from Ohio
Edison more money."
Skeen said he expects a floor
vote on his bill sometime this
year.

33

188 tens. Autlilnd township,
remodel.:! 13 bedroom houll
wfth 11h bllhs, 2 b•na. 3 other
bulldlngt, pond, !roe gao, mln•111 induded. Cell 1fter 5p.m.
I I 4-742-2341.

• tkllt. h:tll ... talary &amp; _ ..,

MALCOLM W. LENTZ, M.D.

HILLCREST SURGICAL CLINIC, INC.
563 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, Ohio

hiring. Your arM. 80&amp;-117·
8000, ext, R-10 189 for CURtnt
Fed•ll lilt,

Nee.-.: Atel...,t Director of
Nursing for 100 bed aldll.t
nurltngfeclllty. Mutt be RNwtth

IDLLCREST SURGICAL CLINIC, INC.
Minor Surgery
Skin Cancer Removal
Colon&amp; Rectal Exams
Breast Exams
Vasectomy

NM ENT JO 88 ,
. 158,230/yr, Now

t/Hott"'· AP~tr In piN'Ion. No
phone calls.

' i~;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;;;;;;';;;;~~~~p~ay~t~ax~e~s,~th~ey~·r~e~no~t~u~n~de~r.i
11
I

Skeen.
"Every customer that's taken
from my Utility - in this case
Ohio Edison .,.. those customers
are figured into their rate base.
So when Ohio Edison loses

'

GOV~ R
018.~

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

18 Wanted to Do

Help Wanted

11

Communities consider public power systems

Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

EmpiDJIIIInt S.rvice
l0136
Strllt

:&gt;

MODERN FURIIITUR£ &amp; MISC.: Nice modern curio cabin!~~;-:
full maple bed; 3-tier curio wnh adtuslable arms; pictur~­
living room suite and solas; painted maple chest ol drawl!fll:
maple mirrored driiSser and night table; beds; met1l utiliW"'
cabinets; 2-dinette sets; pots/pans; fruit iaiS; sin lie pedestl::,
melal des~ soft goods; household goods; cooling ~-emr~.
lamps; stands &amp; tables; good assortme~l of accessories sutll·,
as decorted vases/animal &amp; bird ligures/vaseline opal vast')
. /hen &amp;chick on next/plates/pitchers/Imperial slaa m,..-:•
and much more; mod~ lo'e seat; porch swing and mall(:
additional ttems!
••

New &amp; UHd Farm &amp; lnclultrilll Equlpi!Mint Of All Klndo
Cons•gnments from several Local Farms and Dea le rs.
Many •terns at Absolute Auct•o~

TRACTORS; J.D., I. H., c .... M.F •. Ford, Etc.
Assoned Makes &amp; Models to choose from 26 to 160 H.P.
lndustnal Equ•pment and salvage tractors

Tollage Equopmenl. Plows I lo 7 bouoms. d•scs

F1eld Cult•vators. Packe rs . Eh~ ;:-- Gnnder~M•xers ..
Combmes. Corn P1ckers . Grav1ty Bed Wagons. ·,

Auund &amp; Square Balers. Rakes &amp; Mowers of all konds
Toolo &amp; Egulpmem 10 ~1!11 E..ryonee need•.

-"'

• LUNCH SERVED- TRUCKING AVAILABLE •

Tri-Green
Interstate Equipment, Inc.
1499 U.S. Route 42 N.E.
London, Ohio 43140
14~ 879· 7731 - 879-7732 - 879-7649

Dick Green

0,.....

Judy Green Connie G. Bellah

Madison Co Airport &amp; Motels nearby
Locensed &amp; Bonded on favor ol the state ol Ohoo
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
TERMS: C.lh or check w/proper l.D.
'

'"

..

1

PLUS: Hom elite Xl-12 chain saw; long handle tools; 2-rolls it:
new woven fencing; 2-partial rolls of wo'en tenting chi':J;:
wire; scrap metal; old lumber; ~t ol platlor"\ sCIIes: 1 200 bales ol mixed hay; dehorners; spud bats; metal stoQ1':1
gate; plus much not listed!
:•
Terms: Cash lily of Sill or Chtck with Po1ltlwl 10 ~1
Churcll Lunch Will 8a AWIIIIIII1
-;·.
AUCTIONEERS NDT£: Ewrytllina wUI ill loki II •!ott~
-dillon. lost of 1111 ~- In lilrn1 ud lllllkhll 'j
kiWI rurs of dust Intact. Wt• your "rootitla t11r1t1 _Oj
clatiM.
pri•IIIVI i t - won't be ci~M~Iilltlllll
111 them home! Pt111 to spend lull t11w II 11111 urly flit:"
llom11tiiCI - GOOD All DAY AUCTION.
,..:
AUcnONEEIS:
:.;
OTTIE OPI'EIIAN AND JOHIIIIOlT£1
•

th••

(614) 315-7195 or 137-1201

•

.•

...~.•

.-·

�.·

.,

•
Page- 0-4- Sunday Times-Sentinel
42 Mobile Homes

46 Space for Rent

BRIDGE

for Rent
In Eur-•2 nice. ct.-- 2 SR .
mobile hOrnet'. 1200&amp; t 225per
mo. DeS) r~tqui.-.d. No pet1.
Adultt ontv . Call 814-245-

Trailer lots. Rt. 1 Locust Road.
back of K &amp; K Mobile Homes.
304-675-1076.

NORTH

51 Household Goods

AUCTION 1k FU RNITUAE 62
OUva St., Gallipolil,
NEW- 6 pe, wood group- t399 .
• Uvlng room aultet- 8199· 1599.

3 bedroom. nNr ChMhire. Call

Bunk beds With bedding- '8 199.

2 BR . eptt. 8 ciOtetl, kitch~
appl. furNthecl. W•her-Oryttr
hook·up, ww c•Pit n~~~:¥1¥
patn•d. deck. RegMcy, Inc.

Apts. Call 304-675-7738 "'

875-8104.

New completely furnlthed
apartment a mobile home in
city. Adult• ontr . Parldng. Cell

814-446-0338.
BEAUnRJL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES , AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 538 Jackson
Pike from t183 a mo. Walk to
I~P and movies. t$14-448-

2568. E.O.H.

apartments.
unfurniahed. one-bedroom,
atCM Md refrigerator. water
lnduded. UOO. • $226. per
month. AafarenCM and depotit
~tv-remodeled

Mulmum

r~uired.

OCQJPif'lcy:

2 a"-'lt. 1 child. Call 814-448-

4 249, 446-2328"' 446-4426.
Brooklllde ApartrMnta: Loc.ced
aftBulwlleRd.· 1 BR. tpecjoua
epwtrnentswhhmact.nldtchen
.,d w. . her-dryer haokul)l, c•
ble tel.,iaion available. Call

814-446-1932.

Upalain unfurnished apt. C.r·
pDd, utilltiel ..id. No children.
No potS.

Coli 814-446-1837.

Oown!awn-Modern1 BR .. com-

pl• kttchen. AC. c•JJ81· Call
814-446-0139.
Unfurnlthld apt.-2 BR . t186.
w. . ,_I d. StiM &amp;refrig. 1138
Seoond. OaUipolis. CaU 4464418 after 7 PM.
Furnlthed etfldency. t1 46. Util-

hloo poltl Sh.. both- 807
Second. Otlllpolll. Call 814•4&amp;-4411aft81' 7 PM.
Glrage iipl., furnished. t22&amp;.
UtUit. . paid. 291h Neil a.! lip~

J ertment-3 rooms &amp;
b•h. wid. air. Cleen. No peta.

aa't..-ue

Adults only. Call 614-4481519.

one Bedroom apu. In
Mldcl.,ort. Fur•hed or unfur·
1 iahed. Cell 614-992-6304 Or;
446-8898 oltor e. '
New

furnilhed apt.. 1 BR. eo7
Second, Olllipolil. S225 a mo.
Utlllti• paid. ~II 441-4411
eft•7 PM.

..-. Rio OrM1 de, nice 2 BR, S225
mo. Aefrlg. .tor, ltOtM &amp; water

turnlohotl No ..... Call 614446-80&amp;8.
Furmhed apt. for •nt in town.

Call 814-446-1423.
Or~~ciout

ltvlng. 1 and 2 bad-

room ..,.rtmantt at Village
Manor and Riverside Apart·
m..,U in Middleport. From
t215. lndudlng utllit•. Call

54 Misc . Merchandise
King tlze wl1er bed; I jolnt1 1
inch galvanized pipe, 21 ft .
'length; sofa and chair. Call

K8nmcwe Ml~a Oven. E•·
cell.-.. condition. leiS -... 2
ve•• otd. Q_irtl 241nch bicycle. 2
new *"and ...... 814-949-

614-98!&gt;4488.

986-4366.

of uaed h.!rnrture.

Western boots-

can

U Heut trucks end 1n111. . for
rant. 304-175-7421 .

+9 8 75
.

AUDREY F_CANADAY. REALTO~
ROBERT GORDON. REALTOR. ~46- 6 1 !6

:*

**

•**

614·446-3159.

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

GOOO USED. APPLIANCES
Wnhar1. dryers, refrlgeratott.
ranges. Skaggs Appllancee,
Upper Rlvar Rd. bMide Stone
Crest Motel. 814-448-7398.

Zenith color 19 inch TV wtth
stand, t125.00 . 30•· 875·

5090-

Doubl-e bed. 2 Iliac• c•pM:
lgr'Y and beltel like new". Call

Nortb

I+

Pass

3•
5+
6t
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

:

his hand by ruffing a spade low to
·draw West's nine of trumps with his
remaining queen, and that was a pre. carious 13 tricks.
Could West have set the contract
with a different lead? No, but East
could have set it by covering dummy's
heart IO with his king. When East then
ruffs each high spade with bis eight
and seven of hearts, forcing declarer
to use the queen and jack, West's
trump nine would be promoted to the
setting trick.
The contract is airtight if South
could see East's hand. The play would
go: diamond ace, spade ace, club to
dummy's queen and a club back to the
A·K (a diamond being pitched from
dummy), diamond ruff, spade king
ruffed and overruffed, and the last diamond ruffed. Now the heart 10 from
dummy traps East's king, and West's
nine does not get promoted.

TURECO.

956 Second A..... Oallipoiis,
0.-614-44&amp;-1 171
Ustd refrigeletors. air conditioner, rocker recliner.
RefTigerator. Good cond . S200.

Call 814-446-3848.

Brown carpet. Good condition.

Call 614-

44-8-8658 after 3:30PM.

PICKENS
FURNITURE
Dinettes. beds. bedding,
dretllrl, chest. couches. chain,
lamp•. coffee-end table~ . Every
d.,- Specl .... 'A mile out Jerrl~:;ho . 304-&amp;76-1460.
Good u1ed upright freez:er. Call
814--448-1412 or 448-7382.

Hide-a-bed, quean lllze. Brand
new, used 3 montha. t426. Call
814-742-2796 or 614-742·

James Jacoby's books "Jacoby on
Bridge" and "Jacoby on Card Games•
(written with his father, the late Os·
wald Jacoby) are now available at
bookstores. Both are published by
Pharos Boolrs.
•

3154.

King-sbe five piece bedroom
suite. Large sectional tola. All

excellent mndh:ton. Call 614-

949-2783.

@ liU, HEWSPAPER ENTERPRIBIE ASSN.

Queen siN mlttrftl end bo•

springs, lko • -· 304-8762918.

**
***

HavW!Ird Perft"' extended cvlc.
Pool flttar whh •It priming ·

pump. t178. 304-875-7393.

**

4x8 utllhy ... 11.,, 304-1762159.

i*
***
i
**

i

..**
't

*

:
**
*
**

55 Building Supplies

..
Bullting

245-8121Concrete blocb- .It ein•· yard
or delivery, M11on11nd. Galllp~
lis Block Co., 1 23'h Pine St.,

BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY SURROUNDINGS MAKE APERFECT
SETTING FOR THIS 3 BEDROOM COLONIAL HOME. FORMAL
DINING ROOM, DEN. IN -GROUND POOL, 5 ACRES. $60.000.

Gtslllpolla. Ohio. Call 614·4462783.
.

RIO GRANDE AREA __ .SMALL FARM .. ..17 ACRES .. .3 BED ROOM, 2 BATH RANCH HOME HAS LARGE LI VING ROOM
WITH FIREPLACE. .. EAT-IN KITCHEN ...BARN.. .SEVERAL
OTHER OUTBLDG . . .TOBACCO BASE ... GREAT PROPERTY
FOR AFAMILY WHO LOVES PETS AND ROOM TOROAM ..
$47,500. JUST LI STED'
.

54 Misc. Merchandise

SHORT ON CASH? OWNER WILL CONSIDER HOLDING ASECOND MORTGAGE FOR PART OF THE DOWN PAYMENT .. .NICE
COUNTRY HOME HAS FOUR BEDROOMS .. .FORMAL DINING
ROOM ... NICE KITCHEN WITH AMPLE CABINET SPACE . . .
RANGE AND DISHWASHER ...NEW FURNACE. ..CARPORT.. .
THIRTY ACRES BEAUTIFUL LAND SURROUND HOME. ..CON VENIENT LOCATION. $54,900.

WAAlt(IU$(5 • ~£Tll: • STOR-'Gf
5110WA00MS • OHICES • SH0'S

THE RIVER VIEW FROM THE FRONT DECK OFTHIS
*** ENJOY
PRETTY LOG HOME .. COZY 2 GEOROOM HASCATHEDRAL
WOOD-BURNING STOVE, HEARTH, HANNAN
*** CEILINGS,
TRACE SCHOOLS. $29.900
* NICE AND PRIVATE - APPROX. 2 ACRES. SfORY FRAME
HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS. FULL BASEMENT WITH GARAGE
:* SCHOOLS.
WOODED SURROUNDINGS. KYGER CREEK
** BEAUTIFUL$33.900.
*: $29,000- SPACIOUS MODULAR, LOCATED IN COUNTRY

tfAII MOliNO CONSTIIUCTIOfo.
THf EN~G'f' I'EAFOfU~(fl•
FOil A.lfl EFJICilNC'

&gt;t

,._

&gt;t
ltJt.
Jt.

AIR SUBOI~ISION , 3 BEDROOMS . 2 BATHS, GAS FURNACE
CENT. AIR , LARGE LOT. GREAT PLACE FOR A FAMILY .. :
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS.
.

LE GRANDE- COZY 3. BEDROOM. HAS FIREPLACE IN LIV·
lNG ROOM, FAMILY ROOM OFF KITCHEN , FENCED
~ BACKYARD, WELL CONSTRUCTED HOME 'RECENTLY
PAINTED. $44,000.
.

*

BARGAIN HUNTING? THIS HOME IS AN EXCELLENT
BUY... 3 BEDROOMS. . .LARGE FAMILY ROOM . . .NICE CAR·
PETING. · .EAT·IN KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH RANGE AND
REFRIG . .CEILING FANS ...ATTIC FAN... AND CENTRAL AIR
SCCOHN D. TLSO KEEP YOU COOL THIS SUMMER ..KYGER CREEK
00 .. .$43,000.

•
'•

-------;;-::~~---;------ ' •.
Real Estate General

ble prices. Flnenclng_availebleto
qUIIifiad buyers. Upper River
Rd. Galt 0 . 614-4,6-7444.

'

Seert Coldtpot refrigerator,
Sunnry metro pee..- stove. both
alec. Har ... lt gold, good oond.

614-992-7787. EOH

992-3711. EOH.

bedroomt. Kitchen fur,.hed. E.
~n. Pomeroy. 814-992-8215

Antiques

bedroom aplrtments

In Pomeroy. Deposit ..,quired.

Call 814-992-8723 after 5 :00.
Nice one bedroom •pertment
with eppliences. c•pet. and
wether-dryer hook-up. In nice
neighborhood In G•llipolie.
t220. per month. Call814-448-

9&amp;10.
APARTMENTS. "19bile homes.
houtes. Pt. PleaaentandGalllpo111. 814-448-8221 .
Ba•ch Strwt:. Middl.ort, Ohio,
2 bedroom turnllhed apt, utlltl• pilld. ..terenceunddepolit.

304-882·28118.

