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PaQe•- 12- The

'

Sentinel

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I'

Sunday

&gt;
I

. . NEVER KNOWINGLY UNDERSOLD . . . . . . . . . . .

••

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile
·PRESENTS .·

50 cents

Alysheba wins Kentucky D~rby

Handicapped
youth are all
winners here
-B-1 '

HE GREATEST SALE IN HISTORY!
.

.

May 1, 1987.,'

Ohio

......

'

'

Evangelical phonies sometimes do more good
than hium, .George R. Plagenz .eoncludes -'- A-2
An act of Good Samaritanism earns praise
in Bob Hoeflich's Beat of thc&gt; Bend - 84

STARTS SATURDAY, MAY 2, · 1987
.

Special Finocing 8.25% APR
(Variable Rote) up to 60
months, for this sole. Mike
Berridge &amp; Kotrinka Hart of
the Ohio Volley Bonk will be in
our showroom all day Saturday
to assist you for your finance .
needs and answer any finance
questions. ·

Vol. 22

No. 13

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. May 3, 1987

1987''"'

Jim Mink Chevrolet-Oldsmobile
Will Never
Kno.~ingly Be .Undersold

WVAH-n 23 will be

broadcasting·from our
showroom Satu~day
afternoon. I
Bill Gray, "Local
Broadcast personality"
is. our guest M.C.

FREE REFRESHMENTS

· 7-UP - Coutesy ~f Seven-Up Bottling ·
of Cheshire
Piua-Courtesy of Taco Grande
Spring Valley Plaz~ ·

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

~

~

z

Alon~ the River ....... 8+12
Business ...................... D·I
Coml~s ..... ............... Insert
CIIL•s llleds .. ... ..... .... .D-G· II
Deat hs ........................ A· 7
Editorial ................. .... A-2
Sports .... .................. C·I·K

Showers likely and "~h11nce
of thunde rstorms Sunday,
with hl~~;hs between 70 and 75.

tmts·

.

AT UNHEARD OF PR·ICES! 'NOBODY WALKS!

Inside

•

NEW CARS, NEW TRUCKS, PRE·OWNED·CARS
.

C-1

'

ate of EMS
hinges upon
Tuesday vote

1 1 Section a, 94 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

Linkup's
desigD
nearly .••
complete .
•

By KEVIN KELLY
Southeast Ohio E'mergency MedTimes-Sentinel Stall
leal Services only serves Law·
GALLIPOL IS - Th e bollom
renee, Jackson, Vi nton a~d
line in Tuesday 's spec ia l electio n
Athens counties. SEOEMS d1d
to decide a one-half percent
operate in Gallla County until
increase in Gallia County's sa les
.June 1979.
tax is that there may be no
A co mm on mi sconception,
ambulance or emerge ncy medi ·
Wh eeler sa id, is tha t If the EMS
ca l service at all by th is summer,
fo lds, SEOEMS will . step In to
say th e bac kers of the increase.
lake it s place. However . . the
The Issue will be put belate
commi ssioners have not con·
voter s In all 36 precincts. Polls
tracted with SEOEMS for such
ON YOUR MARK, GE1'SET ... - More than 350 race WIL~ sponsored hy Holzer Medical Center .
will open at 6:30a. m . a nd close a t
Se rvire and have indicated that if
runners
were pr 1me d 1o goo a t t he star 11 ng 11 ne of Result".,, of tht• racr's two cvrnts arr on C·l of
7:30p. m .
the county can't pay for its ow n . the French City Run In Gallipolis Saturd ay. Th e tod~.v's Tlm•·s-S!mthwl.
An Increase in the sa les tax
·
(Continu ed on A.:ll
could genera te up to $500,000 or
more, $400,(100 of which will go to
the Gallla E MS, off icia ls sa id.
The E MS has been witho ut a
prima ry fundin g source since
COLUMBUS rUPI ) - State cam paign television and news·
Long, whose c ampaign aired
reason .
,Janu ary, when the federal reSeil. Ja n Michael Lon g. D· paper adver tisin g.
television
co
mm
ercials
In
the
Co ll ins gott hr·G•mera l Assem·
venue s harin g progra m ended .
Circ levill e, plans lo appeal an
clgh
l·coun
ty
17th
Dl
&gt;
sprawling
came
a
llh&lt;'en
d
of
bly
to pass a law In thc lair 1970s
The
decision
Money generated by the increase
Oh io Electio ns Commissio n deri trlct
In
so
uth
er
n
Ohio
saying
seven-hour
hearing
featu
ring
coun ty sc hool super·
a
permitting
would be put in the county
s ion resulting In a $1,000 lin e
Coll
ins
broke
the
law
b.v
be
ing
a
tesl!fll
ony
by
political
professionl
ntcnde
nts
to bc In th e
general lund .
against him a nd his campaign
legisla
tor
and
Lawrence
Count
y
als
from
bo
th
sides.
Legislature.
Ga"llia Coun ty Commissioners
committee for · an infr action
Attorney John C. McDona ld sc hool s uper lnt end ~nt at thP
have proposed a formula to
durlng.[ast. fall's campaign.
said
Long wlllappeal1'6 F~unklln sa t'ne tim e.
'
distr ibute a ny excess revenue
-· The commission, on a 3·1 vote
Long
defea
ted
Co
llins,
whose
Coun ly Comm on Ple~s Court as
' from thE' Increase to organizaFriday, found Long guilt y of
soon as .t he commission trans· ca~eer In the Ge neral Asse mbly
tions a lso been hur l by the loss of
m aki ng a false statement agai nst
cript Is available. probably in S(lannect 40 years , by t ,:185 votes
revenue . sharlng: Bu t the com·
his opponent, vetera n Sen. Oak·
out of 94,000 cast. Republicans
two weeks .
missioners a nd I hE' c itizens com·
ley C . Collin s, . R·lt'Onton , In
sa
id the TV commercial was th e
"1
t's
the
wro
ng
decisio
n,"
said
mlltee supporting 'the Increase
are rem inding voters lhat the
'
money it could' generate will go
fir st to help the EMS.
"We'd like to see it passed fi rst
and then work from there,"
Commi ss ioner Kail Burleson
said.
Donations won ' t h~lp
•
&gt;
COLU MBUS &lt;UP II - _ Thr
EMS Director Fred Wheele r
Ohio Burea u of E mploy menl
told the Tlmes·Sentinel th at
Services Is pla nning to c losr
should the Increase !all a t lh&lt;'
a nother eight !le ld ofll ces by the
p(ills. it' s conceiva ble Ihe serv ict&gt;
mlddl ~ or May . The Pomeroy
could go out of bu sin&lt;'SS a t the end
office will close the week of Ma y
of the current pay period .
I J.
Since Janu ary, the service has
The c los ln ~s. announced Frl·
been funded month-to-m onth by
day, arc part of a pha seo ut of 42
unappropriated mon ies . In the·
offices which provide ser vices
general fund . Commi ssionerJ. E .
a nd b!'neflt s checks to Ihe .
"Dick" Cremeens said such
unemployed .
temporary funding could last
until July. but noted thai Ju ly
Twe nt y ol!l c~s , a lready have
would be slretching it.
been closed to save money a nd
"There was some talk of
help make up a projcctPd $12
gell in g donation s to kee p II
million dellclt by Oc tober.
going, but you can't operate a
"Given current Informa l Jon
service on th a t kind of mon ey,"
an{J our co ntinuing budgPI dC·
Wheel&lt;'r said. "Our gaso line bills
!lei! , wr mu st Imm ediately pro·
are $16.!100 per year. And If .we
reed with Phase Ill of lh~ office
were to do that, our full .tim e
consolldallo n pl an," sa id Ro·
people would be looking lor
bcr ta Steinbacher, ad mlnls lra·
BRIDGE WORK UNDER WAY - Ohio the concrete on the right Is set . Only on•• side can
work."
tor of OBES.
Department of Transportation personnel and he worked on at a time, I hie ~ald. 0 DOT
Offices In Cos hocton, Ca rrolWheeler cmphasiz&lt;'d that the
workers for ~alden-Jenklr" Construction , Nel- cons tru ction engineer Mike Lang, M11rletta, said
EMS is the only e me rgency
lt on, London and Pomc roy will
sonville, contractor on the '1.39 million Pomeroy· that repairs are being made according to th e
close the wt'ek of May 11,
ambulance service operall nl( In
Mason Bridge r ep11lr project, were pouring arrival of materials and liS lab tests lor material s
followed
the nex t day by rloslngs
Gal!Ia Co unt y. The Ga lli a Count y
can
be
completed
.
Onccthe
Ohlosld
c
ufthc
hrldg•·
concrete Friday for the right s Ide of the front pier
In
Cadiz,
Me onnelsv lll and
Volunteers organization went out
Is
!lnls
hed,
similar
repaln
will
take
place
on
!hP
on the Ohio side. Nick lhl e, ODOT Inspecto r on the
of ex istence in the fall of1986 and
McArthur.
T
he Millers burg of·
job, said that workers will hegln jack· hamme ring West VIrginia side. The bridg e ha~ been closed
•
nrc wil l close May 14, Strl nlr
away the !ell side of the pier about Tuesday after s ince March 30.
achcr said .

By NANCY YOi\CHi\M
Tlmes·Sentlnel Staff
POM E ROY ~ Preliminary
e ngineering. for · the proposed
connector r oad to link Ohio 7 at
Rock Springs to the Ritchie ,,
Bridge between Greal Bend and
Ravenswood, W.Va. , "Is In the '
final s tages" or romplellon,
accordi ng to Tom Hedrick, plan·
nln~ enginee r with &lt;He Ohio
Departmen t or Tra nsportation's
Mur !ntt
' a offlro.
'
Th•' necessary environmental
document on the project must

·
I
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•
1•
long· to appea1e ect10n comp atnt ru tng n;~~!~~:rir~~~~:Zu~~!~
Office
closed
after
May 11

STOCK NO. 751

RETAIL 55285

198 7 Chevrolet Chevette••••••••••••• Sale Price $S180
STOCK NO. 912

RETAIL 59656

1987 Chevrolet S-1 0 Pickup••••••••• Sale Price $7131
RETAIL 5 14,560

1987 Olds Delta 88 4 Dr .••••••••••• Sale Price

.

RETliL.S13,;39

1987 Olds C1era 4 Dr •••••••••• ~ ••• Sale Pr~ee 11,942
RETtll 512 ' 439

CARGO VAN STOCK #665

RETAIL 58340

STOCK NO. 961

1987 Olds 98 Brougham •••••••••• Sale Price $17,953
STOCK NO. 917 •

1987 Chevrolet Cavalier.~~-~·••••• ~ ••• Sale Price $92 50
STOCK NO. 796

FACTORY RUAtl· $2~,870

"DEMO" STOCK # 645

$12,882

198 7 Chevrolet Astro•••••••••••••• Sale Price Sl 0,4 71
12 PASS. VAN. STOCK #506.'

.

.

RETAIL ~19,~46.95

1986 Chev. Beauvllle •••••••••••• Sale Pr~ee 17,000

PRE-OWNED SPECIALS

$9300
3-1986 Chevrolet Cavaliers
· This Sale Onlf· S699 5 ·
4 Drs•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
2-Pontiac Sunbirds•..••••••••••.••.•.••.• J.~ts.!~te.!!!t .. S6 99 5

5-1986 Olds Cutlass Supremes

This Sale Onl

4 Dr. &amp; 2 Dr. Cmpare anywhere •••••••••••••••••••.• •••••• •••• ••••

f... .

EXTENDED TO MAY 9TH

5·1 0 UIAnS EXTENDED TO
auy 14TH

'The Heart•eat of th·e Ohio ~allet"

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Inc.
GMQUAUTY

SERVICE PARTS

1616 EASTERN AVENUE
GA.LLIPOLIS,.OHIO
CARS: 446·3672

TRUCIS: 446..2000,

NEVER KNOWINGLY UNDERSO .....

&amp;J.

~.

by Gov. Richard Ce les te In lat e
January 198&gt;. Woodruff Consult ·
lng , Cleve land. was co nlrac ted In
April of tha t year by ODOT to·
ra r·r;• out thr study, whietf
lncludcdes labll shlngapreferred
toril llon lor relocating Ohio 124
!rom Pomeroy to the Ritchie
Bridge, a dls lunce of tr&gt;.69 miles,
a nd ~a ther l ng envlronmenlal
.
lnlormaHon.
Hedrick said th e consu lting
firm ha s recently s ubmitted
additional material to Byrd Find·
ley, coordlnutor for OD0T's..Burea u of E nvironmen tal &amp;!rvl·
ces, " for semi-final review."
ODOT's Ma rietta office has
a lrt•a dy submitted their routine
comment s a bout the project to
the sta te office. Once the review
;Jroccss Is completed, a publk
mcetln~ to disc uss the findings
may 1hen be schect u led.
Hedrick sa id the prellmln~ry
engl n!'erlng projcct go t off to a
quick s tar t but slowed down
when proiJiems "over ex pend!·
turPS" by th e COni:;U ltin g firm
surfaced .
He add d lhat lhe state
"doesn' t us ually go to a consul·
to nt for this lYtle of work ," since
OOOT has !Is own engineers to
carry out s uch st udi es . However,
this 'projec t, a par t 9f Covcror
Celeste's $1.9 billiOn "Operation
Jobs - Hl~hway s" progra m,
was s tarted soon afiN the
annou nce m &lt;•nt lhut Woodruff
Consu lt ing had been hired.
Woodr uff Consulting was also
Involved In an earlier st udyof tbe
proposed con nector In th e ear ly
1980s. Tha t plan, ca lled the
Woodruff Report, was co mpleted
In 19&amp;1.
In ex plaining the $800.000 pre II·
mlnary engi neeri ng project at a
1985 press ron lt•rencc In Athens,
the govrr nor sai d that after
esta blishing tht• roa d lornt lon
!Conllnur&lt;J on A ·.1~

'Two-vehicle
~ollege
accident kills

1

1-19871ROC Z-28, justtraded ••••.• • ~~••••••••••••••••••$15,900

FULL-SIZE PICKUP REBATES

sti ll be asse mbled. Hedrick said.

Mason youth
• POINT PLE ASANT - II
Leon. W.Va., yout h was pro·
nounced dead at St. Mary's
Hosp ital. Hun tl ngiQn. W.Va ..
al 10: 05 p.m . Frida y due to
. Injuries resulting from a ca r·
·motorcyc le accident at 4: 45
.p.m . Friday. accordi ng to the
Maso n Co upt y Sheriff' s
Oepartmt•nl.
James Michael Whitling·
ton, 13, was lransported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by
the Mount Flower Rescue
Squad following lhe accident
and was lhen flown to St.
Mary's by LlleFIIght.
The sheriffs depar tment
said Whittington was west·
bound on W.Va. 87, near Leon
and Mount Olive School, on a
1983 Honda motorcycle. The
motorcycle was reportedly In
the eastbound lan&lt;' and collided with an eastbound 1977
Oldsmobile driven by Terenc..
(Contlaued on A·3)

•

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holds enrichment day
for talented, gifted students ·
RIO GRANDE - Approxim at ely .100 tale nted a nd gllied
ele m entary school stud ent s,
grades four through eight. from
the four -counly co mmun ity col·
leg&lt;' district allended an enrich·
ment da y Friday at Rio Grande
College and Communit y College. ·
Spo nsored by TAG educators
from Gallla, Jackson, Me igs and
VInton counti es a nd Rio
Grande's School of Education,
Health a nd Physical Educat1on.
the s tudents - representing the
top 3 percent In their schoolspartlclpaled In sessions presented by teac hers !rom the
college, the elementary sc hools
and by Individual representing
business and civ ic organizations.
"The enrichment day was
designed to allow the college a nd
the local schools to share fa ell I·
ties talent and resources In
ortk.r to further the educational
experience of area talented and
gifted students," said ;\ssoclate
Pi-ores110r or, Education Lisa

• )-

Bauer, who coordinat ed the
day's art lvltles .
· The program presented stu·
dents with opportunities to ex·
plorc a va riet y of specia l interest
areas, including art, theat er and
creative express ion , music, pup·
petry, map readi ng, robotocs,
c hem lst'ry, ph ysics and
techn ology.
During o.ne session , the students ex'plored the art of "clown·
lng," as "Sirokes T.M." (Terry
Weakley) g uided Ihem throught
the life of a clown . Face painting,
juggling and mime techniques
were · explored during th e
session.
We akley graduated " Cum
Hum orous" alter a year of study
at Christ Clown Co ll ege In Winter
Park, Fla. She spent another
year as part of the iroupe and
helped train new clowns.
In addition, the students were
shown how to "teach a n old dog
new tricks," as Susan Breech,
adviser lor the K·9 Corps or

Gal lipo li s, l~d a s~sslon on dog
obedience.
,
A member from the LlfeF llgh.'
crew stationed In Wellston di s·
cussed resc~e a nd llfrsav l.ng
tcc hnlques .·Student grou ps pa~j
tlclpatcd In basic aid ski
workshops . ·
' cd d
Other topics explor
~rd1n~
1
TAG Enrich ment Da y nc u ~
leadership skills. wo r~ p rocc~s ·
ing. stenciling, Oh1o s Nat ive
American s, cre~tlve writing,
kara te, socce r, wat er spor ts a nd
moder n dance.
1
TAG educators who partied·
pat ed !n lh&lt;' program lncl,udc •
from Gallla Cou nty, Rosie GilL5•
TAG coordinator, Gallipolis ~lty
Schools; John Lester. 'l A~
teacher, Gallipo lis Cll y SchOols,
Patricia Brennema n, director of
curricu lum and spec ial pro:
grams, Gallipolis City Schools,
a nd Charla McKenzie, TAG
coordi nator, Gallla Co unt y
Schools and Oak HIll Schools.
(Continued on A-7)

CLOWNING AROUND - "St rokes 'J:.M.,"
Weakley, condu cted a c i!IBS on the art of clo,wnln
gifted studentllln the area at R,lo Grande College
College Friday.

reall~y, T~r ry

talented lind
Comm unity

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·c ommentary and perspective
iunba~ ~imea- tmtinel

I

25 Third Ave., GaUipoUs, Ohio I H Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 446·ZI42
(614) 992-2U6

ROBERT·L. WINGETT
Publl~her

HOBART WILSON JR.
l!:xecullve Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER of Thl• UnIt(\! Press l nterna tiona I, Inland Dally Press Assoda·
tlon and the American NewspapL•r Publlsher s Ass ociation.

