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                  <text>Paga 10 The Daily Sentinel

r--LocalContinued
n-ews.
briefs···-~
from page 1
Rood. 19, or Reedsville.
James Hannah, 21 . of Route 2, Albany , was Indicted on one
count of burglary, two counts of passing bad checks and one
count of grand theft.
Johnnie Keith Harrison, 33, of Mlnersvllle Hill, Pomeroy, was
Indicted for grand theft.
And Michael Pierce, no age listed, Rutland , was indicted on
one count of domestic violence and one count of vandalism.
More Information regarding the~harges against th~fourmen
wlll be released later today by Meigs County Prosecutor Fred
Crow .111.

A Pomeroy man was cited by the Gallia-Melgs Post, State
Highway Patrol In connection with a one-car accident
Wednesday at 7:08p.m. In Bedford Township on U.S. 33, four
and a half miles south of the Meigs-Athens County line.
Johnny 0. Hawley, 21, of SR 143, was cited for driving an
unsafe vehicle after his 1977 Chevelle hit a guardrail and a
utility pole. Hawley was driving west when he reported having
steering problems. He went off the right side of the road before
colliding with the guardrail and the utility pole.
The Galtla-Melgs Post reported a total of three accidents
· Investigated Wednesday, with two non-injury and non-citation
accidents.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Thursday; Middleport at 12:43 p.m. to South Third for
Kevin Kline to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at S: 04
p.m. to Route 7 for Earl Wines Sr. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 3:05p.m. to Route 7 for Myrtle Gore
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutlaod at 6:16p.m. to Depot
St. for Charles Bowles to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Syracuse at 6:51 p.m.n to Welshtown Hill for Lawrence Kline to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 8:54 p.m.
transported Matt Dowler from an auto accident on Success
Road to St. JOS!!Ph's Hospital; Middleport at 9:41p.m. to Poplar
Ave. in Cheshire for Joey Curtis; Gallla SEOMS transported
Curtis to Holzer Medical Center.

Levi Tyo

Levi "Lee" M. Tyo, 63, Route 2,
Ripley Road, Point Pleasant. died
at 11:37 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 7,
!988.
He was a retired shift engineer at
the Gavin Power Plant He was a
United
member
of Trinity
Methodist Church and a World War
II U.S. Army Veteran. He had
membership in the following organizations: The American Legion,
Mason County Post 23, The Ohio
Power Company, The Veteran
Employees Association, 32nd Degree A&amp;A Scottish Rite of Free
Masonry Valley of Charleston,
Orient of West Virginia, Beni
Kedem Temple, A.A.O.N.M.S. of
Charleston, Pomeroy Chapter 186
Order of the Eastern Star, Grand
Lodge of A.F.&amp;A.M. of Ohio,
Middleport Lodge No. 363, Middleport, Ohio, Clan No. 7 Southern
Oh10, Grand and Glorious Order of
Hillbilly Degree, Galli)&gt;OliS, Ohio.
Born Dec. 6, 1924 m Zanesville,
Ohio, he was a son of the late Levi
E. and Aorence Martin Tyo. He
was also preceded in death by, five
brothers, Ovid, Gerald, Paul, John,
and Delbert.
He is survived by his wife,
Dorothy Perkins Tyo; lhree sons,
Lance :rr.o, Toledo, Ohio, James
Tyo, Wilmington, Ohio, Jeffrey
Tyo, New Haven; one daughter,
Nancy Jean Clift, Bridgman, Mich.;
. one brother, James Tyo of Canfield,
Ohio; two sisters, Aorence Pryor,
Philo, Ohio, Audrey, Risten,
Frazeysburg, Ohio.

Dally slook prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power . ..... .. .. ... . 28
AT&amp;T ................ ..... ... .. ...... .25\l
.Ashland 011 ... .. ................... 35%
Bob Evans ........ ................. .. 16
Charming Shoppes ..... ........ .12%
City Holding Co ..... .... .... ... .. 31\)
Federal Mogul. ..... .. ... .. .. ..... 45J.o;
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ... ...... ........59)'8
Heck's ... :.: ... .... ... ...... . -·........ l(,
Key Centurion ....... ..... ........ 16~
Lands' End ......... .... .. .. ........ 27%
Umlted Inc .. .. .... .... .. .. ..... ... 22J.o;
Multimedia Inc ...... .. ........... 70\)
Rax ResiJIU{IInls .................. 3ift
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... ..... ...... 11
Shoney's Inc ............ ..... .. .... . 7%
Wendy's Inti ....................... . 6\2
Worthington Ind ................. 21%

r

Pase 88

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday Admlssldns -Virgil
Lewis, West Columbia, W.Va.;
Lois Pauley, Pomeroy: Debra
Edwards, Pomeroy; Earl Wines,
Cheshire; Merle Davis, Rutland;
Crystal Cole, Coolville; Charles
Bowles, Middleport; Everett
Grant, Racine.
Thursday Disc barges - Ronald Jeffers, Lawrence Scarberry, Opal Barr, Ethel Lambert i Wilbur Smith, Wilbur
Ashjey.

·j

Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 10, at the CrowRussell Funeral Home with the
Rev. Steven E. Dorsey, officiating.
Burial will follow in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire, Ohio.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 10 4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
Friday.

Mary Russell
Miss Mary E. Russell, 56, 25
Hocking St., Athens, formerly of
Pomeroy, died Friday at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital In
Athens following a brief Illness.
Employed as a bookkeeper in
Michigan, Miss Russell was born
July 31, 1932 In Meigs County, a
daughter of the late Alpha E. and
Esta Jane Arnold Russell.
Surviving are a· brother, Harold C. Russell, Pomeroy; three
sisters, Dollie Hayden. Tomball,
Tex.; Marcia Mulllnlx, Fairfield,
and Rachael Young, Linden,
Mich., and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides her parents, slie was
preceded In death by a brother,
Kenneth E. Russell, and a sister,
Elma I. Coleman.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Monday at the Ewing Funetal
Home with burtal to be In the
Bradford Cemtery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 6 to
9 p.m. on Sunday.

tmts
Vol 23 lllo. 31
Copyolgti-.1 il88

man indicted
on 23• counts in W.Va.
By

IHIIODS by Patty Dyer of the GaJDa County Sol
Conservation, alfalfa Importances by Ed Vollborn, Gallla County Exientlon Agent Agriculture, and soU lllllag~ampleti by John Underwood,
Bill Wilson and Mike Har;hes. (Suad&amp;)' TimesSentinel photo by Margaret Caldwell)

IN LINE !FOR LUNCH - Among the farm
equipment e):hlblts and musctal performaaees by
the Kner preek Wgh School Band and Idle
Tymes, Farm City Day featured a bean and
cornbread lunch. Ice cream, cheese and sandwiches
also available to the more than 80!1

at the

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of CHRIST
YOUTH GROUP KICKOFF
(3 YRS- -:- SR: HI)

Taste tho GIANT milkshake, dress In SO's
dothos and maybe win a prize If your
outfit Is tho best.

SEPTEMBER 11th at 5:30
L

"BE COOL - BE THERE"

visitors to the Hughe~~ Jo'amUy Jo'&amp;rm. Olher
activities opened to the crowd Included a plant
disease clinic, landacaplnl suggestions, and
wheat weaving demonstrations. (Sunday Tlm.!!SSentlnel photo by Margaret Caldwell)

.

.Agre~ment reached on TNT area

?.

'

JUST 84.99

Right now at Shoney's, you can get a terrific shrimp dinner for
just $4.99. You choose between boiled, fried or bite-sized shrimp.
Each includes French fries (or a baked potato after 5:00 p.m.) and
our famous all-you-care-to-,eat Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar.
If you have a craving for shrimp, come into Shoney's this week for
the best shrimp deal around.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.The turning of state's evidence
by a 23-year old Point Pleasant
man has led to the Indictment of a
25-year-old Gallipolis man on 23
counts of breaking and enter lng
and larceny In a series of
burglarieS' that pollee say began
In November of 1986 and continued through this year, accordIng to Mason County ProsecuiJ!tg
Attorney Damon B. Morgan Jr.,
on Friday.
The September ttnn of the
Mason County Grand Jury which
met Wednesday, Thursday and
Friday returned indictments on 25
people. Armignments before Circuit Coun Judge Clarence L. Watt
are set for Wednesday at 9:30am.
The grand, 'ury indicted Robert
E. Lee, 25, GallipW!, Ohio, on

the 23 counts after Delano Vanso
Jackson Jr., also known as Dale
Jackson, 23, of Point Pleasant. IUr'
ned state's evidence in the investigation of several Mason County
buiglaries and thefts, the prosecutor
said. Jackson recently pleaded
guilty to an infonnation for • the
breaking and entering of the 22nd
Street Shop-A-Minit in Point
Pleasant in November of 1987.
Jackson also pleaded guilty to an
information filed by the prosecutor
charging him with April 1987
burglary o( the Isabel Lutton
residence in Point Pleasant and the
breaking and entering in May of
this year of Power Disuibution
Products in the Mason County Jndusuial Park. Sentencing is pending on Jackson, wbo is housed in
the Mason County jail, Morgan
said.
Lee's lengthy list of indictments

and items authorities say he took
includes:
Breaking and en~ng at
Power Distribution Products in
Mayofl988.
- Grand I;D'Ceny at Power Disuibution Products where
estimated $8,()()(). in various items
were taken according 10 police.
Those
items included
lwo
microwave ovens, live telephones,
four cases of wine, a mine tight
with charger, an electric calculator,
a computer tenninal, typewriter, a
laminating· machine, , two boxes of
candy, pneumatic tools and
mechanics' tools.
Breaking and entering of
Merit Contracting Services in the
county industrial park in April of
1988.
- Grand larceny at Merit Con:
bllcting Services of nearly $6,000
(See GALLIA, A4)

an

Four indicted by Meigs grand jury

COLONY THEATRE

-.

tbe OVP staff

of

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Clarence Douglas Fulton, 21, Pomeroy, and Michelle
Lea Shuster, 17, Pomeroy;
Dwayne Edward Qualls, 28,
Pomeroy, and Gwenn D. Husk,
31, Bidwell: Douglas Wayne
Beaver, 19, Pomeroy, and Kelly
Anne Morris, 20, Long Bottom;
Phillip Andrew Burish, 22, Akron, and Katherine Louise Lunsford , 17, Middleport.

HEY!

CHARLES A. MASON
of

licences issued

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;1

10 Section&amp;, 64 Peg01
A Multimedil Inc. Newap~p•

Farm City Day... ~~-----~ Gallia

Lodge to meet
Racine Lodge 461 F&amp;AM will
meet 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Work
will be in the master mason
degree. Refreshments will be
served. All masons urged to
attend.

EVENING SHOW AT 7:30 P.ll.
ADMISSION 11.00

Showers likely- Chance of
rain 70 percent.

,.,

Middleport Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Plaaaant. Septem~ 11, 1988

Announcements

0~£

Along the River ...... ... B1-8
Business.------·----- ----...... Dl
Comics- ---------- --....... Insert
CIIISIIIfleds ............... ,. 1)2..1
J)eatbs ........... .............. AS
Sporm ........ ............... CI-8

Jim Sands: Court Slreet history
Page B6

•

r--.

lnsid..-

Beat of the Bend: Gifted sehool a1 OSU

Bi
. '

------Weather------:

Cl

College grid results

Politics
a family
affair

three drownlngs Wednesday and
Thursday In the Tampa Bay
area.
In addition, nine children and ,
three others were slightly In- ,
jured In the colllslon of a school
bus and a car near Tampa during '
heavy rains Thursday .
'
Most rivers and creeks In the
Tampa Bay area were above
flood stage and ponds and lakes .
were overflowing, sending flood- :
waters Into low-lying subdM- :
slons throughOut the area, off!- •
clals sal d. ·
•
Forecasters held out the hope :
for cental Floridians of lmprov_.
lng weather today, predicting 5o •
percent chance of rain, com- ' .
pared with the '8(1-100 percent :
chanc~ estimated earlier.

Extended Forecast
South Central Ohio
LAKEVILLE, Minn. - West- engineering oftlce In Midvale,
Sunday
through Tuesday
Clear
tonight,
with
lows
of
50
to
Utah,
and
a
project
office
In
Inghouse Electric Corporation
Fair
through
the period, with .
55
and
no
winds.
Saturday,
sunny
·
announced that It has purchased Apple Grove, W.Va.
mainly
80
to 8~ and lows In ,
highs
with
highs
of
80
to
85.
100 percent of the stock of
president
Thomas
B.
Johnson,
the
50s.
National Electric Inc., (NEI) to
become sole owner of Aptus, an . of Aptus, s~ld the purchase by
_eo_n_un_u_e_d_fr_om__;,p_a_ge_1_ _ _ _ _ _ ,
environmental services and ha- Westinghouse will allow Apt us to
enha
nee
Its
presence
In
the
zardous waste management firm
as normal," said Tully.
Salaries for · teachers range
headquartered In Lakeville, fast -growing hazardous waste
Meanwhile, spe'clal education
from $18,000 to $36,497. Teachers ·
management marketplace.
Minn.
teachers In
eve land walked
are asking for a 10 percent raise ,
''This new alignment will give piCket line§ for a fourth consecu.
Aptus, formed In November,
for the first year and 7 percent
1987, as an equally-owned part- Aptus direct access to Westing- live day today.
raises In the second and third
nership company between West- house financial and technical
The Cuyahoga County Board of year of the contract.
Inghouse Specialty Services Inc., resources to support the design, Mental Retardation was keeping
The special education teachers .
and NEI, operates a laboratory permitting and construction of classes open for the 1,250 stu- were preparing a legal challenge ,
and hazardous waste. transfer nationwide operating facilities - dents but the Association at
to the board's cutting off their 1
and storage faclllty In Lakeville, that are crucial to our continued Cuyahoga County Teachers of health benefits.
a slagglng rotary kiln incinerator success," Johnson said. "As a the Retarded claimed student
Superintendent Michael Don- :
and PCB service center In result, Aptus wmbe able to more attendance Thursday was only 18
zella, citing Ohio Revised Code, ;
Coffeyville, Kan., a sales and effectively service Its growing percent.
said the board could not pay the
customer base."
Teachers were urging parents
benefits during the walkout but :
Johnson said no personnel to keep their children at home,
Divorces sought
teachers said federal law pro- :
changes are planned for any of arguing that students were not . tects health payments for strikDivorce actions have been filed
Aplus's offices or operating recelvlng proper Instruction
lng employees for at least 60
In Meigs County Common Pleas facilities. ''This change in owner- from non-teaching personnel and
days.
Court by Terry Timmons, Mid- ship will enable us to create teachers who crossed picket
"Under revised code, when .
dleport, against Loretta Tint- additional growth opportunities lines.
people are on strike, the board '
mons, in care of Opal Conger, for our employees," he said. "We
The. dispute centers on salary, · may not pay compensation, •·• ,
Racine; Wilma Chapell, Middle- are confident that by working benefits, class size and classsaid Donzella, whose salary Is ·
port, againsi Tony Chapell, In more closely with complemen- room assistance.
$75,739 annually.
care of Carolun VanMeter, Midtary Westinghouse businesses,
dleport; and Melissa Manley,
Aptus wlll be able to make an
Middleport, against Michael even more significant Impact In
GREAT BEND BAniST CHURCH INVITESlOU TO
the marketplace."
Manley, Middleport.
l PICNIC AND APPRECIATION SERVICE
Environmental services now
A restraining order has been
issued by the court against the available from Westinghouse Inhonoring
defendant In the Chapell case.
clude electrical transformer deGranted dissolutions of their commissioning and reclassificaEARL AND MILDRED SHULER
marriages · were Charles M.
tion, risk and environmental
Sunday, Sept1111bor 11th
Lemley and Rebecca S. Lemley;
assessment, analysis, remedial
engineering, site remediation,
Racine Shrine Park
Debra A. Nease and Paul M.
Nease; and Timothy M. McDa·
emergency response, waste min·
Bring your favorite covered dish or dessert and join
nlel and Teresa A. McDaniel.
imizallon, off-site treatment and
us fo~ dinner at 1:30.
disposal, compliance audits and
an impromptu appreciation sarvice, conducted bY
technical assistance to waste
Charlt!l Norris, will begin at 2:30.
generators.
Band Boosters
Eastern Band Boosters will
meet Tuesday, 7:30"p.m., in the
band room at the high school.

~~

Stocks

50 cents

Sunday

a

the spokesman said.
He was then transported to the
State Medical Examiner's Office in
Charleston, by the Putnam County
Ambulance Service.
The incident is still under investigation by ~eputies of the Putnam
County Shenff's Department
Sebrell was employed by the
G&amp;C Towing Company of Point
Pleasant.

Area deaths

9, 1988

Teachers ...

Southside man dies·
in lock at Winfield

I

much of the nation Thursday, but derstorms were forecast from
smoke from western wildfires eastern VIrginia across the Cas haded the sun over the Great rollnas to central Florida and the
Plains and Mississippi Valley Gulf Coast
and tropical storm Florence
Atleasl17cltleslnsevenstates
continued to swell In the Gulf of and the District of Columbia
Mexico, growing less rapidly but reported record low temperastill threatening to become the lures Thursday morning, with
season's second hurricane by
the official start of autumn still
today or' saturday .
two weeks away .
Sunny, dry weather. was preMost of the nation enjoyed
dieted for most of the nation · \!lear skies with mild
today, with highs in the 80s most temperatures .
places, save for 70s across the
In )"lorida, steady showers
northern states and the Pacific continued to trigger flooding that
Coast and the 90s and 100s In the closed dozens of roads and left
Southwest.
•
some homes In 15 feet of water.
Scattered showers and !hunAt least seven deaths have
been blamed on the downpoursfour In the crash of a small plane
· ·on Wednesday near Williston and

Westinghouse becomes
sole owner.of Aptos

EMS has seVen calls Thursday ·

Septem~

Tropicai- stomt Florence creeping north..
By MICHAEL MOLINSKI
United Pressllllernallo1181
Florida's worst floods In 60
years swept through the state for
a fourth straight day , causl~
seven deaths, shutting down
schools and businesses and leaving some homes in 15 feet of
water.
More than 20 inches at rain fell
over the central part of the state
between Labor Day and Thursday, but forecasters said the sun
Is · struggling to get out and
predicted only a 50 percent
chance of rain today .
Meanwhile, a pre-autumn chill ·
and sunny skies lingered over

Patro_l cites Pomeroy man

A Southside, W.Va
man
drowned in the Kanawha River
Wednesdly night. as he and a coworker were conducting locking
procedures on a barge at the Winfield Locks in Putnam County, according to a spokesman for the
Putnam County Sheriff's Department
Gordorr Morris Sebrell ill, 21,
apparently fell over the side of a
barge when working at the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers Winfield
Locks, the spokesman said.
The 5p(lkesman said that Sebrell
and a c()- ·vorker were attempting to
tie off a l .~e. and as they worked,
the co··"\ orker noticed that Sebrell
was mi&amp;&amp;ing. This was around 9
p.m., the spokesman said. After attempts to locate Sebrell failed, the
Putnam County Ambulance Service
and the Rescue Recovery· Dive
Team were notified.
Sebrell 's bod; was recovered by
the Rescue and Recovery Dive
Team at approximately 10:43 p.m ..

Friday,

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

settlemen~

if approved, should help
the county development authoriiy
in the future, since it can now plan
for another county industrial park
site.
"I'm delighted that it has been
resolved," Wise said.
Wise was not pleased with the
len$thY
negotiations
process,
notmg since the site was controlled
by the U.S. Department of Defense
for clean-up rather than other Superfund sites being cleaned up by
the federal EPA a ''bureaucratic uncertainty" developed in the hi&amp;h
levels of government
·
''This has dragged on two years
longer than i.t should have," Wise
years.
.
said. The congressman was inThe Anny alsO agreed to pay the strumental in setting up meetinp to '
push the negotiations along 1111111!1 ,
industrial park's, two busmesses,
Power Disuibulion Products and
also said assistance in resolvin,B tbo ,
Merit Contracting Services, Third
maUer came from West Vlll!tnia's '
two U.S. senators, Senate M,ajority
District U.S. RC~~- Bob Wise, OW.Va., announli:d today. The
Leader Robert C. Byrd, J&gt;..W.Va.,
amount was not disclosed by public
and U.S. Sen. Jay Rockefeller, J&gt;..
officials.
Power
Distlibution
W.Va.
Products is 011 a 7.21-acre site and
WJSe did not take part in the acMerit Contracting Services is m a
tual negotiations.
·
2.64-acre site.
One soun:e clase 10 the
The total site is about 60 acres.
negotiations said Wise was inThe plan is stjll subject to ap- slnlmental in getting the opposing
proval by dt6 ~ral Environmen- forces to meet and talk., calling the
tal Proteclion Apcy. W"JSe said congressman "a shepherd." The
public bearing~ are expected to be consressman said . today the
held by the federal EPA on the government is paying a "just price"
clean-up of the federal Superfund for the land.
lite which is under the contiOl of
Aocording to the qrcementll
the U.S. Dq:cbnellt of Defense.
reached, once tho site is cleaned up,
The nesotiated ~Uiement comes · the state of West V1111inia ha.s
about lhree weeks after formal talb qreed to ac.:ept the property after
between the Army, and the county it has been decontaminated fer use
development authmty, but in ac- in the McOintic Wildlife preserve.
lllllity, informal discussions have
"We
are espeeiallYPleased the
.
been conclucted about the con- uIlilllale use of the property wiD be
tamiDadon problem fer about two in the state of West VUJirila." said
yean_ Once !he contamination wu Lee, "because · the existing indiscovered in the poundw81a' at frastructure and facilitiol will bethe lite. tbe county development come pan of the McClintic Wildlife
1~was stymi~ in its efforts area."
to
the pat. Wise said the

. By CHARLES A. MASON
of the pvP staff
POINT PLEtSANT, W.Va. The U.S. Army, has agreed to pay
the Mason Co'lnty Development
Authority $80(),000 for the 50.9acrecountylndustrlal'jlllrkat the
old West Vll·glnla Ordnance
Works In UghtofTJio'Tcontam(natlo!l discovered In May of 1981,
officials said F)'lday.
"We are pleased with the outcome of the long and protracted
negotiations," said Frank Lee,
Mason County economic development director. The negotiapons
have been bottl¢ up in various
governmental idvels for several

i,

'

\
I

Lee said the money will be used
to retire the debts of the county industrial park. • A lot depends on the
closing date itself, but the
development authority will not incur a financial loss. All lenders will
be paid in full," he said.
Debts include a $313,800 federal
Fanners Home Administration
grant which Lee said could be
redireCted - in discussions to
begin with the FmHA this weekto belp pay for seaing up another
county industrial park; a mortgage
to Citizens National Bank in excess
of $53,000; a mongage to Peoples
Bank in excess of $27,000; and a
loan from the West Vilginia
Economic Development ... ulhority
in excess of $340,000.
Lee said the county development
authority will now tum its attention
10 doing everything possible to help
assist the two bpsinesses in the ind.uSI!ial park in locati"l on another
sue 10 Mason County. We want to
malce swe every assistance is
made," Lee said. "We want to assist
them in re-location in Mason
County. It is uncertain when the]
will actually vacate their ProPertY·
Wise said the key 10 the settlement was reaching a situation
where the site would be cleaned up
and the businesse.o and county
development authority
would
receive just compensation to allow
them 10 make plails for the future.
WISe Aid thai he didn't anticipate any problems from the EPA
on IIJ)II'OVal of the nepllialed set-

tlement.
"''m not swe that we 'II Ft baclt
to 11CJ'11111," be said, lddinr; it is 1101
a situation of 111y entity cominS

"out abeld" in the deal. "The only
way we come out ttbead illmowina
thai there is a problem.•
The CClllllly lndastrial p8lt was
established in 1975.

POMEROY - Four Meigs
County men were 1ndlcted by a
Meigs County Grand Jury Thursd•y morning In the first session
of the ~ptember term. ProsecutIng Attorney Fred W. Crow Ill
P-124 ~-..to. the grand
jucy aa~ reports the following
lhdlctments were returned.
Gary Rood, 19, of Reedsville,
was charged with two counts of
rape In connection with two
separate Incidents involving attacks upon two separate women.
The first Incident occurred In
March and the second In August.
One of the females Is a minor,
said Paul Gerard, investigator
for the prosecutor's office.
Rape Is an aggravated felony
of the first degree and carries a
possible penalty, on each count,
of an Indefinite term of actu,al
Incarceration of 15 to 25 years ln
prison, and a fine up to $10,000.
Rood appeared Friday morning in Meigs County Common
.Pleas Court before Judge Charles H. Knight,andentered a plea
of not guilty to both charges.
Eiond was set In the amount of
$50,000. The judge lncldated a
likely November trial date.
Rood was remanded to the
custody of the Meigs County
Sheriff.
James Hannah, 21, of Route 2,
Albany, was charged with one
oount of burglary In connection
with an Incident July 4 In which
the Charles Eastman residence
on Elk 'Run Road ·was entered
and several Items taken.

Burglary Is an aggravated four years.
Tllat charge resulted from an
felony of the second degree and
Incident
In July In which Harricarries a possible penaHy of
'
son
broke
Into a van belonging to
eight to 15 years in prison and a
Foreman
and
Abbott. In Middlefine up to $7 ,500 •. Gerard said.
port,
and
stole
approximately
Hannah was also charged with
$2,000
worth
of
tools, said
two COIII\ts (!f passing bad checks
Gerard.
and one count of grand theft.
Harrison had Initially denied
PasSing bad checks Is a felony
all
knowledge of the crime but
of the fourth degree and each
admitted
to It after being concharge carries a possible penalty
fronted
with
the physical eviof up to 18 months In prison and a
dence,
according
to Gerard.
fine- up to $2,500.
Prosecutor
Crow
had
argued that
The grand theft charge, which
Imprisonment
was
the proper
Involved a video recorder, Is also
the subsepunishment,
citing
a fourth degree felony.
quent
·shoptlftlng
Incident
as
Hartnah was arraigned In comevidence
of
continuing
criminal
mon pleas court Friday morning
behavior, but Judge Knight
and pleaded not guilty to ali
chose
probation, Gerard said.
charges. Bond was continued as
Harrison
is expected 10 be
previously set In the Meigs
County Court In the amount of arraigned on the new charge
$20,000, and a trial date of Sept. 22 early next week.
Michael Pierce, no age listed,
was .s et.
of
Rutland, was charged with one
Hannah was remanded to the
of domestic violence and
count
custody of the sheriff.
one
count
of vandalism, In
Johnnie Keith Harrison, 33,
connection
with
an Incident In
Minersville Hill. Pomeroy, was
June
at
the
residence
of his
charged with grand theft In
former
wife.
Each
count
of the
connection with a shopllftlng
indictment
Is
a
fourth
degree
Incident on Aug. 31 at Fisher's
felony and carries a possible
Big Wheel.
Grand theft is a felony of the penalty of up to 18 months In
prison and a fine up to $2,500.
fourth degree and carries a
Domestic violence Is consipossible penalty of up to 18
dered
a felony because Pierce
months In prison and a fine tip to
had
previously
been convicted of
$2,500.
the
same
offense,
Gerard
Harrison appeared In common
explained.
pleas court earlier In the week,
A warrant to arrest Pierce on
on Tuesday, for sentencing on a
the
indictment was Issued. He Is
charge of receiving stolen prop·
expected
to appear for arraignerty and was placed on probation
ment
early
this week.
by Judge Knight for a period of

ELIMINATING POSSmLE DANGER - Tbla
oeCltion of Rolde ut, on lhe upper e11d of Syracu~e,
hM beea a lraffle buartl for more lb&amp;a • yelll'l.
~ ofllelala ud tile Ohio Department of
'l'raMporlatfon bave tried lo -•lve lbe q-llon
of rllllloof-wQ 011 lhe alrelcb of roacl. Ofllel&amp;ls
have eollllderetl wiHIIfac or
lhe
road 1o &amp;llllw more , _ . for molorlllll. Earlier
lui week, ODOT equlptnellt wu moved to the

_truet....,.

·r

,,

area and workers bepa to add a four-foot benn to
the river aide of lhe roadway. According to Melp
Coanty's State Wpw&amp;)' Sapertnlendeat, Jamee
Prlllfllt, arnnpmenla were made whh two
property owners for ODOT to fllllhe area bealde
the road. A aloped drlvew&amp;)' will opUt lhe two
reoldeacea. Piau were prepared by Don Johnson;
m&amp;lntenaace eac~Mer ODOT Dlalrlct 10 In
MU'Ietla. (lllanday Tlmet-8entlllel photo)

�..
September 11, 1988

Comnientary and ·perspectivej
iunb~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
I

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher·Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tton and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'I'TERS OF OPI:~'ION are welcome. They shou~ be less than 300 words
long. Allletiers are subject toedlting and must beslgnOO with name, address and
telephone number. ,No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters 'should be In
goOO taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

WASHINGTON - Classified cartel: s top man in Bolivia on his
latest Latin American peaceaccounts contain grim new evl·
dence that the cocaine· making mission. Intelligence
smuggling Medellin Cartel of sources tell us that the cocaine
Colombia came within seconds of cartel learned the route he would
assassinating Secretary of State take from the airport and set up
an ambush.
George Shultz In Bolivia on Aug.
The assassination reportedly
8. His entire entourage, Including
his wife, Helena, narrowly es· was assigned to an explosives
caped death in a bombing lncl· expert who rigged a powerful
dent that was later downplayed dynamite bomb and placed It
against the base of a lamp post
by the State Department.
along
Shultz's route. He strung a
The cartel depends heavily on
wire
up
a grassy hillside where
Bolivia for the raw coca leaves
he
walled
behind a knoll with the
that are refined into cocaine In
triggering
device.
Colombia. But the U.S. govern·
As Shultz's convoy reached the
ment has pressured the Bolivtan
government to crack down. Wa· · lamp post, the bushwhacker set
shlngton also supplied evidence off his bomb, but fortunately, his
that led to the arrest of the timing was bad. The two bullet·

By HELEN THOMAS
UPl White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - The scaffolding In front of the White House may
be down by Inauguration day - but don't count on lt.
Workmen have removed 30 coats of paint from the facade of the
Executive Mansion and there Is no end In sight. Whether under the
Impetus of security or beauty, the work on the WhiteHouse complex is
never done.
' Arid the Reagan adminlstra t ion may be the last of the big spenders
when it comes to the presidential compound. The Washington Post,
securing Its data through the Freedom of Information Act, added up
the cost of Improvements in the past eight years to$44.6mUlion. But it
could be more; costs are hidden and spread around throughout the
government. an old practice that started many presidents ago.

•6€@, I DaMIT
~WH\C~
WHI~

•

A11LUONAIRE',
I MeAN
CANOl~
~T

~s

President Reagan is putting his all Into the election of Vice
President George Bush as his successor in t~e White House. Having
first been accused of dragging his feet, Reagan is now demonstrating
that he views the election of another Republican as president to be a
vote of confidence for his own policies.
He has become Bush's No. 1 surrogate, using the White House
.backdrop and hitting the road with particular emphasis on California.
a prize state. ·
. On that score, White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said that
he I~ " pleased" with the way the campaign is going.
The coordination between the Oval Office and the Bush office in the
White House complex is complete. The go·betweens are the two chiefs
of staff, Craig Fuller for Bush and Kenneth Duberstein for the
president. The two men confer daily on political strategy.
From the sidelines, former President Richard Nixon also appears
to be an ex officio adviser to Bush, warning him of the pitfalls. Nixon,
who was forced to resign from the presidency ln the Watergate
scandal. Is still sought out as a political pundit for the Republicans.
Eventually, he undoubteq,iy hopes he will be able to parlay his help to
the party into the title of elder statesman.
'

Whatever became of former White House chief of ·staff Donald
Regan and fanner spokesman Larry Speal&lt;es. They wrote "kiss and
tell'' books. had their big splash. and now seem to have faded from the

scene.
Apparently there are no sequels in sight. But there may be rebuttals
when President and Mrs. Reagan hit the stands with their memoirs
after thev leave the White House.
Maureen Reagan also h~s a book in theworks,leavi ngthe Reagans'
son, Ronald Prescott, as the only remaining member of the
Immediate family who has not published the family secrets one way
or another.
Security at the White House is selective. Reporters get the once
over when they pass through the gates. Their briefcases and
handbags are carefully inspected and they pass through megatometers for metal detection.
But members of the White House staff who pass through the same
gates every day are not inspected. On presidential trips, the top aides
can come out of the same hotel as reporters, ride in presidential
motorcades, fly on Air Force One, but they do not undergo the ~arne
detection. Must be executive privilege.
President Reagan. whose time in the White House is running out, is
tearing a page out of his predecessors' books. He is putting some
friends and supporters on advisory groups and commissions where
thev will be able to serve a few yea rs longer than he does.
• President Lyndon Johnson had a field day during hls last weeks in
office, passing out rewar ds and giving the Medal of Freedom to those
he felt were worthy .
If he is in a magnanimous mood , Reagan also may pass out a few
·pardons to fanner aides. But the speculation is that pardons. If given
·,at all. would not occur until the yuletide holidays in the spirit of
; goodwill to men, or during his last few days in office.
,• Since he will be politically immune to any retribution, not being
· able to run again. Reflgan would not undergo the kind of repudiation
' President Gerald Ford suffered when he pardoned former President
: Nixon after the Waterga te scandal.

~: letters to the editor
.•
· To Whom It May Concern:
, • In the Sunday issue of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune there read
an arrest fdr William N. Cram·
)ish tor possession of marijuana
· anc1 open container. He was not
arrested for possession of rna.
• rljuana! Can It be so hard to read
a citation form at the pollee de·
partment and get It correct?
Most of this family Is employed
by businesses In this communi·
tyand it has caused a great deal

f

of embarrassment to ail, not to
mention the embarrassment to
the prominent citizens of this
town for whom Nick has painted
for.
H~ has tried very had to build a
better lt!e and business for 'him·
self and it's a shame it can be
torn apart by one paragraph. We
personally apologize to family
and friends for ail the embar·
. rassment this has caused.
Nick &amp; Crlsty Cromlish

••

}Today
in history
..
•

By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Sept. 11, the .255th day of 1988 with 111 to foUow.
• The moon is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
:' There morning stars are Ven~s. Mars and Jupiter.
•· The evening stars..are Mercury and Saturn.
• • Those born on this date are under the sign VIrgo. They include short
··story writer 0. Henry fWililam Sydney Porter) in 1862. author D.H.
Lawrence ln 1885, University of Alabama football coach Paul ' 'Bear' •
: • ·Bryant In 1913, exiled former Ph lilpplne President Ferdinand Marcos
in 1917 (age 71), film director Brian DePalma in 1940 rage 48),
entertainer Lola Falana In 1946 (llge42) ,andactressKristyMcNichol
In 1962 (age 23).

On thls date in history:
In 1777, troops commanded by Gen. George Washington were
defeated by the British under Gen. William Howe in the Battle of
Brandvwlne.

(

can States. Both were saved bY
bullet·proof glass.
,
The security escort sped up the
convoy, veered off the.acheduled
route and headed lor the U.S;
embassy. The Implacable Shultz,
according to witnesses, dldD'~
even change his expression du~
lng the Incident. ·
•
At the embassy, he Jnslsted o!l
going ahead with his schedule. "I
don't want them to win," he sa!a.
grimly.
:
This brazen attempt on
Shultz's life has stimulated
angry discussions In the bacJ
rooms of Wasblngton OD bow to
retaliate, U.S. military strlkeJ
have been ruled out. [nte111genef!
experts say the cartel's jungl!'
processing plants are too hard to
lind and too easily replaced. :
· Washington Is alresdy encouraging Latin American goverdments to raid the cartel's facilities. Some raids have caught the
cartel by surprile, but all top
often, the drug lo~ are Up~
ot11n advance by friends In high
· places.
.
;
The Justice Department would
like to Indict and extradlct the
cartei:S leaders, one by one. If ·
they can't be extradlcted, the
special forces might send Israeli·
like commando teams to grab
them and bring them to justice.
The pollee chiefs are developtog a national hot line that Is
already used In many cltll!l to
receive anonymous tips. They
are also of1erlng an education
program called "Going
Straight" to help parents turn
their children away from drugs.
Footnote: For Information
about this neighborhood cruaadl!,
contact the National Association
of Chiefs of Pollee, P.O. Box
18645, Washlngion, D.C., 20036.

proof limousines, one carrying
Shultz and the other carrying his
wife, .had barely passed the lamp
post. The full force of the bomb
blast hit a security car, blowiDg
out Its tires and shattering the
rear windows.
Luckily, no one was sitting In
the rear seat where the Dying
glass splinters were embedded
deep Into the Interior of the car.
The bullet·proof glass In front
absorbed the shock and did pot
shatter, so the driver survived.
That car was between two other
limousines - the one ahead ·
carrying Helena Shultz and the
one behind carrying Richard
McCormack, the U.S. ambassa·
dar to the Organization of Amerl·

Backstairs at the White House

,,

•

-Shultz faced reaI d anger__--=and~Da=le~Va==n.;.;;;.;At~ta

'rime•· ientintl

Third Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 446-2342
(614) 992-21~6

-.•

•

September 11. 1988

By Jack Anderso~

A Division of

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

Page A-2

OUR FA\\IL'i.

Do icons shed real tears ?____c_e_o~.:::.._ge_R___;~:;._enz_
Was It a hoax? Was It the hu· ing done by God to stengthen the
mldity? Or was it a miracle?
faith of believers.
Those were the options being
Skeptics may a have a harder
considered when the story of the time squelching this report than
"weeping virgin of Fat lma" re· they did the story of the "weep·
celved worldwide publicity In the · tng virgin of Fatima." That was
1970s.
a 4*,foot-tall statute with hollow
It was never settled which It glass eyes and a crown on the
was. Now we are faced with the head that came off.
same three ,choices In the case of
A science writer speculated that
the "weeping Icons."
the tears were 11 COndensatlon.''
There are 19 of these small When the humidity is high, he said,
paintings of the Madonna which some of the water vapor In the air
are said to be crying tears as wiU tend to condense. If hte sur·
they are displayed In various Or· face Is hard - as the case of a
thodox churches In the United glass eye - the moisture might
States.
collect In drops. It wouldn't con·
Once there was only one weep· dense on the wooden part of the
ing Icon. Then in July tears from statute, said the writer. because
that painting were collected in a · wood, being porous, wUI absorb
cotton ball and used to anoint 18 the moisture.
other church icons. Now all are
As for he removable crown, It
reportedly shedding tears. Many 'm ight have given some mischief
church leaders are calling It a maker the opportunity to hide a
'i mlraculous sign," one step supply of water In the statue's
down froma miracle - someth·

head.
With an Icon, conditions ae dlf·
ferent. An Icon Is a religious lm·
age painted on a small wooden
panel. Many of the crying Icons
ae simple paper drawings. There
are no glass eyes to collect mols·
lure or removable parts to tempt
the hoaxer. ·
!
If we rule out humidity and
hoax, are we left with no expla·
nation but miracle?
The fanfare surrounding the
"weeping virgin of Fatima" IJe.
gan In 1972. Brought to this coun·
try from Fatima, Portugal, In
1947, the statute was taken to va·
rlous dioceses In the country to
be venerated. It was In the keepIng of Father Joseph Breault of'
the Missionaries of Perpetual
Adoration when the virgin first
began to "weep."
Breault estimated th·a t the
weeping had tken place on more
than 12 occasions before he

brought the statue to New Or·
leans In July 1972. Father Elmo
Rornagosa, editor of the archldl·
ocesan newspaper In New Or·
leans, had heard about the weepIng virgin and asked Breault to
call him II the statue should shed
tears during Its stay In the cl!f.
Oneevenlngthecallcame. The
virgin was weeping. Romagosa
got his camera and went over. "I
saw for myself, •' said the priest.
He touched the tears nad took
pictures. Suspecting he might
have been the victim of a hoax,
he removed te virgin's crown
and looked Inside the head. "It
was dry as a chip," he said. .
'[ can't explain It," he told me
on thal 'occaalon.
.
'
Meanwhile, the Orthodox pr~
lates are looking for no explana·
lions In the case .of the weep big
Icons. "II you bellve, there Is 1\0
need for proof," says one priest.

FBI head is tough and fair __.:____Ch_uc_k_S_tone....;......:
His steel·blue eyes radiate an
uncompromising sternness as he
rattles off details of the federal
task force's war on drug traffick· ,
ing. Those same eyes then
twinkle as a photographer snaps
his picture. "You can't make a
silk purse out of a sow's ear," he
says with a self·deprecatlng
chuckle. Later, In a rare moment
of contained passion, the former
federal judge exalts the courts
and expresses his faith in them as
the final arbiter In the charges of
racism against the FBI.
The three moods capsule the
personality of William Steele
Sessions, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation's fourth director.
It has only been 10 months
since he took charge, and he
graciously credits his colleagues
for "a great deal of energy ·and ·
willingness" tn getting his prOgrams in place. But if, as
Supreme Court Justice Joseph
Story once observed, "the law is
a jealous mistress," It's al~o a
tough taskmaster.
In an exclusive interview In his
office In the J . Edgar Hoover
buUdlng, the ramrod tall, white·
haired 58-year·old Texan ticked
off the changes he has made
during his first 10 months In
office with a Spartan crispness.
They Include:
- Accelerating the FBI's war
on drugs.
- Tightening the FBI's close
working relationship with the
· Drug Enforcement Agency.
- Setting up a joint drug plan
to attack drug trafficking and
money laundering operations In
six major cities.
- Working closer with foreign
countries on counter ·
lntelllegence operations.
- Cracking down on "more
and more government fraud and
flnanclal·lnstitutlon fraud."
- Attacking the obscenity and
pornography rackets.

,,

- Setting up 13 lnltiavtives to
strengthen the FBI's equal
employment·opportunity efforts.
Those Initiatives for increasing
the recruitment and promotion of
minorities already had been In
place when 311 of the rBI's 437
Hispanic agents flied a lawsuit
charging racial bias In assignments, and a black agent filed a
lawsuit alleging racial
harassment.
"I can make no comment on
litigation," Sessions said, "but
from the moment I stepped
across the door, I began to do
those things - no matter what
the outcome of the lawsuit - to
keep the fabric of the FBI Intact.
The FBI Is not a racist organiza·
tion. We are a law·ablding
agency.
"Our hiring and promotional
policies are sound. We want to
recruit In such a fashion as to '
reflect the (country's) ethnic
makeup." He paused. "It'll
happen."
It has already started. Minorities (blacks, Hispanics, Asians
and Indians) make up 10 percent .
of the bureau's 9,400 agents.
Women comprise about 8 per·
cent. Has any woman been
appointed as a special agent In
charge?
Sessions smUed. "Not yet. But
there wtll be."
One statistic confirms his
confidence In the lnevltsblllty of
change.
M!!anwhlle, he Is also exercls·
lng the opportunity to strengthen
law enforcement at another level
• cooperation between the FBI
with other agencies, such as the
Drug Enforcement Agency.
"I've heard the phrase, 'turf
wars.' But the DEA chief and I
got together and developed the
Joint drug plan for six cities. We
capitalized on the FBI's natural
abilities In training and gather·
lng information. They're In-

valved on the street level; we're
involved In trying to gather
evidence."
One day, America will win Its
many.fronted wars against
drugs, government corruption,

terrorism and racial bigotry.
When It does, history will honqr
the contributions of a West Texas
Judge whose dedication helPEid
make victory possible.

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

Area news briefs---

NATIONAL w::THER SER\'ICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT &amp;-11-88

Bridge to be closed for repairs

Sunday nmes-Sentinei-Page-A-3

-----Area deaths----to 9 p.m . Sunday.

Alice V. Jones

GALLIPOLIS - WQods Mill Bridge over Raccoon Creek will
be closed Monday through Wednesday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. to obtain
struc'ture foundation borings for a new bridge, said Jim Baird,
Ga!Ua County Engineer,
Galiia County has obtained approval for a federal
preliminary funding of $345.000 for the brid~e replacement
project. The project requires 20 percent of the funding to come
from the local government.
A tentative sale date in the spring of 1989 Is projected.

MIDDLEPORT - Alice V.
Harper Ellis Jones, 54, Pageville
Finley W. Evans
Road, Albany , died Friday at
Ohio State University Hospitals
Finley William Evans, 57, Rt.
in Columbus.
·
1, Bidwell, died Thursday at
Mrs. Jones was born in Meigs Mercy Hospital, Portsmouth ,
County on
June 14, 1934. a
after an ex tend ed illness.
daughter of the late Willis and
Born April5, 1930 in Bidwell, he
••
Blanche Taylor Harper. She was was the son of the Roxie Ma e
employed with the former Robin- (Mundell ). Evans and the late
son's Laundry and Dry Cleaning Artis E vans . He was a tetired
establishment In Pomeroy.
construction worker and served
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Fire Department answered five
Surviving are three sons, Da- In the U.S. Army during World
In town alarms and five out of town alarms in August, Chief
niel Ray Ellis, Pageville; Donald War I I.
Danny Zirkle reports. The department went to seven auto fires
Allen and Timothy Arthur Ellis ,
Also surviving are two sons,
or accidents; two brush fires and one structural fire. All
both of Pomeroy; a grandchild, Finley William Evans. J r. a nd
vehicles were driven 377 miles during the month.
Michael Shawn Ellis, and a Ronald Gene Evans. both of
step-grandchild, Victor Attal, Whitehall, Ohio; one daughter,
SNOW
-RAIN
~ StiOWE.RS
both of Chesapeake, Va.; two Mary Frances Evans of Colum1
FRONTS: "Warm "
Cold
Static "
Occluded brothers. Ray Harper, Shade, bus; and two brothers, Paul
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man was cited in a car-truck
and Guy Harper. Harrisonville;
Evans and Robert Evans, both of
WEATHER MAP- A cold front extended from central Missouri
accident Friday at 3:45p.m. on the exit ramp from US 35 toSR 7
two sisters, May Taylor and Rea Columbus.
south, according to the Gallla·Melgs Post of tle State Highway
across central Indiana, northeast Ohio and central Lake Ontario,
Roush. both of Pomeroy. and a
He was preceded In de11 th by
conUauinr northeast. Lows were over northeast Colorado,
Patrol.
special friend, Vickie Bradshaw . his father, one brother and one
northwest Wyomillr, tbe Idaho piUidhandle, Northern CalUornla
· Spencer D. Moss, 53, was cited for not maintaining assured
Besides her parents. she was sister.
and southwest Arizona.
clear distance after his 1980 Dodge Colt rear·ended a 1985 Ford
preceded In death 'by a son. Gene
Memorial services will be
Rahger driven by Troy E. Bartley, 37, of Vinton.
A. Lee, and a brother. Wayne Sunday. 4 p.m. · at the McCoy.
Bartley .and Moss were approaching the merge area on the
Harper.
Moore Funeral Home, VInton,
ramp when Bartley stopped for traffic. Moss did not stop in time
Services will be held at 1 p .m . with the Rev . Bill Minnis, Inter·
to avoid a rear·end collision.
Monday at the Rawiings·Coats- ment will be at Buck Ridge
Blower Funeral hOme with the Cemetery in Springfield TownRev. Alan Blackwood officiating. ship , at the family's
Burial will be in Riverview convenience.
GALLIPOLIS - Leonard Edward Frye Sr., 36, of Addison,
Cemetery. Friends may call at
There will be no calling hours.
was arrested bv the Gallia County Sheriff's Department Friday
scorched nearlv 1.2 million acres the funeral home from 2 to4 and 7
By United Press lnteraatloaal
of land In and· around the park,
night. He was charged with disorderly conduct after warning.
Most of the country enjoyed
including adjacent areas in
mild, pleasant weather Saturday
Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.
except for parts of the South·,
The cost of fighting the fires has
where Hurricane ]florence was
reached $76;1 million, park sporunning her course, and In the
keswoman. Georgia Dempsey
West, where high winds hamPOMEROY - The following
suspended, no operator's li- pered efforts to extinguish ragsaid.
·individuals were fined this week cense; $20 and costs for passing ing wildfires.
'The strong westerly winds at
in Meigs County Court by Judge
over a yellow line; Larry Carr,
high
altitudes have carried the
The National Weather Service
Patrick O'Brien.
Albany, $556 and costs, overload; said scattered showers were
smoke across the central portion
Noble Payne. Pomeroy, $250 Mamie Harman, Dexter, $10 and expected Saturday for central
of the nation, resulting In hazy
·and costs, three days In jail.
costs, failed to display valid Montana and over the mountains
skies and colorful sunrises and
·60-day license suspension, DWI;
registration; Earl Wellman, of Wyoming.·
sunsets," National Weather Ser·
·
·'James Morgan. Albany . $250 and
Proctervllie, $10 and costs, asvice spokesman Brian Smith
Most of the rest of the country
, costs, three days in jail, 60-day
Everyone Welcome! Refreshments Served!
sured clear distance; Thomas A. looked forward to pleasant
said.
Uceqse suspension, DWI; costs Schoonover, Rutland , $10 and weather, with high temperatures
only .for left of center; $75 and
costs, failed to display valid 1n the 60s, 70s and 80s. Highs in
USTOII YOUI
·costs: three days in jail to run registration.
the 90s . were the order for the
HIIILOOM
PHOTOGUPHS
'c oncurrentlv with the DWI sent·
Fined for speeding were ..'Pat · central and lower plains states.
•'ence, no 'operator's license;
Hill Jr., Racine, $20 and costs;
Temperatures over the desert
William C. Lucas, Wilkesville, Steven A. Riffle, Syracuse, $27 southwest were expected to
$250 and costs, three days in jail, and costs; Bruce Stewart, Mid- reach near 110 degrees.
60-day license suspension, costs.
dl~port, $22 and costs; Lisa
Hurricane Florence continued
DWI; Owen A. Miller, Rutland , Saunders, Athens, $24 and costs;
FROM THIS
to dominate weather maps, whip•--------· IN MEIGS COUNTY ·-------,
$250 and costs, three days in jail, John B. Lawry, Columbus, $21 ping southeastern Louisiana with
. '.60-day license suspension. costs,
and costs; James Von Pang, Ft. heavv rains and sustained winds
- DWI; $75 and costs, th'ree days in Bragg, N.C ., $23 and costs;
of so· mph early today before It
jail to run concurrently with the Richard Jones , Pomeroy, $18and began to weaken as it neared the
.PWI sentence, no valid opera· costs; David F. Blackwood,
Mississippi border with rapidly
· tor's llcense; costs only for Milton, W.Va., $21 and costs.
diminishing Winds that barely
'failure to control.
Bonds were forfeited by Robert maintained hurricane strength.
1·
·. SuSjln Pauley, Malta, $75 and Machir, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
Offer Good On C11h T111n11ctlons
I
. The National Weather Service
TO THIS
costs with $50 of the fine sus· $55; Erika Robson, Murray City,
I
in Miami said the storm had
Thl1 Coupon Required
•
; '·pended, six months probation $55; Lisa Saunders, Athens, $55.
I
maximum sustained winds of 75
EXPIRES SEPT. 30. 1988
..
I
mph, barely · hurricane force
which requires windspeeds of at
,_.,..~:;:; --.--·-·-·------~-'----------J
least 74 mph, and continued
DON'T LET YOUR FAMILY
weakening was expected for the
HISTORY FADE AWAY!
(USP 5!5-800)
next 12 hours.
.
Bring your ariglnol phatog1aphs to
At its peak, Florence gener·
u• for Free oonautt.rkm 1nd utiW.VA. 1-800L423-4419
• Published each Sunday, 825ThlrdAve., ·
m..... No abllgotlan. of cauroo.
ated maximum sustained winds
•, Galllp&lt;iis,Ohlo. by tlleOhloValleyPuiJ.
POMEROY - A. decree for
0110 1·100·423·4399
Ushlng COmpany/Multimedia, Inc. Se·
of 80 mph with reported gusts to
foreclosure has been filed In the
· C&lt;lnd class postage pald at GalliPolis,
92 mph over water. However, the
Quality #1 and
~· Ohio 4.%31. Entered as second class
Meigs · County Common Pleas
4242ND AVE.
malltng matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post
storm did not generate hurricane
Quality
·Neatlns Oil
Court case of Shawmut Mortgage
Office.
·
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
force winds over land.
Corporation, formerly known as,
Tornado watches were posted
Member: United Press International,
North Central Mortgage CorpoInland Daily Press Association and the
over portions of southeast Louis!·
ration, ag~inst Robert L. SawyOhio Newspaper Association, Natlol)al
ana, southern Mississippi, south·
Advertising Ftepresentallve, Branham
ers. et al.
ern Alabama and northwest .
Newspaper Sales, 733 Thlr~ Avenue.
In other court matters, an
Florida early today as a precau·, New York, New York 10017. .
order for the destruction of
tion, the National Weather Ser·
SUNDAY ONLY
contraband by the Meigs County vice said.
SUBSCRIFl'ION RATES
Sheriff's Department has been
By Carrier or Motor Route
Early morning showers and
One Week ........................... : 70 Cents
Issued, and a notice of appeal has
occasional
thunderstorms exOne Year ................................. $36.40
been filed by Village. Pharmacy,
SINGLE COPY
tended from the Mississippi
Middleport. against the Ohio Delta across northern Florida
•
PRICE
Sunday ............... ................. 50 Cents
State Board of Pharmacy .
anaGeorgia into South Carolina.
Columbus.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
Showers
also were soaking down
areas where motor carrier service ts
parts of Virginia, Maryland,
available.
Delaware and southern New
The Sunday Tlmes-Senllnel will not be
Jersey.
responsible tor advance payments
Smoke from the Yellowstone
made to carriers.
GALLIPOLIS In Gailia
!Ires
had drifted as far east as
. County Common Pleas Court
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Chicago
and as far south as Los
Sunday Only
Thursday, the court handed
One Year ........ ;., .................... ,. $37.44
Angeles,
and often was visible on
down decrees of divorce for Jodie
Six montl\s .......... ..................... $19.50
sateiUte weather photograplis.
Lee Siders , Rt. 2, Crown City, and
'
The Yellowstone fires. have
Dally ud Soonday
Wayne Siders, ESR. Gallipolis,
MAIL S\IIISCBII"l''ONS
and for Joyce Ann Phillips Jones,
Jmdde COunty
.
I •
13 Weeks .................................. $19.24
Rt. 2, Crown Ctly, and Harold
26 Weeks ................... ....... ........ $37.96
Bruce Jones, Huntington, W.Va.
52 Weeks ....... .'......................... $74.36
The court granted a dissolution
Ratea Outllde Cou.Uy
13Weeks ................ .. ............... $20.80
Thursday
for Wanda Gay Maldo·
26 Weeks .......................... ....... $40.30
nado
and
Lacides
S. Maldonado,
52 Weeks ................... ,............. $71.40
both of Rt. 2, Bidwell.

Department answers ten alarms

r.::::!J

Patrol cites Gallipolis man

_,6

Hurricane ·Florence
running her-course

Sheriff arrests Addison man

.

~Meigs

MEET THE

County Court

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES
SEPT. 12 - 7:00 P.M.

.

WHERE: Home of Eleanor &amp; Carroll Brown .
on Bulaville Pike

. 367-7490

WANTED

HEATING OIL CUTOMERS

!

SlO
OFF
WITH FILL UP OF MORE THAN 150
GALLONS OF HEAnNG OIL

ll

•.

Comp1on
Pleas Court

BURLILE OIL COMPANY

TAWNEY'S STUDIO

#t

9 2 5Ofo
50
.
7
Ofo
9.65

Divorces granted

•

U.S. GOVERNMENT
AGENCY BONDS

O_A0 TAX-FREE*
MUNICIPAL BONDS.

Berry's World

CORPORATE
-BONDS

Special·Faetory PrograM Car- Puroha~e
.

All yields shown are current yields

,and are subject lo change.

'State or local taxes may apply

·~

1988 BUICK LeSABIE CUSTOM

WIRE WHEEl
COVERS
55/45 INTERIOR
7,000 to 10,000
LOW MILES

POWER WINDOWS
AM-FM-CASSmE
POWER
DOOR lOCKS

,'

S12,990 TO S13,700
GOOD COLOR SELECnON - .I TO .CHOOSE FROM

. fl! .
&lt;i)r·· ......... &gt;

.,...,,.. K. EVANS
.
C. BLUE
.............. Nil JOUI' neereal ofloD or oal- toii-INe 111o111*•r 1oi00-2U-1UI
Forn'IOflliilbll. . . iCinCU . . . . ...,.to.-n
I
..... Nlftll(. . . . mill til oaupon.
1.-:---------~----

I
I
1....
1-

I
1-

'"'I
I
I

Cly

G-IIJ-.-~

BUICK-PONTIAC

"OK, kid, hesd 'lltn off at thB GENDER GAP."