45

1 PC. FIBERGLASS TUB &amp; SHOWER, white and colors_
'159.95 ea. (2 fo1 1300.00) (4 For
WHITE STEEL BATH TU9S
'59.95 ea. (2 for 1100.00)
BLUE OR GOLD COMMODES '49.95 ea. (2 for '85.00)
BLUE OR GOLD PEDESTAL LAVATORIES
140.00 ea. (2 for 175.00)
KITCHEN AND VANITY POST FORM COUNTER TOPS
6'·8'·10'12' Pes_
'1-99 lin. ft.
2 GAL. BUCKETS WHITE K·LUX MORTAR or WHITE TEX·
lURED WALL PAINT
2 GAL $4.95
TEMPERED INSULATED GLASS PANELS
72"x32"xo/a $29.95 ea_ 34 pc. up $25.00 ea.
STEEL PORCELAIN SINKS, white &amp; bone, single bowl
21'x~4" or 20"x16" $6.00 ea.; double bowl 21"x32" or
19"x32" or 16"x32" ($8.00 ea.) 12 pk. minimum.
WAFER BOARD SQ. EDGE ('l•x4x8 46 pc_ lilts $6.95 ea.);
7/16x4d-76 pc. lilts. $4.95 ea.); Tongue &amp;Groove (Va·
$6.95) (Va-$7.95),
·
SHOP GMDE YELLOW PINE T-111 SIDING. o/ax4x8 • 56
pes. lifts $10.00 ea. (Yax4x9 • $12.00 ea.).
PRIMED BEADED MASONIC LAP SIDING, 7/16"x8"x16'
20 sq. lifts. $18.00 pr. sq.
15 WT. fEll ROOF PAPER. 20 Pool Iills $5.99 roll - 90 lb.
mineral surface (7.95 roll). ·
PLASTIC COUNTER TOP MATERIAL, choice colors, 61K
.
. sq. ft.
8 OR 16 PEN. NAILS SO 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. awning. double
hung. bows, at Wholesale Cost,

•soo.oo

Specializing in Pole Build·
ings. Designed to meet
Any sizei of 10 colors.
FREE ESTIMATE &lt;in post
b!das. and package deals$ave hundreds, even lhou14nds of dollars.
Local Sales
Representative
Donna Crisenbery
E.S.R •• Bax 166
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

GnAWAY RETREAT
Owner financing, wilh down payment, approx: 7 miles from
Gallipolis. Ideal location. Excellent condition, overlooks Blue
and Raccoon C1eek, 23 n. travel trailer. sun deck, rural
septic system, and eleclric. Fishing, boating. hunting:
relaxing.
#584

54 Misc. Merchandise

or 814-992-3523.
Tw~four

Furnished Rooms

Furnlstwd room-919 Second
A• .• Gallipolis. 1125 e mo.
UtUiti• I* d. Slnglem .. e. Sh . .
b.C.h. C.ll441·44181ft•7PM.
Rooms for ~ttnt·Wiek 011 month.
llarting at 1120 a mo. a.llla

H-·114-446-8880.

SWIMMING POOLS· $988

ORDER NOW · PAY LATER

H~ge 31' 0\41 pool with deck.
fence &amp; filter. lns•llation &amp;
finlncing available. 1-800.345-

0948.
Steel I buma-6 in .xt\ln. x8
ft.)l7/ 18in. no each. Channel
lron-10 ft . $20 ..ch. Call

614-387-7819 oh• 6 PM.
Sand non ... tool box for pic:*.up.
Colt 814-387·0448.

Fist. woodburning .aove plue

truck toed of vyood. Uvlng room

Ulbl•. Call aft.- 8 PM, &amp;14448-9284.
Cash regl111r, milk cooler.

Commerciala .. ee. 1400squere

fHt. corMr Seoond and Pine.
:;'/.. parldng In re.-. Cell
4249. 446-2325 or 4464428.
Molllil• tM.ma lot. eo ft . or

4th. Golllpolls.
•-~...
711-_.,no
pold. Call 446-4418

ott• 7 PM.

l*l••·

940 Toro riding mower, 38 Inch
cut. new than blade. Calf

COUNTRY M061LE HomoP•It.
"ou•
33. North of Pomeroy.
11-1 troll•a. Call 814-992·

e wlls.

old pupplt~-part u ....
Apto. TWin lin boollc•• bed
with bo•sprtnp &amp; mllft,..., &amp;
nlghtltlnd. t71. Po,..crlb &amp;
Mlh6nette, 115. For mor.lntor.

Sen.Powwr Mfler I eiiiCtlic hot

wat• heater. Used 8 montha.
t100. c•1 814-21&amp;-1436.

2 prDm gowne ~-•Clunny
•ck,
3 ••·
onoa. Cell
8 14-4411-79 23-

wo,

lou"l• bod. drop•. odd c:hllro.
Call ,14·2811-1768.

fii;Ke for arMII trill... AJI
ttooll-ups. C.ble. Alto efficiency
,ooms, •r end clble. ~on.

...-om dr..., for •le. Worn
· - · 11111'&amp;-6, Atklna
t:h.

Spacious mobile hOlM lou for
rent. F•mMv Pride Mobile Home
~•k. G.. IIDOIIo Forry, W. Vo.

OIRT CHEAP OIAMONDS,
Emoroldto on d Soppl*• 28
.tones for •25.00. All retll. Call
{11 805-887·6000 Ext. DX·
1000.

W.Vo. Coli 304-773-8181.

304-675-3073-

•

RIO GRANDE AREA - 20 acres, m/1 v; ry
. OICe ho,me has been remodeled and offers 3
BRs. I~ baths, .kitchen with oven, range,
wood burner, fam1ly room/ din 1rrg combo LR
heat pump/cent. air, 30x30 garage laund,Y
rm .• i2x6S mobile home on property. SW
school d1strtct. Call lor appointment.

Call for

more

PL£NTY OF ROOM FOR EVERYONE- Laml
Drive, brick ranch , 3/ 4 bedrooms. 2 baths,
equipped kitchen. den, fam1ly room, LR,
sewing room, dinin&amp; laundry. 2 fireplaces.
gas heat cent. a11. · a~ached garage plus
carport, batio, privacy fence, city schools.
Make an appointment today.

HOME AND ONE HALF ACRE FOR SALE1050 sq. ft. of living space, LR, kitchen,
dining rm., bath. $10,900. Call for more
intormation..
25 ACRES M/L, ON STATE RT. 160- Old
barn and concrete block garage on property.
Rural water available. Callloday.

COMII!ERCIAL SITE FDR SALE- Locatelf at
22D6 Eastern. Ave. All utilrties available_

Round kftchan •ble. C.taln's

7479.

mining business. Owner may cons1der

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - 9.5
acres m/1. Morgan Twp_Frontage on Rt.l60.
Call for details.
$21.0001- 3.5 acres m/1, 2story frame. 3
bedrooms, living rm., kitchen, dining rm.,
storm windows and doors, basemen'. Very
nice.

...1814-388-8602.

*•

THIS COULD BE THE ONE FOR YOU Ranch style home and approx. half an acre. 3
BRs, LR. kitchen, FR. bath. lireplace. WB
.stove, 2 car attached garage, 16x32 pool,
ch~n link fence.

THIS HOME OFFERS A VIEW OF THE OHIO
RIVER THAT JUST OOESN1 QUIT!!- The
front of this home faces the river and the
owners have uself glass to its full advantage.
Beautiful l~ing room wrth mi~rored wall
reflecting the nver view, beamed ceilings,
stone firl!fllace, dinette, equippelf kilchen, 3
or 4 bedrooms. family room, rec. room. 3
baths, 2 car garage. central air.

bu~tler blodc ta~e. booth• &amp;
.. bl•. popd ..
C.ll814446-9782 llltOf 5 PM.

614-446-4044.

46 Space for Rent

OFFERS EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT
- Close to school, store and church. Very
nice home wrth 4 BRs. LR. kitchen. 2 baths.
carpet, heat pump/ cent. air. att'ached
garage, pool. Call for an appainlment today
to view this home.
PRICE REDUCED TO $39,900! - GREAT
BEGINNER HOME - This home offers a
large LR with !~replace, k1tchen, dining area,
3 BRs, bath, full basement, 1 car garage,
deck, lenced yard just minutes to town on Rt.
141. Call for an appointment.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - PERRY TWP.
- NEAR CORA - 6000 sq. ft. steel bldg.,
ideal for anyone in truckm&amp; drilling or
leasing 01 financing.
information.

ua ..
Call 61'4·992-2982 Wtninga.

7914.

57

Muaey Fr-u.-son 185 di-e.

oorvt. 14000-Firm.

81 Farm Equipment
CROSS&amp; SONS
U.S . 35 W•t. Jackeon, ot o .

814-286-6481.

MlllltV Ferguson, NCIW Holland.
Buth Hog Ssl• &amp;. Senlfce. Over
40 used t•cton to chooee from
8r: oompiMI line of n81N &amp; uMd
equipment. L.-gect _.ection In

614-985-3368.

304-175-3190.

.

l.fiii.C. bel•. Modet 27. 8460.
Cell61 5·268-1118. No' SundiiV
calls.
'
Forgu- 8 ft. 3 pt. hitch pickup
dltk. Good condttlon. Call 814-

256-1484-

63

Livestock

, ath Ann~ Ben• lev

Pi8 $•t•
PM,

Wed.. Aprl 27, 7,3

Fayette Co . felrgrounde. W•
shlngton Court Hou•. Selling
200 hud·Duroes. HampDurOH, Hamp-Vorkl. S.rrowt
• Gilts. Remember
champion b•rOtN d the Ohio State
lair plus the champion It
F~yette, Green a. Ao1s w•e
pu!Cheead et l•t ._.., ..le.
Roger Bentiav 3112 Reed Rd ..

-.e

Quarter horu&amp;thoroughbred. 3

Garages
Storage

yr. old Mora. 0360. Call 614446-1558.
One riding hone &amp; one pony.

Buildings ,

Coli 614-446-2222.

Veal Calf I

I ...W. old baby' ctlidts, Silwr
leced W;an dotts. Barred Rocks.
white rock•. pu"••· Aoontr1.

Barns

LOW,
LOW
PRICES

FREE

Coli 614·258·8413.

ESTIMATES

Stallion Service AQHA. lncen·
tlvll Fund Palorrino SteiHon.

Offspring ovolloble for lnopoc-

Double~~~~ Construction

tion. NOQHA ellgable. t100.

614-94!1-2488.

286-1861

'

1sn Morcury Como&lt; 74.000
mi. Good wnd. Rrm-11000.
M.,- trlde for good truck. Cal

614-446-6013.

1911 "'wy Celeblrty Euro

Sh.,.. Auto.. AC, PS, PI;

TransporlaliOII

High Cl.-.noe Plows. John
OaiN 24T hay b ala-, Ford
tiAJtol•- All equipment in ax· 71 Auto's For Sale
eallent condttion . •Phore 614- 1-~-------,949-2763.
1982 Pontile Fir"*&lt;!. New
en glne, painf. 4 cy 1.. .-. dard
O.erborndltklndplo'NS. 3 point: thilt. Excel . b•gain- 13000. Call
hitch. 1 cement mixer. Call 814-446-0046 aft.- 5 PM.

1110 Oliver tr11ctor. axe c;bnd,

1980 Ol~y 1 ton Fl. PS. Pl.
81.000 mla t29110- Coll814-

Sport, V-8, 2 dr., 33,200ml•

Fergueon e ft . Dyna-Belance

Sabino, Ohio. 813-884-23Sil

QUALITY
WORKMANSHIP

Regitwld Sorrill ~., horw.
4 ..,.., old, m .-e B1r &amp; Leo
bloodline with ..ddle II bridle.
304-876-2173.
-

Mower. 2 tvwt... inch f•r..,son

1980 PonUc Surbird, 231-VI.
4 speed hatchba. ...-IP(MI•.
lou\t8f'l, aunrMf, Ponttac Ralty
rim. 41000 nog. Call304-6768812.

AM·FM·Cell., , tltl. Call 41~

386-82401981 Buldt Sky lorlt. 4 dr.. AC.

AM·FM·CIII-~

leege. Good

7211.

• cyl., high mi-

c.,. Call 114-44t-

1981 Dlttun 310. 4 dr.hMch-

b - Goodoond. Call814-3169967.
18n Plymouth, V·8. Good
cond. s&amp;oo. C.ll 81..,4467712.

0212.

1984 Monte C.rlo-52,000
miles. Whtte with red .....,lor,
bucket tuts, console. AC. PS.
P9. tilt. cruise, R.W.L.

1976 Monte Ctrlo. 11000. Call

446-9230.

1979 Pontiac Sunbird. PS. 2.5
liner 4 · cyl. Au n• good. Good
interior. S600. Cell-814-446-

ueoo. Call

614-U&amp;-1 847.

1981 Oldto. Cutlou. l.oododl
low mil .age. 12750 or tr~de tor

canl• or f•m

~tqulpment.

Calli

814-.46-4286.

*•·

814-387-0832 or

1981 Olncord Wagon. nh.
cruite, AM·FM. Aaldng •1100.

Call 814-446-020111981 Olda. Dolu 88 RoVoia
Aorida '*'· Excel

73.000mi~~J.

1984 Chwy Camero w!th Ttopa. Low mileege. Call 814448-9814 tfl• 6 PM.

shape. •2800ar tnlde tor4WD.
V·8, Jeep or truck of equal value.

Call 304-875-2241-

1985 Dodge DIYtorw TUrbo.
Good cond. Call814-448-9884
after 8 PM.

19 n Oodge Aspen SW. t380.
Call 614-44.6-9'780.
1983 Ford LTD Crown Vlctoris.
PS. PR, cruise. tlh. power
11111-locks·Wiindowe. AC, AM·
FM stereo. e~ono-ovardrlve .
7&amp;.000 ml•. One owner. Vwv
clean. Celll14-446-4044.
1982 Ch8VItte. 2 dr. v...,. good
cond. New clu.:h • bfak•·
11000. Call 614-182·1440.

Red Hat b•IJIIIntl Drug deall!l'a'
ewt, boata, Planes repo'd. Sur·
plus. Your Ana. Buy.n Guide.
111801-887·8000 Ext. 5·9108.
1.9 71 Cam•n;. L1'. Compl . .
bod!&lt;. Call814-992-3992.

1974 Volkl¥1111110" Beede. 1100
cc
onglno. Good
condition. GN• wcwk c•- 0111

tlu• """

814-992-8307- 4:00pm.

Rea I Eetate General

'-

JUDY DEWITT
J. Merrill Caner
Phyllis Loveday
Patrick Cochran
Sonny Garnes
Cheryl Lemley

446-6610
SOUTHERN HILLS I.E., INC.

TEN ACRES IN THE COUNTRY- 3 bedroom
home with 2 baths, k1tchen, range and
refrig., LR, carpet, woodburning stove,
several farm buildings. Call lor an appl.

ONE YEAR OLD RANCH style home offers 3·
BRs, I\\ baths, kitchen w/ refrig., range, OW,
lor mal dmin&amp; LR. carpet. heat pump, cent.
air. utilrty bldg., nice neighborhood. Call
today for an appointment. .

22 ACRE CHURCH CAMP FOR SALE
Numerous buildings including dining hall.
caretaker's trailer. cabins, pool. church
buildinP. If interested call lor more deta~led

AFFORDABLY PRICED AT JUST $29,900Close to c11y on Rt. 141 this home offe1s
kitchen. LR, family room, dimng room and
lull basement. large unattached block
garage. Call for an app01ntme~l.

information.

PRICE REDUCED BY $5.000!! ASKING
$54.900 - This home IS situatelf in a very
nice neighborhood al the edge of town and
offe1sapprox. 2,000 sq. ft., 4 BRs. 1\\ ba,hs.
kitchen, d~nette. LR, FR, woodburner, gas
heat, cent. air. attached gmge. City schools.
Make us an offer.

YOU'LL WANfTHIS ONE FOR YOURSELFLovely home just minutes lrom town on
lower Rl. 7.. Beautiful river view, 3 bedrms ..
2. baths, LR, equipped k1tchen. family rm .,
d1nette, 2 l1replaces, game rm .. laundry rm.,
c1ty schools. Call t&lt;xlay.

EXCELLENT STARTER HOME - $39,900 Ranch style home just 5 miles from town
offers 2 BRs. bath, kitchen w/stove and
side-by-side refri~&gt;.·. LR, carpet and hardwood, carport and covered patio. Trailer pad
on lot next to oouse. Crty school district. Call
today.

YOU ARE GOING TO LOVE THIS HOME! located on Jay Drive lhis b1·level home
offers everything you wan! for your fami!y•s
comfort. Kitchen .w/DW, d1spl.. range, refrig ..
IIVmg room. family rm .. dining rm., carpet,
gas heat. cent. air and wood and coal
burning stove, 2 car garage. 12x 16 storage
building,_city schools. Call today and make
an appomtment to see this nice home.