LETTERS OF' OPINION are welcome. They should be less th&amp;n 300 words
long. Alllellers are subject to edlllng and JI'JJst be signal with name, address and
telephone numb('r . No W15lgn£II letl(•rs will be published . Letters should be In

A college professor of mine
once said, "The Ill-willed ix'nefactors of mankind will ix' God's
b\ggest problem on Judgment
Day."
What to do about those who,
acting from motives' of greed and
self·lnlerest, managed neverthe·
less to be of help to others and
sometimes even to the whore·
world.
·
ln the world of religion, there
was Mar joe Gartner, now a bll
actor on television. Some would
say he was always an actor,
nothing more. A onetime boy
evangelist, he grew up to ix' a
religious swindler. He finally
·blew the whistle on himself In the

movie " Marjoe, " In which the
whole hypocritical story 61 his
life came out. Marjae played
himself In the film. Still land
always) lh&lt;' aclor.
Everybody said it was too bad
Marjoe wasn't sincere. Because
he had everything else, inC'Iuding
. charm and charisma.
Thosewhosawthemovlecame
· away admitting he wa s a scoundrel. And that he was. But I left
the movie theaterfeellng thatthe
people he had swindled would
hear him gladly again - even
alter his confession that it was all
a hoax .
Marjoe did what he did lor
selfish reasons~ lor money. But

good taste, uddrcsslng lssu t&gt;s, not )X'rsonalltles.

Backstairs at the White House

Famous, notorious
turn out at dinner
By IIEI.EN 'riiOM AS

Ul'l White !louse Reporter
WASHINGTON iUPI) - The rPccnt ann ual White House
Correspondent s Dinner had It s moments. ·
President Reagan had to shake hands 'and rongrafulate Bob
Woodwa rd of The Washington Post lor his revelation of Reagan's
" dlsl nformation" campaign aga in st Li bya.
1
As Reagan got up to shake lite hand of Woodward I whose effo rt s
won the Post the Pulitzer Prize in the Wat erga t~ sca ndal , the
pres ident murmured to his wife: " I hate tobea.hypocrite but I guess I
have to shake hls hand anvway."

Another sidelight at the dinner was the attention paid to telegenic
Fawn Hall, former secretary to ousted Nationa l Securit y deputy Lt.
Col. Oliver North . . Hall, who will testify on alleged docu ment
shredding before Nor th wa s fired In the Iran arms -Cont ra aid
sca ndal, showed up with her lawyrr. Plato Cac hcrls.
Hall was spotted at one point talking to former national security
adviser Robert McFarlane who made a secret trip to Iran.
Another former national security adviS&lt;'l', Aum . .John Poindexter,
who resigned as the scandal unfolded , also attended the dinner.
ThP prcsldl'nt still has words of praise for Poinpcxtcr. who he calls
"n "honorable man" and North, who he described as a " national
hero."
r.vclyn Y. Davis. who wri!PS a financial newsletter " Hig h Lights
and Low l.l ght s," and attends blur rhlp co rporation stoc khold er
meetings regu larly. extracted from Merrill Lynch officials a t a
mPcll ng In Prloreton, N.. r:. rrrrntly a "ba ll park" sa lary of former
Whit e Housl' spokesman Larry Speakes.
Asked If Speakes was pulling down a salary of $.100,000 In his new
ppsltlon on Wall Stn'&lt;'t. shl' was. told. "That's In the ball park."
·Speakes has not exac tly forsa ken Washington. He has show n up at
t~c maj or dlnnrrs whet·r thr president ha s bPcn the gues t ,of honor
rrcently . Inc lud ing thr Gridiron dlnnc•r and the White House
cOrrespondents dinner.
:The White House• h;tcl a credihillty gap two years ago when it. sought
IQ keep S&lt;'t·rct thc· 1'emova l or" pal!·h of sk in ranc·rr from RPagan's
nJ)Sf'.

-But Whi te Housl' spokes ma n Marlin Fitzwater ha s no cn•d lbllit y
pioblrm . Showing up at the podium wit h two or three red blotches on
h1s lace, h&lt;' did mit h&lt;'sitatl' to n ·s pond to " quest ion. sayi ng that he ha s,
sk in tanrPr rrmov0cl Pvr ry six monrhs.

- Fitzwater , ln t•idpntally , has onl.v a l'OU (llr of mrrnrntocs left in his
office from tht· Speakc•s era.
: Thry a n· two au tographrd b&lt;•scba lis and a s,all sliver trophy from
thr baseball ou tin gs in Snnt&lt;~ Barbara . Calif. , uuring vacat ion lime.

-

- Rragmt wa s preaehing to thr choir when he addr&lt;'ssl'd \he U.S.
Ghamtx•r of Commrrr'· I'N'l'n t\.v, and the audie nrr W&lt;t&gt; with him al l
the wa~ wit h· his humor and his policies.
·No ting that the Chmnix'r had lx·en formed In 1 ~\~ .a t th~ suggrstlon
Ot Pr~sid~nt Howard T&lt;tft . he• r£•rallrd that Taft Is thr only president
. who had serwd on 1111' Suprrrrw ('QLU:t. Tllft ' who became chief
justice, was ~uotNI as S&lt;t~in g at the p&lt;&gt;&lt;ik of his ca reer : " I don't
remt•mbct· Ihat I was PVt' r president ."
.: "You know that ·, somrthlng I can ldentif)•wlth," quipped Reagan.
::A nother story Hengan rr\ish!'d was about "t hat fellow out on the
gal l co urst' who fou nd th;t t his drive had ended up right in Iron I of an
an i n(•st."

::As tltr presidt•nt tells it. "\\'ell. hP ~ot ou t an iron and he look a
swi ng. Hl' liilln ' J hit lh!•ba\1: ht• hit !hi' anthill. Thousa nd s or ant SWCJ'('
1llrown Int o the air. He took two more swipes at 11. and each lime
~l ssed t ht• ba II and hit the ;111 thill. ,\nrl n eouplr of rem a ininga nts. one
)'tlokcd at lltrotiH' r otH'&lt;llltlsalcl. ' lfw rw&lt;t nt tosurviVl'.wc' d better get
on tltc ball." '

·.

Letter to the· Editor
'

.-

Something to thinh~ about

.-

: As most of us who li ve In M&lt;• igs
County know. gradu&lt;.tlion of
h'l'nlors or our three high sc hools
\i-ill bt' on or about Ma .v 2~ . This is
q VPr)· proud tlmt• for th~
~ ~ ·aduales.
lhdr family and
fl·icnds . as well as thr teac hing
!),t all of eac h school dlstt·lrt .
• Howrver. \ bl?forc graduat !on.

eomcs ano ther memorable event
and that 's the high school prom.
A vet')' special eve nt , hoppfully
anc \vh lch all graduates will havr
ROOd mmlot·ies lor )'cars to
corn('.
1
:: Some parents. teac hing staff
and students II'O t'k hat·d prepar·
lilg Ihelr sc ~ools wlt,h dec01·a·
~ons and plan actlv ltlcs to the
early morning hours ol\ !he nex~
morning In un ellort to ~p thP
yyuth at the school Involved In
.ion-alcohol aetlvltles. Ho"ever
QJere Is alwa)1s th~ alter-prom
Jltlrty at one place or another.
li:V11n some parents. plan or
sponsor a party lor thei r child
and his or ~er fellow student s and
this Is what casts a dark shadow
(!f fear over the prom activit IPs.
.: Some parents arc of the opinion
lbat their fi:h11d Is without a doubt
aotng to dilfnk alcohol on prom
night, so th~would rather they
ilrlnk at ho e with friend s. so
~ throw a rty ...:: I know, the

.

.

~

.
'

rules al'(\ :vou rurn, In· your car

kr)'S a nd you don 't leave the
fl&lt;H'I)'. But. what abo ut the law
thal sa.\'s you are not to sell or
provide a minor with lntoxlcat ·
lng bevl•rat(cs (a contributing
charge I . i\nd who gives a parent
tht• right to provide another's
r hild alcoholic beverages• He·
ga rdless of the various school
efforts, last yca t· on prom nlt(h\ .'1
\'lstted the s ite of thr('(&gt; sNious
automobile accidents In ll'hich
someone could have been killed.
Fortunately, the ~ou ths escaped
with only minor Injuries. In a ll
the ac&lt;'ldcnts. the driver has
bt•en drinking and had been to
one of 1hc so·called alter·prom
parties.
·
This letter may be looked upon
lightly by most, but if I were to
cause lnjut·y or· maybe the death
of the kid, I'd have a tough time
living with it .
With alcohol abuse ~x'Ing our
numix'r one problem, I should
hope parents WOljld teach Ihelr
ch11dren that a good time can ix'
had without alcohol or drug
abuse.
THINK ABOUT IT!! !
Carl Hyse11
Meigs County
Juvenile Probation
Officer

~

May 3, 1987:

Two-vehicle accident

to

• -s s

u

"bene factors" approac h the
judgment seat.

country 's most rf'spC'Ctf'd finnn ·

cia l institutions.
Family debt . Se&gt;idman wa rns.
could turn a recession into a
depression . Consumer cn•dil has
reache&gt;d a postwar high of more
than one-quarter of u familv 's
dlsposabh• in co me . One-th ird of
monthly hou sehold income now
goes to debt payments, including
mortgages. A recession that
throws these debt ·payrrs out of
work cou ld bring the whole
system crashing down like a
house of credit cards.
"The larger the debt is. co m·
pared to the ability to repay. thr
more risk you build into thr
system ." Seidma n rxpl:~inrd .
"Since&gt; we' re at all·time high s in
this area. you build In the risk

I was at that site In I985 when a
pollee helicopi Pr bombed thf&gt;
MOVE hOuse.
At fir st, blacks In the crowd
were as enraged as they were
Incredulous.
Then._ they copped out with a
sullen aitblthat I was to hear lor
the next few weeks .
Said blacks: "It's a good thing
a white man wasn't mayor. We
would have lorn thi s cit y up."
(Recently, young blacks tore up
the clly anyway by looting stores
durin!( a parade honoring baske·
ball legend, Julius "Dr. J ."
.Erving.)
.
The white variation on the
bombing alibi was mar&lt;' one or
guilt-ridden relief: "Thank God
It was a black man who orderd
that bomb dropped ."
No society can embrace. a
_separate-but-t:'qual posture . on
one IPv!'l and disavow It on
another.
Elth!'r black life Is as prf&gt;l'lous
as white life or It Isn't .
the Supreme&gt; Court's ru,llng, In
effect, depreciated black life.
But I must confess an admira tion for the eloquence with whlcl\
Justice Lewis F . Powell J r.
stated that position:
"Where the discr!'tlon that Is
lundam~nlal to our criminal
process Is Involved, we decline to
assume that whal Is unexplained
Is Invidious.
"The Constitution does not
require that a stale eliminate any
demonstrable disparity that
com!lates with a potentially
Irrelevant factor In order to
operate a criminal Justice system that Includes capital
punishment."

but consistent .
In ·thi s Instance the court
di smissed ra cr as. "a potentiall.v
irrelrvanl factor .··
But In previous aff irm ati veaction d('('lslons. thr court ha s
ruled that race could Indeed be
takrn Into account Jo redress
hi s toricity un constitutional
behavior.
Civil libertarians and whitr
liberals deplored the Supreme
Eloqu~nt,

OFF

dther that you will have · ~n·
eco nom ic downturn. which wlU
then cause a lot of the weaker.
!banks and businesses) to fan: or
you will ge t an interest nile
increase. which will make thi s,
burclr n of . debt far more·
onerous ."
It 's not just fami lies th at are in
shaky debt -payment sit uatio'ns .but corporat ions as well. BusJ..
ness failures are at levels not '
seen in 50 yrars. while personal •
bankruptcies havr bren skyro ck
eting as well. If business' custo·
mers arc taking \he bankruptcy
bailout- or ju st not buying more.
whl lr thry pay off th e debt s·
incurred on, earlier purchases...:.
the effect on corpora te balance·
sheets will be catastrophic. . · .'
The excesses In the American
living room are matched by those
in the boardroom. Seidm~n ·
makrs no secret of hi s dl sta~t e .
for the cor poratP frreboot~rs :
who havt• abused their trust.·
Only partly in jest, hrs&lt;liqof!\l'an.
Bocsky. deposed king if Insider ' .
ct·ooks: "If capital punishmcnt o\S ·
a ppropr ia te lor whiteco\lar
crime. lle is an out sta nding
candidate."

Linkup's
!Continued !'rom A-ll
and obtaj nlng environmental'
clearance, the detailed design
work could proceed. contract
plans could ix' prepared and
right s of way acquired.
.The governor also said that the
sta te would not initiat e the
pr~llmlnary engineering just to
let .the project dl&lt;' alter that. He
sald then that he Intended to see
the· project through to construction of the road.
Although construction funding
and timing have never been
determined by the state, local
residents remember It took 20
yea'rs to get the Ritchie Bridge
built. even though it was, and still
Is·,. ix'lleved that the bridge could
be a real boon to Meigs County
lin regard to economic development and tourism) and other
southeastern Ohio counties along
th!' U.S ..'13 corridor to Columbus,
II highways to the bridge were
modernized .
The Ritchie Bridt(e was opened
In October 1981 with funds from
bo1h West VIrginia and Ohio.
However, soon after compl!'tlon.
the $17 million dollar structure
which connects to 1·77 in West
virginia, attained the nickname
"bridge to nowhere" because
nothing wa s ever done to Improve roads on the Ohio side of
the rlve&gt;r.

Cou•·t' s refusal to acknowledge
race as a pi votal dPtermlnant Jn.
thr criminal justic(' system . ..
But all or them have bt:'ep·
ei ther notoriously silent or apol,ogetic about a black mayQi''s
barbarism.
If the Supreme Court is wron!i.
so is Wilson Goode.
The troubl e is th at Phlladel·
phla 's blacks are too dumb to
realize that.

.57 tw ... ...... .S1095.00
766.50
.95 tw ... ...... .S2695.00 ' 51886.50
Diamond Pendants
REG.
SALE
554.00
.06 ct... ........... S77.50
.17 ct... ...... ... S247.50 '173.25
.22 ct... ......... SJ95.00 '276.50
:49 ct... ........ S1275.00 1892.50
OoPs No1 Include Chain

UPTO

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"

.'

'

•No subscriptions by mall JHirmlllt'd In
3rPas whrrr motOr carrier service Is
avallabll' .
ThP Sunday Ttmes·Senllnrl will not be
rPSponstblr fflr advancP paymPnts
madE' 10 carrlrrs .

MAIL SU118CRIPTION8

'' . .

..

'
••

"

.
-•" '• '

.
-- '
I . '

"Sony// g8118 It BU to a TV fiVBnge/iSt. "

..

For 4-1 yt'&amp;rl!l Puul Davh·MJt&gt;wt&gt;lt'F8 ha ~ tw.-n M.- rvlnjl
lht• Ohio Vnllf'y. Wt' pridt• ourMt•lvt'H In fti'IHI"IinR our I'UII•
tomrrs in a roul1fOUI!I 1 frit·ndl y, JlrOft·n ional mnnnt•r.
Wt' 1\'f" workt'd hard to llrO"Vidl" It romfortahl .. 8h0fl')Jinl{ f'R•
vlronnumt with no ~immirkl!h phont•y di K(•ounh!, or hl!(h .
prr81!1 Urf', Mo81 importnnt, Wt' offt'r qualit y mt•l'hondiMr al
tht' fairt'!ill prlri•.
.,roud of thf' reputation wt•'vr f'njoyrd fc1r 41 )'t'llfP.l und will strivt' 10 t•arn tfw c·onfilJrnrt•
you\•e t•ume lo rxpt•f'l nl Paul Ouvit'A )l'wrlf'rll. Thank you
for making u s llw nrt•a's Numht•r Ont&gt; k\lo'f•lrr.
Help Ull t'4·1.-hratt• with our !!lOre wid .. a nnlvt•rtutry 14&amp;11•,
Whal a greal lim.- to !! hop ror thmu· UI)('Omin~ Jllfl ~ivlnl{
"---'"'&lt;a!lior••· Ru y now and uvt• J(l o/, ·50 % Mlnrt•wldt•. l..uya·
WIYI! 1\t'tf'plf'd .

s-laJOalf

Onr YPar ..... ............................ $32.24
Six months .............. .... .,. ........... S16.90
DaliJ ud lloaday·

MAIL 8UIISVRIP'RON8
Jaold•C-r

13 w..kS .............. .................... sn. ~

26 Wetlcs ............ .. .................... $.14.!16
~2 weo~cs .................................. l'6.
Rates Oatalde County

l3 Werics

!JJ·ffl

................ &lt;... • • .. •
26 Werics .. ................. .. ... ,........ ..,.,.
~~ ll'erics ....... , .... .......... ........... 167.110

MEN'S ITEMS
Tic Tacs, Money Clips, Key
Rings, Knives, Giftware.

w•.·,,.

25%

Save To

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Bands

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and Bracelets Reduced
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Hundreds to Chootle From.

·Diamond Dinner Rings

Save 20%

•Seiko •Bulova •LaSalle
•Caravelle •Pulsa r

REG.