'

1900 EASTON AVE.

GlWPOUS, OliO

I~ (HM)

1__ ,..,

Galllpolle

444 Seoond Avenue
P.O. Box 328
Gal~polis, Ohio 45631

Z1o
I¥OQ

I
I
I
I

16141448,2125

I

1.:--~--------...J
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�0
Page-A-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Gallia... _____(_Fr_o_m_G_AL_L_IA_._A_1&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____,---,-worth of items including a pocket
calculator, an answering machine.
two telephones, a remote telephone.
an electtic dry wall gun, assorted
hand tools, a weed eater, an eightinch electtic circular saw, two trisquares, a 25-foot measuring tape,
four pneum.atic burr grinders, two
six-inch twisted wire wheels, and .
assorted carpentry tools.
Also taken, according to police,
were an eight-inch black-and-white
television, seven come-a.Jongs,
three mixing chambers for combination burning-heating torches.
two four-and·half-inch right-angle
electric grinders. one nine-inch
right-angle electric grinder. two 24inch pipe wrenches, six acetylene
welding tips, 12 crescent wrenches,
a set of metal imprint stencils, six ·
hammers, a 100-foot measuring
tape, one electtic ro10-harnmer
drill, eight pair of welding .gloves
and 26 welding connectors.
· - Breaking and entering of
Kramer Exploration Co. just north
of Point Pleasant in March of 1988.
· - Grand larceny from Kramer
Exploration Co. of five electric
motors, a gas motor and motor
belts.
- Grand larcency in Feb. 1988
of a 1987 Honda 4-Wheeler aod a
1986 Honda4-Wheeler both owned
by Clair Cottrill, Route I, Point
Pleasant.
- ,Breaking and entering of the
Grace Baptist Church in February
of this year.
.
.,-- Larceny from the Grace Baptist Church of nearly $2,000 worth
of property from the church including two air-conditioning units, a
chain saw, a brush ttimmer, a weed
and a gas can.
- Breaking and entering of a
building owned by Bracy Kinnaird
of Point Pleasant in liebruary of
this year.
- Larceny of $5,500 worth of
items from the Kinnaird building,
including two, 4-Wheelers, assorted tools and a chain saw.
- Larceny from Phillip Hudnall
of Point Pleasnt in January of 1988
of items including 100ls, a floor
jack and a fishing rod and reel.
Items taken amounted to about
$1,000 in value.
- Grand larceny of a 1986
Honda 4-Wheeler from Donald
Thompson of Point Pleasant in
December of 1987. The vehicle
was valued at $1,985.
- Grand larceny in December
of last year of a 1986 Honda 4Wheeler from Garland Arrington of
Gallipolis Ferry valued at $1,000.
- Breaking and entering of
K&amp;K Mobile Homes in April ·of
1987.
- Larcency from K&amp;K Mobile
Homes of a refrigeraror, coffee
table, matching end tables and a
lamp, all valued at $600.
- Burglary of the !sahel Lutton
residence of Point Pleasant in April
of 1987.
Larceny of the Lutron
residence of $1,850 worth of items,

eater

including, cameras, cassette tapes,
a video cassette recorder, rings,
money, and a sound movie camera.
-Burglary in March of 1987 of
the Leonard Brown residence in
Point Pleasant
- Lartency from the Brown
residence of a safe containing a certificate of deposit for $5,000,
$1,000 in cash and other important
papers.
- Breaking and entering at Pantasote in Janu:ll)' of last year.
- Breaking and entering of
building owned by Jack Woodruff
of Point Pleasant in November of
1986.
- Larcency from the Woodruff
building of a host of 100ls and a 33gallon garbage can.
Morgan said police believe the
stolen items were fenced outoQfstate.
Other indicunents, according to
Morgan Friday afternoon, included:
- Denny Burgess and Danny
Ward, no age or address available,
for the malicious assault of Emil
Eddington. The case was presented
to the Mason County Grand Jury by
Special Prosecutor James Casey.
- Mont Clifton Hill, 21, of
Leon, and Chris Rayburn, no age
available, of Le~ for the breaking and entering of a garage owned
by Clifford Eden at Longhollow
.Road in Cooper District in June of
1988. In the same indicunent Hill is
charged with breaking into •another
sotrage building owned by Eden.
HiD has been arrested by the West
Virginia State Police but Rayburn is
still at large.
Hill is also named in a fourcount indictment. The counts include the breaking and entering of a
storage building owned by Ronald
HiD of Dunham Road,' Cooper Dismet in April of this year. The
second count charges Hill with larcency of a 1981 Honda motorcycle
from that building.
The third count of Hill's indictment charges him with a May 1988
burglary at the residence of Hennan
Jordan, Route 2, Leon. The fourlh
count of the indicunent ch;Yges Hill
with the larcency from the Jordan
residence of two cameras and two
wrist watches.
-Robert Allen Shinn, 23, Point
Pleasant, four count indictment.
Count one charges him with kidnapping (taken against her wiD
with intention to defile) of Angela
Kay Shinn, his estranged wife, in
June of 1988. Police say she was
taken 10 Hendersonville, . N.C.
Count two charges him with abduction (taken by force to demand a
concession) of Shinn. Counts three
and four charge assault and battery.
Shinn has been arrested by the
authorities and is out on bond,
Morgan said.
- Jeffrey S. Bonecutter, 22,
Henderson, in a four-count indictmenL Counts one and two charge
him with altering West Virginia
DeJ?3fUDent of Moror Vechile
reg1stration plates and the last two

counts charge him with using the
altered plates in June of 1988.
""""''"
Rnse.
34. of
Mason,
on one E.count
of welfare
fraud from August 1985 10 November of 1985.
-Gregory James Drennon, 25,
of Spencer, and Iris Pamela
Schoonover, 35, of Robensburg,
Putnam County, with a two-count
indictment. Count one charges the
duo with b~rglary of the Paul Rollins residence at Route 2, Point
- Pleasant, and count two charges
larceny of jewelry ·and money from
the·Rollins residence.
-Stephen Lee Holtsclaw, 28, of
Route 2, Point Pleasant, with two
counts. Count one is the manufacturing of marijuana in June of this
year and count two is possession of
marijuana with the intent 10
manufacture.
-Mildred Buzzard, also known
as Sis Buzzard, no age available~ of
Three Mile Creek outside of Henderson, with two counts. In the ~t
count she is charged with the malicious assault of Linda DeWitt in .
July of this year. She is charged as
a principal in the second degree in
the second count.
- Angela J. Riggs, 25, Point
Pleasant, on larceny beginning in
July of 1987 and .continuing
through April of this year of money
and security for money of an infant
child. The second count charges
embezzlement of the child's
$13,000 trust fund. Police say she
bought a car with the infant's
money and also paid for pc)sting
bond of a boyfriend.
The September grand jury aloo
re-indicted several people who
were indicted under the May tenn
of the Mason County Grand Jury,
The indictments include:
- Gregory Gwinn Hill, age unavailable, of ·2213 l/2 Mt. Vernon,
Point Pleasant He is charged with
the January 1988 breaking and entering of Mary Kay's Beauty Shop,
2413 Jackson Ave., Point Pleasant
He is also charged with stealing
a radio tape player from the shop at
that same time. A third count charges HiD with a December 1987
house burglary, a fourth count
charges him with taking a tclevison
cable box from that house and a
fifth count charges him with attempted burglary in November of
last year of a residence. A· sixth
count charges him with another
house burglary and a seventh count
with taking a television cable box
from that residence. He is out on
bond, Morgan said.
- David Allen Myers, 28, of
840 16 Mile Creek Road,
Southside, was indicted for
manufacturing
marijuana
in
February of this year, possession
with the intent to manufacture
marijuana and possession with intent 10 deliver marijuana at a
residence. Myers is out on bond on
all three counts. He is scheduled 10
stand trial in Mason County Circuit
Coun on Tuesday beginning at9:30

He is charged with rnanut8Ciurmg
a.m., Morgan sa1'd.
f
- Todd Eugene Lewis, age not marijuana in March o this YCII' and
available, of Point Pleasan~ was in the second count with possession
iodicled for a February burglary in with, the intent 10 manufacturer
a Point Pleas&lt;mt apartment on Main marijuana.
Street and in a second count he was
-Thomas Sleward Bowe, 30, of
charged with larcency of money Prenter, Boone County, was indicfrom that apanment. He is also out ted for possession of marijuana
on bond.
wilb the inlent 10 deliver in Sep- Randy Allen Byrd, 24, of lember of last year.
Hidden Trail, Barboursville, for
- John Ray Beagle, 39, of
burglary and larceny.
Route I, Leon. was indicted for
The first count charges him · with delivery of marijuana, possession
the November 1987 burglary at a with the intent to deliver marijuana
16 Mile Creek Road residence in and also charged wilh the delivery
Southside~ The grand jury indicted · of oxycodone {Perc&lt;JFet), a contrOlByrd for grand larceny oc two 30- led subsiiUICe. He was bonded out
30 rifles, a television se~ a on the February 1988 charges.
kerosene heater, an AM-FM cas- Gregory Allen Fields, age net
sette player, a 30-06 rifle, two 20- available, of Letart, was charged
gauge shotguns and a 22-caliber with the OciOber 1987 malicious
rift e. Value of the items s10len was assault of James Edward Gerlach i.Ji
listed at about $1,400.
The Hut in New Haven.
- Henry Jackson Cain, in his
- Shirley Temple Balis, age not
50s, of Gunville Ridge in Leon, available, of Point Pleasan~ was
was indicted on two drug charges. indicted for the embezzlement of

\

energy.''

"!think that's very good news
In context," agreed Dirk Van
Dongen, chief economist for the
Natlol\,31 Association of
Wholesaler-Distributors.

Quayle supports
death penalty

•

By United Press International
CANTON, Ohio (UP!) - Borrowing a page from one q1
President Reagan's old State of
the Union addresses, vice presidential nominee Dan Quayle
advocated line-item veto power,
the death penalty for drug
murderers and peace through
mUltary strength.
•
Speaking to an, appreciative
crowd of about 500 at a Rotary
Club luncheon Friday, the Indiana senator also sald the federal
budget deficits are being reduced
in an orderly fashion.

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United Methodist Church, were a mndel of a ·
one-room school, photographs of Gallla County's ·
one-room schoolhouses and the French Colony
DAR chapter scrapbook. '('l'lmes-sentlnel plloto · •
by Lee Ann Welch)
,_.

SCHOOL DAYS -Daughters of the American
Revolution members attending Saturday's Southeast District Meeting In GaiUpolls viewed a
number of reminders of school days. Among the
Items displayed at the meeting, held In Grace

unu As .....

September 16, 17,18
STEll -

GAS ENGINE - TRACTOR SHOW

TheW. Va. Antique Steam and Gas Engine
Assoc. Inc. Exhibitors

FLEA MARKET ...... ARTS &amp; CRAnS
OTHER EXHIBITS
lngl- Ptrfol'llllng

C-'ty· Mullc

a•luion DaMJ $2.50

Country Sunshine Band ·

At a news conference in Akron.
the auditor said the overpayments were determined by com·
puter cross·checklng summit _
Countv welfare rolls with state
income tax data for tax years
1984 and '85.

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ONE EYENIII8 SHOW AT 7:30P.M.

ADIIISStOM 11.00

TAWNEY
JEWEURS
422 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•

•••.
•

INTROUDUCING ....

IN COMPOUND BOW
'

Bring This Ad

..
l

LOGY.

•FACTORY REPS ON HAND ALL DAY
•ARCHERY SHOOTING DEMONSTRAnONS
•DOOR PRIZES
•ONE DlY ONLY CLINIC SPECIALS

•
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Black-Stock #1347 • Med. Gray-Stock #1386
Blue-Stock #1369 • Med. Red-Stock #1339 • White -Stock #1334

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-

Big Discounts + SlQQO Factory Rebates
Over S2QOO Off (Discount &amp; Rebate Combined)

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NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY.'.'

••
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:* PLAN NOW TO AnEND *
GAWPOUS STORE CLOSED DUliNG CUNIC

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

PER WEEK
Based on soil prke of $10,500 with
$1,DOO cash or traclt down plus tax and
title. Monthly payment $206.55 for 60
month1.

DON'T MI-SS THIS ONEill

~

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S5164

"5" NEW 1988 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREMES NOW IN STOCK!

"NEW GENERATION"

~

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~r~;s

Based o~ sale pri&lt;e of $13,400 with
$1,000 cash or trade down plus tax and
title. Monthly payment $291.35 for 60
months.

I

•••

STOCIC # 1421

DR.

FOR AS UnLE AS ...

•
1
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•••
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IBUY A NEW 1988 CHEVROLD CA

BUY A NEW 1988 CHEVROLET SILVERADO
PICKUP STOCK #1259

.'

presented the trophy to PPHS Coach Steve
Safford) are, left to right, Rob .farrell, Casey Hill,
Jimmy Oliver and Billy CuttrUI. (See game
details and additional photos on C-2)

PERWEEK
Based on sale pri&lt;t $9100 with $1,000
&lt;ash or tradt dawn plus tax and title. ·
Monthly payment $17 6.1'1 lor 60
months.

FRAZIERS BOTTOM, W.VA.

••

LANDSTROM'S BlACK HillS GOlD
25% OFF
liNDEN WAU &amp; MANT£1
ClOCKS 30% OfF
STERliNG Sll VU •
· CHARMS &amp; BRACElETS
40% OFF
I 01 or 141 PlAIN
WEDDING BANDS 30% Off
MATCHING WEDDING lANDS
40"/o OFF

$3·429

S4403

POMEROY - Three calls
were answered by local units,
Friday the Meigs County Emergency Medical Sertces reports.
At 2:0l ,p.m,• TUppers Plains
took Jean Hawk from Route 681
to Camden-Cia.rk Hospital in
Parkersburg. W. Va.; Middleport at 5: 09 p.m. took Michelle
Smith !rom the Riverside Apartments to Holzer Medical Center;
Pomeroy at 9: 55 p.m. took Faye
Ransom from · Mechanic St.·. to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

and ~elgs County. Moser's address was "How the
Constltudon was Created." Seated directly In • •
front of Moser Is French Colony DAR Regent
~
Estlvaun Matthews. Also pictured are Mary
~
Niday and Helen Bush. (Tbnes-8entlnel photo by
Lee Ann Welch)

OFF

MIDDLEPORT - A meeting
of Mtdddleport Mason!~ Lodge
an pounced for Tuesday at 7 p.m.
has been cancelled and will be
rescheduled.

FOR ·AS UnLE AS ...

•••

Watches
20-50°/o

Meeting cancelled

STOCK #1337

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ALL

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BUY A NEW 1988 CHEVROLET NOVA

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POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Merchants Association will plan
Christmas activities at a meeting
to be held at 8 a.m. Tuesday at
Bank One In Pomerov. Members
of.the Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce will hold their
monthly session at noon Tuesday
at the Trinity Church. SJjeaker
will be James Carpenter, interim
superintendent of the Meigs
Local School District. ·

Pike, $47; William G. Sanders,
60, Portsmouth, $40; Troy L.
Bearhs , 24, Pomeroy. $43, Ira J .
Bryant, 21, Rt. 1, Scottown. $42:
Robert A. Young, 18, ESR,
Gallipolis, $46; Elden L. Cr!mer.
56, St. Albans, W.Va., $40; and
Amanda D. Savage, 32, Albany.
$41.

BUY A NEW 1988 CHEV. S-1 0 PICKUP

·~•
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Merchants meet

Municipal court

GALLIPOLIS - In Gallipolis
"fhere's an awful lot of resistCynthia Latta. a senior econo- dairy products, pork, coffee and
Municipal
·Court. bonds were
ance all the way around," to mist for Data Resources roc. in turkey all cost more, but fresh
forfeited
Friday.
passing along higher prices. Van Lexington, Mass., said she ~· fruits, chicken, beef and veal
Forfeiting $41 bonds lor failure
Dongen said. "We've got a more thought the Fed would look more were more of a bargain.
to
yield were Dale E. Peart, 38,
disciplined economv than we had' at the 0.3 percent less food and
Consumer goods other than
Jackson,
and Kenneth E. Gray
back In the 70s." •
energy increase than the larger food and energy rose at a more
Jr
..
24,
ESR,
Gallipolis.
If prices rose for the whole overall figure.
moderate 0.3 percent rate, after
S(ieedlng bonds were forfeited
year at the 0.6 percent August
"There's very little that policy a 0.9 percent jump in July .
rate, wholesale inflation would can do about food or energy · Mens' and boys' clothes cost by Danny Bowyer, 35, Ona,
be 6.9 percent, the Bureau of prices," she said. "The Fed's less In August and home elec- W.Va., $43; Vicki L. Winters, 24,
Labor Statistics said.
tearlier) tightening looks as If it Ironic equipment and mobile South Point, $39; Keith D.
Rhodes, 33, Rt. 1. Cheshire, S41;
For the first eight months of has had a fundamental eftect on homes also cost less.
this year, wholesale prices have triflatton." .
Prices for construction and William H. Stover I I, 18. Apple
rtsen at an annual rate of 4.3
Prices for energy jumped 2.2 industrial materials rose more ·Grove, W.Va., $39; David B.
percent, with most of that In- . percent, the largest Increase slowly In August than In July and Chapman, 51, Rt. 2, Crown City,
crease coming in the past few
since April, after dropping or prices for foods and feeds In the $39; Nlda K. Unroe, 36, 425 Green
months.
·
holding steady for the past three Intermediate stages of process- Terrace, $44; Leland D. Watson,
45, Rt. 2, Crown City, $44; Ronald
At the· White House, spokes· months, the bureau said. Natural tng dipped In August.
Joel
Chapman, 43, 536 Jackson
man Marlin Fitzwater said, "We gas prices turned up sharply and
still ' believe lnfiatton In under gasoll'll' prices shot up 3.8
control.''
percent on top of an already steep
"!wouldn't say it's good news;
3 percent rise In July.
it's about the same news we have
Consumer food prices moved :
bad in the past few months," he up 0.4 percent in August matchsaid.
ing the July increase. Eggs,
A morE ominous note was a ·processed fruits and vegetables,
huge L1 percent increase In
wholesale prices for raw mateTHE NilE FORCE
rials, following an Identical drop
In July. the bureau said. That
may mean more inflation a few
•Bays
months down the road as those
eMen's'
higher prices work their way
through tbe manufacturing chain
and down to the consumer.
FOR AS
Analysts had predicted a more
moderate 0.5 percent Increase.
PIR WEEK
The increase may also worry
the financial markets because of
Based 011 sole price $7309 with $1,DOO &lt;ash or trade
the possibility the Federal Redown plus lox and title. Monthly payment $137.17
serve may again rals'e Interest
for 60 110nths.
Air Alpha Foret Low
rates to cool off the economy and
curb Inflation.
•White/Rod, •White/Royal
EL MODEL- STOCK #1417
The Fed last raised Its benchmark discount iRterest rate Aug.
9 from 6 percent to 6.5 percent.
Other interest rates for mort·
The Shoe Cafe :
gages, car loans and bank credit
Gallipolis, Oh. ·
cards followed suit.

Emergency, calls

-.,

Summit n:sidents get illegal benefits
By United Press International
Twenty·eight people In Summit County Illegally received
.$220,482 in welfare benefits between January 1981 and October
1987 while gainfully employed,
Ohio Auditor Thomas Ferguson
said Friday.

...

• ( I

COLONY TH'EATRE

BACK TO POINT- Point Pleasant High School
retrieved the Rotary Traveling TrollhY after a
13-7 victory over host Gallipolis oJill'l'demorlal
Field Friday night. Displaying hardware (after
Gal6polis Rotary Club President Mel Simon

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CLEVELAND (UP!)
Fri·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
865.
Ticket sales totaled $1,403,111, .
with a payoff due of $462,082.
PIC:K-4
6258.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$236,133.50, with a payoff due of
$106,296.
P!CK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$6,456. PJCK-4 $1 box bet pays
$269.

\a

By LYDA PHILLIPS
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON (U~I)
Sharply higher energy prices and
drought-driven Increases in the
cost of food sent wholesale prices
· up a strong0.6 percent in August,
the biggest leap In five months.
the Labor Department said
Friday.
The steep 0.6 percent jump in
wholesale prices for finished
goods may mean consumers will
quickly see those higher prices at
the gasoline pump and on the
grocery shelves.
Analysts found comfort, however • .tn the more moderate 0.3
percent rise In wholesale prices
when the volatile food and energy
sectors were taken out.
Robert Dlell, senior economist
for The Northern Trust Co. of
Chicago, said the report bad
"something for everybody."
"Those who wanted evidence
of further inflation got that In the
0.6 percent total," Dtell std.
"Those who didn't, goi that in the
0.3 percent less food and

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-5

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

Wholesale prices up a strong .6 percent I

embezzlement, according 10 the in- :
dicunent occurred between July of
last year io January of this year.
- Charles Richard Wright, 32,
of Pomroy, was indicled for the
January 1988 malicious assault of .. •
Barbara Lynn Riffte at her
residence.
- Maud Lynn Connolly, 52, of
Point Pleasant, was indicled for • embezzlement of more than $200 ,
from the Shoppers Defile of Point
PleasanL The iodicunent alleges the
embezzlement occurred from a '
time unlcnown in 1980 10 Decem- ·
ber of last year.
· •
- Paul Gary McKinney, 35, of ·'
Point Pleasan~ was indicled by the •. •
grand jury on three felony DUI •
counts. According 10 the indict- ·
men~ McKinney is charged with ·
two counts of felony DUI in Oc- .. ' •
lOber of 1987 and one count in •·
December of last year.

~

Lottery numbers

IJJG .Dlit,1S·

more than $200 from the Fashion Tree store in Point PJeasanL The .

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DIRECTOR'S VfSIT - Ohio's Southeast
District Director Ruth Moser addressed the the
district meeting Saturday of the Daurhters of the
American Revolution. The meeting was held at
Grace United Methodist Church In GalUpoUs, and
Included DAR members from Ga!HpoUs, Ironton

;~~il. .

Septanber 11, 1988

September 11. 1988 .'

Pomll'oy-Middleport-.GaUipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

NO ADD-ON STICKERS • NO GIMMICKS
• NO DEALER PREP •

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P&amp;ge-A-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

September 11. 1988

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

rwoman injured in two-car accident
:~

GALLIPOLIS- A Crown Citv
area WOffif)n was injured in
tw&lt;&gt;ccar accident Fridav at 10:53
a:m. at the intersection of Second
Avenu&lt;&gt; and Sycamore Street,
according to the G allipolisPolice
Department .
Marjorie Bevan, 72, of Rt. 1,
Crown City, was iaken by the
Gallla County Emergency Medl·
cal Services to Pleasant Val ley
Hospital, where she was treated
and released.
·
Bevan was a passenger of Asa
H. Bevan, 76,ofRt.1,CrownCity.
Bevan, driving a 1987 Ford
Tempo, was cited lor failure to
yield.
Asa Bevan was driving north

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on Second Avenue when he hit a
1978 Chevrolet Malibu driven by
Mary E . Miller, 69, of 517
Magnolia Drive, at the Intersection as Miller was heading west
toward the Intersection. The
Impact knocked the Tempo off Its
wheels and onto its lert side.
The accident Is under lnvestl·
gallon by the police.
A Pennsylvania youth was
cited In connection with an
accident Friday at 5:12 p.m. at
the Intersection of Eastern and
Central Avenues.
Jamie Gardner, 16, of Chambersburg, Pa., was cited lor
hit-s kip, failure to yield, and
driving without a license.

Gardner, driving a 19Tr Ford
Granada, was heading east on
Central Avenue when he came to
the Intersection and drove into
the path of a 1978 Dodge Aspen
d.;lven by Sheila K. Helb, 22, qf
Point Pleasant, W.Va. Helb was
driving south on Eastern Avenue
when the coutsion occulTed.
In other pollee news, Claracv
J. Lee, 32, of Point pleasant, was
arrested and charged Friday
night with theft, assault and
resisting arrest. He was not sent
to the Gallia County jail.
Eldon W. Swisher Jr., 32, Rt. 2,
Ga!Upolis, was cited Frldav
afternoon for driving without
license .

We've been accused of
trying to keep our Fish and
Seafood Menu a secret.

a

So .... for those of you .
who may not be· aware ...

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ASSISTING INJURED - Patrolman Bobby
Cornwell . of the GaJUpolls Pollee Departm~nt,
right, and Mike Fulks of Galllpolls assist In
moving Marjorie Bevan, on stretcher, to a GaiDa
County EMS ambulance that would Inter
transport her to Pleasant Valley Hospital. Bevan

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Hanrest Festival
set for merchants

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Valley Hospital. The GaJDa County Sheriff's
Department's Jaws of IJfe van was called in to
rescue Bevan, a passenger In a 1981 Ford Tempo
Involved In a two-car accident Friday moming.
For more Information see related story. (Times·
Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

~

TREATING FOR ~RANSPORTATION - Patrolman Bobby Cornwell of the GaiUpolls Pollee
Department (with pistol) and Deputy Sheriff
·Robert Nance, right, assist Gallla County EMS
paramedic Joe Carter (top, center) In giving
treatment to MarjOrie Bevan, on stretcher, as
they prepare . her for transportation to Pleasant

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Meigs rescue team captures honors

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ST. CLAIRSVILLE - Southern
~ Ohio Coal Company's Meigs No. 2
:: ntine rescue team captured first
&gt;' • lace honors at the seventh annual
~ Ohio Valley Mine Rescue Contest
: here, while Gary Cordery of Wind·

~ ~~n~~~~~=~' won the bench·

· The Meigs No. 2 team had only
, • three discounts, or penalty points,
~ for tbe contest, and topped the 21·
" team .field that Included teams
"• from Ohio, West Virginia, Vir·
~ glnla, Pennsylvania
and Ken; tucky. This year's contest at• tracted a record number of entries.
"We were tickled to death"
" about the first-place flnl~h. said
~ Dave Peterson, safety supervi• . sor at the Meigs No. 2 mine and
; trainer of the Meigs No. 2 mine
•·!" rescue team. "This Is the one
• we'd wanted to win for several
·• years. It makes It all the more
• enjoyable that the competition
• was even tougher this year."
~ · Second place In the team com~ petition belonged to Windsor
~ · Coal Company, from Beech Bot·
;; tom, W. Va. "That gave Amerl,. can Electric Power's mining op;!- erations the top two places In the
,, mine rescue contest standings,
.• and four of the top 10," said Jon
•, M~rrlfield. manager of safety
~ . for Southern Coal's Meigs Dlvl·~ slon.
r, ~· Windsor's mine rescue team
:; had only tour discounts. Both
:~ Meigs No. 2 and Windsor had two
~ penalty points on the written
•' exam, but Meigs No. 2 Incurred
;: just one discount for the time far;: lor (It worked the field problem
" In 59 minutes, 43 seconds), while
•• Windsor had two penalty points
for overtime, needing 63 minutes
l to work the problem.
,.
Peabody Coal's Sunnyhlll "B"
.: 'team from New Lexington, Ohio,
• which won the Ohio Valley con~ test In 1986 and 1987, was third
; this ttrne with six discounts.
·'
While Meigs No. 2 was the
:; grand winner, the other two
teams from Southern Ohio Coal's
•
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Meigs Division, located near AI·
bany, Ohio, also earned top-10 fl.
nlshes. Its Raccoon No. 3 mine
rescue team, which won the Ohio
Valley meet In 1985, was sixth
with eight discounts, while the
Meigs No. 1 team was lOth with
11 discounts, Including five or
overtime.
"It's the biggest win the Meigs
No. 2 mine rescue team has had
since we started entering mine
rescue competitions about-a decade ago," said Peterson. "Our
team really has a lot of confl·
dence going for It now - we've
won trophies In the last four con·
tests that we've entered."
· Members of the Meigs No. 2
team Include Bill Starkey, Jerry
Kovach, Terry Staten, Mike DeiCotto, Clarence Williams, Randy
Cross and Dilvld Shinn. .
The runner-up Windsor team Is
comprised of Gary Cordery,
Mike Shreve, Steve Dlserlo, Jer·
ry Brewer, Mark Badia, Joe
Dobrzynski, Chet Contraguerro,
Jim Stevenson, and trainer Dave
Mahlke, manager of safety at
Windsor.
"We're pleased with our show·
log, particularly since three of
our team members are only In
their second year of mine rescue,
" Mahlke commented ..
Cordery took first place honors
among the 14 henchmen compel·
log In that category. It was his
third win of the year In bench·
men's competition, the other vic·
torles having come In contests at
New Lexington, Ohio, and Morgnatown, W.Va .
"Obviously, Gary's having his
best year ever as a henchman "
Mahlke said. "He's faced the defending national champion, Malcolm Dunbar of the Mathies
mine, twice already this season,
and won each time.
In a mine rescue contest. participating teams test their know!·
edge of rescue procedures and
their problem-solving ability
with a simulated mine "emergency'' on a f.leld which has been

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HOWARD BAKER
;·• SAUNDERS INSURANCE INC.
"We Manage Your Risk"
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PJl 43 7 Second Annue, Gallipolis SINCE
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Opposite the Post Office

1951

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laid out to replicate the entries
and passageways of an actual
mine. The bench men's contest
tests a mine rescue team member's ·ability to spot and correct
certain defects In the breathing
apparatus that each team member wears during the competl·
lion, and would wear In the event
of an actual emergency.

Recreation area
open on Lake Erie
By United Press International
.CLEVELAND (UPI) _ Gov.
Richard Celeste and other state
.and local officials have offlciallv
openeq the ,North Coast Harbo'r
recreational area, a 7.6-acreboat
harbor on Lake Erie extending
from the East Ninth Street Pier
to Pier 32.
"Today, we celebrate a project
tha! has brought the lake back to
the people of Cleveland," said
Celeste, who participated In the
"Harbor Expo" celebration
Fridav.
The project, part · of Cleveland's Lakefront State Park,
Includes a 1,300-foot waterfront
promenade and a three-acre
festival park. The state of Ohio
contributed $8.5 million In capital
funds.
"I am confident that by build·
ing on the strong level of
community and corporate support for this project, we can
make the North Coast Harbor a
catalyst for future development
along the lakefront," said the
governor.
Plans call for a world-class
aquarium, a maritime museum
and a 120,000-square foot retail
market featuring re&gt;;taurants
and specialty shops.

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was Injured In a two·car accident Friday morning
and was trapped temporarily In a 1987 Ford
· Tempo untllsheriH's depulles came with the Jaws
of Ute van· and freed her. (Times-Sentinel photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)

Couples apply for

GALLIPOLIS - Nine couples
RACl!1iE - The Racine Mer- applied for marriage licenses in
chants are expecting a big Gallla County Probate Court.
wee~end for the village this
Filing petitions were Allan E.
coming Saturday, Sept. 17 as the 'Sheets, 29, Rt. 2, Galllpolls, and
local merchants association Is Marry A. ' Durst, 31, Rt. 2,
sponsoring Its annual Harvest Gallipolis; Douglas G. Chance,
· Festival.
26, Rt. 4, Oak Hill, and Lori L .
Joining forces with the mer- Dorst, 25, Rt. 4, Oak Hill;
chants Is the Racine American Raymon G. Clark, 21, Rt. 4,
Leglori.
Gall1polls, and Lori L. VanvA parade will kick off the dav at ranken, 21, Rt. 1, Pt. Pleasant .
10 a .m. with line-up slated 'tor W.Va.; Patrick D. Watson, 17, ,
9:30 a.m. on the Southern Jr. Rt. 2, Crow11 City, and Peggy
High grounds.
Lynn Neal,l7, Rt.1, Crown City;
The Harvest Festival queen Richard D. Boggs, 52,237 Second
.will be chosed following the Ave., Gallipolis, and Goldie L.
parade.
White, 58, 725 Third Ave., GaiU·
Food, games, blngo,raffles- polls; David R. Pearson, 40,
' craft s,an tiq ues ,arrowheads, Mason, W.Va., and Martha L.
and an antique-classic car Erb, 42, Mason, W.Va.; Jeffrey
show .The car show will be at the . E. Johnson, 20, Rt.l, Crown City,
Jr. High grounds and already
over fifty entries have been ·
received.
One of the main events will be
an old-fashioned Blue grass,Gospel, and Country festival of
music in downtown Racine.
The na(lonaly known Hart
Brothers,Tall Grass, Bend River
Boys,Country Blend; Dan,Falth,and Tamara Havman trio
Midnight Cloggers, Shady Rive;
Shufflers, and a host of bands
from the Coal Miners JambQree.

lic~nses

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and domestic an !mal In the
GALLIPOLIS - The Carson &amp; the circus comes to town.
The Carson &amp; Barnes Circus morning and before the first
:Barnes 5·Ring Wild Animal Cit·
'will
be In Gallipolis Sept. 22at the sit ow . Showtlme' w111 be 4: 30 and
cus will bring Dudley the Magic
Gall1a County Fairgrounds for 7:30p.m.
Clown to area schools WednesTickets may be purchased at
two shows, brought to the area bv
day and Thursday to personally
Foodland stores, Star Bank
the Gallipolis Area Jaycees. ·
Invite the children to visit "The
Dudley will be visiting Ga!Upo- branches, Alcove, Carl's Shoe
Biggest Big Top on Earth'' when
lls City schools, Gallla County Store, Village Quick Shop (SR
schools and a Mason County 141), Rite Aide, Charlie's Snack
(W.\1 a.) school Wednesday and Shop and the Ga!Upolls Area
Thursday to stir the Interest and Chamber of Commerce. Tickets
also are available at Western
excltment In the children. .
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Publl~
On Wednesday, Dudley will see Auto in Point Pleasant.
UtUities Commission of Ohio children at Cheshlre-Kyger, Ad·
Tickets purchased before the
slatr reports released Friday
show
are $4 for children, $6 lor
daville, Vinton, Bidwell-Porter,
recommended a $2'!5 million
·
adults.
Tickets purchased at the
and Green elementary schools.
. --disallowance In construction
On Thursday, he will be at gate will be $5forchll(jren, $7 for
costs tor the Perry nuclear power
Washington, Hannan Trace, adults.
plant and 25 percent rate In"It's a great opportunity for
Southwestern and Rio Grande
creases over four years for
the children," said Jaycee Jeff
elementary
schools
as
well
as
Cleveland Electric Illuminating North Point Pleasant Elemen- Icard, chairman. "For the sake
Co. and Toledo Edison Co.
. of the children, I hope parents
tary in Mason County, W.Va.
The disallowance recommen·
The circus will be set up for will bring them to the clrcu s
·dation means utilities that have
residents to visit and view considering the size and number
' Interest In Perry would not be area
the
more
than 200 wild. exotic of attractions offered."
allowed to Include that amount In

Hospital news

PUCO discloses

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Wendell Barrett,
Langsville; Brian Hartman,
Pomeroy; Tina Hendricks, Mid·
dleport; William Barnhart, Mid·
dleport; Gloria Musser, Pomeroy; Edith Cummins, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Lois Pauley,
Muriel Davis, Garth Smith,
Eloise Stiles, Virgil Lewis, Patricia Tobias, J?wight Spencer.

··plant disallowances

. customers' electric bills.
• The recommendation was
, based on eight events that caused
• ,'construction delays at the $5.6
•, billion plant, resulting In cost
.·,overruns; staff members sa !II.

r Teache.-s strike in
;iCiark district

Ostomy chapter
holds annual picnic

• :By United Preaalnlernaltonal
• , About half of the students In
• :the Mad River-Green School
• District in Clark County stayed
;:out of school Friday as teachers
• , walked picket lines outside the
: district's tour school buildings.
•, Superintendent Darlene Du·
: chene said no new talks were
!:scheduled between the admlnis•:tratlon and the teachers, who
; · have failed to agree on teachers'
::salaries.
•. Meanwhile, the district asked
:•the State Employment Relations
O: Board to determine whether the
, ;Mad River-Green Local Educa• tlop AssocatiOn violated state
: collective bargaining laws by
striking.

·,Blood pressure
:·checks offered

•

·@EU114ND

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RACINE - Members of the
EMS Unit are urging
; everyone who attends thi~ Satur·
day's Harvest Festival in Racine
to watch tor their first aid trailer.
- From 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., the EMS
group will be conducting free
''· blood pressure. pulse pressure
&lt; and sugar level tests at the
·~; trailer. Everyone welcome.

c...fted In FlftPO'l. MIIM1 USA.

1Racine

•LARGE SllECnOH Of KNEf, ANilE, WIIST AND WOW SUPPOm
.,._ED INEEIUCES lEGAL FOIIIGH SCHOOl. AND COUEGE PLAY
.C:OIPlEIE UNE Of PRO AllllE1IC SUPPORTS
-sPENCO INSOlES AND SPOm INlAYS
•SIIN GIWD FICIION PlOOf TAP£

•JOIST s•PORT anunc sox

e&amp;EL WT ANilE IIACES

.aASTK IIIIGH/SIIN SUPPORTS
•SPINCO HOT/COLD WWS W1111 YBCRO

WIEilHE GME Gm A UmE lOUGH AND
YOUI DOCTOI SUGGEm PHYSICAL 'IIIEUPY....
OUTPAnErn PHYSICAL 'IIIEUPY SERVICE
MIMAI L 111&amp;&amp;011, IS, PT, CO.
IICHUL . . . .u. MS, AI

'he
.
....1........, •• ,...
.

PH. (614) 446·2206

o.. DIHon. R.N • .
M8J11118r

GAWPOUS 0110
'

TRU·MOC BOOTIE

THE SHOE CAFE

SEPTEMBER II

Homeowners .insurance

discounts

has Hadded" a fantastic
selection of fish and
seafood to their "already
. '' menu.
extenstve
Here it is ....

Oscar's Fish and Seafood
KIND
Whole, Deboned Rainbow Trout
Whole Catfish ·

HOW PREPARED
Broiled, Only

Pickerel Fillets

Blackened, Broiled or Deep Fried

Halibut Steaks

Blackened, Broiled or Deep Fr'ied

Catfish Fillets

Blackened, Broiled or Deep Fried

Sword Fish Steaks

Blackened, Broiled orDeep Fried

Red Snapper Fillets

Blackened, Broiled or D~ep Fried

Lake Perch Fillets

Deep Fried, Only

Ocean Perch Fillets

Blackened, Broiled orDeep Fried

Orange Roughy Fillets

Blackened, Broiled or Deep Fried

Oysters

Deep Fried, Only

Scallops

Broiled or Deep Fried

Tilt: OHIO

For qualified homeowners, we offer
discounts which can make our already low
premium even lower. Call

Cod Fillets

Blackened, Broiled or De~p Fried

Seafood Platter

Deep Fried, Only

Shrimp Platter

Deep Fried, Only··

Sole Fillets

Blackened, Broiled or Deep Fried

Salmon Steaks

Blackened or Broiled

Flounder Fillets

Blacked, Broiled or Deep Fried

Grouper Fillets

Blackened, Broiled orDeep Fried

Whole Pickerel

Deep Fried, Only-

V~LLEY

eANt;

,Reservations
Suggested

(or•oll'lllr~

Phone

A• I Stele St.
g '\ •••• Oh.
............2t0

446-9545

446-4511

COMMERCIAL &amp; PERSONAL
JOHN H. SAUNDUIS - BETSY SAUNDERS CANADAY
HOWARD BAIC&amp;II SAUNDERS - CONNIE HEMPHILL

U~e

1 gootJ "''fQhDOf. Stare Farm 1s tflere

Slate Farm Fire ancl Cas.Jalty Company Home ort 1ce: Bloominoron. llhnois

'

Open
4 pm tilll pm
6 Days
Serving Dinner
4 pm to 10 pm

OSCAR'S
57-59 Court St.

Gallipolis, Ohio
'

446~0404

Mon.-Tues.-Wed.·Fri. - 8:30 til 4:30
Thuradey • Seturdey ;- 8:30 til 12 Noon

..

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-

· UIIOU SIIOWDEN

.,......

Deep Fried, Only

Lobster (Whe~ practical price)

from state Faa 111.

HOMI!CIWNlRS

r

STOP BY FOR ALL OF'
YOUR ATHLOIC NIEDSf

Oscar's Restaurant

• BOOTHBAY•

(al:

BUIINfiS

Football Season
·.Is Here.!

••

Gallipolis Area Os tbmy Chapter will hold their annual picnic
meeting on Sunday, Sept. 18, at 1
p.m . on the Holzer Medical
Center picnic grounds, according
to Richard Vaughn, president of
' ·the local group.
Ostomates, lamlly and friends
are Invited. Members are asked
to bring covered dish, salad,
vegetable or dessert. The meat,
. drinks and utensils will be ·
provided.
The Gallipolis area group holds
regular monthly meetings open
to anyone interested. For addl·
tiona I Information, contact Phyilis Brown, R.N ., E.T., at446-5000.

s

Carson II Barnes 11-Ring Wild Anbnal Circus,
coming to Ga1Upoll8 Sept. 22. Dudley wlll be
vlalling. GaJUpoUa and Gallla County schools.

· Circus clown visits area schools

and Jodv B. Hall. 20, Rt. 1,
Northup;' Terry L. Holley, 23,
VIllage Manor, Middleport, and
Elizabeth Irwin, 21. Rt. 3, Gall1·
polls; Joseph E. Black, 39, Rt. 1,
Northup, and Patricia J . Ball, 36,
Rt. 1, Northup.

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 2nd lvt.
Clalllpalls, Oh. 45631
(6141446-1615.

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COMING TO TOWN- Dudley &amp;he Magic Clown
will be visiting area elementary schoola Wedoe~­
day and Thul'lday inviting children to attend the

Lafay.tt• llaii~Galllpollt

: ~M

Sunday nme.Sentinei-Paga A-7

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

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�Ohio-Point Plea1Mt, W.Va.

•

ong t e rtver
Artie Shaw Band.
will open season
of Artists Series

•

football game. Abo~, members of the flag corps, majorettes and ;
some cheerleaders do a dance routine.

HOME OPENER - GaiDa Academy IUgh School's marching
band performed at home for the first lime this year Frlda,v nleht
prior to and 111 halftime Intermission of the GABS-Point Ple88811t

City placed under
fiscal emergency
OUTLAW - Dawn 'l'homas, Middleport, pictured with her son,
three-year--old Matthew, vows that she will get a program
underway 1to outlaw pit bulls. Matthew was attacked by a pit buB
Wednesday when he and his mother were visiting friends near the
Athens-Meigs line. Thomas said Matthew was walking by the dog,
which was chained, when the dog attacked, stretching to the end of
his chain, and puUed the cbDd toward hbn. The anbnal was choked
by onlookers to free tbe child, Thomas reports. Matthew was taken
to O'Bieness Hospital In Athens where Thomas reports 65 stitches
were required to close head wounds over a period of four hours.
Matthew also receive puncture marks on the left hand and about
the left eye. The dog Is under observation for the next 10 days.
Thomas vows she will seek out an organization to help in her pledge
to have pit bulls outlawed.

Fontter Ashland Oil
chief arrested on
conspiracy charges

•

ASHLAND, Ky. !UP!) - A
former chairman of Ashland Oil
was arrested in July for alleged
conspiracy to steal confidential
company docum~&gt;nts and sell
them to Iran for use in a lawsuit
against the oil giant, the company said Saturday.
In a statement from its corporate headquarters, Ashland Offi·
ctals confirmed a New York
Times report that Orin Atkins
had been arrested in New York
and charged with interstate
transportation of stolen prop·
erty, a charge that carries a
maximum penalty of 10 years in
jail, a $10,000 fine , or both.
Justice Department officials In
Washington declinf'd comment .
The Times said the arrest
came after U.S. Customs Service ·,
agents secretly videotaped a
conversation in which Atkins told
a business associate to sell two
confidentlal1979 Ashland memorandums to Iran for $600,000.
The company also said Charles
Dugan, a former company vice
president: Charles Barnett, a
Florida attorney; and Roy Furmark, a former Ashland consul·
tant; were arrested in the case.
The four men alleg~&gt;dly conspired to obtain secret Internal
documents and sell them to the
National Iranian 011 Company,
which had sued Ashland for $500
million for failure to pay $283
million - plus interi!st - for
seven shipments of crude oil in
1979.
The shipments were made
about the time the United States
imposed an embargo on Iran for
seizing Americans hostage. The
shipments left Iran before the
embargo was Imposed, an Ash·
land spokE&gt;sman, Roger Schrum,
said.
"We are absolutely outragf'd
bv the conduct allegf'd in the
charges, " said John Hall, the
company 's chairman and chief
.executivE&gt; officer .
"We did not know whether the
allegations were true, how the
Iranians may havE&gt; gained access
· to the documents. or who may
have been Involved," Hall said.

"We requE&gt;sted a prompt and
thorough inv~&gt;stigation and
simply decid!'d to let the chips
fall where they may."
Hall noted that Ashland had
alerted federal authorities in
August 1987 of rumors that
National 'Iranian Oil Company
offiCials had access to con!lden·
tlai Ashland documents pertain·
lng to the outstanding dispute
being lltigated in Bermuda and
Mississippi courts.
The New York Times reported
that law enforcement officials
kept the arrests of Atkins and
Furmark under court seal in
hopes of pursuing Iranian figures
in the case. The newspaper
quoted Ia w enforcement officials
as saying the investigation ended
Friday .
Atkins pleaded innocE&gt;nt aftE&gt;r
his arrest and was relE&gt;ased, The
Times said.
The newspaper, quoting un·
named Ashland and ff'deral
Investigator~. said they had
~&gt;vidence that at a 1985 meeting in
London, Iranian r!'presentatives
were allowed to review and tak e
notes ori some 1,000 pages of
confidential Ashland documents.
The exact nature of thE&gt; docu·
ments was not known.
Atkins had retired from Ashland In 1981 followlngdlffer~&gt;nces
with the company's board of
directors, the company said In Its
statement.

•
'

By United Press International
EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio
(UP!) - The city of East
Clevelan,d Is the 19th Ohio city to
be placf'd under fiscal emer·
gency in the last nine years.
The city . was put in that
category Friday by statE&gt; Auditor
Thomas Ferguson, who citE&gt;d a
treasury deficit of $2.5 mllllon.
Ferguson said his office had
postponf'd considering emer·
gency status In May 1986 because
citv officials assured that financial problems would be cor·
reeled. But he said the deficit has
grown since last December.
"We determtnf'd in June of this
year that the objectives of the
city's financial plan were not
being met and the d~&gt;cision was.
made to Initiate a fiscal emer·
gency analysis," said Ferguson.
The mayor and council president have 10 days to submit to
Gov. Richard Celeste a list of five
people to servE&gt; on a special
supervisory commission. Celeste
wi 11 choose thr~&gt;e of the
nominees.
Also serving on the commission working on a plan to
eliminatE&gt; the deficit will be thE&gt;
mayor, council pr~&gt;sldentand tlie
state tr!'asurer and state budget
director.

•
•

•
•
r

.•
•

,.

.Women's health focus
of September campaign
1 By United Press International

rural area, is that they felt
Isolated. They felt they were out
there doing their job all by
themselves. They didn't feel
connectf'd to other service providers and sometimes they dldn' t
even feel connected to their
clients," she said.
women.
The state launchf'd the first
The trends show more women
Women's
Health Awarenss
living in po~erty, ehterlng the
Month
in
September
1986 by
workforce and suffering from
sponsoring
publicity
campaigns
chronic diseases that result in
longer hospital stays, according for 34 agencies dealing with
to a study by the Department of · health Issues as wide· ranging as
poverty, homelessness, AIDS,
Health and Human Services.
To those patterns, Moseley drug addiction and chronic dis·
would add an apparent increase eases among womeri..
Thts September, there are 87
In violence against women.
projects in 45 Ohio counties,
Domestic violence and rape' 'is
using a total of about $50,000 in
definitely being reported more.
state
funding.
Whether It's growing or not Is
"It's
a way of trying to reach
difficult to say," she said.
people
with preventive health
When Ohio considered starting
messages,"
Moseley said
a health awareness campaign
Friday.
directed specifically at women,
Though Ohio is the only state
the HE&gt;alth Department gathered
with a month dedicated to
information from clinics, hospiwomen's health E'ducation, Mose·
tals, community centers and
ley said Michigan, Texas and .
church groups, Moseley said.
Kansas have inquired about
"The thing I heard from every
starting simDar programs.
arE&gt;a, whether an urban area or a
Judi Moseley, coordinator of
Women's Health Awareness
Month this September in Ohio,
said Friday the state is following
national trends that show a rise
In health-related problems for

1918

''A-lOA'S It

CUitolillud-Le

•s•

OILY "I"~
.... $11,200 .

c~..a~,SlS,
..

...........
"
........
......,,...

1988 IIICI LeSAIRIS
'

- '. .• at Snith's

Section

8

Septanber 11, 1988

Politics a family affair of Rutland
- he's mayor, she's on council
RUTLAND - If 15-year-old
Mike Fink or 11-year old Ell Fink
ever decide to run for rriayor or
villagE&gt; council In the Meigs
County community of Rutland,
their neighbors won't be too
surprised.
c
Alter all, their father, Jim
Fink, a genera11nslde laborer at
Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs No. l mine, Is currently
serving his second term as
mayor of the vUlage. Their
mother, Vickie, is an elected
member of the village council.
And the · youngsters' grandfather, Eugene Fink, served 18
years on the Rutland Council.
Located next to one of Meigs
County's oldest churches, the
Finks' two-story home on Depot
Street quallflf'd as the unofficial
"town hall" in Rutland these
days. Vickie Is the first woman
ever elected to village council In
Rutland, and she and Jim ar'eone
of only a few husband-and-wife
teams holding elective office
, anywh£lre in the state.
Years from now, though, local
historians wUI probably not concentrale on the novelty of a
husband·and·wlfe duo winning at
the polls. What they will remember Is that Jim and Vickie
have helped lead Rutland out of
an ocean of red Ink.
Alter the community's mayor
resigned in 1985, Jim won an
election to fill the former mayor's unexpired term. Jim won
handily and Immediately had to
confront the dilemma of a $10,000
deficit in the general fund.
"SinceOhlolawdoesn'tpermit
counties, towns, or even the state
Itself to operate with a deficit,
there was a distinct possibility
that the state might takE&gt; ov~&gt;r the
operation of tile village," he
recalls. Complicating the problem was the fact that the village's
clerk had dlf'd,leaving the town's
financial records in disarray.
So Jim set to work, putting the
books and the balances back in
order. "We cut down pn expenditures," he says. "We lnstitutf'd a
voucher system, and we tried to
run the village's affairs more like
an actual business.
"We eliminated the mayor's
secretary, which saved the vii·
lage $45 a month. Now Vickie
serves as the vUiage secretary,
only she does It without pay.
·We've used our own money for
stamps and long distance phone
calls and things like that, just so
that we could save the town some
money.''
Between keeping street lights
lit, roads paved, potholes filled
and insurance premiums paid,
the village's $20,000 annuai tax
revenue for its general fund and
$103,000 overall budget do not
stretch very far, the mayor
admits.
"J.'he village never had any
problems with misuse of funds,
It's sbnply that there weren't
enough funds to operate with,"
he explains. "It's taken a couple
of years, but we've pulled the
vUiage out of the red (ink)."
The most dramatic step that
Jim took was eliminating the
vUiage' s one· man pollee depart- ·
men!. "It wasn't a step that I
wanted to take, but it was one of
the major reasons why we were
running such a defficlt," hE&gt;
points out.
"The crime rate around town
hasn't changf'd since we dis·
solved the pollee department the most serious thing we ever
have around here is a speeder.
But the townspeople seemf'd to
want their po11ce protection
restorf'd, so we placf'd an operatIng levy on last Nov~&gt;mber' s
ballot." Everybody wanted the
pollee department, it seemf'd,

but they didn't vote that way Give Jim a chance to write out
they levy failf'd by a .2-to-1 a wish list for Rutland, though,
margin.
and he immf'dlately puts new
But, now that the village's water and sewer systems at .the
financial health Is no longer In top or his list.
critical condition, Jim is wDllng
Although the Leading Creek
to give the police force another Conservancy District supplies
try. "We're planning to reinstate Rutland with water, thevlllage's
our police officer, either In network of water lines needs
August or September, until the replacement. " When I became
end of the year. ThE&gt;n we'll look at mayor, there were some big
thenumbersanddecideonce .a nd leaks In the village's water lines,
for all if we can afford to continue and as a result, our bills from
It," he says.
·
Leading Creek were higher than
Although Jim insists that he they needed to be. In fact, it was
was surprised when he won the putting the village's water fund
mayor's race, voters In Rutland in jeopardy."
obviously felt he had the right
A $5-per-month special assess·
credentials. After all, he has an ment for twQ years on water bills
associate degree in police in the vUlage raised $20,000 that
science from Hocking Technical helped finance needed repairs to
College, a bachelor of science the system. "We're finally mak·
degree in public administration lng a little profit now so that we
from Rio Grande College, and Is can slowly replace the water
au. S. Marine Corps veteran.
lines," he says.
Jim, who says he's a descendAt the present time, however,
ant of the famf'd riverman, Mike Rutland bas no sewage treat·
Fink, worked for the Gallia ment system. "I think if we had
County Department of Human better water and sewer facilities,
Services for three years before the village would attract new
Joining Southern Ohio Coal In housing and new businesses. I'm
1976.
sure more people would want to
If Jim has br.ought anything to live here If Rutland had more
the village's procef'dlngs, it's a thinks to offer - stores, busisense of cooperatlop.
nesses, more housing." As it
"I've been trying to get people stands, he says, the town's
to work together," he says. "ltell population has changed very
them It's just likE&gt; a football team little from the 1980 census, when
or a baseball team- we've got to It stood at 654.
pull together to win." He cites an
Although Vickie Is a reglsterf'd
example of two neighbors who Republican and Jim Is a regis·
had been feuding for 30 years tered Democrat (who says that,
over a drainage problem. •'I . in his heart, he's really an
finally got them to ,sit down independent), the two emphasize
together and talk about It," he that they've never differed on
smiles. "It took a lot of talking,
any village Issue. Vickie debut we got things settled .and I feated a 15-year council member
think we Ironed It out pretty when she ran for her four-year
well."
term back in November 1985. Jim

I

ran unopposf'd when lie was
elected to a new four-year term
in November 1987.
"It works out pretty well, "
Vickie says of their sharf'd
community sE&gt;rvice. "We've always · trlf'd to be Involved in
things together. Most people call
the mayor when they have a
complaint, and If Jim 's not here,
they can at least talk to a
member of the vUlage council
who happens to be the vUlage' s
secretary as well."
VIckie has also been a member
ot the Rutland Emergency Medical Service for the past six years,
and laughs that "If there's a
squad run, half the council

leaves.''
Jim's salary is. $150 per year,
although in 1986 and 1987 he
donated that salary back to the
vUiag,e. VIckie and the other
members of village council each
receive $10 per month.
But the man that the townspeo·
ple call "Duke" because of his
long-time admiration for the late
John Wayne would rather not
talk about taxes and budgets.
He'd rather talk about getting
people to set aside differences, to
work tog~&gt;thf'f, and to make
Rutland a bett!'r place to live, He
sees a number or signs that
''we've turned the corner.
"!like what John Wayne had to
say In one or his movies, 'The
Shootlst' ,"Jim says." 'I won'tbe
insulted or wronged or laid a
hand on. I won'tdq these things to
other people and require the
same from the. • That's something I try to go by."
Which just goes to prove that,
when it comes to mayors, Rutland has one who's a straight
shooter.

MIT

'35
•

..

.'

FAMU..Y
aunlque husband and wile team&lt; He~s serving his
second term as mayor of Rutland, while she's the

. Cheerleader camps: making money with sis-boom-bah industry
~':Jc. ~·.,:.=r

' Senators team up
slamming ads

_By RENE STUTZMAN
DALLAS CUP!) - As sure as
the arrival of autumn Is the sight
•of boys in helmets and pads
·knocking each other down and
girls cheering them on. If football
is the yin of high school life,
cheerteadlng is the yang, a $100
mUllan to $200 mllllon-a·year
yang.
L.R. "Herkie" Herkimer, the
millionaire inventor of the pompon, conlrols much of the
Industry.
In June, a New York investment IJ'OUP bought the five
cheerleadlng-related companies
he founded In a deal worth $45
million.
.
"'I'bere are 600,000 cheerleaders," says Herkbner, 62, of
Dallas, who still controls the
companies. He estimates his
companieS willll'OSS $50 miiUon
this year.
"We're the blgi!St In the

color. In

-

IDUCII. .tO ·t....;::,;

By United Press International
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (tiPl) · Sen. Howard Metzenbaum and
his one-time nemesis, Sen. John
Glenn, havE&gt; teamf'd up to siam
Cleveland Mayor George Voino·
vich for running a television
advertisement saying Metzenbaum Is soft on child
'
pornography.
The Metzenbaum campaign
began airing a commercial,
scripted and acted by Glenn, In
all eight major Ohio mf'dia
markets Friday and said It would
not stop until Volnovich, the
Republican nominee running
against Metz:enbaum, cancels his
own ad and apoloalzes.
(

RIO GRANDE - Music that made audiences swoon during
the Big Band era - and many modern compositions - will fill
the theater of the Fine and Performing Arts Center at Rio
Grande Colleges on Monday. Sept. 26.
That's when the Artie Shaw Band Inc. kicks off the Valley
Artists Series' 1988-89 season with a performance by the band
creatf'd by the "King or Swing" of the late 1930s and '40s.
Artie Shaw is expectf'd to conduct the band, but the actual
playing of the clarinet, Shaw's Instrument of choice, will be
done by Dick Johnson. Johnson was hand·plckf'd by Shaw to do
the performing when the band was formE&gt;d five years ago.
Shaw reachf'd the heights of musical fame In 1938 with his
recording of "Begin the Beguine," a tune from a failed
Broadway musical that caught the fancy o!'the jitterbug period
by the pants. Shaw rose from anonymity as a one-time
orchestra performer to become the toast of the musical world.
Aiwavs an individualist. Shaw was revolted by the behavior of
swing f;ms. So much so that he walked off the stage In the midst
of a performance in 1939 and went Into self-Imposed exllP in
Mexico. When he returnf'd, he brought back with him a Mexican
melody he transformf'd into another monster hit, "Frenesl."
He continued performing untlll954, when he retiree. ''I had a
bellyful of the musical business," he told an iftterviewer. "In my
mind, thE&gt; big band era was identified with a lot of slE&gt;aze and
greed."
His career went .down many paths over the years- traveler,
writer, dairy f'armer, !Ibn distributor '- but the adulation of .
fans and jazz musicians coupled with the renewal of interest In
the swing band period prompted him to go back on the road
again. The response, he found, has been encouraging.
''I guess we're getting this kind of reception because a lot of
people are starved for popular sounds in which musical values
are paramount,'' he said.
Called an "astonishingly good orchestra" by Down Beat
reviewer John McDonough, Shaw's group offers "clean·as-alr
swing and overall ensemble balance.''
"We don't know what Shaw might have de':eloped had he '
continued to play," McDonough wrote. ''But we do know he was
a restless, creative man who looked forWard to growth and had
little patience for endlessly recreating himself."
,
Shaw's choice of Dick Johnson as the on-stage Interpreter of
his music was the Icing on the cake for Johnson's slow but
steady climb to jazz reknown.
A graduate of the New England Conservatory, Johnson was
on the verge of success In the 1950s when a record company
lmpedf'd his progress by holding him to a contract. The
company never releasf'd more than one of Johnson's
recordings. Despite this, his fame as a swing performer in New
England continued until the early '80s, when a contract with a
California record outfit and a highly-regarded live performance
made fans •·~ross the nation stand up and pay attention.
"I've always dug Artie," Johnson explained. "When I was a
kid l was raised on Shaw and Benny Goodman."
In past performances, Down Beat's ji,JcDonough obsE&gt;rved
that Johnson "succeeds in sounding more like the prewar Shaw
than the Shaw on the Book of the Month 'Club records. He seems
to have swallowed him whole... .
.
Individual tickets for the show are $7. Valley Artists Series
season tickets are $25. For additional Information, contact the
Fine and Performing Arts Center at Rio Grande, 245-5353,
extension 364, or (In Ohio) l-800·282-7201.