3 BEDROOM RANCH NEAR HMC - Other
features include eat·in krtchen, LR, bath,
laundry, attachelf garage. utility building,
nice flat yard. Call for an appointment.

OPEN HOUSE

•

S·UNDAY, APRIL 24
1 4 P.M.

••

'•

GUYAN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres m/1.
located south ol Mercerville. 20 A. tillable,
balance woods, tobacco base. Owner will
help finance.

TEN ACRES IN THE COUNTRY- 3 bedroom
home wrth 2 baths. k~chen. range and
refrig., LR. carpet. woodburning stove,
several farm buildings. Call for an appt.

29.8 ACRES MIL VACANT LAND- Fronts
on Rl. 160. Build or put a mobile home here_
$16,900.

69 ACRES VACANT LAND T~wnship. $23,000.

BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER VIEW- 40 acres
more or less, home srtes. Cily sc~ools.
'

Morgan

•

''

PEACE &amp;
come and see this cozy log
nestled on 42
acres more or less. 3 bedrooms, living room.
partial basement, electnc heat pump. Owner
willing to help wrth the financ1ng Inquire

NEW
Approx.
story 4 bedroom remodelelf home.
buildin&amp; cellar. garage, machinery shed.
setting. Priced in the 40's. Make an appointment
today.

dolghtful llfoltylo that call be youn. Truly a

MORE THAN YOU'D EKPECT. Very pleasant and
spolless. 3 bedrooms. 1 bath lrame and brick
ranch. Bright kitchen and formal dining area,
large 12' x26' family room and a~ached garage.
Located minutes kom Silver Bridge shopping for
convenience. Take a peep and you'll be
impressed.
#2542
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - 3 bedroom ranch,
spacious k1tchen, living room. bath, formal dining
utilily. Anachelf garage wrth elec. opene1. Fenced
back lawn, in·lown location. Price relfuced to
$43,000.
#2534
1\1 STORY FRAME HOME wrth 3 bedrooms. living
room, bath, dining room. Hardwood lloors.
Located in Porte1. Call for more information.

HOME Ill CITY- Older
wrth 2 bedrooms, bath. kitchen wrth br
noo~ formal dining living room, small den. large
pantry, utility room, part. basement, lois ol closet
space, lront porch. I car garage and deep lot.
rnced m $30s.
•
#
2560

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY

#~506

YOU'RE GONNA LOVE THIS HOUSE- This ~ not
your typical ranch. Ownet has done extensive
renovation. Custom built oak cabinets wrth wo1k
~land . Great room. free standing fireplace. 3
bedrooms. bath, all snuated on approx. 3 acres .
Be the lirst to see this new listing
#2555
NEW LISTING! £XCELLENT BUILDING SITE. 3.49 acres more or less of vacant land. Located
just outside of the city limns. Call lor more
information.

#2585.
FORCED SALE- Approx. 39 acres. 3 bedrooms,
2 bath kame bi·level. unanached garage. Owner
needs quick sale. Priced at $52,900.
#2538
LOVELY HOME- Start wrth double front doors to
entry. tri-level home wrth 3·4 bedrooms. open
living and dining room, knchen w~.h breakfast
noo~ large family room, 3baths. 2-car garage, all
newer carpet. Avery nice home in good location.
Convenient to shopping and hospilal.
.
#2559
GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE! THIS TillE YOU
CAN AFFORD m-You will know the care it has
hl{l as soon as you open the door. 3 bedroom
ranch. bath, living room, eat-in krtchen, utility,
approx. II acre lawn. Storage building. Within 4
miles of cily. SR 218. Pri~ in tM $40s.
#2578
'
PROBLEM SOLVER ,- Has your search for ·the
right home been Mpeless? You don't want to
spend lots of fixing? What a pleasant surprise in
store for you. This 2 bedroom ranch has had
tender loving care! Decorated nicely, chain link
fence surrounds bact&lt; lawn. Priced at $29,500.
#25n

#2537
COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS FINEST- Approx. 105
'!tres wrth newer contemporary stone and cedar
.tome. Spacious rooms. In-ground pool, nice barn.
Rutland area. Call for details.
#2574
LOCATION! Sen tel Drive! - Kids can walk to
school. 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, A· l condrtion.
·
#2515

.

SPARKLES INSIDE &amp; OUT~ Pride of ownership
shows throoghout this 3 bed1oom ranch. Alum.
siding. lui basement, dec~ gara2e, St. Rf. 35
West. Make an appointment today!
#2575

BROKER
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR

388-8166
379-2184
446-2230
446-8666
446-2707
742-3171

'

REDUCED $5,000 - If THIS OOESN1 IIOVE
YOU nothingw~t Outstanding 4bedroom, 2 story
home in Cenlenary with 2\\ baths, living room,
family room. formal dining 2 car garage, full
basement and much mora Call for more
information.
#2468

a

sq.
• baths home
.
room. · ing room, formal dining and
f11eplace, heat pump/central air. Snuatelf on over
an acre. Call lor more information.
#2558
LIKE NEW - Contemporary home_ 3 or 4
bedrooms, 2 full baths, office, large entertaining
1oom for the family or execulive. Well equipped
kitchen and f01mal dining area. Wrap-around
deck lacing beautiful valley. Muli-level svstem
(co~ . wood. or propane gas). 3 car garage and
workshop with app1ox. 3 ac1es of land_ #
2541
FARM LISTING - 160 acres. Private location.
Modern house, 6 rms., 1\0 baths. Private water
system, spring development. Tobacco base, barn,
lie house, many springs for livestock water
pasture. tillable land and woodland. Joins Wayne
National Forest. Good hunting and recreation .
Soulhwestern schools. Pr~celf in low ·$60s.
#2464
CLOSE TO TOWN, extra nice ranch wrth full
basement. 3 bedrooms, I ~ baths. living room,
dining room, 2 car garage. low maintenance home
sitting on approx. 1 acre.
#2556
$32,500-00. - 3 bedroom ranch overlooking
Raccoon C1eek. Access to boat ramp. Would make
a nice starter home or retirement home. Just the
lime of year for .this buy.
#2562
HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS and you can feel
the warmth and charm of this 2 story bnck
throughout. 3 bedrooms. spacious living room.
formal dining room, eat-in kitchen. bath, 2
enclosed porcht!S, basement. barn. garage, 17
acres. Private location. S1tuated at surlaced road .
Call today!
#2583
EDGE OF TOWN- 3 bedroom house. 2 car garage
with efficiency apartment. Nice neighborhood.
$32,(JOO. '

'

'

#2480

LOVELY 2 BEDIOOM HOME WITH SPACIOUS
LIVING ROOM, dining area and krtchen. Mud
room to the coverelf patio. ll basement. 1 car
a~ached garage, lighted closets. front porch, lac.
lawn. Located in Vinton,
*2505
TAKE ONE LOOK!- Just one little peep at this 3
bedroom ranch and you'll be sold. 2 baths, family
room, living roorn, eat·in krtchen, 2 car garage,
basement. Approx_ I acre. storage bu~din• •invl
sidin &amp; Priced $49,900.
12567

•

•

-~~~ alttactln

twe bedroom stucco and codar hOlM In a
wooded area. Gnonhousa, garage and an af·

prko of S.U ,500.
L,catlon: 37016 llntlltury ld., lloltt County, 1.2 mile
.
oH St. If, 143.

Put your trust in Number One:
, Cll988 Crntury 21 Roal Estate Corpprttion as trusleelor the NAF. ®and"
• trodtmorko of Cftltury 21 Rool Eotatt Corporation. Equ•l )lousing Opportunity \01

EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED ANDOPERATEI&gt;.

REAL ESTATE
•

Cell

ano. APttA-ACN ..-ena blood
line; Fee t75. Call &amp;14-9-'9·
2052.'-

Ford 503 skte delivery rwke.

&amp; L1vesluLk

Ff,INII Cub trlctOf with plows
.• cuhfvaton. v.y good wnditlon. 11800 for all or will
IOIHirtte. Call 814-448-4045.

Old uprig~ pilr'lo. Call 814441·4052 aft• Spm. .

814-286-66-22.

fH-388-9384.

Fnr111 Suppl1e::,

S.E. Ohio.

Musical
lnetruments

Aegll..-ed ~nt Sqlion ..,..
oAce. Bl&amp;~tiful ct.rk brown Tobi-

Good

BUILDING SUPPLIES-SAVE 50°/.

Ph. 614-256-6518

Callahan' a Uaed Tire Shop. Over
1 .000 tires. tires 1 2. 1 3. 1 4. 1 &amp;,
18. 18.5. 8 mil• out AI. 218.
Cell 814-266-8261 .

2 CocllMiel birds, 1 Pllrehtblrd,
3 hand mlde quUts, · 304-876·

Wan .. d: R .. ponslble party to
tllkeover lowmontNy payments
on tplnet plano. See Locslty, CIU
800..3~7-33•&amp; e•t. 102.

2526.

1 bedroom furnilhed affeciencv
apt . 1 upttllrt 1pt. with 2

Peir of t ..lned :=oon HciuNit to
Mil 011 tr11dator guns or anything
of aquel..,.lua. 114-7.t2-2821 .

1 5150011Yer Metor. plows. gr•ln
drMI. post drillor, t3.5110. 3800
Ford with Dyne Bou..-:e nlQ'Mr.
t4950. OwiW wll hence. C.tl

D.C. Metal Sails, Inc.
Cannelbur1, Ind. 47519

'.

304-676-2231 .

Buy or Sell. RIV•Ine Antjquet,
1124 E. Main Sueet. Pomeroy.
Hours; M,T,W 10..m. to 6p.m.,
Sunday 1 to &amp;p.m. 614-992·

_

WI Auop1
Food S t -

· Real Estate General

Mallohan Furnliure. Quality fur-

2 be~oom Apt. for tent. Car·
p.ted. Nice setting. L.au ndry
f.ciftt• available. ~II 614-

_

_

Sl1m1M Ktttena for sale. Call
. 114-448--4888 aft• I PM.

63

PENNS WAREHOUSE

niture 6 carpet 11 lowtilt PGIIi-

53

.

Reg. Hlmal.,... • Peul• Slue
Cream. Champion Bid. line.
•175. DtdiWed. Excel. pet
Fomol&amp; Coli 614-387-7611.

lndhtklull guitar l...ont. Be·
glnMfl. Sertoue Qul .. rlat. Bru ril*'dls Mutlc. &amp;14-.,48·0187.
Jtft Wamtl-r inlltrUetM. 814. .6-6077. Llmltod Oponl"fiS.

71 Auto's For Sala

Livestock

61 Farm Equipment

WELLSTON, OHIO
OPEN 8 TO 6
CLOSED THURS. &amp; SUNDAY
PHONE 614·3e4-3646

I~

Real Estate General

2 bedroom apartment on Lincoln
Hill Pomeroy. Ctll 814-9928639 .. 814-992-348S.

Moto~ola

Blodl, brldt. ....,., plp11, wi~
dowL lintelt, etc. Cla~de Wlntert, Rio Grende, 0 . Call 814--

•********************************~r*it*1t******~'*ir*''*'t*****~

Frlghlllre Heavy Duty Wesher
and Dryer, S100. Call61 4-985-

4178.

POMEROY

992-6910

Dl'lgonwynd C-m.-y Kennel.
CFA Hlm~l.,.n. P•slen and
Slem.. IUtten •· New AKC
Chow puppl•. ·Cell 114-44f..
3844 tfter 7PM .

Musical
Instruments

833-3483.

amond. He was now able to return to

CO~BIN 8o SNYOER FURNI·

514 EAST MAIN

ten••· w.v•. 18110-842·2434. 0111o 1·800.

Behind in a team match, South
. blasted to a shaky grand slam. (Seven
hearts would be a laydown if spades
split better and the heart king could be
picked up.) South won the . opening
lead, cashed the spade ace and led to
the club queen_He started the hearts
by leading the 10. When that held the
trick, he was still in dummy so he
played the spade king .. East ruffed
small; declarer overruffed with the
jack and cashed the A·K of clubs,
pitching dummy's small diamond. Declarer ruffed a diamond, played anoth·
er high spade ruffed by East's king and
overruffed, and then ruffed his last di·

J &amp; S FURNITURE
1415 Eaatwn A....
Living room tuitH 1179 &amp; up.
Bedroom eultltl t 399 &amp; up.

l!A

OHIO VALLEY-·BULK FOODS

·deltverv end

By James Jacoby

VllltV Furniture
New and Ullld furniture and
appllcancee : Call 614-4487572. Hourt9-6.

STOP IN FOR SOME AMISH BUnERr
CHEESE &amp; JEWEL EVANS BREAD
NEW &amp; USED COOK BOOKS

Portable si'na: llghled end unlighted. t 18 • t.379. Fr..

Living
dangerously

0322.

uo.

dlehw11her.

hbv bed complete. Mattress.
bumper peds. uc. cond. PYiced
ta aell. 2722 Uncoln Ave.
304-876-1800.

90 Dav• 11me as cMh with
epproyed credit. 3 Mil• aut
Butavllle Rd. Opl!ln 9am to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 814-448·

h.

a,.,.

good c:ond. t100.00. Sp.,ldlng
EucutNe golt dube. exc oond.
t1110. 00. Call 304-875-1355
ottor 8:30PM dolly .

East

Opening lead: t K

Sof• and chairs priced from
8395 to 1995. Tabl• S60 and
up to t128. Hide-a-beds f390
to 1595. Recliners *225 to
1375. Lampe 128 to 1125.
Dinette• 1109 and up to 1495.
Wood tabla w-8 chain 1285 to
1795. Deek 1100 up to 1375.
Hutche:t 1400 and up. Bunk
bedl compl .. e w-mattreues
1295andup to 1395. BlllbV beds
11 10. Mattrettel or box tpring1
full or twin 108. firm 178, and
188. Queen aet1 1225. King
1350. 4 drawer ch•l 189. Gun
cabinet~ I gun. Baby' manres••
136 &amp; 145. Bad tr.m• 120.
130 &amp; King fnlma t50. Good
Mlectlon of bedroom suh:es.
metal cabinetl, haadbo•ds 830
end up to 186.

Intermediate &amp; Beginnner
Call for lesson Times

304-17!&gt;1998 · - 5:00

LA.YNE'S FURNITURE

14~K28~

CAKE CLASSES FORMING

Pori•bl•

West

County Appliance, Inc. Good
u•d appltanC81 and TV 18'11.
Open SAM to BPM . Mon thru

START YOUR OWN
HERB GARDEN

eplleieh:l•. Sam SomarvAie. Rt
21 JunctlonlndependlncaAold.
Ean Ravenswood. Fri, s.-. Sun,
noon-8:00pm. 30~273-1855.

lnotollod teoo. 304-07&amp;-&amp;477.

'

Groom and Supplv Shop-Pel
Grooming. All brud1 ... AII
It\'*. l•m• Pet Food Dealer.
Julio Wobb Ph_ ~14-448-0231 .

HERB PLANTS HARD TO FIND FLOWERS

1 8 ft. Ulld MteUhe aystem.

25 LOCUST STREH. GAlliPOLIS. OHIO

57

SURPWS DENIM, army, tental
clothing. Md turk'¥ ••on
IOGn.. cemouflege gr-., black
white clothing. NO · chldct.

P&lt;&gt;lhlcol odvertlolng lmprlntod

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

S30.

Workbooto $18 8o up. {Stool 8o
soft toe).

tl09832

.AQJ53
tAH
.
+AKJI

suites. 1199- '299 . Desks,
wringer wether. a complete line
NEW-

lB. 446-3636cA~~

"K 8 7

.

Rapl Estate General

.Realty

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

54 Misc. Merchandise

*********************************************************

SOUTH

USED- S.dl, dr•••. bedraom

lis. Call 814-4411-4416 olt"'fY'
PM.
1 3 Court St.-2 8Ft. 2 b•hs.
ldhchen tur'*hed. w/w cwpet.
No petl. Off 1trM1 ~rldng.
•321amo. plusutiliti•. Dep. &amp;
t&lt;lf. Coli 614-U&amp;-4928.

112e 7 . 8oth WOfn Ofl~. 61.t-

+9

....

Full lite mattrea &amp; foundation

ttl r ting - 199. Recliners
ttenln9" S99.

Ave . Gallipoll1, OH.