.15 CL ...... .. S300.00
.21 ct.. ......... $429.00
.25 ct. .......... S529.00
.33 CL ....... ,S729.00
.48 CL ...... I1175.00
.74 ct.. ....... '2150.00

SALE
•199.00
1299.00
1349.00
•479.00
'779.00
'1429.00

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.'

I '

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l4KT CHAINS

MPmlx' n UnltE'd Pr{'SS lntl"rnatlonal.
Inland Dally Prf'Ss Association and th£1
Ohio Nt&gt;wsPaiX"r Association. National
Adv.. rtlslntz Rfp resrn tatl vc, Branham
Newspai)('r SaiC'S, 733 Third Avl'nue,
Nf'W York. NPW Y,ork 10017.

'

All Strand8, Earring8,
Add•A·Bead8, Rings,
Brncelet8, Pins

CUSP l%5·800)

Berry's World

.

PEARLS

-THIS IS A REAL SALE-

Publlsh&lt;'d pac;h Sunday. 825 Third Avr ..
Gal\lpOII•. Ohio. by rh•OiltoValley Pub·
1\shlnjl Company tMultlmt'dla. Inc. Second rtass ~la:$1:C paid at Gallipolis.
Ohio 45631 . EntrrPd as serond class
malllnJZ matl(lr at Pom('roy . Ohio. Pmt
OfflrP.

~

~NN\\IE

20%

Devaluing black life ______ch_uc_k_Sto_ne
"Equal justice lor all" was
dea It a dlst res sing setback recently ,when the U.S. Supreme
Court -ruled that death-penalty
laws are constltu11onal even
when statistics docum!'nt a racially biased a pplication.
But next month black Philadelphians will 1(0 to the polls and. In
a II likelihood endorse 1hat sa me
position .
Currently. the odds favor renomination or Philadelphia's Incu mbent black mayor, W. Wilson
Goode. who allow pollee to bomb
the MOVE house two years ago,
which resulted In the deaths of 11
black people, Including five
black children.
The only reason Goode Is
favored lor renomination on the
Democratic ticket Is skin color. ·
He has paraded his blackness
as an epidermal alibi for Ineptitude. Incompetence and cotempt
lor human life.
Yet 80 percent of Phlladel- .
phla's blacks are supporting
Goode out of a misguided ethnic
affection.
1
They would ix' the first to weep
In crocodilian despair allqut the
racism of America's criminal
justice system:
- More convictions of blacks
than whiles for similar crimes.
- Longer sentences for blacks
than whites for· the same crimes.
- Disproportionately higher
number of blacks than whites
sentenced to the electric chair.
But In the ..anctuary of ethnocentric fanaticism blacks see no
contradiction In tbelr refusal to
condemn a black mayor for one
of history's most barbaric acts
against black people.

.

\1'5

no;h~e53t~urein"~!~ik:~~~0 ~t~~~~

associate Michael tllnstei n. Seid ·
man took a stern. magisteria r
view of thr cou ntry's. .financial
crisis. Much of the threat to
America 's futurP, Seidman be·
lievrs. origi nates in two places:
th e family living room and the
corporate boardroom.
,
By thi s Se&gt;idman means the
scary level of personal debt and
the greed-fueled fraud tha t is
swreplng through some of the

Sleuths question Poindexter

Help available for
plant problems

Sweating out lazy banks =--Ja_ck_A_n_de_.r.~_on_&amp;_"_Da_l&lt;_'V_a_n_At_ia
WASHINGTON - For most chalnreaction catastrophe th at
Americans, lh!' Initials FDIC on !allures could trigger - and to
a little gold sticker on their keep from t(Oing broke itself
bank's plate glass window signi- trying to pa y off the insured
fies ton closer Inspection) mem- depositors - the FDIC does
bership In the Federal Deposit everything It can to min imize the
Insurance Corp. It's not nearly as · effect of bank failures.
Interesting as the Interest rat!'
At the same lime, th e FDIC
placard - or even the potted can '1 be overly Indulgent of
palm .
dangerous banklnt( practices.
To thoughtful leaders In the and let poorly run Institutions
financial community, the FDIC stay open to rake in still mo ce
Is something far more Important. guaranteed deposits and make
It's th~ glue that keeps the still more ri sky loans. Usually,
increasingly rickety banking sys- Ihe FDIC tries to arrange a quick
tem from collapsing like a kid' s merger of the bankrupt bank
jerry- built tree house.
with a healthy one.
Since 1982. nearly 500 banks In
the United States have failed The man who oversees this
the blgges t banking bust since&gt; tricky high-wire act Is William
the Great Depression. Until Seidman, a robust and comrecently, the numb!'r of "prob- pactly built man of 65, who left
lem" banks was growi ng at the his cactus tower as head of
rate&gt; of about one a day . These Arizona State's business school
marginal operations now total to become chairman of the FDIC
1.535: about one&gt; In live comm!'r- In 1985. He has the Independence
cla l banks In the country Is either to stray from the path of
on thr list or lost mone&gt;y last year. conventional wldsom when neThe FDIC's legally mandated cessary, without minimizi ng the
mission Is st mpiy to guarantee problems In the ollflelds and the
Indi vidua l deposits up to$100,000. farm belt. where failed banks
In practice, the Industry-funded leave shattered lives In their
insura nce company plays a wake.
In an interview w1th out
much larger role. To prevent a

t Continued from A-1)

~

E,MS. It's unlikely .it ca n afiord ing will enable expansion of first to school and build up their telephone surve;Y last fall said
WASHINGTON 1UP!\ '-- Con·
SEO~:!S. d · blrtl ·
responders into the north and educational status. "·he said.
they would favor a sales tax hike gresslonal lnwstigator s, undet· money from the arms sales io
Iran to the Contra rebels In
south ends of the ~unty.
Shou ld any excess revenue, ix' over .a propeny tax .
_
rease capa 1 es
an
agreement
with
special
proNl~aragua. ·
·'Until recently, Wheeler added,
''It's definitely on the ex pan· generated , the comm issioners
secutor Lawrence Walsh , Satut·Sources said Poindexter camp
SEO,EMS only handled emer- slon list " he said "We win be haveproposedafundlngformu\a
day
ix'gan
questioning
Rear
to
Capitol Hill at about 9 a.m;
gency transports, while the E~S · able to ~xpand int~ areas where to help tl)e townships and the
·
Adm
..
John
Poindex
ter
about
his
EDT
Sat~rda' y and was ix'lnt
~rrles non-emergency patients, we don't have anything now, or Gallla Coun ty Senior Citizens
In
th ~ Iran-Con tra scandal.
role
qu es tioned by two )awyers for the
any of them to hospitals In where we have a high ratio of Center on whal they termed.
until
Nov.
25 Presi· special llo~ se and ~nate com;
Poindexter.
"worthwhil e projects," They
CO LUMBUS. Ohio (UP.It Columbus and West Virginia. runs"
SEOEMS has recently Initiated a
·
No added stall
have also proposed using some of Fot· · those of us cursed with a dent Reagan's fourth nation al mlttres . Th.e sources. said they
sPcurity adviser. i s the one figure
did not know when the session
1\0Q-emergency transport 'serWh!?eler stressed tha t if the the excess to help groups such as "black 1humb," who rant make
in
the
scandal
that
C'OUld
Jell
vl~e In Lawrence County, prim- increase Is p;!Ssed. there will be the Gallla Co unt y J unior Fair anything grow in the house, what , il an)·thing, th e president would end or whether Poindexter
was acco mpanied by his
arlly to combat competition from no additions In personnel. Th&lt;: Board and French Art Colony there's help avai lable from Ohio
kn ew about th e divrrs ion of- attorney.
priyate transport firms.
EMS' current lull-time staff obtain matching grants, a nd Stale University,'
"Our set·v ices are available to
- .lf the Increase Is passed , the consists of six paramedics and establish an emergency tund.
county can begin collecting the one dispatcher. By maintaining
" It's for the whole coun ty," ·anybody .and everybody. not just
revenue within a few months. that level of st!lffing, Wheeler explained Marlon "Jack" HaiTI- co mmercial growers. " says Ste·
W.heeler has· prepare d a said the money wilt allow those son, chairman of lhe cilitens ph~n T . Nameth. di rec tor· of th~
!Continued from A ~ I I
report sa id.
$410 •565 ·96 budget that , With personnel to u.ndergo additional committee.
· Plant andPest.DiagnostirClinir.
Lawrence. 46, ·Point Pl easa nt ,
No one in the Lawrence
~pproxlmatel y $100,000 in collec· training.
Backers of the increase chose
The clinic, located in 110
the drpar\ment said .
ve hicle was injured, deputies
tlons added to It, will allow the
"Since we lost 25 perc'ent of our go with the sales tax after almost Kott{Tlan Ha ll on th~ Ohio State
Th e motorcycle was totaled
suld. The accident remains
ser,vlcetocontlnueoperatingand staff, we have Included money 75 percent of the respondents campus. analyzes more samples
and the Lawrence ca r sus·
undet· Investl!(atlon.
improve the lifesaving capabili· (in the budget) to send our staff answering an EMS-conducted than any other Jab of It s kind .
tained $2.500 dama ge. the
lies of its equipment and staff.
;~:_:::::_~::~:_::_::_~::_::_::__:_::::~===-=~=_::_:_:_:::__:_:.:.:_::::.:::__.========~================
, '.' You would have to upgrade
equipment to the point where you
dQn't have monumental breakqBwns, as we have In the past ,"
Wheeler said.
. The EMS hopes to initiate an
ambulance replacement pro·
g'l'am to ensure a turnaround In
v.ehlcles every live years. The
service also hopes to follow the
modular design or ambulances,
ill' which the "box mounted"
compartment can be removed
ami placed on· a new chassis,
sav,ing approximately $20,000
over the cost of a new
ambulance.
Responder expansion
Some of the equipment needed
Is basic to th&lt;' service, such as a
thlrd cardiac monitor. One of the
monitors the service now ha s Is
seven years old, which Wheeler
said Is "running on borrowed
time, considering that they have
a life expectancy of five ye&gt;ars."
· Also, th e EMS plans to pur·
chase pediatric anti-shock trou s·
ers to aid very young accident
victims. Th ese specially-filled
l·rousers are not offered anywhere In Gallla County, Wheeler
saJd.
. The EMS and the committee,
In various public meet ings, have
Diamond Earrings
also emphasized that the in.cr~ased funding will allow for the
and Pendants
el&lt;pansion of the first -responder
system, In which emergency
Diamond Earrings
medical technicians can ix' sent
to'an accident scene and admlnlsREG.
SALE
t.t"r · necessary medical aid until
587.50
.09 tw .. .. __ ..... S125.00
a'n 'ambulance can arhve.
.23 tw ...... ..... S285.00 '199.00
· Wheeler said 1he added fund1

iro nically the people would say have their loyal followers Who
that they got their money '! are willing to forgive and forgi&gt;t
worth . Marjoe got them to fee l their preachers' all-too-human
the Spirit. There are a Jot of failings- incl udin g the falllng0!
si ncere ministers who are not getting rich at \heir ex pense ..... ·
What this says about us Is that
ab le to do that for their
on the list of what we revere in
congregations.
Meanwhile there are a lot of the people we follow. sincel'ity
other hypocrites out there like and honesty don't always rate
Mar joe who are great successes high - although we might say
at getting· people to feel the · they do. When I lived In Boston,
Spirit. Many people are helped Mayor .James Michael , Curley
once ran his re-elect ion camand healed by their ministries.
We are learning more about paign from his ja il cell. And won,
The question of hypocrisy: Is
some of these evangelists as we
watch the PTL sex-and-money . one that mos t ministers have- to
se rial unfold , Even in this. wrestle with al times. Is it th'etr
eva ngelis m' s darkest hour. these job first and for!'most to prea~h
self-serving men of soiled cloth the gospel effectively? To touch
people's souls and get them
fee l the Spirit? Or must th&lt;'Y first
as k themselves wh!'ther they
fully believe what th.ey say? ··
A fellow minister once said to
me, "If you and I made a cas!'
only for the things we have
succeeded In providing to our
own satisfarl ion - intellectually
and ot herwise ~ we wou ld "be·
restricting the people of God'~
congregation to our own personal
theologica l development. I think
we always teach and preach
more than what W&lt;' hav!'success·
fully made our own."
Is that hypocrisy?
If it is, it is in a diHere \ class
from the kind of hypocrisy that is
bred by a lust for riches. power
and fame.
To sprak assurl ngly to • a
bereaved soul about the hope tor
a "blessed reunion In heaven"
when you may have some doulit s
abou t tha t yourself may not b!'
enti rely hones t. But it won't glvt'
God any problems with you ·d•
Juo gment Day .

IT'S ANo'fH@R R€(oRD Klt;H Oft ~LL ST~T

Pomeroy-MiddleportGallipolis; ·Ohio-Point PleaSant
... W. Va.
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Fate of Gallia EMS hinges on special election

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The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-3

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May 3, 1987

Hypocrites help others.____Ge_or~ge_R---:c.P_lap,;;__:ren_-z

A Division of

.

20%to 40% OFF

Brass \\'ood "Clocks
"Crystal "Pewter "Sliver
0

0

20%~30%0FF
ADD-A-BEADS

20%
ON ALL
•Pierced Earrings

•l...o"ke.t8
•CrosseB
•P•nda~t~

STONE
RINGS
ENTIRE INVENTORY !
FREE SIZING

20%'
OFF

Reduced

25%

�...

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· Page- A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- l\lliddleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Meigs County Court judge issues fines
POMEROY - The foll ow in g
indiv iduals were fin ed !his week
In "-leigs Count y Court tJy J udge
Pa II ick O' Br ien.
Barney hliles. Long flol lom. $!i
~l

rrs1itu ti on .

days

j ail su s-

pended wit h I he exception of four
days served , two-years proba·
tlon and cos ts . cr iminal damag·
in g; six-mo nt hs in jail suspended
all but fou r days, 410 shotgun
forfeit ed to the sla le, two-yea rs

Local Briefs:
Fond distribution Wednesday

probation and costs, usi ng a tutlon and costs. crimi nal
weapon ' while intoxicated ; six· damaging.
months In jail suspended all but
Fined for speeding were Ar·
four da ys, lwo-years probation, nold R Knigh t, Pomeroy. $26 and
costs, aggrava ted menacing; costs; Don E. Garvin Jr .. Ne·
Wallace Reu ter, Middleport , SfOO · wark, $18 and costs; William
rest itution and ·costs, 10 da ys In . Elam . Pomeroy, $26 and cosls;
Jail co ncurreqt , assaull ; $300 and Jeffr ey Ford·, Clar ksbu rg.
costs; 10 days In jail concurrent , W.Va ., $29 and costs.
falsiflcalion:
Forfeiting bonds for speeding
Wa led Zahran, Pomeroy , $250 ' r----.,-----.,--~--l
imd cos!, three-days In jail,
60-day license suspens ion, DWI:
costs onl y, left of divided road·
way; Donald Riffle, Pomeroy, .
$400 and costs, six-months In jail,
Indefi nit e drivers li cense suspensio n, DWI; costs only ,. lefl of
cenl er ; $100 and costs, sixmonths in jail concurrent. driving urider suspension.
Daniel Heck, Belpre, $10 and
cos ts, left of .ce nter: Tammy
Walls, Reedsville, $10 a nd cosls,
Impr oper backi ng; Paul Touse,
Colu'mbu s, $20 and costs, no seat
belt ; Archie Rose, Long Botlom,
$10 a nd cos ts, failed to yield ; '
Regina Nance, Syracuse. $20 and
cos ts, !allure lo control: William
Fulks , Malvern, $25 a nd costs,
littering; Myrl Warner, Fairborn, $20 and cosls, no·sealbelt ;
Robbie Landers, Shade, $5 rest!-

bot h rounth 1S.

In Meigs Co un ty. Ihe commodllies will be di sl ributed a t the
MPi gs Coun ty F'a irgrounds. the Racine Amer ica n Legion Post,
lhr· Tu ppPrs P lains F' irr Sla t ion and al Pagev lll e Town Ha iL
Ca llia Co unl y loea tio ns In clude the Ga llla Co unty Junior
F~ ir gro und s, Mou n) Ca rmel Church a l Bi dwell , !he Guiding
·- Hand Sc hool and the Cuya n Tow nship Volunteer Fire
lk par tment al Merce rville.
Food ro mm odilirs may he picked up by ot hers for senior
l'i t izr- ns, lh&lt;· s lek, th!' hand ica pped or those who work, if !hose
persons send !heir food commodil y ca rd and a signed no le
grantin g permi ssion for another perso n to pick. up !heir il ems.
Old food com modil y ca rd s are sliil bein g used. Persons
iwv in g quest ions may co nlar t the age n ~y at 992-6629 or .:l67·7:141.

Meeting with BREC Monday
CHF:SII PEA KF. - Sial e Se n. .Jan Michael Long, D·
Clrriov il lc•, rPmindrd hi s cons til uenl s that a pub lie meeling will
be hdd Monday at li: :10 p.m . a! Chesapea ke Wesl F:lemcnta ry
Sc hoo L
·
The disr· uss ion. which wil l be aboul possi ble solulions lo
prevcnlin g powe r oula gcs such as tho se suffered llprli 4-9, will
Include representatives fr om Buckeye Ru ral EleclricCoopera·
live Inc. and I he Publ ic Utilities Com mission of Ohio. Also In
a ltcndanec w!H be Long and Slate Reps . . Jolynn Bosler,
D-Ca il lpolls, a nd Ma rk Malone, D-Sou lh Poi nt.
" We arc hopefu l th ai !his public meeting will bring aboul
posi tive res ull s and better commu nlral io n and f wou ld
cnco urag" anyone inlcres ted to a! lend." said Long.

were Elaine Cummin gs, Pros·
pect , Ky. , $50;' Amy Doughty.
Beallsvill e, S50; Timothy S!eV·
ens, '- Hurricane. W.Va ., $50;
James Andrews, At hens .. $50; .
Doni McKenna, Parkersburg,

W.Va., S.'iO; George Powets .
S!ia; William
Lake,
Delaware,
. .
.
Millfield. S.'iO.
John Seevers, Lower SaleJ;Il ,
forfeited a $45 bond.for laillng•to
display highway u·se tax slicker.