~imts - ~.eutiu:el

,

I

••

country. We're probably as big
as all the others puttogether," he
says.
One of his companies Is National Cheerleaders Association,
which conducts 300 cheer leading
clinics a year. High school and
college students flock to them.
This year. 100,000 people signf'd
up, Herkimer says. .
In the first week of August,
1,400 high school and college
cheerleaders swarmed over the
Southern Methodllt Unlverllty
campus.
On the fourth and last nilbt of
the cllltic, the temperature hung
In the 901, but hundreds of
parents drill out their lawn
chairs to watch what their
daughters had learned.
"I've been here every nlabt,"
Hid Steve Roe, a math teacher In
Carrollton who maneuvers along
tile aldellllee with a vldaoctuller!l
to tape his J4,year·old daughter,

Lauren. She Is about to begin her
first year as a junior high
cheerleader.
"We like to support our kids in
everything they do," he sa Id.
The family paid $110 to send
Lauren to camp.
"It's what she wanted to do, so
I'm just kind of going along with
what she wanted to do," said Roe.
''We offer the best bargain In
town," Herkimer says of his
clinics. "Where else can you send
your kid for $110? We just hope
we'll sell some uniforms."
And sell they do.
The day at camp begins with
"Cheeroblcs" done to a tape of
disco music that begins with a
sales pitch for Cheerleaders
Supply Co., another of Herkl·
mer's companies.
Immediately alter that, the
girls have a car decorating
contest.

"We have this Car Color stuff
on sale," says Carol Wagers,
executive director of HE&gt;rkimer's
high school clinics. "You can
order it through Cheerleaders
Supply."
Minutes later the girls file
inside for a fashion shoow of
clothing available through Herki·
mer's companies.
At an advisors' meeting in the
afternoon, a company sales re· presentatlve gives each sponsor
a cheerleading calendar jammed
with photos, trivia ("The first
cheer was in 1897, when a man
jumped from the stands and said
· Rah, Rah, Rah - Mlne-ne-sotah! "), and solicitations (Oc·
toller: "Cold weather Is here. DO
YOU·HAVE YOUR AWARD
JACKETS ORDERED? Cali
your Cheerleader Supply Repre·
sentatlve today.") ,
Herkimer estimates It costs
about $400-a·year to be a

cheer iead~&gt;r .
"It's pretty darn cheap. It's
much cheaper than dance lessons, music lessons, piano lessons," Herkimer argues.
I

"The uniforms will cost about
$600," said Pat Roe, Lauren's
mother, but she says that does
not seem out of line.
"We have friends who spend
more than $1,000," says Steve
Roe.
To parents who think it Is too
expensive, "I'd say they've got
their values in the wrong ptace,"
says Herkimer. "For most of
them, the attitude Is. 'We'll sell
the boat before I let my girl go
without her pompons.' ... If
you've got a daughter who's one
of 10 girls In school elected
cheerleader, you're not going to ,
deprive her.''
The girls and lew boys at camp
do , not appear to have bei!n

deprived. There are 18 instructors for the 750 high school
campers . II thE&gt;y want Individual
Instruction, all they have to do is
ask.
"HIs a very, very well planned
camp," says Paige Wllllams, 17,
the captain of the cheerleadlng
squad at Monticello High In
Monticello, Ark. "We learn a lot
more good cheers, hardE&gt;r
cheers. All our Instructors are
really good at helping in critl·
cism and such. ·• .
Kenny Goss, a Cheerleader
Supply Co. sales representativE&gt;
during the winter, Is in his llth
year as a camp instructor.
•'The old~&gt;r you get, the more
you look around and say, 'What
· am I doing here? I'm 30, and I'm
sleE&gt;ping In a twin bed in a dorm."
"But in the summer It's great
to ... come out with the kids.
(See CHEERLEADER, pag~ 83)

�Page-B-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy . Middleport-Gallipolis,

Ohio-Point

Community calendar
noon, followed by a gospel sing at
2 p.m. featuring Jan and Kathy,
the Johnson family, and the
United Faith Four.

SUNDAY
EVERGREEN - Rovalaires
featured in hymn sing at-Westerroan Methodist Church, Sunday,
7:30p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Harry and
Murlle Drummond famllv reunIon, Sunday, Raccoon · Creek
County· Park; dinner at 12:·30
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS- Holley family
reunion, Sunday, home of Vernon
Holley on Falr!leld-Vanco Road.

ATHENS- Mt. Zion Church,
Athens, will have homecoming
on Sunday with morning service
at 10 a.m., dinner at 12 noon, and
afternoon service at 1 p.m.
Everyone welcome.

CROWN CITY - Kyle Donnally will be guest speaker at Mt ·
Zion Baptist Church, Sunday, 7
p.m.

CHESTER '- Annual Weber
family reunion Sunday at the
Rodney Keller farm on Route 248
with basket dinner at 12:30 p.m .

ADDISON- Addison Freewill
Baptist Church family day Is
Suoday; Sunday School at 10
a.m.; worship service at 11 a.m.;
diMer following; Zion Hill Singers and Addison Quartet singIng. Speakers are Rev. Jack
Parsons and Rev. Frank Conner;
evening services at 7: 30p.m. ·

TUPPERS PLAINS- A representative of the Buckeye Program will he at the United
Methodist Church· In Tuppers
Plains on Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday from 12: 30 to 2 p.m.
Persons may also register to vote
at the same lime and place.
TUESDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Rotary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m.,
Down Under.

GALLIPOLIS - Rlverby Writers meet Monday, 7 p.m.,
French Art Colony.

GALLIPOLIS- GFWC/Riverslde Study Club meets Tuesday, 1
p.m., Our House for no hostess
meeting. Staff serves lunch and
speaks on the Our House, Yesterday and Today .

PT. PLEASANT - Beginning
cloggers class Is Mondav, Mason
County Senior Citizen Center.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Chapter PERI meetes Tuesday, 3
p.m., Bob Evans Farms shelterhouse. Bring covered dish; meat
and drink furnished.

POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladles
Auxiliary will meet 7 p.m.
Monday at the hall, 124 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.

POMEROY - The Bowers
reunion will be held Sundav at the
southbound park on Route 33.
Tbe reunion will begin at 11 a.m.

TUPPERSPLAINS-Arepresentatlve of the Buckeye Program will he at the United
Methodist Church In Tuppers
Plains on Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday, from 12:30 to 2:30
p.m. Persons may also register
to vote at the same time and
place.

POMEROY -The Wood famIly reunion will he held Sunday at
the Virgil King Farm, 38858
Smith Road, Pomerov. Picnic
lunch at l2 noon.
·

DARWIN - Bedford Township
Trustees will meet In regular
session on Monday, at 7 p.m., at
the town halt

GALLIPOLIS Lafayette
While Shrine meets Tuesday, 7
p.m. for election of officers.
GALLIPOLIS- Gallla County
Right to Life meets Tuesday, 7: 30
p.m., Buckeye Rural Electt1c.
RIO GRANDE Gallla
Countv Farm Bureau meets
Tuesday, Buckeye Hills Career
Center cafeteria. There Is a
proposed dues Increase to be
voted on.
GALLIPOLIS - Ga Ilia County
District Library BQard of Trustees meet Tuesday, 5 p.m. ;
Bossard Library.

RACIJio'E - Southern Junior
High Boosters will meet Mondav
7:30 p.m.. at the junior high

Senior ]db Bank service
helps employer, employee

POMEORY - The annual
homecoming of the United Faith
Church, wUI he this Sundav. A
basket diMer will be held at 12

POMEROY - Members of
Milk Marketing Inc. (MM!)
District 10, Local 7 and 8, will be
holding their annual membership meeting on Wednesday at
the Salisbury Elementary School
In Pomeroy.
The 7:30 p.m. meeting will
feature this year's audio visual
presentation "Forward ... to gether" and a fiscal year-end
wrap-up about dairy industry
happen lngs and how these events
will affect the MMI members.
After the local report from
Boardmember Harold Schacht,
Canal Winchester, a report will
be presented by an MMI staff
member. Following the reports,
voting delegates will he elecled
to represen1 their dis trlcts for the
current term.
MMI is a 7,000 member dalrv
farmer-owned cooperative ericompassingan eight- stale midwestern area Including Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Michigan,
New York, Kenlucky , Maryland
and Wes1 Virginia.
Last year, MMI marketed
more than 4.1 billion pounds or
475 million gallons of milk.

REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Elementary PTO will meet Monday at the school, starting with
open house at6: 30 p,m., followed
by the meeting at 7 p.m. All
parents and friends are urged to
attend.

MONDAY
MERCERVILLE - Hannan
Trace Elemenuirv School PTA
meets Monday, 7 p.m., tor open
house and meet the teachers
night.

POMEROY - A series of
gospel meetings will be held at
the Red Brush Church of Christ
. beginning Sunday and continuing
for a week, 7:30 each evening.
Guy Malory of Winter Garden,
Fla. wUI he the speaker each
evening. The public is Invited to
atlt!nd.

MMI meeting
set Wednesday

RACINE - OAPSE Chapter
453, Southern Local, will meet
Monday, 7 _p.m., at the high
school. All mem~rs are urged to
attend.

RACIIIfE - . The Gideon and
Artimeshla Roush reunion will
be held Sunday, Sept ui, starting
at 1 p.m., at the Shrine Club Park
In Racine.

GALLIPOLIS Russell
Wright speaks at Providence
Missionary Baptist Cllurch on
Teen's Run Road, Sunday, 7 p.m.

MINERSVILLE- Minersville
United Methodist Church will
have their annual homecoming
this Sun&lt;)ay. The public Is
Invited.

KYGER CREEK - Women
Alive wi II meet Monday, 7 p.m. at
the Kyger Creek Clubhouse.
Speakers will he Mary Beth
Smlthern and Rebecca DeLong.
Monthly membership dues are
$2. Refreshments' will he served.

RACilllE - The annual Harv·
est Festival at the St. John
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove
Road, Racine, will be held
Sunday. Wotshlp at 11 a.m.,
covered dish dinner at 12 noon,
afternoon program at 1:30 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Revival hegIns Sunday at Dickey Ch~pel
Church with Eddie Salmons.

REEDSVILLE -The Bucklev
reunion will be held Sundav at the
Belleville Dam Park In Reedsville, beginning with a potluck
dinner at 1 p.m.

school. All parents welcome.

GALLIPOLIS - As an em- myths surrounding the older
ployer, you realize the Impor- worker.
tance of hiring competent people
One such myth Is that physical
to staff your organization. Often job requirements are too deyou will encounter problems In manding. Studies have shown
finding suitable candidates to fill that physical strength changes
many of these positions.
llttle from the time of biological
If you are planning to hire, the . maturity untU the age 60 and
Job Bank has applicants 50 years changes vety .little at all there
of age and older to fill your after.
employment needs.
The Job Bank Is open Monday
The older worker today repres- through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4
ents one of the best human p.m. Call446-7000 and speak with
resources Investments a busi- one of the Job Counselors for this
ness can make. These are certal'l free service.

Ferrellgos
~our

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$100 million to $200 million a
year, bu tit Is growing as schools
add more cheerleadlng squads
and add cheerleaders to the ones
already existing.
He had been edging toward
retirement, but he says a recent
weight loss has returned his
appetite for business.
"I used to he the oldest and
fattest cheerleader around, but
I've lost 52 pounds, so you can · "
only say I'm the· oldest now ."
"I want to run a $100 million '
company," he says. " I'm shooting for It In four years, five years
maximum.''

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Soulhern Ohio Coal Compnay's Meip Division Is sponsoring '
"The Velveteen Rabbit," one of six productions of the Little
Buckeye Theater Series
This ·

year the perfonnances reached 24 school districts In southeastern
Ohio, according to Dr. Greg Miller, coordinator of the fine and
perfonnlng arts at Rio Grande College and Community College.

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Food Man~gemtnt I Catering
Auto Mechanics
Industrial Malnttlllnce
Clrpantry
Machine Trlld11
Cotmetology
Ntnlng Alllatant/Orderly
Dlvtrsllled Medical Occupatlona
OHice Servlcll
Electricity
Wilding
Electronics Servicing
Parsl~gal Assistant
Financial Aid and/or Tuition Subsidy May Be Available To Qualified Applicants From
A Variety Of Sources: PELL GRANTS; VETERANS BENEFilS; BUREAU OF VOCA·
TIONAL REHABIUTATION; GUARANTEED STUDENT LOAN; SINGLE
PARENT/HOMEMAKER GRANT; J.T.P.A. (COMMUNITY ACTION AGENCIES).

(From CHEERLEADER, page 81).
Bucks
...
They're so full of spirit. just leading Industry now rakes In

r,,::i

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In

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page B-3

can' t be beat ."
Four of the girls at camp are
from Samuel High School in
Dallas. Two are deaf; two are
hearing impaired .
"We change the motions just a
· uttle bit to sign the words ," says
Anne Hatch, their advisor.
There are 88 hearing Impaired
students at SamueL These girls
cheer at any sporis event that
Includes a deaf athlete.
"1 don't think of 11 as being a
cheerleader but as a supporter of
the deaf," said D'Lisa Preston,
18, head cheerleader.
Herkimer estimates the cheer-

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· By LIDIA WASOWICZ
UPI Science Writer
DAVIS, Calif. (UP!)- You are
looking for a dog. Your J1\0ther
recommends a poodle. Your
neighbOr swears by ·his Irish
setter. A breeder claims boxers
are best What will you do?
The first researchers to compile scientific data on the 56 most
popular canines, ranking each
breed on 13 behavioral traits, ·
ranging from playfulness to
. watchdog barking, have an
answer.
Lynette and Benjamin Hart of
the School of Veterinary Medicine at the University of California, Davis, compiled the ratings
of 96 small-animal veterinarians
and dog obedience judges from
around the country Into canine
profiles they say can promote
matches made In dog heaven.
"Selecting a pet Is a ·little !Ike
choosing a spouse: you've ~ot to
consider more than just looks.
Pick a dog because It has a
friendly face or cute ears, and
you can be In for a big letdown,"
said Benjamin Hart, author,
professor of physiology and behavior and expert on canine and
feline behavior.
''A Samoyed may look like the
most Iova ble cream puff you ever
saw, but he certainly does not act
like one, rating a lowly three out
of 10 on its demand for affection.
"A hasty decision might lead
you straight to the pound, but by
carefully selecting a breed that
matches your personality, age,
lifestyle and environment, you
can anticipate a happy and
loving relationship with your new
pet over the next 10 or 20 years,"
said Lynette Hart, director of the
human-animal program and specialist In health benefits of pet
owners,
Sixty-five percent of American
households have at le&lt;jst one pet,
owning a total of 56 million cats,
53 mllllon birds, 51 million dogs
and 5oo million fish.
Each year, Americans spend
more than $5.2 billion on pettood,
$4.1 billion on medicine and
veterinary services and another
$3 billion In petshop supplies.

-...

"If you're going to Invest that;

kind of money - not to mention
, time anp emotion - Into .a pet,;
you want to make sure you,
choose the right one tor you,"
Lynette Hart said In an Interview. "You want to maximize the'
emotional and physical benefits
scientific studies are linking td
pet ownershhlp."
In their book, "The Perfect
Puppy: How to Choose Your Dog
by Its Behavior," the Harts rate
each breed on a scale from onet(l
10 on excitability, general acllv·
lty, snapping at children, excessive harking, playfulness, o~1
dlence training, watchdog.
barking, aggression towaro!·
other dogs, dominance ove"
owner, territorial defense, demand for affection, destructiveness and ease of housebreaking.
These traits should be matched
with the ages, personality apd,
lifestyle of the dogT adoptive
·
i
family, they said.
"I have seen many problem~
with timid people who hayef
aggressive dogs calling all the!
shots. This group would be het~r~
off with a golden retriever .or
blchon frlse than a chow chow or
miniature schnauzer," Benjamin Har~ advised.

"lf you are not very demon- tradeoffs, so first decide which
traits will be easiest and hardest
strative with your feelings and
for you to live with," Benjamin
prefer the dog to lie on the rug
rather than lick your teet, opt!or Hart said.
Chihuahuas, Yorkshire terria bloodhound, collie or chow .
ers and silky terriers may make
Instead of a poodle, English
good watchdogs and loving comspringer spaniel, Boston terrier
panions - but tend to he
or Shih Tzu."
dominant
and bark ex~esslvely.
A Doberman pinscher or rot tweiler might fit the btll for a
young man living alone and
working long hours who wants a
dog that ranks low on harking
excessively and destructiveness,
high on watchdog barking and
ease of housebreaking and moderate on demand for love.
ITarry Stalnaker)
On the other hand, a family
who will often play with their pet
in a large backyard might prefer
a breed that rates low;. on
snapping at children and domiPOMROY, OHIO
nance but high on general activIty and excitability. Good bets
Include the English springer
spaniel, goklen retriever, Labra8 p.m. • 12 midnight
dor retriever and vlzsla.
Apartment dwellers wanting
$5.00 per person
neither a large dog nor one that Is
FOR MEMBERS AND
very active, assertive and barky
. GUESTS ONLY
- characteristics typical of
many smaller dogs -can choose
from among the Maltese, Pekingese, pug and Lhasa apso.
"As with spouses, there will be

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15 WALLETS

Tackett has graduated from the
MICHAEL A. SILVERmORN
nlnt-week U.S. Air Force senior
Sgt. Michael A. Silverthorn,
noncommissioned officer (NCD)
son
of Mike and Jane Silverthorn,
academy at Gunter Air Force
RAC!Jio'E - Racine Lodge 461, Station, Ala.
Rio Grande, recently recently
F&amp;AM, will meet 7: 30 p.m.
re-enllsted for four more years In
Graduates of the Air Force's
Tuesday. Work In master mason highest professional military the U. S. Marines.
degree. Re!re.s hments following schOQI for NCDs studied ad·
Sgt: Silverthorn Is currently
the meeting, All masons urged to vanced management techniques,
stationed with the Fourth Marine
atend.
communication skills and behav· Division, FMF AFRTC, Lynch-burg, Va.
lora! science.
EAST MEIGS- Eastern Band
Sgt. Silverthorn has more than
He Is a security pollee superinBoosters will meet 7 p.m. Tues- tendent In Spain, with the 406th seven years previous service
day In the high school hand room. Security Pollee Squadron.
with the Marines.
He Is married to the former
Tackett Is thesonofMelburnC.
Pattie
J. Gardner, daughter of
and Juanita Tackett of GallipoJack
Gardner,
Lynchburg, and
lis, Ohio.
Hog roast
the
late
Lois
Gardner.
The sergeant graduated from
SYRACUSE - A hog roast,
He was a gtaduate ol TuscaraSouthwestern
High School, Pasponsored by the Meigs Associawas
Valley High School, Zoartion for Retarded Citizens and triOt, Ohio, 1970, and received
ville,
Ohio.
the local Karate Club, will he an associate degree In 1983 tram
held Saturday, Sept. 17, at
Carleton School In Syracuse,
Serving will be from 5 to 7 p.m.
Cost, $3 per person. Everyone
welcome.
1986 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME, 4 DR .. V-6, auto., air,
AM-FM-Stereo.
Meetbtg set
1984
T-BIRD Air, auto .. power windows, AM-FM-Sterao.
VINTON -Open-air meetings
1984 FORD TEMPO 4 Dr., red, auto .. air. and just 42,300
will be held Wednesday through
. miles.
Sunday at Pine Grove Holiness
1984
DODGE OMNI4 DR .. auto .• air
Church. Services will .start at
1987 DODGE OMNI AMERICA. Air, AM-FM, 6 1peed,
7: 30 each evening with Rev.
Odell Manley and Rev. Bob
21,000 mllaa.
.
Manley. Special singing will be
1983 CAMARO. Red Z-28. 6 spd .. air, AM-FM-, PW,
featured. The chuch Is located
cruise. 51 , 460 miles.
five miles out Route 325 from
1977 CHEVY IMPALA. 4 dr, auto., 305 V-8. 76,176
VInton on Rowlesvllle Road.
actual mllaa.
.
Watch for .signs. Everyone
1978 BUICK LaSABRE, 4 ·dr., auto., air, V-8,1otaand Iota
welcome.
· of new partl.
·
1986 FORD BRONCO II, V-6, 5 apd., XLT package.
Retired teachers
30,436 milaa.
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
1986
PLYMOUTH HORIZON, 4 dr. auto., air. AM -FM,
County Retired Teachers' Asso21,300
miles.
ciation will meet for a luncheon
1986
DODGE
4X4 TRUCK. D-10, black, 4 spd., Slant Six
on Saturday, Sept 17, at 12:30
motor, 19,963 miles. Was $8100. Now '7400.
p.m., at the Middleport Masonic
1986
FORD STAR VAN. V-6. auto .. air, AM-FM . Lots of
Temple. Harold Young, district
axtr•.
representative of the State
19811 CttEVY CHEVETTE. 4 speed. Spacial $3300.
Teachers' Retirement System,
(2) 1984 FORD LTDa, 4 Dr.. auto., air. AM·FM-Sterao.
will speak. lf not contacted, call
742-2251 for a reservation, by
19B6 CHEVY S-10 PICKUP. 4 speed. Slack, sharp.
Wednesday, Sept 14.
1987 CHRYSLER LeBARON GTS. Turbo, air, auto .• AM· ·
FM. 4 cyl.. 8.300 miles. Sail for loan value.
Anniversary
1983 PONTIAC 6000 4 DR. 4 cyl., auto., air, AM-FMPOMEROY - The Ladles
Stereo.
Order of Eagles Auxiliary 2171
1986 PONTIAC 6000 WAGON. Air. auto., luggage rack,
Invites all auxiliary members to
AM-FM-Stereo, rear defro~er. real nice value. Was
an anniversary dinner at the
$7900. Now '7200.
club, on Saturday, Sept 17, at 6
1982 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC 2 DR .. V-8. auto., air,
p.m. Bring a covered dish for the
cruil8, tilt, 61.000 miles. Cash Price $3900.
potluck d!Mer. Meat will be
1983 CAMARO, V·6, auto., air, AM-FM.
provided . .
1985 PLYMOUTH ARIES,. 4 DR. Loaded. 4 cylinder.
Mls!lionary service
HARRISONVILLE
A special missiOnary service will be
held Wednesday at the Harrisonville Holiness Church. Speakers
will he Rev. and Mrs. Sam Davis
605 GENERAL
MIDDUPOIT,
from Mexico.

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Minot State College, N.D.

The Velveteen Rabbit'------..

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CHARLES M. TACKE'rl'
Senior Master Sgt. Charles M.

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

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o:o. STUDIO

In the service

Propane Needt" ·

FooDLAND
12

POMEROY - Ohio Ela Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma f'hl SororIty, will meet at 7:30 Tuesday
evening at the Senior Citizens
Center for the opening of meetIngs for the new chapter year.

I

September 11, 1988

Tri·County Vocational School
St. Rt. 691, OH Rt. 33 Nelsonvlle, Oh 45764
753·3511 (Mon·.·Thurs.)
We Prepare People For Jobs

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September 11, 1988

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

B-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Divorce checklist clevis~
to prepare for single life
Dear Ann Landers: After 17
years of what I thought was a
solid marriage, my husband
announced that he had found
11
the perfect female." I ran
across an article tn Mony magazine that has loads of great
advice for women In my spot.
Unfortunately, It came too late
for me, but It w111 surely help
others: Please print it. Thou·
sands of woman will bless you.
·.Shell-Shocked In Schenectady
Dear Shell: Thanks for your
generosity, and good luck to you,
dear.
Preparing lor Divorce
The following checklist, devised with the help of lawyers,
llnanclal planners and family
counselors, can ease the transition to single life.
While you and your partner are
just thinking about divorce:
Start putting away savings In
an account of yo11r own. This w!H
give you ready cash In case your
spouse suddenly stops contributIng to household bills.
If you do not have credit in your
own name, get it. Applyforcredit
cards, and If necessary, have
someone other than your spouse
co-sign a small bank loan.
Make an Inventory ol al!
separately and jointly held assest, Including Investments, cars
and furniture. This tally, along
with a list ol outstanding depts,
may be necessary to determine a
division of property. Have your
bank verily a list of the contents
of any joint safe-deposit box.
Once you have decided to get a
divorce:
Notify banks and broderages
where you and your spouse have
joint accounts of your Intent to
divorce. Ask that no brokerage
transactions be carried out with·
out the written approval of both
you and your spouse.
Close -out joint ch11rge accou-nts, or, If you wish to keep the
accounts open, notify the creditors In wrlglng that you will no
longer be responsible fo( your
spouse's purchases.
Try to negotiate an agreement
with your spouse on the division
of assets, child support and
visitation rights. If you want
child support or alimony, list
your monthly and yearly expenses so your lawyer can make

Ann

would like them.'' The man was
pensive for a moment and then
asked, "God, why then did you
make women sodar'l,ed stupid?"
God replied, "So they would like
you!'' --No Dummy In PhlliJ.'
Dear No Dummy: I'm printing
your small joke to makeup for all
the male chauvinist commerits
that have appeared in this space
over the years.
Planning a wedding? What's
right? Whal's wrong? "The Ann
Landers Guide for Brides" will
relieve your anxiety. To receive
a copy, sent $3 plus a selladdressed, stamped businesssize envelope (45 cents postage)
to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 111162,
Chicago, Dl. 60611-0562.

Garden Clubs planning
·fall meeting in Wellston
WELLSTON- The fall meetIng of the Garden Clubs of Ohio,
:Jackson District, wll be held
Sept. 19 at the Falrgreens Coun: trv Club, Wellston.
: 'Registration will begin at 9:30
·a.m. and members are· urged to
:arrive early in order to visit the
Harvest Bountv Market, a sales
:table which ·features plants,
:bulbs, vegetables, dried material
·and crafts.
· Mrs. Gladys Melvin and Mrs.
:Pauline Savey will be guest
· speakers during the morning
:session and following the lun-

One quilt in a crowd _ _ _ __

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
POMEROY - The only Meigs
County quilt selected for display
at the Patterns
Worth RepeatIng exhlbltlon at
the Dairy Barn
So.utheastern
Ohio Cultural
Arls Center Jn
Athens last
month was one belonging to
Juanita Lodwick. Chester.
Numerous residents displayed
their quilts In a county show at St.
Paul's Lutheran Church In May
but Juanita's was the only one
selected by the judges for the
exhibit. ·
Thought you should know .

homelnordertohavesomeextra
Income, perhaps a bed and
breakfast Is lor you.

landers

r~~in~a~~ wr~;~:d. ·~.s~01~~~

Among our happy travelers
have been Pat and Roy Holter,
just back from a tour of Denmark, Sweden andd Norway. The
two were impressed with the
progressive atmosphere of that
area with Pat commenting that
everywhere you looked there
were cranes and other equipment knocking down the old and
putting up new.
Incidentally, Roy Is sure he has
cousins by the dozen there since
at one stdphe counted more than
a hundred Hollers In a phone
book.
Your registration lor that
seminar on how to start and
operate a bed and breakfast
sponsored by the Extension Service and the Pomeroy - Area
Chamber of Commerce Is needed
right away so that plans can
move ahead. Just call the Extension Office, 992-6696. The cost Is
$12 per person or $16 per couple
and that includes lunch, snacks,
and handout materials.
The ali-day seminar will take
place on Sept. 27 and the program
will IncI ude Inform a lion on how
to start a bed and breakfast,
. marketing, sources of assistance, food service, and how to
prepare a business plan.
So if you're one of those people ·
with an extra bedroom or two and
open to having people In your

Fans and ba.ts
· Historians believe that the
folding fan was Invented In Japan
a bout AD 700. The inventor mav
have made the fan after notlcini,:
the way a bat f~lds Its wings ..

Mulberry Heltihts
Wed· 6:00 ~m .

$14.95

ANNIVER SARY SPECIAL

ALL AGES
AND FAMILIES

ONLY

S7 47

95¢

ON DEL.

DEPOSIT

KODAK PAPER

2 · 8 X 10
3·5X7
15 WALLETS

F0 0 DLAND

.

Woad Pl1111ue Will a. Av•ll•ble
At Time 01 Peckegt Delivery

·

LIMIT ONE PACK PER
SUBJECT PER FAMILY.
ADDITIONAL SUBJECTS IN
FAMILY REGULAR PRICE.
BACKGROUND SCENIC
AND BLACK.
GROUP PICTURES
$1.00 PER SUBJECT.
PAY WHEN TAKEN.
PACKAGED SCENIC
BACKGROUND.
NO EXTRA CHARGE.

3RD AYE.

JACKSON PIKE

LA-Z-BOY®

....
,
r'

·~

··f J

Lewis-Nakamoto

Cadmus alumni plan reunion Sept. 25

Women are designed to fit your body, not just
your feet.

NOW

.
Knights to note 50th anmversary

Front-row savings ,that
make It easier than
ever for you to be:an
armchair quarterback!

POMEROY - The 50th wedding anniversary of Chester and
Annette Ashworth Knight, 104
Legion Terrace, Pomeroy, will
be observed with an open receplion on Sunday, Sept. 18. from 2 to
4 p.m.
The reception Is being hosted
by their sons and daughters-Intaw Ter·r v and Sharon Knight, of
Cal~onla, and Dick and Bo
Knight ol Riverview. Fla. Mr.
and Mrs. KDti!ht have three
grandchildren, Steve, Caledonia,
and Mandy Knight and Stephanie

Sale$279
&lt;A.J "Eagle" Recllna-Rocker' Reclll'lef
Soft and casual, featuring contemporary
rolleel-over back and pillow -style arms.

,.

•

"

YOU SAVE $13.00

SaleS299

&lt;

•

A versatile transitiOnal beauty with a
deep-tufted pillow back, padded roll arms.

(800) 582-1399
.,

Deep seating comfon and traditional good
looks! Tufted button back, T-cushion seat.

__ .,..,,...
MII•J' Pai"Cltd

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'
'••

Flair Furniture &amp; Design

••
•'•
•

"Brand Name FumRure AJ. Dlscounl Prices"
fi'IIJ-1171

DIST!NcriON
(Tennis)

&lt;Cnrl '5
sho• slorc

GAlli POl :S

(JHirJ

i. ifill

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 til 8 P.M.
Tues.. Wed .. Thur.
9:30 til 7 P.M.
Saturday 9:30 til 6 P.M.

.---------------------------------------------~ :•
'

End-Of-Summer

CLEARANCE SALE
on

~-

TRACTORS
&amp;MOWERS

SPECIAL PRICES!

It's A

Great Time For
Wheel Horse Power.
Wnrrl Hone La\IIR and Garden Tractors never fall behind In perrormancr.
VIs II us 1oday, Ask to see Whttl Horsr k:afbiggrr attaChments.

PARENTHOOD

Sales349

&lt;C.l "the Champ" DReclii...-J"'ICI"'·Rocker" 111 cluer
'·

NOW

. . . . . . . . No_......... - - ...... of idlly to par.

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Phone 11111 llll1boul
pre-pay COIItllunlly meetlnp
nearjOU.

NOTIDNGWORKSLIKEWEIGIDWATCHERS!

days, from 10: I5a.m. to2: 15 p.m .
and evenings, on the same days,
from 5 to 9 p.m.
In Middleport, sessions will be
at the public library on Mondays
and Tuesdays from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. each day.
The Adult Basic Education
program Is sponsored by the
Meigs County Board of
.M.~o~nd~a~y~s,~Tu;,;;,;e~sd~a~y~s~a;,;n~d~WIIed;.;n;;.e,;.s·-.;E;;d;;u;c~a,;,;ti,;,on;;;.•·_ _ _ _ _ _ _,
1

Confidential SeNices:
Birth Control
v. D. Screening
Cancer Screening ·
Pregnancy Teltlng

Reaular Price . • . .$25 .00

•

Bohrer, and a great-grandson,
Jake Bohrer, Riverview, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. · Knight were
married In Pleasantville, Ohio by
her cousin, the Rev. Wald Radford, on Sept. ~6, 1938 and have
spent most of their married lives
In Pomeroy.
Knight is a retired school
teacher. and also worked for
American Electric Power Co. for
25 years. Mrs. Knight drove
school bus here lor 25 years.
The couple requests that gifts
he omitted.

REG. 155.00

T -8 St(flN[l fl.'wl

POM);;.ROY -This fall's first
session of Adult Basic Education
Classes In Meigs County will
begin on Tuesday.
Anyone· over 18 who is interestedinenrollingln the sessions.
has two locations from which to
choose.
Sessions will be held at the
JTPA office In Pomeroy on

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••
I

The bride Is a graduate ' ol
Gallla Academy High School and
attended Rio Grande College.
She Is employed by Gallipolis
Parts Warehouse.
· The groom is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and
attended Ohylo University and
Rio Grande College. He Is employed by EconoLodge Motel.

Adult Basic Education class set
CHESTER and ANNE'ITE (ASHWORTH) KNIGHT

IVOME N

REG. TO 165.00

Facemire-Randolph

.