Apartment
for · Rent

One while prom dre... lize 6-15
petite and one biiCk prom dran.

EAST

WEST
+JI0851
.9 2
tKQJ
+10 6 3

S.t. 614-448-1899. 827 3rd.

44

Used leroy 125 air compressor.
Needs some r~JPiirt . See at
Mldcbport Village Garage. P..-k
&amp; High Stt.

Real Estate General

t65 '

Sw.&lt;\IN

2 BR·. furNshed or unfurnished.
O.polit required. No peb. Call
aftw 5 PM, 814-448-1200.

2 bedrooml. furni1hed or unturnllhedtrallllf'. ..weklv ormomhlv
dapoeit required, 304-8751208.

Queen m•ttrns set. t50. Color

+Q2

2 ""' 6 14-44&amp;-0827.

Mobile home, 7mil•fromPolnt
Pl. . .nt. •ntdey, week. month.
Depolit an d ref eren co 304-1 7 51928.

54 Mise- Merchandise

l-ll-tl

+KQ 7 6 3 2
• 10 61

Mobile honoe for ,.nt. C.ll aft•

814-387·0682.

54 Misc. Merchandise

t.v .. S!;G. 2 ft.x4 ft. mlrra..'. 850.
1 ~75 Toyou. pickup, 1800. Call
81 4-.. 48-70, 9.

James Jacoby

Merchandise

446-2300.

54 Misc. Merchandise

24.1988

2477.

6863.·

14x70, 2 BR .. unfurnilhed on
prNete lot. tiJ: m ile from Holzer
~·••· Adu Ita only . all 614-

April 24, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Oh1o- Point Plt.as.mt. W. Va.

•·
Profeuional Real Estate
Services for Buyers and Sellers
with 6100 Cm'JTURY 21•

Offices Nationwide.

.

:

•

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

~

April 24, 1988

April 24, 1988
THAT OAill

PUUlll

S©~~lA-~f-tfS &lt;

WOlD
GAME

72

1 9 81 Crown' VIctori&amp; 110.000.
One owner. 22.000mifa 1983

1979 Dodge. V· l .-ncllrd.
Elilcel. running oond. Clll 114-

Ford A1nger. *31,00. One
awrw. 81,000 mil&amp; Call 114-

_ _ _ _...:...__: Edit•d bt;; ClAY R. POLLAN

992· 2374.

nge the
scrambled
0 Rearra
words be low ro make 6
~

1980 Z-28. T·toP-. crulte, r•r.
PW, 13,000.00 or make o"tr.
1954 Chovy lo~Air. .,, TOO.OO

.s• mple words

Pr 1nt letTers of
eoch 1n 1!s l1ne of squares.

mike off•. Phone 304-8153427 o. 304-I?S.HOII.

o~

. · ~~-.:-P~R;....:...I.,.:.T_..:C:-..-::..S...---ll

1984 Ford EX P. eun roof. I
call lifter 5:00, 304-17111 121.

. 11I I l
1

71 Auto's For Sale

2

1985 Dodae DIY toni Tul't)o Z,
loaded. SHARP, *7, 700.00.
1983 Dodge 100 ES. l,.dod.
exc cond. t4. 500.00.
fr•
both c ... must •II m.lle .,
off• on either. 304-8715-5301.

new-

1 983 C.diUK Reetwood De·
Legume T-top,loededwhh • M

•

38,000mM•. Exc. Cond.brown
m .... lic. Call 304-372·1310.

1979 Morcurv Capri rolly - "
f&lt;T 1982 Hondo C8900. 1979
Mercurv Capri f&lt;T. 304-1711e394.

'75 Chrysler New York
Braughrn air, tih:, cruise, PI,
PS, vinyl top, le•hlr interior,
*650.00. 304-1711-4144.
'&amp;1-Oldl CUll . . Su.,.,..e. n_,
brak•. new
n.., wheel
be•lnga end ball )oinla. Black
with burgendl Interior.
• 1.100.00. 304- 711-5438 af.
ter 4:00.

tir•.

Truc;ks for Sale

371-UII.

1t74 F~ F-1 00
Y· l. M.lto. ......

114-441-4041.

SUPM'

•eso.

c•lb.
Cell

72

79 Ford F250 4114. Call Henry
V~nMeter. 304-773-5638.

73

74

Trucks for Sale

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1981 Suz..Jd OS 750. 4000

1 987 Dodao R1m 10. Coli
114-441-2117.

1181 Joop Com,.,dlo
lporttruck. . _ . wkh sltwr

I I - 4 apd. I .W.B.
Colll14-2111-1327.

•asoo.

800 c... bul-. 1984

pl.... p

,..It

F 210, 381. 4 apd. CR
280 Hondl Elsinore. C.ll 114441-3040.

tt11411 &amp; I • her Cf1Pqin chllrt &amp;
loungo. Coli 114-2Se.l327.

•I•
or nd•1971 jC} -7
J••·
11100 or Hit otftr. C1ll
114-388-8754.

1978 Hondlt 760, S550. Cell
114-4411-0758.

7346.

YMWhe 750 Msclm.
Good oond. Oaii814· 24S.9192
1982

eft• 8 PM.

PS, PB, PD iodtt, dlt, AM·fM·

1983 tlonde XR 200 A. Good
cond : *495. Call 81 4-317·
7105afler 5 PM.

cycle sounds. new tir ... menv
ex u.s, 304-882·3397.

1978CIIowy4a4. 310.Mito.PS.
PB. t~ whool 114-141-2237.

1 !J71 Dodge ven. e cvl .. 3 tpd.
on column. teoo.Cell814-38 e.
9119.
.

1979CX500, tlte, cond. for .. le
or tnlde. $900. Arm . 304-8754090.

1911 R - a FIM. 10 fl.. 2
S p - With ..... high ... w..
n.w twp. EllCell• concltk»n.
Coli 814-941-24111.

1980Chwy4x4plckup. PS, PB,
515.000 ect.-1 mil•. excel.
cond. Alto OIIYer lfllctOf. Cell
114-379-2788.

1973Dotavnpldl· ..,. To-. 4
no 1e11tt. Good running
...... lon. fiiO. 11178 4•4
Plymouth Troll Du-. Moo.•

1978 Ch.,..,.. v • . 11 pel·
nnger former school bus.

••d.

Auto, .,r, am·fm. t1 475. C•ll

114-11811-4311.

Ao. . h condition. Mlnlm.~m. ac-cifolod. a200. Contact Molga

lncktstrl•. Inc., P.O . Box 307,
John St. , Syreeu ... Ohio

45778. Caiii14-992-HB1 .

1170 Fard pic:lwp. .,.,. cuat...,

v.a. 3 ap.1171 Holld..,Tr"""'•

•~contalnod, 22 fl. 304175-1314.

fullY

1918.J••Wagoi"'MMf, t900.00.
Runt good. 4 good AT t1'8ck•

tlrM. 304-882-2019 .tter 8:00

om.

Honda CB900 fully dres1ed,

75

Painting, bo (Jw' work. tune-upbrak-. etc. MinOt inechenic
work. Csl1614-4'4&amp;-7572. afl•
5 PM· 44e.l441.

~

Boats and
Motors for Sale

28 ft. BeyNner etu...r. 1988
wide beam, ell electronic; g ..ev.
canws. etc. 3150 V· B eng..
sleept S . Verv low hours.
S27,500. C•lll04-!27-8890.

Spinet-Console Plmo Bar!JIIIn·
Wented: R"ponaible party to
1akeover lowmanthly payments
on SPinet piano. See locally. C.ll
800-327-3345. axt. 102.

Travel tr8H•. 21 ft. Eac:elfent
c:ondiUon. S2800. c.ll 304882· 2071.