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HOW DO
YOU LOVE
MOTHER?

CHI&lt;S HIR J·:- Ga llia·Meigs Community Acl ion Agency wi ll
hr· dis tri buting chccsP. rice and honey to eligi ble persons on
Wr·d ncsday from approxim ately noon to 2 p.m . at loca tio ns in

May 3 •. 1.987

{!crtt.llll-~

Por

MOTHER

Set wilh rad1ant birlh ·
stones- one atone for
each member of the

Let us count the ways:
•Dress

•Purse

•Blouse

•Sweater

•Suit

•Shorts

•Skirt

•Levi's

•Slacks

•Bathing Suit

QuIz

, •

,.

-------....:=-------------··
Are your CD' s renewing at lower rates than you
wont?
DYes

DNo

'·

Are your Money Market rates uncompetitive?
DYes

DNo

'

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'

Do you still want to shelter income from current '
t~e~
·
DYes

DNo

Are you looking for alternatives to help you make .
your money grow foster?
:.
DYes

DNo
'

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If .you answered YES to any of these questions, you
need to attend a free seminar discussing ways to · '
help make the new tax lows work to your odvon· ·
tog e.
Date: May 5, 1987
Time: 6:30 P.M.
Place: Holiday Inn
Sponsored by:
.Jim Morrison
Integrated Resources Equity Corporation
530 Second Avenue, Suite C
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

famll~

School of Nursing wins grant

A1 DISCOUNT PRICES

FREE GiFT WRAPPING

Please call 446-1986 to reserve -your seat.

yell ow or white gold.

HlO f: f{AN DF: - Rio Grantl e Coll ege's Holzer Sc hoo l of
Nu rs in g recently received a $10.000 gra nt from !he Fi fth Thi r-d
Bank In Cin cin nati.
The gran! , awardPd by lhr• ·directors of the J aco~ .
Schmidlapp Trust. wi ll be used 10 purchase inslruct iona! film s
and co mpul f' r soft w;ur for nu rsi ng st ud ies.
·

,,

Tawney Jewelers
424SICGAWPOII$

THOMAS
CLOTHIERS
·Downtown Gallipolis

Integrated
Resources

.'

Gi\LI. If'OI.I S - ln vrs llga lor Wa yne Sweeney and Depuly
Howard Mullins ot lhP Callla Count y Sheri ff' s Deparl menl
:t tl cnriNI a recent OtH'·day se minar at Ken t State Univers ll y,
acco rding lo Sheri i f .lames M. Monl go mrry.
Thr• s(•minar co nsisll'd of lnstt·uc·tlons In a nd hands-on
cxpcricncr• wil h tartica l dCJl loy menl of chemica l agcnls. The
sPm lnar is a part of a eon finu lng educa tional progra m withi n
lhr s heriff' s department designed IOkee p personn el tra ined and
qua lified. Mont go rncr.v s;1 id .

9 calL~

rf'Jlt) I'I S nln(' ca lls F' rl day :

Po nwr o~: n1l l : 01; a.m. 10 Union 1\ vrnue ror Rir h lcenhowcl' who
rr lu sf'd trr;1 lnwn t : Mlddlrp or t at l1 : 4:' a.m. 10 Nor th Second

Moose Lodge 731
Point Pleasant, WV 25550:

Ave nue fur Margan'! Va nCootwy to Holzer Medical Cent er ;
Middl!'purt a t 12::12 p.m. 10 Sioncwood Apa rl mcnl s fo1· Mabie
l.;rn e to ll otzc· r Mr' dieal Cen ter; Micldlcport at 4:21 p.m. 10Sou th
Fourllt Al'&lt;'nu e for tld am Haning 10 Holzer MPdicai Crnt cr:
'Micldlrpn rl a! 9:29p.m. to Coa l Slrret for Refl y Cr ites who was
trentrti tJul not tnttts)}Ortl'&lt;i:· Tuppers Plain s at 10:46 p.m. lo
Oh io 10 ~ 1 lor Ciler.vl Swager! to O'Birness Memor ial HospiJ;il :
r'on"·r o_v at II :'" p.m. to Ohio 7 for r:enr Marslw illo Ve terans
Mrmori;il li os pilal.

Tickets Available At:
.PVH Gift Shop
&amp; Other tocal Businesses.

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Spring Green Up
5¢ Per Pound Bonus With This Coupon
!c):pit'l!s 5171871

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ANNUAL
CHARITY BALL

BRIDGEPORT. Conn . (UP!)
: -The last bod y was pulled from
:the rubble of a collapsed apart · men) bUilding Saturday, brlng:ing to 28 the final death toll of
:conslrucllon workt&gt;rs, some of
w hom apparently Ifled to flee as
;Ions of concrete and steel· came
. ~crumbling down , authorit ies
.sal,d.
: Rescue workers removing tons
· of concrete and twisted 'meta l
: round bodies near ex its, indicat ; ing some workers fried to escape,
•said' Jonalh ~ n Best. director of
: emergency services in Bridge; porl, and head of the rescue
•effort ·
; Ope(atlons ended early today
: when qews pulled the las! body
from tile rubble. The body of an
·unidentified cons! ru ction worker'
:was r~overed at about 2 a.m.
,a nd taken to St. Vincent 's Hospl·
; tal, pollee said .
· The 1.3-s tor y L' Ambiance
:Plaza ,aparlment building and
;parking garage collapsed In a
-hea p April 2:1. The nine-da v
, rescue eflorl Involving hundreds
· of sea rchers produced no
:survlvors .
: "II's like the last quarter of a
· football ga me that you know
: you've los!," OQe rescue worker
; was overheard to say a! the scene
· in )he fin al hours of the operation
: f"rlday.
: Ma yor Thomas Bucci said I al k
· Of making !he scene a permanenl
: memor ia l to the workers was up
: lo the owners of the private
·building site, but the city was
: loo king for "an appropriale
:memoria l."

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A MEMBER OF THE CLUB - Paige Sheets, prin!)ipjl) _ol
Southwestern High School, attended the 92nd annual North Cenh·al ·
Association meeting this year. Sheets is seen above heing
congratulated by Sister M11ry Ann E~kholl, superint endent ol
schools, archdiocese of St. Louis, president ol the NCA lor the
19R6-87 a.~soclation year.

3 Gallia high schools
win NCA accreditation
GA LLIPOLIS Ha nnan
Trace , North Gallia and Sou thwes tern high schools were admit·
t{!d to members hip in the North
C!'nt ra i Associa tion of Colleges
and Seconda ry Schools during it s
recent annu al meet ing in
Chicago.
The three schools were among
27 Institutions in Ohio to beco me
NCA members for the firs! lim!".
Accreditalion by the NCi\
means that the school ha s met
lhc stand ards set for memher·
ship. These slandards signify
!ha l the school has the resources,
perso nn el and leadership necessary for effective educa tion.
Accredilation mu sl be re·
newed eac h year.
"Continuation within lhe NCA
req uires a joint effort by the
community a nd the staff to make
certain !ha l the potentia lil y for
qualit y ed ucation remai ns unlm·
paired," Ga lila Count y Local
Schools Sup eri nt endent Nell
Johnso n said. " The advant age of
NCA membership Is that 11'.
assures !he public al large that
!he school has met !hose sta nd·
ards which good schoo ls in the
NC A region consider 10 be

im perative for ·elfeel ivc educa·
lion to take place."
Dr. Gene Wenger, NCA state
director, extended congratuia·
tions to !he schools, noting that
"Hannan Trace , Norl h Ga llia
and Southwestern hi gh sc hools ·
have now joined . the growing
league of schools whose purpose
is the continu ing ques t for higher
levels of qualit y education ."
NCA, the riation 's largest re·
gionai accrediting assoclallon, Is
a league of 6,000 schools and 900
colleges and universities In I~
stal es. The association work s
with schools lo impmve the
quality of &lt;?ducat!on lhrough
· accreditation and evaluation.

.

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l;tl6 Xl6001 ............... 12050'
l;tl6 n:rsoa ...... .,. ...... 11749
1~6 116001 ............... 12079
1~16 IIUOR ............... I1889

Point Distributing Co. is pa~ing cash on the spot for
empty aluminum beverage cans of any kind. ~1akc a clean
sweep this Spring when l'Ou recycle. There's plenty of grcco
out there just wai ting to be picked up.
Recycling Pays 'IOda~!

I.
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Can Recovery
R.R. 1, Old Thwn Road
Monday:rhursday 8-11 AM &amp; 1-4 PM
675-4519

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Sponsored by:
Point Distributing Co.

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....2240

Low Back Spring Bas1 Chair .....................•65
High Back Spring Base Chair ....................sn
End Table ..................................................S4S ,

Spring Base Lounger .............................. S139 ..~.

446-1171 Gal

'

Ohio

Sales Tax?·
0

- First raspondar rn outlying areas of the County.
•

ON A HOI IliA,

HONDA-

WITH SAYINGS UP TO
..1300 ON SELECTED
REBATE MODElS

1917 TRX2SO ............... S2t00
• 1917 TRX2SOX ............. 122 SO
19111 TRX200SX ........... s1700
19811 TRI2SO .............. .' 1985

Ho11dt At Itt Be1tf
NOW CARRYING THE
CO.MPLETE LINE OF
"HONDA" OILS AND
CHEMICALS

YUASHA BAnERIJ!
5TAI11NG AT

J i 0 95

FourTro•" 250

1986 ATC350X............. S1891
1986 ATC200X ............ $1591

1986 ATC12S ............... 11198

HONDA SUNGLASSES
ARE HERE!

WE CARRY IHE WIWE &amp; MAX UI(E OF
SADDU BAGS
..., t AJL-6 , ...

' - Safety training programs for groups and organizations.

-

- 2400 calls for emergency medical service to the Gallia
County EMS annually.
- Emergency transfer service .

•PREVENT CONTINUAL SOLICITATION FOR DONATIONS.
•NO SATISFAI=TORY ALTERNATIVE EXISTS IF GALLIA
COUNTY LOSES THE PRESENT GALLIA COUNTY EMS .

491 GT •dl•lln

.

Local Consultation
In Gallipolis

- Upgrading and replacem ent of outdated and worn out
equipment.

Fer al your tire llllds:

fhlce......llniOf
•••l•p tires wltll the ·
MW hnlop Elite

336 S. High St., Columbus, OH.

•ASSURED CONTINUATION OF QUALITY EMERGENCY
MEDICAL SERVICE FOR OUR CITIZENS THROUGHOUT
THE COUNTY .....
- 24 hours a day.

Oo11 ,, Ml11 Ou#/ Rockl11' R.1hlfB1 '''·Hot/

THE WORLD FAMOUS

AnORNIY·AI·LAW

•LOSS.OF OVER $200.000 IN FEDERAL REVENUE SHARING WHICH HAS H.ELPED FINANCE THE EMS UNTIL
THIS YEAR.

•

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. L. W. CENNAMO

•ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF OUR AREA

(

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614-221-0888

Casual Outdoor Furniture

1ft.'/•

MAll 'lOUR IUMitUI A •mE • , •

tl7 GL1200A ............. 17150
tl7 Gl12001 .............. SSIIOO
tl6 YT1100 Shadow ...13600
,16 YT700 Shallow ... S299S
tl6 (MX 4SO ltbel ... lt891
ttl6 W250 ltblt .... S1191

BANKRUPTCY

Whv D·oes ·The Ga·llipolis
Area Chamber ~of
Co~merce Support The

ROCKIN' REBATES

j

the data In mid-May.
"It is my hope !hal with the
Ve nice teconomirt summit com·
ing up , our,ongolng review of the
semiconduc tor agreemenl will
dem onstrate a persuasive patt·
ern of com11liance. thereby allowin g remova l of the sa nctions as
soo n as possibl e'." Re aga n said.

I MOTHER'S DAY SUNDAY, MAY lOTH I

.-------------1

FEATURING:

SHADOW" 1100

The White Hou se agreed few
specific solutions were offered
during the Naka sone vi sit.
Chief of staff Howard Baker
said In an lniNvlew on television
commentator ,John MeLaugh·

9SSSecond Ave.

RIVER FRONT HONDA

Black Tie Optional

cou~trles.

lin 's "One on One" progr am.
"There's an hon est and genu ine
effort on the part ol the pr ime
minister ... to improve !he
economic relationship between
our cou nt ries a nd to redu ce the
size of the trade deficit. "
But whllr " II was a good series
of meet ings." Baker sa id, "It
was pret ty shorl of specifi c
proposals."
Pres id Pn t Re ag an , In saving
good-bye to Naka sone. said he
hoped Jap an has corrected !he
actions th at led him to Impose
$300 million in punitive ta ri ffs
_A pril 17 becau se of alleged
··'llumping" ot elt'Ct ronl c compu·
ter chips into third countries at
less tha n fair market price.
The Japa nese deny they have
violated an aj!reement prohibit ·
ing such trade practices.
Reaga n said !he Uni ted Sta les
and J apan have agrPed 10 reVI eW

CORfliN ~ SN\'[)(R
fURNITURE CO.

• GALLIPOLIS - An automo·
bile fir!' In lhe Blue Fountain
Motel parking lot Friday aflt;r·
noon caused an estimated $600 In
~amage, according lo !he Galli·
flolls Volunteer Fire
Department.
; The automobile, a 1982 Chevtolet Cavalier owned by James
Gooderham, Rt. 2, Vinton, suslained damage when the lranstnlsslon overhea ted , starting the
ljre under, the ear. The fir e
~urned oil, wiring and the
lnsulallon.
, One tr11ck and 1~ fir emen were
lo the scene.

Couple • $35.00
Single • $17.50

WASHINGTON 1UP! I
Prime Minister Yasuhlro Nakasone ended his official visil
Sa t~ rday with agreement thai
Japan's trade ifllbalance with
the United Sta tes is a seriou s
problem, but no agreement on
how to deal wit h the underlying
issues.
Aft er breakfast wit h Seerel ary
of Stale Grorge Shultz, Nakasone
was scheduled lo flv to Hawa ii for
a day 's res t before.his flight ba r k
to Japan.
He told a Na tional Press Club
audience friday he was deeply
conee r·ned about co nl l~ u.lnl! ~
trade Imbalance between !he two

For this Mother's Day give
Mother something to help her
enjoy the summer months
ahead. lloyd's Flanders Fibercraft has the exclusive woven
fiber that is self ventilating .
Order Mother's Todayl

Fire dama~ rar

9:00P.M.· 1:00 A.M.

Midd lrporl !' ire il&lt;'J~ rr · t mcn l at ~ : 4 Ja. m . l oa n au to accidPnt
nn Oh io 7 in Cht•shi re, no inju ries: Pomeroy at 10: O:l a.m. lo Pine
Crovp Hnmt lor Anna 1\oenig lo Veterans Memori al Hos pital ;

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Saturday, May 16, 1987

POM J-:i! OY.- Mr lgs Coun t.v " merrwnry MPdica l Services

.

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:VICtim

• GALLIPOLIS - A sc hool bus
: and a iruck collided on Ches hil&gt;e
; 'l;,o~Vnshlp Road 2 Friday at 2: H
p.m., according to the Gallla ·
Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol .
; The patrol said Lemuel J .
Harden Jr ., 70, Cheshire, wa s
arlvlng his !ruck south on Town·
~hlp Road 2 when a Gallla County
Local school bus dr iven by Peggy
A. Thomas, 52, Rt. 1. Cheshire.
turned right onto !he lownshlp
road from Ohio 554. Thomas went
left of center as s he made her
(Urn, striking Harden's truck,
according lo lhe patrol.
: Thomas was cited for lm·
proper turning.

The Sunday Times-Sentinet-Page~A-5

Few specific solutions a~ise
from Japanese leader's visit

Workers
find last
[collapse
:

•

Pomeroy~ Middleport- GellipOiis. Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va .