)BROOKS.
FOR

GARY LEE and RHONDA KAY (RANDOLPH) FACEMmE

••

IUJi~tra1ion Fee , . . SI7 .00

~~~

her sister was Crvstal Folmer,
Long Bottom. Other attendants
were Tracie Abbott, Mason,
bridesmaid; Jennifer Mora,
Pomeroy, junior bridesmaid:
and Brit nee Stollings, Columbus,
flower girl.
The attendants wore peach and
mint green satin tea length
dresses with spaghetd straps,
scalloped lace oversklrts and
lace bolero jackets. They wore
baby's breath In their hair and
matching satin shoes, carried
bouquets of peach and mint
green carnations. The flower girl
carried a white basket of peach
and mint green petals.
Todd Tripp, Pomeroy, was
best man, and ushers were Mark
Abbott, Mason: Shannon Staats,
Pomeroy, assisted by Scott Eichinger, Pomeroy, brother ol the
groom, with Jason Mora, Pomeroy, rtngbearer, nephew of the
groom.
The groom wore an all-white
cut-a-way tuxedo ensemble while
his . atten~ants were In white
tuxedos with ties, cumberbunds, ·
and boutonnieres In peach and
MAX JR. and KELLY (THOMPSON) EICHINGER
green.
The bride's mother wore a
The groom graduated from
Kelly, Hollywood, Fla ., ail aunts
wedgewood blue linen suit while
Eastern
and Hocking Technical.
of
the
groom;
assisted
by
women
the groom's mother was In a pink
of
the
church.
College
with
a degree In business
ensemble. Both had earnatlon
management.
He Is employed
They
now
reside
at
300
MMulcorsages. Becky Smith, Belpre,
with
Marcum
Contracting,
Chesberruy
Ave.,
Pomerey.
-sister of the groom, registered
ter.
Guests
at
the
wedding
were
The
bride
is
a
graduate
of
guests.
from
Ohio,
West
Virginia,
VirgiEastern
High
School
and
atThe bride's table featured a
three-tiered fountain cake with tended business office education nia, ~nd Florida.
staircases descending from each classes at Meigs.
side first to two-tiered wedding
cakes, then single layered cakes,
with miniature replicas of the
CADMUS - Plans lor the 10 a.m. until noon Is the arrival
attendants on the staircases. Cadmus High School reunion are
dme. Lunch Is scheduled from 12
Peach flowers and taperscom- complete, according to its noon until 12:30. Cost will be $5
pleted the table decoratiOf!. Serv- alumni.
per person. The dinner will be
ing were June Eichinger, BarThe reunion, or " homecom - catered by Dean Circle.
bara Fry, Pomeroy, and Bonnie Ing" will be held on Sunday, Sept.
Cadmus graduates from the
25, at Cadmus High School, earlv 1920s until the late 1950s are
beginning at IO a.m.
to check their class representaAccording to the spokesperson. tives for additional Information.

POMEROY Kelly Lea
Thompson, Long Bottom, and
Max Allen Eichinger, Jr., Po me·
roy, exchanged wedding vows In
a ceremony at Sl. Paul Lutheran
Church, July 16.
The Rev. Lawrence E. Bush
and the Rev. William Middleswarth performed the double-ring
ceremony before an altar decorated wllh a peach and mint
.•. green gladioli arrangement and
candelabra. As a part of the
ceremony the bride, daughter ol
Mr. and Mrs. Max E. Folmer,
Sr., Long Bottom, and the groom,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Max
Eichinger, Sr .. lighted a unity
candle.
Escorted to the altar by her
lather, the bride wore a gown of
white matte talleta fashioned
with beaded Alencon lace on the
. ''-'
mandarin neckline and fitted
princes bodice. Drop pearls
· cas.c aded from an alencon lace
applique on the yoke and were
RICHARD and MAE MmORI (NAKAMOTO) LEWIS
repeated on the shirred, alencon
adorned pickups of the skirt. The'
Renaissance double pout sleeves
featured pearl strands and lace
Rosalind Lewis, Warwick, R.I. In
RUTLAND - Mae Mldorl
appliques . with wrist decor of
suede rose satin with lace overNakamoto, daughter of Janet
shell-patterned headed alencon
lay,a dropped waist and poutled
Nakamoto, Rutland, and Robert
cuffs. A candy box bow and
·sleeves, bridesmaids.
Nakamoto, Falls Church, Va,
streamers or taffeta embellished
Megan Vento, cousin ol the
and Richard Michael Lewis, son
the basque waist with the boufgroom
was the flower girl, and
of Mrs. Barbara Lewis, Rhode
fant skirt encircled with a
Christopher Simpkins, also a
Island, ;~nd Norman Lewis,
flounced ruffle accented with
cousin of the groom, was the ring
Flanders, i'i,J., were married on
appliques and lace flowing Into a
bearer.
July I6 In Warwick, R.I.
cathedral train.
Joseph Bassett, Providence,
The double- ring ceremony took
The bride's fingertip veil and
R.I .. cousin ol the groom was
place at St. Benedict's CathoUc
blusher fell from a headpiece
bestman, and ushers were Gary . trimmed with simulated pearls
Church. Mrs. Elsie Emery, orgaNakamoto, Rutland, and MInist, and Mrs. Jill Spangler,
and white satin shoes and pearl
chael Nakamoto, Falls ChurCh,
vocalist, provided the music.
earrings completed her ensemBaskets of mixed flowers deco- Va.
ble. She carried a colonial
The mother ol the bride wore a
rated the church.
bouquet of majestic daisies and
powder blue lace dress, while ker
Escorted to the altar by her
peach and green carnations and
stepmother wore a floral print.
father, the bride wore a formal
roses with baby's breath.
The groom's mother was in a
• gown fashioned with a sweeServing as maid of honor for
pink ensemble. and all had
theart neckline, shirred to the
rosebud corsages.
waist which was trimmed with
A recepton honoring the couple
simulated pearls, sequins and
was held at the West Valley Inn,
Venice lace. The short puffed
s'ieeves had lace Inserts, and the West Warwick, R.I. Tables were
bouffant skirt flowed Into a. decorated with fresh flowers an~
a traditional wedding cake was
chapel train. The bride wore a
served
with other refres~ments
headpiece trimmed with simufollowing
a catered dinner. Amy
lated pearls from which fell a veil
Nakamoto,
the bride's sister,
of Illusion. She carried a bouquet
registered
the
guests.
of white rosebuds and baby's
The couple resides at Northbreath and a pearl necklace and
earrings completed her gate Apt., Admiralty Drive West.
Bldg. C. Apt. 5, Middletown, R.I ..
ensemble.
02840,
The bride Is a graduate of
The bride's attendants were
Carol Wright, Greenbelt, Md., Meigs High School, attended ,
maid of honor, in a tea length Mary Washington College al)d
suede rose crocheted lace gown San Diego City College, and will
with scalloped edge hemline and attend Community College In
blouson bodice; Penny De- Rhode Island. She Is employed at
whurst, Huntington, W.Va., a Star Market In Middletown, R.I.
The groom Is stationed with the
bridesmaid In suede rose satin
gown wilh sweethearl neckline, U.S. Navy, on the USS Trippe,
fitted bodice and bustle back, and Newport, R.I.

HOMECO

FifM'Meeling Fee . .$ 8,00

SEIIKIR C1TIZENS CENTER

v

MISS
THIS

JOIN NOW FOR
ONLY. ••

45 MltUTES EARLY FOR REGISTftATION AND WEIGH IN.

541 5econdA&gt;eflue
Tue: 7:00p.m., Wed: 9:30a.m.

1f2

DUN' f

OFF
REG. PRICE

Florine Mark,
Area Director

nearest you.
POMEROY

to 7
OHIO VAUIY, JACKSON PIIE-WD., SEPT. 14-11 to 7
Special

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

•li...rio
412
S..ond
Dowlfawn

Olrtr eodJ £h:toMr 8, 1918.

ST. PETER'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH

MOTHERS ' GAWPous,~!»!»L~~o~~!.12-11
Annivers&lt;~ry

11, 1988

•Swtattn
•J....

~

GALUPOUS

The Maternity Orchard

Our 31st

September

CHESHIRE - Rhonda Kay
Randoph and Gary Lee Facemire were united In marriage Aug.
19, at Cheshire Baptist Church.
The service was conducted by the
Rev . Stewart Jamison.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mrs. Barbara Randolph ol Addi·
son and the groom is the son of
Mr.-and Mrs. jack Facemire of
Gallipolis.

I can't lose fte!ght
fast enough!
· ·. . · · ''Now you can
with Wejght Watchers on
,
your sideZ'

NEW MEMBERS: PLEASE

The Mother- To-Be

D.O. STUDIO

\

Eichinger-Thompson

out of the way, activities are month. Just call the center to join
expected to get back on schedule. a group of givers.
But there Is one area ol
concern.
· Have you noticed?·
It's not too late II you haven't
E)eanor Thomas, executive
Trees are coming down around
made it to Rutland to attend the director, advises that local dona- the old Diamond Savings and
three-club flower show, "Antique
tions have been gotng down. Loan building on Main St.,
Artis try."
While federal and stale funding Pomeroy, In preparation for
The e~hlblts will remain In stay about the same level, expansion of the bUilding which
place until 5 p.m. today. Someexpenses tend to go up, and this has been pure based by the Meigs
thing new fo~ flower shows here
puts !be Cenier operation In a Library Board.
Is a special class for mini-decors · bind.
The architectural plans have
displayed In a quarter of an eight
SO ...... there Is an appeal -not been completed, bids will be •
foot diameter circle.
only to those ol you who enjoy the taken soon, and construction, .
The four exhibits feature se- activities and services of the well, Ruth Powers, librarian, ·
lected pieces ol furniture, like an Center, but others who are just thinks It could get underway late
antique chair, table, and accesso- Interested in seeing the program fall. Plans are for the work to be '
ries, with a floral arrangement move forward - to Join the "$A completed and· the Pomeroy .
or plant as a focal point. Month Club.''
llbrarv moved there by late
Different!
And there are several kinds summer. '89.
the $I club, the $5 club, the $10
.,
At last the renovation and club and the $20 club ..... that's a
Have a nice week!
expansion of the Senior Citizens
Center Is completed. It's been a
tedious few months. for the staff,
A Shop To Meet The Needs of
not to mention the seniors. as the
work went on.
The kitchen and dining room
Maternir.y Fashions from Lingerie 10 Finer
have been enlarged and some
Dresses For Special Occasions.
new equipment Installed making
Infant Clothing 0·24 Months
It easier for the cooks who
prepare those hundreds of meals
each week. there's a large new
conference room for meetings
and other activities, and more
230 Broadway, Jack1on • 288-2559
Open Tu81.-Wed.· Thurs.-Set. 9 :30-6:30 1
craft and office space.
Mon. &amp; Fri. til 8:00
·
Now that cool weather Is here ·
and the construction workers are

TilE

cheon James Caldwell, retired
professor of hortiuculture, Ohio
State University, and presently
feature writer for the Columbus
Dispatch, will present a slide
program of European flower
shows he has attended. The
showing Is to give alpreview of
Amerlflora prospect-~ lor 1992.
Deadline for reservations Is
Thursday, Sept. 15 and the cost Is
$8.50 per person with checks to be
made payable to Jackson District, GCO and mailed to Mrs.
Richard Bulger, 23 Club Drive,
Chillicothe, 45601.

You keep trying to lose weight fast but keep
running into all kinds of problems. You're always
hungry. You're snacking at parties or ordering the
wrong things at restaurants. ItS all so confusing.
But NOT anymore. Now, you can have
Weight Watchers®on your side and lose weight
fast without being hungry.
With our New Quick Success® Program, you can
start losing weight 20% faster in the first few weeks.
Don't miss this chance to lose weight faster than
ever and save money too!

.

11. 1988

Community corner

...

a case.
Collect the names of experienced divorce lawyers from
friends, the state or county bar
association or other attorneys.
Interview at least two candidates. Question them about their
lees.
After the divorce decree be·
comes final:
Rewrite your will to name an
heir other than your spouse.
Review health, life and disabilIty Insurance coverage. Change
the beneficiaries on pollcl.e s you
own unless your settl~men t •~­
quires you to continue to protect
your ex. Replace any protection
you have los!.
Dear Ann Landers: I'd get a
big kick out of It If you'd publish
my responsee to "A Texas
Question," the reader whose son
asked why women are so dumb.
As the story goes, there was a
man sitting In his room. He began
to talk to God. The !nan said,
"God, why did you make women
so beau tlful?' · · God rep lied,
"Well, so you would like them.".
"Oh," the man replied, "why did

September

JU 18, OaiUpoUe Fe..,., WV
•
"

' •

Of SOUTHEAST OHIO

GAWPOUS
414 Second •••• 2nd floor
446-0166
"1·5912
B:IO te 5•00 Montlay-friclay
1130 te 5•00 Montlay·Frltlay
B:JO to 12 Satll'tlay
CloHIIW-.•day
CIIHd Thursday
ell11, logan &amp; McAi1hur
AlSOs .lol'w.-• a lllp 1 , All-.

POMDOY•
Zl6 L Main St. 2nd Floor

aa

WI NOW HAYI . . 1919 WHIIL IOISES IN

RIG FEED &amp; SUPPLY
CO.
Pa•aroy, Ohio

1.. W. . . St.

STOCK, NO PAYMIIIT OlllniiiST UtmL APIIL 1
TO QUAUFIID APPUCAIITS.

992·1164

The lito.. with "AIKindl of Stuff"
P:or P.ta. lubl•. Llrge 6 lrnlll Anlrnele. Llwn1 6 G1rdena

CIIISTD

BAUM LUMBER

fiS.JIOt

�'
September 11 , 1988
Pomeroy

B-6 Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middi~-Gallipolis,

Three appointed to OAC panel
GALLIPOLIS - Janice M.
Thaler, Patrtcla Glass and Dr.
Gregory Miller, all or Gallla
County, have been appointed to
Ohio Arts Council (OAC) panels.
The OAC has a panel of
reviewers to help decide on the
disbursement of tunds In each of.
their program areas . Each panel
member Is directly responsible
lor an In-depth review or assigned orgtzatlons or projects.
On ~ specified date, after all
on-site visits are completed, the
panel meets at an open meeting
and discusses the projects, and
recommends funding . Panel
members are selected forexper·
lise In their field, for recognized
achievements In the arts, and for
their ability to give accurate and
constructive evaluation.
Janice M. Thaler will be
serving her second term on the
Multi-Arts Panel. She will visit
and evaluate arts councils and

organizations that are Involved
In a v~rlety of arts, such as
dancing, painting, promoting the
arts, and educating people In the
arts. Thaler, whose formal edu·
calion was In nursing, has
studledtheartsandartsmanagement at workshops throughout
Ohio and surrounding areas.
Thaler gained attention from the
OAC through successful grant
writing and her extensive work In
starting the French Art Colony
and serving on the Board or
Trustees . She Is currently the
Curator of the FAC and Is
responsible for the many line
exhibits open to the public.
Patricia Glass, who also volunleers at the FAC, has been
Invited for her second year to
serve on the Traditional and
Ethnic Crafts Panel. Glass
earned her position on the panel
through 30 years of experience
with the Cooperative Extension

.
s pnnts
FIAl•C .p~esenr·
_ . .·
.
Palntlngs ln lts ga11erles
I

1. ·

.

'

.

GALLIPOLIS .,... Artwork displayed at the French Art Colony,
a regional multi-arts Center at
530 First Ave., for September
tncl~des prints and paintings.
The watercolors and pastels on
display represent the work of
Marilyn Coppel of Chillicothe.
Coppel Is a professional artist
with a studio In which she
produces paints and prints, as
well as cards that feature dried
flower arrays. Coppel has also
Included woodcuts and pencil
drawings In this exhibit.
Cappel's work has been exhibited at Columbus Museum of
Art, and at the Artist's Den In
Valparlaso, Ind., and the Milton
Gallery In Wellston, as well as

fames Sands

•

several ln Chillicothe.
The work of Robert Franzlnl,
professor of art at Morehead
State University In Morehead.
Kentucky Includes etching, lithography, woodcut and relief etchIng. Franzlnl has been teaching
printmaking and drawing at
Morehead f()r eight years. His
work Is represented In collections nationally Including the
Cincinnati Art Museum.
VIsitors are welcome during
open hours Tuesdays and Thursdays 10-3, and Saturdays and
Sundays 1-5, and by
appointment.
French Art Colony programs
are offered with the support of
the Ohio Arts Council.

I

Gallipolis was In the 1840's when
''The fire was discovered after
Bell first arrived In town. In one night In the Smith store and
of those recollections that ap- spread to the Academy. Both
peared In the paper on February buildings were entirely des16, 1895 Bell told about the fire troyed and scarcely any of the
that burned down the Gallia Aca· contents of either were saved. A
demy.
small engine, worked by hand
"The fire occured In the fall of levers, was the only fire-extin1846 and was the biggest fire the guishing apparatus the town postown ever had. A two story frame sessed at that time and It was
building stood where the store of kept In a corner of the market
J .M. Kerr and Co. now stands house whlch stood In the public
(corner of Second and State). It square. Nearly everybodY turned
was occupied by a family named out to the Ore and as there were no
Smith, who kept a general store cisterns from which water to
In the house . . The Gallla Aca- ·supply the engine could be obdemy stood below the Smith tained, It was nef'essary to form a
store and a shOrt dis lance back bucket line whlch reached from
from the street. The second story Second Street clear down to the
of the Academy building was river's edge. The people composused by the Masons as lodge log this line were principally woheadquarters. Whenever they men and they worked splendidly.
met they had some sort of a per· The engine threw a steam strong
formance that sounded like the enough to reach the second story ol
rolling of cannon balls over a the houses. •'
bare floor. This noise was a
"The late Squire John Callng
source of much terror to the chll· was In command of te Fire Dedren of those days, who believed partment, and rode up and down
that It was caused by ghosts, and street on horseback giving ord·
the youngsters could not be In- ers. The engine was manned by
duced to go near the building af- Edward Deletombe, John C. Sheter nightfall."
pherd, William Morrison and
myself. Samuel Maxon lived In
the house which then stood on
what Is now known as the Opera
House corner (400 Second Avenuet . A growth of l()CUSt trees
stooo on the State Street side of
his house and they were badly
scorched by the flames. I suppose that the protection they affordeq the Maxon house was all
that prevented It from catching

!ire."
In February and March of1894

-

•

THE BUILDING AT 58 Court St., in Gallipolis was erected In 1852
lor Henry R. Bell. A saddle shop was located in the place lor 64
years. Bell was also a source ol historical lnlonnatlon lor many
events In the middle 19th century.

REVIVAL SERVICES
AT

GOOD NEWS BAPTIST CHURCH
GEORGES CREEK RD. • GALLIPOLIS

·

Mrs.
Leonard Newberry announce the
upcoming wedding of their
daughter Lynnlta Newberry, to
Greg Crawford.
An open-church wedding Is • .
being planned tor6p.m.,Sept.17, .
at Faith Baptllt Church Roon

imperial
1•

1,"

,. rl•

'

"

.

"

.

• 111 1 •

..

.

WALLPAPER

J\JLIE ANN KITCHEN
KENNY JOE MANKIN

••

KitchenMankin
MIDDLEPORT - Julie Ann
Kitchen and Kenny Joe Mankin.
both of Middleport, announce
their engagement.
Miss Kitchen Is the daughter of
Pat Kitchen, Middleport, and
Edward Kitchen, also of Middle. port. Mankin Is the son of Eloise
Mankin, Middleport, and the late
Kenneth E. Mankln, Pomerov.
Miss Kitchen graduated from
Meigs High School and attended
Rio Grande College.
Mankin graduated from Meigs
High School and has been employed by James Davidson Constructors. Inc., Dickinson, Texas
for nearly two years.
Wedding plans are Incomplete.

Bell also related the story of the
fire that burned down the Academy. In that .article he mentioned that there might have
been another obstacle to fighting
the fire that was not present In Ia·
ter years. ·
"II was dangerous lor pedestrians after nlghttan to pereambu·
late about the Square, unless fa·
vored by the light of the moon or a
lantern dimly burning, as all the bovines, and their numbers were legion, that were kept In town at that
time would come In to their respec·
live homes, after browsing In the
suburos all day, and after being relIeved m their lacteal Quid and partaken of !heir evening meal, would
gravitate to the Square with the
same regularity as the needle to the
pole, there to Ike their evening siesta and chew their cuds at leisure.
It was while In this blissful state
that caused trouble to the belated
pedestrian ol a dark night, as the
animals were perfectly docile and
would suffer yoo to stumble over
them with the equanimity of a mar·
ble statue, of which the wrtter
speaks from sad experience.'
As a footnote to this story the
burning o"t the Gallla Academy
caused a reorganization of the
fire department, the purchase of
new fire equipment and the dig·
glng of several public cisterns on
the public square.' We also note
that the Market House was soon
moved from the Public Square as
were the wandering bovines."
Gallla Academy was not rebuilt
until 1853, with the location being
changed to Fourth and "State
Streets.

·

..
•

I

50°/o .
JODY BETHANNE HALL
JEFFREY EUGENE JOHNSON

Hall-Johnson
Gallipolis - The engagement
and appmachlng marriage of
Jooy Bethanne Hall and Jeffrey
Eugene Johnson Is being announced by their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert L. Hall and Mr.
and Mrs. Maxwell E. Johnson.
The open-ceremony Garden
Wedding Is set for Saturday,
Sept. 17, at · the home of the
bride's parents on Hannan Trace
Road.
A reception follows.

•.•

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RITES OF AUTUMN

You know it's fall when the daY,
get cooler. the nights get Ianger
and you obsolutely
can't resist buying
sweaters and

pants. Set
those fall
fashions off
in Connie's
taiiOfed
casual-

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Mon. &amp; Fri. Iii I P.M.
Tu•. Wtd. Thur. til 7 P.M.
Saturday Iii 5 P.M.

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Gifted school at OSU
By BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY -JaredA.Sheets,
son of Jennifer and Jim Sheets
and a senior at
Meigs High
School, had the
hOnor of attend·
lng Ohio's Martin W. Essex
School lor the
GlUed head quartered at Drackett Tower,
Ohio State University.
Competition to attend the
school which has been In operation for 13 years Is keen. For
example, there were applications from 350 gifted students
from ac~oss Ohio--and only 60
were accepted. Of course, the
school was esta bllshed by Martin
W. Essex, former state superln·
tendent of schools who, at one .
time, was superintendent or the
Middleport Schools. ·
Jared Is highly pleased with
the· week-long experience which
offered numerous qualified
speakers from a wide variety of
pi"Qfesslonal areas.
On the first day, the 60 gifted
students met with a government
panel at the Ohio State Capitol
and making up the panel were
Dr. Carla Edlefson, executive
assistant to the Governor: Ohio
House Representative Ray
Miller, Jr.; Ohio Senator Robert
Cupp, and Dr. Irene Bandy,
assistant superintendent ol pub·
lie Instruction. Into the bargain.
th~ students were given tlme·to.
hold a discussion with the panel.
On the second day, students
had their choice of attending
lee\ ures on engineering and
medical professions In the 21st
century plus a seminar on the
topic, commercialization of technology. The d"a y also featured a
visit to the Center of Science and
Industry.
Wednesday gave the gifted
students an .opportunlty to attend
one of several programs on
various arts plus a visit to the
telecommunclmatlon center at
the Fawcett Center for Tomar·
row. Some of the topics for the
Thursday seminars which students could select were "Man
and Animals--Their lnterrela·
tionshlp"; "Global Change and
Resource Information Sys·
terns", "Biotechnology and Good
Processing" and a visit to the
Ohio Supercomputer Center for a
demonstration was among the
afternoon features . On the final

Don't Have A Satellte System?
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SEPT. 15·18

S1499

WITH

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SATEWTE SYSTEMS

day, students were again offererd their choice of several
" Interest" workshops on educa·
tlonal guidance, mlnorliles and
the roles of women as well as
research Information and
demonstrations.
The school wrapped up at noon
on Saturday with student presen·
tations, comments and awards
and Dr . Essex was among the
speakers.
The Royal Oak Ballroom
Dance Club will be opening Its
fall dance program next Sunday
evening, from 7 to 10 p.m., with a
dance at the Royal Oak Park
Resort. Oneoftheclub members'
favorite musicians, George Hall,
will be providing music for
dancing.
The Racine Emergency Squad
will be on hand Saturday when
the annual Harvest Festival Is
staged In Racine. The squad will
be on the scene from 9 a.m. to 10
p.m. and will be providing free
blood pressure, pulse pressure
and sugar level services.
And while I'm up Racine way,
let me mention that Gretta
Caranahan will be observing her
95th birthday on Thursday, Sept.
15. I'm sure she'd love to hear
from you . The address Is P.O .
Box 173, Racine, Ohio 45771.

•·'

Chester Bow Club; and class B.
Justin Roush, Chester Bow Club,
trophies donated by Feeney·
Bennett Post.
Recurve class A, Duane De·
Long, trophy donated by Manley's Sunoco; and class B, Debra
DeLong, trophy donated by

Homecare Medical Supply

Input meeting planned by CAA
CHESHIRE
The Gallia'
Meigs Community Action
Agency will be holding a public
h~arlng at the Cheshire Central
Office at 10 a.m. Thursday for
low-Income persons, soliciting
Input on community needs In
both Gallla and Meigs Counties.
The low Income persons will
also be electing persons to fill
Indigent vacancies on theGallla·
Meigs C.A.A. Executive Board
for 1989.

. The agency urges all Inter·
ested persons to participate on
Thursday.

"Ye1r C••Pittt
"••• He1lt~, C1re.ltere"
.
· - · ···--·
• HOlE OXYGEN

• ADULT DIAPERS

LONG BOTTOM - Eddie
Whaley of Shade will be special
speaker at the MI. Olive Community Church In Long Bottom at
7:30p.m. Wednesday.

Wt IIIII Ml~iclrt/M..icaill IIIII othtr IMur.- F• T•
THIRD&amp;PINEST.
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446•7283

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Area senior centers
plan weekly activities
GALLIPOLIS- Activities and
menus for the week of Sept. 12
through Sepl.16 at the Senior Cit·
lzens Center, 220 Jackson Pike,
wUI be as follows:
MONDAY 12 - Ceramics,
9: 30-noon: 9horus, 1-3 p.m.
TUESDAY - S.T.O.P./physlcal fitness, 10: 30 a.m.
WEDNESDAY -Card games,
1-3 p.m.; Rawlelgh &amp; Fuller
Brush party, 1 p.m.
THURSDAY- Bible study,ll·
noon; legal aide, 1 p.m.; board of
trustees meeting, 1:30 p.m.
FRIDAY -Artclass,10·noon;
craft mini-course, 1-3 p.m.
Menus conofst of:
MONDAY -Beef pattie with
gravy, whipped potatoes, garden
salad with tomato, oil and vinegar, whole grain bread, sliced
peaches.
TUESDAY - Creatned chicken
over noodles, seasoned green beans
with com, whole grain bread, sUced
bananas In orange juice.
WEDNESDAY- Pot roast In
Its own juice, hailed quartered
potat()e5, buttered cabbage with
carrots, rolls, Ice cream.
THURSDAY- Ham and beans
with onions, spinach with vinegar,
cornbread, applesauce In Jello.
FRIDAY - Macaroni and
cheese, buttered peas, cole slaw,
whole grain bread, cake with
glaze.

Choice of coffee, tea, lemonade, milk or buttermilk with
each meal.
POMEROY -Tbe Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, has the follow·
lng activities scheduled lor the
week of Sept. 12-16:
MONDAY - Round and square
dance 1-3.
TUESDAY - Chorus 1·2, howling 1: 30.
WEDNESDAY- Social SecurIty Representative 10-12, knitting
circle 10-12, ceramics 10·12, bingo
1·2, bridge 1-3.
THURSDAY- Birthday par·ty,
seniors with birthdays In September wUI be honored, entertainment
at 11 by the .Oide Tyme Chorus
from Galli a County.
The Senior Nutrition Program
menu for the week Is:
MONDAY - Hotdog, sauerkraut, mashed potat()es, peaches.
TUESDAY- Porkette, mashed
potat()e5, green beans. pudding.
WEDNESDAY - Soup beans
with ham, spinach, fruit cocktail,
cookie.
THURSDAY -Beef and noodles, mashed potatoos, carrots and
pineapple In gelatin, cake.
FRIDAY - Spanish rice, tossed
salad, cauliflower, applecrisp.
Choice of beverage available ,
with meals.

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Special speaker

innovative investment is tied
to the natima1 Prime Rate, as
published in the Will Street
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monthly based 00 the Prime

,,

Shammy's Carryout.
The team participating trophy
and the top team score trophy
both donated by Middleport
trophies were won by theCh~ster
Club. The money. was presetned
at th.e telethon In Huntington by
Sam and Ann McKinney .

Bowman's

.,..

Snbofen!j,ttpomltyb"earlywithdmnJ.

.,

'

McMillan, Chester and Mason
Clubs, and class C, Joyce Zerkle,
Chester and Mason, with trophies donated by Video Touch.
Juniors class A, Shane Thompson, Jackson Bow Club, class B,
Shawn McBee, Jackson Bow
Club, trophies donated by
Feeney-Bennett Post, American
Legion; and class C, Sam Sutton,
Mountain State Sportsman Association, trophies donated by
Brown's Archery.
Cubs class A, Scottie Cockran,
Mason Bow Club, trophy donated·
by J. andR. Sports Shop; class B.
Jason Roush. Chester Bow Club,
and class C, Adam Smith, trophies donated by FeeneyBennett Post I28, American
Legion.
Pee Wee class A, Buddy Spires,

tlon In the planned photo. So-even though the picture didn't
materlallz~. at least you now
know that you didn ' t win the fan .
Sure--r get some problems. But
guess what, I'm still smiling. Are

Morning Services-Monday thru Friday
10:00 A.M.
Evening Services at 7:00 P.M.

•

POMEROY - The Chester
Bowhunters and Archery Club
hosted two shoots to ralse4500for
the Muscular Dystrophy Association recently.
The first shoot was held Sept. 3
at 9 p.m . with the ten participants
using flashlights to see to shoot a
round of I5 targets In the pouring
rain. The second shoot was held
the following day at 10 a.m. and it
brought out62 shooters, enduring
a sudden downpour, to achieve
the goal ol $500.
The winners were men' s class
A, Mike Jordan, Jackson Bow
Club, class B. Kelly Parsons,
class C, Buddy Crawford, Mason
Bow Club, with all trophies
donated by Joey's Archery.
Women's class A, Sue Perine,
HTC Bow Club, class B, Diane

n;YGrterest rate oo this

,

Page-B-7

And now an a I tempt to make
"amends " for problems of the
week.
First, sympathy and an apology to Mrs. JoAnn Ward and her
family . Mrs . Ward's husband,
Jack, died at the Holzer Medical
Center last Friday. Through
some technicalities in pr()Cesslng
and the Monday holiday, his
obituary did not get into print
until Tuesday, the day of the
funeral. We all are sorry about
that, Mrs. Ward. I'm sure you
have heard of the best laid plans
or mice and men .
Also a photo of Brady Knotts
accepting a large ceiling fan
whlch he was awarded through
the exhibit of Columbus Southern
Ohio Power at the Meigs County ·

Formerly from Indonesia

For more Information call:
Pastor, El•r GeiSir 311·9109
or Pastor, lob Colvin 446-0111

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Chester bowhunters sponsor benefit shoots

$69900

SEPT. 11-14
FELLOWSHIP
CHAPEL
VINTON, OH

Evangelist G. S. Tiiong

! Ga~£~wfgFct
•'I

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

Beat of the Bend

Newberry-

Engagements

Court Street's .place in history ·

By JAMES SANDS
The building at 58 Court Street
In Gallipolis served as a saddle
and harnes.s shop from 1858 until
1922 first under Henry R. Bell
and then from 1894 to 1922 under
Henry Ecker and Charles Weihe.
It was Bell who
~
had the buUdlng
erected In 1852.
1
For some time
·- . ; '
· ,
the Bell famlly
' - .
lived on the second floor. From
1852 to 1858 Bell retil:eii .iliii
floor of his building to the groc·ery firm of Henklng and Cadot.
During that time Bell's own shOp
· was I()Cated directly across
Court Street.
-Henry Bell was born In 1822 In
Alexandria, Pa. It was aboutl846
that Bell came to Gallipolis to
work In the saddle shop of Robert
Black at 45 Court 'Street. During
most of the time between 1846
and the early 1850's Black and
Bell were partners.
In the 1890's Henry Bell often
recalled for the Gallipolis Bullelin his recollections of the way
'

Office.
She has served both In Ga\lla
County and the District Office In
Jackson. She was the District
Extension Specialist In Home
Economics. Now retired, Mrs.
Glass Is still Interested In seeing
that the craftspeople and owners
of quilts and other craft Items are
given the full worth, and that the
artistic Integrity of these works ·
Is not lost.
•
She belongs to a statewide
group that Is cataloging quilts In
Ohio, so that records of this art
will exist. She believes her
contribution to the panel Is
"Important to Southeastern
Ohio, because owners of valuable
quilts and other works are not
getting their worth when the
Items are sold."
Dr. Greg Miller of Rio Grande
College.and Community College
Is serving his fourth year on the
The.atre Panel. He holds a
Bachelor of Fine Arts In Theatre
and a PhD. In Comparative Arts
from Ohio University . He recelved the Award of Excellence
from Ohio Reglonall Ass()C\atlon
of Concert and Lecture Enter·
prises (ORACLE) In November
ofl987. He Is currently serving on
the Boards of the Valley Artist
Series, the Little Buckeye Thea·
tre Series, and the Gallipolis
Bicentennial Commission.
Among other projects, Miller
has received funding for his
project "Out of the Red Brush."
In .thls play about his hometown,
Jackson, Miller Is the adaptor,
star, and director. The play was
Initially funded through the New
Works/New Ideas Project ol the
Ohio Arts Council/Ohio Human!·
ties Council Joint Program.
The prooucllon has been per·
formed five times In Gallla
County, once In Medina, and Is
now preparing to travel to other
parts of Ohio.

September 11, 1988

Ohio Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Silwr Brille Plaza OffiCe
(614) 446-9")00

Spring 1illley OffiCe
(614) 446-1399

'"'

.'·

�September 11. 1988.

Times-Sentinel

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

OfftiRB
.8, Food
STORE HOIJRS

ports

September 11, 1988

Clemson easy winner; ·Rutgers upsets MSU

Bonanza

Monday thru Sunday

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

quarter.
CLEMSON, S.C. (UPI) Gardockl' s field goals of 38 and
Terry Allen rushed for two
46
yards gave the Tigers a 13·3
touchdowns and Chris Gardockl
halftime lead.
kicked three field goals Saturday
Allen's 7-yard touchdown run
to lead No. 3 Clemson to a 23·3
capped a 5-play, 43-yard drive
. triumph over Furman.
with 4:33\eft In the third quarter
Allen's two touchdowns
sparked Clemson' s offense, and gav the Tigers a 20-3
which gained 316 yards - 234 on advantage. The teams · traded
punts for much ot!he quarter.
the ground. Joe Henderson ran
Gardockl kicked a 31-yard field
for 72 yards on 15 carries to lead
with 6: 17\ett In the game to
goal
the Tigers. 2·0.
complete
the scoring.
Allen's 1-yard scoring run put
Bobby
Daugherty
and Kennel
the Tigers ahead 7·0 with 9: 27left .
Goldsmith
combined
for 136
In the first quarter. The score
rushing
yards
to
lead
the
Southwas set up by a fumble by
ern
Conference
Paladins,
who
Furman quarterback j'atrlck
Baynes, who made a bad pltchout gained all but two of their 15 first
that was scooped up by defensive downs on the ground_
--back Jessie · Hatcher at the
.Rutgers 17, MSU 13
Furman 3-yard line,
EAST LANSING, Mich. IUPI)
Furman, l-1, cut Its deficit to
- No. 14 Michigan State, yearn7-3 on a 48-yard field
by Glen
lng to teach Rutgers -about Big

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BOSTON IUPI)- Roger Clemens held Cleveland hitless for 7
1·3 Innings and finished with a
one-hitter Saturday, lifting the
Boston Red Sox to a 6·0 victory
over the Indians.
Clemens, 16·10, .lost his nohitter when Dave Clark singled to
right-center with one out In the
'eighth. He relied more on his
control than his overpowering
fastball to get hitters out, strik.lng out five and walking just on~
In bteaklng a five-game losing
,
streak.
He retired the first 14 batters

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he faced beforewalktngClarkon doubled to lead offthe third, took
a 3·1 pitch. Clark's line single third when Ellis Burks' singled
over second baseman Martv and scored on Larry Parrish's
Barrett cam\' on the first pitch two-out single for a 2-0 lead.
after Clemens had retired CarThe Red Sox added two runs In
man Castillo on a fly ball to deep tbe fourth. Cleveland shortstop
center.
'
' Paul Zuvella errored on Rick
No Boston pitcher has pitched Cerone's grounder. Wade Boggs
a no-hitter since Dave Morehead singled to center and Marty
beat Cleveland, 2-0, at Fenway Barrett sacrificed the runners to
Park on Sept. 16, 1965.
second and third. Evans then
Jim Rice singled In the second grounded a slllgle to lett to score
off loser Bud Black, 4-4, took Cerone and Boggs came home In
second on a balk and scored on a when Mel Hall kicked the ball
two-out single by Jody Reed to away for an error.
make It , 1·0. Dwight Evans
Boston made It 6-0 In the eighth
on an RBI triple by Evans,
followed by Burks' two-out run·
scoring double.
Clemens had five losses and a
no-decisions In his last six starts,
allowing 27 earned runs In 33 1-3
Innings. However, 11e Is 9-0
agalru;t Cleveland in his career.

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Chris Tolbert (L) and Jay Dortch to set up a field
goal that gave the Auburn Its first score of the
game. Auburn went on to beat Kentucky 20-10.

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Boston. tops · · fnd·ians·; Carets~~-~'~.
down Cubs; Yanks trip Tigers

of tiiKIHttO producta&amp;li i•ulicatud
on wmnng game puJctt.

HOLLY RIDGE FARMS

..it'll'

DANLEY GETS 11 YARDS -The Auburn
Tigers opened tbe 1988 season Saturday wllh an
SEC game agalnat Kentucky. Here, the Tigers'
Stacey Danley (32) gaiDSll yards agalna WUdcala

"Wuuuua rHceive $1 . 65 ur ontt

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HOUSE

COFFEE

$599
limit 1 ,., c..,_,
•
Good Only At Powoit'o Supor Yalv
~ Good Sun.. Sept. 11 _lllr• Sat., ~- 17

OF ARC

TOMATO SOUP
1G.75 OZ. CAN

3/89(

KIDNEY BEANS

3/s·l
5

L-----------...1
..

Johnson and one by Tim
Williams.
___
Georgia 38 TCU 10
ATHENS. Ga. (UP!) _ After
No. 8 Georgia passed for just 25
yards last week while rushing for
414 In a season-opening victory
over Tennessee, Texas Christian
scouts had every reason to
expect the Bulldogs to stick to the
ground Saturday,
But while the Bulldogs were
paced by Tim Worley 's 128yards,
Including a -77-yard scoring gal·
lop In the final quarter, In roU!ng
up 295 rushing yards, they also
displayed a strong aerial attack
enroutetoa38-10routoverTexas
Christian.
Auburn 20, Kentucky 10
AUBURN, Ala . (UPI)
James Joseph ran for two touch·
downs and Greg Staples Inter-

cepted a fourth-q4arter pass In
the end zone Saturday to help No.
7 Auburn to a 20-10 victory over
Kentucky In a Southeastern
C:onference game.
Joseph scored on runs of 33
yards and 1 yard and Chris
Dickinson kicked field goals otiS
and 26 ya rds In the Tigers'
season-opener.
Navy 30, Delaware 3
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UP])
Gary Mcintosh threw a 34-yard
touchdown pass and ran for
another score Saturday to fuel
Navy to ·a 30·3 victory over
Dela.ware.
Navy, 2-0 .for Its best season
start since 1981, also got a
touchdown run from starting
quarterback Alton Grizzard, who
gained 76 yards on 16 carries.
Grizzard completed 3 of 4 passes
for 52 yards.

26-9 win
•
m opener

\•

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Ten football, Saturday received a remaining 5:23.
humiliating lesson.
''This was a great, great win
"I feel very humble," Michl· for us," Rutgers Coach Dick
gan State Coach George Perles Anderson said. "I think our kids
said after his defending Big Ten believed from the beginning that
champion Spartans were upset they could win, and they plilyed
17-13 by the Scarlet Knights.
that way, "
"We Iosito a very good football
--team. They got a good lead In the
W4!1it VIrginia 45 Fullerton 10
first half and hung onto It They
MORGANTOWN, W. Va .
will get SO!lje recognition from ·&lt;UPI) - A.B. Brown and Undra
the win today , It's too bad we Johnson each ran for two touchhave to be the team that gave downs Saturday to power No. 13
them that recognition,"
West VIrginia to a 45·10' triumph
Scott Erney threw second- over Fullerton State.
quarter scoring passes to Eric
Calvin Phillips caught a 37Young and Brett Mersola to help yard touchdown pass from Greg
Rutgers build a 17-3 halftime ·Jones to give the Mountaineers a
lead.
38·0 lead In the third quarter.
Michigan State drove . to . Phillips tied a school record with
Rutgers' 11-yard line late In the 190 yards on five receptions.
fourtlt quarter but Blake Ezor
The Mountaineers' other five
tumbled after a 5-yard gain. The touchdowns came on 1-vard runs
Scarlet !&lt;nights ran out the - two each by Brown and

't~~'

mrn

C

Section

OPEN CHAMP - W•t Gennany'a Steftl Graf Jaolda lbe
U.S. Open cup alaft after delea&amp;lag Arpntlna'a Gabriela Sabatlnt
8-S, U and &amp;-1 ~urdiiJ' to wiD Die U.S. Open and llae Grand Slam.
(tlPI)

Cardinals I Cubs 3
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Jose
Oquendo drove In three runs,
Terry Pendleton had three hits
and two RBI and Scott Terry won
his sixth consecutive start Satur·
day to !Itt the St. Louis Cardinals
to a 9-3 victory over the Chicago
Cubs.
··
The victory lifted the Cardinals
over the Cubs Into fourth place In
the NL East.
Terry, 7·3, who entered the
Cardinals' starting rotation Aug .
11, gave up nine hits, struck out
one and walked two In 7 23
Innings. Dan Qulnsenberry
pitched the flnal113 Innings.
Chicago starter Rick Sutcliffe,
12·12,I.asted six Innings, striking
out tour and walking one.
The Cubs jumped on Terry,
who had yielded only seven runs
In his previous six starts, for two
runs In the first two Innings.
Mark Grace ripped his seventh
homer With two outs In the first
and Mitch Webster's two-out
slnele In the second drove In
Shawon Dunston, who had
reached on a flelaer'a choice and
went to second on a eround-out.
Yaeh•tllpnf
NEW YORK (UPI) - Don
Slaught's two-run alngle scored
the tying and go-ahead runs In a
slx·run seventh lnniDg Saturday,
. llttlngtheNewYorkYankeeatoa
9-4 victory over the slumping
Detroit Tlprs.
Detroit lost tor tlte 16th time In
19 games, and fell 3 1-2 games
behind the first-place Bos!DnRe.d
Sox In the AL East. The Yankees
remained 4 1-2 -eamea behind
Boa ton.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Ohio State turned Syracuse mistakes Into a pair of second·
quarter touchdowns and Pat
O'Morrow kicked four field goals
!or a 26-9 win over 19th-ranked
Syracuse Saturday In the Buckeye coaching debut of John
Cooper.
The loss snapped a 14-game
unbeaten streak for Syracuse,
now 1·1, before a record opening·
day crowd of 89,768 In Ohio
Stadium.
,
Ohio State spotted Syracuse an
early 3·0 lead on Kevin J.
Greene's 24-yard field goal with
6: 10 lett In the first period. But
the Buckeyes tied It at 3-3 with a
CELEBRATE TOUCHDOWN - Rutgers' Andre Yates, right,
62-yard drive, which stalled on
and
Brett Mersola celebrate after a touchdown against Michigan
the Syracuse 10 and resulted In
State
Saturday. The Scarlet Knights upset the host Spartans17-13.
the first of O'Morrow's four field
(UP
I)
goals, a 27-yarder.
A poorly executed quick kick
by Syracuse fullback Daryl John· McCray getting the other for the Washlock threw two touchdown
ston, which carried only seven Buckeyes .
passes Saturday In a 24-15 Case
yards to the Orange 30, set up the
Reserve win over Hiram in the
Iowa 45, Kansas Slate 10
. ,!jriJ:, Qll,lq. State tpqchdQwn. ,
"
.•t
season open,; for both
teams
•
.•
MANHATTAN, Kiln. (UPI)- _ . .
Four plays later, ' sophomore
tailback Carlos Snow burst up the Chuck Hartlieb passed for 253
Kent Stale 32, Akron 12
middle from 14 yards out to make yards and a touchdown and
KENT, Ohto (UP!) - Eric
linebacker Brad Quast tied a
It 10-3.
Wilkerson ran 23 limes for 109
34-year-old
school record with a yards Saturday to become Kent
That score came with 9:081eft
In the half and less than three 94-yard Interception return Sat- State's career rushing leader
urday to lead No. 18 Iowa to a while Patrick Young passed and
minutes later. the Buckeyes had
45·10
victory over Kansas State.
scored again, a TD set up by an
ran tor four touchdowns to pace
Interception of a Todd Phllcox
the Golden Flashes to a 32-12
Ball Stale 34, BGU 10
pass by free safety David Brown,
romp over Akron.
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
who returned to the Orange 43.
Wilkerson, with 2.740 career
Sophomore quarterback Greg (UPI) - Mark Stevens scored rushing yards, eclipsed Larry
Frey, making his first start, three touchdowns on a pair of Poole's old record of 2,668.
passe&lt;) 20 yards to Bobby Olive 1-yard plunges and a 4-yard run
and a five -yard face mask Saturday . leading Ball State to a
Virginia Tech 27, ECU 16
penalty took the ball to the 34-10 Mid-American Conference
BLACKSBURG, Va . (UPI) Syracuse five. On third and two, win over Bowling Green.
Jon Jeffries rushed for 101 vards
Stevens' first 1-yard score and two touchdowns Saturday to
Frey found tight end Jeff Ellis
came on the Cardinals' first lead VIrginia Tech to a 27-16
with a scoring pass.
possession. The Falcons closed to victory over East Carolina.
Greene added a 45-yard field
goal for a 17·6 halftime score and 7·3 on a 44-yard Jason Zeller field
Jeffries scored on runs of 3 and
goal on their second possession, 5 yards In the first half and Chris
the second half was all field
but It was the closest they got.
goals, with O'Morrow hitting
Kinzer added field goals of28 and
from 33, 41 and 30 yards and
22 yards as Tech. 1-1, won Its first
OberOn 12, Thiel (Pa.) 7
Greene a 38-yarder,
home operier In seven years.
OBERLIN,
Ohio (UPI) -Fred Rich Fox added a late 2-yard TD
In the third quarter, Ohio
Cummings ran 64 yards In the run.
State's rebuilt defense allowed
fourtlf
quarter Saturday for the Musklngum 26, Urbana 14)
Syracuse only 10 plays from
deciding
score In Oberlin's 12-7
scrimmage and 21 total yards.
NEW CONCORD, Ohio rUPI)
win
over
Thiel In the season's - Mike Gaiters rushed 16 limes
Frey completed 12 of 17 passes
for 141 yards and the one TD . first game for both teams .
for 151 yards , Including touchPhllcox was 14 of 24 for175yards,
downs of 77 and 1 yards, to pace
but had two picked off, with
Case Reserve 24, Hiram 15
Musklngum to a 26-14 victorv
outside linebacker Michael
HIRAM, Ohio (UPI) - Paul over Urbana Saturday,
·
·~

BROWN SCORES - Wa.t Vlrllnlli's Anthony
A.B. Browll (18) 110e11 ap ud over linebacker Bill
Beyan (88) and &amp;lie ""'t of lbe Cal State-Fullerton
.-

'

line to acore a touchdown. The Mountaineers
walloped Fallerton D-10. (UPI)
•

·•

�September 11, 1988

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

Page C-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Big Blacke rally, edge GAHS 13-7 before overflow crowd
GALLIPOLIS - Point Pleasant rallled from a 7-3 hattllme
deficit before a standing-room
only crowd of approximately
4,000 on Memorial Field Friday
night to edge Gallipolis 13-71n the
Blue Devils 1988 home opener.
Chevalier Seores
Coach Brent Saunders' lads
struck paydlrt first when QB
Todd Casey fired a nine-yard
strl)te to wingback Jamie Cheva·
lier on the first play of the second
quarter. Craig Slagle kicked the
point after with 11:56 lett In the
half.
Coach Steve Safford's West
VIrginians broke the Ice with 6: 05
to go In the half when sophomore
kicker Chuck Wood booted a
22-yard field goal. That cui the
Ohioans' lead to 7-3.

Prior to the PPHS threepointer, Gallla's Marlin Griffin
had tossed Big Black signal
caller Shawn Foglesong for a
10-vard loss on a third and two
situation on the Galllans' three.
GAHS -came right back, mov·
lng to the PPHS 46 In five plays,
but that drive was stopped by
Bslan Greenlee's pass lntercep·,
tlon on the PPHS 30 u1th 1: 50 left
tn the half. The Big Blacks
marched within field goal range
just before Intermission, but a
15-yard penalty ended that
threat.
Second Hall
The second half was all Point
Pleasant. The West VIrginians
cut Gallla's lead to two- 7·5when Dusty carr caught Todd
Casey behlng the GAHS goal

(8:42) following a 51-yard punt
moments earlier by Foglesong.
Taking the following klckotl on
the Blue Devils 42, Point Pleasant marched the distance In
seven plays with Jim Oliver
going the final 12 up the middle.
The clock showed 5: 16 remainIng. Foglesong passed to David
Supple In the left flat tor the
two-point conversion to complete
the game's scoring.
Strong Second Half
All told, It was the veteran Big
Blacks kicking game. ball control and rugged defense In the
second half whlc h proved to be
the difference In Friday's
outcome.
PPHS, after giving up 140 total
yards and nine first downs In the
first half, buckled down to hold
GAHS to a minus four total yards
and one first down (by penalty)
during the final two quarters.
"We thought It was an excellent effort from our football
team," remarked Safford. He
added. "Brent's (Saunders) boys
played extremely hard, We were

down emotionally after last
week 's loss to Barboursville.
Then, tonight, we were able to
come over here and come back
with a big, big win -there's no
telling how much this means to
our football team."
lt was Point Pleasant's first
win over Galllpolls In three
years, and Gallla Academy's
first home loss since mid 1984.
Sattord concluded,"! felt the
difference was we were able to
make the big plays In the second
halt. Early In the game, we made
some mental and physical er·
rors. We played with wltttle more
emotion In the second halt."
Saunders reported, "Steve has
a good ball club. His boys are
going to rack up some wins this
year. They simply pounded us."
Greenlee, Hill, Jackie Bowers
and Carr paced the visitors
defensively.
Saunders added, "We felt we
should have scored · another
touchdown In the first half. That
Interception &lt;Greenlee's) really
hurt. Losing Josh (Williams)

SIPPLE CHARGES UPFIELD - Kyger Creek
luOback .John Sipple, with ball at right, charges
upfleld, as Waterford defender Chris Huck (70)
step!l forward to attempt a tackle In Fl'lday
night's non-league match In Cheshire. Sipple, who
would score a game-tying touchdown from three

I

SEO STANDINGS

yards out late In the fourth quarter, wookl watch It
go tor nought, as Chris Huck's brother Shawn
would kick an 11-yard field goal to beat the
Bobcals 10·7. (Times-Sentinel photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

(Opponents, All-Game~)

TEAM

W L P OP
Huntington ............. 2 0 60 22
Meigs .....................2 0 48 14
Logan ........... .......... 1 1 59 27
Pt. Pleasant .......... .1 1 30 30
Galllpolls ............ ....1 1 29 19
Warren ................ .. J 1 27 22
Jackson .................. 1 1 20 55
Marletta .................o 2 27 56
Wellston ................. 0 2 14 49
Athens .................... 0 2 19 35
Coal Grove .......... ...0 2 9 49
Sept. 9 Results:
Pt. Pleasant13 GalUpolls 7
Waverly 15 Athens 7
Jackson 20 Circleville 6
Miami Trace 27 Logan 14
Parkersburg 30 Marietta 6
Warren 27 Fort Fry 14
Meigs 22 Trimble 6
Belpre 40 WellSton 7
Wheelersburg 27 Coal Grove 3
Huntington High - Open
Sept. 16 Game~:
Gallipolis at Wellston
Athens at Point Pleasant
Jackson at Waverlv
Logan at Circleville
Marietta at Coal Grove
W. Park at Warren
RIPI!!Y at Huntington High
Miller at Meigs

.JARRELL NABS WILLIAMS - Point Pleasant's Rob Jarrell
(76) snagged GaiDa's Josh WUllams (22) from behind during first

half action of Fl'lday's GAHS.Polat Pleasant football game on
Memorial F1eld. PPHS won, 13-7.

during Friday's Blue Devil home opener on
Memorial Ftekl. The Big Blacka won, 13·7.

CASEY BOTI'LED UP- GaiUaQBTodd Casey
Is brought down by Point Pleasant's Casey IDII
(40); Brian Greenlee .(44) and Shane Bush (81)

Highlanders end losing streak
ALBANY - "We did some
hitting, especially on defense,"
said Southwestern head coach
Jack James of his Highlanders,
who ended a six-game losing
streak by beating Alexander 14-6
Friday night.
The Highlanders got nn the
scoreboard when defensive end
Brent Davies recovered a fumble

In the end zone In the first
quarter, putting the visitors
ahead 6-0. That lead was verv
short-lived, as Alexander kick
returner Denny Jarvis returned
a kickoff 85 yards for a touchdown seconds after Davies' scorIng fumble recovery.
The 6-6 tie didn't last long, as
later In the first quarter, High·

Pirates win 12-11
aver Southeastern
VINTON North Gallla
boosted Its record to 2-0 after Its
defense headed off a fourthquarter victory drive to post a
12-11 victory Friday night over
Ross Southeastern. ,
With 1:12 left In the game; the
Panthers drove down to North's
KING LEADS INTERFERENCE- Gallla fullback Bryan King
17-yard line, where they were In
(31) leads Interference for GARS tailback Josh Williams during
position to kick the winning field
Fl'iday's non-league' grid game with Point Pleasant. The Big
goaL Pirate nose guard Chris
Blacka won, 13·7.
Skidmore sacked Adams and
forced a fumble that the Panthers recovered back at the Pirate
35-yard line, out or field-goal
range. On the next play, Smith, a
defensive back, forced a Panther
scrambled three Urnes for 30 wide receiver to fumble a pass
MERCERVILLE Sophoyards. Tailback Larry Jarrell out of bounds . On fourth down
more J .J. Bevan caught ·a sixyard touchdown pass from quar- was l'j!Sponslble for the Wildcats' and 16, Adams gunned for the end
zone, but Smith broke up the pass
only Interception toss.
terback Shad Johnson with eight
On defense, lineman Dean to end the threat.
minutes left In the game to give
The Pirates scored their points
Flanery, operating out of the 4·3
Hannan Trace a 21-14 victory
In
the first quarter, with the first
defense.
had
four
sacks
and
over Green Friday night.
Later events In the game made recovered a fumble. Defensive touchdown coming when fulBevan's scoring catch the end Jack Swain had six tackles, lback Felipe Beach scored on a
!!&gt;llncher, as the Bobcats five assists and the blocked kick. one-yard run set up by a Kevin
marched downfleld and let Its Linebacker Saunders had nine . Smith Interception, one of two
plckoffs the Bucs would make off
running game crank out Its tackles and three assists.
Hannan Trace, 2-1 against Panther quarterback Mike
second touchdown with 12 se·
conds left In the contest. The non-league teams, will begin Adams. The other gift, received
successful two-point conversion SVAC competition Friday night by defensive back Keith Eleam,
set up a 30-yard touchdown pass
against Southern In Racine.
completed the 21·14. verdict.
from Greg Glassburn to Eleam
with 1: 01left.
The scoring started In the first
When both teams returned