1917 Amari_,• P•k Modol
bOll•. 38 fl. lorfg. 2 tip
outL w / d, storm windOws, eir.

.~~ ·.&lt;?!. 0/md
~~~~k

&amp; Accessories

lillB .

Home
Improvements

Tr" &amp; sti.ITip rtmOYIII. New
,.,,._ ttone, mulch. th.te
A•ll•. top aoil.
Don't Landleepll • 81"""S..

,,...., •hNI•.

9~48 .
ui11 . 21 fl..
homo.
4o.ooo Cl
-~iila:l ...&lt;wS: RC remodeling. Odd jobs·
COnd. t850Q.

naa.

C.pentry. Free eetlmM•. Cell

85
St8rk1 Tr" end t..Nn S.,vice,

1-.vn c•e. t•dtciPing. stump
removtl, 304· 57&amp;-2842 or
57e.2903 .

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

11 4-381-8491 .

· CAAT!'R'S PWMBING
f&lt;ND HEATING
Cor. Fourth snd Pin•·
Gellloofls. Ohio
Pbonlll 81 .... 446-3888 or 81444&amp;-4477

.·

450 2nd AVE.
446-6806

Electrical

84

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

&amp; Refrigeration

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER. 388-8828
RUTH GOODY. ~EALTOR , 379-2128
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR. 25S-0251
BRENDA WRIGHT. REALTOR, 388· 8284
LEESA CLARK. REALTOR . 441-3038
ALICE MAY , RE~LTOR, 388·8109

Fetty Tr• TrimminQ. d..-np
,.mowl. Cell 304-175-1331 .
Rotary or cable
.' :

81

t~

drilling.

Moet-....llscampiMedumedev.
PUmp • • tn d 181'Vice. 304-

Horne

8911-3802

Improvements

R•Jdentl.r or •comrnerclli wlr·
iog. New Mrvice or repsiu.
Llcenltd ...ctrici.,. Es1inwte
free. Ridenour Electrlcel, 30 ....
1711-1788.

'~..
fi·

Ollerd Wctr S•vlce: PDols,
Ciaternt, Wellt. DeU...rery Any·
lime. Cell 514-448-7404-No
Sundey c•l• .

J &amp; J W•er S•vlce. Swimming

pools. eiaterns. ..... u•. Ph. I 14245-9285.

R Ia A Wat., S.-v~ Pools.
cia 1erns , wella. lmmecll'•te 1 , 000 cw 2,000gallonade1Wry.
Call 304-675-8370.
Pall Rupe, J,. Waer Service.
cit..-ns, Mtlt. c.ll 8144411-3171 .
~ols,

Watte rton ' 1 Weter Hauling.
reasonebfe rate~ . immediace
2. 000 gallon delfvery, cittwna,'
pools, well, etc. c all 304-8782919.

87

Upholstery

Mowrey's Upholstering .-rvlng
trl county area 22.,..•s.Thebelt
in fumttu .. upholattring. C.ll

304 - &amp;75 - 4154 for free
· estimatn.

' L\ 4

f.~.
' • I

'i.

~

Tr~nahlno-i.•onebleret. . WI·
ter, electric, u•. dreinegeln•.
Pipe &amp; fixture~ M da.count. Cell
114-4411-1808.

·.: '

~•'

r-----. --- w------------ ·-- -c

.. 'tl31000 3NIM e
6U!J9PJO pue Jeq 841 01 dn 6u!~11aq
~OQMO~ 941 5e4 UJOIS8M 8W!I·Pt0 841
10 UO!SJ9h NI9U 841 .. .J9W!I PIO 941
P!BS ,,'p96U"Bl.l:l e.-.el.I9JnS S9W!1 •. .

l:f:nooo 3NIM
D'IZDIZ
DN01eo
SA lfM11f
31DNir
l:fnOA30
ldll:fOS
Sl:J?-i'VIfl:fas

LIFE'S TOO SHORT! - Relax and renew yourself
in thiS new rustic cedar contemporary. Vau~ed
ceiling in entrance and livin g room. Op en oak
staircase. 2 skylights. 3 bedroom s. 2 ~ baths,
family room and formal dimng. Prepare to get
comlorlable. $104,900.
• #233

for.
uses. I
bedr01J11 rental above shop plus
. . mobile
home in excellent shape. Income w1ll make
payments. Easy to reQt in Rio Grande. $28,000.
. #241

E. Main ·

POMEROY. OH.
992-2269
NEW LISTING - For Sale:
"G1amps" a pr~e winning
Bass! Cratty, hard to get a
hooll into' We'U also sell the
large pond he lives in wtth
dher smaller lish! And ye~
the house Irs very a-ge too! 7
room~ 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
Huge family room with a view
of "Gramps"·home. We ooubt
voo'll stay in the house
thou~. when "Gramps' ~bit·
ing? Approx. 3 acre;. Selling
Price: $46,000.00.

NEW USTING- In the country - 2 acres oil and wrth all
hook·up avahble. Elec .• septic tan~ phone and a well.
What more could you ask for!
ONLY $7,300.00.
.MIDDLEPORT - Beautiful
restored colonial home 4bed·
rooms, 2 car garag~ has ornate tnm. leaded lllass window
and door. AttiC studMJ w/skyf
iglll. Must See! Has raJuced
price to $62,000.00.

RETIRE TO THE COUNTRY - Mainlain aretlllled.
but active lifestyle in this fliendly 1II story home
3 bedrooms (upstairs could be linished into 41h).
dining room, new vinyl siding. garage and several
outbuildings. 17 acres wrth 10·12 cropland.
$40,000.
'

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•••
••
••
••
•••
••
••
••
••

;'t".; NEAR THE SCHOOLS -Older 2 story in good condl·
, ·'• lion. L1v1ng room, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 2 Clly lots.
~ Newly refin is hed. Children can walk to school. Priced
' L• • in the 40's.
i OON1 LET TilE CURB SIDE APPEARANCE FOOL YOUI
• • ~ This one IS a beauty' Ideal for horses, cattle, etc. 20
$il:. acres mostly flat w/new lences. lots of room to roam.
•'..l Extra nice fam1ly room w/ tung &amp;groove cedar ceil·
I ·r• ings and walls. lots of glass. livin g room features
t · 1 bu ilt in bookshelves and fireplace. Complete kitchen
:fSt w/hand·built cabinet•. full basement. Approx . 1800
• · ~·. sq. ff. main living area. City schools. Rio Grande area.
1{ '1 NEW LISTING: COUNTRY HILLS -SECLUDED.t NICE SffiiNG - Home has acreage and barn. 3
1
II" bedrooms, family room w/ fireplace. Living room lea·
~ lures glass doors to deck area for a great view. Also a
...-.: fireplace. Kitchen w/ chairhoard , also canning
·!.: ·, kitchen downstairs. Owner aniious to sell. Give us a

~PRJIWLING

COUNTRY SPLIT·LEVEL- Got a big
that needs a little room? This 4 bedroom
will surt your needs. Everything for the
active family including family room, rec. ro001,
large living 1oom, eat-in kitchen, 2 baths. Large 2
car garage plus sturdy outbuildins. 1.3 acres of
llat yard . Green Township. Only 3·4 miles fr001
town. Owner doesn't want to fool around- priced
~ $69,900.
i

#214
EASY ON THE POCKmOOK - Here's an
aflordable home in city schools you'll enjoy living
in. Complete with large eat-in krtchen. dining
room, large living room, 3 bedrooms, I bath and
partial basement. 1.6 acre lot includes garden
space, 2 outbuildings, large lro.t porch. Well
insulated, easy lo heat. $36,000.

#212

•
•
•

2-STORY. 3·BEDROOM HOME located along Upper River.
Road. Can be utilized for residential and commercial. •
158'xl53' lot, has mobile hook-up. All for $35,000.00!!! •

LISTINGS NEEDED! We
have buyers tor Meigs
County properties and need
·homes to sell - Call Today'
We need your property to
sell!

•
•

TWO BUILDING LO{S IN RODNEY II SO. I for $4,300,.
the other. $5.000.
.
•

•

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

e

•

: .
PICK IP FREE
e
• RIAL ESTATE LISnllt II OIR OFFICE OR •
e
YOUR 8A* OR UOCERY
•

•
•

#702

#120

NICE BUILDING LOT in Mills SO, near Holzer Hospilal. ••
City water and sewer. Price $12.500.

. .w.l

~ i call.

•.:]. CITY PROPERTY - Ideal for retired couple. Hom e
~ has aluminum siding and nice deck to enjoy those
'J\. summer evenings. 2 bedrooms, large country kitchen
." •; w/lots of cabinets. Priced low $30,000' s.
_
OWNER RELOCATING - Needs to sell this lovely
~ home. Very private. 3.6 acres. NICe pond. lg. brick
·i 1 home. 4 bedrooms, 2\0 baths. f1mshed basement.
~ Make us an offer.
""'f:'
RENTALS - RENTALS - RENTALS
.;.·, Owner wants to sell right away. 3 apartments and of··
.~ 1., lice. In city. All is renled . Approx . $375.00 per mo~th .
~ Priced $30's. let's make a deal.

SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSIN::.:
CALL AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SAL
( .dl Wond Hf•,tlly
t .&gt; I ( H

I I',!

(' l

( '.I

44h 1 rlhh

lr

t

STRETCH YOUR FAMILY OUT- in this spacious
lazy "L" ranch in Green Township. lfs easy to see
you and your l1111ily in this 4 lo 5 bedroom home
once you walk througll. La rae ul·in knchen Wlh
ad)lltent TV room, lormal dinin~ sunken living
-'ndlo.w dh attractive flagstooe lirepace. Lots of
15 overlook the beautiful rolling country·
~·
wood deck along entire back of house. 3
2 car garage, partial basement wilh
and rec. room lhat only need a few
fin~~~nJ!_Irouchl~. Call us, you'ft love rt! Reduced

. rzoo

;-&lt;..

FOUR BEDROOM SOLID BRICK - Th is ~ a well
built one owner home of which could be said
AJOY TO SEE - A GREATER JOYTO
"They don't build 'em like this anymore. " Has
3 bedroom, 2 bath home with dining room and 2 2,044 sq. ~. good floor pl an which indudes side
car garage. New carpet througllout. Insert jn
by side large. family room and living room, 4
fireplaqe. Efficient heat pump. $59,500.
bedrooms (one located at opposite end) complete
#104
kitchen with new appliances. 2 car garage plus an
extra 24x24 garage, localed on 2.1 acres on Rt.
WHO SAYS YOU CAN1 HAVE IT ALL7 - City
160. New listing;• $89,900.
convenience and country serenity come with this
#408
afluring3 bedroom only ~ mile from Spring Valley
Plaza. Dining area. 2 baths. cozy fireplace. large . CONVEN lENT LOCATION - II you are lookm g for
basemen! room lhat could be finished and 2 car
a good quality modern home just 4 blocks from
garage. 1.4 acre landscaped lot. Location is
downtown. see thiS mediu mprice ranch . Includes
everything! $95,900. ·
3 bedrooms. very nice krtchen. family room, 2
#107
baths and lull basement with linished rec. room .
woodburning fireplace, large epclosed back porch
NICE STARTER HOME - Cheshire area ran ch
for storage. located on a large lot with room for
offers 3 bedrooms. 1 balh. family room, living
garden. Look at this before you buy' $56,900.
room. Situated on 2.42 acres. Owner a"'ious to
#110
sell. $20,000.

OUTSTANDING HOME FOR YOUR FAMILY- This
one has 4 bedrooms. large Nving and din in~ 2 ~
baths, fam1ly room and 2 car garage. II features
new wall to wall carpet, a wife approved kitchen
w.1th loads of cabinets. This home is clean and
mcely decoraled. You and your children will love
the 3 level sundeck, in·ground pool and large lot
located 1n c1ty scho~ district about 6 mites fr1111
town. $69,900.

••

A

I
.
Approx.
sq. ft . with fulllinished basement
18x36 in·ground pool. Jennaire kitchen, intercom
system, central vacuum, sun room. Add itional
1600 sq. ~ . bu ildin g w1th office room. This one
must be seen to believe. Priced at $139,900.
#701

,.

#Ill

NEW LISTING- HARRISON·
VILLE - Approx. 27 acres of
ground wlh all trailer hook·
ups avaiable. Call fur more
detai~. ONLY $12.500.00.

Dottle Turn• ..... 992·5692
Trtcy lllffle ....... 94t-3010
Olflct................ 992·2259

&gt;\

' ~

~;
• •

1

'

COMMERCIAL INVESTMENT- 50 unit residen ·
tial mobile home community can be expanded to
86 lots. Paved streets, sidewalks. street lights.
Stays over 90% occupied. City schools and
communily sewage plant. Call for more details.
#130
WITH AVIEW TO THE FUTURE- And ariver view
for · the presenl. Excellent starter home in
Middleport at Cole and First Streets. $25,000.

#445

NEW LISTING - located close lo town, this 2
bedroom home offers livm g room w1lh wood ·
burner. den. dining room. eat·in kitchen and bath.
Barn, storage buildin g and cellar. 4 acres.
$42,500.

#213
42 ACRES OF BARE LAND - Moslly wooded with
some saw timber. 4 acres m/ 1 ol bott om land .
Good place to build. Wafer tap pa~d for. located in
Vinton or Glenn Summit Road , % mile south of
Vinton. Asking $20,000.
#338

•
FAMILY DELIGHT - Home built wrth the whole
family in mind. Fealures very usable FR. kilchen
and breakfast nook plus format DR &amp; LR. Over
1400 sq. ft. of living space also includes 3 good
size BRs and 2 sparkling baths. Resting on a 0.66
ac. lot wdh addrtional 1.6 acres available. Great
pr011imity to town. Buyer's Protection Plan. Priced
to please. $64,900.

f201

LOOKIN ' FOR CHEAP COUNTRY? - Here's 53
acres in a quiellocation only 10 m11es homtown.
Older I ~ story hom e. pleasantly remodeled, offer s
4 bedrooms. nice bath, spaciou s kitchen and ·
dining area. Electric heat plus lireplace with
wood/coal stove. Quality 30x42 metal building
with concrete floor and older large barn. Good '
garden area. Mineral rights mcluded. 15 acres '
open land; tobacco base A setting rich with ·
wildlife and views. $36,900.
1

noo '

113 SECOND AVENUE - Suffering ~om lack of
maintenance, this home was once a beauty and
could be aaain, givin ahention. The basic features
are there: 4·5 bedr!IQms. 2 baths, living room
lamily room, bay window~ French doors, lar~
foyer wlh winding staiEWay, attaohad storage room
·and more! $57,500.
MOO

120 ACRES MIL. OF VACANT LAND- Good 1oad
fronta.ge for building home and small farm. Owner,
w1ll d1v1de. Excellent area tor hunting. Most lays
well lor hay and pasture land. All for $63,000. •

#319' ~

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
(614) 446-3644

E. M. Wiseman, Broker
DAVID WISEMAN, 441-iBII
LORETTA McDADE, 446-7729
CLYDE B. WALKER, 241·1278
·a. J. HAIRSTON, 446-4240
.PAT ROBIE. 371·2288
PHYLLIS MILLER, 446-8346
IPECIAUSTS IN RESIDENTIAL. FARMS It COMMEIIU

SUNDAY, PUZZLER

~
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: .1

ACROSS

f'Y

1 Snares
6 Armadillo
10 Rotate
14 Board game
19 Eaglea· nests
21 Maacullne
22 Charter
23 lrJah seaport
24 Utters sharp
outcry
26 Polly rulers
28 Bestow
29 Follows ess
30 Female ruffs
32 Tanned skin
33 Delineate

· ..'
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"'

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• ·~

C. •

' ''(. 1

~

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;:..Y,

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34
35
37
39
40

Con1end
Dutch cheese
Cines
Beam
Old name for
Thailand
41 Bundle
42 Goddess of
discord
.W Memorizes
46 Judge
47 Top or head
48 Twist about a
fixed point
50 Those In custody
· 52 Ballot
53 Proceed
55 Howard - or
"Dallas"
57 Paid notice
58- bene
59 Beatty fllm
60 Art1Hclall&amp;r1guage
62 Circuit
64 Narrow, flat
board
66 Babylonian deity
68 As far as
69 Lairs
70 Condensed

~

I

· I ,'

~

, : \'
1

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS
!f.' :'
•
Excellent
care
has
been
taken
of
this
home.
Almosl
~
1
;tr; everything is new. Formal living room &amp; dining. Com· • •
· '":\, plete kitchen . lg. lamily room. 3 bedrooms. 217 bath s. ~;"'I
'~ Greal deck area. Priced $60's.
~

i·

VACANT LAND - One of the pretliesl spot; in
Galha Counly. 40 acres rolling hilttop land wrth a
king's v~ew ofthe river and the Ohio Valley. Perfect
place .tor several homesrtes. Pnced at $49,900.
Good mveslment for development now or in lhe
luture.
·

SPACIOUS BEAUTIFUL BRICK 4 bedroom home over·
looking the beautiful Ohio River. Lower River Rd. Galli·
polis City Schools. 1.10 acres. Buy now for $110,000.

H2-5191
.1t11 Trmtlf..... 949-2660

Can't allonl high pri-7 Coli A
&amp; I rtmodeNng. You namelt. we
do ~atlowlowcoat . l14-44118970.

·'·~·

mo

•
•
•

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

TWO
FOR THE PRICE OF ONE!
Bargain
and investors. don't let this one
pass you by. Located in town. mcludes 3
bedrOCJns. 2 fun baths, living room. dining room.
large family room and eat·in kitchen. Nicely
remodeled. Gas heat Smaller home has ·rented for
$175/mo. consists of 3 rooms and bath. $49', 900.

COMMERCIAL - GARAGE - 40XIOO- 5 garage :'i\!
doors. Owner has outgrown building and needs larger .~;
• •· ~.~ one.
,• "
• i

~

..... .

: •.•; A-FRAME - ROMANTIC FIREPLACE - Book· ~
~ shelves in living room, formal dining room. mannerly
·,.r.-.',· kitchen, 2 bubbling baths, swirling spiral staircase. 3 : • ~
"
bedrooms. muscle room, snow covered pines, 12
. ;_.. acres. gwner says to sell!!! Only $83,000.
~

'-i '

~·

•1: ·· CARRYOUT- BAIT BUSINESS- DRIVE THROUGH

' • · - Also clean new home, living room, fireplace, lg.
,;_;. family room. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, everything
""" kitchen , Kyger Schools.

~ ~···
.j '

IANO CONTRACT -lAC.RE -LIKE NEW DOUBLE
,..:. WIDE - 24'152' - Also rental mobile home. 1Qx50
·-'-. ! 2 bedrooms. Rents for $180.00 per monlh and other
. : , trailer pad. Ooublewide has 3 bedrooms, 2' baths,
~ : . master leatures garden tub. Complete kitchen w/bar
....,. • and appliances. Cathedral ceiling, living room, family
~ room. central air. 10x20 wooden deck. Can buy var1·
·; · .: ous ways. G1ve us a call for more details!
"t' . POSSIBLE LAND CONTRCT-2.6 acres, more or less,
. , ' , on St. Rt. appro•. 5 miles from city. Net home. 2·3
~.. bedrooms. living room. dinin&amp; modern kitchen, large
'· · family room, treated deck off from back of home.
~
Clean and neat. A must to see. Priced $40' s. City
schools.
.. ~,. 876 LB. TOBACCO .BASE- 12 'h acres, more or less.
• I!· Very produclive land. located 13 miles from city.
•• , Plus 876 lb tobrrcc~ ~~seC w~ld also ~ us4 for
.~· • grazing. Totally a or a e. a or more m orma 1on.

~-:

FLAT 1.4 ACRES - Unanached 2 car garage. 1500
sq. ft. ranch. 4 bedrooms, modern living room , 2
warm woodburners. comforting family room .

'

IF YOU 'RELOOKING FOR A HOME that is very wellta·

.. .

4•1 ken care ofand has it aiHook atthis one. Features hr·
~ mal living room w/fireplace. Complete kitchen wta·p.
Wfi pliances. formal dining, washer &amp; dryer included.
~/,· Large desk area for summer cookouts or to sun your·

':, . self. I acre'. City schools. Would be excellent starter
~.-. home.

~·.

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u· ··.\•·

moisture

7t
73
75
77
78
80

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USIIN~ ltll IOIJtllAI MOlE oo conaete foundllion. J
bedrm.• 2 bll~hrepltelllld prden htb. l971 model mobile home on prlnle
lot rents for.SiUO.OO. Reroote ~eti•e_ ~~stsn. All It'll$ 1'1 a secluded setting
only 10 mll'l. from town tor only $42.50000.
VACMT LMD: 33 acres ali readv lol• n!Wr Mme. llO rt. CIS!d well, concrete

11250. NEW

7~

1

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REALESTATE

,:;:

Bonnie Stutei
Jim Stutes

' '·

.to:

~-.

~·a experitld.

Coli 814-2411-tiiZ.

~~

#225

PRICE REDUCED- Approxi·
mately 136 acres of vacant
land. Seduded and private.
Elcellenl home s~e or hunting
land. Up to 30 acres of hay·
land. NOW $38,000.00.

PRICE REDUCED - MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom 2
slory home in town. NICe
kitchen, W.B. F.P. Much
more! Call for your showing..
$16,500.00.

a

•tmetet. 25

,'-i

101

POMEROY- Beautilul view
of the Ohio R1ver, lhis 2 story
home features 3 bedrms.,
nice living room, full base
ment wtth a 2 C31 garage