: Patrol tickets driver

Gallia lawmen attend seminar

Eml'ff!,'l'ru:y unit.~ answer

. May~. 1987

PAm &amp; SEIVICI 446-2648
SAT. 9

P.&amp; ·

Passage of the 1/2°/o Sales.
Tax Proposal Can Make
The Difference Betw.een
Life and Death.
In .Gallia County.
PAID FOR BV GALLIPOLIS AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

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... $

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

!

~~~~~T~he~S~un~d~ay~~~~~~===::=!~~~~~~~~~~~O~h~io~P~o~in~t~P~Iea~sa~.·~nt~.~W~-~V~&lt;!~-====~=:::::====;;=~~~3~·J1~9~8.1~=:.;
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JVSD board acts on personnel matte~

RIO GRAN DE: - Person nel
actions dominated ac tio n tak en
by the Callla-Jac kson-VI nton
Joint Vocat ional Boa rd of E:d uca
lion at li s recent mce!ing.
: The first order of business wa .,
to approve c·xlendcd se rvice
cont racts to De nn is Fra nks and
Mi chael McPherson. The purpose of lhosp contrac ts was to
cover t he time tha i lh('ir classes.
compu ters and t ran sil ions rc·
speclively. ru n past th e end of t he
SC hOOl ,YPar IO.J un (• 1987.
- Next. fi ve instructors wen·
recommended for ont&gt;·ye ar II·
rntt ed contracts, prov ided that
sufficient enro llmen t t&gt;x ls ts.
These instructors are Bl'II Y P lv·
~ale, Pam Moran, Denn.is
Franks, Mike McPh erson a nd
Po rna Smlt h.
· Pa rt -time• hourly adult a ppalntment s were apr&gt;rovcd for
pave Burnel! t&gt;, Fa ye FrazN,
Earl Fry a nd Joh n Per ry.
: The adult cd ucat Jon budget for
the period of Apr il l'i to Ma y 20,
1987, for the amount of $746.R6,
was approved for th e F: MT
refresher co urS&lt;' for the• Sou theas t Ohio F.mergc ncy Med ic-a 1
Service.
: The busi ness of co ni rae! r&lt;•nt•·
Iva Is for 19R7-AA saw a total of 24
Individuals approved for emp loy·
men! and 12 individu als slate&lt;!

fo r C() nt rac t non -renewaL
tra n. 20 days: Marty Wallace. 15
Jena R. We'iker, a speec h days: and Carl Wamsley, 20
thera pist, received a one-year, days.
part -time contract.
There were non-renewed co nReceivi ng other one-year con- tracts fo r the following certJfl.
tracts are Mar k Blair, Ra ymond catcd personnel: E ric Carman
DeGa rmo. Rol&gt;ln Ha rris, Carol Glenn Gra ham, Bonnie Huston '
.lackson. Lee .Johnson. Michael Patty Jones, Wes Menshouse and
Kinnaird, Christi ne Ober holzer, Chris Tibby.
Dav id Pope, Jea n Rinehart
There were non-renewed li·
Kenn eth Slone a nd Cari mil ed supplementa l con tracts
Wams ley.
for the followi ng certificted perTwo· yc&lt;i r cant ra e" were ap· sonnel: Bonnie Cra btree. Dennis
proved for Sa ndy Forgey . .Joyce Fra nks, Cha r les Harper. Ml'ke
.John son, Char les .Jones an d .ran
Me Pherso n. Tom Reid and
Rada bau gh.
Mar ly Wa llace.
Approva l for thret•-ye ar ron·
In of her business, 1he board:
tra cts was gra nted for Dewey
-a uthorized summer school
Hor ton, J an McCorkle, Jack lor stupcnt s needing credits for
Ri chards and Mar tin Wa llace.
high sc hool graduation;
Continuing contrac ts were ap·
-approved the 1987-88 school
provr-d for .l amPs McCar ley. calendar for Buckeye Hills Ca Wendvll McCoy, Tom Reid and reer Center;
l:erald Shook.
-gra nt ed permi ssion to Super·
Limit ed suppl ement al ' con- int endent .John A. Shump to
tracts of extended se rvice were submi1 proposa ls to· the Ohio
gra nted to Rober t Baughma n, :10 Department of Food Service for a .
day's; Mark Blai r, .20 days;
.Jeann ine Cunni ngham. 20 da ys;
rtayrnond DeGarmo, :ls da ys;
Dick Drt ty. Dwight J enki ns.
.loyre .lohnson. Mi chae l Kin·
nal rcl, .lamPs MrC'a rl r y, WendPII

McCoy, 20 da ys; David Pope, 60
days; .Jan Rad abaugh, Tom
Reid, .Jack Richards. Jean Rine·
hart, .ion Rot hgcb, Meta VanNJ&gt;s·

Forest service taking
summer applications
IRONTON - Appllca lions orr• youn g peoplc. and develop In
now bein g acct&gt;pled for the You tIt you th an understanding and
Conserva tion Co rt&gt;Summer Em · appreciation of our natio n's
ploy men! Program to be held by nat ural Pn v ironme n t and
the 'fVa ync Nalio na l Fores t. her if age."
according to Dis tric t Ran ger
Two four-week sess ions will be
Lionel Lemery. The program is held . Each sess ion will emplo);
open toa ll yo ungmr' n and wome n four youth. The fir st session is
ages 15 Ihrough 18.
scheduled fo r .June 15 to .July 10.
This program r nablcs yout11 to The secood sess ion from Juiy 1:1
work, lear n and l'ar n by doin g to Aug. i . Pa rticipan ts will work
projec ts I ha I fu r thrr I he develop· Monda y through Friday, eight
men! and co nserva tion of the · hours a da y, and h&lt;' pa id $:1.:l5 per
natura l rcsoun·es of th P Un itcd hour .
States. Participant s wi ll work
Applica tions and adcl ilional
out of the La ke Vrsu.v ius Work
Informa t io n ma y be obtu ined by
Ce nter. ne~r Prclr o. r ig hl m i iPs
ro ntac ilng high school ca ree r or
north of lmnt on.
C'Ounseling depa rtment s, the
"The YCC progra m· h&lt;Js three• Ohi o Bun•a u ol Employmen t
objectives," said l.rmN v. "Thl' l' Servlc s, 706 Park Avc .. Iron ton,
arf' lo accompli s h nrpdp(J consc r'·
Ot' thf' Distric t Ran ger. USDAvatlon wor·k on public la nds. l·' orrs t Srr vlr-e, 710 Park Ave.,
provide gain fu l empl oymen t for Iro nto n, :.:12-:!22:\.

City police issue 5 citations
GA LLIPOL IS - Chm·les E .
Coeh ran , 41 , :to Mill Creek Roa cl.
was cited Fricluy ni ght by Ca lli·
po lls Cit y Poilr r for clisordcr ty
condu c·t by Intoxica ti on .
tlr was rrleas('(l al midn i~ hl
Friday on a ~ - F summons,
accord ing to police t' port s.
Thr pollee dr partmc•nt rr··
por ted un acc lc!Pnl l•' rida.v ufll'rnoon nn Spru f'C' Slr('(•t .

Angrla L. Smith , l!l. P;, triot
Star Rout&lt;', wa s dri,·Jng eas t on
Sprue(' Str·r0! wlwn lnrz A J
~IO&lt;'krr . ·I·L 4fl Sp •u''" St .. rr port
cdi)' drove in to Smith 's p.r th a s
Stoc·krr· ;~ tt e rnp t i'CI to turn int o
hrr drivl'way .

Stockt• r was til ed for fail ure to
vir ld.
Da ni PI E: . Buys. 21. Eu reka
Star Rou te. was ci ted Satu rday
morni ng fo r fa !l ure to co ntrol his
vrhie lc after he repor1 edly
struck H uti lit y pole on VIne
Strrrt . Pollee sa id his ca r went
orr the righ t side oft he street. The
collis ion ca used hea vy damage
to his veh icle.
In other poilcr news, Allen A.
Cox. 21. Eu reka Star Route. was
citc•d Friday night for dcfecilve

nutrutongrantandtothe Depart ·
ment of Vocational Education for
a Carl Perkins Vocational Edu ·
for the ·· 1987·88
cat Ion Grant
School
Year .'
·
-grant ed permission to the
superintendent to apply through
th e Department of Vocational
.
f
h
Ed uca ron
or 1 e l·A Handi·
'
ca pped Program vocational
unit·
•
-granted permission to the
superlntenden1 to advertise for
blds on carpet to complete the
I h r e e - Ye a r
r e car PetIng

~ogram: ,

, -adopted the revised Sou·
theasler n Ohio Volu ntary Education Cooperative byla ws and
a greemen1, which regarded
changing th e SEOVEC fiscal
year from Sept: l through Aug. 31
to July l through June 30.
-approved a second readin g to
Title VI , Title IX and Section 504
grievance procedures fo r student s and non-certificated staff.

1

._,.

.

GA LLIPOLIS - Milton D.
Polly, .12. Rt. 2. Vinton, was
sent to !he Ga llia Countv· Jail
Saturday
morning by the
C
allla·Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Pa tro), charged wi1h
OWl and cited tor bei ng left of
center . , ',.
.
Polly posted bond about 71'2
hours later after being 1a.ken
to jail and was released at 9: 45
a.m. , according to the Gallia
Coun1y Sheriff's Depar tment.

'

$3.75

WHICH INCLUDES: 112 CHICKEN OR RIBS,
BAKED BEANS, COLE SLAW, ROLL &amp;
BEVERAGE. PIE OR CAKE 50'.

..

'l·.' I

"

Bidwell, was brought to the.
jail by the sheriff's depart·
.
.
me nt Sat urda y m orntng ,
charghd
with OWl a nd cited · "
~
for speeding
. . . ·
Gary M. Altier. 26, Chr"
shire, was sent to 1hr ja il by ' '
the Gallipolis City Police ·
d .h
Friday night. charge wt1 '
DWI.
· ··
Paul Dav id Lee, 18, Rt. 2,' ·
.Vinton. was sent to the jall
Friday night by the patrol•.·

MODEL
414-8
High-back
1881 Willi

Tach·a-Matlc•
hitch syslem

Sealed
beam
headlights

~'
l ,'

}j j ....
,,.• I

8-s•eed.
8·plnlon
Uni·D~n · ·

tranuxle

mowing decks

Dtol-a-hetgll1
lltachmeniUH

1.~.

BAUM LUMBER

985-3301

of 7333 Case· Ave., Mentor,
Wednesday in Men lor. Fun·
aca t services were conducted
lf.rlday at Mentor United Met hodtsl Churc h, where he was a
•
nzember.
.
:.Born in Gai lla Cou nty, hew as a
s~ n of Ross and Nora Ward
Phillips.
::He is survived by his wife,
~afcell a Blauser Phillips; two
so n~. Greg Phillips of Worthing·
1oQl and Jerry Phillips:· seven
grMdchlldrcn: and cousins in
CaUfa County.
til! was preceded in death by a
bro'lher. Ward Phillips.
b.•graduate of Ga llia Academy
ttil:lf School, he received a
ba~e lor of arts degree from
Ol\IOl University and master of
arls: degree from Ohio State
U~l\!e rslt y . He retired from
tcarlling In 1972, after 33 years of
set\llce, and taught business
aclj"iltnlstrallon al Mentor High
ScAool. Following his rellrl'mr nt. he was an Insurance agent
for.ifii years.
~fed

FREE DELIVERY, WE TAKE TRADE-INS
QUALITY PARTS AND SERVICE
CHESTER

GALLIPOLIS - William B.
Brumfield, 78. 2918 Darwin Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif., died Thurs·
day at the Veterans Adminlstra:
lion Hospital in Wadsworth.
Calif. He retired as an operating
engineer In 1972.
Born Aug. 29. 1908, in Lesage,
W.Va., he was a. son of !he late
Em mett Brumfield and Eliza·
beth. Brumfield Ribick.
tie Is survived by his wife,
Mildred arumfleld: two brothers, Joseph A. Brumfield of
Temple City, Calif., and Noah C'.
BtUmfleld of Casper, Wyo.;
lllree sis ters, Bertha I. Dillon of
Cancaster, Calif. , Mary Bennett
~ Gallipolis,
and Kathleen
~lager &lt;Jf Alahambra , Calif. He
was' preceded In de ath by one
Jtrother and one sister.
He was a World War .II Army
Xt-teran.
,; Services will be 1 p.m., Wed·
nesday In the Willis Fun eral
f{om e.- wlt,h the Rev. Alfred
l!oll~y officiating. Burial will be
~Crown City Ceme1ery. Ffiends
'llay call at' the funeral Home
(rom 6-9 p.m. Tuesday .
:\ VFW post 4464 will present
gfaveside military riles.

Clarence Phillips
I'
'
·'•:MENTOR- Clarence Phillips,

X

3&amp;"' 42" &amp; 48" ' -......__

William B. Brumfield

:·

8.50
rear tu~ tires

23

•

'

r~-D~;ar;r;el~l~F~e~ll~u~re~.;~~·~R;t;·;2;,.-;a;ls;o;c;h;a;rg;ed;;w~it;h;D~W~I.;;;·~

springs

ORANGE TWP. V.F.D. ANNUAL
MOTHER'S DAY CHICKEN &amp; RIB
B.B.Q. AT THE FI.RE HOUSE IN
TUPPERS PLAINS, MAY 10.
SERVING TIME 11 :00 A.M.
PRICE:

Po.lice agencies place·
Jlour ;n ·Gallw· J·a;l· .

College h!)lds

"

"

'

'

.

Mi'M,red E. Story

.r

enrich~ent

day_

_..:...:.IC=~nl.: .:lnu:.ed~fro:.::.:m.:.:...A
:. :
· l:. :. . l

ers and three sisters. '
Graveside services will b.e held
TAG educators a!lending from ~c' r s it y: Sheri Hollings head, re- White. While's School of Tae
Mondily·'at 2: 30 p.m.· in Beech
Meigs
County were Bill Buckley '· cr!'a llon program director, 0 .0. Kwo n-Do: a nd Mlkki Cas to,
Grove Cemetery. wi th the Rev.
Columbus, died Friday.
TAG
coordi
na10r, Meigs County Mcint yre Park District; David dance In structor.
Mrs. S!ory and her late hus- Jo hn .Ja ckson offl c laling. Schools. and Patti Strubl e, TAG .--..__.:__ _ __.;,._ _ _ _~_ _ _ __.:__ _ _~
band, Ernest E . Story, were lxith Friends may call at Ewing' teacher, Southern Local Schools.
former Meigs Cou nty residents. Funeral Home from 7·9 p.m.
Regiona l TAG Codrdl nator
Survivors include two daugh· today.
In lieu of flowers, th~ fami ly Tracy J ageman also took part in
ters, Grace Rya n of Columbus.
.
and Helen Willey of Livonia. requests thai donations be made theRiprogram
o
Gra
nde
College par,tlciMich.: a son, Verne E. Story of to the Racine Emergency Medi· pant s includ ed: H. Paul Lloyd,
Laurel Cliff: and two grandsons, cal Service uni t.
dean, School of Education.
ln(ontinent Pants/Liners .............................. 25% off
Michael Willey and John Story :
.. tleallh and Ph ysical Ed ucation;
Funera l arrangements ar e
Chest &amp; Waist Restraints .......................-...... 15% off
Ben Forshey, Ro n Tu cceri. Ro n
pending with Rutherford's Fun·. ,Veterans Memorial
Craig, Greg Miller, Ed Roark.
Batk Rest Cushions ....................................... 25% off
era! Home in Columbus. Burial
E:di e Ross; Sa nford Lane, .lames
Friday
Admissions
Freda
Stethoscopes ., ................................................25°/o off
will be in Greenl awn Cemetery iil
Doubl eday , Ph il Ander son and
Milch,
Pomeroy;
Flora
Gibson.
Columbus.
Mastectomy Sleeves ..................................... 2 5% off
MiddleJ"ort; Anna Koenig, Ra· Bauer.
Ot
her
partici
pants
we
r~
Bob
Donald G. Strauss
ci ne: Flossie Prunt y, Bidwell;
Mastectomy Bras ~......................................... 10°/o off
Newaza Smith, Pomeroy; Ca rl Swa nk, scou1m aster , Troop 51,
Camp #212 Tru·Life Mastectomy Forms. ...... S42.00
RACINE- Donald G. Strauss.
Rairden, Hart ford. W.Va.: Ed· Jackson: Jo Kappa s. Ohio Uni·
(Discontinued lteml
75, 24310 Hill Road, Racine, died ward Martin. Pomeroy.
Purchase a Mastectomy Form at our
Saturday at Veterans Memorial
Friday Disc harges - Ronald
Hospital.
Jeffers, Rex Cum ings, Den nis Kle in. Joh n Metzger. RobPrl
Suggested Retail prlce .......... get 2 Mastectomy, Bras
A retired ass istant press t:nan, McKinney, Bill Kenn edy . Irene Pa rsons. Emerson Will.
-FREEhe was born Dec. 7. 1911 , in r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii]
Knee Exercise Table (20 lb. wt.).................... s75.00
Pomeroy to the ta le Valentine
and Deana ttobstetter Strauss .
1IIE YER50N AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO THATAPPEAIS ON
Sian~ Pillows .................................................... 518.00 ·
He was a member . of the
PAGE 12 OF 011t MAY 3RD SAil CIICIIAR Will NOT BE
Convoluted Bed Pads (3" thick) .................... SJ4.00
Amert~an Legion In Columbu s
AVAILABLE AT ntiS 11ME. WE WE1E 111011 TO GET DEUVERY
~:/1 ~ .s. NavyveteranofWorld
FROM 1IIE MANUFAClUIER. WE AlE SORRY FOR ANY .

HELP US CELEBRA
· 1OTH ANNIVERSARY!!!

survivors Include his ,wife.
Eula, of Racine: ane brother:
Charles S1 rauss of Pomeroy; and
several ni eces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he wa s
preceded in death by t')'O broth·

THE MEDICAL
SHOPPE, INC
565 Jackson Pike

INCONVENINCE tHIS MAY HAVE CAUSED OUR CUSTOMERS;

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
· Phone 446 -2206
~

MANY OTHEIITEMS ALSO AVAILABLE
Herman L. Dillon. L.P.T.
Dee Dillon, R.N.

2 are fined
in local court
GALLIPOLIS - Kevin P.
Taylor, 19, of RL 2, Vinton. was
fin ed $17 for an open contai ner
viola tion Friday in Ga llipolis
Municipal Court .
In other court news, Sheila R.
Brammer. 18, of Kenton , was
fin ed $12 for assured clear
dis tance.
Speeding bonds were forfeited
by Beatrice I. Spr inger, 51, of Rt .
1. Gallipolis, $41; oa,·id A.
Brown, 30, 'or Milton. W.Va ., $40:
and Char les H. Peters, 52.
Toledo, $42.
Kevin S. Longarder, 19, and
Kenn eth N. Robinson .Jr., 20, both
of Mesa. Ariz.. forfeited $53
bonds for fishing in Tycoon Lake
without a license.