quarter, when Wildcat fullback
from the locker room alter
Brad Cremeens ran 16 yards for a
touchdown. Johnson's extraThe 0.0. Mcintyre Park Dis· halftime the score was 12-0. The
point kick put Trace ahead 7-0.
trlct Is announcing Its 1988 Fall Panthers changed Jhat when
Glassburn threw an Interception
The Bobcats pulled closer with
Youth Soccer League.
a touchdown run later In that
Registration Is currently tak· to an unidentified Southeastern
quarter, but the extra-point atlng place through Friday, Sept. defender, who returned It 35
tempt, blocked by Wildcat defen16, wtth the first games slated for yards tor a touchdown. The
sive end Jack Swain, kept the Saturday, Sept. 24. The lee will be successful kick made the score
Wildcats ahead 7-ti.
$9 per child tor Gallla County 12-7.
HT halfback Todd Saunders
Later In the third quarter, the
residents and an additional $3 per
extended the Wildcats' lead to child lor non-Gallla County rest· Pirates tumbled the ball deep In
13-6 with a seven-yard touchdown
dents. Age groups wUI be 1st their own territQry. George
run In the third quarter. The grad~s through 8 years old and 9 kicked the ball out of the end zone
foUowing extra-point kick failed.
to prevent a Panther touchdown,
years old through 11 years old.
Cremeens ran tor 71 yards on
To register, please contact the but the safety made the score
14 carries, and Saunders picked
0.0. Mcintyre Park District 12·9. And that wasn't all.
up 68 yards on 15 runs . Johnson
In the final quarter, Pirate
Ottlce In the Gallla County
was 4 of 8 for 55 yards, Including
punter
Don Mays was standing In
Courthouse or call 446-4612, ext.
his own end zone when he
• the touchdown pass, and . 256.

fumbled a snap from center. He
fell on It, and the Panthers had
themselves another safety,
which made the score 12-11.
The Pirates will start the SVAC
campaign Friday night at Oak
HilL

•.......,

c~o

(All Games)
TEAM ............... W L
North Gall!a ...........2 0
Hannan Trace ........2 1
Oak Hill .................1 1
Southwestern .......... ) 1
Kyger Creek ........... 1 2
Eastern ..................O 2
Symmes Valley ......0 2
Southern .................0 2

P
26
37
26

IATI!UITE
EARTH
IT AnON

OP
23

43
22

14 -39
20
19
12
6

45
95
41
81

Friday's resnlta
Hannan Trace 21, Green Local l4
North Gallla 12, Ross SE 11
Southwestern 14, Alexander 6
Waterford 10, Kyger Creek 7
Wahama 61, Eastern 6
Huntington Ross 49, Southern 0
Oak Hill 26, Rock Hill 20
Huntington Vinson 14, Symmes
Valley 6 •
Sept. 18 game~
Hannan Trace at Southern ·
Eastern at Kyger Creek
North Gallla at Oak Hill
Southwestern at Symmes Vallev

t

Wildcats edge Green

UPPER ROUTE 7
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
"NEXT TO RIVERFRONT HONDA"

:white may
~ be problem

:for Bengals

: CINCINNATI tUPI) - The
· Clnclnnatl.Bengals offensive line
· film room has been a · popular
·place this week. The rest of the
team wants to find out just how
the line Intends to stop Philadelphia Eagles defensive end Reggie White on Sunday.
White led the NFL with 21
sacks In just 12 games last year
and the Bengals need to find a
way to l(eep him from sacking
Boomer Eslason In Sunday's
game In Philadelphia.
The primary assignment of
stopping White will go to Bengals' tackle Joe Walter. He' shad
plenty of company as he studied
films of White this week.
"A lot of people have been
taking a peek," says Walter.
"Everybody just wants to see
how he plays.
"(Teammates Brian) Blados
·and (Bruce) Reimers have been
sitting on the other side of the
room and they chuckle whenever
he kills somebody.
1'Titts would have to rate as my
: first really big challenge," adds
Walter. ''The man has got
everything. He's got a heck of a
.bull (rush), he swats, he swims.
I've never seen anybody like
him. I'm sure there will be a lot of
' prayers said for me this week."
· White reminds many Bengals
of what New York Jets star Mark
:Gastineau could do before he
. began suffering knee Injuries.
"If you want to compare him
with somebody, compare him
with Gastineau In his prime,"
'.'says Bengals' head coach Sam
~ Wyche. "He's big (6-foot-5, 285
pounds), quick, nimble and ex, tremety' strong."
As much as Walter Is concen'tratlng on White, Bengals' offef\·
'stve line coach Jim McNally
· doesn't want the restofthellneto
neglect their Individual
assignments.
"We tried to do a lot of things
with Gastineau and overall, they
didn't work," recalls McNally.
"We thought so much about that,
"we couldn't do anything else
• •rlgllt. , We're telling all our
·: blockers to be aware that they
might need to help out on Reggie
:: If they're not occupied on a
: particular play. But we're basi·
,• cally going to hope Walter can
-: block him."

•

'•••

McCUTCHEON RUSHES .:_ Waterford tailback ScoH McCut·
cheon, with ball, takes the handoff from quarterback 8coH Teters
(13) and goes uplleld to pick up some of his game-high 102 yards
rushing in the second quarter of Friday night'&amp; non-league battle
with Kyger Creek. McCutcheon broke a 80-yard rwt late In the
fourth qll!'rter to set up a Shawn Huck field goal that gave the
Wildcats a 10-7 victory. (Times-Sendnel photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

BRADBURY SLIPS AWAY - Kyger Creek tailback Pbll
Bradbury (20) slips away from a Waterford defender aahe charges
uplleld to gain some of his 30 yard8 rushing In the fourth quarter of
Friday night's non-conference game with Waterford. Tbe Bobcats
lost lbe contest10·7. (Times-Seallnel photo by G, Spencer Osborne)

COMING IN OCTOBER
Reserve your copy today with
$5.00 deposit. Only a limited
number e»f th1M will be

Rose Hlll tops
OVCS squad, 3-2

~

•·',.•
'••

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HUNTERS

ovn so HllhMG

MOVIU 10 CHOOSE
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[ltv

RIO GRANDE - The Lyne
Center gymnasium schedule !or
the following week Is as follows:
Sunday: 1-3 p.m., open recreation; 6·8 p.m . •college recreation.
Monday: 6-8 p.m., college
recreation.
Tuesday: 6-8 p.m ., college
'r ecreation.
Wednesday: 6-8 p.m., college
recreation.
Thursday: 6·8 p.m., college
recreat ton.
Friday:
6·8 p.m ., open
recreation.
Saturday: CLOSED FOR VOL·.
LEYBALL MATCH.
Sunday,Sept-18: 1-3p.m. ,open
recreation; 6-8 p.m., college
recreation.
,

.

Adual Cost wRI .bt $14.95.

'

·'•
.•

.

••
·~•
•

..
.•
:·,•

.
'
,·

::
·:

·-·

UP TliE FIELD - Wabama Junior running
b.,:kRyaa Wood (10) tul'l18apthefteldaralnstthe

••

the left sideline outrunning the scoring run with an extra-point
Wildcats until a man In the kick to gtve the visitors a 7-0 lead.
secondary took him out of bounds
McCutcheon led all rushers
at the Wildcats' seven-yard line. with 102 yards on 10 carries, and
The Bobcats pushed the vis- the Bobcats en masse barely
Itors to the Waterford one, but the outrushed Tolsen, plckl!lg .up &amp;7
Wildcats' defense stiffened and yards to Totsen's 86, Vinson ted
turned the hosts away. "We KCHS rushers with 35 yards on 10
didn't execute. and I don't think attempts, while teammate Phil
any of us did a good job, Bradbury ran for 30 .
especially fn thetrenches," said ,. On defense for the Bobcats.
KCHS head coach Mel Coen, who ·' linebacker Joey Edwards led
watched his Bobcats lose their with seven unassls ted tackles
second straight contest.
and one assist, While defensive
The Wildcats didn 't work end Frank Overstreet made six
enough miracles In the trenches unassisted tackles and one
to prevent losing a tumble on assist.
their next possession, recovered
Kyger Creek,l·2 on the season,
In heavy traffic by one of several will have a chance to start fresh
Bobcat defenders near · the Wa- when It begins SVAC play FridaY.
terford 25-yard line. The Bobcats against visiting Eastern.
,
made sure to cash In on this
(Waterford St.als)
drive, as wide receiver Jet!
sing )lards . ... .. .. .... .. .. . . .. ..... ... ... .. .. .f\
Taylor got the ball on a reverse Pas
Attempts... .. .... .. .. ........ ..................... . 4
and threw It to VInson. Vinson Compli"'lions ........................... .... ...... . 1
took the ball to the Wildcats' lnlercepllons ........,.. .. .... .. .... .... .. .... .. .. o
seven-yard line, setting the stage Ru shlng yards .. .. ........................ ....... 193
First downs...... ................................. 7
for Sipple's tying touchdown.
Fumbles /losl .... : ..................... .......... ,.2·1
The Wildcats were responsible
(Kyger Creelt Stats)
for the game's first points, as Pas si ng yards
.............. .................... . 76
fullback VInce Tolsen powered Attempls ... ....... .......... ................... .... 17
his way through the right side of Completions .......... ..... ............. .......... 7
Jnlercepllons .... .. ....
............. ..... .. J
the Bobcat defense for a 17-yard Rushing
yard s ...... .. ........................... 87
touchdown run with 2: 35 left In First downs .. .......... .. ..... .............. .... 6
the first half. He followed his Fumbles / lost ... .. ...... .. ..... ... .,...... .... .....2· 1 .

NEW YORK (UP!) - With Graf ,said. "I wanted to play
Chris Evert's default from the pretty badly. "It would have
semifinal of the U.S. Open, the been Important for me to play
passing of a generatlo~ In against Chris. She has the kind of
women's tennis appears game which gives me a harder
complete.
time."
Neither Evert nor Martina
Sabatini, who defeated No. 11
Navratllova will take part In the Zlna Garrison 6-4. 7-5 In Friday's
women's singles final of the U.s. 501e semifinal, Is the only woman
Open for the first time since 1974. to beat Graf this year. The West
Instead, the title will be decided German Is 59-2 In 1988, wtnnlllg
tOday by a pair of teenagers, only one of three meetings with
19-year-old Stelfl Graf looking to the Argentinian.
complete the Grand Slam by
The women's final today will
defeating 18-year-okl Gabriela be played between the men's
Sa batinl. ,.
'
semifinal matches. The first
Evert withdrew from the tour· match will put second seeded
namentdue to a virulent stomach Mats Wllander agalns t unseeded
. virus that, she said In a prepared Darren Cahill. The last match
statement, made her body feel will be No. 1 Ivan Lendl against
"like It's .been through a 1\'ar."
No. 4 Andre AgassL
Dr. Gary Wadler, the tournaGarrison. who disposed of
. ment physician, said that If Navratilova In a three-set quarEvert attempted to play ,It would terfinal Wednesday,led Sabatini
be an "exercise In fu tlllty."
5-3 In the second set, but
Graf did not lost a set to Evert squandered the opportunity. .
In their last six meetings, but the
. ''The mental · lapse that I
33-year-Old veteran still wanted a usually have against Martina
chance to stop theWest German. caught up with me today," said
''I got through all my previous Garrison, from Houston. "I
matches with the girls I was though II played well, but I didn't
,s upposed to beat," she said. "I play all the way through."
was really looking forward to
Sabatini's deep top-spin back·
being part of her Grand Slam bfd.
hands hampered Garrison's net·
"I could have gone out there rushing tactics and.oflen left her
with no pressure, just hit out and six feet behind the baseline,
really have given Ita shot against hitting groundstrokes above her '
Steff!."
shoulders.
W adler said Evert's disap"I was nervous at the start,"
pointment was obvious, "this Is said Sabatini, who becomes the
the twilight ot her career and to
first Argentinian woman ever to
have It now was particuiarty
play In a Grand Slam singles
dis tresslng."
finaL "I'm very proud of that."
Graf, winner of 33 consecutive
W!tander, who lost to Lendlln a
matches, has lost only 13 games · four-set final last year, will be·
In her five Open matches. She facing the tournament's biggest
learned of her semifinal wal- surprise In Cahill, an Australian,
kover while watching television who. upset Boris Becker in the
In her hotel room.
second round. The first unseeded
"I was surprised because I player to reach the semifinals
didn't know anything about It,"
since Johan Krlek In 1980, Cahill,

The pool schedule for the
coming week Is as follows:
Sullday: 1-3
p.m., open swim;
.

available.

1995.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tlmes-Sendnel Start
CHESHIRE - Shawn Huck
kicked an 11-yard field goal with
two seconds left In the game to
give waterford a 10-7 victory
over Kyger Creek Friday night.
Huck, a junior who also started
at lert tackle for the· Wildcats,
was given his opportunity to
make good when the Wildcat
tailback Scott McCutcheon broke
loose and blew past .the KCHS
defense lor a 60-yard run that
took the visitors to the Bobcat
11-yard line. "We gave the ball to
McCutcheon, and he decided he
wanted to end the game on that
run." said Waterford head coach
Jay Long.
.
That run was Waterford's
Initial response to Bobcat fuilbacll John Sipple's game-tying
touchdown run, a three-yard
ettort, at the 1:17 mark In the
fourth period that made the score
7-7.
The crowd was made to stay
awake for Sipple's touchdown
when with 5: 18 remaining, Waterford punted on fourth down to
the KC 37-yard line. where
returner Brian Vinson was wallIng. He then took the ball,
sprinted to his left and headed for

GALLIPOLIS . - Rose Hill
Christian School's soccer team
handed the Ohio Valley Christian
School a 3-2 defeat Friday
afternoon at Raccoon Creek
County Park.
OV's defense limited Rose Hill
to eight shots on the goal, live of
wblch were aaved by gQlllie
Brady JoiUlsotl. However, Rose
Hill's Clayton Hill tallied two
1!081&amp;, one from a direct kick.
The Defl!nders could only man·
age two successful boots, one In
each half frmn senior Joho
Keenan. Teammate 'l'ony Jamora picked up the assist on the
second ov aoal
The Defendtrs will boat South·
WebBier Monday at 4:30 p.m.
Parents' Nltlbt will be Friday at5
p.m. agatnat !Jundngton St. Joe.

·.

No. 33 In the world. is the
lowest-ran ked player to reach
the round of four sl nee computer
ranklngs began In 1973. Today's
match will be his first-ever
against Wllander.
The Swede, reigning champion
of the Australian and French
Opens, Is seeking to become the
first man since Jimmy Connors
In 1974 to win three majors In tlie
same year.
The Lendt-Agassl pairing will
be just the second meeting
between the defending champion
and the 18-year-old showm;j.n
from Las Vegas, Nev., who lost to
the Czechoslovakian at Stratton,
Vt. In 1987.
The pairing will be a meeting of
streaks. Lend! has won his last 26
matches at the U.S. Open. Agassl
won his 23rd consecutive matoh
of the year.
·:

'•

Graduate
to a
brighter
tomorrow

·.

'•

Give a graduate Iife
Insurance and you'll
give the start of a solid
financial luture.

Lyne Center gym schedule

.••

OUR PRICEs
Plus you •• receive a $5.00 refund
from Ptptl-

limes-Santinai-Page-C-3

·Evert withdraws from U. S. Open

'•
'•

Soccer registration
underway at OOM

(

lander defensive back D.J.
Harden scored a safety, with help
from teammate Kevin Kiser, to
put the Highlanders up 8-6, In the
second quarter, sophomore Chris
Metzger added Insurance points
with a three-yard touchdown run
to end the scoring at14-6.
The SWHS defense limited the
Spartans to two first downs, 85
yards rushing and no passing
yards, while recovering two
tumbles (both by Davies) and
Intercepting a pass (Glen Arrowood was the recipient). Jarvis
had 38 yards on seven rushes, and
teammate Joey Vincent rushed
tor 32 yards on six carries.
For the Highlanders. Metzger
picked up 84 yards on 14 deliverIes, and fullback Josh Halslop
had 22 yards on 12 carries. Mike
Walker was 3 of 6 for 24 yards.
The Highlanders will begin
SVAC play Friday night at
Symmes Valley.

SVAC
standings·

Sundla~

Waterford's last-second field
goal tops KC Bobcats, 10-7

yards In 37 plays from ICrlm·
with a possible concussion after
mage. Josh Williams led Gallla
the first halt hurt. And tbose
runners with 64 yards In 12 trips
encroachment penalties just
(all In the first baH). Casey hit
kiUed us. We worked hard on that
five ot 11 aerials (two Inter·
all week."
Saunders praised PPHS for Its
cepted) for 56 yards and one
touchdown. Casey punted five
ball control tactics and defensive
times for 154 yards (31.0). . .
play. He concluded, "Our kids
Galllpolls finished with 10 first
never quit. They broke down In
places, but they never gave up."
downs.
The Blue Devils play at Well·
Brent Simms, Dave Hoke and
ChriS Dillon were among those
ston Sept. 16. Point Pleasant will
wl!o stood out defensively tor the
host Wellston.
GalUans .
Sia&amp;llltlcl:
Statl•llcs
. DEPAB'IllllllNT
G PP
PPHS totaled 232 yards from
First Downs ................................ 10 16
Yards Nllllnc ............................. 93 226
scrimmage (57 plays) with 202
Loll rushing ................................ 13 24
coming on the ground. Of that
Net n~shlnc ...... ..... ................ ...... 80 202
total, tailback Jimmy Oliver Pas.saltempls ...............................J2 6'
netted 1431n 30 trips and fullback Completlom ................... ... ......... 4 2
lnlercepll!d by............................. 1 2
Bill Cottrill added 51 In 10 tries. Yards pautng ........ ..... ....... .. ....... 56 30
Foglesong hit two ot six aerials TOO!I yards ......... ,....................... 136 232
(both to Casey Hill) for 30 yards. Plays .......................... ................ 37 57
Return yards ............................... 48 29
He had one Interception (by Todd Fumbles.......................... ............ . 1 0
Casey). PPHS racked up 16 first Fumbles .................................. :... 0 0
Penaltles ................................... 8il0 8·90
downs.
Punts ........ ,.. , .................. ..... .. 5·154 4-150
The Big Blacks punted tour
Seo10 b)' Quarlen:
times for 150 yards (37.5).
Gallipolis ............................. 0 7 0 o- 7
Gallipolis gained 80 yards Pt. Pla~sant .........................0 3 10 0-13
Next Ga~pe- S~t. 16-WeUSI(.ft, Away.
rushing and 56 passing for 136 net

Standings

W.Va.

Ohio-Point

6-8 p .m., college sw1m.
Monday: 6-8 p.m ., college
swim.
Tuesday: 6-8 p.m., college
swim.
Wednesday: 6-8 p.m ., college
swim.
Thursday: 6-8 p.m. , college
swim.
Fl'lday: 6-8 p.m., college swim.
Saturday: CLOSED
Sunday, Sept. ~8: 1-3 p.m . ,open
swim; 6-8 p.m., college swim.

NEIL MORRISON
P.O . Box 3461
Rio Granda, OH . 45674

~M~'"'

Home athletic events Include
soccer against Tiffin (TUesday, 4
p.m.), baseball against Wilmington (Saturday, 1 p.m. doubleheader) a.nd volleyball against
Walsh and Alderson-Broaddus
(Saturday, 2 p .m.).

MOOEAN WOODMEN
Of ..\Mf.RICA
SINCE 1883
~ll h
"'().~ O(riCL ~OCK '&gt;I.ANO IU. IM.ll\

/&gt;. IRATI liN- t I Il l 'NSlJIIAt&lt;l

HOLZER C::LINIC
EYE CARE
CENTER
JEAN A. DISSELER, M.D.
MAUREEN A, MAY, M.D.
OPHTHAl~IOLOG!STS .

•
•
•
•

EYE EXAM!NA TIONS
CATARACT &amp; LENS IMPlANT SURGERY
IN-OFFICE LAZER SURGERY
CHILDREN'S EYE EXMII:-.:AT!ONS
AND SURGERY

• GLAUCOMA SURGERY

HOLZER CLINIC
EYE CARE CENTER
Located At

HOLZER ~Lil¥1«: Matn Facility
On Rt. 315 In Gallipolis

J:!~BONE

446-5411
\

�Page-C-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

September 11 , 1988..

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea•ant. W.Va.

September 11, 1988

Mets, Reds and
Astros post wins

,...
.~· ·

...

EN ROUTE T~ VICTORY -Dennis Conner, on the tiller, takes a

Ohio HI &amp;II !khool FootbiJI Rn .. a
By Un!U!d PrNI laler~~tiiGIIIll

capable of. Down there I was
By RICHARD RO'M'KOV
batting only .180 In June." ·
UPI Sports Writer
Terry Leach pitched 2-3 In'A 21-year-old rookie surnings
and Improved to 7-2 in
rounded by proven talent Is
starter Sid Fernandez,
relief
of
providing the New York Mets
who gave up three runs In 4 1·3
with an unexpected push heading
innings. Roger McDowell, the
Into the National League
fourth Mets pitcher, worked
playoffs.
three Innings for his l~th save. ·
Gregg Jefferies has started 11
In other National League
games since the Mets elevated
games, Pittsburgh downed Phi·
·him from Tidewater on Aug. 26.
!adelphia 5-2, St. Louts defeated
In his ·u starts he has four
Chicago 6-2, Houston slipped past
three-hit games, Including Frl·
San Francisco 4-3 in 12 Innings,
day night when he doubled,
tripled and homered to lead New Cincinnati stopped Los Angeles
York to a 7·3 victory over the 5-2, and Atlanta edged Sa.n Diego I •
'
5-4 in 11 Innings.
Montreal Expos.
Plra&amp;es
5,
PhliUes
2
Jefferies has sparked what had
At Pittsburgh, Mike Dunne,
been a struggling offense and his
emergence gives Mets Manager 7-11, posted his first triumph
Dave Johnson another option as since July 9 to lift the ,Pirates.
New York heads into the Andy Van Slyke. Dunne, Barry
Bonds and Glenn Wilson each hit
playof!s.
· "I have never seen a player !It a sacrifice flv oft Bob Sebra, 0-2,
In as well as Gregg, breaking Into to become ihe sixth team in
National League history to rethe big leagues," said Johnson.
"He is doing so well that I think cord four In a game.
' .
Cardinals 6, Cubs 2
he Is getting embarrassed. But
hitting the ball the way he does Is · At St. Louts, Pedro Guerrero
great and others are following drove In three runs and Greg
him on the team. Something like Mathews and Todd Worrell comthat Is contagious and that Is a iblned . on a five-hitter for the
good sign especially at this point 'Cardinals. Mathews, 4-5, won his •
second gamestncecomingoffthe ',
of the season."
Je fferles admits he's s urprlsed disabled list Aug. 16. Worrell (
pitched 1 2-3 Innings for his 29th
to be the lineup everyday.
''I thought I would be used as a save. Cubs 'starter Calvin Schl·
hull out of the water en route to victory in the second and final race
pinch hitter, but now that I am raid!, 8-11, took the loss.
.'
of the Amerlca'.s Cup. (UPI)
Astros 4, Giants 3,
getting an opportunity to play
12 innings
regularly and It Isn't bothering
At San Francisco, Alan Ashby
me." Jefferies said. "I am not
nervous. I realiZe that some singled home Craig Smajstrla
other guys have come up here to with two out in the 12th Inning to
had to reef his mainsail in about
Diego, ·challenges will be ac- help the team In September and It enable Houston. which blew a 3-0
15 feet for the remainder of the
cepted for 60 days with no one Is great to be with a group like lead, to close to within four
games of Los Angeles In the
first leg.
considered the first challenger that."
National League West. Scott
The
Mets
lead
the
Pirates
by
"They sailed two very good
who could insist on an exclusive
Garrelts,
5-9, was the loser, while
games
in
the
National
nine
races, from their point of view,"
series with San Diego.
Danny
Darwin.
7-11, gained the •'
East
and
arecloslnglnon
League
Barnes said. " We couldn't have
The challengers will decide
tried any harder and we can be when the next cup will be sailed clinching their second division vlctory.
' Reds 5, Dodgers 2
proud of that."
and in what type of boat. They title In three years.
At
Los Angeles, Eric Davis and
3-1,
but
the
Mets
Montreal
led
Conner, whose hat was blown will then seek San Diego's
runs
In
the
sixth.
With
Paul
O'Neill each doubled home
scored
five
overboard, dropped his jib and
agreement to the terms.
out.
Mookte
Wllsbn
hit
his
runs
in the third inning to ,
one
two
lifted his windward hull from the
If no agreement Is reached, a
Carter
seventh
homer.
Gary
help
Danny
Jackson record his . •
water, givlng the catamaran a
three-member committee made
boost of speed.
up of representatives of the New followed with. a single off Brian 21st victory. Jackson, 21-6,
There were whoops and cheers
York. San Diego and Royal Perth Holman. 3-7. and scored the tying hurled his 14th complete game
and gave up nine hits. He struck
at the San Diego Yacht Club,
Yacht Clubs - the three clubs run on Dave Magadan's double.
Sauveur
gave
up
out eight and walked one. Rookie
Reliever
Rich
where the "Grand Auld Mug"
that have held the cup- will rule
an
RBI
double
to
pinch
hitter
Tim
Ramon Martinez, 1·2, was the
will remain until 1991, when the
in favor of one side or the other~
Teufel.
Jefferies,
who
already
loser.
next cup defense is planned, or
'
had
a
double
and
triple
in
the
Braves 5, Padres 4,
until l'ew York Supreme Court
game, connected for his fltth
lllnnlngs
Justice C. Beauchamp Clparlck
•
homer
In
45
at-bats
to
give
the
At
San
Diego, Ozzle Virgil •
rules on New Zealand's expected
' TOLEDO. Ohio (UP!) - E.W. Mets a 6-3 lead.
singled home Jim Morrison from
protest.
was never headed in posting a 1
"I
am
not
a
great
home
run
base with none Qut In the
second
Fay and the Kiwis have in·
'!, length victory over Kermit hitter like Darryl Strawberry," 11th Inning and Bruce Sutter
sisted that sending Stars &amp;
Key in the featured pace Friday Jefferies said. "I won't hit 30 or piCked up his 300th career save
Stripes to the line against a
night at Raceway Park.
40 but I think I will hit my share. I for Atlanta: Sutter ranks third on
monohull was unfair and cheated
F .F. Lightning finished third.
them out of the match they were . Driven by Terry Morgan, E.W. dniy had seven ali season at the all-time list behind Rollle
Tidewater but I don't think that Is F1ngers, who has 341, and Rich
entitled to.
covered the mile In 1: 58 2-5.
any Indication of what I am Gossage, who has 301.
Clparick can rule against Fay
and allow the races to stand or
she can agree that San Diego
•
violated the Deed of Gift and
order the cup forfeited to the
By JOE ILLUZZI
Mercury Bay Boating Club.
Boston next weekend with ·a
Blue Jays 8, Orioles 1
UPI Sports Writer
Fay has said that he will be on
chance to catch the front-running
At Baltimore, George Bell
The New York Yankees are Red Sox.
hand in 1991 as either a defender
belted his 21st home run and
or a challenger.
repaying the Detroit Tigers for
Boston, which owns the best
knocked in four .runs to power
some damage they inflicted on home record In the majors,
The next cup defense should be
Toronto. Jim Clancy, 9'13, won
them earlier In the season.
a bit 111ore orderly now that a new
opened a 10-game stand at his third consecutive decision .
Clauilen Washington hit a Fenway Park by defeating the
set of guidelines for the regattas
Brewers 2, Mariners 1
homer In ninth In· Cleveland Indians 7-4. That
tie-breaking
. has been es ta bllshed. ·
At Milwaukee, Gary Sheffield .
ning Friday night, marking the padded the Red Sox's lead to 2 I-2 notched his first two major
Under the terms of the agree·
ment signed Wednesday In San
second straight night the Yan- games over lnjury·plagued De- league hits, a homer In the fifth
kees beat the Tigers in their final troit, which has lost I5 of 18 and a game-winning single in the
at-bat with a home run:
games and Is fading rapldlv In 11th, to carrv the Brewers over
In June, the Tigers beat New the division It once controlled.
Mark Langsion, 11-11.
York three straight times In the
The Yankees and the MilwauTwins I, While Sox 0
flnailnnlng. That series knocked kee Brewers trail Boston by 41 ·2
At Chicago, Fred Toliver althe Yankees out of first place In games and the Toronto Blue Jays lowed one hit over eight innings
Hannan Trace.
the AL East and Manager Billy are 61·2 behind.
Score by quarters:
and Jeff Reardon escaped his
Martin
was fired.
"The race Is going to be touch own m In the ninth to ))rE!Setrve
Southern ....... ....... ·0 0 0 0- 0
"It's about time we won one of and go. that's all I can say," said the
· with his
Huntington ... , .. .. .. 13 14 7 15-49
those close games, " Washington Mike Boddlcker, who raised h
said after he gave the Yankees
Fen way Park record. to 4·1 •'"'ppr~
I
3-2 victory. "It was just under. the the Red Sox acquired him from
•'•
letters- a little high -but 1 got the Orioles In a midseason trade.
enough of It to put It out."
"If we keep winning, they've
Since those demoralizing to catch us."
losses In Detroit, the Yankees
Elsewhere, Toronto pounded
•
have been chasing the Tigers. Baltimore 8-1, Milwaukee edged
But if they can sweep the two Seattle 2·1 In 11 Innings, Minneremaining games of the series, sota clipped Chicago 1·0, Oak·
they 'll have caught Detroit In the land trounced Kansas , City
standings. That would put New and California defeated Texas
York In a position to go into 5-3.

.U.rou Ellri n. AkrtH~ Spl'l•ll
.tkr011 flreMoae l·t. Stow II
Akrot~ lhb• It, Gar l .. d 1111 1
1\llron MUIC.'bfl&amp;c'r ~1, Do)'lrMtown Q
Aluooe Nordl Sl, T•llnadp Ill

nation was was an explosive

force In Huntington's seond pe·
rlod success. Proctor added one
Pi\T kick for a 27·0 halftime

score.
At the 3:40 mark Black added a
QB sneak from two yards out and
· a 34-0 score with a Proctor kick.
A five yard ·bootleg by Black
added 6 more at the 7:12 mark In
me finale.
The final scoring came on a 53
yard scramble by reserve quarterback Chad. Lytle, who culminated the scoring and added the ·
two-point conversion, lor a 49-0

score.
No Individual stats were available, however, Black passed tor
well over 100 yards.
SOuthern's Shawn Diddle had a
fumble recover as did Jamie
Cummtns.Mike Amos had a
sack.
Danny Gheen again led the

SRS defense with the most
tackles.
Southern opens SVAC play
next week at home .against

AnUtoll)' W191~ II Syl~an .. N'vl.ew 7
Ant wer p 12, Edu 11
1\n:•t.ld lA, Bryp•0
A.rllnl(t•al8, Pandora·GIIt»a o

.UhlaadCreshtew 18, New London7
.blllahu~ 18, Gneva 1'
A-.untwn Atch 'til, Menlor It
Awn ts, Q(' LullwiUI W 7
A)ll'!l'lvllle J4j 8herwuud Falr\ltfw 7
BarbH ... IO, Stow
.In Ilk 12
Beachwood 14, Oep.., &amp;
........tlle14,8hAIIyllklet
IJe•ercreN. 11, Sprinl SoudJ t
BeiWn S4, St CI.Ur.ntll• Ill
B&amp;lltlontal .. tl, 81-.)',
Bellev.e til, Pori CIIMon 1-1
Belle¥ue (&amp;JI %4, New Rlchmoad 7
Belp.e tl, Wellltoa 1
·
BHIJunlaLo,.. n. W~lfttield!t
Ber Ctr " '•• Rei! w. 8ehr1Br8
BHe.a I~ Norll DimMed 7
BHea au....,kll, ..,. Vlllaae 14
Bet IIPI Tate I!, M acWra II
111 WalaatiO, Mo.uta Ver~~&gt;n U
,IIIOOilll Car Nil•, Rehron LU•ood f

w.....

lloanlmu U. Y~u ... iChaMJ 7

llowllal Uret!ll 21, Ofiiii'!IO 14
lrecbvtlle II, De Cen' Cath C
ll.-.o~t¥tlle 41, Dillie t
ln..wlek II, Oe 'Wesl Tet:lllt ,
Buell• 8W 41, Brlllllep011 lt
If, o. .. rlo 7
•11a1o WIIIQ'• !WY) 7, S.ut1 Polall ·

.C)',.

TIED FOR LEAD - Dave Barr watches his chip shot on the
seventh hole at Tuckaway Country Club during the second day of
competition of the Greater Milwaukee Open In Franklin, Wis.,
Friday. Barr shot a four·under par 68 to bring his two·day total to
134 and tie him for the lead with JiQI Gallar;her. (UPI)

PUBLIC
NOTICE

~

}

Jacllaonlll, Qrclftlllr I
leweti.Sclo U, RUtmu 14
Jobas&amp;Gw• n, Col Cealul!llll'7
Johnaiowa Northl'hla:e St. \Jtk:a f

-i

Jolllllban AlliN •· Pal_. .... I
IWniKoownU U, ....... i

Ktaloll•. OU••a &lt;H•dlrf 1
Kttl Mler II, aartoa Nor11unollll7
Ketl falrmo• tl, ~ S.ehlltnt I
Kk'llalwl lA, Ollll'ill Pal .. IS
Leblllonlf. Ma~~on D
Lf.f!tiOIIla U, Lowellville 1
Lelpllc II, Arcadia It
Le:dnllon 14, Sltelby I
Uberty fttonkHII, Cory RIIW!tOD T
Ubertf Ua .. n"', GranUle f7
MadiHII 311, 1'\a!Uhu Ia F.d1e'Woocl ~
M.. lleld IS, Col Wetl 1
M•'"eld Madlilolllf, Galion 1
Muafleld MalabM" *l, Oht&gt;rlln 7
ll!illflelon II, Blatll Rlnr 12
MarlemoM !1, DeH Park 15
Marlo• Elaln lif, Marton PI4'~WU~t 7
Marlnpon •· 8all'm IS
M•Una Ferry If, Ma«nolhl tWVJ 10
M•nnee 21, Tul Roaer11 i
M.,.-a\lllle 12, CrMknllle 7
MeDermoU NW II, Piketon It
McDonald 1:1, Wllllllhlm 1'
Mc~ecben tWV) Do•ll•!'7, Frollller

a..-.

'
'

Col Hamut•Twp31, Ol~u 1%
Col HUCt!r II, Mlllllda Cle"""n-f'k I
, Colln.,.•dPnct"W, Watllln•Mem U
Col NorthlaiMI J.l, C.l MIU'-Ji'n.ak 7
Col RIP My II, C'el Brill!' fl
Col S.•dl !1, "'e~W\1111(' S 0
Col Sl filM!!, Muioo Hardlna: 7
Col Wal11lll Rl-· 311, MIU'rareUu Z!
Col Wehrle 31, ·GreeneYiew H
fol Whehtolll! 7, &lt;~I WaUer!!on 0
{'oldwater a. Arunwn •
Colerala 1... Hamllto. 7
CoiiiM W RK~ne 14, I',N:Iantbl ~
Colonel Crawlord.J.f, Rl\lerdllie 13
Columbiana Crutvlew 1-4, S Ran RIP o
Conllf' .. l S$, ,Jelferaon 0
CoMoclon II, Meadowllrook 7 (otJ
fo\llnpon 21, Twin Val S 0.
Crntl_. !1'. Tilln CalYfrl I
('u)'ll.._. Pal~ H. Maylletd 1-1
Cll~ll-11. Hla U, Richmond HIA 0

.

'

Mf'c:llanlt&gt;Mhul'll:

n, N l.ewiMhul'll: Triad

Medi•IA. A.lhland II
Mf' .. MIDplud34, M~dl- B111:keye 0
Melli H, Trimble i
Miami ,-,.ce n, a.o.- 14
Mllfl.(,Vdlal %1, TbompLed.emo.Mldcletown M, E O.lcaro t1ndl 0
Mlllt'I"Mport n, ZanPM RoMl&gt;eran" 1%
Mlnerw 38, San~~)&gt; Vlllley 0
Min*' 41, llfoOralf RIYerMict. It
M•pdol'l! .fl7, Woo.rtrc t
M•uOI!!vllle S3. S Central 0
M•uM Heatlhy 33, W Chf!fller LakoUI If
Nehic:.vllle-V•rk II, Mlllft' 13
New AlblliJ t. Bern! U•io• 0
New Brem~ Slli, A1111oaia I
Newark 12. PlckerliiA'on a
Newton Fall~ U, Jaeklloa Milton t
Nortfl BalllnMre It, flmwood 0
North CaniOIIftOO\'H Sl, M•11PerrrU
North Galllalt,
Soutbeauern II
North Royali . . t, llchfteld ~ere 3
Norihwood Sl, DanburJ Lak£111* G
No.--111 H. Huron t ( .. )

young playen played very well and good as Wahama increased its lead
did an outstanding job. It will help to 40.(). Some five minutes later
Seven different players figured in us later on in the season if we con- Billy Zuspan added another WHS
the scoring for coach Donnie Van- tinue to improve the way we have touchdown to the scoreboard on a
27-yard scamper. Sam Thompson's
Meter's Wahama White Falcons each gwne," added VanMeter.
extra-point·
boot made it47.0.
While the veteran Wahama team
Friday night as the Bend Area team
In the final period Jamie Roush
used a devastating ~nd attack to had little trouble with the Eagles
the
White
Falcon
became
there
were
still
some
bright
spots
annihilate the viSiting Eastern
workhorse
with
Roush
culminating
infor
coach
Arch
Rose's
young
Eagles by a 6I -6 margin before a
Parents Night crowd at the Mason experienced squad with freshman a four-play, 3Q-yard .drive with a
quarterback Jeff Durst turning in an
County school.
The White Falcons amassed 409 impressive perfonnance in his
yards In tolal offense in capturing rookie season guiding the Eagles
its third straight gridiron encounter offense. Durst completed nine of 18
of the 1988 season. In addition the aerials for 93 yards with
locals claimed their 18th consecu· sophomore running back Tim Bislive triumph before the home fans sel also making a fine showing for
at Bachtel Field and its seventh win the visitors.
Wahama opened the scoring in
in a row over the Eagles. For
first period on a one-yard run
the
Eastern the setback was their
by
Jewell
with Dave Sigman bootsecond in as many tries on the year.
ing
the
point
after to make it 7-0
The Falcons forced six Eagle
with
8:52
to
play in the quarter.
turnovers in the contest on four in·
later
Jewell once again
Minutes
terceptions and two fumble
reached
paydirt
on a 38-yard gallop
recoveries which led to six WHS
with
Keams
going
in for the twotouchdowns. Wahama scored on
point
conversion
to
make
it 15.0.
nine of its I3 offensive possessions
The
White
Falcons
scored
three
in the gatlle with the While Falcon
times
'
in
the
second
canto
with
defense responsible for giving the
Ke.ns
scoring
the
locals
first
two
offense excellent field position
of
the
stanza
on
runs
touchdowns
from which to stan ilS drives.
Senior running bicks Ouis of four and eight yards.
Sigman's Ieick following the
Jewell and Rick Keams each
sccnd a pair oftouchdowns for the second 1D made it 28-0 with 10:01
Bend Area team while Sean Gibbs, remaining in the half. The final
Jim Ashley, Billy Zuspan, Jamie WHS score of the first half came at
Roush and Ryan Wood added. one the 7:08 mark when Sean Gibbs
six pointer each. Eastern managed skirted around the right side for a
its lone score of the evening on the nine-yard touchdown run. The PAT
final play of the game when Junior kick sailed wide leaving Wahama
Smith hulled in from three yards with a 34.() halftime advantage.
The Bend Area teams longest
OUL
"We executed our plays. the best · drive of the night opened the third
we've done aU year," said Van· quarter scoring when junior
453 JACKSON PIKE,
Meter. ''Our kids hit hard from the quarterback Jim Ashley capped a
446·4148 OR
beginning. We were very fortunate 53-yard nine play drive with a oneyard
plunge
with
7:49
to
play
in
the
to be able to play a lot of our youn·
ger kids a lot of minutes. Our period. The point after kick was no
By Gary Clark

Qoing Out ol Butlne11 Sale
WE WILL CLOSE OUR
FLOWER SHOP SEPT. 30

EVERYTHING IN STORE

30°/o-50°/o OFF

ALL INSECTiCIDES - FUNGICIDES
HERBICIDES AND FERTILIZERS ARE
REDUCED

SMELTIERS
FLOWER SHOP &amp; GARDEN CENTER

\ )\

Oak Harllor IS, Millbury I.Ue 7

..

Ottaawa lUll• U, IIUIIop 0

Majors

M.IDIIt'lata 1, llllcqil

II!
I
·........--.

W L Pd.

08

N•w York
Plullbursh
Montreal
Lblcap

K3 Si .~9, ,.,. 65 .5S'l !I
71 u .581 12 \1
Q8 7! .481 11\1

st .........
rhtladelph'a

IM ,3 .tfUi 16
56 M.fl A(IO 27~
We~t

19 eo .w
16 65 .539

Loll A.~P!I

H••••n
Clltclnlllil

1.- II .58
7i 70 .51).1
70 . . . Kt
D tO .sn

San Francl!ll'o
SanDiep

AUant.a

"

5~

II
9

so

AMERICAN LEA.GUE
IE lilt
" ' L P1•1. GB
711 62 .1111~ BOI'IIoa
7&amp; 65 .531 t ~~
DetroH
New \'orll
1'3 H .sa · ~
7S ill .52-1 4 ~
Mltwaukt&gt;e
'n i9 .510 8~
Tororao
111
n .4111· 10
OeYeland
.at ta .S53 U 11
8altlmoft"
Wt'llt

Mln~~r~~tta

114! .134 18 6! .511~ II

('alllornllt.

l3 it

Clllcap
Sealllf'

n

1-1 n .sts mr,

.....

· Kaa . . City

.s 14

17

tl ,. .... ttl

M 1!1 .4R 28~
~

..fiN

10W·30. lOW..O,
20W-50

89~

Clneia11411al fto!IIOII

Detroit at Nt-w York
Toi'OIIlo at Balttmore
Mln~ola at rille•••
5eall~ at Milwaukee
OaklAnd a1 Kan.ua City
Calllornla at Tn:W~

-

Frldafs ~!udhl'
PIUI!Ibu ,... 5, Phlladlt'lpN:a 2
New t'ork 7, Moflll'f',. J
St. Loult; I, lbiUIO 2
Atlanta S, SIUI Dltpt, lllnr.. p
t:lnctn•U l, LoJ Anpjflll%
Houl!lo• 4, s.,. Pt~l.ro 3, It lnllinp
SU.:IIf'll Gamet~
Ntw l'nrk at Molllrtal
PhUadelphlaat PHUhursh
Qlc:llJO at 811 . Lalli!!
A.tla.ata II San Dlep
Hou•D• II San FrandM'O
Cllll'lnll&amp;ll at IA11 An piH

o.t.-..a

u

Oatil_. 1-1, Ku~a~~ CIIJ6
Milwaukee 'I, Selltle I, lllrtnlap
Callforala s. ·re~u S
S.niiQ'&amp; Game~

ll,r Unll#d Prt!l!i lnif'r,.tla ...
NATtONAL LEAGUE

•

GALLIPOLIS, OH.
446-6681

SALE PRICES
EFFECnVE THROUGH
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17th

Scoreboard ...
....

50°/o

ALL EQUIPMENT AND
. SUPPLIES FOR SALE

Oak Hill._ Hoek Hill 21
0N10a C1Q ft, Tol Slrlch 10
Orr\lllle 40, Wadlworih ~
OrvreiiGralld Val IS, Burtoa&amp;-rbhlrl"

Da,y Oakwood n, Bellbrook e1
08)' w..,-nt" u, Cent.ervlllf'3
O.laftre ,.,, MarJMvllle !.f
ne1 phD" Jnllll~ 31, TI-1-Coulllly N I
Del pimA Jeffwun .M, Unw. CC 21
Delta 11, EYerl(l't'f'n 0

four yard run. The try for the point
after failed and Wahama led by a
53.0 score with 10:17 remaining in
the game. The locals scoring on the
night was capped by Ryan V(ood on
a detennined 12-yard run wtth 4:26
to play._ Roush ran_ the two-pomt
conversiOn to make n61·0.
Eastern marched 63 yards in 10
Cont.lnued on page 6

Ro""

Dallon II. Tlillaw II
0., Carnlll %8, D"' Belmonl 'ZJ
DQ lhlnhar u, On Aiken !%

sz~

Frldll,)''il Relilllh
New York :t, Dt'lr.ll%

lloa&amp;on1,0"et•.a

ToNA~;o "· a.un.re •.

Transactions
Hue hall
BaJtlmorf'- Real'lw•aaxret&gt;ment with
FrankRohlason lo eotdnue ""maaa~:cr
· In ltil8.
mow Into an exrt'Utlve
pOIIIUon wii('D h .. m~Mrertal lmun&gt; b~o

IU'I•

0\'l'l'.

San Franci!K'o - Recalle411 plk her Ml ke
L.Cou lr..., the Uilaov dlsa ..d ll.t;
l'l!called pitcher Uta... Cook lrom
Phoe•lx or tht l"adnc coua Leqw
(AAA. ).

ACCESSORIES

THE PARTS DEPARTMENT

BODY

Blls..utall
Bolton- 86ped tonrard RrlliiLohaw!i
to • m 1111-.)'l!ar eonlrati Ut•h - Ac:q .area l•rwa.rd ·•o.e Ortlx
from Zaraa~ (Spin) Ia uchuae lor

cenier Mel hrpln.
Colle,e

Declared TexaN A6M lnriiKthle for 11 loodt&amp;ll b.wll&amp;miP &amp;hla aeuon:
NCAA-

llantd Crel ~··from pOllt.eiiSOach 11111IJIIollliblplllhlll yur.
Foolhall
NFL - Re.ched an ••reement with
•u"ptndPd Chlca,o Be ana defea.We end
Richard Dent allowtnr him to play
Su .. ., '11 rame araAn•t Ia•&amp;MpoiAR.
New O..lean11 - Cut pard Mark
MacDo•ld: 11ipd ruard Jamea

Caampen.
W•lllnllon- Pl~~eedpunterStneCDil
un llfht.)urett-r""rw I bit: stpe411 PtiiUr
Tomnt)' llaralu•rdt Hocke;y
New JerWJ- SllfW!d rt .... wtnx Pat
Vt'f'heek to • m IIIli- )'e.- co111rac1.
NY lllanden - !YK-d defn~neman
Chrlll PrJOr loa m ..U-,.e• co•mct.

Woodlo.nd Centers, Inc.

ALCOHOL/DRUG ABUSE
TREATMENT PROGRAM
•

UnderP.oweri!Q trimmers Just
won t cut II when you're up
ll110&amp;'1nst heavy weecla and brush.
Thai's when you need a Sllhl
FS·8' AVE Brushculler with
a hlgh·pOwerecl engine and !IX·
cluaiVII'Polycul· head. When
you have work to do, ~·t
play around. Gall Sllhl ·
Bruahcutler. And i)el the Job
done. See 1 demonstration at:

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
c111m1

915·3301

~

l.
'••'••
••
.'
' '•

.
••'

•

••

'.

''.;
.,••••
•

·~

'.,•I

'.
'I

.·!,

Professional substance Abuse Treatment &amp; Prevention
Services at Woodland Centers are designed to help people
develop their fiiH potential without dependence on druas.
alcohol or other substances.
TREATMENT SERVICES

24·HOUR CRISISLINE

Evaluation and Testing,
Psychotherapy and
Counseling for individuals,
groups and families.

Information, Referrals,
Telephone Counseling and
Emergency Services.

MlCIA 101QUI 60

MONTH IATTIIIY

ptlfvi!I!M_,,. Lo.f!Miftl,
·-~-..-..

13

99

3ft'

RUIIEI MAU.IT

"
rim:
to»c

• A h&lt;&gt;...t, body
1i*. t U11ll
UIIUOHII

PREVENTION/EQUCATION

Programs availablef or schools, civic orpnizaiton and
other community aroups.
GALLIPOLIS

JACKtoN

412 VInton Pike
4.8 6!100

200 Main Street
28U075

meul'IIA--.

=E:......

POMEROY
Mulberry

Helg~ta

1102·2182

CRISISLINE - CRISISLINE.

'

•

In clan Hlll411, IAwland M
In clan Lake 21, Rldlftnott t
ln ... v....,.u, M&amp;lwras
Jromon u. Alhland (K1 ~A

Olltmp6onM, P,matunl•tValf
M, Vounp Rl\fen 7
ChlllklK~ !7, lhahln,;ton I:H 1
Gtn Baoon U. Cln Wes1eu H111•6
Cln CAPE 33. On Taft A
(;In Co••r)' Dlly 35, MIIM! In d) 10
Cl• GremNIII!I 12, N Cnlle~e Hill&amp;
On Hulfaet n, Lemon Monree :i
Cln LockiUIId 10, Ji'1nEylowll7
Cln frlncfton ~. Upper Arlln~on U
an Sfc.,.ore U, an Wal11ul Hills U
Cln Withrow 21, Am ella 6
On Woodward l.f, Mllto. Union lfl
f:ln Xa,.ler 15, .. clanapolb1 Hip~ 13
Clark N•rll••t.ern II, MIIUIII E 6
Cle VoiHnwood lA, F.ullake No
Clellll .. •lllls", Eudld 1%
CIIPIII' Fork41, Sparta&amp; fDKhland 6
CII•....M•IIe U, Blanehe&gt;AUr o
Cot Ac:-*rny %1, lellley (I
Col Beecller.n %7, f;ellh&gt;Sah11 6
Col Brooldl.,.ea Jl, Whtwhall 14
Col EMIM, Col Mlfftln 0

.- • .J,

'

Vall

Camt..ldp II, Union Local 7

e

EHective as of September 1, 1988
1. AR bills will be due on or before tht due dote.
2. We will no longer honor postme~rkS.
3. The 15th will no longer be the set due date each
month. Due dotes may c~ange each month
4. Office hours are 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Mondoy
thru Friday.
5. Billing system will be current billing. We no longer
bill a month behind.
6. No penalties wHI be charged for September only.
7. Before any accounts are transferred, all bills and all
paperwork mutt be completed.
If any qu•tiomt, please contact our office, 446·9221.
Louii McCormick, Jr.
Superintendent
Gallia
Rulal Water Auociation, Inc.

HullllnJtoa IWVa) Vi~~MIIIf, SJIQIIte&amp;

C.... F11li011 N\r II, CoYenlry 17
Cual "'1Ddlea&amp;er 1', Gr•dYiew e
C..JeiiiU, lrMIIfleld t
Calll.. 11mRII 14, Qe lelln Hay 1i
C&amp;tdi•IIOn a, U.n.tlle 1'
Carlile H. 0., Nortarhlie 13
Ce:WMIIe Je, S,rtlla NW t
Centerburr u, Ucldnc HI• 28

Yanks, Red Sox, A's triumph

Tools
Not
Toys.

EuiMOd U, Oy•oe 11
Eal on 11, Preble Sllawaee l.fl
Edls•S.udl IS, Beaver Lac&amp;ll
Elida 40, Uma ShuDet I
El)'rlll W 21. Lorai•So•ll'l'lew t
Falrllehl Unkta!l. He alii t•
Fairfield Jl. an Oak Hll .. ltl
Field U:, Le avltlllbu rtl..aPra• 7
P'lnllay tt, Tttnn C.hnblan,
Foret.t Park 11\, an,...,... 11
F011tarla tt, Upper 8anduslq 8
FnnWin IT, Sprlnrhoro 0
Fr11nWin Hts 33, G&amp;lloway We~~tlalld I
Frt11Mtnl Roaal%. To I Macomber R
G.,...waJ U, Tuau,.wu C..t.ll
Glb8onhllrtl4, Fo.corla St \\'endelln 6
Girard !5, C.rtlalld Lalrie'YIN 1
Golhen 11, Ofl"mo• Nar .. e•tHnl.f
Growport 21, ...ac:..aer 14
Hamllt011 He• 14, Qa 8tunmM t
HIUI_. Traee!l, Pruk F\lraGree11 14
Hh .. bal Rlwr 8, Bar..S'I'IIIt' T
HaNIIaNortlleraU, Vulue U
HarltHa Sl, M1111Dn18
Hltkl\lllle ... FA&amp;Wiotl 1'
Hllbnl tl, Gro• City!! C!ot)
HIIWate n, Lue•JI
Hopeweii-LD.&amp;o n II, Kana• LaliOU fl
Howl.ad U, ae E.uL I
Hu .. lapo• 'n, Rlldne Southern II

AlllM«:• 14, MMIUioa Jacbon 13

Toledo results

a

Eaal Kao.&amp; 41, Gal .... NorGimor 14
EatiPaletHHU, U...e411Loc.J U:

An....._lt, N1rw0041 10

'

Southent drops 49-0 decision
RACINE - The HuntingtonRoss Huntsmen of Coach Ted
Lehew blasted the Southern
Tornadoes 49·0 here Friday evening in a non-league football tilt In
Racine.
Huntsman Quarterback Todd
Black threw three touchdown
passes and ran for two oth-e rs as
he displayed a masterful offensive effort.
The key to the game came at
the line of scrimmage where the
Huntsmen dominated, blasting
through the line to fall the
Tornado backs before they had a
c hance. Meanwhile, the bulky
Huntsman line blasted through
the Tornadoes,' defense at will,
forced to punt onlv once on the
ni!(ht.
·
Tom Barr scored the first
Huntington TD,followed by a
Todd Black run and PATbyDeke
Proctor, for a 13-0 score.
· · The second quarter comblna·
lion was Black-to-David Kunkel
for 42 ya rds and 48 yards
respectively. That aerial comb!·

DlvPr •• Ulllichntl ... na.)'moM &amp;

Eut CanlC11117, Slrubui'J( 0
Eut Cle Shw 11. Oe Glenville I
&amp;!at CIIM011 11, JUap I

Fri~,Squ . t

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page·- C-5

Eagles drop 61-6 decision to W ahama

Friday's scores

Threats fly in face of America Cup victory
SAl' DIEGO (UP!) - Dennis favorable course than Wednes·
Conner mav have won the day. when Stars &amp; Stripes won
America's Cup for the third time, the opening race of the best-ofrouting the Kiwis by more than 21 three series by 18: 15.
minutes, but the tireless chair·
Conner rounded the first turn
man of the New Zealand chat· with a 10-mlnute lead over New
lenge team has vowed to fight the Zealand after the 13-mlle upwind
victory in court.
beat and Increased the advanAfter losing the lead briefly on tage by 1: 56 on the second leg.
the first leg of the triangular The race began Into westerly
course, Conner used his catama· winds of six knots that shifted
ran's superior speed to leave the slightly to the north as the yachts
monohull New Zealand miles closed in on the first mark. The
behind and turn back the Kiwi's · wind shift turned a tacking duel
challenge In three hours, 27
Into more of a reach and the
minutes and 38 seconds. New second leg Into more of a
Zealand's monohull finished
downwind run.
21:10 later.
tatamarans are especially
fast on the reach and Stars &amp;
"It would be hard for me to say
Stripes slashed around the mark
that this was one of the most
into the second leg exactly 10
memorable or exciting (cup
minutes ahead of New Zealand
victories) ," Conner said Friday.
with 15 knots of wind pushing the
"It was a case of we had a job to
wing-like sal!. '
do and we went out and did it."
Yachting's most prestigious
The New Zealanders took the
trophy wilt remain In the hands of lead briefly in the early stages of
the San Diego Yacht Club unless the race with a clever false tack
New Zealand's threatened legal
that the veteran Conner took.
challenge to Stars &amp; Stripes is
As happened at the races In
upheld by a Manhattan judge.
Australia last year, when Conner
"! will not be going home to
reclaimed the Cup after losing it,
New Zealand until the'protesthas superior boat speed allowed the
been heard In New York," said American to recapture the lead
Michael Fay, chairman of the about 12 minutes Into the contest.
New Zealand Challenge. " I hope Both boats started behind the llne
to be home by Christmas."
in six-knot winds from the west.
There was no evidence of Conner held a 29-second advan·
American "sand bagging, " or tage over rival David Barnes
making the race appear closer when his catamaran crossed the
·
than It actually was, as claimed .starting line.
by New Zealand crew members
Barnes had to adjust the shape
Wednesday. Conner enjoyed of his sail to take the pressure off
stronger winds and a mar~ of his 150-foot mast and finally

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

..

•

Me

M.

·-""!.-·
.:~~·

"'

24'

�•

'
)

Page C-6 Sunday Times-Sentinel

198~

September 11,

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

September 11 , 1988

•

SEOAL football teams·now 2-4 after two weeks action
•

GALLIPOLIS - Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League teams were
2-4 against non-league opponents
Friday night with Jackson de-

I

,,

!eating Circleville 20-6 and
Warren Local winning 27-14 at
Fort Frye.
Defending champion Logan

Rio Grande runners
showing improvement
The men's and women's cross
countrv teams at Elo Grande
College/ Community College
may have finished last In the
Marshall Invitational Sept. 3, but
"tremendous" improvement by
nearly all runners left Coac,h Bob
W!lley encouraged.
••we saw some positive
' things," Willey remarked.
"Overall, our people race well. "
; The men finished the five-mile
•course fifth in a field or five
:schools with 122 points . The other
;sehools, in order, were West

;E
· les •••
·
';. ag
Conlinued from page 5

Virginia University, 21 points;
Marshall, 55; Glenville State. 83;
and Morehead State, 88. The
women runners ended !lfth with
124 points. Finishing jn the
women's race were Eastern
Kentucky University, 25: Marshall, 43; Glenville State, 97; and
Morehead State, 98.
Individual results saw junior
Troy Cochran finish first lor Rio
Grande at 27: 26. Others,ln order
of finish, were Tim Warnock,
27: 10; Bob Fritz, 27: 55; Tony
Fatica. 28: 59; James Peck,
29: 10; Doug Horne. 28: 40; VInce

,Fatlca,30:27, Amongthewo~en,

senior MarvDowlerflnishedflrst
' plays to avoid the shutout follow- at 19:23; · Atsuko Yamazaki.
mg the final WHS touchdown with 24: 17; Gina Kllchenman, 26: 50;
the Eagles )WJior Smith ripping off and Paula Sydenstrlcker, 28:02.
huge chWJks of yardage in the
Willey noted that for the
drive. Smith hulled his way into the veterans who had raced at
end zone as time ran out to make Marshall In 1987, Improvement
the final tally 61-6 as _the extra· . was seen In their tiiJleS. Dowler
point attempt sruled w1de of us was eightli to finish In the
women's race, having been 15th
k
mre.;..cll led all ground gainers in at last vear's event. Kllchenman
the contest with 77 yards in just cut her previous time at the
sevencarries followed by Keams Invitational by three minutes, the
' with 71 yards in seven tries. Jamie coach added.
Roush notched 61 yards in nine at"We were pleased to see how
tempts while Bill Zuspan totaled 39 her (Dowler's) time had lm·
•yards in four carries; Ryan, Wood proved so much," Willey
..33 yards in four auempts; Bobby ·commented.
-Ash 29 yards in three carries and
The teams were to travel to
:Justin Crandol 26 yards in three Wittenberg University, Sprlng~es. Eastern was led in rushing by
!leld, ·today for an Invitational.
·Junior Smith with 39 yards in six The women were to run at 3:30
' attempts.
p.m. and the men at 4.
Sean Gibbs completed two of
Willey said that compared to
three passes for 42 yards while Jim the regional powerhouses the
' Ashley connected on thwo of three teams faced at Marshall, compe: tor 30 yards. Jeff Dur.;t completed tltlon at Wittenberg should be
•nine of 18 passes for 93 yards wtth more on Rio Grande's level.
; chris Lance completing one of two Other teams tailing part will be
.
.
Cedarville, Defiance, Ohio
:for seven yards.
•• Billy Purkey caught one aenal Northern, Musklngum, Ohio
"for 26 yards to lead the Falcon Wesleyan and Denison.
• receivers with Bobby Kincwd,
~philip Upton and Wes Bumgarner
;.all with one recepuon for 16, IS
-and 15 yards respectively, Lance
:caught four passes for 82 yards for
,:ihe Eagles.
..
• Defensively for Wahama Phihp
Upton had a pair of pass interce~­
iions while Bill Zuspan and Justm
:crandol had one each. Upton also
: had a'n enemy fumble recovery
· along with Troy Meadows. Taskle
"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
: readers for the White Falcons were
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
;zuspan. Jewell, Chris Noble. BumSTORE"
• garner, Upton, Ash, Crandol and Irn
' zuspan with four each. ·
. ~ Following an open date next
COACHES SHORTS
, ~eek the Bend Area team takes to
;the road for three s uccessive away
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS
~ames at Ravenswood, Vinson and
:Federal Hocking on successive
BALL CAPS • BAGS
;Friday nights.

4lli6.

!:

.

T-SHIRTS • &amp; MORE

STATISTICS

...

Wahama

18

{first Downs

IYda Rushing

Estem
II

32-75
tOO

41·337

:Yards Passing

72

"totAl Yds

409

175

4-6
4·2

10-20
4
2-2

3-15

2-10

'}&gt;unts-Avg
·Off Playa

1-31.0
49

5-25.6

·Score by Quarters:
)Vahama
.£astern

I 5 19 13 14 61

)using
interceptions Thrown
Fumbles-Lost

0

P,m&amp;lr.ies-Yds

••

!O:u::w ~

was a 27-14 victim at Miami
Trace, Gallipolis fell to Point
Pleasant 13-7, the Parkersburg
Big Reds whipped Marietta 30-6,
and the Waverly Tigers downed
Athens 15-7.

Jackaon 20, Circleville 6
JACKSON - Freshman quarterback Mike Morgan passed for
two touchdowns and Todd Bach·
tel ran for 251 yards in leading the
Ironmen on to their first 1988
victory.
Morgan finished with eight of
17 passes for 108 yards,lncludlng
an 11- and 10-yard strike to
George Smalley. Bachtel carried
the ball 35 times for 251 yards,
including a 68-yard TD run In the
second period.
Score by quarters:
Circleville ............... 0 0 0 6-6
Jackson ................ o 14 o 6-20

.

Waverly 15, Athens 1
ATHENS - The Athens Bulldogs won the battle of statistics
by tolling up 222 total yards to
Waverly's 117, but a four-yard
run by Jodie Crabtree and Mike
Heibel's 45-yard jaunt with a
blocked Athens punt proved to be
the winners.
The lone BulldogTD came with
35 seconds remaining In the first
half when Georg Norris slammed
over from the two-yard stripe.
Waverly Is now 2·0 on the year
while Athens Is 0-2.
Score by quarters:
Waverly ......... ! .......7 6 0 2-15
Athens ................ :... 0 7 0 0-7

Miami Trace 2'7, Logan 14
WASHINGTON COURT
HOUSE - Tailback Paul Clark
carried the ball14 times for 168
yards and scored on runs of 32
and &lt;16 yards, but his Logan
Chieftain teammates fell to the

Panthers' high-powered offense.