and large front siHing porch.
This home can be yours with
little effort. MAKE .OFFER
$19,900.00.

Work· lbuNIOIIoN.
brklk . -.... flreplac• . .-peln.
rwtcntlont
tnwl jobs. FrN

¢r,
'

•orm

windowt. Free Mtt-

8~dt-81odl

~.;
BEST LISDNG FOR TH
.
condilion, well buill home. New plumbing, new
water heater. located on St. Rt 35. Rio Grande
Grade School, GallipolisHigh School. 3 bedrooms.
good slorage space in closets, atlic, garage, shop.
Patio doors to large deck in back ol house. Cabl e
TV. County water. Chain link fence - pari of
backyard. Good buy at $49,900.

a

mato. Calll14-4411-1070.

,...

Real Estate General

RUTlAND - Nice ranch
type home on a level lot 3
bedrooms. equippaJ kitchen,
close to schools. all in gooo
condition. $25.000.00 assu·
mabie loan, 911% lor 20 yrs.,
approx. $287/mo. P&amp;I&amp;T&amp;I.
$4,500.00 down or owner
will help finance. ONLY
$29.900.00. .

do Clrl

·~
~
... .

#313

~

Siding. overhlng gu11en,

estern, 18(110r sep11c sws1em lfld fintshtd ~Ne. Quiet courtr, klc:1bon.

462 2ND AVE. REAR

I

lB.

~
Q·

Mo'pn Two. $19.700.00.

~-.
~.

#C. -·

~
,J.,

Tammy Moore. 317-7780
·
Crystal Riehle. 448-3838
'"
~
~· ·~-~· ·-·,.,.n~~
.!;'[·~,~~I .. ;"741: t"'tr!&amp;~·,.:;~ : •-:t•• ~·. ~

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I

•

Colorado Indians
Besmirches
A continent
Cure
Greek letter
Impudent: colloq .

B1 Senor's partner:

abbr.
82 Amends
84 Climbing palm
86 Continued story
87 Performers
89 Tavern stock
92 Climbing planls
95 Lock of hair
98 OutfitS
99 Made amends
10t Calling
103 Descenl
104 Hall!
105 Row
106 Three-load slolh
107 Teutonlc deity
108 ProjecTing ti&gt;oth
110 Music: as wrfllen
111 Old pronoun
112 Parcels of land
113 Emmets
115 Exists
117 Journey
119 Grad,- lo-be
120 Transfixes
121 Chlefexecutlve
124 Baaeball stats.
126 Sleep, rugged
rock
127 Nourish
128 Injury
130 Smack one's (express
satisfaction)
132 Equal
133 Chapeaus
134 Legal matter
135 Conspiracy
137 Insect eggs
139 Joan of 140 Hurries
14t Taut
143 In resting position
145 T811Chers' org.
148 Walking
unsteadily
148 Runs easily
150 Cups'
companions
152 Wireless sets
153 Gasp tor breath
154 Mature
156 Strikes
157 Rain and hall

158 Writing fluids
159 Alhletlc group
160 Sludded

DOWN
1 Experience
2 Move back
3 That which Is
unpaid but due
4 -ala mode
5 Bum
6 Forenoon
7 Dance step
8 Word of sorrow
9 Renders (a
verdict)
10 Disreputable:
colloq.
11 Melallube.
12 Federal agcy.
13 Neon symbol
14 Ship's
complement
15 Possesses
16 Raise
17 Pertaining 10
old age
18 Mediterranean

-·

20 Pintail duck
23 English slreetcar
25 Fasten tlghlly
27 Cauae
28 English baby
carriage
31 Walk
33 Expires
36 Dairy product
38 Girl's name
40 Anllto•ln
41 Aylng mammals
43 Petitions
45 Those borne
46 Roundabout way
47 Seed containers
49 Lampreys
51 Memoranda
52 Glosa
53 0\oerflll
54 Solemn, vow
56 Thrashes: slang
59 Typify
60 Authenllc
61 Nlghl birds
63 Nobility

7

General Hauling ·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
UncordtloMI llf•ime gulrtntN. Locel ref..-.cee furnlthed.
FrH Htlnwt•. Call aollecx
1 · 814-237·0418. d., or nlgM.
Aogerel•a•!Ttent
· W.terprooftng.

It

·~

General

81

Sunday limes-Sentinel-

RfSIDENTIAL · INVESTMENTS . C6MME&gt;:!CIAL . FARMS

Oldl.. Buiek. Pontiac. ~Wv. :
Ch..,v truck, Ford. Chrytler-·
ttw~smlssiona (used) ere Inter•"' ..
nllly Inspected &amp; carry 3000m'• ·
or 30 dao,: wer-:-nty (whichiiY8r 1
oocure fir,U . We buy junll- ·
tnnsmitslont. Cell 814··4~· .
0918.
';.·

Ford 302 engine and eutometie ~
tnlntml..ion, can h... It run, ~
• 150.00. 304-S7S. 7837.
'

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Real Estate G

~7~6==~A=~=o~Pa=rts:=:=_:••:~

BUDGET TAf&lt;NSMISSION C
Uted &amp; rebulhell types. Ou•ntn· · •
tee 30 davs minimum . Prlcet •
t99 &amp; up. Rebuilt torquet•"'.
conwrter at low 111 t39. Con- ;
vMaion ltit:·S · 10' t&amp; C·10'towr'
clrve lo 350'1. We buY, junk '"'
trentmitliom. C.ll 304-67&amp;- •'
4230 or 814-379-2220.
"

79 Motors Homes
&amp; campers

a 12.000 Call 114-4411-4393.

16 tl . Cruiser Inc. , 22 HP. .
MerOJry m01or &amp; trwflar. ssoo.~·
Cell 61 .... 9686.
" '
16 tt. Tr~Heul. 60 HP Mercury :W
Motor, trailer topper, skit . ...
i.Daded. S2500. Call 614· 992· '
2671..

C..1. rHr_ defro1t. running
bolf\11. 39,000 mil... Excel.
cond. C.ll 304-175-7438 efter
· I PM.

1878 l;or&lt;l F100 llldt·.., tTUck.
Coll814-44e.4344.

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

16ft. V- hu~ Glatt ron bolt wtrh .
65' Merc, S. trailer. Vfii'Y good .
cond. U$00. C.ll 814-448-.,.

For

19&amp;e. fltvmou~ vo.,.aerSE. •ir.

75

mil•. NMv tlru, wry clean.
t2000. CaU 614-448-4046.

1117 Ford 1150 txeended con-

....,,ion..,., 14.000 ml•. fl.:

Motorcycles

65 Gull-like bird
67 Pallor
69 Note of scale
70 Merchants
72 Remains
74 Cooled lava
76 Sun god
77 LiSTened Ia
79 Consumed
83 Hole
85 Characteristics
86 Observes
87 Supplicate
88 Animated
89 Article
90 Inclined
91 Redac1s
92 Frozen wa1er
93 D.tverslfles
94 Negative prefix
96 Drunkards
97 Mast
100 Either
102 Unusual
105 Chinese taction
109 Female
112 Falsifier
113 War god
114 Quiet
116 Cut
118 Ache
120 Come before
121 Fondles
122 Dinner course
123 Indian weight
125 Small pianos
126 Breaktasl rood
127 Long tooth
129 Heads: slang
131 Cubic meters
132 Young salmons

133 Vandals
134 Le~ses
138 Afternoon parties
138 West African trae
140 Disturbance
141 Large cistern

142 Great Lake
144 Stupid: colloq .
147 Falsehood
148 Container
149 Health resorl .,
151 Labor grp.
153 Malh lerm
155 Printer's measure

�•
Apri124, 1988

Page-D-8-Sunday limes-Sentinel

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

In Our Town

"Dayton bank fails; will reopen as ~ranch facili~y

Jesse Jackson may
be big 's urprise in '88
By DICK THOMAS
GALLIPOLIS - The R.ev.
Jesse Jackson, Democratlc hopeful for president, Is a man
standing on the
threshold of
greatness as
others have before him but not
In the same
light. Jackson is the man of the
hour, and will never have that
honor again,like Barry Goldwater and George C. Wallace.
Goldwater was the Republican
candidate for president In 1964
but lost to Lyndon B. Johnson.
Wallace was a third party
ca ndidate in 1968 and finished
third behind Democrat Hubert H.
Humphrey and the winning Republican Richard M. Nixon.
.
Some say it's not time to elect a
black presiden t. Back in 1960,
they said a Catholic couldn't be
elected to the White House, but
John F .Kennedy was elected . I
think Jackson shows a certain
Initiative and tenacious aggres- ·
slvness. He's different than the
other candidates. To be right
honest,and you , too, should be, if
it came right down to George
· Bush and Jesse Jackson, I'd vote
for Jackson. And. that 's despite
the facl that as a Republican 1 ·
began pushing George Bush,
before the first caucus or
primary.
If you think reruns on televi-

sion are bad now, walt until the
summer of reruns begin. As the
old saying goes, "You ain't seen
nuthin' yet . "

· But, NBC, which walked of!
wllh the ratings lor the third
straight season, is already look·
lng to next season, when a
writers' guild strike could keep
Its rivals In reruns. NBC will be
covering the s ummer Olympics.
The six-week old writers ' strike
has already been responsible for
a lot of reruns.
ABC and CBS are already
trying to combat reruns with
some new stuff this coming week
and NBC Is presenting six new
episodes of a former series.
CBS is bringing back "Houston
Knights" Tuesday at 8 p.m. NBC
will air the first of six new
one-hour episodes of ·'St . Else·
wher.e" Wednesday at 10 p.m.
ABC's "Max Headroom " will
return t For a one-night stand? )
Thursday at 8 p.m. ABC is
running two episodes of a new
series t How long has it been In
the can? ), Tuesday and Wednesday nights at 8 p.m. It 's called
"China Beach," and it:s a bout
"R. &amp; R." (Rest and Relaxation )
In VIetnam.
I believe the public is being
~uped by the networks race for
the rat lngs. Enough good television has been produced to meet
everybody's likes . Not everybody likes the same thing. Ever
watch, just about th e time you
really become engrossed In a
series (like Houston Knights, for
example), they take it off. I once
checked the top 65 TV shows In
Broadcast magazine for a certain week and and found l had
watched or had the desire to
watch only six or seven - and
they were't in the top 10.
1 said, '' Son. you ain't tall

enough to be a Marine." But,
there he was In T-sh!rt that had · ·
USMC" on it. It was Thursday at
the bloodmobile at Grace United
Methodist Church . Bryan Vance
was on his final leg to the donor' s
table. He's an old friend from thr
radio statiOn where we used to
work. He's now Private First
Class Brya n Vance and he's
home on leave. Bryan is the son
of Jack L. Vance, Second Avenue
and Shirley A. Vance, Smithers
Street, Gallipolis. Vance has
completed the Air Co ntrol Elec·
tronlcs Course at The Ma r ine
Corps Air-Ground Combat Center, Twenty-nine Palms, Calif.
While in Air Defense. Vance

learned to use several radars In
the tracking proces~ of enemy
aircraft and worked with the
F-14; F -16, F -18andothers. A1987
graduate of Gallia Aca~emy
High School, Vance will be
stationed at Kenohe Bay, Hawaii
for the nex t three years. He
leaves May 3 for the land of hula
and s urf. Wish he had a duffle
bag I could crawl into.
We get letters - one from my
former boss Dene "Chatterbox"
Wagner Pellegrinon, who sent
me a clipping about a veteran
newspaperman, James Saunders Moran, a 100-year·old columnist from the Springfield (Ky )
Sun. He began at age 10 as Valley
Hill correspondent for a Washington County weekly newspaper,sending In Dbits and such.
At age 28, he bought a weekly
newspaper and merged It with
the Springfield Sun. He's been at
It ever since. He's been editor
e-meritus for the past 17 years .
His editor, George Gabehart,
writes on a computer, but Moran
continues to poundoutcopyonan
old mechanical Underwood
typewriter. He has used only two
typewri ters In 72 years. Moran
doesn't shy away from expressing his opinions In his columns,
whether It be local affairs or
presidential politics. He said "I
pass my opinions and try to keep
it fresh." Gabehart edits Moran's work for typing mistakes,
but, doesn 't change the content s."His opinion Is his opinion,"
Gabehart said, "People don't
always agre.e, but nobody says he
doesn't have the right to them." .
Dene said I m !ght find the article
Interesting ti did) and that they
may be writing the same about
me one day.
--- Also got · a letter from Eldie
Dickey of Girard, Pa ., who
expressed an Interest in my
column a couple of weeks ago
about Mary Greene and the
Greene Family nominees for the
National Rivers Hall of Fame.
Dickey was born In Galli a County
and graduated from Gallia
Academy High School in 1927.
He' s been married to the same
woman for 59 years come
Sept.16,1929.
What Dickey wanted to know
was if l would copy Fred Way 's
Packet Directory, 1838-1983 and
send it to hlin. Would If I
could-,but I can't. It 's a huge
book, about two Inches thick.
Dickey said send it C.O.D or te'u
him how much and he would send
me a check or money order. And,
tell Morris ,Haskins I said it was
good and to cash II .
Well, Mr. Dickey, you might
try the Little Professors Book
Center, 65 S. Court St., Athens,
OH 45701, telephone 614-592-4418.
11 costs $34. Of course, if I ever
find myself on the way to Girard,
Pa., I'll stop, pick up a copy and
drop it of!.
Harold Saunders , Rt. 218 (he's
the pop of GAHS grid coach Brent
Saunders) gave us some Information concerning some Gallia
County World War II veterans
Friday afternoon. Harold, along
with some other veterans,
planned to be in Columbus for a
s urprise · event lor R.lchard E.
Houck, Rt. 218. retired Ohio Bell
Co .. employee, who Is celebratIng his 50th wedding anniversary
this weekend. Houck was a
member of the USS Indianapolis
crew. The Indianapolis was one
of the most most famous ships of
World War II. More about that
next week.

Lott~

DAYTON, Ohio tUPI)- Unity
Bank, the only minority-owned,
state-chartered bank In Ohio, has
closed it s doors, but will reopen
Monday as a branch of The First
- National Bank In Dayton, a
spokesman lor the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said.
Depositors ·at Unity's sole
office In Dayton will au tomatically become depositors at First
National , s ubject to approval by
the a ppropriate court, said Bill
Olcheski, FDIC . spokesman In
Washington.
Unity, with tota,l assets of $6.2
. million, was closed Friday by
John Gayton, Ohio's superintendent of banks. The FDIC was
named receiver. Deposits at
Unity are Insured up to $100,000
per accou·nt by the FD !C.
It was the first bank failure In
Ohio this year and only \he eighth
in the state since 1935, said Fred
Alverson, public information offleer for th e Ohio Department of
Commerce.
In recent months, Unity's
capital deficiency drew the concern of state banking regulators,
who threatened to take control of
Unity if it.s capital did not reach 6
percent of Its assets by late
March. As of Feb. 29, ac'cording
to the bank' s statement, Its
capital was 4.5 percent of its
assets.
Unity said last month Its
·delinquent loans on average
comprised 25 to 30 percent of Its

total loans, a percentage that It
"I commend the strong actiOn
described as "seriously high.''
and leadership of officials at the
Unity also revealed that It Departm e nt of Commerece,
faced Investigations by the Jus- ·which pursued all avenues In
tice Department and In.ternal putting Unity Bank of Dayton
R.evenue Service for possible back on solid linahclal footing, "
criminal violations, Including said Celeste ,
embezzlement. At the ·time,
" I am pleased ta learn that the
Unity said the Investigations
ste mm"'J from lax reporting of
transactions and said the problems had been corrected.
First National will asswne $5.9
million In 1, 770 de posit accounts.
First National also will purchase
approximately Sl million of the
failed bank's assets, Olcheskl
said.
To' facilitate the transaction,
the FDIC will advance about $5.1
mill ion to the asswning bank and
will retain Unity assets of about
$5.3 million, Olc heski said.
)'l~
The FDIC will recover a
Jjre'&lt;l!f"4;.
portion of Its ou Uay through the
liquidation of assets not transferreO.to First Nat1onal. FDIC's
claim would have priority over
the claims of Unity shareholders,
01ch~skl said.
NAMED MANAGER
John
J. White was recently
Gov. R.ichard Celeste said in a
manager of the Custonamed
press release that closing !he
mer
Accounts
section of Cobank was "the only alternative.' '
lumbus
Southern
Power ComCeleste closed 70 state-chartered
pany's
general
organization.
savings and loan associations in
1985 after the failure of the He succeeds Dick F11rr, who
flagship Home State Savings retired March 31. Before his
appointment, White was manBank of Cincinnati. threatened a
ager
of the Columbus Divrun on the Ohio Deposit Guaran ision's
Delaware area office.
tee Fund.
A 15-year employee of Columbus Southern, he has also
served as office manager at
S~aman and Delaware. In his
current position White will
have functional responsibility
for credit and collection, customer Information, meter
reading and revenue protec·
lion actlvilles throughout the
ccrtnpany's service area. He
will report to the company's
director of marketing and
customer services. He Is a
graduate ·or Wilmington College, and lives In Delaware
with his wife Debra and their
child.

Stock · market toms
.in mixed perfonnance
By DONALD GALLAGHER
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK IUPI) - The
stock market turned In a mixed
performance last week as most
individual and insltltutlonal in-

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The '
Sherwin-Williams Co. said ·
Thursday It was disappointed :·
with Income of $8.4 mUllan In the
first quarter, up 2.9 percent from
$8.2 million during the same
period a year earlier. .
.
Sales totaled $412 million, up
8.3 percent from $380.5 million .·
during the first quarter 'of 1987. :

Bring us your lab prescription and get fast and
accurate results. No waiting or appointment Is
necessary. No complicated forms to fill out. We
bill medicare/medicaid and other Insurances.
Remember, you are free to choose your health
care provider, Including who performs your
lab tests.

Judge

Court of Appeals

Income per share was 19 cents
In the most recent quarter, up
from 18 cents In the first three
months of 1987.
"The operating results for the
first quarter were disappointing
and while we stlll expect 198ll to
Improve over 1987 results.

CttEROKfE.
Sl:l()f:mi
GRAY
WHITE

.

I

THE
SHOE CAFE
LAFA VETTE MALL
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Judicial service
is the highest
public trust.

Wed., April 27th.

Rose named

Paid for by the Committee
to Nominata Gerald E. Radcliffe for Judge, Court of
Appeals, Mrs. John W. Allen, Treasurer, Box 3B61,
Lick Run Road. Chillicothe.
Ohio 45601.

'Honor Employee'

V arity records best results since 1976

TAYLOR NISSAN

Lot~~~ 1;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

1951

$·sooQo to $1000°0

Super Pak contains: 2-8x1D's, 3-Sx7's,
15 WALLET SIZE plus 6-415 SUPER GIFTS

-·
HOMEOWNERS '

palM--·

SUIO -

nl,. -

tgt. Llmft 5 aubfacla.

• FARM

HEALTH

Was S'UI-$10.00 OFF
18• dapoelt et llltlng.bollllnce on daNow 1111/y
"*J,

AUTO

$1588

Groupe

IIIIa PIICk·

DON'TMISSm

446-0404

I

On All New Nissans In Stock

8.9%

FAESH Cur

Stem R
Testuba ~ ose
&amp;eft

COMMERCIAL &amp; PERSONAL
JOHN H. SAUNDERS- BETSY SAUNDERS CANADAY
HOWARD
BAKER SAUNDERS. - CONNIE
HEMPHILL'
~
.
. .

CASH . BACK ·

8.1% for 41 monilia, U% for 10 monthl, 10.21% far M nionthe

GROUP

Mon.-Tues.-Wed.-Frl.-f1:30 till 4:30
Thursday 8a Saturday- 8:~0 t11112 Noon ·

ANNUAL •
4 DAY SALEI

I

HOWARD BAIER
SAUNDERS INSURANCE INC.
'We Manage Your Risk"
•
PJl 437 Second Avenue, GalllpoHs SINCE

Look For New Bakery, Deli
Products Each Week As We
Go Through Our New
Remodeling Stages.

Secr.etar1eS
Day!