Other bonds were fo rfe ited by
Anthony B. Chapma n, 19. of Long
Bottom, $5.1 for d lsposlng a
beverage container in Tycoon
Lake; Ernest Pa trick . Mundell.
27, VIctorville. $40, following a
vehicle too closely; Da vid A.
Far ~. 18, of Poin t Pleasa nt , $40,
squealing tires; and Mary K.
Saxon, 24 , of 62 Chilllcolhe Road ,
$45 for failure to con1ro1 her
vehicle.

MOTHER'S DAY
AT

rx hi iU st on his ve hlc le.

I)&lt;' bra S. Simpkins. :12. Po int
Pl('asa nt. was cit eel F rida y night

fo r speeding.

You May Not Think You
Need A H earing Aid!
\'our ht•uring loss mny nollw ~t·vt•rt' t• nnu~h Ihut you
yo u nt•t•d " lwarin ~-: ail l.
\'nu mi F-( hl wi !'l h htlwnr ) 'Uur famil y nr frit•rul s n littlt•
lll'llo ·r, or wan1 m on· from a rf'li~-:itnr • ••·r&gt;i&lt;-o•, ll•r lurr•
or t•onft•ro•nr·r•. Or.~"" mi~tht ju ~ t wnn tlo ht•ar 1lw rn·

r,.,.,

(tiO

or 1t•lt'\' i!-! ion mort• t'Ul'l ih .

.

'

YOU MAY NEED THE

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.
!M

.,

Today is the day to make your best deal on the beauty and
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Roxann K . Pollark, M:A., tlw l Jnitron
fll&lt;'lory· Train&lt;'d authorized r('prest'n tativt&gt; will
he atiNHEARING May 6·May 9, 1987 to de mon·
st rai t' the m•w ··UC" Pt·rsonal Amplifier.
Durin!' this Sp&lt;'fial t'VI'n t, we ore offering the
"UC" at a 20% diseoun i.
CALL &lt;146-76 19 for an appointment for a FREE
hPaing t&lt;'st &amp; dt'mon stration of the "UC."

INHEARING .
417 /:i St•cond Ave.
Gallipolis
446-7619
1

1

OPEN 11 A.M. TO I P.M.
MONDAY lHIU SATuiDAJ
SUNDAY 11 A.M. nL 1 P.M.

EVANS &amp; BlACK CARPET

EVANS &amp; BLACK CARPET

SCULPTURED
CUT LOOP

LORELLE ANSO IV

Special 921 0

SALE

SATIN ELEGANCE
SAXONY PLUSH

95 sq. y~.
$8
Rtg.
sq.
110.95

$1
4
95 sq.
Reg. 118.95 sq. yd.

SALE

yd.

. ANSO IV

ft .

ANSO V
WORRY FREE CARPET

yd.

SMORGASBORD

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

.IVANS &amp; BLACK CARPET

SALE

$6 95sq.sq. yd.

Reg. 18.9 5

BEST DEAL

BETTER DEAL

•

Full Warranty Pad and
Installation ~vailable
FREE ESTIMATES

DIRECT

LL OUTLET

HAFFELT BROTHERS
It; 4 Box 1S3C·

PH. 446·2107

.

Gallipolis, Ohio

"

�I

. Ohio-~oint Pleasant. W. Va.

-Agency ·
silent
on claim
of theft
YOUNGSTOW N IUPlt -The
age nt In charge of the FBI' s
You ngs town office has declined
comment on a federal informant 's claim that two Ma honl ng
Cou nty sher iff' s depu ties stole
coca ine and money from a drug
deal er In mid-1985.
Informant Robert Ar mstrong,
testifying Thursday in Akron in
the federa l government' s dr ug
case aga inst two Mahoning
County men, alleged I hat his
brother, aux il iary deput y Pa
trick Armstro ng, along with
sheriff' s Ll. Mlt'hael Terlecky,
stole the money and drugs after
threatening to arrest the cocaine
deal er. ·
FB I ofllclal Robert Friedm an,
whose age nt s relied on inform a·
lion from Robert Armstrong
during a two-year drug In vest iga·
lim\ that Jed to multipl!' in dict·
ment s, said Friday he could not
"say anyt hing either way" r e·
g ardln g Ar m s tron g's
accusa tions.
M ah.onlng Coun ty Sheriff Ed·
ward Nemeth sa id hPwou ld lake
no action agains t the offict' rs
because they have not been
charged with any wrongdoin g.
He also ques tioned I he cred lbi li ty
of Robert Armstrong, Who has
been coovlcted In tht&gt; past on
charges of co unterfeiting, armed
robbery, kidnapping and rape.
Terlecky, a sheriff's depart ment detective, fla tly denied
Rober t Arm strong's allega tion.
Pa l Arms trong, a former You ngstow n pollee officer who has
served since 198.'i on I he sher i ff' s
au&gt;llllary force, co uld not be
reached for comment.
Robert Arms trong · Is a kt'y
prosecution wit ness In th p yover nmenl' s case against Robert
.1. Zelinka of Lowellv ille and
William Emil Ghlnda of St rul h·
er s, both accused of Invo lvement
In a coca ine r ing center ed in
Youngstow n.
T he Informant testifi ed he had
been asked to distribu te cocai ne
by ,Joseph. Van Oud enhova n of
Stru thers, who plea ded guilt y
Thursday to a federa l narco tics
violation.
Ar·mstrong told a U.S. District
Court jury In Akron thai Va n
Oudenhovan brought cocai ne
and drug paraphernalia to his
house In 19Ro. He said he
deliver ed part of the cocain e to
Ghlnda but derided to steal the
rest. t\r'mstrong sa id he 1hen
ca ll ed Te rl ec k~ and his brother
to his home.
Van Ou denhova n was later
summonl'd to Robcr·t Mm ·
~ trong ' s home, whl're ht· was
threa tened w llh arr&lt;'sl bv Tcr lcckv. wh'o con fronted him with
the coca ine, Armstrong tes tified .
Armstrong said after Van
Oudenhovan denied owners hip of
the coca ln e,'l'!'r lecky replied , " It
m ust be mine." He sa ldTcr'lt'cky
and Pal Armstrong look the
drugs and $1,800 i n cash from
Van · Oudcnhovari. Armstron!(
sa id hr was given a portion of lhr
money to pay a debt.
Th1• informa nt l rsllficd tha t
T!'l' lecky said he and Pa t Arm strong would take t he coca ine to
the sheriff's departmen t so they
could cl ai m they were working
pn a drug Investiga tion If they
wer e ca ught with the drugs,
Rober t Armstrong. who also
has provided the FBI with
Information on gambling in the
Mahonln g Valley, did not lndi calr what happened to the
cora inr and m on!'y .

Ohio Lottery
CLEVELAND tUPI) - Fri day's winning Ohi o Loll ery
numbers:
Dally Number

966
Ti c k e t sa l es totaled
$1.545,496.50, with a payoff due of
$368,879.
PICil-1
6315
• PICK -4 ticket sal es totaled
'$219,577.50, with a payoff due of
.$98,810.
: PICK -4 $1 straight bet ,pays
.$4,464. PICK-4 S1 box bet pays
•$186.

Section B
May 3, 1987

Artist's work displayed .
We Reserve
Right To
limit:Quantities ·

STORE HOURS .
Mon.-Sat 8 AM-10 PM
·sunday 10 AM-10 .PM

RIO GRANDE- A '' miniretrospective' of the works or
Assistant Professor of Art James
E. Allen will be on display In the
atrium of the Fin e and Performing Arts Center at .Rio Grande
College a nd Community College
fro~ Mav 8 - 22.
The exhibit, Allen says, show·s
a progression of hi s work from
early pieces that used polyur eth,ane . castings to form relief
surfa~es, through abstract works
of a ilecoratlve nature, to his
mot recent Jl('riod of developing
worJ&lt;s wit h "figural references. ·•
''! believe viewers will be able
t o see the easy transition that has
occ~red at each of these
stages," Allen says. "EssenI Ially, th e works flow from
decorative abstra ctions to r ur·
rent works with figurative refer·ence and Increased conte nt. "

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., MAY 9, 1987

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Allen says his most recent

MIXED

Fryer Parts •.•..•. ~L:

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39&lt;

1-

works present a wi ndow on the
world by using various castings
to create a bordered frame of
reference. "Inside the window,"
he says, "! use painting an d
collage to present the figural
r eference, the content of the

work."
Allen joined the faculty at Rio
Gra nde in the fall of the current
academic year. Prior to coming ·
to Rio Grand e, he taught lor five
year s at Asbury College, where
his instructional duties cen tered
on art. printmaking, painting,
drawing, and art history.
•
He earned his Master ·of Fine
Art s Degree at Bowlin g Green
State Unlversitv in 1979. While
his major area 'ot study focused
on painting, he minored in
graphics, Including drawing,
printmaking and phol~raphy .
Allen's May 8 throu gh 22
exhibit is free and open to the
public.

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BUCKET

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Cube Steak •••••••••• $2'29:]
LB.

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HOMEMADE SANDWICH

Spread ••••••••••••••
LB.

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The a1ti.rt 1cith 'The Old l:jiiJe.rian ·

RED CASING

Chunk Bologna ••~•. 69(l:i

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

Chuck Roast •.••• i:·. $1 59
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$
Round Steak .....i:·. 199
SUPERIOR FRANKIE

"joe :r Rejlll'al"
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Wieners ••••..••.•~;.~~. 99&lt;

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SAVORY

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Sliced Bacon ... ~~.:~G•• 89&lt;

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LONG THROW ""' Th ere are many evenlsln the
• ' 'Area Seven Special Olympics, nmong them the
: _s oftball throw. Here, 12-year-old Nick Esquivel of
' t

Guiding Hand School makes his attempt In
Thursday's events at the Rio Gran de College and
Community College track.

c'
s.
1

FLVORITE IND. SLICES

Amer. Cheese .•

l2.~~ ••

_(:
99

-GRADE A

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59~~•
Ex-Lg. Eggs •••••••••••
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DOZ.

BANQUET (EXcept Beef and Ham)

UNTY

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HIGH ,JUMP - i\mong the eveniH of Special
Olympics Is the hi gh jump, which Is part of th e
penlalhlon. llere, one of the Mndlull of

Nobody's a (loser'
By LE E i\NN WELCH
Tlmes·Sentlnel Staff
R IO GRANDE- For the first
time In five years the sun shone
on the Area Seven Speical ·
Olympics.
'
Th e event , co ndu cted each
year for at hletes who are mentally handica pped or developm entally disabled, saw approximat ely 240 youn g men, women,
boys and girls from Gallla
County compete.
In th e past rive years, the
events ha ve been hel d in the rain
at the Rio Grande College and
Communit y College track . This
year was different- the sun was
out and temperatures were In the
70's,
The Guidin g Hand School and
Gallco Industries event went so
far as to create a "good luck

(·
Tomatoes ........~•..•• '49'_

·Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
Shower's likely and a rhanre of
thunders torms Sund:t)', wll h
highs between 70 and 75.
Th e probabili ty of precipit a·
tion is 70 Jl('reen t:
Ohio E.tended • ·orrcust
Mondny through Wednt'Sdny
Fair Monday and Tuesday,
with a chance or shower s on
Wednesday. Highs will be tn•l he
70s car h day, wit h overnight lows
ranging from 4~ ro 55.

May 3, 1987

penlathletes makes his attempt at
atth c Rio Grand e C olle ~e and Community CollicK&lt;'
lrack.

i~ _Special

charm," a specia l shirr tor the
regional event which depleted a
runner In galoshes, carrying an
umbrella .
Other Ga llla. County par tl clpa nls were from Ga I Ii polls Developmen ral Center and the.Jolnt
Vocationa l Schoo l at Bu ckey
Hills.
Schoo ls' ou tside of Gallla
Coun ty making up Area Seven
were Happy Harts, Adams
County, Jackson' County, !'Ike
County, Pike Coun ty east, Open
Door School, Good Shepherd
Manor. Hilts' and Da lcs , Plone!'r
Schoo l, Chillicothe and Vinton
Co unt y.
~
At hl etes partlcipated In a
num ber of events - running,
long jump, high jump, pcntalh·
Jon, basebal l throwin g, shotpul

Olympics

throwing and the whrt' lchalr
races.
Every athl ete had an a&lt;lull
rhapcronr who was a teacher.
communit y or co llege vo lun teer .
Their responsibility was to sec
each athlete got to his or her
event on lime. and give support
and encouragem ent to them.
Even though only the top
placer s In each even t will be
going 10 sta te competition in ·
Col umbu s In June,' every athl cl&lt;'
In Special Olympics Is a winner
-simply for being brave enough
to compete and fini sh.
Local Specia l Olympics art'
assisted fi nancially by many
event s and com munity sponsors .
For exa mple. the Gallipolis Busi ness and Profess ional Wom en's
Club spon sored an athl ete In the

Thursday and friday events.
Teach ·r s at the sc hools havo
many fund raisers - like soft
drink sa les and car washes- and
the at hletes them selves co ntrfb·
ute, b,v making candl es and other
ll&lt;•m s to b•' sold In l h!:'
community .
Food land is pioneering an Idea
for Sprrla l Olympics, a project
whl h Is an offshoot of !their
Cancer Mrrch"nts ' Day . They
will bcdonatlng thr'&lt;'(' prrc&lt;'nl of
th Pir sales on Om' day to the
program.
Speirvl Ol y mpic ~ wl'l'~
founded by Ethel Kennedy , thr
widow ot Hoilrrt F' . Kennrdy .Thr
coupl&lt;' had l.l ml'nlally handl·
r"ppcd C' hll&lt;l. and bega n th(•
progrvm to provldr• athl••tlr
fitn ess and t·ompf'illlon for lh C'SC'
children .

79~-:
TV
Dinners
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••
Paper Towels ••. :~~•• 69(
KEMPS
GIANT 20 OZ. PKG. • .
$
9
8
$299:
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Or eo Cook1es ••••••• 1 Ice Cream ••••••••••••
S QUART PAIL

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#WA507 · 40+8

7

QUART '

:UNSWEETENED

KOOL AID

•••

It

.....

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99&lt;

limit 10 Por Cost-r

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CHARMIN
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••
•• TOILET TISSUE
•
ROLL
•• · 4PK(i
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limit I Por Cuot-

• Good Only At Powell's Supo......,.ot
: . Offer Good Thiu Sat., May '· I 917
• • • • f . . . . . . . . . . . ..

t

:

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Geo.t CW, At r.woll's s.,,_t.ot
Offtr Goo4 thru Sat. lllloy 9, "~7

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CHICKEN OF THE SEA

TUNA

6~ ::t:il 2/Sl.
lilllit 2 Por (UifGeoll CW, At r.woll'• Supormarbt
Ofhr Geed ttn Sat. May '· 1917

TIDE DETERGENT
1470Z.

$599

limit 1 Por Cust-r
Geo.t CW, At Powell's Supormarl!et
Offer Good thru Sat, May 9, 1917
:•

! PAU_- Terela EM&amp;maa, left, 111111 11-;rear-old Nick E~qul\'el
Ire llpelal OIJmplc pab. Mn. EM&amp;mu II a ~IIeber at Guldlnfl

•; Hlllld 8ellool, ... Nick II alludN&amp;tllere.llllewallll cbajlei'GIIe for
:~.,tiM! diQ', and made certain he 11ot to all 1t11 eveat. 01 time.

TOP SPEED - Alltletet hi tile Special Olympka run at top
apeetll towU"d tl&gt;e Onilh line In Thulllday's evenls, i\t rlgbt 18
Lynnlta Newberry, a teacher at Guiding Hand School, cheerln• on

not only .her athletes, hut all of them, encouraging th&lt;•m to do ·their
very hesl •
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May 3, 1987

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Ohio- Point Pleaiant W.Va.

Money, money, ·rf!O'J1ey -

Community corner·

PLAY PRESENTED - The musical, 'Bye Bye .
Birdie," was presented by mem bers of the Galli a ,
Academy High School vocal music department.

. By CHARLENE HOEFL!CH
Times-Sentinel Staff
More money .Is needed bUI ll!e
Rutland flre men .and garden
club members
are delighted
with the ccmtrtbutions so far
toward the picnic tables ~nd
.
benches for the Rutland park.
The bake sale was a success.
and about everybody conlacted
In the house-to-house-fund drive
gave something toward the purchase of· ihe lumber needed fo r
the tal)Ies and ~nrhes. ,Howard
Birchfield and Bob Bishop have
taken on the project of)!avl}lgthe
tables and benches built. JoAnn
Stewart is general chairman ol
the drive to get the money
together.
In the past II you . were
attending the July 4 artlvities at
the park, you eit her had to sla nd
or take along a tawn rhalr. But
th is year if all goes well: you' ll