Senior Logan quarterback
Jlmmer Breining completed only
two of 19 passes and suffered
three liiterceptlons before leavIng the game with an Injury In the
second period.
Miami Trace finished with 246
yards rushing and 62 passing
whlle ~he Chieftains netted 219 on
the ground and 46 In the air.
'Score by quarters:
Logan ..................... o 7 7 0-14
Miami Trace .......... 7 0 6 14-27
Parkersbul'lf 30, Marietta 8
MARIETTA - Quarterback
Rick Marshall scored 10 points
and passed for 10 more In pacing
the Big Reds over the Tigers.
The lone Marietta TD came on
a three-yard run by John Carter
In the second quarter.
Ma~shall carried eight times
for 72 yards while Carter Jed the

CROFT ALVMINUM
32" or 36"
s1yre 161 Mill

Slyle 163 White

36" Only
Slyle464 White

Tigers with 71 yards on 19
carries .
Score by quarters:
Parkersburg ......... 8 0 6 16-30
Marietta .................. 0 6 0 0-6
'
Warren Local 2'7, Fort Frye 14 .
BE\'ERLY -Fullback Heath
Eddleblute carried 15 times for
187 yards and scored three
touchdowns on runs of 3, 61and 17
yards.
Scott Mitchem also returned a
Fort Frye punt for 47 yards and a
TD and kicked three extra points
as the Warriors go to 1·1 on the
season . .
Score by quarters:
Warren Local ....... 7 6 0 14-27
Fort Frye ...............o 7 7 0-11

Friday's scores
Od_OI'II Talaw~&amp;~~da 3D, Qn NW I
Pal• Haney U, Alhi S1 John D
Paii!IN Rh·enlde 2"1, Alht Harho:lr 1

Parllenburr (WV) H, Marietta 8

•••
!•

'

Vinton County defeated Fed·;toral Hocking by a 12·0 score.
: &lt;Shawn Ray had a five yard
·~ouchdown run for the Vikings
:~nd Steve Taylor piCked of a
!-Lancer pass for a 40 yard
:~ouchdown with aU the scoring
-coming In the second quarter of
t play.
; Tom Reed was the leading ball
, carrier for the Vlkes with 80

.

Finish .............~79 95
Cross Buck..~89 95

•

, .Skyline to host race

36" Only

95
s1y1e 265 White, Full View......~9

HOT WATER
TANKS
$141 20
30 Gallon Electric
$154 95
40 Gallon Gas
42 Gallon Electric
$13660
52 GallorJ EleQtrlc $159 75

PLYWOOD
SHEATHING
112"

X

4

1

X

8

1

$684SHEET
5/8" X 4

1

sgsg

SHEET

-Custom Transfers
and Lettering-

.
.
.
.
o
8' .......................... 5.33

26" X
26" X 10'........................16.59
26" X 12'...................... ..'7.95
26" X 14'........................•9.25
26" X 16'.......................10.80
1

54

0 0 0 6 6

S/32" 4'

X

8'

BUNGALOW '
PANELING

JOJQIIS MANVILLE
KRAFT .FACED
x 15 (88.12 sq. ft.) ......S1 0.58 roll
x23 (135.12 sq. ft.) ....•16.22 roll
X15 (48.96 sq. ft.) ........ ,.$11.51 roll
x23 (75.07 sq. ft.) .........'17.65 ron

X 81

•Autumn Oak
•Mushroom Hickory
•Tan Bark Hickory

$299SHEET

FIBERGLASS
SHINGLES

$15

; STEWART - Skyline Speed' ;way near Stewart will run the
• Mark Balzano Memorial Race on
l -Sunday September 251n conjunct tion with the World Race of
; Champions event at Mineral
; M'elis .
; As a tune up for the Balzano
; memorial. Skvllne will hold the
: :rourth annuai Harvest 50 late
;;model Invitational on Saturday,
. &amp;-pt.17.
;' Many area drivers Including
•:J· time champion Bob Adams,
; vr.,1983 champ Scott Wolfe. Lee
•$toyd,Marc French, Hilton
i:Wolfe, Jr .• Benny Hickel, and
;.Phil Davis.
; • Mike Balzano, Harold Red·
&gt;,man, and many national stars
:.are expected to enter.

,•

::Scioto results
••

:; COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
;,Cagey Myrt scored a mild upset
~- In Friday night's Set the Trap
--:series finale at Scioto Downs,
:•beating out the favorite, Love To
:'Shop, by 5 % lengths.

9

::::::::::::::::::
..................

..........

1

..........

.

''Sure we dropped out
But does that mean we're worth any less?"
Only about
$200,000 each ..
TIM: :1\\:rJ~ Jnp.•n rJJ~ fi ..- II.S
h!KII ,.;&amp;,;hllllb 111.11'1' !&gt;Wid. .. IIII M"C
th:1111ti lll..-rl.'\.'fll \\:'..: t.~lll' tl-..:~illl&lt;l
......-.bUrt: d..:~ w.:. ~A irliJI\ w.lt~tl

puK:nrlil! n... wei'IJ'.~ diC'-''M" Nllll.'
b.l.'i t tf 1&amp;:, AfJO..'flotlll ~~ouh .1 hl~l1
lll.'.lrll ,II "!IIlii

Jil 'lliKil~ l' ~._•ullk.· il~ll ol hi)91

!ll.'lw ••l w...lual\..':0. Al"ll ...~

wpcr-

l\.,11 I 4 • ~~~· \\d(IJ"C J'o.. 'dllk:lll:i h:i\"C
l1Nhi~1-..\J k_~~ 11);111 11}C:II'l&gt; If

s iii.Mll

TI~tliy, we a«: ~\M\If...1ing:

1\ILh IIUr flfJifl,'&gt; ill \1\ll'lJ lll.li'kl.'l:o,

.111d the 1 ~LI} 1\"J}' ttl su.1.u'll b wuh
1\L.'II ....'I.Itll.lll'l.l y,ukr.;. An t.•ttun tu
l\ IIT\.'\.1 tJIII ..JniflOU\ pn~ll·tn l)IJW
,p n nli..~Jn :Lill..11\:r futun: fol" the
\\htllc II,Uit ~l.
\\:hill t'.Ul )'IIUt.lfi?SI.JOt'k~ IU
111111~
JtLILwc o.:hlklrcn, ~...'1..1"~
tl'ol.'IU In .'lt.'hc~ !l \'C11l,hl'f }llllllil\'t'
Lhiklrclltlf J'l!,(, lk.-tf) )liUf lo. ...;d

lll"lllui ,h•: lilnJ,t&lt;.a:I"M.-r.., :!I'M.! I )IJII:r
jl.ln.•IIL~ 1.k.1IY.ilh tlk: pn~lklll
11\l'l ltt}Ch tl. 1111munky JlfiJKl'Jllbi Aka

crf ;ell, try Iii hl'llruo.'&gt;llk: hH.:blM
illlf•IIU!li,."\:!I:IL\"l~lio..1&lt;.!L~k10
Ul Ilk! l\~Jn~ p.'l.{llc )'IU kii!NI.
\l•hm tJilC In b1r :illlllt.1"=&gt;
Jn ~~ IJI.K 1-.f .'ll.iM-~, W\! 111\N t-,:
~ ~:ti• ~tt cltlr mind.••.

WIRE

95

CASH&amp;CARRY
6-0 X6'8"

lncludu Screen

ROLL

end H1rdware

I

For most of us, lile is an
enriching experience. Filled
with both planned and
spontaqeous events. Some
are predictable, others are
not. And, some events in
life !lre simply Inevitable.
Preparing for the inevitable is an Individual
responsjbility, and should
not be left behind for
someone else. That is why,
for family memorials, there

$675
SHEET
••

288

PA -&lt;: ......... ...................5· 1-135-15-2

Penaliles-Yds ................2·20 6-40
Fumbles-lost .......... .. .. .. .....2-l 2-0
Punts-dist ................ ,..4-135 3-104 .

Sco10byq-o:

Meigs ............... ......... 0 1 6 1~-22
Trimble ............ .........0 6 0 0- 6

3.9°/o

OR CASH BACK

APR

FINANCING

.. ,- ,,- '

•

1988 FORD BRONCO XLT .
1988 FORD CONVERSION VAN
(DEMO)

$19,98800

WAS $20,611

NOW

S17 900
I

LOADED
INCLUDES TV

WAS $25,900

1989 Models
Now

.Arriving

1988 FORD RANGER 4X4's

$7

1986 OLD$ CIEU 2 DR.

1987 FORD
ESCORT WAGON

Air, auto., tilt, cruise,
cassette.

Air conditioning
'
550 Transmission

1986 RANGER PICKUP

1987 ASTRO VAN

For the finest natural
quality, unmatched craftsmanship and guaranteed
value, Rock of Ages memorials stand alone.
Rock of Ages family
memorials stand for what
people care to remember.

V-6, auto. trans.
Tutone paint.

V-6. auto. trans.
Customized.

1986 ESCORT GT

1986 ESCORT PONY

550 trans .•
AM/FM/Cassette

4 speed trans.
Tape stripes

1986 PLYMOUTH
TURISMO DUSTER

1985 GRAND
WAGONEER 4x4
leather interior,
All Power.

Auto. trans.

PAT'S MUFFLER SHOP

WE STAND FOR WHAT /'E(l/'LE CARE TO RE\IE\IBER.

Your Complete Exhaust
Service Center

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0 Pleo•e send ~. FREE booklell •hawing memorial•

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print&lt;ed in lull colorwhh size and price~li1t.d .

0

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0

Klndlr have an authoriz.d L09Qn Monument Co.
represe"'oti11e.coll 01 my helm•.
.
Plea•• ••nd me detail• about 11JOusoleum• without
aiJiivotion .

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••
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ber . . . Rock of Ages.

PRE-FAB
TRUSSES
•

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PANELING

:&amp;4

Yal'lls

Total yards .... .............. .. 253

AS LOW AS

Air, auto trans., tilt
wheel. 15,000 miles .

J./4" PEG BOARD

1

Department
M
T
First downs .. .. .... .. .............. 13 15
Yards rllshJng .... ,........... 244
65

1988 FORD ESCORTS

'

.

./~

The Atrium Door
Is actually a whole
eyetem of Ideas
for enhancing the
beauty of any
home. Come In
today· let us help
you choose the
Idea that's right
for your home.
'

McE Iroy was the total Meigs
offense as "Cheez" gained 142
yards In 17 carries and sconed all
touchdowns and Howard added
108 yards In 21 tries. Aaron
McCown was the big gun for
Trimble with 79 yards In 10
attempts and four pass receptions for 51 yards. .

Dealer

1988 BMPO GL 4 DRS•

..

•anergy alflcflant
•cartlllad for Federal
Energy Tax Cradtt
• fleady-to-lnstall .
•Solid Brass morllca
lock Included

You'r

efforts of McElroy and Howard .
Defensively for the Marauders, Wes Young was outstanding
with the blocked field goal and
three sacks to his credit. Along
with Young, Terry Fields, Wess
Howard and Terry McGuire
turned In great defensive efforts.
Fields was credl ted with two
quarterback sacks while Aaron
Sheets, Dave Lester and Jim
Durst recorded one each. Randy
Hawley, Kurtis English, Scott
Nelgler and Frank Blake also
made their presence known on
defense as they combined lor. ·
many tackles.
The running of Howard and

USED CARS AND TRUCKS

•all wood

BARBED

'

•

REPLACE YOUR
OLD SLIDING
DOOR
WITH THE
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1

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•

THE ATRIUM DOOR
.

2 X 2' .......... $26.95
3 X2
$30.95
3' X3
$37.95

GALLIPOLIS- BIIJ Todd, Bob
Donnally, Janie Lane and Margret Grant were chosen as the
new officers for the GARS
Athletic Boosters for 1988-89 at Its
annual election meeting.
Todd wlll serve as president,
and Donnelly will be the vice
president. Lane will be the
secretary, and Grant will serve
as treasurer.
Those wishing to purchase
membership cards ShOUld COO·
tact Carol Davis, who was
elected to chair the membership
drive this year.
The meetings will Ill! held In the
GAHS .library annex each Tuesday during football season at 7
p.m. All are welcome to at tend
the business meetings and the
previous Friday's football game
on video narrated by one of the
football coaches.

'.•
You never know.
· But, you can always be sure.

$990

1

Coach Chancey stated that the
Marauders tightened their dl!'
tense In the second half of play
after being victimized by Bing·
man's passing In the first 24
minutes. The defensive pressure
applied by Meigs forced Bingman to throw too soon causing
the Incompletion.
Tomcat Coach Greg Holbert'
said the two penalties, one on
their first drive and the second
the holding call at the Meigs six,
aborted two touchdowns and
were Instrumental In the Joss. He
also cited the failure of the Cat
reclevers to hold onto Bingman's
passes. He had high praise for the

GAHS Boosters elect
officers for 1988-89

••

Black • Brown • While
GrHn • Green &amp; White Mlr

SIZES
AVAILABLE

Pinned at their own five yard
line, Bingman, on a passing
attempt, was dumped In the
endzone by Young and Aaron
Sheets lor a safety. On the
ensuing free klcl&lt;, McElroypicked up a 37 yard return to give
the Marauders possession at the
Trimble 25. It took just five plays
in two minutes for McElroy to hit
paydlrt alter he and Howard had
combined to put the ball at the
Cat seven. Boothe's point after
attetnpt was wide of the mark.
Then, with 1:10 remaining In
the contest, McElroy's one yard
plunge and Boothe's extra point
kick sealed tl)e win for Meigs.

20 Year Warranty
-Neptune GrHn Only

!UARE · t

ROLLED
ROOFING
ALUMINUM
SLIDE

yards In 17 carries.
.
NelsonvllJe-York squeaked by
Miller bv a 16-13 margin. Tom
Campbeil !recorded one touch·
down and added a safety for the
winners as he picked up 150 yards
In 23 .carrles. Shawn Bartley, for
Miller, completed 11 of 18 passes
for 151 vards and two touchdo"(lls
and th'rew three Interceptions.
Siemer and Pompey were his
primary targets .
Belpre rema_ined unbeaten
with a 40-7 win over. the Wellston
Golden Rockets. No details were
available on the game at press
time.

..

90LB•

1

By ,JJM SOULSBY
Marauders first serious threat of
Ttme.Senllaelllalf
the night.
GLOUSTER - Fifteen unansThe Marauder defense was not
wered points In the fourth quarto be denied, however. With 9: 20
ter of play broke open what had left to play In the second period,
1ieen a "nail-biter" and sealed a "Cheez" McElroy picked off a
22-6 Meigs win over the Trimble lBingman aerial and racled 48
Tomcats Friday night.
yards to put the Marauders on
.Taking the opening kickoff, the top 6-0. Dennis Boothe drilled the
Marauders, after netting just extra point.
seven yards In three plays were
Following a pair of exchanges
forced to punt. Jeff McElroy's of possession after the ensuing
kick was taken by the Cats' Jeff kickoff, the Marauders bid for a
Holbert· at the Trimble l5. From
first down went for nought at the
t}lat point, signal caller Roger Trimble 34 yard line. Seven
Bingman, mixing the pass and consecutive passes by Bingman
run well and aided by a fifteen pulled Trimble to within one of
yard facemask penalty against the Marauders as he hit Holbert
Meigs, had the Tomcats In In the endzone for a seven yard
tluslness at the Marauder four.
completion. Another pass for the
Two excellent defensive plays,
two point conversion failed and
one by Vince Vanaman who Melp was up 7·6 at the half.
batted down a Bingman arr!.alln
In the third stanza, the Trimble
the endzone and the other a sack squad moved the ball well
by Terry Fields, forced Hurston reaching the Marauder six where
Richmond to attempt a 22 yard .11 holding call stymied the drive.
. Jleld goal. The Cats came away The services of Holbert was lost
: Qlnpty, however, wh~n Wes on this series of plays. Then, with
•::VI)ung broke through to block the neither team moving the ball
: )!ck and recover the ball at the effectively lor the rest of the
: -Meigs 30.
period, the score remained
• · • Eleven plays later with the ball unchanged.
.at theTrlmblefouryardllne, Jeff
The play that could be consi: &lt;~Jalbert Intercepted a Crooks
dered the turning point of the
&lt;pass In the endzone to end The game came In the early fourth. '
• ••

;How other TVC teams fared Friday

PRESSURE

Finish.................~59 95

32" or 36"

Marauders defeat Trimble team 22-6 for second -·victory

' 4' JK 8'

STORM DOORS

Suoday rmaa Sentinel-Page C-7

Pomaroy-Middlaport-Gallipolil. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

••

POMEROY, OHIO

VINTON. OHIO

Melp County OlapiiiY Yard
Pom•ov-Maaon Bridge
LM L. Vaughan, M11r.
I'IHine 11112-21188

Oellla County
Dlaplay Yard
Jam• A. Bulh, Man•11•

Phone 388-8103

Pat Hill Ford Inc•
461 S. 3rd

Middleport, OH.
••

�Ohio-Point PIBPUF"t W.Va.

Times-Sentinel

•

Mud bog special set September 18
TUPPERS PLAINS -Sunday,
Sept. 18, Steve Anthony and his
specially bu Ut CJ5 4-wheel special, "Thor-God of Thunder",
wm compete In Rainbow Park' s
mud bog special which wtll pay a
$1,600 purse.
The event, held In conjunction
with Racine Vlllage's Harvest
Festival, was postponed from the
Labor Day weekend.
Anthony's jeep has been a top
contender In the tri-state area.
The 1_914 CJ5 body was bu!lt by
Anthny and his crew In 1985 from
the ground up. The body, sal-

vaged from an auto wrecking
yard was mounted on a heavier
C55 frame and equipped wtth a
front end from a jeep truck Dana
44. The rear consists of a Dana 44
from an International scout.
It's transmission Is a ·1978
model three speed with gear
driven transfer case.Necessary
steps have been taken to 'lightenup' the vehicle for more acceleration In the pit.
Once all altert!ons were completed on the body and frame, a
350 chevy eng!ne,punched out 30
thousandths was mounted on the

frame. The mount features 12-1
compression ratios, Edelbrock
Intake-port matched, with a
large 1150 CFM Ho!ly dominator
carburator to flow fuel to the
combustlon chambers.
Anthony pointed the body a
beautiful Bahama Blue and usually competes on 18.5-44 Inch
Gumbo Monster Mudder tires.
The vehicle Is often displayed
at fairgrounds.
·
Owners are Anthony and David
Adams with pit crew help from
David Adams,Erlc Adams,Deb·ble Anthony,and Argel Male.
'THOR' wtll next compete at
Rainbow Park next Sunday at12
noon,where vehicles from Columbus, Delaware, and the
States of lnd!ana,Kentucky, and
West V!rg!na will compete for the
$1,600 purse.
Ralnbpw Park Is located off
County Road 28 near Bas han just
7 miles from Racine and the
same distance off State Route 7
near Tuppers Plains. Follow the
signs.

Gibbs-Jay Schroeder dispute
caused Redskin quarterback's trade
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Jay
Schroeder, once hailed as the
Washington Redsk!ns' "quarterback of the future," became the
Super Bowl champions' quarterback of the pas I after a festering
dispute with Coach Joe Gibbs.
Gibbs wanted Schroeder about
as far away from the nation's
capital as possible after an
accelerated collapse of their
once-close relationship over
Schroeder's unwillingness to sit
on the bench behind Super Bowl
.Most Valuable Player Doug
Williams.
"In Jay's case, II had reached a
point where I was absolutely
convinced that he was not going
to be able to play here ever
again," Gibbs said.
It wasn't surprising, then, that
Schroeder was sent about 3,000
miles from Washington to the
quarterback-craving Los Angeles Raiders In a trade announced shortly after la.m. EDT
Labor Day. , ln. return for the
strong -armed 27 -year -old
Schroede~ . the Redsk!ns received one of the NFL's top
young offensive linemen, 25year -old Pro Bowl tackle Jim
Lachey , and several future draft
choices based on the Raiders'
finish during the 1988 season.
Schroeder's fu lure with the
Redskins appeared sterling entering the 1987 season. He was a
Pro Bowl selection in 1986 after
breaking Hall of Farner Sonny
Jurgensen's 20-year-old club
single-season passing record and
leading the surprising Redskins
to within a game of the Super
Bowl.
But Schroeder's fortunes In
Washing!on were suddenly reversed starting in the first quarter
of the first game of the 1987
season, when Philadelphia's
Reggie White separated the
quarterback's right shoulder on
a clean hit, giving Williams his
first shot at playing for a team
that signed him as an expensive
Insurance policy behind a budding superstar. Williams produced a come-from -behind victory in wha1 was an omen of
future events.
.
Schroeder's relationship wtth
his teammates then s041 ~d when
he reportedly was shouted down
at a private players' meeting
during the 24-day strike for
allegedly keeping regular contact with team management In
the midst of the labor strife.
Schroeder never regained his
1986 form, frequently overthrowing wide-open receivers and
misreading coverages.
Gibbs abandoned his long-held
pol!cy to support s truggllng
starting quarleri;Jacks and
benched Schroeder In the second
quarter of a home game In which
the Redsklns were leading the
Detroit Lions. Gibbs alternated
Schroeder and W!lliams five
times during the season, then
settled on Williams as the starting quarterback for the playoffs
after Williams came off the
bench In the regular-season
finale to produce an overtime
victory against the Minnesota
VIkings.
W!ll!ams engineered the Inspired Redsk!ns' drive through
the playoffs and delivered a
virtuoso performance in Super
Bowl XXII, settlnll' several pass-

ing records and earning MVP
honors en route to a 42-10
pounding of the favored Denver
Broncos. ·
Even as Schroeder struggled In
1987, Gibbs repeatedly called
him the team 's "quarterback of
the future," realizing that W!lliams would be 33 entering the 1988

season.
But Schroeder failed to show
up for the team's Super Bowl
victory parade and trip to the
White House. Just a few weeks
later. he asked Gibbs for the first
time to trade him from the
Redsklns. What Schroeder actually said at that meeting effectively ended his relationship with
Gibbs and caused his trade seven
months later.
Neither man would confirm
what was discussed, but
Schroeder reportedly com plained bitterly that his Washing,
ton teammates played much
harder for the popular Williams
than they did for him .
Gibbs said he was caught by
surprise.
''There was no wav he was
going to play again wlih some of
those things he told me," G! bbs
said.
"! said. 'I think you're wrong
about this. Your situation with
me (the strained relationship) Is
understandable. That happens
between coach and player or boss
and employee and I can deal wtth
that,"' Gibbs related . "But I
said, 'Some of the other things
you're telling me, I can tell you
for a fact are not true because
I've seen these other people and
how they deal with other people
In the organization and other •
playelJS. Some of these people
you're referring to, there's no
way that's the case. ' But he was
convinced.''
"! told him at that point, •Jay. I
w!ll do everything within my
power to try and help that (trade)
come true for you.' I said, 'We
may have to go a year, we may
have to go two years. But I'll
certainly do anything I can.' If
there's one spot that would be
tough to work with somebody
who does not war\t to play would
be quarterback," Gibbs said.
The relationship between
Schroeder and Gibbs continued
on a downward spiral through
summer training camp, as the
quarterback repeated his trade
demand several times. An uncharacteristically angry Gibbs demoted Schroeder to third string
behind Williams and untested
Mark Ryplen on the day of the
final regular preseason game,
saying Schroeder "mentally"
was unprepared to play In
Washington.
Schroeder gives a different
version of the events leading to
the trade.
''The bottom line Is It just came
down to between Joe and myself.
As far as anybody else In the
organization, It had nothing to do
with them. It was just between
the quarterback and the head
coach," Schroeder added. "I did
come off as the bad guy. But If l
had to do It again, I don't think It
would change.''
"There's no hard feelings,"
Schroeder said. "I've got a lot of
good friends on this football
team. Iwlshthemwelland I want
them to do as well as they can, as

(

I'm sure they would do the same
thing ~or me. This Is something I
think the players understand a
little bit more than anybody else
because they know where I'm
coming from.''
It seemed an eternity since
Schroeder was proclaimed
"Saint Jay" by one local newspaper columnist after leading the
Redsk!ns past the New York
Giants bn Nov. 18, 1985, In the
game In which Joe Thelsmann
sustained his career-ending leg
Injury. By the time he left,
Schroeder had been blasted by
another columnist as "a virus"
that needed to be purged.
The 1986 season Is what convinced the Raiders that
Schroeder was the man he
wanted at the controls of the
famous vertical passing game
that has helped the Raiders
maintain their "Commitment to
Excellence."
Schroeder become onlv the
eighth player In NFL history to
exceed 4,000 yards passing, racking up 4,109 yards In 1986 In
establishing himself as one of the
game's most dangerous deep
passers.
"! had a wonderful time here,
there Is no question about it,"
Schroeder said.

~imts ,. ~.entin.el

Section

D

Septemblw 11, 1988

•

.:' .

Stocks advance;
volume subdued

~

0

By DONALD GALLAGHER
Analysts biamed the market's
UPI Business Writer
sharp retreat at the open on
NEW YORK tUPI) - The futures-related sen programs
stock market rode a late rally In
and their exaggerated Impact In
the technology sector to a modest a quiet market .
advance last week as trading
"The early weakness was
activity remained subdued. ·
almost totally due to the mad
The Dow Jones Industrial aver- bombers (program traders) doage, which rose 5.69 Friday, Ing their thing," said Ralph
"': .•2i:it'. li.1coi ,...1_:., •f.
Bloch, chief market analyst at
closed the four-day week at
Raymond,
James &amp; Associates In
2068.81. For the week, the blue~"'"~'·'
··'''"'
.. ~/1
~- ..
·--'L :, -~'t
~ "' ~r:,
St.
Petersburg,
Fla. "In a rela·
chip Index rose 14.22 points.
a...,
,1
•' .... {"
tively
thin
market
they encounAfter ' the long Labor Day
..
~'ll
,-~·''\\-~ .,
.
'
~
ter no resistance.''
weekend, the market Tuesday
·.·1'il.&lt;. ·
•} -~;·"• '.· ~
f.c,.:r..o::.·, -: ...':·· :r_;.;._-:... "'.-•~e· '~~.'- ..-~,,
, :t.
:.ff' ~ -~1:.; . . tJ:. ~ ........ ....... ,. ':')
,..
Jerry Hinkle, a trader with
managed to extend the Dow's
SMITH BVICf!:·PONTIAC'S NEW PAINT, BODY SHOP
alr-eondltloned manager's office; employee meeting aad training
52-paint jump on the previous Sanford C. Bernstein In New
:. Colliltructlon Clliinlth Bulck-Ponllac'a new 1,100 square foot pala\"
rooms and paint storage room. The new paint system should
Friday but trading remained York, credited a rebound In the
• 'and body shop Is DGw complete. Tile structure lacludea el1ht metal
lnerease productivity and allow for dirt-free paint finish jobs, a
bond market and the strong
slow.
; •work blQ's, complete wllb frame lie clown eq..pment; two eleanup
spokeaman said. Smith Buick-Pontiac can now cure pafntjobs that
The Dow rose 10.67 on volume technology sector for the
; .and prep blQ'&amp;. The l&amp;cllllty aJao lneludea: Blnb clowndraft spray
usually lake 30 to 60 days "In about 40 minutes," the spokesman
reversal.
of only ~22 .3 million shares.
:~cure paint booth, complete with 1,100,000 BTU heated air makeup
coneluded.
"It was not an exuberant rallv
Analysts were encouraged,
.system aad Infrared heat lamp~~ lor bakiDI on paint;
In the sense of sustainab!l!ty,'•
however, by the market's ab!l!ty
to withstand pressures to take Hinkle said. "But it was a
.•
profits. Buying was described as positive end to a pretly good
week.''
'
"very selective."
,.
In
economic
news
Friday,
the
Wednesday and Thursday the
government said the Producer
market remained stuck In a
Price Index rose 0.6 percent In
narrow trading range with the
''
.
'
August, compared with a 0.5
Dow rising 0.53 Wednesday and
By Joha C. Rice
'Ohio forest property laws' or lumber species for home· and
Inches for yearlings and beef falling 2.'67 on Thursday:
percent jump In July. The
'
County Ext. A1ent,
'Christmas tree shearing'?
farm use, and more.
cows and 8 Inches for calves.
Friday proved lo be the most Increase was slightly higher than
•
Agrleulture
These topics and rruiny more
Stop by our oft!ce If Interested
market forecasts.
Angle on the dividers should be volatile and Interesting session of
•"
are
covered
In
short,
easy-toIn
a
free
copy
of
any
of
the
a
6:12
ratio;
that
Is,
6-!nch
"The PPI was pretty much as
ihe
week.
• POMEROY - This year's read fact sheets that are availa- forestry and forest Industry fact setover per 12 Inches of height.
The Dow, which ended the day .expected and ought to be better
IU!vlew Is scheduled lor Sept. 20, ble from the Meigs County sheets.
Many of the wastefu !feeders that with a gain of 5.69, was an over
next month because of energy
21, and 22.
Extension Office.
Are You Wasting Hay?
were checked had a 13- to 14-!nch the map.
prices, which have dropped
, Tickets are $2 In advance and
Many people don't know where
Too much space between dividsharply," Bloch said.
spacing and vertical or near
The index plunged 18 points in
$4 at the gate. Tickets can be to begin when looking for fore- ers on round metal or long,
vertical dividers.
''This market should continue
the early part of the session and
purchased at Sugar Run Flour stry assistance. One of our fact upright hay feeders can be
to
engage In backing and !llllng
Feeder Calf Sales
then slowly recovered to peak In
M!ll, R &amp; G Supply, ASCS Office, sheets, "Technical Assistance In costly. More hay Is being wasted
Feeder Calf Sales are In fun · mid-afternoon trading wtlh a
until at least the middle of next
MGM, and our office. Tickets can Forestry", outlines the various by some feeders than by others,
swing right now and prices are gain of about20 points.
Continued on D-8
be purchased at these locations public and private sources of and that means higher hay
high. Be sure you know what
, untn Monday, .Sept. 19.
assistance.
purchase costs and extra work
calves are sell!ng for If you·are
Fact Sheets Available
hauling
away the waste.
Other fact sheets cover items
sell!ng private treaty.
Do you have questions on. 'how such' as herbicide 'appllcatlon,
Research shows th'e optimum
Also, now is ,the lime to have
to choose a tbn ber buyer' or lumber drying, buying and using spacing between dividers Is U.5
your cows checked lor preg·
. \ 'making maple syrup'? Or preservative treated wood pro- to 12 Inches for dairy cows,
nancy. You cannot af!ord&gt;to keep
·' maybe you need some pointers ducts, measuring logs, native measured at right . angles becows that are not bred.
; on 'woodland improvement', the
tween dividers. It's 10 to 10.5
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A to get Impatient and g!veupwhen
swtne specialist says pork prowater doesn't flow fast enough.
ducers too often ignore the And an Impatient pig is a
cheapest part nu tr!ent In their stressed pig. Stress Isn't good for
CHICAGO (UP!) - A crop animals' diets: water.
anythjng and, consequently, the
Problems with water pressure,
production report from private
pig won't consume enough water
forecaster Conrad Leslie was waterer type and location, and or feed to grow satisfactorily .
•
'
considered bearish and pres· the number of pigs drinking from That probably means It's going to
ler. If the seller's
marginal tax
,
Edward M. Vollborn
are not restr!Ctea trom watering
sured grain futures Friday on the the waterer are often overlooked,
bracket Is lower than the buyer's,
• By CountJ Exleaeloa A1ent,
you may want to get this job done
take more time to get that pig to
says Gerald Shurson of Ohio market and that costs you
,
AgrlcuUure A CNRD.
Chicago Board of Trade.
a lower price and higher Interest
now.
Closing prices were lower to State University.
; GALLIPOLIS - Drought e!;
money.''
••~ ~ !ltuatlon,for next~ ., usually benefit both parties. Be
'"All too many times producers
sharply
lower In virtually every
cautious,
however.
Ittheratels
too
Waterer problems are particu~~~~~ do not end when rain hi!- looks very tight. Several seed comdon't pay attention to their nipple larly cr!t!cal!n hot weather. ')'he
panies are gearing up to produce blgh, buyers are encouraged to 'contract.
Lesl!e estimated corn produ.c- waterer systems," Shurson says.
pay off loans ear1ier and refinance
: Landscape plants may still seed this winter in Florida, Thxas.
stress on the pig from having to
t!on at 4.42 billion bushels and a "Water flow rates are not someat lower rates somewhere else.
• feel problems lor a couple of California, Arizona, and Central
spend more time getting a drink
soybean yield of 1.46 billion thing we can eas!ly see, so we
Prepayment penalties, however,
: years. Research done at tb~ Na· and South America. Nevertheless,
Is rnagn!tled by heat, Shurson
bushels, His corn estimate was a don't think about them. It's time
can
avert
this:
A
lower
price
re: tiona! Shade Tree Laboratories U.S. farmers will probably face
says. And stress also slows
l!ttle higher than one month ago to refocus on thai really cheap growth.
• In Massachusetts revealed that their llrst$lll0 a bag seed corn next duces the tax basis for a buyer and
but
the soybean figure was nutrient that we too often forget
may
result
bl
higher
taxes
later.
: even In the second year after spring.
"How much water Is enough
slightly
lower.
about."
; each drought a surge of proThe recent Ohio Ram Test Sale The longer the land Is held, the less
water Is a matter of opinion,"
Shurson's research shows that
The over a II volume was not
featured some 90 performance Important this becomes.
' blems occurred.
Shurson says. "We do know that
Announcing the 1988 Annual
especially heavy as traders awa- young pigs wtth Inadequate wa~ Trees are
weakened from tested ram Jambs. The average
If the flow of water Into the
Beef-Forage evening. Amy and
Ited the September crop report ter supplies tend to eat less. His
• the death of tinder Ieeder rootlets. lor the sale was $283.~ per head.
waterer nipple Is low, the pig is
from the Agriculture Depart- study showed the greatest lm·
The root system cannot absorb en- Two suffolk rams shared the top Allen Boster wtll be hosting this
going to have to work harder to
pact of limiting the water supply
year's event. The Boster farm Is . ment on Monday.
• ough water to support the foliage price of $550 per head.
get enough to drink.''
Scatt.ered price protection came just after the pigs were
; canopy, regardless of how much
The September 1 Graded · on Buiavllle Road justoutof Gal·
Producers need to check their
Jipolls.
The
event
wm
be
Sept.
27
around
the M!dwes I and the weane~ at about 27 days old, The
, water may be present later. Trees Feeder Pig sale at H!llsboro lea·
nipple waterer systems on a
starting at 6 p.m. We will have
approaching harvest contributed four-week study Involved 72 pigs.
: that have become weakened are tured 1216 head of pigs. The averregular basis, Shurson says. You
The period of greatest demand
to the weakness across the !loor.
'" then subject to attacks made by a age weight was 51.6 ~·The more details next week!
can check the flow rate bv
I
for food and water normally
~ whole range of pathogens and !rJ.
averaae selling price w $50.48
measuring the amount that flow's
comes
later In the pig's life, as It
sects that seldom harm healthy per hundred or $26.04 pe ]ll!dd.
from the nipple in a minute. If It's
trees.
.
gets closer to market weight,
.Top was on a pen of 35 poun 1)igs
less than three-fourths of a quart
Shurson says. His study didn't
fi~
ol:• Speclal!sts suggest that woody and sold for $69 per hundred.
per minute, your pressure Is
foUow the pigs that far, but it did
rnamental plants be kept well
According to Dr. Allan Lines,
probably too low.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) $3.79, No.2 shelled corn$2.82, No. Indicate that pigs given a low
:watered until the son freezes this current tax law encourages
Keep waterers clean and In
The average closing grain prices 2 oats $2.85. No. I soybeans $8.69. water flow rate ate less the older
buyers and sellers of farmland to
I ~II.
good
repair, Shurson says. It's
·(per bushel) paid at grain
West Central Ohio: No. 2wheat they got. And that has significant
r, , Lawn failures because of sev- consider negotiating a lower sale
often
hard to know when nipple
elevators In the principal mar· $3. 74. No. 2 shelled corn $2.83, No. implications for the pig and the
~e drought are common In
price and higher Interest rate
waterers
are broken or clogged
ket!ng areas pi Ohio Friday:
2 oats $3.08. No.1 soybeans $8.73. producer, he says.
~a Ilia County. September Is nor· when the seller holds the mort·
but
watching
the pigs will help. If
Southwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
Northeast Ohio: No. 2 wheat
r~ally a lime to establish a new gage.
they
spend
a
lot of time playing
$3.88, No. 2 shelled corn $2.80, No. $3.70, No . 2 shelled corn$2.83, No.
"If the water !low In your
, i{llwn or reseed bare . spots. U
The decision depends upon the
chances are
with
the
nipple,
2 oats $2.77, No.1 soybeans $8.63. 2 oats not avanable, No. 1 system Is low, It's going to mean
•lioalnfall amounts Increase or you tax brackets of the buyer and sel·
there
Is
a
problem.
sovbeans $8.72.
~ - ....
. -' . the pig spends more time at the
Make sure you have enough
Northwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
'•'
Trends: No. 2 wheat, sharply waterer and less time at the
waterer space for the number of
$3. 78, No. 2 shelled corn $2. 79, No. lower; l'io. 2 shelled corn, lower;
pigs In the pen. The Ideal number
2 oats $2.82, No. I soybeans $8.72. No. 2 oats, unchanged; No. 1 feeder," Shurson says. "However,!t appears that even though
•
Is two nipples for every 16 pigs,
Central Ohio: No. 2 wheat soybeans. sharply lower.
•.t
pigs spend more time drinking
•'
Shurson says, Waterers should
surprising to witness short term
out of a nipple with a low water
:;iy Sian Evaaa
be located on the opposite side of
•••
rates rising faster than long term
flow rate, that extra time Is not
the
pen from the feeder at a
•'
enough to meet the pigs' needs.
:. ; Gaillpol!s - Over the past two rates. The rise in short term
height slightly higher than the
"In other words, the pig seems
• ,weeks, the discount rate, the rates makes It compelllag lor the
pig's back.
By CONSTANCE S. WHITE
o!f!ce at 446· 7007.
!nyestor
to
Increase
the
percen·
t :~~roducer price
the trade
GALLIPOLIS - Plans are betage of a:ssets held In l!quld Ing made for he next Beef Forage
; ~.efldt, and the
reserves.
•:factory util!za·
Tour to be held on Tuesday, Sept.
AI the same time, longer term 27 at 6 p.m.
;~l)on rate were
financial ·assets, such as long
;111 headed In one
This year the iour . will be
term bonds and common stocks,
•;alrectlon - UP.
hosted by Amy and Allan Boster.
decline In price to very attractive The Bosters' farm Is located In
• ~._.' As a result,
levels.
;i\!ond prices de- · ·
Addison Township on Bulav!Ue
Despite the general tendency Pike.
,tel!ned as Inter•
to lacrease the liquidity of assets,
I est rates rose. Long
The County FFA Soil Judging
we
currently view long term
: !py yields are currently at the top
Contest will take place on the
l;,and of 1988's trading range of bonds as attractive because their farm that morning. The soil
real rate of return (current judging will be combined with
l '8.8% to 9.4%.
coupon
rate minus the current the Items of Interest for the tour.
Even wtth the recent rise, the
movement of Interest rates over Jnllatlob rate) ls_qulte high. This
So,lf you have ever been on a son
situation Is one reason why we
~~e course or the year Is consist·
judging team or would like to test
jiht with our long standing have maintained that the grea·
your knowledge of soils, you will
l fprecast that the yield curve test potential for a rise In Interest have a chance during the even·
; 1\'0uld natten as short term· rates rates was at the short end of the
lng's activities.
, ;x'lse and long term rates remain maturity range and not the long
The tour will Include viewing
: I~ a trading range. It Is Interest- end.
the cow/calf operation. The herd
In 1988, our recommendation consists of two purebred lines,
!)na to note that long term rates
bas
been that lnvealors add to
that of Angus and Charolais. Al·
'Esenliy remain at lbe same
loq
term bond poaltlollll during lalla production, winter grazing
: vel that existed just prior to
•
rial . Day when the last periods of price wealmels. Given
methods, and conservation mea: iiond market rally erupted. This the events of the put two weeks,
sures will be covered on the tour.
:)J despite reporta of strong we contlaue to maintain that
The breeding/health program
stance. We remain opllmlsllc
~oaomlc conditions and a
and backgrounding feeder pro: ...rlher tightening of credit by the about the loq term trend of gram will be dlscullled. Jim Clay
cull prlle from tile OIJJo Valley l'llblflllllll Co.
MYIITERY FARM - Thll week'l MJSIUJ
;:lrederal Reserve. In contrast, Interest rates: aboui!S ,lhe later·
wUI cover managing feed InvenLeave yOIII' ume, addlwaaad telepbolle a-ber
farm, lelliured by the Galla SoD ud Water
·)hort term rates have rileD over mediate trend In the lnllatlon
tory during a drought. A video
with yourclll'llorletter. No telephone calli will be
Colll&amp;rvatloa District, Is located ..newhere Ia
;1tne hundred basis poinla (one lull rate peak at a rate no ll'feater
will be shown on fall forage. The
accepted.
All co Illest enlriN should be tU'IIOII In to
Galla
County.
Individuals
wlshlq
to
participate
tban
"
·
the
IOJIIl'
term
HCUlar
·"rl!ercelltage polat) since Memor·
feeder calf price outlook for Fall
the
newiiPJIIIer
office by 4 p.m. each WNIIeaday.
trend
to
lower
Inflation
will
·
In
the
weekly
contest
may
do
10
by
Jlllelslnl
the
.
·Jal Day.
'88 will also be addressed.
In
cue
ol
a
tie,
the winner will be c~n by
remain
Intact.
farm'
a
owner
•
.Just
mall,
or
drop
off
yolll'
pea
to
;•: Recent business news Ia domtAnyone needing additional In·
lottery.
Next
week
a Melp County farm will be
(Mr.
BvUI
Ia
u
Jav•lmlat
lbe
Dally
Sentinel,
111
Court
St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
formation, please contact the
:.ted by reports of the mat1111n&amp;
featured
by
lbe
Melp
SoD and Wilier Co~~~~erva· .
broUr
for
'l'be
Oblo
CoiDPUIID
41'7111,
or
lbe
GaiUpolls
l)ally
Tribune,
IW
Third
.)lature of the c:urrent buslnels
Gallia SWCD at 146-8687 or the
tbelr
Oalllpolfl
omee.)
~ve.,
GallpoDll,
Ohio
fMsl,
and
you
may
win
a
$5
tlon
IMslrfct.
-$pa1111lon. As a result, It Is not
Cooperative Extension Service

-··--

.. ,

....

'.i-_

PARKERSBURG - Middleport's Dave Ashley ,promotor of
West Virginia Motor Speedway,
has announced that the World
Dirt Track Championship at the
speedway· near Mineral Wells
will be a three day event on Sept.
22, 23, and 24. The event will pay
$50,000 to win and feature the
largest purse In dirt track
·history.
Besides the World championship race, the UMP Nationals
will be held.
See the Times-Sentinel for
Further Details.

~oe

•

•=·•

List dates for event

MUD RUNNER- This vehklle,owned by Steve Anthony of near
Tuppers Plalns,has been one or the lop perfonners at Rainbow
Park's Mud Bogs for the past two years. This 1914 CJ5,
appropriately dubbed 'THOR-God of Thunder', will again thunder
through competition a ext Sunday, September 18 at Rainbow
Park's $1,600 mud bogging extravaganza.

ustness
•

Meigs County agent's corner

Tickets on sale for Farm Science Review
.
'

'.

ARRIVES IN MOSCOW - World heavywelrht
boxlnr champion Mfke Tyson emerges from
cusloms at Moacow's Sheremetlevo Airport
Friday evenlag, where he arrived wtth his wife;
Robia Givens. She Is to slar In "Head of the

Class," a television drama to be partly fUmed Ia
central Moscow. Tyson said be hoped lodefead hll
IItle against England's Frank Brnno "Ia a eouple
of months.'' (REUTER)

Speelal Faetory Program Car Purehase
1988 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
'•

LOW MILES
TILT WHEEL
CRUISE CONTROL
REAR DEFOGGER
POWER D()OR
LOCKS

:Farm Flashes

~DrOught effects will not end immediately

ALUM. WHEELS
TWO-TONE PAINT
LUGGAGE RACKS
POWER WINDOWS
DELAY WIPERS
POWER SEATS

STARTING AT$

Chicago gr!lin

!

12,990 TO S13,700

OPTIONS VARY - 7,000 TO 11,000 LOW MlES- S TO CHOOSE FROM

often

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC
1900 EASTERN AYE.

Don't forget water
for your.pigs this fall

j
t

GALUPOUS, OHIO

Ohio grain report

THIS IS THE TIME
GO.FOR IT!

1~oney Ideas

WE STILL HAVE A GOOD
SELECTION OF ...
SPECIAL PRICED CARS &amp; TRUCKS
TO CHOOSE FROM!

.

Interest rates

.

Beef forage tour Sept. 27

.
Ii

OFFER EXPIRES
SEPT. 28th

CHEVY'S "GO FOR IT SAVINGS"
"We Offer Simple Service"

Dallas
Chevroletsss E. Main St.

•

Across From The Post Office
Jackson, Ohio

286-2171

0

(,

•

__,_ ...... __...._ - ----- '-' ---·11-- - .

�..
Paga D-2-Sunday limes-Sentinel

Ponwoy-Midclaport-Gellipolis, Ohio-Poirt Pleasant, W. Va.

Too provocative?

September 11. 1988

September 11, 1988

Fire 1 mile from park headquarter
So far, at least live people have
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL
PARK, Wyo. (UP!) - A huge died fighting fires in the West this
wlidflre crept to within one mile year. Two others were missing
of the Yellowstone National Park and presumed dead after their
headquarters complex Saturday, helicopter crashed ln Yellowforcing 1he evacuation of all but stone spokeswoman Linda Miller
sald most of the 300 or so park
absolutely essential personnel.
employees
and . their families
While winds were generally
who
llve
at
Mammoth left the
lighter than had been predicted,
area
Saturday
as flames shot
the edge of the North Fork fire
over
a
ridge
a
mile
to the south.
continued to move toward the
Most
of
the
evacuees
drove to
Mammoth headquarters cam·
Gardiner,
Mont
..
just
outside
the
plex and engulfed several micropark's
northern
boundary,
or
to
wave dishes, cutting oft telephone service to much of the the homes of friends and
relatives.
park.
Meanwhile, the more than
About 50 miles to the south,
Interior Secretary Donald Hodel 9,000 firelighters who have the
and other federal officials sent to park virtually to themselves got.
Inspect the fire scene arrived In something of a break when winds
the Old Faithful area, which last that were expected to gust to 60
week was overrun by the devas- mph proved to pack a much less
tating Inferno knOWll as the North deadly punch.
There was even drizzle reFork fire.
ported
In areas.
·
J. Hodel, Agriculture Secretary
"There's
moisture
moving ln
Richard Lyng and Deputy Deof
Yellowstone,"
on
the
east
side
. fense Secretary William H. Taft
IV were dispatched to Yellow- Don Jackson of the Bot.se center
stone by President Reagan to said, "and all of the fires pretty
report on the National Park much iald doWll overnight.
''Humidity Is coming up," he
Service's let-bum policy.
Critics claim if the fires had said, "and though winds In the
been agresslveiy fought early on, night blew like heck for a while,
they might not have spread to they've either slowed down or
blacken more than 1 mllllon calmed down."
However, all the Yellowstone
acres !nand around Yellowstone
fires
got "a llttle bit bigger"
the past two months.
overnight,
Jackson sald. Of the
The trio was scheduled to
live
wltltln
park boundaries, the
return to Washington and brief
largest
was
the Clover Mist
Reagan on the situation Sunday
complex,
a
304,100-acre
lriferno
after· a. visit to Idaho's Boise
Interagency Fire Center, where ln the northeast sector.
Officials feared that If the
. officials currently monitor 33
seperate fires raging ln eight winds picked up strongly enough,
another 150,000 acres of preWestern states.
There were a total of 33 viously unburned land In Yellow uncontalned, active fires In the stone could be In serlbus
West, burning on more than 1. 75 jeopardy.
The North Fork fire was at
mUllan acres - an area larger
.
221,800
acres, reaching from the
than Deleware and Rhode Island
Mammoth
area west to near
combiiled.

9

QUILTS
C.. h paid for quilts. Pre

1950'L Pie- .,piqued.

unu... ·env condition. Call

114-192-5857.

Sr:IVILI:o

11

BRIDGE

....

James Jacoby

l ·lt·U

u.

EAST
.1017

.AQJU

••

•ua

SOUI'II

•u
••

....

tJI071SS2

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Norlll Eul

Paa

Pua

S.lll

st

Pus

Opening lead: • Q

Sixth sense
beats the odds

you have been around ,competitive
bridge a few decades, you realize that
there are a few great playen who
aeem lo know when to throw percentages out the window and Jlllt play
their table intuition. In this hind from
"Murder at the Bridle Table, • watdl
bow VIc MitdleU pll:ped a simple illlle
Jhree.Giamoncl contract to CCIIIfoand
Weat, who thoupt be had a sure set in
hind.
When the openin1 queen of spades
lead wu allcnred to hold the trick, It
aeenled rea10nable to Weal to continue
the auil South won the killl, c~ to
dummy with a club and cublld the
spade ace, on·whlcb be thriw bia lingletoa heart. He then rutfod a hesrt,
pllyed a club blclt to diiJilllly, ruffed
another beart and played another club
to dwnmy. He ruffed a ...de, acting
that Eut did not ruff In with a ellamonel boaor. Fol1ow!q his table lntultioo, be DOW alted with the jack of dl·
aiROIIdl. West had to win and pve up
the Jut Irick to the dec:larer'alO·spot.
Certainly It ts a better percentaae
plly to win the ace of opades at trick
-and play a diamond from dummy.
That will allow deelarer to make the
contract whenever dlamoada apllt 1-2.
But the point of the actual plly Ia that
Vic MilcbeU knew from 10111e alxtll
that West bad all the dtamOIIdl,
to be pla:ped the haDd the only way It
could be made. Follow my advice don't you try to do that.

humaa reJatlou commlllllloo. She aays Coualryman has told her thai her dresse!i IU'etoo llhorl and
her style of dress "excites" defense attorneys.
(UPI)

Dukakis comes out swinging.
By BUD NEWMAN
United Press International
Michael Dukakls and George
Bush are singing the same
refrain now that the Democrat
has moved strongly to take the
upper hand In their bitter fight
for the White House by accusing
the Republican of McCarthylst
·'garbage' · tactics.
The refrain Is simple and one
that both candidates hope will
assuage concerns of voters as the
race appears to be running
headlong into negativism. Both
men use almost exactly the same
words:
''I'm not questioning his patriotism; I'm questioning his
judgment. "
Bush has employed the disclaimer several limes In recent days
as he has tried to appear above
reproach In continued attempts
to vilify Dukakls as opposed to
. the Pledge of Allegiance and to
"every weapons system since the
s llngshot."
Friday, however, Jt was the
Democrat's turn as he carefully
sought to claim the moral high
road while denouncing the vice
president lor pollllcal tactics
comparable to those during the
dark era of Sen . Joseph
McCarthy, R-W!s.
Dukakls launched his bid to

regain the offensive In a speech
at East Texas State University In
Commerce, Texas, the alma
mater of former House Speaker
Sam Rayburn, a political legend
In the Lone Star State.
Texas Is a big campaign prize
with lts 29 electoral votes, and
Dukakls struck a populist chord
before an enthusiastic crowd of
about 10.000 as he recalled
Rayburn's efforts to pass Wall
Street reform leglslallon during
the 1930s.
''The RepubliCans at that llme
put together the biggest and most
vicious campaign of propa·
ganda. lobbying and lntim!dallon
ever seen," the candidate sal d.
"They attacked Sam Rayburn
and (President) Franklin Roose·
velt and they called them
communists.
"But Sam Rayburn didn't back
orr. He snorted, 'Hell, I'm a
conservative, but even a conser·
vatlve can smell garbage in his
front yard. '
"Sam Rayburn knew that
when you light lor the real
people. the other side will attack
your patriotism. He saw that
when he passed the Wall Street
reform bills. He saw It again in
the 1950s when the RepubliCans
cheered as Joseph R. McCarthy
slandered the Democrats and

Pl.:XK Sill'

called them communists and
Soviet sympathizers.
"And those Republican tactics
haven't changed a bit," Dukakls
declared. "Just as they did to
Franklin Roosevelt and Sam
Rayburn, now they're attacking
my patriotism. And Just as they
did ln the 1930s and the 1950s, the
American people and the people
of Texas can smell the garbage!''
Buoyed by applause, the gover·
nor concluded his case by noting
some or his many policy dlfferen·
ces with Bush but polntlngout, "I
don't question his patliollsm; I
do question his judgment."
Bush, thrown on the defensive
for the first time In several days
by the counterattack, denied any
negative campaigning and In·
slsted at an outdoor rally in York,
Pa., that he too has merely
pointed out pollcy differences.
"All I've done ls tell the truth ...
and I'm not going to get deterred
by a bunch of llberal Democrats," hetoldabout2,000people.
"I'm not questioning his patriotIsm; l'm questioning hls
Judgment."
At an earlier stop ln Rockford,
Ill., Bush tried to show what he
means by quoting his opponent
specifically In order to point to
what he sees as the Democrat's
Indecision on the "Star Wars"
mlsslle defense system.

TOURING DESTRUCTION - Forest Service lncldeot Commander Denny Bungan, rtrht, describes a bum area to Interior
Secretary Donald Hodel, left, during a Cabtnet·level task force
tour of the fire ravared Yellowslone N alional Park In Wyomlnr on
Saturday. (UP!)

Public Notice
PUBLIC HEATING
NOTICE
Tho Melp Coumy Com·
mlaaionera: 1re pl•nning to

CEO ~ GE
ft\.&lt;1

HE~!IfR'T

f',o(t lfd.., _

f~\! Wt

cling

through tho Ohio L!tl~ Pr•
vontlon ond R•cyctlng Progrom, Divlalon ol Utter Pr•
vontlon ond Recycling.
Tho purpooe of thit public
hoorlng Ia 10 dllerrnine If

ouch •n opntion would du·
pNcoto tho
aclverooty offoct tha -nomic

-rt• .,.

;(

otondlng of ulltlng ._.
cllll!l o,_,lo_ bualn•.,d/or lndu-.
The dm tor • public hollr-

Of ,\)l fi:HIC \

WAlKU !lUSH

t•ldJl

1.

~.¥il;

grant for I recy·
center
operetion

IUbmit I

•

1 .'\ t'I EIJ S'J.\'fl;s

11111 1o -lor S•ptombor 14,

1881. Tho och-tod limo
1Drtheheorlll!lle11:00o.m.
Tho hMrlng w•l bo held II

&lt;ii•lt ~~

"'filltllf'k•)'014

tho

Melt~~

County llolrrd of

MR/DD main fuillly loc.tod 11 1310 Corleton
~

lllr-

Syracuoe.

411778.
1818. 11, 12, 3tc

Ohio

Littk llriftl$

"" wm1r
Al.t
In
11rt Clls•ifiJ Sttlilttl

. . . . Ni !LhPBI\ llft"alPPUUa .-rt.

3 Announcaments

6

P8ylng 10corrnoreforev1tfVboX

top. libel or coupon you aend to

u• eccardlng to one Jlmple

lost and Found

FOUND: Stem.. Tom c.t.

Vlcintty of OOC. c.ll 11-.448-

lnltructlont. Oettllt 11lf·
ldctrea.l Jllmped envelope to

7e78.

EVIl DunCWI, Box 2111•. US Rt.
3118, Boulflaldo. wY 25117.

oroo. Collet4-112·3318.

GiYaaway

4

------------2 kitten~ to~~ . ..,. c.ll after
e PM, et401140.

Fr• to good hom.. M81e .,..ow
kittena-1 bl ... wlttl white fMt

8

Smllt whht dog In Flvt Point•

Found: Medium llz.cl white dog
In F... Pblnto or-. C.ll et4992·33e8.

•

\'

plant cllllllnr clauae In lbe Trade Act llpecl by
President Reqan laat month, and oppoeed by
Republican vlce-prealdenllal nominee Du
Quayle. (UPI)
I

~cheniCI,

Get paid for ...ung boobl
t100.00 per title. Write: Pae·
F1531. 181 S. Uncolnway, N.
Aurorll. II. 80542.

McCLURE'S RESTAURANT
HIRING. Cookl end w.tt,.. ...
n..ct• A•um• being 18k'"
1 :0~ : 00 p.m. Tu•dws and
ThurldB¥sal 471JecllsonPtke.
Oelllpolbl. wllit• hou• btlhind

2

•
•

•

1
,

CARD OF THANKS
The famly of Carrie
Wallil wllhea to ax·
pr.a our deep apprecllltion to our rellltlvel.
frlenda and neighbors
for their love. support
and expr111siona of
S)ollljl&amp;thy.
Spacial thank&amp; to
Ora. Harder. Megnu•
nn and Cl.-ke; Home
Health Dept.; ataffa of
Holzer Medical Canter
4 West and Internal
Medlci'ne Dept.; Rev.
Joseph Hefner; Rev.
David Elliott; frlenda
of Grace Mllthodlat
Church and Wiilil Fu•
neral Home.
Thank you - your
kindness will never
be forgotten.
2

.:

1M 1212'11. Mixed. breed C.III1C.
4411-41123.
Long ..... lr.'¥ 1;11.

K-

11~

can

--v

1&lt;1 olw
to good
- · Col 114-812· 7382 """'

1:00..

--...............
1oau1t

...,.

e.v • .... You cut

up. 114-1143-12113.

Good SI4-7.Z.2aZt.

lurnllntlquiM. A"o ~ood •

''"
a
coli '-t••· lhnl,n's FurnHure

clog. Young.

......"POmeroy...........
Middleport
8t Vicinity
.----............. ·-- ··--·· ........
Soot. 1,10,11. 110.000

3 Announoementl

IITU

Gel ,.,..... Loti of .,.......
- · 2138 . FlfthAw. MIM•
- - 9·1.

......l't.Preiiaairt·---··

•

Auction,

Th~~

&amp;

et4-4ol8-3te9.

Olivo,

car.

wllh or without
- · Colt Lony l.hoaly-81 ..

Junk

Jlll-1303.

In loving memory of
Anita (Buckley) Ball
who left us 9 years
ago today.
God picked a rose
from the prden and we
loved her too dearly to
forpt.
Sadly missed by: Son,
Mom, Dad, brothers,
sister, grandparents, all
her relativas and friends
who knew and loved her.

--lei.

3tH.

•••
••
••
•

••
•'

•
'•
'•

'•

..

_.hoYt

"••a..