Group seeks to ·f onn alumni association

,

·shop U1 While We Q,ow

Money Ideas

r.Pride in Property, Our ·Nation's
Heritage,' Ainerican Home Week theme

Call (614) 446-0353

Opposite the Post Office

computer-program traders.
The Dow Jones industrial aver(Continued on Page E -2)

By STA(II EVANS
that was Initially lost. consumers
GALLIPOLIS - As we have returned to spending at an
reported over the last half
adequate, ·t hough somewhat rethe overall econ, luctant pace that Is consistent
omy's perforwith the age of the current
mance following
economic expansion.
the unpreceWhat about the future ? We can
dented UP.heaval
lind nocompelllngreason to alter
in fln~clal
our expectation for sluggish
markets 6as esgrowth In 198ll. The most recently
sentl~lly
met
available statistics show some
our
gathering strength. However, we
growth in early 1988 moderated are not convinced that the
'
from the substantial pace set in, underpinnings for growth other
1, ' ' \
the second half of 1987. Inflation' tha n of a sluggish nature Is
"iJt, ·~, •.
ary pressures and foreign trade present: the continued very
;11~'
Imbalances, though both remain strong payroll employment
SIGNS PROCLAMATION
GalllpoUs City Realtors, and Bonnie Stutes, president of the
,,
significant concerns , diminished numbers contain some question
1
Manager Dale lman, right, signs the proclama- Southeastern Board, look on. PurjJose of the
~~... ~; ~\\·
•.,!":.
In Intensity with slackened de- marks and certaill other strong
proclamation Is to recognize .the right of clilzens
. tlon' to make the week of April 24-30 as American
mand.
A recession has not performances were partly the
to own private property. (Times-Sentinel by Geoff
Home Week, as realtors Tammy Moore,left,
NEW STAFF MEMBER materialized, nor does It appear result of rather easy comparl·
treasurer of . the Southeastern Ohio Board of Osbome)
probable that a downturn will sons. Furthermore, stimulus to ·
Margaret D. Caldwell, 23,
Bellville, Ohio, Is a new
unfold In 198ll.
·
the economy from two prime
memberoftheSundayTimesFor the last six months , the economic agents, ·the federal
Sentinel and. GaiUpolis Dally
conswner's reactlon was the government and the consumer
'
most critical element in the sector, Is still best described as
Tribune news staff. Miss Caldwell attended Elon CoUege,
scenario of slow growth. Consu- lackluster. Federal government
Eion College, N.C., for one
mer spending, particularly on a expenditures are growing very
year at which lime she worked
real basis, already had been slowly . The consumer, although
increased life quality and the
·GALLIPOLIS - The National
slowing substantially prior to the spending- for example, domesand make a commitment to the
for The Pendulum, the
Association of Realtors has enjoyment of having a better
market debacle. With such a tic car sales exceeded expectacommunity.
school's newspaper. In 1987,
Issued a call to join Jn the place to live., I.e., a hoinethat Is in
she graduated from Ohio
backdrop and no historical prece- tions In the first quarter Apr ills Fair Housing Month:as
Celebration of American Home good condition and a town or
proclalined throughout the Unl- · Unl\'erslty with a bachelor's
dent for October's events, the appears reluctant to do so,
Week, April 24-30. " Pride in community that is a more
of science degree In Joumalsignificant potential of a re- requiring motivation as saving
ted States by the National Associ. Property ... Our Nation's Herit- desirable place to call home.
atlon of Realtors.
Ism. While attending OU In
trenchment In Individual pur- has become somewha t more
age" Is the theme for this year's
Americans should be aware of
Athens, she worked for The
chasing existed. True to form,
In addition to Fair Housing
Important. It still appears that
salute to the American Home.
their private property rights. By
conswners did react negatively the Industrial sector is econoMonth this Is the 20th Ann!ver- Post, The Athens Messenger
observing American Home sary of the Civil Rights Act of
American Home Week Is an
and was a production assistIn the Immediate aftermath of my's primary area of strenglh
annual nationwide celebration of Week. We hope to encourage 1968. This act was the first
ant for videotape of the E.W.
the crash as their collective and growth; producers are in
the Constitutional freedom to citizens to be aware of these Comprehensive Fair Housing
Scripps School of Journalism.
confidence was shaken.
good economic health, as there Is
own property. With this owner· rights, to be Interested parties In
Law to be enacted by the United
She Interned with Billboard
However, the combined effect a pronounced Increase In orders
ship comes private property
community-wide property Im- States Congress and as so has
Magazine, NashvUie, Tenn.
of time's passage making the and backlog versus a year ago,
rights and the responsibility to · provement , and to be aware of been the basis of our states to
Miss Caldwell worked for the
meltdown Increasingly a part of while inVentory levels are In line.
protect them.
the value of home ownership.
Evening/Weekend Joumalln
"history," a continued strong
enact their own Fair Housing
(Mr. Evans Is an Investment
Since 1956, Realtors-members
Mardnsburg, W.Va. prior to
overall employment picture and broker for The Ohio Company In
Laws. In the last 20 years the
of the local board, their State
According toNal ional Associa- individual states have seen many
Joining the OVP papers last
Improving income trends res- Its Gallipolis nfflce)
Association and the National
tion of Realtors Pre~ldent Nestor changes In civil rights. This
October.
tored a majority of confidence
Association of Realtors-have
Weigand, "This week-long Na- controversy continues within the . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - . . . : __ _ _ _ _::._
, -------------taken part in this week-long
tionwide event Is aimed at federal government to this day.
•
L_
event lhrough Board-Sponsored, remlnqing citizens of their .Con- All the more reason for all of us to
Communlty-relaled activities
stitutional freedom to own prop- be concerned In and promote our
that call attention to the aware- erty as well as the need to protect ClvU Rights, the Civil Rights Act
ness and preservation of iheSI! - their ~ rights !that come with - of 1968;-·eur ·constitllflonal• free--·~
rights.
'
ownership.''
dom to own property to promote
The emphasis this year is
Home ownership remains one property Improvement and to
property improvement. Im - of .the most rewarding Invest- have Pride In our Property.
proved property Is more valua- ments people make. Owning a
The · State of Ohio and its
ble property In terms of &amp;&gt;liars,
home allows people to assume a Realtors are the nation's leaders
certainly, but also In terms of
responsibility, put down roots lp Equal Op~ortunlty In Housing
and this 20th Anniversary of the ,
CivU Rights Act of 1968 reminds
.
us to be Informed and be
GALLIPOLIS- The G~llipoUs addresses of the following gradulnvolved ... ln our property and
community .
branch of Southeastern Business ates: Kimberly Carpenter,
College Is seeking graduates R.andy Crabtree, Keith Dye,
"Pride in &lt;?ialllpolls" In keeplnterest~d in ,forming an alumni Marcella Ferrell, Mary Floyd,
lng with the Spirit of Renewal of
associatiOn.
Karen Helms, Robert Johnson,
the Downtown Area . .
Jack Mowery, a 1986 graduate, Lori Kerr, Penny Lusk, Gary
Is coordinating a project with Michel, Barbara .Miller, Grace
several graduates to locate Mullins, Joseph Nott, Francis
graduates.
Queen, Sherry Roese, Jewell
DON'T I=ORGETI
Anyone Interested In the pro· Roth, Danlelle Smith, Linda
•
ject and has n'ot received~ letter Taylor, Jo Ann Terry, Darlene
GALLIPOLIS
Dale
Rose,
a
regarding a formation of an Thornton, Carla Tucker, Jackie
alumni association can call Toni VIllars, Jlll Walburn and Kathe- heavy equipment at the Gallla
County Sanitary. Landfill, was
Holsteln at 446-4367 or notify the rine Wilfong.
named "Honor Employee" for
school if anyone knows the
the first quarter of 1988 by
San ltary Commercia I Services of
Gallipolis.
TORONTO - Spurred by
ferguson, one of the company's
Rose, 41, Is a 1965 graduate of
higher sales, Improved produc- subdivisions, operated profitably Jackson High School and served
tivity and rebounding markets, in the last three months.
In the Army In VIetnam. He has
Varlty Corporation ,posted a net
"We are encouraged by the been with SCS for four years. ·
Income of $4 .5 million In !!seal
momentum of sales and earnings
He lives In Jackson with his
1987, Its highest earnings from across the entire range of our
wife Nina and their three
operations since 1976. •
operating businesses as we enter children.
Varlty reported that Massey - the new fiscal year.

numbers

CLEVELAND (UPll
day 's winning Ohio
numbel's:
Dally Number
797.
PJCK-4
3131.

ves tors stepped to the sidelines
rather than risk gE'ttlng bounced
around by the aggressive

Economic conditions

"My present and fu- .
ture goal is and will
continue to be the
betterment of the
delivery of judicial
services and to properly serve our community, state and
nation."

You can now have your lab work
done locally and save yourself
the time and trip.

~-t.ufuw · section. ~
Apri124, 1988

Sherwin·Wllliams
income up, but
company not happy

GERALD E. RADCUFFE

Tired of driving
around or leaving
town just to have your'lab
work done ? ? ?

lmW"l!

department has facilitated the
sale of Unity to the First National
Bank of Dayton, which will
protect all depositors and provide even greater financial services to all · the residents of
Dayton."

· NOMINATE

RANKS FOURTH IN STATE- The administrative staff of the
Gallla-Jackson-Vlnton J:VSD's School of Practical Nursing
recently received cerd llcates of recognition for their efforts In
having a practical nursing program ranked fourth In Ohio, based
on the scores from the last licensing test, the best In the program's
15-year history. Shown from left to right are nursing Instructor
Belly Plymale,. coordinator Mary Sue Weiland, JVSD Board ·
Presldent..Joan Schmidt, and Instructors Pam Moran and Carol
Fairchild.

Business

Thursday
111m- 1pm
2pm- 8pm

Fdday
101m - 1 pm
2pm- 8pm

Saturday

Sund1y

10am- 1pm 11am- &amp;pm
2pm- epm

Silver lrldge Plaza

'S88ase.

-

�•
Page-E-2-Sunday

Ohio-Point ·Pleasant, W. Va.

April24, 1988

April

Stock ...

Declines led advances 432-369
among 1.012 issues traded on the
Amex. Volume totaled 43.143.360.
shares. compared with 63,706,535
traded a week earlier a nd
66.902.680 traded In the same
week a year earlier.

Classes slated
to start May 10
GALLIPOLIS - The Adult
Services Division of Buckeye
Hills Career Center is offering a
class In LOTUS 1-2-3 spreadsheet
software, used on IBM computers, and a Job Cho ices class,
designed to assist adults In
making career decisions a bout
, 1 career chOices.
Tuition for the LOTUS 1·2·3
class Is $100 for 30 hours of
Instruction. and will be held
Tuesday·s and Thursdays from 6
to 9 p.m ., starting on May 10.
The Job Choices class is a
20-hour class that begins on May
11 and will be held on successive
Wednesdays from 6 to 9 p.m .
For more Information. call
Buckeye Hills at 245-5336.
~··--'---

--~

-

-

We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities

•

Continued from E -l
age, which rose 27.69 Friday,
closed the week at 2015.09. For
the week, the Index tacked on 1.16
points.
On two occasions last week.
analysts cited -some cursedfutures-related selling for the
collapse of signUicant earlysession rallies.
On Tuesday the Dow blew a
32-polnt advance to close down
about 9 points . And Thursday the
Index managed only a modest
gain after showing a 35-point
advance.
Ralph Bloch. senior vice president and c hief market analyst at
Raym()nd, James.&amp; Associates in
St. Petersburg, Fla. , said the
futur es -re lat ed activity this
week ma d~ it impossible 'to
attract investors Into the market.
From Tuesday on, "virtually
90 percent of the activity has
been program tradi ng.'· Bloch
said. "It's an absolu te outrage.
The public is putting back because of a total .lack of
confidence."
Bloch noted the Dow 's ro ller
coaster performance last Tuesday and Thursday.
"Rallies cannot hold and this Is
a very dangerous sign," Bloch
sa id.
AI Goldman, market stra tegis t
with A.G. Edwards &amp; Sons in St.
Louis, took little comfort in the
mar ket's a bility to close the week
with an adva nce.
" We had developed a shortterm oversold condition ," Gold man said. "We had the ingredien ts for a bounce. which makes
for a nice wee ken d. We 'll get
these blips, but one day does not
reverse the recent negative patter n. Anyone who ass umes otherwise is walking around with
rose-colored glasses." .;
Goldman said the program
traders. while boosting the
mar ket by buying on Friday,
have sparked a " high level of
disgus t amon~ ind ividual investors and a high level of co ncern
and disenchantment among
lnsitltutlons."
Broad market Indicators were
little changed on the week. The
New York Stock Exchange composite Index rose 0.03 to 147.03.
Standard &amp; Poor's 500-s~c k
Index added 0.37 to close the week
at 260.14.
Dec Iines edged advances 969923 a mong the 2,180 iss ues
traded. Big Board vo lume totaled 775,150,700 shares, compared with 923,644,950 last week
and 866,100,800 a year ago.
On the NYSE trading floor this
week, Paciflcorp was the most
active iss ue. falli ng y. to 34Y, .
Southern Co. followed, up Y, to
22%. The iss ue, which carries a
9.6 percen t dividei!TPoyield . goes
ex-divide nd Tuesday.
General Electric was third, up
y, to 40Y,.
Trans World Airli nes jumped
6% to 35\1,. feliowing news that
Chairma n Car l Icahn had renewed efforts to take the a irli ne
private.
AT&amp;T was up Y, to 27\1,. The
company reported fi r st-q ua rter
earnings of 46 cents a share. up
from 40 cents a share in the
year-ago period.
IBM s lipped 11. to 113'1.. Digital
Equipment fell 2V.. ro 99'/.i.
Among the active blue ch ips,
Exxon was up }!, to 44 a nd
Eastman Kodak was unc hanged
at 40Y, .
American Express wa s off% to
24Y, ." The company reported
first-quarter earnings of 62 ce nts
a s ha re. down from 71 cen ts a
year ago.
Tandy gained 4:Y, to 46Y,. The
company Introduced its most
powerful desktop computer, designed to be co mpatible with
memory products from IBM .
On the America n Stock Exchange. the Amex Market Value
Index• fell 1.21 to close at 298.03,
while the Natio na l Associatio n of
Securities Dealers Index added
0.14 TO 374.04

P.~y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

•

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

291 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

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Monday thru Sunday
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�April 24. 1988

Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Soil, Water Stewardship Week underway
have more and more people In
this country with little or no
understanding of farming or care
of the land. So !tiS Important that
we alJ strive to pass ·on this
knowledge of the land and Its
care to· our children.
Since 1955, the National Association of Conservation Districts
has sponsored Soli and water
Stewardship Week, In cooperation with nearly 3,000 local
conservation districts ·nationwide. The locaj district work ·
hand-In-hand with churches lo
help them convey this message of

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the GaiDa and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
GaiDa County. Individuals wishing to parllclpate
In the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
457111!, or the GalUpolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., GaiDpolls, Ohio 45631, and you may win a S5

Farm flashes

soil stewardship.
You may think this does not
effect you, but the quality of the
water you drink, air you breath,
and food you eat Is dependent on
the way we take care of the
source of these basic fundamental needs. We could have all the
money In the world to give our
children, but It would do them
little good unless we also give
them productive soli on which to
Jive.
For more Information, please
contact our office by calling
446-8687.

· The latest in
desktop accessories ·

cash prlze from the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Leave your name, address and telephone number
with your card or letter. No telephone calls will be
accepted. All contest entries should be turned In to
the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.
In case of a tie, the winner will be chosen by
lotlery. 'Next week a Meigs County farm will be
featured by the Meigs SoU and Water Conservation Distrlct.

Orioles
lose ·l8th
•
mrow

for Secretaries' week, Apri/25-29.

e

Raccoon Creek
•
•
proJect r,n .
planning stage
By Constance S. White
Gallla SWCD
GALLIPOLIS -A project is in
the planning stage which will
look at the pos11ible Improvements that cpuld be made to
Raccoon Creek. A committee Is
being formed which wpl wo~k
with the District, Gallia Conservation Club. and volunteers In
setting goals and objectives for
the project. Hopefully volunteers
can be drawn from 4-H Clubs,
FFA Chapters, college fraternities and sororities, service organizations and any other Interested
Individuals.
April 26 at 7 p.m. a meeting Is
planned for landowners along the
creek. The meeting wUl be held
a I ~he Raccoon Creek County
Park. Slides will be presented of
types of problems we lire looking
to correct, such as streambank
stabilization to stop erosion. It
you are a landowner wishing to
contribute your ideas and suggestions, please come as we need
your support.
If you plan to attend, contact
the Gallia SWCD office by calling
446-8687 or stop by at 529 Jackson
Pike, Room 308-C. If you are
unable to be there we would still
like your comments.

SUPERIOR

at

enttne
2 Sections, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 25, 1988