have a bench to sit on and a table
on whirh you can enjoy some·
th ing good to eat.
Now .. .!! you haven't mad e a
' musical was dlreuted hy GAllS teacher Anne
toward the planned
contribution
Fischer, a nd t'tlmmunity Instrumentalists proimprovements
at the park, movided accompaniment. ·
ney can be left wit h Margaret
_ Edwards at the post office.

'Bye Bye Birdie' presented by GAHS
The Bro a dwa y m us ica l
comedy " Bye Bye Birdie" will t)(•
presented Ma y 1 and May 2 at 8
p.m. at Washln!(to n School Au dit orium by the Galllu fl cudemv
Choirs. ·
·
The cast or charac ters incl ucl e,
In order of appcara nc&lt;'. Mark
Lukac as fl l ~rt Prtcrson; Lynn
Co nley as Rose Al varez; Dc.bblc
Seylarth as Ursula Mer kle; Cu rl
Crem!'ahs as Kim Mar Mer;
Amy Neal as Mrs. MacMce;
: Kyle Saunders us Mr. MacAfer ;
: Julie Clemens. H~ a th er Hast . well. Rosa de Souza and Terri
., Taw,pcy a~ the Sa d Girls; Sama n1tha Plllihps. as Mae Peterso n;
, Mark Stockman and .l ohn Ca st o
~ as the reporte rs; Charli e Youn g
•as Conrad Birdie; Greg Di lley as
: the Ma yor; l:letlwny Mitchell as
;the Mayor's wile; Allen Ross us
~ Hugo Peabody; fl aron Seam on
•as Randolph MacMcc; fi nn
;va lentine as Mrs. Merkle; 11osa
;dr Souza as Gloria nasputln ; .Jeff
~Set tle as Char les F. Maude: Selh ·
~OIIt•r as Harvey .Johnso n; Tony
·Van ce as the tra in man; and
: c harles Grubb anct Ma rk Ev:.rrts
:&lt;1s the policemen.
' Oancers and members of th&lt;•

..•
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Steven M Bennett

chorus arc Stewa rt Cor bin. Bran!
Pauley. Ma rk Moore . .Jea n Sofranko. Ke lly .Jackson. Chr is
Broy les . Sher ry 1·1111. Rac hel
Lund , Amy .Jal'kso n, J ulie Kidmorr. ,J ulie Parso ns. Ta mmy
Brewer. LPigh fi nn Cremea ns.
Trcncl u Miller. Amy E liason,
Kim Boster. Betsy Sanders.
Dawn l"ra nklln . DeShaw n Ca ldwrl l, Shciif'y W,est. Debbie
Pl antz, Tony Va nce, Jill Mll ler.
Tara Lu cas. K &lt;~ r e n Pra tt ,
.Joa nna Hupp, Dina Foley. Mindy
Miller. Ja ni ce 1-Jagy, Barba ra
E:v;rrr;, Anni e Spurlock ,J lc.1 thcr
Hastwrll , Ros;r do Souza , Te r-rr
T;rwney. Sara h ·Si mpson. Dav id
Bloomer. Srth Oi lrr·. Roc ky Bennell , Charles Gru bb, Jo hn Casto.
Lee Combs. /\ my Hu ber , Miss ic ·
Bla ck, Je nn ift•r Clark . Donnie
Slone. Robe rt Rocc hi, :Jarn
Ci ar.v. C' rys tell r Howa rd, Lo ri
Th;Jc kcr. .Jessica Sau nd ers.
Mar k Eva ns. fi nn Adk ins.
Yoland a Clary , Kelly Chapman
and Ri ck Elliol l.
Musicians in tho orches tra arc
Robin navis. flut e; Lori Bullion
ami Dav id Phil ll p.s, clari net;
Torn Phillips and Jeff Sett le.
trumpet; Susy Kobctsky, violin ;

To m Edelma nn, bass ; Matt
Will is, drums; and Anne Fischer .
piano .
The produ ction s tarr Is Ann e
Fise her. di rector; Marlene Hof·
fm an and Sharon Weya nt , assis·t·
ants; Lynn Conl ey, Heather
Has t well. Mark Lukac and Debbie Scyf:11·th, choreog ra phers ;
J .D. Cra ft . .Jenny Dyer, David
Ede lman n. John Ed elmann.
Bobby Gor don. John .Ja ckson,
Jackie Knight. Sa mmy Morris,
Lin e Neal. Je ff Sa nd ers and Eric
Stump; st;rgc crew; Geo rge
Thompso n and Don Woth e.
so und ; Mike Dye r and Steve
Ha ner, lights; Ca rl Cam eron .
phomg ra ph rr; Mi ke Nea l.
rickPts; and Evelyn Abbott and
GHCC' students. makeu p.
Ga ll ia Academy mad e spec ial
mentio n of Was hington Elementary School sta rr and students.
Carl Cameron. Sc ht•ll Scenic
St udio, Scott Cost ume Company,
French Cit y Press, the f'rench
flr t Colony. Mr. a nd Mrs. James
Bennett , Susa n Bennett. Doug
Mayes. Mike Nea l. Bobby Cordon. Mi kr Cor ~i n, Anni e Roach,
al l who loa ned props and
cos tumes.

In the service----

All· Forrr's six-week bas ic Poi nt PJocasant. W. Va., has a r•• Sgt. Steve n M. Benn ett . son of the
milltarv tr·a iniriga t Lackla ndA ir rived fot" duty with the 6920t h
J tntws fl . a nd Ka thery n M . Force Base, nrar Sa n Ant onio, Ei &lt;'r t ro nl c Sec ur ity Gr oup,
~Be nn ett q! Rt. 2, Vin lo n. w&lt;!s , Texas. ~t al l is sc hed ul ed to
Japa n.
&gt;decora ted with th e flr my rrce lvr trchn lca ltra ining in the
Wellma n. anelec troniccornpu~.Achievem ent Medal at F'ot:t Serurlty Specia list ca reer fl r ld . tcr and switc hin g syslems spe-!J3enj arnln Harrison. lncllanapoDwight E. Kinnard
cia list. Is a 1983 graduate of
'.lls. Indi ana.
Army Spec. •t Dwight E. Ga ll Ia • Academy High School,
; fl&lt;&gt;nn ctt . :r blo mrdlcal equ ip- Kinnard . so n of Clyde E. Kinn ard Gallipolis.
merit rna i nt c n a nr~ chief with the of Gall ipolis Ferry, W.Va .. has
Robert B. lloudashelt
.'Hawley flrm y Community Hos pi- a rrived for du ty with the IR7 th
Rober t B. Houd ashelt , son of
:;tal. Is a 198:1 gradua te of Gu illa In fantry, Fort Ca mpbell . Ky.
P~u l R. and Marc ia J . Houda·
&lt;'a d~my ,
l&lt;lnnard. " com munica ti ons sh'rlt of 102 We he Terra ce,
•
sys tem specia lis t. is a 1982 Pomeroy , ha s bee n promoted In
:;
Dennis L. Rodgers
!(r&lt;rdu at&lt;' of Hannah Trac·e Hig h th e U.S. flir F'orcc to the rank of
~- Marine La ncr Cpl. Drn nis L.
senior airman.
;Rodgrrs. son of Dan L. and Jean Sc hoo i.' As lrton. W.Va.
Houdashrlt is an elec tronic
'13· Rodgers of 191 5 N. Ma in St .
Timothy T. Klein
Point Pl ~.1sa nt. WV , ha·s be n
Army Pvt . 1st Class Tlmot hv computer and switching systems
promoted to his present ra nk
T. Kle in has par ticipa ted iir specialist at Hurlburt F ield , Fl a ..
~hlle se rving at Marine Bar" Kindl e Li brrty R7... a u.s. with the 727th Tac tical Co ntrol
acks. Yokos uku. Japan .
Sou thern Co mm and exr 1·cisc S~uadron .
A 1985 graclu atr of Point held In the Republ ic of Pa nama
He Is a 1982 grad ua te of Meigs
~lea s ant High School, he joi ned Invo lving America n personn el High School, Po meroy .
h e Ma rine Corps In August 1985. a nn Pana ma nia n defense forces .
Mi chael L. Keney
;His wile. Ta mmy,ls the da ught er
The exrrr lsr is 'th e lates t In a
Michael L. Kcncy, son of Mr.
or Jim ancl .Judy Wood of 103 co ntl huing sN IPs of combined and Mrs. J im Nelson of Po(lle&lt;Libert y St .. also uf Point Pica-. tra ln ing ac ti vities or the two roy. e nlisted in the Air F orce.
' an t.
Upon successfully co mpleting
nati ons drfcnsc of the stra tegic
l
Kenneth T. llan••r
Pmw ma Ca na l.
the Air Force's six-week basic.
;•. Kenn eth T. Haner, hu s ba n~ of
Klr ln Is a cargo specialis t with
mil jtary trai ning at Lack! and Air
~andra J . H11n er of Crown Cltv. the 567t 11 Tra nsport at ion Corn- Force Base. near Sa n Antonio.
:;t&gt;nllsted In the Air Force's pa ny. ut Fort Eustis. Va.
Texas. Kency. Is sc heduled to
He Is th"' so n of 1.awrencc E . recrivc technica l training In the
CDelaycd Enl ·rs tment Progra m.
• Haner. a 1985 crradua tr of an d Pa tric ia A. Kl ein of 32035 Aircraft Furl Systems Specialist
~
ca reer field.
Wclc ht own ·Road. Pomeroy .
1Gallta Academy Hig h Schoo l. 1~
lj;ch!'dulcd lor enllstm r nt In t,he
His wife, Lisa. Is the daught er
Keney. a 1986 gradu ate of
egular Air Foret• on Sr pt&lt;'mb&lt;'l' Of Lpsllc H. a nd Yvo nne Whi lllng- Easter n High School, will be
·1987. Upon I)Taduatioo from the ton of Mlddl rpor t. .
ear ning credits towa rd an assoelate degree In applied· sciences
.v\lr Force's six-week bas ic tra inDavid A. Wellman
~ ng course ncar San Antonio,
Ai r Force Airman Jst Class ! ~ rough the Community College
of th e Ai r F'o•·ce whil e attending
;rex as, Haner is schedul ed to Dav id A. Wellman. so n of Bill an d bas i and technical training
'tieneral technlca
CEU'('(' r flp
:receive
I tldra.lning In the

l~

Pnul E. llull
Paul E. Hall . so n of Mr. ancl
~r, . James E. Hall of Ga llipolis,
: enlls led In the Air Force.
s ucces s f~ll y complet ing

HUIIARDS
GREENHOUSE

SYRACUSE

992-5776

....... fer Sjlrlng Season

Lillian Moore of the· local '
chapter or the Cancer Society Is
trying to wrap up lhe ,annual
crusade but needs more hel~. As .
yet she has not been able to get ·
volunteers In Sclpid and Olive
Townships to do the house-to·
house soliciting.
.
· Wanna help?'Just call Lillian ..

Is anyone listening?
Tbe organlze~s of a Iuncheort
and a ft ernoon reunion of the
Sl,luthern High School Class of
1977 are · gettln
a Itt lie
discouraged.
Plans have b n made for a
get-together
Ma y 23, (that 's
alumni b que l day! from 11
a.m. to. .rn. at the Racine fire
station and so far It ·looks like a
lonely afternoon. Bobbl Chapman Hill. 247-461!1. or Ailsa
Harris Findley, 992-0875. would
love to hear ~rom their classrnates .... !ike this week.
----Our &lt;'Ongratulations to Herb
and Berneda Boney who will be
observing their !iOth wedding "
anniversary on May 9 from 2 to4
p.m. at the Senior Cltlzens
Center, Fourth and Scam mel
Streets In Marietta.
Herb was with Krogers here ·
for many years before movi ng to
Florida in the early sixties where
he worked as a market manager
until about 10 years ago when he
suffered a heart attack. They
now ll.ve In Marietta . .Sorry we
don't have their home address .

There's lOts of opportunity for
get ting Involved In the bicentennlal ' for· every age. Not only are
displays and programs 'being
carried out In E!v~ry tqwnshi~.
but there are art and essay
conlests with casn priies for
students. and the · Spirit of '87
award~ program.
Patty Parker has' all the
inlorrnatlon on acttvltle5 which
will be climaxed on July 11 with a
celebration at the Rock Springs
.Falrgroun~s. She wants and
needs partlclpatlon In th~,
things so that Meigs County w9f
have a memorable celebration Qf
the the bicentennial. ·- - - - 1
Balloon launches are a popular
way of bringing att'entlon to a
project or program, In oliser-:
vance of Natlonal Library Week,
balloons were launched at Middleport and the first. responses
carne from Mounf Pleasant, Pa.
where someone found Penny
Lewis ' balloon , a nd· from Fairmont, W. Va. where Tyler
Faulk's balloon was found .
----Have a nice week!

*

'

Twen ty-five years is a ion)(
time. and Charles A. Covert of
Harbor, Oregon is making his
first visit here with his brorher.
Donald E. Covert and Freda and
his sister. Mild'red . and Carl L.
Hubbard .

GALLIA COUNTY
GALLIPOLIS - The Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial LIbrary announces its bookmobile
schedule for the week of May 4 to
9.
Monday : Geiger, 10-10:20:
Ewlngton. 10: 25·10:45: Vinton
(Dyer) , 10:55-11:05; Kyger l ,
1'1:'35·11 : 45; Kyger II. · 1.1: 50·
noon ; Ga ll la Christian ·School,
12:45-1:45; Cheshire (Thomas),
2: 0:.-2:35. Ga llla Metro. 4-5;
Kerr, 5: 15·5: 35; Bidwell. 5: 50fi : 10; Cochrans , 6; 20-6: 45; Deer,
Creek. 6: 55-7: 15; Valley VIew.
7: 25-7: !iO; Rio Gra nde Eslates ,
7:55-8: 30.
Tuesday: Eno Store,l: 30·1: 55;
Africa Road, 2-2: 15; Roush La ne,
:1-3: 15; Roush Lane, 3: 15·3: 30;
Cheshire, 3: 35-4: 05; Addison,
4; 15-4:30: Add a ville School, 4:405; 05; R&amp;R Trailer Ct., 5:15-5: 45;
Georges Creek , 5:45-6: 15;
Georges Creek, 6:20-6: 40; Ka nau ga 5th Ave., 6:50-7:10; Fos.
ters Trailer Ct., 7: 15·7: 40; K&amp;K
Trailer Ct., 7:45-8:05.
Wednesday: No route, malntenance day.
Thursday: Imogene Church's
1 30 30
Patriot,
40; Cadmus,
: .3:4:15-4:
s4;rore.
: Mudsock.
3: 45·
4:50-5: 15; Gallla, 5: 30-6; Center·
point . 6:15-6: 30; Centerville,
6:45-7: 15; Copley's, 7:35-7: 45;
Thorne's. 7:45-8.
Friday: Eureka, 1·1: 15; Huf·
!man's, 1:25-1:40; Kingery's,
1: 45-2; Myers, 2:25-2: 40; Mereerville. 3:25-3: 40; 790 Small. 3: 50-4;
790 Halley, 4-4: 10; 790 Lineoln
Pike J et.. 4: 20-4 :40: Burd's,
5-5: 15; Crown City, 5:30-6: 05;
Roma Myers. 6:15-6:30; Ohio
Tow nhouse, 6:45-7: 10; Kenny's
Carryout, 7:25-7: 50; Teens Run,
8-8: 2:i.

Saturday: L&lt;o&gt;grande. 9: .10-10;
Raccoon Trailer Ct. , 10: 15-10: 30;
Cora . 10: 35-10: 50; Quail Creek,
11:05-11: 35; Rodney Village,
12:20-12: !iO; Children's Home.
1-1:20; CRTP. 1:2:i-l:!i0; Allee,
2: 15-2: 45; Vinton. 3-3: 30; Morgan Cent er. 3:45-4: 15.
MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY -Bookrnoblleservice In Meigs County Is by
contract with Ohio Valley Area
Libraries.
Monday: .Carpenter, Laura's
Store, 2:55-3: 40; DeKter chureh,
4:10-4: 40; Danville church, 5: 156; Rutland Civic Center. 6: 4:i·
7:45.
Tuesday; Port and post office,
2: 15-3; Letart Falls, Effie's Restaurant, 3:30-4: 30; Racine bank,
5:15-6: 15; Syracuse across from
ballfield, 6130-7: 30.
Wednesday: Keno, north side
of bridge, 2:20-3: 05; Long. Bot·
tompostolllre. 3:20·4:05; Reed sville, Reed's Store; 4: 15·5:
Tupper's Plains. Lodwick's, 6-7;
Chester lire station. corn&lt;o&gt;r
across front . 7:15·8.

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$1 .... .... PACI

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DA.'IE:

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TIME:
GIVMBI':

Patty Gibbs

Bi·Rite MONEY
.We've Redefined Generics!
BI-RITE (buy-right)
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LABORATORY TESTED and APPROVED
for QUALITY and ECONOMY!
VERB 2. To compare our prices and SAVE
20% to 40% versus the leading National Brands! ·
See Also: VALUE, LOW PRICES, VARIETY, SAY·
INGS, CONTROLLED QUALITY, CONSISTANT QUALITY!

Large shipment of
and women's dress
port .hose just arrived.

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a glowing day.
Send the nu- Soo!Ied Candle

Macaroni
&amp; Cheese
Dinner 1 oz. •ox

Bouquet.
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Mother's Week stalls May 4.
Just call or visil us today.

' CALL 446-097 4

THE GifT
SHOP

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42

salt

Charlene Carter

1£\

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seWing kit. .MOiher's Week stalls May 4.
Just call or visit us today.

32

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Mary's School Of Dance
May 5,1987
8 p.m.

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. .-"

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

=ilSIIIAN'S.

•

Bookmobile routes set

Come To A JaXlefCL~
~FREE

but we're sure cards sent .to the
Senior Center will be jiassed
along to the couple.:

-----

'

VIGITAIU PUNTS

......, " fruit ''"'·
- " ' warlttltt;
Vltlttl &amp;

They we~e joined for a· several
days' visit by another sister..
Lucy L. Sickle of Magadore, so
there wa.s lots of talldng and lois
· of pictures and a ;video mlide or
thefo11r. A brother , Dana Covert, .
died in 1981, and a sister, Ethel
Johnson died a year ago.
. .
To cap off. Charles' visit a
cookout for all the relatlves was
held at lhe home o(Harold and
Penny Brinker and family of
Bailey Run Road.

s.
r~S~o;m;·a;V;V~el;lt~n~a1~1;o;f ~7l;I~M;al~n;S;t ~.,~;~~;;;;:;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~~~~~~~;;;~~

Bridge Clotlng Special

SJSO,.PUt
FLO. . . . PUNTS

l\ilay 3. 1

1

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A:!•••
Ant•••
21 CRII SIMI
........ OliO
PID."'-9721
•'

Responsible for

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I

Pag!)- 8-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point

'

Circus In 1855, beginning his own
show in the 188Q's as Perry and
Rhelnharts AOied Circus and
Museum No'vtlity Show . He
started In a 30 by 60 feet tent with
two exotic b(rjb; , two monkeys
·and whatev~r &lt;~nima l s he could
capture arou~ll Marion, Ohio
where he starte .