AVON · AH ...... 'CIII M•rilyn
w... 304-812-2846.

CHARGE NURSE
Yell~¥

l'lk.lnlng Care
Center, 100 bed tfllled nursing
fadhv loCMed In Point Ple. .nt.
Pl_,t

WV. It 1Hkh1g • r-eis•r.ct
nurM to u1ume the duti11 of
ful-tfme ch-ae nur•. Thla
polltion Is open lrnmedl..ay,
c.tl K.thYTl'lorntonat 304-1755238. Pf1aunt Vall-v Nursing
C•e cent• Is en equal OPPOr·
tunh:y •mployer .n d afflrmhiYe
action empl.,.,..,r. ,

D•lry f«m

wortuW

for local
Millon County f•m. Experience
pnf~ . Will mille twiettl diV.
~te f•m equiJijmMrt. Hou•
furniahed plus , 1780.00 J*"
month. W•g•.nd:'hb..ra.,.ar.
1 Mek wc•iori Ref•enCM
required. Ape»f¥ in p. .on. Pt.
,._,,Job S.Vice. 225 Sixth
St. · 1:0().4:30 Mon-Frl.

15

RE·TRAIN NOW1
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS

18 Wantad to Do

Lie. No. 599·89
ID Required for Bid Number
Refreshments - Inside Sale

COLLEGE. 629 J•c:Uon Pike.
Ohio ln•tructlo.-1 Gra~t Deadline Aug. 19. Call 448-4367.
Reg. No. 88-11 -101558 .

po~ltkln

wfth b.,eftts. Qu ..ifted
applicant lhould COntlct kim

Experience Opwator. Crem._..

Conat. C.ll 814-251-1718.

Will do baby tittlngln my home.
Ctty lmits. Have ntferenc:et~. Call
814-448-1382.

hb¥' lfttlng In my homa In
Centenery area. Call e14-448-

0785.

614-245-5152

Henderlon Sen tor Citizen will do
quilting. Call M-.,de Kelly, 304-

175-6264.

Will c.e for elct.ty ma1 or

won.n ., our hotne. 614-9921115.

SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 17, 1988
10:00 A.M.
.
To settle the Estate of lillian Vermillion (Probate
Case No. 18.878). The following will be sold at Public Auction in Centenary, Ohio:
Zenith color TV (remote control), maple colored coffee
and end tables, couch &amp; chair, small writing desk &amp;
chair, matching lamps, high lift chair, lilt back brown
chair, G.E. washer &amp; dryer, G.E. refrigerator, maple
drop-leal table w/4 chairs, Sears electric sewing
machine, 3 pc. bedroom suite, posler bed, chest hall
tree, Hoover sweeper, quilts and bed linen, chairs, sev·
eral pots &amp;pans, kitchen utensils, 3 pc. luggage set,
and other miscellaneous items.
Terms: Cash

I

Hapty 36th
La11ny

('

Lo11e,

IE E. NULL, ADMINISTRATOR

?
8

Johnson
AUCTIONEER
Lee

Public Sale
8r. Auction

DALE .

••

~
'

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

•FARM
•HOME
•COMMERCIAL
8

Public Sale
8t Auction

614-757·244

REALTY
ONE QF THE l!lOSTaEAUTIFUL VIEWS OF THE OHIO IN THE
AREA - VERY COMFORTABLE FRAME HOME HAS LARGE
LIVING ROOM, 4 BEDROOMS PLUS 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE.
BARN SHED, APPROX. 15 ACRES PARTIALLY WOODED. SEVERAL BUILDING SITES WITH EXCELLENT VIEW OF THE
RIVER. ON OLO RT. 7 JUST BELOW CITY. $59.000. FIRST
TIME ON THi!IMARKET.

OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE- PROPERTY LOCATED ON LOWER
RT 7 JUST A FEW MINUTES FROM CITY. 3 BEDROOM
FRAME 1\1 STORY, BASEMENT. LARGE LEVEL LOT. EXCEL·
LENT RIVER VIEW. $42,000. NEW LISTING!

P LIC AUCTION
SAT., SEPT. 17, 1988
: 10:00 A.M.

Located at 217 E. 2nd St. in Pomeroy, Ohio.
Have discontinued our business so will sell the
following.
"EQUIPMENT"
.
Dry cleaning machrne, washer w/lliters and Hozt reclarner,
commercial dryer, washer extracter, Troy Laundnte 60, CISsell twin tumbler, clothes dolly, legger press. legger pants,
topper su~e. pantex foot operated, dry cleaning press,
hampers, C~andler button machine, Prostuce laundry press,
mushroom press, sorting wheel, large exhaust fan, gas heat·
ers, vacuum pump. misc. motors, pants rack, 5 hp Westmghouse air compresser, 100# scales, platform scales, water
pump, Parker boiler, ahelving. lots of work clothes.
OWNER: MARC SARRETT
Dan Smith: Auctioneer
67-68-1344 Richard Workman: Apprentice
6114-992-7301 or 614-949-2033
Cash
'
Posi1iv8 ID
"Not Responsible for Accidents . Loss of Property''

MON.·!AT.o 10 AM 'Ta OUSI
lUNDAY: NOON 'Tl DU!I

614-314·3060 or
1-800-212-2167

BEACH IS
STILL GREATII

11

Help Wanted

11

VERY QUIET ... VERY NICE- RANCH HAS 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN WITH LOTS OF CABINET
S~AC( CENTRAL AIR COND., CAR~ORT PLUS 2 CAR GAR ·
AGE All THIS COMPLETELY SURROUNOED BY 5 BEAUTI·
FUL.ACRES, JUST MINUTES FROM CITY $68,000.
SHADED LOT - CENTRAL AIR, NICE, 2 BEDROOM HOME
HAS SPACIOUS DINING, KITCHEN AREA, BACK PORCH, BA·
SEMENT. VERY CONVENIENT LOCATION IN CITY ON
HENKLE AVE. ONLY $35,000.
SCENIC FARM - RELAX HERE AT THE END OF A BUSY DAY
AND ENJOY THE BEAUTIFUL QUIET SURROUNDINGS. 43
ACRES MOSTLY PASTUME AND TILLABLE LAND. FENCED
POND '2 LARGE BARNS PLUS 18X50 HOG BARN. 8 YEAR OLD
3 BEDROOM . 2 BATH HOME HAS FAMILY ~OOM, NICE
DINING AREA. PORCHES, $80,000.
·

Help Wanted

A
FUN
JOB!

JUST IN TIME FOR FALL AND WINTER SEASON - NICE
CAMP SITE ON RACCOON CREEK. $4.200.

Ladies. Join
House of lloyd
showing country charm decor. toys,
gifts untR Christmas. No investmants.
deliviK,V or collecting. Free $300
sample
Also booking parties. Call
614'·949-2266 after 6 p.m •

PUBLIC NOTICE
Farm•• Hom• Adml-.ralton (FmHA) lor flnand .. •••·

KYGER CREEK AREA- ONE YEAR OLD VINYLS IDEO HOME
ON LARGE LEVEL LOT ONLY 4 MILES FROM GALLIPOLIS.
THIS LOCATION IS GREAT! VERY PRETTY HOME HAS 3 BED·
ROOMS. GARAGE, DECK, CENTRAL AIR, NICE LANDSCAPING
$52,000.

fromth•offl•lhown bMw. Theprojactwould btwlttMn tha
boundlf'-1 of. or hiW 11ft eff.et Dn epproxlma.ty 30 acrN of

ON LITTLE BUlLSKIN-JUST MINUTES FROM GALLIPOLIS.
60 ACRE FARM. SOME TILLABLE LAND. BEAUTIFUL WOODED
AREA. COLONIAL FARM HOME HAS 4 BEDROOMS, FAMILY
ROOM, fORMAL DINING. COUNTRY KITCHEN, CELLAR
HOUSE, CRIB, BARN. HANNAN TRACE SCHOOL DISTRICT .
$6().000.

floodplain end 22 •or• of prime ftrml.nd.
FmHA lnvJI• comment a fr~ thtpubllc on (1) th;tlmpactt of
lo0116ftt the projem within theldenttfl.t foodpilln end prime

famtlll'ld ...... t21 ahernetlve Pf'oiMI tit•. end (3) m•hods
of IIV'Oidlng or reducing fiDOdllllkl .nd prtm• f•ml•d lmplotl .nd luurdl If no p...,.kalbl. altern..tw.s ta tM pra.
poHd prCJIRt 11t• •• klentlftlll.

Tho..,.,.._
Coulll'/ .,d &lt;IelNo
CouriY end..
IIDnl pardoN of rcadl thawnblllow. F.
·-•raod_.,.,nv...,.lnlho_oo_lhoCiollla

--llolow.

BRICK AID FWIE RANCH - LOCATED JUST OFF LOWER
RT 7 3 BEDROOMS FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM. WORKSAVER KITCHEN IS EQUIPPED WITH RANGE, REFRIG ., AND
DISHWASHER NICE DINING AREA, ATTACHEO 2 CAR GAR·
AGE, PATIO. .ABOVE GROUND POOL GALLIPOLIS CITY
SCHOOLS. $55,900.
.
AUDREY F. CANADAY, REALTOR
ROBERT E. GORDON. REALTOR
MARY FLOYO, REALTOR
•
OFFICE: 21 LOCUST ST.
10

11w
E - Rd.. M -

M-Townohlp:
. Rd .. Tom Porry Rd .. County Rood I. ond IIIIo- 271 .
Gafii•Courdy, Gr... fWd llld Wtlnwt Tow,...,... Pl. . lprlng
Croa. .od Rd .. C.dnNa Croa- Rd.. Pertlel Rd., Wogn•

pr--

c. ........

Rd.) .,, Utili ....... ltd.
,
Tho _
_. -~~~ of FrniiA n.....,,. •-· 700 ond
lho-1
II IHO.OOO. ~--p- -ld

'II

-·
--·•

..:

ANY HOUR
.,

..: .

--

01110 4321&amp;
j,

•

"

:,:.

•ftl\"..::.'flit...

.....

•••

5\\ ACRES WITH NEARLY.NEW MODUlAR HOlE- 3 BED·
ROOMS. 2 BATHS, CATHEDRAL CEILING IN liVING ROOM.
NICE COUNTRY SETTING NEAR MUDSOC. GREAT PRICE•
$34,900.

orovtdo wlllion oo..,...o on tho _ _, - 10 dora
!rom ~":.";,•••
R-IO?

,zoo--~~:...
.......... ,~li'rMoi

•.

DOWN ON THE FARM- VERY PLEASANT HERE. 30 ACRES.
LARGE 2 STORY FARM HOME HAS 4 BEDROOMS, MODERN
KITCHEN, SPACIOUS DINING ROOM, CARPORT. ON PAVED
ROAD. ONLY 10 MILES FROM GALLIPOLIS. $49,500.

!tit.

In ord• to conltruot wllter di1trfbution ptpalln• •nd •

••• ••or•u• '-nk. Th• .,pll-kJn It availml• for rwlew

eo....,""'"' w-A-Mion..- l'mliAJoo•
J t - County.

..

·-

AUCTIONEER

OPEN Till OCT. 30

t::.- .. ., J-•

•

Richard Workman: Apprentice
614·992-7301 or 614·949-2033
Eats
Cash
Positive ID
"Not R~sponsible for Accidonls or Loss of Property."

Not Responsible for Accidan1s or Loss oi Property

JOHNSON

-

57-68-1344

Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

Golllo Coul!lY. HM-rloon Townohltr: Clorl• Rd. IMaoodonto

•

located at 30628 Murry Hill 'Rd. in Bradbury, Ohio.
Watch for siens at flashing light .on St. Rt. 7 By pus
of Middleport, Ohio. Due to health llrs. Werner ltas
moved north to smaller home closer to family so
must sell the lollowin&amp; items. Nice and clean Auction'
"HOUSEHOLD"
.
Brickwedge splid cherry drop-leaf banquet table w/4
straight and 2 capta ins cha1rs, cherry china cabinet. Whirlpool refrigerator, table and 6 chairs. Estey cord organ and
bench, sofa and chair. rocker, coffee and end tables, cedar
chest, vanity dresser, beds, chest ol drawers, lawn chairs.
glider, stereo, 110 air conditioner, hamper, humidifier,
Hoover small washer, Wizzard dryer, Eureka sweeper, new
13" Quasar B&amp;W TV, lots ol dishes, pots&amp; pans, linens. small
appli ances, lamps, stands. fans, misc. pictures, quins.
pieces, lots ol clothes and shoes, tots of nice handmade algans.
·cAR
1970 Delta 88 w/rocker 455 engine, 4 door, one o-.
59,929 original miles. VERY SHARP.
MISC.
Bearcat scanner, Homelite rear engine lawn mower, wood
ladder, Jacobsen 18" lawn mower, 10' alum. step ladder,
wood step ladder, arr conditioner (needs gas), 4' light, misc.
lumber, misc. tools, ice cream freezer, quilting frames, trim.
wide motdin&amp; sidin&amp; eaves and downspout and etc.
REAL ESTATE
3 bedroom house and lot appraised value $25,000.00. Prop·
erty to sell at 2:30. 20% down day olauction. Bal. on delivery
ol deed within 30 days.
Bud Spires, Auctioneer and Realtor
.
PALMER REALTY INC,
Owner; Kathryn Werner
Dan Smith: Auctioneer

ESTATE .AUCTION

•

Oood Heavens
Terry's "37"1

· c.....,. -fnglon ond Mor.., Tow•.....,.., """'"'
Rd., RO\' . . . . Rd. Em_, Pip• Rd.. o n d - - J2S.

•••

SAT., SEPT. 17. 1988
1:00 P.M.

Happy .Ads

48e~t .

N01ice II h•tby gtV'H thMthtGIIIIIaCountyAurll Wit• A•·
eod•kHI h8l IPPII .. to th• U.S. t&gt;.plll'tment of AlriCUtt.,..,
t•n~

PUBLIC AUCTION

Have something you want to sell? Bring i1 in. Con·
signments accepted between 12 Noon till5:00 P.M.
on Friday, new &amp; used merchandise, somethin1 for
everyone. Auction everv Friday at 7:00 P.M. Contact
Marltn Wedemeyer. 614-245-5152 or Keith Molden
614-742·2048.
MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER
KEITH MOLDEN. APPRENTICE AUCTIONEER
614-742-2048
LIC. &amp; BONDED IN OHIO

TRAIN RIDES • ANIMALS
•MINI GOLF • OIFTS
•PICNIC AREAS

Now bookina fall
reservations. 2 BR
condo overlookina
ocean at North Myrtle
Beach, S.C. Enjoy th1
beach without th1
crowds. Spacial fall
rates - $385 weekly.
For inforntation and
bookinas e~ll
614-446-2206, 9-5.

7:00 P.M.

l¥"ping Service-letters, term
papers, •sume~, etc. Accurate
II conftden•l . Clll 614-446-

5

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

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1988

814-245-5274.

,.:5p::.,.m....,. --:----,------

NOAH'S
--'~~~ ARK
'(,;:) ~; ANIMAL
,'t ~~,er :: FARM

The sorrow the day
would bring,
For the call wu sud·
den, the shock sev·
are
To part -with one we
loved do dear.
We love and miss you,
Your Wife &amp; Children

RUTLAND. OHIO

1802)838·8885o:t. 1203.

5 MILES EAST OF
JACKSON. OH. 011 IT. 32

In Lovin&amp; Memory of
our beloved husband
and father,
Bernie Queen, who
departed this life,.
Sept. 15. 1987.
We little knew when

AMERICAN LEGION HALL

Will do odd jobt. lawrence
Cundiff. 814-949-2314 efter

I .

In Memoriam

ALL CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME
FARM, INDUSTRIAL. VEHICLES.
HOME APPLIANCE, ETC.
DALE JOHNSON--AUCTIONEER
Licensed and Bonded State of Ohio
Apprentice Auctioneer-Ray Graham
·

Oo1er &amp; Blckhoa Work-850
dozer. Ae•or.bl• rates.

ca..

"'Hiring! Government jobl- your
aree. $11,000 • *6B.OOO. Call

Lonetv eldwly man lookig for a
femele com.-nion to date end
apend tlma with. 1 Pl. . . •end
,...pon .. to: hrnest McKfnney,
76 Court St., Galllpolbl, Ohio

TAKING IN CONSIGNMENTS
SEPT. 22ND 23RD
8 A.M. TILL 6 P.M.

et4-379-24t6.

....,,., 304-372-2731 ••• 312.
M·F, Sept. 4, E .O,E.

Situati!)na
Wanted

Located 1¥2 miles from Wilkesville,
Ohio on State Rt. 160.

304-428-7215

Y•d c•e. bru!il cutting. llgtn
h -..ling, 10me tree trimming end
ntmo... l. 8111 Slack 614-9922289 eveningt.

12

Saturday, Sept. 24, 1988

PATRICK BLOSSER-AUCTIONEER

P•inting &amp; roofing &amp; c•pentry
work by the hour or job. Call

HIIVII a carefree vacation. Houae
Sh:ter .. Excellent refnnots; Call

=-~::::·.::::·~~9
lor a Sonognpt., lull time

SUN., SEPT. 11
12:30 P.M.
In Howell Grove Park. Belpre. Ohio on Washington Bvd. 1 mile west of Parkersburg, W. Va.
Lots of good oak furniture, quills, crock jars, Shirley
Temple dolls, glassware, lots of misc. items. Building
will be lull.
.
.

Fifty five year old .mlf'l tooklng
fof a , IW. In female compP ion

SONOORAPHER

CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION

AUCTION

Schools
Instruction

3181 .

wtth no dependllnts. Write Box
I, New Hwen, W ~V•. 215215.

LARGE ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTABLE

•
Call us for your mobile home
lnsur•nce : Miller Insurance.
304-882 -2145. Alao: auto,
home, llf.. hNith.

Earn utra Income. Mothers &amp;
Subttltu• teachn ewn exua
Income In Educ .. lon Sale~. Set
yourhour&amp;-WortdBooklnc. C.ll
COIIIMlt 114-17&amp;-2813. Sue
Congw.

·~ ~-,
' '.

Rold. end leundlr• Roed.

-cloy•

Hou• 11011• - · w•h ot
whM.
bll.
Coli lt4-81Z·IH4.

tloM. CAll SI4-99Z.9§02.

Insurance

Gille Cou'*f, ,_,., .ndAIIOCIOGnTownaNpra: Coni
Rd., Holcomb Holfow Rd., h•w Rd .. 1nd S..leRoute 321.

-SChool · Dlnrka.
10.20 ·RIMOMble.
-·eon lt4-4oiii-IZ17

-·:30.·~-

S.r htlp nNct.d, Taldnaappic•

3 Announcements

3 Announcements

Fwnltur1 and 8PPIIIMII by th•
.ort-llolngpold.
. - or ontlow Colt .,....
Fol.
e.

COli 814-3711-2711.

•

'

•

W.,lodtolluy-8... dlngHmbor.

I wllnotbtntpaJllllbleiDr•btl
oontroctod try _ . , . · mylllf. Mlcllaot Y. O.m•.

""

eo ......... hou-ldl of

Yard Sale

......

otd. Good llou• ••·
114-317·7713.

~~td

7

et4-4411-3S72

CASH pold foo' '13 modo!
lnd MW'It' ~ c... Smhh
lhltd&lt;·Pantloc, Ill 1 EMtorn
A,. .. Oolllpolil. Cell St4-448Z282.

•w 2·1 weeki old fremllle

'
l

w.P.Yc•hfor ...emodll dNI'I
uMdcers.
Jim MlnkChw...Oidl:'lnc.
BHI Gtn • Jolw'llon

13

Help Wanted

In Memoriam

' \lvantad To Buy

~OP

, . _•. Coli 814-371t.243e.
Qlw•

don • • · 304-773-178&amp;.
1---__;
___::_:..;.::..:__

9

C...PMters. Colrne-

tologloto; Dlveralflod Medical
Worklrt, Bec:trlclans, Food s.rvlce Workerl. EIUroniCI Technici-. lndultrill Meinlln .. ce
Work••· NurtlngAu&amp;n.ntt.,.d
Ordlrll11, Machlntfts. Office
Wortc.s end Wttdlltt. RegiltM'
now for elM'" beginning Oc·
tot. 3rd. Call Tri-CountyVocetio.,.. Adult Center at 7153-3111
nt. '14. A v•rlllty of funding
soUrc11 to PlY tor training Ire
&amp;YIIilable tor thosa flliglble.

Plrttin'l• S.cr... ry nHded. 9
AM-1 PM Tundl¥ through
S.tulld_. for fVPng. . ~nswo.erlng
phones.
Mtry, coPY'ng.
filing, •king cl•l: .egiltrtltlon. 1 M:=•C::'"::'""::..:.u=•..,:.:'"";:.::.'·----11111stlngwkhbulkmeHinp, and 1·
a verlerv of other Ulskl. Quellfl- AVON, all eru111 Shirley
cetklns include accurate typing Spe••· 304-675-1429 .
at 50 wpm. goodphonemM'Iner,
1nd •bllhy toworkwftha v•rlety
of p . .onalhl•. Send resume to OIRECTOR OF NURSING . A 75
Bo• 472. Oolllpotla, Ohio45831 bed sldll.t nursing facllty is
before September 17. No phofl• Mektngen AN for .. e Director of
Nurtlng poslllon. Applle~nt
calli pl....
must PDI... I strong leed•shlp,
Modern skilled nU,..ng fac:jity communiCIIIon end petlentcere
1Nidng enthualllltk:ft~lblep•­ ski ... In return, we aft• a very
ton for •taitalnt OlrectOf of competltMJ w.g• .,d benllftt
Pllc:kllll. For immediate c:onlldNur81ng ' po~itlon. Experience In
long tlfm care • nul'ling8dmln- .,.tlon. . . .d resume in conft·
dence to Kevin Ruffing. Arcedl•
latrotlon holplrl.
• benollt pockogo. Apply bela'" Nurli~g Center, Box A, CootSept. 20 or Send Mume to: vile, Ohio 45723.
Pinec...et Clr• een..r IIS5Jeck·
ton Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio Need someon• to repair chairs.
c.ll 814-912-2021.
45831. 814-448-71, 2.

1 Card of Thanks

••

Pe•son Auctktn_.-, II·
conood Ohio ond -~ Vi•glnlk
E1tM1. lntiQw, f•m. llqulda-

wfth 3
whitlt 1pot1 an Wtv. AniWIIIM'I to
Dowr. tRt. 3311 A-Melp

Unot. 114-8111-13211.

Public Sale
8t Auction

fUdr:

Latt: f.t ONY fllmlle •

• •• n • •• •••••••••••••••••••• • •••••

''60-dar..ollce" unlllllle electlon,-referln~rto the

8:30.5 PM.

train people for jo._ 11 Auto

11'

e........... ..,.

P/Jart111 Boob.

&amp; Vicinity
PINK SLIP - Demoorallce vlce-prealdendal
nominee Sen. Uoyd Benllen,lefl, hel.. member•
of tbe Untied Food lllld Commercial Workers
Union In Bloomlopon, Calif., hold aloft an
over-ailed pink sUp rlvtnr George Buoh a

Part-time Registered X-r1y
Technicilr'l. V•l~ hou,... No
wHk ..dl, call, or holict.,t.
Apply .. the Medical " ' - 203
J•ell:,on Pike, Galllpoli• ba-

Job hundng7 Need • 1kMI? We

we woke that morn

'60 ·DAYS NOTICE FOR
GEORGE BUSH
f ill-.

.

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

'

1101••~lif

..

J._ Jacoby's boob "Jacoby M
Brldtle" ut1 "JIICOby e111 Card aamea·
(trritleiJ lritb bJ6 /alber, tbe late Orwild JIICOby) are oorr nailable at
boobtotea. Botb are pubJ/6bed by

r-~~~~~~-------------------------------------------------------------

~onn-:. OF

l!i.._

2155.

d••

Knowinc the rigbt percentage playa

Slate Proaeculor Brenda Taylor, 25,
says she could lose her joh because her bess,
a,ssistant slate attorney John Countryman, thinks
her designer dres""" are too provocative. She has
llled a dlscrbnination complaint with the county

EARN EXTRA MONEY during
tt. Summer. Get out of the
hou•. become a Dally Sentinel
~· c.rier. Rou . . open irt
Mlddepon. C.ll Scott •t The
S«ttlnel Office it 114--912-

All •ou:f.•m h• d on Grain
Nrm. Sen repll• to: Box Cia
119. c/
ltpolia Deily Tribune, 821 lrd Aw ., GalllpoNs,
Ohio46131.

Is certainly valuable. However, when

...... '""

805.187-8000 E•t. R-

9805 for current ~denllilt:

46631 .

By James Jacoby

•' t

•ea.

-ol.

+J IOU

W..l

Tu81Sd-,.

Don't be lett behind by the rapid
change In '"-"ufacturtng tpchLacH• needld for good paying , nology . Receive specialized
terhportry office like wark. No tntlnlng In 1M mechanical, tty.
•l*'len.. nec....-y. At.o Meet •auuc .. d electrical compoledle~ with c• for lght delfverv n.-.ts of factory equipment In
work. Gu llowen ce. Appty in 1M Adult lntt.lltrf.ll PMintl. . ..., only leboolutlly no phone n.nc. Program· M The Adult
Clllli) to Mra. c.rter, Room 14 Educlltion C•nter- -Tri-County
&amp;ono lDdp
9-9:30 Vocatlo,.l Schoot W• h.ve a
v ... iaty at funding IDUIC81 evllilAI\Hu•.-Sopt. 13.
able for eligible eppllcanu.
8a.tJ¥attttr nMded tor 2 children. CIPIOI begin Ocr- 3rd, cell
Aft•noon ahlft. C.ll 814-448- 713-3111 at. 14 to reglltlr.
4 't07 or 448-8847.
QUILTERS
EM'n 110Q.• t150. • qultt,
M'dlcel Supply Butinlll n. .
working a1 your home at your
P'tiOn to oompt•• lnaurence
own IPMd. We 1uppfy f'le top
an~ other medical related fonna.
*eady pieced Jtnd everything
EXI*IMce helpful but not ,..
elte acapt ,the nlllldle. Call
quired. Some SeturdiVI re- .
Holly Hllln.n for mo"'
qulred. s..,d ..sumtto:BoxCia
lnl&lt;&gt;"""rlon. Cell 8 ,,.. 992170, c.O.IIIpolls Oallr' Tribune
82&amp; Third Aw .• Clalllpol1, Ohio 5857.

•AII:Q
.QJI5
.72
tAJtQI

sh•ing. f:or ,....,.,.. .,........,
&lt;ell 814-448-7481. Monday.

Governm.m Job.. 111,040•68.230 .,.• . Now hiring. Your

. A~ON-Need &amp; ladl• to Sell
Awn. Call 114-448-33158 .

• lt!OIU

WEST

I.Dcai comp~ny now hiring for
full time •nd prt time empfoym4Jnt. No •perltnCf nect~terY.
Ev~~ work. 8enllflt1: f1200
a
Dluslnaurence • profit

det•lll.

HQip Wanted

t~

Help Wanted

Hair Styllstt. Acrou The Strell
ttyMng Mlon il ... ing one
addhlonll stylist who il looking
for mont th., )Jit .nother job.
Call T•rlat 614-446-9610 for

lilljilllyllll~ill

· •

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

•uu

11

Wanted To 8uy-Ua.t Mobile
HorMS. C.IIIJ14-446-0175.

West Yellowstone, Mont., and
south to the Old Faitblul area.
Outside Yellowstone, Jackson
said, the worst fires were in
Manlana and Idaho. Colorado
also had four fires on 4,600 acres.
"It's really starting to heat up
there," Jackson said.
In Washington state, the
wreckage of a two-man helicopter that vanished on a waterbucket run Friday night was
spotted Saturday on the northern
edge of the troublesome 46,000acre Dlnkleman fire near
WE'natchee.

NOIITB

Wanted To Buy

Sunday

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

'

••

-·
...

·,·

...

�Page 0-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel
~llldlll.ldl

21

Pomeroy-

44

LAFF-A-DAY
MEATS

I NOTICE I

lHE 0,.0 VALLEY PUBLISH-

,_..,..dO-

IPIG CO.
vou
• do bu1in- wtth oeoole you
know. ll'ld NOT to lend money
through the mil untl you h ....
-lgatod tha o~.

1000 IUNIEDS
Sunii-W'OLFF T111nlng lllldl.
Sllll::cllla••t TonlnJI Ta!;:JI•,
lunOum a.ollty Spo1- lkoy
Direct Sweupto&amp;O%. OtiWIY
to lu.in- or Home. Clll for

f!ent

~

'

"I guess, in retrospect, get=~~C::!."t;.==.-: ting a guard dog was a dumb
ond in-to&lt;y. 0 -5 llc:onoo.
Approxfm81etv 2817 Sq. Ft.

dea."

1.

o.lu• 1 BR . IIJt. Flrtt Ave.,
Gelllpoli•. 2 cw o.-aoe.. central
helt / llr. t285 mo. Ref. • Dip,
C•lll14-2111-152!1.

Two bedroom houll. lot 1nd
hilt chain link fenc.d ytrd.
2119 Che~tnut St. Call 81+
245-5278.

: 3 BA. houll. c•J~M throughout.
. t5000 down. Al•urne lOin.
• ICygtr Creek ~•tirct:. Cell 814. 441-7757 1fter 4 PM.

· Nice 2 BA. Orten School
:.. Otttrlet. Call 114-448-3112.
: 2-4- BR .. living

room,

dining.

· lfftlll llftch..-., 1 blth. 1 Clf'
• glf'lg•openftf. Steel aiding,
· new furnace. CA. City limits.
• Nice Neighborhood. 833. 900.

: Call 814-U6·4983 d .. t . 445• 2800 evening~.

: ATHENA HILLS REALTORS.
,.,st •• lo IPPf"tciale this
lovetv newer home. 6 rooms. 3
bllclooom. 2 both. h118 l•ge
deck with gr_. hill toP view.
LDc•ed et long Bottom. Ohio.
- e14-&amp;94-3643 ... 814-696. 1082.

• Bride. and ced• finch hou•. lJ4
· acres in Bradbury behind
• WMPO. Llr~ 2 e• g . .ge. :1
· bedroom•. Irving room. cent,.l
1lr-h. .t. woodburntr. w.leuof·
wnw; newlv remodeled large
kitchen with J1n Air R.,ge,
g•b.tg• dfspoMI, dlsfM1111her.
utlftv room. landac.pld nicetv.
51., by oppointment only, Coli
e14-992-&amp;?~1 . U1 ,500.
For • • or tltde for houte in
country wUh 1 acre or more.
PriOI reduced bv t8000. Nice. 2
story, 3 bedroom. on pretty
stret. 1YJ bath. full bailment. 2
c• g~nge. n..- .::hoofs 1nd
shopping. Cent !Ill hut and air.
8112 Pe•f St., Middleport. 814992-1031 .

3btdrooml. 1'h bill h. b•ement
and gltlge. Cent• I air. In
Midclepot1. Coll814-992-7882
... 814-992-52&amp;7.

3 BR . Good cond. $8,000. Ctll
114-388-9844.
'81 Fllttmlng, 2 bedroom, 1 b.. h.
lived In B month I , mu It Mil

$10,000.00. 304-67&amp;-&amp;841
IWflingt.

1973 Holt.., P•k, A-1 cond. ,A
acre lot, reduced. 304-8763030 .. 675-3431 .
1986 14x7D, Exc . Cond. 304875-7988.

Farms for Sale

30 acre f•m on A1ocoon Creek
or _., hou• and one •ere. Call
61 4-24&amp;-9&amp;76 .. 445-6784.
For ••• bv owner ap ,..OKimately

39 •ere f•m IOCI'tld 3 mil•
from Polntf't . . .nt on S111d HHI
Rood, 304-875-6787.

74•cre t.-m, nobu lldlng~, good
petture 1nd rur11 w.ter avlilt·
ble. price negoti•ble. 304-1751386.

34

Business
Buildings

IOR.

304-175-8367.

35 Lots 8t Acreage

911• - rant 1r11ll•, 4 Iota.
dty. WIII Wltlr, I •C, bulding
alto. Nancy. 304-875-~~40.

30 •ere f•m • ..,.u hou•.
prMte. biiCk of Hendwaon.
Hor• I"""'· ba.,.lful 80 It 304-8 75-7589.
r~ndl home. 2 b•M. 2 110M
2 c• ..,at.. b•ri
and pond. - o d 5 ,,...., '"'llh
l.... 'l""d. muat- -.:ad to
-~ 188,000.00. 304-4511842.

1-------- - -

Arlluctl• 2 •orv hou• wfth 41 Homee for Rent
_
... on1 .1o.,• . H I - - -- , - -- - - : - : -ond-fr~wlthoui&gt;ulld- Nlcoly furri- ·
.ln ... 30...178- 81.
Aduht onlv. Rat. ~-· No
lo Haw-. 3 - - · 2 pero. C.ll814-44.ti-O 311.
1 - living _ , ., ftre- 2 BA . ...... rnlohod. 1""110. 1
. , _ - • f30.000. 304- mlo-211. f200..,., f180dop.
na.zn1.
Rat. ana chHd. Call e14-44&amp;llll&amp;.
Muatllll- 2-oomhomo.
111,1100.00. good l-ion. 1 BR. ho. .. 21R. mobile-.
thewn br IPaiohiliiMil. 304- Both furt*hld. t200a mo. c:-11
178-H3t 178-1113.
814-448-4109ar 3179-2740.

1-- -- - -----

'*

870-98~1 .

Git.on Side-By-Side Refr._,. ~
tor Frlelllf'. 1100. Ctll 114992-5352.

Aodio Shock Com- 1000

E• .• eatra dill: .W. 360·k,
printer DMP 130, monitorCM11, dnk.lo1•of pragr1m1&amp;
clac1. Colt~ *2000nBW, wiH
. . fuo- t1100. Coli e14-44tl381!1~nytlme.

8r1ndt Mw~McC ulloch Pro~
Meek 810 chtin - - ,.., hM
been darted but h• n.,., Q.lt
1ny wood. Re.,. for ..tlino-:
InJury. NWI co,t U&amp;l. wll ....
for UJO or belt off•. C.ll
814-387-0274.

51 Household Goods

Commerdlls~ce.

1400tq.. nt
feet. corner S•cond .nd Pine.
Ample perking In re•. Cell
448-4249. 448-2326 or 4484421.
CO UN TRY MOBilE Home P•k.
Rou• 33. North of Pomeroy.
AenMI trtlhn. Call 814-1827479.
Office ot small bu linea• spece
for •nt. Localed at N. Second
Aw. In ~ddleport bu 11ine11
dlttrlct. Call 114-949-554!5 o-:
e14-949-2216.

SW41N
4UCTION &amp; FURMTURE 62
011¥0 St.. Golllp!lllo,
NEW· 8 pc. woOd group- t399.
Uvlng room suit•- t199 -•599,
a unk beds whh bedding- t241.
Full tizl mlttt'MI &amp; toundlllon
1t1rt1ng- *99. Recliners
atlrtinft t99.
USEO. Beds,
bedroom
tuttea. Detkl, wringer Wllher, a
compt ... lint of ulld ..,rnttu,.,
NEW- W111tern boots- t35.
Woril;baots t18 • up. (Steel •
oo1t tool. Cell 614-4411-3151 .

dr...,..

County A,lpN.,;oe, lne. Good
Specious mobile hom~ lots for '-'-' ap~l•on 1t1d TV 1et1.
rent~ Famlty Pride Mobile Home Open 8A.M 1o IPM. Mon thru
P•k. Gllllpola l'o&lt;ry, W. VI. Sot. e14-448-1689, e27 3&lt;d.
304-878-3073.
I
Ave. Cbllipalil, 0 H.
Spac• for Mnt tr1ller IPICN.
wat• • • ....,.. furnllhed. loculi
Ad. Rt. 1, 304-878-1076.
Tr~ll• ...ce, 3 . rNI• South of
Pt. Pl.-.t It Y off At. 2 &amp; 82.
304-875-3818.

Modern offl.- •uhll. 2924 Jadc•on AVI , Point PleeMIIt, 614448-8221.

GOOO .USED APPliANCES
W11hlr1. dryers. refrlg. . tort,
rengn . Shgg1 A.ppll1ncea,
Upper Rtver Rd . bealde Stone
c- Motel. 814-44e·7398.
Vlllev Purnlture
New lnd u•d furniture .., d

•pplfclncts. Ctll 114·448·
7572. Houri 9-5.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa and chair• pril*t from
t395 to *996. T1bl• t50 ..nd
up 01 t 125. Hld••·bodt 0 390
to U95. Redlnen 122&amp; to
0375. Llmpo *28 to •1 25.
Dinette• •109 .,d up to $49&amp;.
Wood oble w-e chairs *211i to
*791. Desk t100 up to *37&amp;.
Hutch• toiOO 1nd up. Bunk
beet. complete w-matretset
•29&amp;and uptot395. llbVbedl
t110. Mitt,..... or box .,inge
ful or twin
firm
•nd
Ounn ....
up,
King f3&amp;0 . 4 driWW ChNt $89.
Oun ceblnet• I oun. lab¥
mattrna11 · UB • t411. Bed
"fr~m• UO, UO &amp; King frllme
$60. Good setectton of bedroom
auitea. melll clbineta, headboards t30 .. d up to t85.

•ee.

•ea.

•78.

•ao •

90 O.Vs •me 11 c11h with
IJ)proved credit. 3 Mfl• out
BullVIlle Ad. Op~n 9am to 5pm
Mon. thru 8111 . Ph . 8.14-4480322.
J 8o S FU ANITURE
1415 e-tern A\11.
4 dri'Ner chlft. $48. 5 drawer

Chlfl, •&amp;4.95. 5 pc. wooden
dinnette Htl, t199.95,

For tow priC* on Oualftv CWptd
·• Furniture come to Mollatwl
Furnltu•Upper Rivlf Rd .• 114-~
448-7444.
VIAe' t Furnttu..

Open 7 dsv• • wiNk
'
Mondl\'·811urd... 9 AM -8 PM
Sund"Y. 12 noon-15 PM
Uvlng room lUll• 2 pc.-$211,
lltrnPI lltlrtlng .. 119.H , wood
dinette seu-t149 • up ,
hutchee-t219 • up. blk.,.
raak•-118.9&amp;. Tva..,.lll.tnMr~
-.lnment ctntere, d••·t49.88
It up, gl111 front gun c1blnet•
• 279. bedroom eutc... fuN " "
matlree•• ltllrtlng 11: •49.915,
bunk beds with beddln~tl229,
b1bv beds.
Excellant uMd IPpiWIC. with
30 dlyt gulflntft. w......
099 • up, dl'yOI'I!"' fr-•o.

rllfrlg.-.ton. ,....gil,
U.,.w.y• •re wefcorM. Fln~~nc­
lng av1leble with lpprawd
crtdh .

At. 1411n Cen•narv·lf•mlleon
Uncoln Pike. 814-«B-3118.
2 crib bodt. 1 oofo. 2 reldnaro.
Whftl MWWing miChlne. 3 ldt·
chen ch1lr1 . Clll 814-388·
8963.

WESli!RN RED CEDAR
• Channll Ru1tk:
ond ....,od Lop Sl..,g
• OeckMM•IIIs
Ouw•ntHd Ouatlt.,
CETIDE. INC .. AthMWs -814&amp;14-31178

ARMY SURPlUS (Adv. .lolng
Spedlllti11. lualn.... Pollticll,
Alllteme) . Fri. Set. Sun, Noon to
8:00 PM. Slm So ......llo't
sine• 1184. R•uular t~rm.,.
il.._.., denim, r1nt11 ·dothlng.
Jr. elmOUft~ge blk •d white.
Fo;d 1171 •le or nde. Ju~ ­
tlonlndop.,- Rood. Rt. 21.
304-273-5885.
S.I80Md Olk flrtMtood cell

304-875-2787 alief 4:30PM.

f'tutlc letters for portable tlgn
*42.80 box frM ohlpplng, Off•
uplr• Silpt. 10. WV. 1· 800842-2434. or Ohio 1 -80tl-5333483onytlmo.
Pltrtablelighted tlan with llfttf'll
1291.00. ffOI dellwry, Off•
- - Sept. 10. WVII 1-100842·2434. .o r Ollio 1-800.5333413 tnydme.

1::--:--:--:--:-:--::-----

br-.

a-

10 push mowers, 2 Se•t riding
mo..,., 1 liNer. AM far *400 or
,bllt ""•· Coli 814-388-1188.
Satal-plnobu'*bodtwlth
llldct.r 1nd menren. v.,., good
oondhlon. Coli 814-188-4113.
Mlxod hard wood olobo. f1 2 par
bunlo. Con•lnln~ .,...•. 1 'h
ton. Ohio Pillet CO .. Pomeroy,
Ohio. 814-852-8411.

64 Misc. Merchandise

,,.y.,

65 ~uilding Supplies

•
Builclng Motlriolo
llook, brlcll. ...,... pip•. wln-

-dO.

dawt. llnttlt,

,.~ Rio

..-c. ClaJde 'Nin-

24&amp;-5121.

0 . Call e14-

Home Park. Call 814-441-

11102. .

1- -:-::------,..,..,-,--

2 BR. mobile horne. $300• mo.
Ref. • dep. requirt~d. C1ll
614-446-7292.

•

B&amp;B GUN SHOP

2 BR . furnilhed mobile horne.
n101 mo. plu••c. d~. • rlf.
Adutta only. Send lnqulri• to:
BDx Cla188, c / oGMIIpalll D-'tv
Triburw. 825 Third A"'·· Gall._
polo, Olllo 48831 .

PHONE 388·9856

BUY·SELL-TRADE

--d.

FRONTAGE Lovely lwo story home
a formal entry,
equipped kitchen, beatrtilullivingroom with
fireplace, family room,: 2 baths, gas heal,
basement with brick fireplace, summer
porch, lovely level area by river. Shown by
appointment only.
:

N.wfy de00111ted. 2 BR., fulfy

olllrtllhleo pold -opt
electric. Sec. dep. t~~qulrad. C.ll
814-448-8558.

,

FAMILY ORIENTED
Lovely home with lois
features 3 BRs, 2\\ baths, eq~ip~ed .k~cnen,
LR. DR, lamily room, 2
. gas heat, cent. air. Just

Guns, IIIIRIO, lht lhts &amp;
s•pplln, doa fltd &amp;
11pplln, huntift&amp; license.
Open Noon til 8:00 P.M.
Mold., thru SltuniiY.
Located on StJte Roull
110 11 Porttr.

ATMGM
SALE

stvt•.

lerm Pet Food Dt.ter.
JuHe Webb Ph. 114-"6-0231.

fraeur

D.C. Metal Sales. Inc.
Cannelburg, Ind. 47519
OFFERS EVERYTHING YOU COULD' WANT
- Close to schoo~ slore and church. Very
nice home with 4 BRs. LR, kitchen, 2 baths.
carpel, heat pump/Fen!. air, attached
garage, p o~ . Call for an appointment today
to view this home. 1

Mobile ho..,....fu.,tshtd $185.

5&amp;12.

Two 3 bedroom tralln. all
electric. Glllipolis Ferry, phone
304-675-4088.

PRICE R£DUCED TO $39,900! BEGINNER HOME - This home
a
large LR wllh fireplace, kitchen, dinng a1ea.
3 BRs, bath, full .basement, I car garag~
deck, fenced yard just minutes to town on Rt.
141. Call tor an appointment.

..
' ..

Apartment
for Rent

Sptcializina in Pole Buildinp. Desianed to meet
your needs. Any size Choice of 10 colors.
ESTIMATE on . post
l~lldes, and packaae deals.
hundreds, even thoulllltdt of dollars.
local Sales
Representative
Donna Cri..nbery
•· E.S.R., Box 166
Glllipolis, Ohio 45631

Ph. 614·256·6518

2 BR . epta. 8 clo••· kttchen-

hook-up, ww Clfpet. newty
pain18d, dedc.
From t17&amp;.
Regency, In c. Apt .. Call 304117&amp;-5104, or 875-1386 or
e7&amp;-7738.

KANAUGA AREA - Nice starter home, 3
krtchen, LR. bath, gas heat. carpet, vinyl

PRICE REDUCED BY TEN
DOLLARS - lhis home ofters a
i
view of the surrounding area. 6.5 acres,
24~20 buildin~ Very nice home offers 4 BRs,
2 baths, living room, family room combo, ·
kitchen fireplace, glass shd1n g door~
' carpet. 'Quiet serene surroundings.
,,

EWINGTDN - $19,900 - Four be!toom
.home inciudes kitchen, living room, dining
room , bath, NG school district.

• "

t

I
offers 3 or 4
v&lt;/slone fireplace
gs,
beaut~ul k~chen, diflette, game room, 2 c•
attachad garage. Very pr-ivate.

Al*tment• and
304-87&amp;-e104.

'*'-·

C.H

Furnilhrld IPI lih.1L $210 t
mo. 1 Ill . Ullltlol palcl 920
Fourth ..,.,.,, OllllpaiiL Call
448-44.18olt• 7 PM.
3 room ..,art...m:. 1100• mo.
Coil 304-e7&amp;-l 104.
.
Modern 1 BA . opt, Call 114446-0310.

AR!SKE

I I I I I
10

•

•

•

.

I

My aunl is always on the go
and lceapo hers811 busy. She
likes to say lhal " ea~y to bed
and early to rise and you'll
make your neighbors

tlta

Complete the th utkl e quoted
b y lill1ng in the mls.stng word '
you develop from srep No . 3 below.

snOr.JidSns

U

q ••l :. _

......

I' I'' I
I III I II I III

s_,..,..._

AKC Reg. Golden Rllrlllll'ers. 2
mil•. Flr.t lhott. CMI 814-

,; snOIOidSnS SJoq~~!IU

Jno.l ~W ll,nil.( pU'I H~ OliiiJIO
PU'I ~ 01 ·~··.. 1141 ... 01
H~ll "'lS ·.lsnq U - sdoe~ pue
0~ 8~1 UO IIIBM(I B! 1une ill'j

!i:ISJI'l4
:INn!'II'll

Pigs for •le. •25.()0 Nch.
304-675-69&amp;0.

64

13~Slffl

ASOOOM
;ns!lnd
11m:mn
513'7-1'1\f!i:JS

Hay 8t Grain

Ground s hall corn *8.00 per
100, pntmiumaltlff•hll¥'. alr8W.
Morgen' a Woodlltwn F• m. At.
35, P1lny, w. v.. 304-9372018.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

448-8253-

Reg. mile Poocle. blade &amp;
white. Coli 814-388-9794

Full blooded Pektn. . for •le.
Three month old femele. Call
814-992-7259:
.

Sponoo&lt; o1 NBC'I
lelecaat of tho 1988

.•

446-6610

Summer Olympics.

M1l1 MinletuN Schnauzer pup.
Worm8d. llhots.. e.. cropped.
Coli olt.. 4p.m. 814-949-2?94.
BliCk l.abrldo~ Rlllrl....., puppi•. 8 wlal. Full blooded. Not
..,.....od. Warmad, thoto. fiiO.
e14-e9B-8390.

O.rm1n Shepherd puppi ...
AKC, blk and -.. •bfe. good

.podl_ .xca~~..t w - - t

652 Second Ave.
Gallipolis. Ohio

SOUTHERN HILLS I.E., INC •

lt. Ber.,.rdmlleAKCreg....r ..
dog. Bom Juty 20th. Beanffut

~279.9&amp;

$22995

1-10 cu. ft. Chest

frtellf

57

JUDY DEW!" -BROKER-388·8155
PHYLLIS LOVEDAY -REALTOR-446-2230
PATRICK COCHRAN-REALTOR-446-1655

J. MERRILL CARTER-REALTOR-379-2184
CHERYL LErllEY-REALTOR-742-3171

Musical
Instruments

Lowery Pfeno. Good cond. Call
814-2&amp;11-8230.

~2596

GREEN TOWNSHIP is this 3 bedroom brick
ranch with I \I baths, living room w~h lireplac~
lormal dinin&amp; 2 car garage, 12'd2' patio on .41 ol
an acre lawn more or less. Call today for more
information. $49,900.

Real Estate General

SALE

~3·re.s11

S28995

Sw..,...

I*U4413)
SALE

1-25 cu. ft. Chest
freezer
SALE
~a19.9&amp; S48995
1 H1111w.. c.."' 1ible

s7995
..._.,

GOOD
RECREATIONAL
LAND OR BUILD
A CABIN

•cr• n-

3BV.
Rutlend. Sect. 24
Meigl County, on
C-13 Le81her Rd.
Call R110ltor

ELLA MAE GRANT

COMMERCIAL BUILDING ~ Block and
Su~aced parking area. Over 3600 sq. ft.
sales area. Garage. Storage area. 2 bedroom
apartment. Appro~. I acre of ground. Call tor more
details!
#2604

81-LEVEL HOME CLOSE TO TOWN- ~•.•uu.uu
is lhe reduced price on this 3 bedroom home.
Living room. family room , 2 car garage, eat-1n
kitchen. Fresh paint throughout. Call today lor
your showing.
#2610

KIDS LOVE THIS HOllE, but so will mom and dad.
Room to grow in this lovely 3-4 bedroom, 2 bath
bi·level. Large country kitch en. rec. and family
room, 2 lots in Green School System. $68,500.00.
N2637

6

Real Estate General

HOUSE FOR SALE
Owner moving out of county. 3
bedroom, 2 story house and
exhisting 3 room house on same
lot. Must see to appreciate.
Reduced to $49,500.00. 2 blocks
from City School.

Call (614) 643-29?3
or 446-4668

$25,000- CITY SCHOOlS- MINUTES TO
TOWN. Approx. one hall acre. Home features
basement large unattached block gatag~
gas heat. Call tor an appointment

oE;

T1nl Townhou•

1 BR. Uti. Utllltlol poicl Coli
448-4418 oil• 7 PM.

I I I' I I

Englloh
from
P'"'"" Grou• dogo. F.D.S.B.
R-od. 0&amp;0. COli 814-2882470. Jockoon. Ohio

Real Estate General

tpartmenh. Elepnt 2 ftoora, 2
IR .• ful b•h uDitlllrt. powd•

Furnllhld 1Pt- New. Ne*HMC.

MENUMI

AKC l'log. Brittany Sponitlo.
f 100eocll. Coll814-4411-1714.

Up . .lrs unfurnlsl'led IPt. C.r·

room downatalrt. CA.. d is·
hwtshlr. dttpoe~l, prhete enbWICI. prt;Me .nclollcl petkl.
pl-ound. Uti- n..
fnduded. lt.-tlng • t2tt per
mo. Calll14-317-7180.

KAB E S T

Re. 10 go 1ft 15 Melui , Call
814-3118-8801 .
.

New completll., furnished
..,artment • mobile hom~ In
city. Adutts ontv. P•klng. Clltl
814-446-0338.
8EAUTJFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES. 530 Jldcton
Pike from *183 1 mo. Wllk to
shop 1nd mavi•. 114-44S.
2&amp;18. E.O.H.

Lu~turl oua

I I I' I I' I

1'1- •riwl 4K~ Soxor puppl ...

1----- -----

Furnished- 3 room• • tNith.
Cler.n. No pets. Ref. • depa.ll:
required. Utllltiel furnished.
Adult• only. C•ll 114-44&amp;1519,

SOWDOY

I I' I I .I

Sil19• Mgon1 for •lt. 304671i-2 5 8e.

IIEIGS COUN'IY PROPERlY

&amp; $200plus utHhl•. 304-875-

utllhioo,.lcl No Dhilcnn.

I I I' I I

HepiJ"f Jack Tthlennicdl : Reco~
nb:ed •fe • ~ bV U.S.
au,_. of Vetlrl.,...,. Medlcln•
IQIIntt hoolt. round. • tap•
wonna k\ dogs &amp; ella. Bfltwell
CUh Feed J .D. North ProD.~ ca.

Qlbeon Masl8r Tone Banjo
RBL250. Exel. cond. t1000
llrm. Coli e 14-2e&amp;-1 85&amp;.

992·2111

2 bedroom mobile ho..,. hltf
mile out Jericho Road. •ferenc• required. c.tllfler !:OOPM,
304-875-1082.
~

No pel•. C.ll814-441-1137.

USPUER

I

61 Farm Equipment

Bundy Alto SIUPhone. , Good Appl•. purs, grape~, ml.celPaving condh:k&gt;n. t 150. C.ll l•neoua fo od items. Dunrovin 7 ton sil1ge w•_gon Gehl,
Fruh F•m-Rt. 681 •outhe•t of
e14-98&amp;-4288.
0 80o. oo . 304 -e 7 S -1417
Albany . Open 9-8 . Clo•d Monlnytlme.
lndtv,_ll guitar l•aona. b~ d.,• . 114-898-1298.
gin,.,., Mrlout guillrilt. BruiTo becco adckafor _.., 20cent1
C*'dfl M.llk:. 114-448·0887. Bab' s M~rket and GreenhOu• •·
eiCh. Mo rg~r~ WoodiWtn F.-m.
Jeff W1mal-v in•truetor, 814- Mllon. W. Va. now h• juicy Rt. 35, Pliny, W.Ve. 304-937·
canning pe1ch•, 81rl..., p..-a,. 2018.
448-8077. limited OJMnlnga.
Stant..,. prune "plums, Crltpy
Pl~no. ••c cond, cell 304-175- new Mclntoth IPP*· Urge
CI'OP hordy ftll garden mumt.
63
Uveetock
4874 oltor 5 :00PM.
Now reedy", phaM 304-773- 1 ___ __ _ _ _ __
Bundy Trombone, good cond. 5721 or773-5900op..,7diVS· t ·
0100. 304-&amp;78-5 141 or 67&amp;20!18.
Registered Ch1rol
. •Is Bull~
o1200. Raglotorod lin blooded
~ c~rn1 Supplle~
Chi' llul~ f 1800 Cell 814-387·Oelu• b..• 1mplifler, 10 watt,
solid ••te, greM condltton with
&amp; Livestock
7458. '
vinyl cOver, prl9td right; 304Reg. Pure Brld Umou~n 8 _.,
,578-2995.
for _,., Gllllpolit. Ohio. Celli
61 FanT'I Equipment
814-256-1187.
Wlf'lt tabuy ._d flute muat.be In
exceH.,t condlt5on. 304-882· IH Farm AHwithlllettachmant:L
ReglsWed Hol•tein B .. for -'e.
2225.
Vwy ..uonabla Call 814-446- Breeding ag• Call 114-912·
7026.
'
7281 .

I I' I' I I
I

Fruit

8t Vegetables

Mu1ic l.e11ons on 111 woodwind Red RllpblfTI• - Pi ck your own
lnetrum1nts· flute . oboe, cia· or we pldl;. TIV Ior'• Berry P.. ch.
rl net, suophoM and b••oon. Clll 114-246-5084 or 4•&amp;Cefllof1 Snaw. ll14-215&amp;-1814. 88U.

CRUNUL

*''·

SALE

540 &amp;at Mttin

MobMeHomet for .ent. Evelyn'•
Moble Home P•k. KenMigl.
Ohio. C.ll 814-446-0608.

-d.

_

O Reorrongt the 6 k rombleU
wordt b.low to moke 6
••mple word'
Prin1 ietTen of
eoch in 111 hne of ~uoret .

o._.wvncl Cottery Kennel.
CFA Penlll'l and Sllt'l'l_. kll·
AKC cttow puppl... New
Hlrnoi"Y'!n ldtt-. Call ·814445-31144 "'• 7PM.

S22995

MGM Farm City

t ·.

Oroom 1n d Supply Shop-Pet
Oroomlng. All br•eda ... AII

·Wanted To Buy-Good Uled
plana. Pl..,.ble c:ondhkm. Call
e14-2811-1423,

1-5 cu. ft. Chest

~,·.ra.s&amp;

I

Pets for Sale

Ultell .. ., CU.t l . 'DUAN __;;__ __

58

f150.00. 814-8811-5085 ..
304-738-3023.

,,,,,.,, ,,,,,,,
~:8:911

13041
(oil Tall FrH ....,.., II
1-100-447-7436

56

S©~ot11A-l£t.trs· ::::
_.·~~:~;~·
.;.;_:.;,;__=-=

Musical
Instruments

Sunday Times-Sentinel-

54 Misc. Merchandise

Freezer

Furnished 2BR . Ca. cable. ..,..,.,
sewage Pilei. Foster'l MobU.

Z783.

57

Oog. f280. 814-797· 4893.

FARM CITY
1-5 cu. ft.

for Rant

44

Sen du•l f., ~ 71,000 BTu
•221. Wwm Morning 15.000
IITU. 1115. 814-948-2031 .

Htrvett Gold stove- • 225. 9Jt11 ft. red ClrJ)II wtth pad.
rolrlpnotor-1100. 1\!ovlng, Ex· olmoot n - . 110().00. 503
col. cond. Coli e14·448-8211 MaNoll Aw, Pt. Pit.
oft• 4 PM.
Bunk bod with 4 drawer chat
Nice refrigarator, 2 dlnllte ..... and boollc... ldtllched. Good
,...., bod. box llllringt 8o mat- cond. 304-178-8924 oftor 4
tras. couch, oak d•k • chair, p.m.
Coli e1 4-448-3224.
For •leHor .... poni•. •ddlellt
RCA Dolor TV 215" COn10l• mloc . 304-871-3180.
eJCCel. cand.·l1150. Lowery organ (encore) wtth Mtglc Gen Je. Hondl 50 Mini bike. Stlhl Chain
• 300, rabbit hutm•. goet aw; 1978 8tercr8ft c.mper; 10
"'lldng stand. nllt boxes. lncu- 1!. Moah ....,lhe lith. 304-875bat.,,
Coli 814-245- 7188.
81e7.
Aehitch, compiMe.
FlrMiood for llle: Mlxtd ..
304-675-8372.
fOned hanlwood. 035 for &gt;,;
cord. Coli e14-379-2502. No Uvlng room IUile, hou.. awnSundl"f clllt, Pl. . .l
lng, ltove &amp; refrigemor, c.parts • giiMMre, 1ntiquet, lit
Bab\'bodlbum.., · .,_., mloc. 304-773-5842.
dill* llteck•-140. car .....
120, potty-f2, Coli e14-388- 81 bollrd alec. heet8rl &amp; tlwrmodto. 304-87&amp;-2722 .
9734 "'"' 8 PM.

Seaonld oak *IWood for •I e.
us lold. 814-742-254&amp;.

appl. furnl•hed. W.her-Oryer

H 'il leN whh g. .ge. Cement
floor. t&amp;OOO. Call 814-992tallll 81-=.. . ctntrll air, walk l -:8_3_1 1.
- - ,- - , - - ,-,-- •ound deck. oul building. many
u:tr1'a. t34,000. 814-992· Aah1on. l•ge bulding lots.
2909.
\ :.~!7'::::'r!:'..m::· ~~
Speciou 1 3 bedroom. 2 story Bowen. Jr. 304-576-2336.
home on St. At. 33. LOh of
doltt •ce. ctnt,.lalr,cla•to Be&amp;~ttful river lotaone1creplu..
Meigs Schoola. 014-992-8383. public wet•. Ctyde Bowen, Jr.
30.4-1!178-2336.
Home..,d3acres. YlmileoutSA
,43 0If Rt 7 ~-11 814-882· 25 •cr" 8roed Run Rold, New
' · .....
Hl'll'en. Owner fiMndng •vail•
2904
·
blo. 304-882-3394.
Home in country with land for . . , - - - --:-- - --,-.,ul• 11 .. 992-SBofB.
53 ~ter•. 5 mil• to Point
Pl .. nnt, phone 304-871!1 101privllti1Ct'NW/ eMyiCC:.S 5018.
Galllpoll Ferry, new home 1110 - -- -- --- - - 2 lott wfth walla. e7o.ooo. C.ll C•mp lfte tbo¥11 Collt Outrd
304-175-4831 .
Stltlon 11nd Henderlon At. 315,
h• .. ec. • septic •Yifllm. .8 of
3bedroomhomton41ota. Ore• ecre. call antVtlrne. 304-175llood, HHMaw. 304-87&amp;-4018. 8372.

"*•

Ragen Mobltycolleel, 1-114-

2 bedroom apartment. c•plt Mparate utlhiel. 2208 Jeffer-

1982 CI"Yton Double wkle ;n
Syr1cu11. 3 Bedroom. 2 beth.

Gntnd VI.- Hgts.·l beci'oom
hama with f1mlty room. woodburner, 2 lcres of l1nd.
U8,QOO.OO. Shownbyeppointment 304-175-1175.

Whetlch*•"• or uted. 3
whoalod olocvlc oco-.. Coli

Furnished 1 SR. IIPirtmlnt·
R1 d ne. Utllftilt. G.qe IQiice
lnduded. • 27&amp; a mo. can
814-992-7104 tft~r 8 PM.

Clean 2 BR ., eir, l•ge garage.
2 bedroom. needl replir n60. 2 Uppor Rt. 7 . Coli 814-448bedroom · ready to u• and 2&amp;15.
lllready ho~lld up. t1900. 2 bedroom mmlle home In
30..87&gt;2 7 22 .
Mldcleporl. Furnished, 1ir co~
1988 &amp;r011 dmore by Fleetwood. dh:loner. Wllshw 1nd dryer.
14di2, 2 bedroom, all efKtrlc, -,
8-14-_99_2_-_&amp;3_0_4_.--::--:-:-exc cond, call304-6711-2862 or . 2 bed;oom, on Silver Run Road,
1576-2004.
Middleport. For infornwtlonctll
614-992-7409.

33

64 Misc. Marctlancba

-•u!d)o-bo-.

A•••• couch. eac cond, c•U
304-876-1238.

Conor ... blocks- •II tlizet· -,.rd
ordeftwry. ~llontlnd. Ollllpo111 lk)dt co .• 1 z~ Pin• 9t ..
Qallloollo. Ollio. Coli e14-448-

au..-.,

45 Furnished Rooms

46 Space for Rent

Antiquee

55 Building Supplies

ConW.C•ed cers, truck•. wna,
bolts. plen• J.w.!ry, • much
mora. Solnd In drug • etlmo
t1ldl. Up to 90 percent off. Cell
1-304-429-4878. .... J8.

Jluy or Sell Riverin1 AMktutl,
1124 E. Mliln Strett. Pomeroy.
Hour~: M.T.W 1DI.m. to lp.m.,
1 to &amp;p.m. 114-992- Babv c • •at tor 11le. t20.
e 14-742·211115.
2528.

p•d. Celllh:er4 : 00 . 304-87~
3788.

dO.

..
•
:

53

i&lt;omp bu'*
tiki new. . . . . . •d Fo1t1r
m.rtreaea. 1300. Clll 114-448-9&amp;27.

Downtown modern 1 bedropm
apt. fumlahl4, 1ir oond. Car·

-- - -- - - -

• 814-448-4189.

j

•u

lfving. 1 and 2 bedlluldlngwith,.rklngforap,...•lmetely
SO. Ath... HIHa Ae ... y. '
r - - - - - - - - - - . , - - - - - - - - - - GracloUI
room aptrtmenta It Vlll19e
e 14-594-3~43.
M1nor and Atveraide Apart·
32 Mobile Homes
ment• In Middleport. From
41 Homes for Rent
f1 82. Coli e1 4-992-7787.
for Sale
EOH.
· 23 Professional
3 or 4 BFI. hou•· Eureka. 'I:Y.t
Services
b•ha. •275 • mo. Dip. , ... 2 bedroom Apta . for Nnt.
Land contract, l~tgtltvlng room oulrN. Coli e14-448-4222 b• Cor-el
Nlee oettlng, Lou rdry
w l expendo room, 2 BR .. tween B-5.
facilhl•
av1Uable.
Call 81 ..
Plano Tuning. ()Jalttv •ervlct w / wall cwpet. 1ir condttion.
992-3711 . EOH.
w / orwhhoutfurnltuN. Nat. g• 2 BA . hou•, air condttioiWd,
Iince 1916. Lane Oanl•• 814- furr.ce on prhrtte lot. M"Y ,.nt
large *ced In .,.rd. In Bidwell
for rent. t2215 •
742-2951 .
lot. Coli ~ to 8 PM, 814-448- School Diltrict. '30De mo. can . Ap.-tment
momh. Oepo* required. 1141405.
114-441-1320.
992-5724. Alter 6pm or 992·
1972Fo•lltP•k. 12&amp;80, 211R ., 3 a.•oom haute bet•en 5119.
appl•ces. CA. dedc.IWnlng, • O.llipollo 8o Hobor Hoopitol. full NIIW'Iv redecorated tplf'tmenta
und•Pnnlng. C1ll 814-448- tt.emant, twa c• g..ag-. v• ""'NIDio. Utiltlol polcl f225.
: 31 Homee for Sale
0&amp;00.
fur,.c-. central Mr. city 8Chool1. per month. deposit ~~qulred. C.ll
Coll814-448-1288alterSPM. 814-992-&amp;724 after 8:00 or
• 1986 Mwl«te MoEkl ..r Home,
REDUCED-28 • 56 " Log
li92-51 19.
• 10128. AI oloctrlc, Co, 3 BR., 2
Hou•" · •;x•vlfi~ on our Lag 3 BR. hau•ln country ne .. Rio
· bat ... or_. room. dining room. Hou• dlt
. Stop 1nd •• It Gran
No ·Sec. dep. 1240 1 bedroom tplnmentln Middl•
To "*"' ..... to lat. Must . .
French City o bileHom•~448- o mo. C.ll614-24&amp;-5439.
port. e1so. per month plu1
9340.
to IPpredMe. •e.ooo. owner
utHtH11. Call 814-992-5546 or
flnondng. Coli 814-448-1408
7 room, ntwlydecol'llted. Stove, 6, 4-949-2216.
NEED EXTRA ROOM1 Big_.. refrig.. crpet. CA. Loc.ted In
• •tt•l PM.
ing~ on ourVEMC012x24room
GeUipoll1. •30o per mo. Ref. &amp;
bedroom. nice kJclllon In
leaJtlful Holcomb Hill, •ddi- •dcftlon cls~-v-front po.ch • dop. roqulrod. Coli e1 4-448- 2Atver.
Utiliti• Included. 114tionol lot. 3 Bit, Co. Coli
e-tto door. FrMch Chy Mobile 1232.
992-5945 or 614-992-9903.
: e14-448-0338.
Hom•. Inc.. 448-934q.
2 bedroom. unfumlthed. Fulty
fumilhed. Aduhl
· Mo·a ..• home on large lot in 1982 llbeny 14x70, 3 bod- c.peted. Nice and c111n. Otpo Completely
only . .., Mldcleport. Call 114- Mlrcwvile. Po~. AC, nerN room, 2 bMhl. newc•Pit meny osit rwquftd. Clll 114-992- 992-7751 .
· c•pet. c.ll 114-251-1752 or ell trU . All"lfldy 111 up. c.tl 3090.
814-2se-eo1o. 448-n4S .
. 114-248-1020.
Apt, for ""t. *150month. •1 00
Nice 3 bedroom hou•. fun
.
No beer or drug1.
· Modu W home on llrge lot In 1959 Dltrofter mobUe home. b. .ment, quilt loclt:ion. 8 depo~h
. MMc• :die. POol AC, nM" 1o.so. noo. Coli &amp;14-44&amp;- mil• oul of town, phone 304- 814-882-2904.
: ....... Coli e14-258-8752 ... 1232.
875-10715.
- 814-245-9020.
1979 14&lt;70 N11hua . Excal. Hou• for nle or rent, 3
.. Myrtle Ortve-3 bedroom. 4 .,.. cond . CA. 2 BR .. l1rge beth, bedroom house, 304-875"' old home, g.ag &amp; fWiced level newer carpet, underpinning, 7281.
deck 8o buDclng. Coli 814-24&amp;~~ .,.rd, ttONge buldlng. Call
9894.
. e14-44tl-1988.
Small houll. 2 bldroom1 • .-terence and depolh:. 304-175: 1 SA . home-M1dll0n St. &amp; 2-2 1970 fiWn 12x70, 3 bedroom, 138&amp;.
· BA . moiNie ho.,....Centenlry . tipout tlvlng room. c.ll 814- Coli 814-448-4109 ... 379- 245-91519 after 5 PM, or 2455&amp;39 .
• 2740.
42 Mobile Homee
• V.ry att•ctlwl brick 4 bedroom. . Sc..,lt 1 2dl0 w !tip-out. E•t111
: 2 bMh. f~mlty room with fire- good cond. Beat offer. Call
- plica formll dining. t.ge ltvlng 814-742-2984 .. 388-9739.
. room, 30ft. cultom o-k lchehen
· ctbinats. ollk woocfwoork. finish 1971 Ao•mont mobile horne,
· b. .ment, 2 c• g••ae. r..,et 1•x70, :I bedroom~ , w.ahennd
• ._dlcaped tot. 4 mil• from dr,1tr, afr cond, ltOYI and ref,
- Holzlr Ho1phll off Rt. 3 5- $8,000.00 negotllble. 304: Ptwterbrook Subdlvlskm. C.ll 895-3427 or 304-175-8108.

CJood ultd ~or TVI for •l e.
Call 114-448-1149.

30" . . . Nn ge-h.,..t got&amp;
*915. 30'' el.c. l'llngHIVIOa:lo
•-•95. 30''1•,..gatop•
bottom oven· VIIt'th• •110. O.E.
Wlthar-a98. -lpool d - 085. Rofrlg.-h . - t gold froat
tr. .
Rolrig.- - • .,,. t91. Rolrig. 2 door-whh•
t715. Hot wat• hMtlf·30 gil.·
oea. Sk- Applon•. Upper
Rive&lt; Ad .. 81 """'8-7318.

NDw ICctpf:lng ap~c:M:ioftl for
2 bedroom ltplrtnwnta, tufty
4WPftld. IPPI .. c.a, wat• 1nd
truh pic:kuPI provided. Mlin• ~
ntnce free IMno clo• to shopping. b.-.b tnd IChaola. For
mo .. Information clll304-882371e. E.O.H.

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

51 Household Goods 54 Misc. Merctlandise

P1CKENS UIIEO FURNITURE
Comi)tet• hou•hold furnillh ingl. If. mile out Jlrricho.
304-875-14.150.

APAFI1MENTS. mobile homes,
ho..... Pt. Pl ....ntlndGIIIipollo. 814-448-8221 .

Ntwlv·Nmodeled, unfu,..hld.
of~H)Hroom, .. en~~ 1nd r.-fri(tantor, w.t• included. Rtf..,._
c• 1nd depotlt .equftd. *225
.., month. C.lle14-448-4249.
446-2325 or 448-4426.

htwMtionll MttlllulldlngManuticturW S ...ctlng bu Hder/ de.... m.ame 01*'1.,. • • High
fH)tentlll profh In our growth
3200
13031 7
··•

51 Household Gooda

JUT 'N ' CARLYLEe ~J Larry Wrlaht

whh e-lla, w.ter ..i d. t130
moqth plut d-olt. e 14-9927880 or 814-992·&amp;238.

Furnlthed efftcitlficy· *1 101 mo.
Utilttlel paid. 701 Fourth Ave ..
Ollllpoli•. C.II44S.4418tfter7
PM.

Coli 814-448-3131 .

Apartment
for Rent

September 11. 1988

September 11. 1988

Bachefor 11)1 . PrM1e entrance

Furntshed IPt.-1 BA. t240•mo.
Utllhlol polcl243JockoonPiko..
Oallipolll. C.ll446-44 11•fhtr7
PM.

Eltllblillh.cl buain111 for ule,

~9-

44

Smll fumllhed IIPirtm.-t. Cen·
trelfy toe-.ct. Su•bletor 1 or 2
tduh1, No pllb . Ref. • •c. dep.
Caiii14-441-0C.U..

FREE Color c.talogut • 'ltlhot.
solo...,_ 1· 800.228-8292.

~::r.v·

Apartment
for

~N ict 2 IR .. 4 1AI mM11 from
CWIIpolta. StO\IIt, refr~. • wetet'
furnlthtd. t22&amp; • mo. No peiL
Clll 814-44&amp;-8038.

Businees
Opportunity

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Middlaport-Gallipolil.

&gt;~
TEN ACIES Ill Till COUIITRY- 3bedroom
home w~h 2 baths, ldtchen. rlll&amp;e and
relri(l., LR. c•pet. woodbuming stove,
several r.m buidings. Call lor an appt.

YOU'Ll WAII-T THIS ONE FOR YOURSELFLovely home just minutes from town on
Lower Rt 7, beautKul river view, 3 bedrms..
2 baths, LR, equippad k~chen, family 1!11.,
dinette, 2 fireplaces, game room, l1t1ndry
rm., cijy schools. Callloday.

CoiMEICIAL l R£SID£1111Al

Your local Bonanza
· btillcler Is ready to build
atlractlve and etllcl·
bulldlng lor alot 11!81
thaa you'd thlnlt. .. oee
him today lor alree eBtl·
)nale!

IURT BUILDING CO.

IT. t, 101 71
• WAIDIOID. OliO 45116
CIIUI« 61 ..6"-JOOI
liD 1·100"'17·1146

SPEcrACUIAR STONE'&amp; CEDAR
Rarely do we have such 1 sensational residence to offer for sale:
Adream home priced well under today's construction cost. lhis
oulstandlng 8 yr. old home is lOcated in city school dislrict on a
densely wooded picturesque 5 acre tract. When you tour lhis
2400 SQ. ft. of elegant Ivins spac~ your heart will skip a.beat. Included is a sensalional kijchen w~h all qual~y appliances plus
pantry. Family room w~h fireplace 1nd wooded -liew provided
by Andersen lhermop~ne window~ Formal dini_ng wijh vau~ed
ceilings and huge cork stone wall with see-throuah fireplace.
Step down livlna room, formal entry, 3!1 gfeaminl balhroom~
The master bedroom ~ 18x19 wlh bath and patiodoo11 loa privale sundeck. You will not see' a more pleasing party or rae.
room. Th~ large area has solid, select cinder wall~ expensive
new carpel, e buiH-in bw w~h h/c waler, patiodoo11 to 1round
level and blck deck. Outside you will fmd ftower .beds and
shrubbery &amp;•dens of professional qualtty whicll succeed in
hllpin&amp; m1ke tllis tile outstandin1 property tor sale in Gallla
Counly. Owner is anxious lo sell and has pnced ~below ijs lair
market value. We wanllo show you this breathtakina home 1nd
are Witting your call!
'
1110

WISEMAN lEAL ESTATE AGENCY

REDUCED $1,000.00 -TAKE ONE LOOK! at this
3 bedroom ranch and you'll be sold! 2 baths,
lamily room, living room, eat·in k~chen, 2 car
garage, basement, I acre lawn, storage buildin,
vinyl siding. $48,900.
#2627
QUIET COUNTRY CHARM- $59,900 - Not just
anOiher ranch: owners have spent time and
money to keep this home in mint condrtion.
Chandelier, eat-in kllchen wllh all the latest
appliances, formal dining and living room, lamily
room with fireplace, lull basement, 2 car garage.
S~uated on over I acre landscaped land. Kyger
Creek School District. Be the first to see this new
listing
.
#2654
HOllE. ACREAGE AND MORE - I story home
w~h alum. siding, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, eat-in
kitchen. ApproK. 44.9 acres, barn, several
outbuildings, pond, 2 silos, some newer fencing.
Land lays well.
#2600
VACANT PROPERlY - 12} Two-acre tracls of
land. Nice location for your new home. Access lo
Raccoon Creek. Approx. 5 miles south of Gallipolis,
$7.500 each.
'
J2601
2 IIOBILE HOMES1!!
(1988 FLEMING: 2
bedrooms, bath, living room, range, refrigerator
and draperies, central air. 1978 RICHARDSON: 2
bedrooms, bath, living room, completely furnished, fronl porcht . Both mobile homes are
undeoginned. Nice flat over an acre lawn,
$35' o.
J2663
PRICE REDUCED ON THIS 58 ACRE FARII Remodeled 6 room house w~h bath. A barn for
storage of cattle and a workable garage. Some
tilable land, fenced pasture and some timberland.
Ru1al water recently install ad. Clay Township, all
min8ral rights included. Our reduced lis~ng price,
only $48,500.
J2590
NEW USnNGI RANCH &amp; APPROX. 44 ACRES
located in the city school district. All acreage lays
very nice. Pond, mineral rights. Call tor more
details.
*2649
GEORGES CREEK ROAD. Knw CrHk Schools.
- Appro~ . 1,440 sq. ft., 3 bedroom, 2 bath
doublewide dh living room, dining area, central
air, carport and sltnge building. All on .30 of an
acre m/1. $29.900.
*2639

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS FINEST- ApproK. 105
acres wllh newer contemporary stone and cedar
home. Spacious rooms, in-ground pool, nice barn,
Rutland area. Call for details.
#2574

NEW LISTING! LOCATED IN SYRACUSE on
appro~ . 2 acres with river view. 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, family room and much more. Call for appt.
N2659
$32,000. LIKE NEW CONDITION - 3 bedroom
ranch. 1 car attached garag~ livilg room, balh