JERUSALEM (UPI) - Retired U.S. autoworker John Demjanjuk was sentenced today to
death by hanging tor sadistic war
crimes he committed as "Ivan
the Terrible," the Nazi concentration camp guard who sent tens
of thousands of prisoners to their
deaths.
"The blood of the victims still
cries out to us ... and still 'Ivan
the Terrible' stands and poisOns,
sta nds and stabs, and his face has
not turned old," Judge Zvi Tal
read from the panel's decls(on.
"We sentence him, for the crimeshe has done and for what he has
been convicted of, to the death
penalty."
Demjanjuk, seated In 11 wheelchair because of back pain,
repeatedly shook his head during
the reading of his death sentence.
Spectators In the packed cour-

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troom burst into applause when
the judges announced the sentence for the man convicted last
week of being the sadistic death
camp guard "Ivan the Terrible."
People shouted "bravo," the
Hebrew word "mavet" for death
and began singing ''The people of
Israel live. "
Shortly ltefore the sentence
was read Demjanjuk, 68,
shouted, "1 am Innocent." Someone in the courtroom yelled back,
"You're a liar."
Outside the courtroom, John
Demfanjuk Jr .., 22, denounced his
lather's sentence.
"It will goon to shame the state
of Israel, the Israeli Justice
Department, the U.S. Justice
Department and, most unfortunately , the 6 million Innocent
victims of the Holocaust."
Prosecutors said bemjanjuk
forced tens of thousands -or
prisoners into gas chambers,
then fired up the engines at the
Treblinka death camp In Nazioccupied Poland. More than

850,000 people, most of them
Jews, died at Trebllnka in 1942
and 1943.
Demjanjuk immigrated to the
United States after World War II
and settled in Cleveland, where
he worked for about 30 years onan automobile assembly line and
became a naturalized U.S. citizen. The Justice Department
uncovered his past, stripped him
of his citizenship and sent him to
Israel for tr.ial in 1986.
The only other person tried
under Israel's war crimes law
was Adolf Eichmann, the mastermind of the Nazi plan to
exterminate the Jews, who was
convicted in 1961 and hanged In
1962.
The three-judge panel last
·week convicted Demjanjuk of
war crimes, crimes against
humanity, crimes against the
Jewish people and cr.imes
against a persecuted people each carrying a maximum sentence of death by l)anglng.
· Under Israel's Genocide Law,

the judges' decision on the death
penalty mlust automatically be
appealed to the High Court of
Justice. Demjanjuk also has said
he will appeal his conviction .
Chief defense lawyer Yoram
Sheftel said he was not surprised
by the sentence.
The judges rejected defense
arguments that people sentenced
to death sometimes were later
found to be innocent, that the
events at Trebllnka had occurred
more than 40 years ago, and that
Demjanjuk had since started a
new life and raised a family In the
United States.
' 'The meaning of these crimes
is that we have to look at them as ·
though they're timeless," Tal
read from the decision, " as if
Treblinka still existed and Jews
ln their thousands still choked to
death as one and shouted out
from torn lungs."
State prosecutor Yonah Blattman, hours earlier lnar'guments ,.
before the judges, said the native
Ukrainian deserved to be

hanged.
"He committed the most hei·
nous acts with his very hands,
killing hundreds of thousands of
victims with unspeakable brutal ·
ity, " Blatlman said. "We maintaln that the only punishment
that may be imposed is the death
penalty."
As the prosecutor recited some
of the atrocities of which Demjanjuk was convicted last week.
the retired autoworker made the
sign of the cross, shook his head
back and forth , and appeared to
be pray ing.
Before the sentence was an·
nounced, Demjanjuk declared
his, Innocence speaking from his
wheelchair in a loud clear voice
and occasionally sipping from a
glass of water. Defense lawyer
John Glll said Oemjanjuk needed
the wheelchair because . of a
persistent back problem and had
bee~... given an injection of
,palhkiller.
" I believe the atrocities of
Continued on page 12

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci
and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman William Crowe have confirmed they are reconsidering a
plan to send Coast Guard vessels
to the Persian Gulftoworkpatrol
duty.
·
Speaking on ABC's "ThIs Week
with David Brinkley," Carlucci
said Sunday the plan Is under
consideration because the Coast
Guard vessels have "a better
patrol capability that would free
our larger ships for other
missions."
Interviewed on CBS's ""Face
the Nation," Crowe added, "We
are looking at the wisdom of it,
·the parameters, the costs, and
we could very well make such a
decision."

Both men, however. stressed
that no decision had been made
yet to assign such duties to the
Coast Guard, which is under the
Transportation Department.
The New York Times reported
Sunday that under the plan for
the Coast Guard, its vessels
would assist larger Navy warships In escorting merchant
vessels through the war-torn
gulf, keeplrig watch over sea
lanes to prevent mine-laying and
guarding offshore installations
from attacks by small craft.
· The idea, rejected last fall by
Carlucci's predecessor, Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger,
was recently resurrected by
mllltary officials who believe the
Coast Guard ships would add
flexibility to their operations at

less cost.
Carlucci noted the United
States has "plenty of Navy ships,
but why use a larger ship when a
smaller ship will do? Smaller
ships have somewhat more
flexibility ."
Coast Guard ves5els .a re used
chiefly formarttimepatrol on the
U.S. coasls and in that capacity
they conduct l'ntreh of the Interdiction of illegal drugs coming
into the Unlled States .
Crowe, a Navy admiral, said
any decision on using the Coast
Guard ln the gulf would not affect
the anti-drug effort because the
vessels under consideration currently "are not being employed ."
The proposed Coast Guard use
comes as the ·administration is
considering an expanded Navy

role in the gulf to include
protection of ships other than
those flying the American flag .
Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N. Y., a
member of lhe House Foreign
Affairs Committee. was quoted
by the Times as saying about the
latter proposal: "This is not a
Rambo-llke policy In which the .
United States Is out there all by
Itself. Our response Is part of a
larger cooperative effort involving our European allles and
countries in the gulf."
But the newspaper quoted
unidentified sources as saying
Coast Guard officials are eager
to get involved in gulf duties .
During the Vietnam War , Coast
Guard vessels opera ted along
VIetnamese shores and In Inland
~
waters.

'

'

.WASHINGTON (UP!) - As
chances for a slrateg!c arms
reduction agreement have
dimmed, President Reagan has
begun to highlight other aspects
of U.S. -Soviet relations In preparation for his summit In Moscow .
Reagan's talks with Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev no
doubt will deal at length with the
thorny issues that stand In the
way of a joint desire by the
superpowers to halve their strategic arsenals.
Secretary of State George
Shultz denied on the NBC "Today" program today that he had
told NATO allies there will not be

ll

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an intercontinental missile
trealy when Reagan goes to
Moscow.
"No, I didn't tell them that,"
Shultz said. "It's difficult, so the
probability of finishing that
treaty In time for the Mosco'w
summit becomes less and less....
We keep working at it and that's
where we are."
, But ,t he little time that remains
before the summit opens a month
from now suggests only limited
headway can be.•expected. The
Moscow meeting May 29 to June 2
will lack the kind of concrete sign
of progress that the Intermediate
Nuclear Forces Tr~aty provided

With an eye on the summit,
Reagan has pointed to the Soviet
agreement to withdraw troops
from Afghanis tar as a triumph of
his policy of supporting anticommunist insurgents around
the world , like the Afghan
·
Mujahldeen.
At the same time, he has used
the Afghan peace accord as a
political opening to exert added
pressure for a Soviet retreat
from such other trouble spots as
Nicaragua and Angola, where
U.S. -armed rebels oppose Sovietbacked regimes.
Leaving arms control In the

for their Washington summit In
December.
As a result, White House
efforts to frame the fourth
Reagan-Gorbachev summit
have cast attention on matters
other than arms control, with a
heavy emphasis on Soviet foreign policy and human rights In
the era of glasnost, or openness .
Today, that summit warm-up
had Reagan meeting wlth a
group advocating j:reater religious freedom In the Soviet
Union. Leaders of the organization wanted the opportunity to
ask Re~JWn to deliver their
appeal to'Glorbachev next month.

openness at home, "this could
hands of technocrats and diplomats, the president also has indeed turn out to be a turning
spoken at length of the Indica- point In the history of East-West
tions of economic and political relations. "
Whether such a judgment will
change ln the Soviet Union,
challenging Gorbachev to build be made by the end of the
on glasnost by permitting his - Moscow summit Is doubtful. The
people more access lo citizens, oonven tiona! word is that U.S.
policies and culture of the West. officials look lor good will but
In a pre-summit speech last little substantive achievement.
week to the World Affairs Council Reagan will press Gorbachev oq
of Western Massachusetts, Rea- ,such issues as Nicaqagua and
gan drew a link between the human rights , but progress in
Kremlin's foreign and domestic ,either area Is more likely In less
policies, suggesting that If Gor- public settings than the first trip
bachev pursues a course of less to Moscow by a U.S. president In
aggression a broad and . more 14 years.

FBI files suggest North lied
to prompt Contra inv_estigation

·\ 1~.\1~~t
HANGING ROCK

·

LARGE
EGGS

59.~.

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Oliver North may have lied to
FBI agents to get th~m to
Investigate his political adversaries two years ago, according
to doduments and sources close
to the Inquiry.
North told the FBI he had been
followed, his car was vandalized,
his tires were slashed and his dog
was poisoned, but after months of
looking lnto the reports, FBI

agents came to believe he may
have concocted the harassment
story to spur a criminal Investigation into several people he
believed threatened to expose hiS
secret aid to the Nicaraguan
Contra rebels, evidence shows.
Moreover, the alleged effort to
manipulate the bureau backfired
when agents eventually turned
their sights on the Matlne lieutenant colonel who worked on the

National Security Council staff.
seurces say.
tn sworn testimony to Congress made public last week ,
Associate FBI Director Oliver
Revell said that at one point In
early 1986 he turned aside a
North request to investigate
several people he perceived as
political adversaries .
"I told him that Is what we
Continued on page 12

Meigs EMS has busy weekend
SOUTHERN

IN
MEN'S &amp;
WOMEN'S

President Reagan begins to ·look.'for other summit aspects

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~~

OLD FASHION
HOMfMADI

A gift that grows In value
and encourages a young
person to think about the
future, that's life insur·
ance. L~t's make plans for

. The search for the two missing Meigs County men In the Ohio
River was suspended as of 11 a.m. Monday, due to dangerous
weather coridlllons and the lack of volunteers. The two men are
presumed to have drown.
The search for Shain Smith, 18, near Salem Center, and Pete
McDonald, 19, Dexter, was suspended Sunday at 3:15p.m. due
to high · winds and the lack of volunteers. according to Fred
Taylor, Mason County Emergency Medical Service director.
Taylor said some llsblng equipment has been found.
The two men and a third man, Jobn Brown, 24, Langsville,
were on the Ohio River near Ohio River Mile marker 258 (near
the K:~~ger Creek ~ower Plant~ Friday when wavedrom the tow
barge James K. Ellis apparently swamped the 8-foot,
flat·bottom boat at approximately 11:40 p.m.
Brown was rescued by Gavin Power Plant employees on the
barge when they heard yeiDng.
The search has been conducted . by · the · West VIrginia
Department of Natural Resources, Middleport, Ohio, Point ·
Pleasant, New Haven, Leon, Valley, and Ohio River Road,
W.Va, volunteer lire departments, and Mason County and Point
Pleasant Emergency Medical Service. LlfeFilght, of Columbus
and Wellston, also assisted in the search. ·

USDA

lEWIS

PUT 'EM 10 WORK.

300 2ND AVE.
OALUPOLIS, OH.
446-4222

JOHN DEMJANJUK

•co:Jl~~TsAL

•

Official.s suspend
search for victims U. S. -Coast Guard considered for gulf

ll&amp; IMI

THE SHOE CAFE

-

..

Mostly clear tonight. Low In
mid 40s. Tuesday, sunny, plea~nt. High around 70.

John Demjanjuk sentenced to death by judges

Give your secretary a Teleflora BuHerfly Keepsake Mug or
Basket Bouquet and you can register to each win separate
vacations for two in Thhiti via Continental Airlines. Each pretty
and practical ceramic flowers-in-a-gift keepsake features a
colorful springtime motif They c-Jn he displaved at home or
the office, even after the flowers are gone. Call or visit us today.

6'NJUii&amp;.ac/!f.t!m/Jer

•

Copyrighted 1988

By Edward M. Vollborn
County Extension Agent

~~

Super Lotto
1-2-21-29-31-39

Vol.38, No.246

Cold temperatures hamper spring planting

.CONTINENTAL

Daily Number
053
Pick 4
4732

Page 4 .

.

GALLIPOLIS The Ohio
Weekly Crop- Weather Summary
released on Aprll18 showed only
2 percent of Ohio corn 'planted.
An estimated 80 percent of the
tobacco beds were sown. Bare
soli temperatures averaged In
the mid-50's for this area for the
week ending Aprll 18. This past
week probably brought the average down a little.
Though no-till can reduce tillage cost and minimize soli
erosion, careful management Is
necessary to get a good stand.
Missouri researchers say to walt
untU soU temperatures at a depth
of four Inches r.e ach 50 degrees F
for corn and 55 degrees F for
soybeans.
Don't plant If the soli would be
too wet to seed by conventional
methods. Set coulters to penetrate about one-half inch deeper
than the desired seed depth,
To get good seed- to-soil contact, use press wheels that close
the slot. When planting In sod,
moist solls, or under rough
~onditions, hold speed to no more
than 3¥, mlles per hour. Unless
no-till conditions are ideal, use
highly quality seed and increase
Sf!"dlng rate by 10 percent.
An anticipated change in lab
tees at the soli testing lab in
Wooster will take place In a
couple months , The main reason
for getting a soli sample analysis
is to. be able to select an efficient
but yet low-cost fertility program. Turn a round time' Is still

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•

HONORED - .Jaek A....._., p-ocery
mu.,er at tbe Pomeroy Kroger !Kore, left, was
hllnored for fl yeara 11entce rib the llrocer
Compllll)' Saturday alternoon. A baHel tuacbeon
'wu held for emplOyees of the iltore IUld Ambroee

wu pr••ted rib a oalte by Dlek Warner, 1tore
maaacer, rtpt, ud other pl't8. Ambroee'• f1
yeara of 1entce have beea at ator• In Point
Pleasant, W.Va., Marietta, tnd Pomeroy.

Twelve calls for rrtedlca,l assis lance and three for fires were
answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service and fire departments over
the weekend.
Saturday at 4: 04 a.m. the
Middleport unit went to the
Leading Creek road where an
auto accident had occurred.
Beverly Hayes was transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and then later taken by Health
Net to the Charleston Area
Medical Center.
At 8: 04 a.m. the Syracuse unit

went to an automobile accident of
Morning .Star Road and transported Bill Rice to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 8:23 a.m.
the Racine unit responded to the
same area and transported
Donna Rice to Veterans Merr!Orlal Hospital; at 10: 24 a.m. the
Middleport unit went to the
Cheshire boat landing to treat but
not transport Velvie McDaniel .
At 11:36 a.m . the Tuppers
Plains ·unit answered a call to
Olive . Township Road ' 1189 for
Helen Sanders who was taken to
St. Joseph Hospital In Parkers-

burg; at 12:35 p.m. the Rutland
squad went to Route 143 and took
Rayma Booth to O'Blenness
Hospital in At-hens for treat men:
of Injuries suffered In an auto
accident.
At 2:35 p.m. the Racine unit
transported Shirley Evans from
Greenwood Cemetery Road to
Veterans Memorial Hospif al; at
3:45 p. m. the Syracuse Fire
Department responded to a call
to State Route 124 where a car
was on fire, owner's name not
reported; and Jlt 3:53 p.m. the
(Continued on page 1.21

'

"

.

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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38050">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38049">
              <text>April 24, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6857">
      <name>berringer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3055">
      <name>boyd</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6858">
      <name>chalker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2253">
      <name>deeter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="411">
      <name>gibson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1134">
      <name>griffith</name>
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    <tag tagId="1051">
      <name>haning</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6859">
      <name>ingraham</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6452">
      <name>laudermilk</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1760">
      <name>terrell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="91">
      <name>walker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