and more. Located at Rutland.
.2647
COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING- Oownstairs used for
businass, Upstairs is an apartment. Presently fully
rented. Will pay for itself. Only $22,000.
#2632
.
BI -LEVtl WITH 4 BEDROOMS. den, family room,
211 baths. hcellenl condition, greal location. Call
for appointment.
J2606
LAND- Over 52 acres. E~cellent building site.
J2646
TWO STDIY HOllE - Well maintained, 3
bedrooms, basement. 2 car garage. Nice wood
floarinjlhroughoul Located in Middleport. Asking
$37,500.00.
#2648

HOllE IS WHERE THE HEART IS and you can lee!
the warmth and charm of this 2 story brick
throughout. 3 bedrooms, spa cious living room,
formal dining room, eat-in kitchen, bath, 2
en closed porches, basement. barn, garage, 17
acres. Private location. Situated at surlaced road.
Call tod ay.
#2583
LOCATED JUST ONE IIILE FROM TOWN IN
GREEN TOWNSHIP - 2 bedroom ranch wilh
livingroom , bath, dining area, utilityroom, storage
buildin&amp; covered patio and carport on 1.88 acres
more or less. $39,900.
#2630
GREEN 10WNSHIP - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1985
sectional on block found ation wrt h living room,
family room, formal dinin g, large eal·in kitchen,
utilty room, 2'h car carport. covered deck ,and
palio. All this on landscaped 8 acres. Call tooay.
#2652
HOllE SWEET HOME - REDUCED TO $49,900
- Lovely 3 bedroom br ick and frame ranch.
Huge family room with cathedral ceiling and
fireplace, slluated on corn er lot in theCOfl)munity
ot Vinton.
#2623
BRAND NEW - Well almost. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
dining room, family room , central air. Owner has
lived here less than a year. Situaled on appro~ .
1.77 acres. Be the first lo see I his one!
#2634
IN TOWN - Two bed room one story vinyl sided
home with living room, bath, family room, fo1mal
dining and krtchen an large fenced·in lot with
slorage build i n ~ $38,900.
M2650
VACANT LAND - 67.25 acres more or less
partially wooded with mineral fi ght s, good hunting
land in Morgan Twp.
N2592
1974 SHUlll mobile home and over 31 acres.
Total electric wijh air. Newer unde rpinnin~ 2
bedrooms, living room, bath, kijchen, equippad
with range, refrigerator and range wood.
M2&amp;57
NEW LISTING! PRIME DEVELOPIIENT PROP·
ER'IY! - Situated in back and to the side of
Pinecrest Nursing Home. Over 74 acres. Call tor
more informat ion.
•~
#2651.

Put your trust in Number One:

·,
'

It ond • - trodornorlaooiCentury 21 Real £1tat&lt;Corpomi&lt;ll1. tQuo1 Opportunity Empl&lt;7r&gt;r
EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AI'ID OPERATED.
'

••

�Times· Sentinel
71 Auto's For Sale
RfO HOT b•eMntl Drug dMI· 1981 Eoata euoo Coil 614. .. a.._ baau.. IMenw •o'd. 4411-4641 oft• 5 PM.
.......... Your tre•. Buv-rs
Ouid&amp; f1) 805-117-1000, ID1.

S-4112.

1982 PontiiiC J- 2000. 2 door.
.,to, good co ndition. a2100.
Go\lllfnmlftt Stiized Vehld• Call 814-992-SOBI!Ii •fltt 6 :00.
from t100. Fords. Merced•.
Corvette~. Chwys. Surplu a. Buy Go....,nment lliHd tnd
luyera B.!ida (1) 105-117· 1urplu 1 .,..hid• from • 100.
1000 &amp;t. -10189.
Fordl, Ch•vs. Corvttt•. etc ..
In your lfee. Fot ~to ~:~1111 1102)
1tlllluldo Stovlork. 4 doO&lt;. ob&lt; 842· 1051 '"'· 645 5.
cylndor. AC. "'"'"'· PS. Oood .::..:.::._.:...;,._ _ _ _ __
cond. RN.Icect. . t 4000. c.n For ,I greet de.II on 1 ~or ueed
114-4411-0577.
.
c.. b'uCk or*'· ••Kenny Ban
at. Jim Mink Chevro l et ~
1871 Buick W•gon.. 19n Un· Oldemoblle. 814-446-3172 or
colrt • dr. (for •u). Mllctofftr. 773-6134.
Coll614-4411-3115 ony~me.
1174 Je..,, uc... cond, many
n., perts-t1600. IOC80. excel.
cond. ·
250 Eltln.,.., wr;
f•t. mlftY new P.rt• 11500. call
614-. .2-5883.

71 Auto' s For Sale

Ooodoondlt lon.
Vehld•~~~~~~~~:~:

from t100. FO«&lt;•. Merctd•.
cGoverl'lmltl'l
......u... ChSlUed
.. yo. Surplus.
Buyoro vutde. 1· 8011-187·$000
e... s 98011.
1979 Mlt'eu ry. 302 V8 enalne.
•to .. goodtlr• . call &amp;14-992·
2858.

1981 Chwrottt M-'lta.l Stationwagon. &gt;Nell equlpp«J,Incktdlng
C . B. fldio, nMfronttM, good

72

Trucks for Sale

72

Trucks for Sale ·

1182 Diltsun King C. b. 1!11 ,000
mil-. etuo, PS.PB, ,..window
dafoocl•. nice truck. 304-17155761.
Pick up t.cll, Ford Ch.,rol.t,.

1977 Chwy pldtuptruck ~ ton.
camp• top, 1110w plow. t11500
or be.t off•. C.lt 814-38f.
9685.
'

1981 ChiPiy TniCII. Also 1111
bado · - gooc! ...... 51 .000 Oh.. four door. Call 114-985.
•ct._.l ml•. •sldng •2150. Bob 3839.
Hoolllch 614-992-5292 &amp;p.m . orc~nMHenat109High 1983 Fora 5 150. L•l11 T...ck.
St. Pomeroy . Evtnlngt or 302 ttandlrd. Clll 114-742weekendl.

lo!'l orllhort, na ru.... 30~1751288.

73

Vans 8o 4 W.O .

1977 Dodge Pu1. v.,, . AC.
cru-.. Ae•on~~ble. Call 814448-7025.

73

Vans 814 W.O.

1988 SU OMC 4 WO Jimmy.
v-a. 2. a ..... toad~. 1s. ooo
mil•. 114,500. Cell 814-2469122.
1979 Ch..,y Suburb~n . 9 pasunger. Excellent condition. R•
bull 350englne. Calli 814-9827789.
1979 Plymouth window wn.
•uoo.oo. 30W7rH429.

. '79

BRONCO RANOER XLT.
new '"dltlt, 61 ,800.00. 3048711-4131.

September 11. 1988

September 11, 1988 · ~
74 Motorcycles

74 " Motorcycles

1980 ...,nda lnleratate. One
Like n.w. Cell 114-4481079.

...
i

&lt;Wimtr.

1983 Honda ISO 3 Vlof\Hier·
t300, Oo-cwt• 1 mo. old. newwes •3815. A...ng t271!1i firm.
Call 614-4411-4031
3 wheet Trille. Cr.lg.- """ •
tires, AM -FM·Call. Captein
• ••· TV. luggtgt compartmont •2500. Coil 814-21111856.
1985 &amp;11uld LT 230 Q.lod
nmner. n 500. C.ll 114-3782797.

1986 Hondo XR 20~ . ApPfo"' • ''
400 origlnol mH• . et4-949'
2414 Of 304-875-15893.

A:t. 31 C~eSela~. parts ..,...Ice
and KCIII~ IIVII..,.t for
Honda. ~..~~~. Sululd tnd
Yamlh&amp; 304-171-4130.

f -.::..:.~:_:.::__

_ __-:--

1188 vz 490, uc cand, 304-' • .. .
882·3397.

. .
~

Moving out ot t:lllte must aell

t1,1DO.OObilcea7te.oo. 1880
Honda 800 CB C~om . exn
.... 304-678-4038.

~

.···'• '

1113 Trlftt·Am, V- 8,etOI~
inj.:tlon, ..,to.• rwcwo lnletior,
•·ioodod. 25.000 mil-.
•&amp;.97!1 ftrm. CaU 114-4414031

'

,.• '"

Real

·..-••

OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

1:00-4 :30

1 :00·4:30

1:00-4:30

74

Motorcycle•

G&amp; JCycleP•tsandS.vtce for
tiJ Jap-.,- bik• .nd ATV.
F•ctorv trwlntd technld.-. Qwy
Klmwird, 304-178-1566.

75

;2~79~·~-~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~ ~·

Real Est81e General

•eoo.

71 Auto' s For Sale

.

.

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

Boats and
Mo1ors for Sale

1917 27 ft. Criocroft Cavoilor
CllbinCruiHr. P•tllll.., ••tared.
327 motor. Sleep~ 4. ~nl&lt;.

stove. b•hfoam wtr:h uall•.

015000. Coli 514-2411-9122.

1987 Jau Tracker ToUrrwnent
'TX17,
hp motor. 3 batterl-.
lift JKk..._ LCR 200 Or•ph
trollng motor. 41 lb thrutt,.
a1.000.00 and •ke over P41V•
mento, 13.400.00. 3045711-2833.

•s

78

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Ut ect Tranami~tlont . All lnttr·
nllty Inspected. 30d.,aguertnt . .. w. buy UWitmilsiona. C.ll
814-4•6-0918 . Rebuilding
av•il•ble.

1983 Oldtrnablle 98. Motor and
trlnsmb slon. 304-773-51!1 1.
Tlr• Md batter!• salt ISept.
ht-17tht. Auto Ur-. $28.50
Plir. Light truck tlret, t15. ttch.
New &amp;00 AMP biUer les,
128.915 . . L and L Tire Barn,
33861 Pine Grow Road, Recine. Ohio tn..- Ftve Poln11)
I 14-992· 6344.

79 Motors Homes
&amp;Campers
1968 tr•il er Kin g ctmptr.
Sleeps 8 a r make• nic. wagon.
1200. C.ll 114-256-6010, or
441-7749.

18ft. AWl! on camper.... up at
the Ohio River. ltlf contlllntd.
11200. CAll 814-887-·389.

19n 17 fl. VIking PGP-10&gt;
c1mptr. Good ltoncltion. $100;
King Woodbu,..,., Good condition . 1226. CAll 814-9925 693.
.

79 Motors Homee
8o Campers
19815 RV. 21 ft. cl•llic Ch..:J
ch.-. lo8ded with ~an-,.

81

....... 304-e711-4551 .

1984 Tor'Y T.,.,.. 24 It - t l
Mil ... bUnk bedl. .... COrttalntd, tlr cond, twnlng. micro-

WIVe own, 11.110.00. Eugene
. . . , . cell tfter 1:003~895-

3138 ""'' 304-6711-1981.
Ford Arrow Motor Home, 18 fl
IOnQJ OOod cond, 13.999.00.

304-1711-e886.

81

s~rvlu:s

Home
Improvements

Home
lmprovemants

Ak. . TrooTri mmlngond St"'"P
Remowf. FrM ntlmatet. Cllll
304-176-7121 .

BABEMENT

J &amp; H Construction, roafing.
room t ddhlont. .emodellng•nd
gMirll
16 vrs exPtrl.,ce. free•tinmet. 304-67 5-

WATERPROORNO
Unc:onciUorwl lff•lme !iJU8r.,..

.._ Local ...... C* fur. . t.d.
Fr• Mtl,....... Cell collect

1·114-237·0418. d .... nlg!tt.
RogertBittment
WM•prooflng.

82

Plumbing
8o Heating
AND HEATING

85

Ganeral Hauling

An/dent.- or commercl-' w itIna. New swvlce or r..-lra.
Ueented electrician. &amp;tlmatt
frte. FUd..aur ElecuiCIII, 304175-1788.

Wotor dolhlory . 1000 p i RI•onable prAc.. ..,............,
dtltvo,.. Coiii14-H2-1278.

85

Watttnon' t Wtttr Heullng,
rHiontbte r•tft, l m~••
2.000 gllllon diiMry , ••nt.
pooJ.. V1118ll, ..-c. c .. 304-1712918.

3213.

Cor. Fourth •nd Pine
Galllpolt, Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 or 11._
4411-4477

WMted - Motor for 1978 Dodge
DiJSIIOrNt. 304-n3-&amp;193

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

rep•.

CARTER'S PLUMBING

Real Estate General

84

7

Gan•al Hauling

Dillard W•er S.-vlce: Poolt.
Cl•tern•. Wells. Delivery Altv·
tlmo. Coli 614-446-7404-No
Sund-r talll.
A &amp; R W•er SII'Yice. Poolt.

87

Upholstery

cleterns, well•. lmmecll•t•·
1, 000 or 2,000gallonadefhtery.
Coil 304-57&amp;-6370.

Real Estate·General
RON EVANS ENTI!RPRISES·

1987 Dodge Sh.:low, loaded,
1980 Dodge DSO 4WO , Call
814-3811-9301 .

.'

SeptiC - k pumpln9-

•
·~

Bl
-LIKE NEW
In country. 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, large family room, nice and
modern kitchen, dining room wrth French doors loa 14' &gt;14'
redwood sundeck, 2 car garage, Andersen windows, Rae·
coon Twp., one acre level land. You must see this home.
Phone now-for appointment.
H675

1111 Ford F.armont. StNight 8.
n•
w.. •eoo. C•III14-24&amp;91U

1183 Dido. Cuttua Su.....,..
V-8 . auto., PS. PB,
..,, cruiM, titl. 70.000 mH•.
Elccet. lhiPe. C.ll 114-2458081.
lrought~W~.

LEADINGHAM lEAl ESTATE

1187 Nil-. Sentr1, ,.._,ual,

PS, PI, AC. atereo. turwoof.
24.827 mil•. Auume ~­

Charming home,
easy to maintain. 2·3 bedroom home w~h living
room, eat-in Krtchen and I bath. Full basement.
Easy to heat. Nice deck oft back. Small yard .
Perfect for singles. $28,500.
#219

1 :00·4:30

1978 Ford Thund•blrd. cruile.
moon roof, dual•h.,•l. 12100
or bMt off•. 0.11 814-2581104.

'

TrM • ttump •m~l. tre• II
shrubt, ... one, mu~. grtvlll.
firewood delivered. Don's
Lon doc.... I 14-441l-914e.

.......... •

~

ADDIS~N .... New Lis;in&amp; -

OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

o.,.., Willi.-na, 304-

.

P•ntlng: Interior • E•rk)r.
Froo ootlm-. Coli 814-44118344.

•

cam, 780 HoH.,. DP Muncy
trans. *4000. Cell 114-2459122.

•eo pw

lood. Coli 1·100.537· 9528 .

"~

1988 Z 21 C.m•o, pM"tielly
reuDNd. HG-194heecl. 610 lfl

mtrttt. Catl
175-1•71

Sunday Times-

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

~

could be
like this anymore." Has
plan which includes side
room and living room, 4
bedrooms
located at opposite end) ..
complete
with new appliances, i car
garage plus an eKira 24&lt;24 garage, located on 2. 1
acres on Rl. 160. $89,900.

#408
OFFIC OPEN SUNDAY

Real Estate General

PRIVATE IN THE PIN£51 - 4 year
, modern home features sunken fam~y
room
sliding glass doors out to patio; lormal
living room. modern kitchen w~h lovely oak
cabinets, ulitrty and large unfinished room that
owner will customize to your needs - playroom,
office, bedroom? Stunning carpel and wallpaper
throughout. Insulated min~ba(n out back for your
projects. All this wrth 2 car attached garage on 10
acres! We knew it was just what you wanted. Call
us today!

·

••...

...

•
at-this maintenance free ranch's door. 3 bedrooms, I bath,
farge kitchen wrth oak cabinet~ Spacious bedrooms. dining
room living room . Well insutljled and has Thermopane wtndows: Attached garage on level lot. Quiet street. AssumabtP.
mortgage. Owner an&gt;ious to sell at $38,000.
#801

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY - 446-3644

U04

1:00-4:30

Speeding motorists should remember 1hat it is
b81ter 10 be a little 181e down here than too early
up there.
·

OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

1:00-4:30

1184 Ponti.: Grand Prbc LE,

Fetty Tr• Trlrnrring. lhmp
remcMI. Call 304-175-1331.

Ro•rv or cable tool driUng.

Mottwdtoomplltldumed-v.
PUmp .... md 18f'Vic&amp; 304.
8911-3802
RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
hou• ctll MrYidng G E. Hot
Point. waahen, dryen and
trtoves. 304-871-2388.

.,

V·8, AC. PS. PB .... CC. RWO ,
auto.. buckc •••· 27 M PO.

Good condiUon. Negotl•bl•
.11100. Call 814-2511-8257.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

1984 Oadgo Colt 2 dr. 46. 000
'"....

•

apd.

814-379-2728.

*2150. Call

REALESTATE

111M Plymouth Horlron 4dr.. 4

WHO COULD ASJ( FOR ANYlHING MORE? Owner has moved to Florida and desires an
immediate sale of this outstanding home and IO
acres. This 12 yr. old qualrty home has 2700 sq. ft.
of living space which includes 4 bedrooms. famtly
room with woodbumer. huge ground level rec.
room, wife approved kitchen (all appliances stay
long wrth a pool table and grand piano), large
inground pool. Also features an outstanding
40&gt;60 2-story garaga The 10 acres is a flat to
gently rolling meadow located in the crty school
district near Rio Grande on a state highway. Not
many like this on today's market. $1f9.500.

462 2ND AVE. REAR

.,d. t2100. Coil 814·3792728.

Jim and Bonnie Stutes - !~~~,·~~.~~
Tammy Moore, Realtor -

1881 Otrhun2DOSX t2DOOor
b•t Dff• or trade 1Dr pidcup.
Colll14-317-0!141.

~~!Y!!,!!~R!£! !..:~~~=

1918 Pord Mu~t~ngM11chl. 351

Mndlor. •to. Aell Sh•PI
e38oo. Coil 114-888·8463.
Proatorvll~

1983 Cam1ro. 31 . 000 mil•.
loMed. AIIW ,_int &amp; Cralger
wh .... • l'lldl• . E~~tcll. cond.
uooo 080 . Coil 814-25111115.

WIOI
OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

1811JHondiCivicDX. AT. PB, 3
d•. HB. 13495. Call 814-2455078.

/

QUALITY BRICK RANCH - wrth fuU basement in
afamily neighborhood. Tell me more! 4 bedrooms,
Ill baths, living room and huge family room,
eat·in kitchen with nice cabinets and all
appliances stay. More! Big indoor workshop for
your handyman. More! Crty schools. More! 5 year
old roof and central air. Priced to give you MORE
at $52,000.
#803

OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

1 :00·4:30

1 :00-4:ll0
EXCELLENT INVESTMENT PROPERTY
NEIGHBORHOOD - Only $29,900.00. 3 bedrooms.
kikhon w/ appliances, L.R. Home has vinyl sidin&amp; gas heat,
air. Flat lot. Don 't let a good buy like this pissyou by.
I
- 8% fi&lt;ed rate.
$250.00.

1114 Carva.t:te. Glau top,
white, la.le.l 50, 000 miles.
&amp;eel. cond. S14,000firm. C•ll
514-258-8475.
1911 Olcll. Omega. needsworkteoQ. 1981 Otevv Statton
Wagon, good cond. *2600 or
boot olfet. Coil 614-388-9188.

ACROSS

- Make us an offer we
· refuse! - owner is building a new home
needs lo sell his present home so he can move
h•'•"• tho snow falls. This ~vely 3 bedroom ranch
is
i crty schools and is conven ientto both
the
and Rio Gran~e. The kids can play in
the fenced backyard while you refa. on the
spacious covered patio. The large eat-in k~chen
will delight the lady of the house. Living room,
cozy family room w~h woodburner, and if that's
not enough, the washer, dryer, range and
refrigerator stay!! As~ng $33,500. Don't let this
bargain pass you by!
H601

1 Embrace
6 Word of sorrow
10 Secure
14 Threefold
19 Retrea1
. 21 Cripple .
22P._,tty
23 More flexible
24 Ensnares
2tl Brilliancy
28 Lock lea1ure
2G JapM ending
30 Machine for
grinding grain
32 Stalk ol grain
33 Animal

'OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

1 :00·4:30 .

enclosure
3&lt;1 Fu11
35 Nul11nce
37 North American
oc:oter
39Declmllbaae
40 Thfla1er box
.
41 Hebrew measure
42 Antlered
animal .·
44 Become le88
good
46 Danish Island
47 Dry
48 Transac11on
50 Wandered
llmlfluty
52 FISh eauce
53 Hebrew month
55 Lan1ern
57 Agave plant
•
58 Mix
59 Spoken
60LU1ecMJm
symbol
62 Cui oH
&amp;4 Soil
58 French article
68 Equally
69 Bridge
70 Wire measure
71 Unruly child
73 Ctotheemaker
75 Tidier
77 Cupola
78 Fine crOII·
otroke on
letter
80 Rends
81 Snake
82 Fixed portions
&amp;4 PIIJ'phlets
86 Gtouy fabric

1979 Conlette. l011ded, blue,
Mldng e9.500.00. 814-992·
5531 ot 304-675-5332.
1 I 84 Ouwrolst Ch IIVtltft CS, air
cond. good cond, 81,800.00.
1978 C:Ott wagon $350.00.
304-458-1542.

NICE STARTER HOME - Cheshire area
offers 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, family room, 1
room. Srtuated on 2.42 acres. owner an&gt;ious
sell. $20.000.

1992 Pontiac Firebird,i.ir, a-t.

new tirel. he. Condition. Char·

#702

RIO GRANOE
$73.900- 2,924 sq. h. liv ingspace, 3 bedrooms. formal
entry, d i n~n g room. complete kitch en. bu ill· in microwave.
fam ily room. 'ilereo· interco m

co•l gr11y. $3.500. 304-6752749.

1980 Citation Ouw. 4 door
,.ndltd. 4 cyl. 0450. 304-882·
2714.

A· FRAME ~ Owner moving away. Needs property SOLO!
Make usa REASONABLE OFFER. Can buy w/ 12 or 42 acres.
Very nice home &amp; 3 car garage.

1980 Fairmont Ford station
Wigen. exc. running CDnd. &amp;
'""' .. euoo. 304-875-2058
or 875-5141 .

GREAT PRICES FOR VACANT LAND••••

1979 F•lrmont. 8 cyl. auto,
AM·FM radio, fir!Jf •4&amp;0.00.
304-875-8169 oft"' 5:00PM.
1918 Otry .... La B•ron. 4 door,
nM .-int . • ,.., bllttery, brakee.
t996. Call814-992-7214.

ssssssssssssssssssssssssssss
S 121\ ACRES FOR $13,500.00- Nice country loca· !
S l ion. 14 miles from c~y. Potential building site. Good •

Real Estate General

sssssssssssssssssssssssssssss

S

S
S

soil w/ tobacco base. Call offi ce for more information.
JUST LISTED- A lot just minutes from town. Con·
tain s electric, water &amp; sewage. City schools.

S
S
S

TEAFORD

•ssssssssssesssssssssssssss~

·REAL EsTATE

$ HUNTER'S RETREAT - 25 acres m/1. Very reaso- $
$ nably priced. Land has great potential. A good loca· S
$ lion tor a cabin or greenhouse operation. FREE gas for S

S

216 East Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

2 dwellings. Secluded. Pri ced in the $20's.

S

ssssssssssssssssssssssssssss

NEW LISTING-Li ke new 3
bedroom ranch near Five
Points. Walk-in cl osets, nice
lg. kitchen, high effici en cy
furnace. dining, full base·
ment and garage. $70,000.

HOME - 1.4 acres. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen
w/a ppliances. Priced $20's,
ARE YOUR KIDS LEAVING FOR COLlEGE? DOES YOUR
HOUSE SEEM JUST TOO BIG NOW? ... Then you'll want to
take a look at this 2 bedroom, I bath home. located just mi·
nules from town. Offers living room, family room w/fire·
place, eat-in kitchen, back pat10, front porch, 2 car garage
w/ opener. Very cozyhome for two with agreat deal of room.
$42,000.

NEW LISTING - 6 rm.
home on Mulberry. 2 BRs,
gas furnace, fireplace, din·
ing rm ., equipped krtchen,
full
basement. co pper
plumbing and garaga Just
$24,900.

NEW LISTING - 1.590 ACRES more or less. 3 bedroom
home. 2 baths, krtchen w/appliances. F.R., forma) din in&amp; 2
lg. covered patios.

NEW LISTING- 2 1evel lots
on corner. 12 rm. house. 5
Brm ~ . 2 baths, gas turnace.
new kitchen-equipped,
dining rm. and 2 porches.
$40,660.

PRICE REDUCE0 ... $14,500.00 on this small cottage in the
country. The location of this 3-2 bedroom, 1 bath cotta~e
provides a quiet country setting srtuated on 5 acres m/ 1tn
Greenfield Township, A great buy.

NEW LISTING - 3 BRs, air
conditioned home. total
elec. Liv. rm. 18&gt;24, in·
sulaled, copper plumbing
and garage. Want $32,000.
Rutland.

.FARM JUST LISTED- 21acres farm for only $36,000. A mu st
to see! Includes alarge barn. tool shed and cellar. Fen ces
surround these beautiful actes and cement block home,
w/2 bedrooms, I bath, living room w/new woodburner.
Call office for appointment. to show. Located near Coal "
Co.
·

flEW LISTING -

3 acres
near Racine. Just off 124 on
East end.

FARM - Very nice, remodeled 1900 farm house. Many
additions add to the' charm oft he secfuston. 116 acr~s
m/ 1, 4 bedrooms, ltvtng room, dining room, large eat·tn
kitchen, bath, pantry, enclosed patio. 2 car garage, barn,
ch icken house,.milk house &amp; more! Great place to raiSe
family. A place to really enjoy &amp; PRICED RIGHT!

NEW LISTING -

Remodeled 3 bechom home in
Syracuse near PO. New gas
furnace, new k~chen, car·
~etina and two level lots.

$27,500.

GREAT NEW LISTING IN HIDEAWAY ACRES! Located in Green Township,\! mile oft Rl. 141,1ttis
2,200 sq. n. home offers comfortable country
living at tis best. Very nice floor plan includes 3
bedrooms (14&lt;24 master bedroom, lull na10,targe
walk-in closet and has sliding glass doors leading
'to a cool screened -in porch), e&gt;ha roomy tamily
room. tormal dining. eat-in kitchen and living
room. U-shape design of house makes large new
deck .accessible to 3 rooms. Flat 1.3 acre lot is
spacious enough for garden, pool, rec. area and
then some. Attached 2 car garage and outbuilding
$79,900.
#216
lAUNCH YOUR BOAT from the frontage of 1.5
acres on Raccoon Creek. You'll appreciate the
care the owners have given the 1460 sq. h. home
wrth 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, partially tinished
basement, 2 car garage and large deck. A very
nice home! $59,900.
#407
PROFITABLE BUSINESS FOR SALE- Tired of a
deadend job' Do you want to control your own
future? This could be a business opportun~y for
the right persons. Owner needs to sell this
successful bu siness in order to e&lt;pand other
busin ess ventures. It you are ambitious, hard
working and want to be your own bos~ give us a
call today for details. Owner may consider some
financing to a qualitied person.

#602
GARDENER'S DELIGHT - Years and years of
care and maintenance have gone into this
property. So much so, it's shame the owner can't
take it with him. But that means a great
opportunity for you. Large flat manicured Ill acre,
m/ 1, lawn with over 20 frurt Ire~. blueberry
bu shes. grape arbor and targe.cuHivated garden.
4 bedroom home in equally good condition has
large living room wrth attractive stone fireplace,
11! baths, spacious basement. Plus. 40x40
workshop in back for the hobbyist. Complete with
forced air heating system. I car garage plus
carport. $59,900.
#222
A· I. TOP NOTCH, FIRST CLASS- We could go on
and on about the condrtion of this tidy 3 bedroom
home in town. Located on the river, rt has all the
conveniences you're looking for. All appliances
stay including washer and dryer. Full basement.
Welt landscapBrl lot. Maintenance free. Easy to
heat. I car garage $56,900.
#226

LATE SUMMER SAVINGS - Price Reduced Was $139.900, Was $129,000. NOW $119,000!!!
- Owners comments: "I own two expensive
homes, side by side, over l9&lt;1king the river, one of
which I don't need. After a buyer looks, I think
they wilt agree that there is no prettier or more
convenient ~cation. My lot runs to the river which
provides a place lor boat docks, a garden, private
picnic area, etc. We have ~njoyed the location so
much for so many years thai I built a new, smaller
home ne&lt;t door. Winter is coming soon .and I'm
interested in making someone a real bargain on
the big house.

#238

Don't
tell

anyone!

"LOOK AT THIS" - If you can find a better buy,
Buy ill! But before you do, you 6etter "lookattftls"
· one. We think it's the best buy on tne marKet tor
$69,900. "Look at this" list of features:
2500 square feet of living space
3 fuU baths (no waiting)
4 bedrooms (no small ones)
'
Equipped kitchen
Dining room
2 car garage
17 years old
City schools, water, sewer
Woodburner in fireplace
Carpel throughout
Quality construction
I Mile to H.M.C.
Shopping close bv
E&gt;cellent neighborhood
Your builder will tell you that rt takes $40.00 a sq.
ft. to build (not countingthe lot)lfyou don'taskfor
too many e&gt;tras. $40.00 X 2500 sq. ft.
$100,000. At $69,900, you're getting the extras.
Maybe you better "Look at this"!

=

That's right, don't tell anybody
about your house being for 8&amp;!e and
no sale will be realized,

but
If you list your home or businss with
us, It is pouible that it will be sold .
Ju81 give us a call and by using our
Signs and newapaper advertising. it
usually pays off. REALLY WORTH
A TRY.
.
MODIFIED A·FRAM£ - 2 yr. old uniquely
designed home wrth a sense of openness but,
maintains distinct living areas. Has 3 bedrooms, 2
full baths. livin~ room.larl!l! kitchen with pantry,
sitting/sewing area wrth sliding glass doors to
balcony. Located on 3.1 acres, tnts nome nas z
decks and is on the market for the first time.
$59,900.

#402

SLIMMEO DOWN PRICE .....$4,000 reduction
makes this ranch lrte on your budget. Motivated
owner wants to sell this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home
NOW! Fireplace in living room, dining room, 2 car
garage. Heat pumD, new carpet througllout.
$55,500. Interested! Call today!

1

#tD4

11211
VILlAGE OF VINTON -Directly across from the
new elementary school. Situated on 0.7 acres, this
2 story brick/frame home has 7 rooms. bath, lull
basement and a large metal outbuildin, Garden
space, mature trees and 2 porches add to the
country-like senin, Possible loan assumption. ·.
$29,000.
#401
OUT·DF·STAH OWNER 1!1 A BIND!! - Must let
his 3 bedroom brick and frame home go NOW! 2
baths, family room, fireplace, nice flat I acre lot.
Possible VA loan assumption. $57,600. Pick up
that phone and call TODAY!

#304
FARM- 70 acres with appro&lt;. 15 acres tillable.
40 pasture and balance in woods. 810 'lb. tobacco
base. New fence over most of propefly. 3 bedroom
home with nice family room, large eat-in k~chen
wrth lots of cabinets. Beautiful view. S64,500.

#205

PERFECfLY PRICED FOR YOUNG FAMILIES! Smart 3 bedroom ranch located in Kyger Creek
School District. Brick fireplace in living rdom,
partial basement and carport. Very nice shop
building w~h woodburner. Apple trees and grape
arbor. $32,900. What are you warting lorn . . •

.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
(614). 446-3644

POSSIBLE ASSUMABLE LOAN - Very nice private . .
Spl~ level, 3 bedrooms, 2'h baths, 21irepfaces, central atr,
car garaee. on 3 acres.

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E. M. WisemQn, Broker

MERCIAL GARAGE ON STAT£ ROUTE - Call for

BUSIII£55 BLDG. - 22
rms., 4 two BR rentals. lg.
bus. rm. on lsi floor rented.
4 baths,· 2 halls. Asking
$45,000.
PHONE: 992-3326

#IOo

~
i ,t)

-•••.
~-

David Wiseman. 446-3796
Pat Robie, 379-2288

Rae Bea•ley, 446-8128

We Ne .. .'Liatl•t•l

Loretta McDade, 446-7729
B. J. Hairston, 446-4240
PhyUia Miller, 448-8348

~·

••
••
••
••
•

Older 3 bedrm.
remodeled. Very good condition.. L~c~~.~croo:
mus. Barn, 2-car garage, 1'.1 acre. Pnced
UliLIZ£ FOR RESIDENTIAL DR COMMERCIAL, Situated
along busy Rt. 7, Upper River Road. Cornerlot158'K153'.
$35,000.00
IIIC£ BUILDING LOT in Mills Subd., near Ho~er HOSIPilaf
C~y water and sewer. Price $12,500.
TWO BUILDING LOTS IN lOONEY II SO. I for $4.300.
ot~er $5,000.
NEW LISTING: QueiMy buildinR tot in Charotai·:_
sHillis Lal~eEs
tate. Buy now for $12,000.00. AReal Barpm!

PICK IPFRU
RUL ESTATI UITIIIIIM 011 OFFIGI OR
;
YOII U.C OR tROGIRY

87 "- Hospital"
89 Harvest goddess
92 Chore
95 Boote ol maps
· 96 Native metals
99 Poln1ed slake
101 Dlalec1
103 Farm a1ructure
104 Ventilate
'
105 Solitary
106 Tantalum symbol
107 12 moe.
108 Venluresome
110 Sesame
111 C-F linkup
112 Lengthy
113 Actor Clark
115 Poet Eliot
111 Metal fas1ener
119 Tellurium
symbol
120 ArtifiCial Ieeth
121 St. LOUIS
baseball1eam
124'Snare
126 Rallonal
127 Dllflcull
126 Cylindrical
130 Sins
132 Solicitude
133 Female horse
134 Haggard harolne
135 Place lor refuse
137 Relaln
·139 P.-rlslan summer

140 Eotate
141 Wlnler vehicles
143 Expires
145 Female holy
person: abbr-.

146 Irreconcilable
opponan1
148 Entangled
150 Filled to
capacl1y
152 Darts
153 Average
154 Emerald isle
156 Sharper
157 Remains a1 ease
158 Clan
159 Dlspa1ched
160 Tropical frul1s
DOWN

1 Crawl
2 Camera parts
3 Bears witness
10

4 Tille of
respecl

5 English baby
carriage
6 ~arly morn
7 Fall behind
6 Is Ill
9 Grievously
afflicted
10 Mephta1oplleles
11 Again
12 On behalf ol
13- garde
14 Heavy volume
15 Lowe ollllmdom
16 Pertaining to
Moelem religion
17 Wanted
t6 Trial and 20 Heroic event .
23 Old musle_al
Instrument

25 Sluggish
27 lnellna11ons
28 Restaurant

sign: 2 wds.
31 Weaving machine
33 S1rlng
36 South African
Dutch
38 Allowance tor

waste
40 Condescending
look
41 City In Russia
43 Merry '
45 Popeye, e.g.
46 Gats up
47 Wolfhound
49 Send 1orth
51 Babylonian
hero

52 Biblical
mountain
53 Priest's
vestments

54 Wearying person
56 Babbling
59 Surgical
proeedure
60 Delineate
61 Rubber 1rees
63 Mate
65 Crava1s
67 Biller ve1ch
69 "- El-hare"
70 Llghled by
the moon

72 Car tea1uras
74 " - Law"

76 News-gathering
org.

77 Food programa
79 Diltant
83 Alternoon
SOCial .
85 Kinds o1 lowl
86 Supercilious
periOil

87 Pointed otlck
88 Great Lake
89 Stomp ol
approval
90 variety of
llrecracker
91 Remain erect
92 Secret agent
93 Intractable
person
94 That thing
96 Landed
97 Food tlah
100 Eutwood tD
102 Narrow. ftat
board
105 Run eaally
109 Ex1remely
terrible
112 "Superman"
character
113 Challenge
114 Each (ol two)
116 Wln1er vehicle
116 Singing bird
120 Callings
121 Puteboard
122 Sewing
Implements
123 Ornamental
knob
125 Gilt
126 Sareum
127 Workman
129 Arabian
commander
131 Sofa
132 Evergreen 1ree
133 Plane1
134 Incline
136 Sly lOOk
138 Equals
140 Ordtnaneu
141 Break suddenly
142 Wl1hered
144 Hurried
147 Torrid
148 Diocese
149 Noise
151 Meadow
153 Ed.'s concern
155 Nlton symbol

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�Plga

D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport

Workshop to deal with
rural assistance programs
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) -To
grow economically, rural communities can get help from
government programs, but research shows many publiC officials don't know tlie programs
exist, says an Ohio State Univer sity community development
specialist.
Programs range from helping
communities attract business to
helping them adopt new technology, said John D. Rohrer. coordinator of a workshop to explore
assistance available to rural
communftles.
The linking resources workshop Sept. 29 In Columbus is for
publiC officials, community econ.omlc development specialists
and community leaders, Rohrer
said.
Besides showing them what's
out there. it will show them how
the programs ha ve been used, he
said.
Topics to be covered in the
workshop Include government
financing, marketing strategies,

management asslstanc&lt;.&gt; programs and labOr-marketing relations. Each session will be taught
by a representative of a program
a nd a member of a comm unity
that used the program.
Deadline for workshop registration Is S&lt;.&gt;pt. 22. The lee Is $20
and includes workshop mate·
ria ls, lunch and refreshments.
The workshop Is sponsored by
the Rural Development Subcommittee of the Ohio Food and
Agriculture Council in cooperation with the Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service, Economic
Development Administration,
farmers Home Administration,
Ohio Department of Development, Ohio Bureau of Employment Services and Small Bustness Admi nistration.
For information and a registration lonn and brochure, write
John · D. Rohrer, Ohio Cooperativo Extension Service, 2120
Fvffe Road, Columbus, Ohio.
4J210, or cail t614) 292-8436.

Pesticide research
broadened.
manner.''

COLUMBUS, Ohio IVPl ) Startled bv one of their findings ,
Ohio · State Univer-s ity researchers ptari to expand their .
study of pesticides mo\ong
through the environment.
For two years, agronomist
Terry J. Logan and his co tleagues have been studying the
movement of pesticides in surface water. The main focus of the
research is where the chemicals
go and how long they persist in
toxic forms . ·
During their monitoring of
surface water. the scientists
detected pesticide compounds
that hadn 't been used in nearby
areas. Logan said. Thts was
completely unexpected, he said .
"One might ask how that can
happen," said Logan'. "We feel
that we're getting some pes ti cides comtng down in rainfalL
We're doing a tittle bit of analysis
of rainfall presently, but right
now , we 're not really set up to do
it In a very sophisticated

The researchers ha_ve just
ac&lt;J,uired · a special rainfall
sampler that they'll modify for
pesticide monitoring, Logan
said.
"Starting next year, we will
have a much more accurate
handle on what pesticides are
coming down in rainfall," he
said.
The scientists are studying the
most-often used compounds applied to corn and soybeans, the two
major crops In the United States.
These include atrazine, metolachtor, aJachlor and metribuzln.
Atrazine takes the longest to
break down toto other compounds. Logan said. The researc hers have found atrazine in
th e environment a year or more
afler it was applied, he said.
Only preliminary data has
been ga thered so far. Logan said.
lt will take years before
researchers gather enough information to make a detailed
analysis of pesticide movement.

September 11, 1988

Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant. W.Va.

COLUMBUS, Ohio CUPl) Dwarf apple trees are growtng In
popularity among homeowners
because they can be planted In
small areas. Some dwarf trees
are only 5 feet high when fully
grown.
Dwarf apple trees to be planted
next spring should be ordered
from catalogs this fall or bought
from garden centers in early
spring, says Richard Funt, fruit
specialist at Ohio State University. By knowing the rootstock
and cultlvar of the trees you
want, you'll know exactly what
type of trees you're getting.
A common misconception
abOut dwarf trees Is that ,they
produce dwarf apples, Funt says.
The size of the fruit doesn't
change. Dwarf apple trees are
just small trees, he says.
Because of their size, dwarf
apple trees produce less fruit
than regular-sized apple trees.
but that 's attractive to homeowners who can handle only
so many apples, he says. Dwarf
apple .tr~ees will pl'Q(Iuce abOut

~t()Cics•..

one-rtrth toone-tenth the crop of a
-regular-sized tree.
Homeowners with room for
more than one tree can have
several culttvars ripening at
different times, Funt says.
They'll all taste different and
some can be stored, eaten fresh
or cooked depending upon the
cultlvar, lle says. ·
When choosing a tree, remember that cuitlvars fall into
three categories, Funt says.
Summer cultlvars ripen from
mid-July to September 1. Fall
cu ltivars ripen from September 1
to mid-October . Winter cultlvars
ripen in October and are good for
long-term storage, generally un·
til Christmas.
Summer cultlvars are mostly
used In sauces, Funt says. Some,
such . as the Jerseymac, can be
eaten fresh. But summer apples
tend to be soft and don't store
well, he says.
Fall cultlvars are inost common, Funt says. Popular ones
Include Mcintosh, Cortland, Jon-

a than, Delicious and Winesap.
Several cultlvars are resistant
to col'l)mon diseases such as
apple scab and fire blight.
Choosing a disease-resistant tree
means fewH tu ngicide sprays
and that appeals to homeowners
and commercial growers, Funt
says.
Homeowners can explore their
landscape and harvest options by
reading Ohio Cooperative Extension Service Bulletin 758, Apple
Rootstocks and Cultivars, Funt
says.
It covers all aspects of selecting and growing apple trees. By
following Its guidelines, you'll be
able to plant a blend of old, new
and disease-resistant cuittvars
that ripen at different times.
The bulletin Is available from
Ohio countv Extension offices.
Numbers for most offices are
found In the phone book under
county government listing&amp;.
Dwarf apple trees are easier to
prune and spray, Funt says. But
many need support If they have a

heavv fruit load or grow In a
wtndv area, he says. That's
because their roots are brittle
and do not spread but grow
straight down.
A trellis of lour horizontal
wires will support the tree and
train the limbs, Funt says. Each
wire should be 18 Inches apart.
'rhe limbs should be tied to the
wires In a slightly upward
position.
II you don't use a trellis, use
wooden stakes and spreaders,
Funt says. Tie the tree to the
stakes with plastic ties and use
the spreaders to train the limbs,
he says. Any support system
should be in place for the life of
the tree.
All apple trees must be grown
in full sun, Funt says. They do
best when they receive early
morning sunlight, he says.
Trees ordered from catalogs in
the fall should be delivered at the
end of March or first week of
April. They should be planted by
mid-April.

bid by the Pritzker family of
Chicago.
Polaroid rose% to 41% - The

IT'S OUR LIFELINE TO DO THE VERY BEST JOB FOR YOU IN ALL
YOUR BANKING NEEDS AND TRANSACTIONS
In Order to Better Acquaint·You With Our More Than 100 Dedicated
Employees. we :re Going To Conduct A Weekly Contest With
Pictures of 9 Different Employees. Their Names Will Be Included at
the Bottom of the Pictures. All You Need To Do Is Match Names
With The Pictures By Writing The Correct Name Under The Right
Picture. The Person Who Identifies The Most Pictures Correctly Will
Receive A $10.00 Cash Prize From OVB! Employees and Members
of Their Immediate Families Are Ineligible. In Case Of Ties, Winners
Will Be Determined By A Drawing. Winners Will Be Announced Each
Saturday Morning at 9 A.M. Entry Forms Must Be Received Each
Week No later Than 3 P.M. Friday at Any Ban'k location.

Shamrock Holdings Inc.'s unsolicited $42-a·share takeover btd.
Macmlllanjumped3to83Y, ,on

lion was willing to discuss _
boosting Its $80-a-share offer for ~
the company.

;~~
ROll~
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ENJOY THE OLYMPIC GAMES ON A NEW
RCA COLOR TV •••THEY'RE ALL ON SALE!

-

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• ChanneLock digital remote
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• Hi-Con'• square-corner COTY
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• 147-channel cable-compatible
'tuning·
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'W1 1n opl1ona1 s1gna1 splincr Up to 122
CI"I81H'&gt;f!IS WIIMUI SphliiJI Gnetk yOj.H I(IC91
cable company 's compal1tld11y reqU1remtnts

Employees pictured above are: nandy Hammond, Georgia Riehle,
Emerson Evans, Joy Barlow, MlcheUe Loomis, _C onnie Palmer,
Richard Speirs, Betty Brown, Sharon Cremeens.
Mall or deliver entry to any OVB location by 3 p.m. Friday.

IF YOU ARE NOT GETTING.THE SERVICE AND AnENTION YOU D£SERVE, COME
TO OHIO VALLEY BANK, YOUR HOMETOWN BANK, THAT TAKES CUSTOMER
SERVICE SERIOUSlY.
Laot Weok'o Winner: Ho11hlf Swoln, Thurmon, Ohio

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Gilbert
•

•

·galnlng

,,
'

KINGSTON, Jamaica (UPI)H11rrlcane Gtlbert grew In
~trength and smasfted Into the
eastern tip of Jamaica today,
then "aimed Its dangerous 115mph winds at the capital of
Kingston .
At 9 a.m. EDT1 forecasters at
the Natl.onal Hu~ricane Center In
Miami upgraded Gilbert to a
"Category 3" hurricane - one

capable

during the afternoon were Cr0880ver, Charlles
Utile, Sweet Mountain Sound wllh dancing by lhe
Shady R~r Shufflers and Ihe Midnight Cloggers.
(See story and additional photos on page 6).

Ohio records 19 weekend fatalities

20" d1agonal

"And who do you think Is going out to be $30,000 for each person
to pay for for that new tax break7 earning more than $200,000. '
Look at your kids. Look at your
Nonetheless, Dukakis still
parents. Look In the mirror and never mentioned what Bush
ask yourself, can we afford four proposal he was talking a bout
more years of thatT' Dukakis when he made his charges - an
asked.
, omission that may have left his
Dukakis is correct that the listeners puzzled over what the
wealthy would benefit the most vice president had In mind. And
from the plan. Despite the Dukakls's data may also be
governor's rhetoric, however, suspect, if only because It Is four
the tax reduction would be years old . His campaign's advisenjoyed by only those wealthy ers said those are the latest
people who sold property subject figures available.
to tax. And even then, a capital
Both candidates realize that
gains profit In the vicinity of taxes are a major Issue In this,
$230,000 would be necessary to and every, election. But their
generate the $30,000 tax break arguments on the matter are far
Dukakls cites.
from a lull discussion of the
By the end of last week, the Issue, even though they state
governor had fine- tuned his rhetheir cases as absolute fact.
toric to be more accurate, noting
Each camp, however, can try
that the tax break would average
Continued on page 10

strength

$549-00

RCA 20'cllagonal
XL-100 Color TV

(8)

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
tax rates drastically,.and there- go to all people earning more ing money - a position almost
UPI Poll&amp;lcal Writer
fore concluded that no special than $200,000.
completely opposite from Bush's
WASHINGTON CUP!)
rate was required for capital
Neither position from the presi- contention.
George Bush and Michael Duka- gains. Currently, all capital dential candidates is complete
Dukakls, meanwhlle, has been
kis, taking advantage of the gains are taxed as regular and each Is open to a number of relying on 1984 Interfl!ll Revenue
Income.
publiC's generally vague underserious questions.
Service figures to argue that ·
standing of the nation's tax laws;
Bush, however, clinging to a
For example, there Is consider- Bush's proposal would be a
are both bending the facts to try supply-side argument, has sug- able doubt about the accuracy ot giveaway to the wealthy at the
to score political points over ges1ed that even with the lower Bush's prediction that cutting the expense of the middle class.
whether a Republican tax cut Income tax rates, special treat- capital gahls rate would actually
In speeches In the past week,
proposal would be an economic ment should be reinstated for Increase goverrunent revenues.
the Massachusetts governor bestimulant or a gift for the capital gains because such a
In the writing of the sweeping gan charging that the GOP Idea
wea)thy.
·
move would spur investment and 1986 tax changes, congressional would, amount to a $30,000 tax cut
At Issue is the RepubliCan vice stimulilte the economy. The tax experts effectively avoided a for people earning more than
president's desire to. restore a increased economic activity, hard answer on the matter by not $200,000, making It appear that
lower tax rate for capital gains- Bush argues •. would have the net labeling the changes in the the break would go to all wealthy
the profit from sales of Items result of providing more money capital gains rate as either a · Individuals, even if they had no
such as stock and certain to the goverrunent.
revenue loser or a gainer.
capital gains.
property.
But, there was a general
Dukakis, meanwhile, has been
Dukakls told a large Labor Day
The favored treatment was
using extremely vague terms to · assumption by many of the rally In Detroit that Bush "wants
dropped In the 1986 tax reform attack the proposal - often drafters . that by elbninatlng the to give those who make $200,000 a
law when Congress and Presi- making the Idea appear to be a special treatment of capital year or more a tax break of
dent Reagan cut regular Income · major income tax cut that would gains, the goverrunent was gain- $30,000.

MUSICIANS PERFORM- Thill group of young
mullictapa known as Amlx provided p&amp;rt of the
entertainment for the annual Middleport mock
Party Saturday. Other musical group&amp; presented

xl~to

25 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. Newtp•per

Candidates eye points on tax, defense issues

..

*90 DAYS
SAME AS CASH

1 SectiOn. 10 Page~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 12, 1988

MOD. ~1659PR

SALE

(9)

Yot.39, No.88

Copyrighted 1988

~AU THIS WEEK WE'RE
. ..
PARTS &amp; UBOR WAR:AElNlTING 5 fEAR EXTENDED
.
y AT 112 PRICE.

xl~

(1)

I '

5 YEAR EXTENDED WARRANTY
Jl2
,.
.
'I~
RICE .

Chance of rain 60 percent
tonight. Tuesday, cloudy.
IDgh near 80. Chance of rain
50 percent.

•

\

-26" Diag. Screen
-XL-1 00 Chassis
-Pecan

(6)

Daily Number
617
Pick 4
8241
Super Lotto
5-10-12-13-39-44

•

26" REMOTE CONSOLE

(3

Ohio Lottery

Page3

. . .il'.,

Ohio· Valley Bank

(5)

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_______c~o~n~tl~nu~e~d~fr~o~m~D~-1L_~~~--~------~~--~----------~~~--~~~~~
news of a $10-a·share takeover company said It would consider
new~ that Maxwell Communlca- :

week," Bloch said, adding that
Investors would be reluctant to
act ahead of the July U.S.
merchandise trade report next
Wednesday.
Broad market Indicators also
posted modest gains on the week.
The New York Stock Exchange
composite Index rose 1.18 to
150.(!4. Standard &amp; Poor's 500stock Index gained 2.36 to close
the week at 266.84.
Advances led declines 1,130-683
among the 2,136 Issues traded.
Big Board volume totaled
552,800,220 shares, compared
with 642,314,890 last week and
765,648.170 a year ago.
On the NYSE trading floor this
week, Pacific Gas &amp; Electric was
the most active Issue, gaining ')f.
to 17.
.
Exxon followed, down 1% to
45% .
Ohio Edison was third , off% to
18\fo.
AT&amp;T rose 'h to 25'h. TBM
gained % to 114% .
Ramada jumped 2% to 10, on

·cuSTOMER SERVICE ISN'T JUST A GAME AT

(2)

Browns
~ lose another
quarterback

Dwarf apple trees getting more popular ·

•

By United Press International
Four teenagers killed In one
accident and six motorcyclists
killed In separate accidents
raised the state's weekend traffic
death toll to at least 19, the State
Highway Patrol said today.
The count showed six deaths
Friday night, nine Saturday and
four Sunday.
·
VIctims Included:
Friday night
Ashtabula: Larry R. ·Benson,
25, Ashtabula, motorcyclist
killed when his vehicle struck a
deer on Ohio 167 In Ashtabula
County.

r-

·Toledo: Kenneth H. Bragdon,
Roger L. Shields, Edward A.
Lambrecht and Timothy A. Klostermeler, all17 of Toledo, killed
In a one-vehicle accident on a city
street In Toledo.
Fostoria: Cheryi Dieterle, 25,
West Millgrove, killed when tl\e
motorcycle she was riding on
crashed during a. pollee chase on
Ohio 199 north of Fostoria.
Saturday
Springfield: James A. Manning, 14, Springfield, killed when
his motorcycle collided with a
truck on a city street In

Local news

briefs--.~

Rutland man cited by patrol
' at
A Rutland man was cited In a one-car accident Saturday
9:05a.m. on SR 143 in Rutland Township, aboutfour mUes north
of the junction of SR 7, according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.
Roland E. Morris Jr., 18, was cited for not wearing a seat belt
after his 1979 AMC Concord ran off the right side of the road and
hit a mailbox. He was driving south when the accident occurred.

Chamber to meet 'Tuesday
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce will meet Tuesday at 12
noon at the Trinity Church. Guest speaker will be James
Carpenter, Interim superintendent of Meigs Local School
District.

Board

~ts

this evening

The Racine Board of Public Affairs will meet at 7 o'clock
tonight at the S'lt'lne Park.
·

Tour, demonstration Tuesday
In observance of Heart Healthy Food week, Cindy Oliveri,
Melp County Extension Service, will conduct a tour and
demonstration of healthy heart foods at Vaughan's Cardinal in
Middleport at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Tuesday.
She will also dlstrlbu 1e pamphlets of heart health foods In
addition to lntonnatlon from the Meigs Unit of the American
Heart Assn.
Continued on page 10
•

'
~I

Springfield.
North Royalton: Tammy L.
Parks,17, North Royalton, killed
in a two-vehicle accident on a city
street In North Royalton.
Columbus: Danny L. Wymer,
40, killed when his motorcycle hit
a street sign along a Franklin
County road.
Paulding: Ronald D. Blair, 39,
Oakwood, killed when his car hit
a pole along a Paulding County

road. '
Ashland: Jeanette L. Fruth, 18,
Ashland, killed when her car hit a
tree along Ohio 603 In Ashland
County.
Akron: Yvonne L. Fielders, 26,
Akron, passenger thrown off a
motorcycle on a Summit County
road.
Granville: Robert D. Hunt, 85,
Whitehall, killed when the car he
was riding in · collided with
another at a Licking County
Intersection.
Washington, CourtHouse: Wll·
!lam Thomas Sanders, 16, Hillsboro, killed when his pickup
truck crashed on U.S. 62 In
' Fayette· County.
Chillicothe: Imogene Sheese,
13, Hillsboro, killed when the car
she was riding In collided with a
truck on U.S. !50 In Ross County.
Sunday
Castalia: Edmund L. Pawlicki, 79, Elk Grove, Dl., 79, killed
when the car he was riding In
went through a suard rail.and bit
a brldgeabutmentllong the Ohio
Turnpike 111 Sandusky CoWity.
Columbus: Randall J. Belshe,
22, GM\-e City, kllled when hls
motoi'cycle craahedlnto a guard
rail on U.S. 33 011 the IOUtheast
side of Columbus.
Columbus: Crystal L. Collins,
16, k!Ued In an accident on a
Franklin County road.
Greenville: StephenA.Byram,
35, Arcanum, killed wben hll car
hit a pole on a Darke County
road.

or-~

caustna -ex~enslve' ·

damage. The storm was located
on the eastern tip' of Jamaica, 85
miles east of Kingston and was
moving westward at 17 mph.
Further strengthening was expected, hurricane center Director Bob Sheets said. Hurricane
warnings were posted for Jamaica and the southern coast of
Haiti. The Cayman Islands were
under a sbnUar warning and
Cuba imposed a hurricane watch
for Its southern coast east of CabO
Cruz.
Sheets said Jamaica would be
drenched by 5 to 10 Inches of rain
and flash flooding and mudslides
were likely.
"We realize that a very dangerous system Is on our shores,"
said Calvin Gray, a spokesman
for Jamaica's National Meteorological Service.
"The easlern third of the Island
is having light-to-moderate continuous rain and In some areas, It
Is very heavy at times," he said.
'The entire Island has been
receiving gale-force winds" of
between 39 to 54 mph.
Heavy flooding was reported
on parts of the eastern coast.
Authorities began to evacuate
residents of the Portmore district In western Kingston to the
capital's National Arena because
of fears the ocean-front area
would be swamped by heavy
waves and floodwaters.
Gilbert became the first hurricane to hit the Island of Jamaica
head-on since Hurricane Charlie
In 1951, according to John Blake,
director of the Jamaica MeteorOlogical Service.
"
Prime Minister Edward Seaga
held an emergency Cabinet
meeting Sunday and ordered the
capital's National Arena opened
as a shelter and placed pollee, the
armed forces, and government
construction equipment and
work crews on alert.
"Although we have had near
misses In the recent past, this
hurricane appears to be a real
threat," Seaga said In a statement after the Cabinet meeting.
Jamaicans battened down
their homes and other property
and necked to markets that
opened Sunday to provide kerosene, bat1erJes, canned food and
other emergency supplies. Some
stores reported they had sold out
of candles.
'Tbe people are just taking
precautionary measures now," a
spokesman for the islandwlde
Jamaica Pollee Departtnent
headquarters said today.
A halt-toot of rain and 10-toot
waves created by Gilbert's 100Contlnued on page 10

TOP WINNERS - Fred and Barbara Priddy of Rutland are

pictured with their lour foot trophy received as owners of the best
vehicle among the 74 cars competing In the annual car show at
Silturday's block party In Middleport. The car Is a 1968 customized
Corvette wllh a chrome motor. Sponsoring the championship
award was Five Points Express. Mrs. Priddy also won first place
llonors for the best Ford with a 195ll Thunderbird and a first place
trophy In the special Interest c ale gory with the same Thunderbird.

Racine Council hikes
trash collection rates
Racine Village Council passed
an emergency ordinance raising
the rates charged for trash
collection service when they met
last week In regular session. The
new rates, effective Immediately, are as follows:
Residential, $15 per quarter,
$16.50 for outside the corportatlon; light commercial, $18 per
quarter, for no more than six
30-gallon bags, or 'the equivalent,
and as long as a backhoe Is not
required to load; heavy commercial, $30 per quarter.
Residential and light commercial refuse Is to be placed at the
curb In suitable containers, such
as bags, cans or boxes which can
be easily loaded without equipment and without tearing or
bursting.
Meeting with Council were
representatives of the National
Gas and Oil Corporation which
has pure hased the Rae Ine Gas
and Service.
Council had an opportunity at
an earlier Informal session to
review a new rate ordinance, as
well as franchise ordinance,
authorizing the gas company to
lay and repair gas lines on village
·property.
Council passed both ordinances as emergency measures In
,order that residents could benefit
' from lower gas rates being
:offered by the company. Other' wise, residents would have to pay
the higher Racine Gas Comp&amp;ny
rates until three readings of the
ordinances could be given.
It was noted that employees
·Bill Hayman and Dennis Wolfe
will continue with the new
company, working In Racine and
Syracuse.

Council discussed the Juvenile
Detention Facility proposed by
the State for location somewhere
In Southeastern Ohio. Mayor
Frank Cleland reported he has
been approached by a land owner
who has acreage available close to water and sewer - that
he would sell. It was decided that
the mayor would call a public
meeting for residents to express
their opinions as to whether the
Council should actively pursue
. the facility for the Racine area.
The date and location of the
public meeting will be announced
later.
1
Council au thorlzed ClerkTreasurer Jane Beegle to make
necessary transfers within the
various village funds in order to
account for State audit fees
which were deducted .by the
county auditor in the August
settlement of taxes. The State
· audit cost the village $3,0ll.ll
In other matters, Council dis·
cussed the purchase of a brush
hog. Councllmembers are · to
begin looking around for a
reasonably priced brush hog.
Council authorized the purchase of a fire exUngulsher for
the 'Shrine Club Park building,
and antifreeze for the fire and
street departments.
Council voted that a thank·vou
letter should be sent to Mr. and
Mrs. Roscoe Wedge for cleaning
up the lot at the corner of Pearl
and Second Sts.
The Park Committee reported
that Items which are being paid
tor by a Community Development Block Grant are starting to
arrive.
Continued on page 10

,.

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