After making , refit s in his fir st
year of $160, Pelv bought more
animals from ihe Central P ark
Men.agerte In ' New York · City.
While early traveling by wagon
from town to town, when Perry
moved to Gal lipolis abou t 1892,
he owned his own railroad ca r
that was brightly decorated with
lhe name of the show. The ca r
which was parked in the winter at
the Gal lipolis freight depot consisted of a kitchen, two bedrooms, mall a nd baggage room,
and a large cellar undern eath
which carried the a nimals a nd
appara tu s for the show ,
·
In 1892 Perry 's show was worth
S2600 but still play ed mostly In
smal l Ohio towns and cit ies.
The Kling Family consisted of

Fred Kling and his three child· person would then iurn to his
reri : Eva May, Artie Maud , and neighbor and inquire how in the
Harry .- These long time residents world it was possible lor such
of the First Ward in Ga llipolis li ttle midgets tb' perform ~uc h ·
began their s how business career dartng and dilficult teats."
Mr. Kling's specialty was the
in 1887 In the old Betz Opera
House, co ntinuing into the 1890' s. cannonball act. He 'would take
.. In their ·fir st perfor mance in silver w'etghted balls and toss
Gallipolis ' th e repo rter lor the them around. Stated the BulGall ipolis Bulleti n wrote : "Our . leti n: "The silver spheres were
eyes at times seemed to deceiye tossed abo ut by Mr. Kling as
us - so diffi cult wa s it to realize mere playth ings . They ran up
th at we w ere not drea ming one arm . around .his neck and
es pecia ll y wh en the litt le fairies down the ot her arm, as though '
Artie a nd Eva, perfor med !heir 'endowed with animaie life- but
always obeying a master hand."
single and combinat ion acts on
"In short , we but mention a
the tight rope a ri"d when Ar tie and
Harry went through their wond - recognized fact when we state
erfu ll v thrill ing mid ·a ir fea ts on · that Mr. Kling has no peer in hi s
the high trapeze and when the
special · line. And we are confi·
dent that his genius and ability
daring little Eva mad e her
will receive the flaltering atten·
·almost inc redible toe-drop s from
th e fly ing r ings. "
tlon and remunerative results
that they so justly deserve at the
"At such .times th e audience
hands of an amusement loving
wa s spell-bound and wi th baited
eople, He and his children give a
P.
breat h awaited the outcome of .'
performa nce that would comsom r extra-ha zardou s feat ; and
mand t he appla use ol theinvariabl y, th e lad ies parlicu·
crowned heads of Europe."
lar ly, drew a long sigh ol relief
One of the vaudeville groups
upon it s successfu l consu mm athat called Gallipolis home even
tion and sa fe ending . Each

::Beat of the bend

r.·Nat finders keepers
By BOB HOEFLICH
,,'
Tim•,.·Sl•ntincl Stall
• There are some who bel ieve in
...

Malone.

:· ·find er s -

Friend s are having a card
shower for Mrs . Allen tAudrcy l ·
Brewer who will mark her 88th
birthday on Saturday, May 9.
Cards will rea ch her at ~158 1
Brewer Road , Portland , Ohio
4o770.

: kcepers" a nd
~ othe rs

who
: make every ef-

for t lu ret urn
so met hing they
find to its ow ner.
Helen Frank
Is in the latter category . She ·
Angclia Spencer. a sop homore
fou nd a women's watch in the edu cation maj or at Shawnf'f'
Pomeroy busin ess section th('
Sta ir Univers ll y, wa s nam ed to
other day and placed a fCJti!P ad
the dean' .&gt; list for the winte r
In ThP ()all.v Sen tin el t~y to quart er na II ing down a .1.87 grade
local&lt;' lhc ownN . She didandthf'
point average. A ~-" is ri'Q uired
watch was picked up the wat ch for list ing. Ange lia, n 198ogradu ·
f rom Hcl'-' n ThurscL'l.\' cvPning .
ate of !-:as tern Hi gh School , is the•
No"!J. that 's ni C' ( ' ~
daughll' l' of Roger 11nd J e11n
Spl' nrer. Tuppers Ploin.s.
Man.v or yo u will rrm emb1•r Ihr
Rev. Ralph C. Zundel.
Th e Harr isonv i!lt• Alumni A sHe was pastor of the Middle· sociation will br stagin g it s
port f'ir st Raptis! Church from
unnual bunqu el and dance 1:11 7
19411 to IY,i4 and pastorr&lt;J thr
p.m. on Ma y 2:t R('Srrvat ions
P,omeroy Bapt lsi r·hurch for
l'an be made b~ calling 742-.1182
somr lO )'Cars .
.
or wril ing to Vir gi ni ~l Gibson.
· A eclr-bratl on or 1h&lt;• an nl ver- :Jo:&gt;l!l St. Rt. 14:1, Pom eroy, Ohio
sar:&gt; of his Wth .vrar as a pastor
4:17H9. Res er va tions a rr $7 a
will b&lt;' held at I~ p.m. on
person and che cks should be
Satunlay.' Ma y 9, at IIH• First
made payable to thr HarrisonBaptl~l l' hurch, Sixth a nd South
ville Srlpio Alumn i ,\ssn.
Sts .. Za nes vil le an d ol course•, is
----open to the publi c.
Micldlrport's Mary Skinner is
Rr\·. Zundel ha s been a fr e·
among resident s remembering
quent visit or over 1he ,VN l " sinre
OD . Odrnbau gh. the Middleport
lea ving hrrP. !lis late wife. Ruth,
tailor. who has almost beco me a
WilS &lt;I r eligiou s rdu C'ilflon
celebrity in thi s column .
tral'h&lt;· r In Meigs County before
The late Mr. Odrnbau gh did all
thf' roupiP mnvC'd awa y.
ur the tailor ing work for the
Lew is and Col' Men's Clothing
Sta ir S..'nat or .tan Long, for ·
Store wh ich was loca ted at the
ml'ri.v of M•' igs rount.r , has
corner of Nor!h Seconcl Ave .. and
Issued a rem lndt' r that a public
Mill St. Working wilh Odenbau gh
mrett ng wil l be held att;::m p.m. · Wii S l.ukC' Connor s.
thi s Mond a)· at 1he Chcsu peakt•
And incide nt al ly . 11 great West F.IPm&lt;' ntary Sc hoo l to eligrent -untlc· of Mary's died at th e
cuss the pmv.-r outage probl ems
t\ndersvi lle Prison during th e
tha t took place in tlw area Apr il
Civ il War ns the rrsult of

.

4 - ~1 .

had u probic'm, it woulcl

bfl a good idru to a 1!l •n(l l!w
mr-(•1 ing si ncr· n •prescntali vr s of
Buckl!,w • Rur;ll EIN'I rir and lhP
Pub Iie!U t Jilt irs Commiss ion wi II

be on hand as well as Lon g. Rl'P·
.Jolynn Bostl'r and Hep. Mark

d y sl'n l a r~'

whic h ra n

Lois i\nn Reinke
.Jack Lee Duffy ,Jr.

!)~'

can&lt;'C'r rlinh· bL•i ng spon sorpd

the Meigs Count ) Un it or the
/\m(•ri C';m t'um'l 'r Sod et.v .
Thr cllni r h as l~' &lt;•n se t for 1
.,P.m. on Thursdn .v, Ma)' 14. "' 111&lt;'
Meigs Cou nt)· Health llrpart ·
mrnl. MulbrrT)' Height s. Ponw.

Caldwell-Bing

Bet you ' re g l &lt;~d yuu don ' t hu vp
the heada ches apparent ly in·
valved in keep ing the fl'r r.v
So keep smilin g.

1' 0~1 .

Dr.

Mi c h&lt;~ e l
Fu r long , wil l
I~ s C'n' icP~ for thr (']ink

and Norma Ton es. R.N.. direc·

()r. .L.m1 rs Witherell and Dr.
Z ln e:~ Dayo, will be workinR with
the ca ncer clinics at a later date.
Earl y detection of can(Cr is one
of the aims of the clin ics sta ged
b)· the local cancrnrnit.

Pedaling the beat
MONTR'OSE. Colo. tU PJ i " What we a n' go in g to do,"
Pollcl' in thi s western t.'o lor:tdo HirrckiP said . " Is use them to '
tow n of about 8.000 people soon au~ment bl'cau; e ther·e are so
will be prd:1lln g their beat s on many places in Montr·ose bicycles .
bicycle paths. parks - th at arP
Sgt. Rick Hin cklr s :~icl four inaccessible in cars."
mountain bikes - sturdier of
Hinekle compart'd the bic)'cle·
fram e and wider of wheel than moun ted officers with horseba ck
racing or trad llional recr ea- patrols in other rifles and said
tional models - a n • beinR they are more accessible to the
purchased for $~50 t•a r h and .will public than ofllcers in pollee cars
be ridden by officers during 1wo . because " there's a barrier when
to four hours of e&lt;J r h Hl-hour you're silting In u car."
shift..

6uild Your Dream House
This Year

JIM BARNA

I

-

LOG HOME
BNutyeoStrength•Economy

- HHt

ElflcitncyoRultk: Chorm

- AifordoiMIJty
3 bdrm. log kit ostow •• U,521
"Model Home ohown by oppointment"

Home Connection

Ook Mill, Otrio 4SU6

4/ 882· 6417
o O.k Hill orr St. lit.

,,

Diana Y. Caldw&lt;•ll

r.

Duam• Bing

,,

Mciver-Bissell

''

WESTERVILLE. Ohio - Ti - by Bissl'll F loor Co .. Groveporl.
mothy Melver , Columbu s. and
Palernal g r ~ndpa r ent s are Mr.
Ms. Vonnie Mciver. Westrn•iile, and Mrs. Charles Bissell. Long
are announc ing the engagement · Bottom, and Mr. and Mrs.
a
nd approach ing marriage of Donald Brewer. Reedsville. Ma tSyra cuse .
th
eir daughter, Denise Mciver. ernal gra ndparents are Mr. and
Th&lt;• br ide-rlcrt is a graduate of
Weste
rville, to Dl'lbert D. Bis- Mrs. Hewltf Mclver, Colu mb us,
River Valley Hi gh School and
sell, Col umbu s. son of Mr. and and Dr. and Mrs. Elwood BerkBmvling r.rren Stut e Universil _
\ ·.
Sh(• is l'mpio.vcd at F. lder Ber-. Mrs . ()elbert L. Bis sell. ley . Laccland, Ky.
, Gro,·eport.
man, Ma rion .
()uffy is a gradu ate ofSouthern
The wedding will .be at the rr:::::::;;;;;;:;:=:~=====il
Libert y Presbyter ia n Chu rch,
High School and Denison Un iver·
Olentangy ·Rivl'f Road, Dela sit y. He is emplovrd at Curri s
ware. Sat urda)' . May g, at :1:.10
Mathias Home En tert ainment
p.m. Th E• r('ception will be in the
Centl'r, r·olumbu s.
Anchor
Inn. 1·7l,North and
Th e weddi ng will take pla ce on
Morse
Road,
Columbu s. fo ll owMa y ~0 at 2: :m p.m. "' the
ing
the
ceremony.
E pworth Unit ed Method is t
Miss Mciver is a gradua te of
Chu rch in Marion. The recl'ption
Westerville
High School and is
will ~ held in the chu rch
employed a t Bank One in
following the ceremony.
Westerville.
Bissell is a grad uate of Grove·
port Hi gh School and is employed
TWIN SIZE

~' (' an; .

tili11i.

wedd ing. They wi ll reside on New
Lima Roacl in Rutland.

DIAMOND SALE ,

SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Lynn t\ . Reinke: Marion. announ ce the engagement and
approac- hing marriage of their
daught er. Lois Ann Reink e, to
.Ja ck Lee ()uffy .Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs . .l ar k Lr&lt;' Duffy Sr.,

~wmpan t

tor of thr nu rs in g staff of the
hr&lt;~ llh depart ment . and other
health depal'lment pNsonnei will
be on hand to wor' k at the clini&lt;'.
Hesident s in teres ted should
rnak&lt;' nn appointm ent by calling
the health dc,partrn ent at 992 -

Barbara Ellrn M&lt;Quaid
.fa&lt;k Bl'rnard Peterson

K

•

DAYTON - Announcement Is
being made of the engagemen~
and approaching marriage of
Raben Denis Grove ol Dayton, to
.lames Alan Dixon ofCincinnaJi.
She is· the dau ghter or Don and ,
Blanche Grove of Springfiel9,
Ohio. He is the son-of the late
Sharlene and Cliff Dixon or
Gallipolis.
The wedding will take plare
. •June 27 in Springfield.
Miss Grove is a graduate of
Mia m i tOhiol University. Shell~·
Ad\'Ntising -Production Coor~i -,
nai'or at Lion Apparel in Dayton.·
bixon is ~ gradual(' of Galli,a ·
Academy Hrgh School, and has a,
bachelor's degrf'f' from . Ri!)
Gra nde College, antl a master,' s
from Miami tOhioJ University.
He is managerofVoiceCommunir at ion for First National Bank in.
Cincinnati.

Reinke-Duffy

Carycer screening clinic planned
POMI\ ROY - On i.1· ~II resi ·
dent s can bf' :.1cce pt Pd for" free

George S. Kaufman, the Marx
Brothers and one time hired a.
fellow to be stage manager on the
road who would later make a .
mark in motion pictures- D.W.
Griffi th .

Grove-Dixon

~eterson

du e to unsa nit a ry co nd itions at
the Souther n priso n due I he war

runnin g ·~

featured a future ramou s person
- 0 .0 . Mc in tyre and a drama
group that used the Old French
City as base featured Oscar
Eagle who in time became
associa led with such greats as

, McQuaidPOMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence William McQuaid J r ..
Pomeroy, announce the engagement of their daugh ter. Barbara
Ellen McQuaid; to Jark Bernard
Peterson, son of Alma Greer
' Peterson and the ta le Olaf A.
Peterson, Rufland.
The bride· elecl is a graduate ol
Southview Hi gh School, Lorain.
and is em ployl'd as an assistant
mana ger at Taco Grande.
Ga llipolis.
Peterson grad uated from Ru tland Hi gh School and Is em·
played by Sou l hun Ohio Coa t. .
The couple plan a late May

MACHIA,S. Maine (UPI) Scouring ·a remote · wooded hil·
!side by, helicopter, searchers
!aUed to detect signs of the
·w~kage !rom a French biP,lane
that may have crashed in the
Maine wilderness after a 1927
transa!lanti(' flight.
"BUt we stili have confidence,"
search leader Ril'hard Gillespie ·
said Friday. "The Lord will let us
have this thing when we're ready
for it. "
The French-made helicopter,
equipped with sophisticated In·
frared sensing devices , tried to
spot signs of the big 12· cylinder
engine that powered l'Oiseau
Blanc, or White Bird. the plane
that American flier Charles
Lindbergh once said disappeared
"like a midnight ghost" .
The Infrared equipment should
be llble·to spot the engine because
it would absorb heat from the sun
at a faster rate than the sur·
rounding ground, Gillespie said.

BUILT ABOUT 1885, hy W.H. McCormick as a livj!ry stable, ~as
this huilding at Fourth lind ~ourt. In the 1890's, the buldltng was
used as the Winter quarl ers for a circus, one Ql several travelin~t
shows hast•d in GaiUpoiis in the 1890's and early 1900's.

Engagments

"'

donal£'

No.sign of 1927 btplane

The ctrcus, vaudeville and novelties

}
By JAMES SA('IDS
::.
' Special Correspondent
"' In the 1890's a nd first decade of
: :~:th e present century, .Gallipolis
·~ was the home base for a number
'•·'Of traveling en·
:: r er t ainment
::shows inc lUding
;:· drama group!'i , a
•·v a u d e v I I I e
"'
o. troupe,. Kider
:;and Spear 's
:. New Orlean s
' Minstrels, McCo rmick' s Sli ver
:.Plate Circus, Kling Family aero. bats. and the Golden Mus eum
, and Novel ty Show .
', ljhe building that we f e~ture
;;tod ~y at Fourth and Court wa s
· the rwlnt er home for the McC or: ml&lt;'k Circus and during the late
, 1890's wild animals were kept
~ hen• In this build-Ing which wa s
built In the 1880's as a livery
, stable .
The Goldf'n Museum and No·velty Show, based in Gai iiJJ&lt;J IIs in
:·th e early 1890's wa s organized by
· W.C. Perry who lived on upper
,·second Avenul'. Perry began his
: circus career _with the Robin son

y ~u

Ponieroy-MiddlePon-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

W. Va .

•

]ame.r Sands:

If

May 3, 1987

KERR - Announcemenl is
· being made of lhe engagement
and app :oachi ng marrlagl' of
Diana Y. Caldwdl, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Leroy Caldwell of
Kerr-. and C. Duane Bing, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing of
Ga ll ipolis.
Th(' ope n church weddi ng will
take place Ju ly 2o at Prospect
Baptist Chu rch at 6 p.m.
Miss Caldwell is employed by
Mane Designers sa lon.
Bin g is e mployed by
Smeltzer' s Garden Center .

•
,
Mr. and Mn. .Herbe1t T:. Boney
t, L,· ney annt"versary .to be noted
DO
;_j

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.

H',~rbert E . Boney will celebrate

their 50th wedding anniversary
with an open house recept ion
given by their children at the
0

REG.
S350

carat of Diamonds
Sale

$17995
J

,,,

- . IIW' .

$1995

Diamo•d. Pierced
· Eamap

All
Solitcires· ·

at
Large '·.
Discounf .

$9995

S29tS

of hea rt attacks.
They are the paren ts•of three
spns, David of Little Hocking, Ed
or Westerville, and Joel ol
Austin, Texas. They have seven

HASKINS-TANNER

r:'J.~ ~~~.

~-? . ~ 111 ~. ~

New Gift and
L-(JF"J' r-:linen' Dept.
Is Ready For Spring Brides
Brass
Pewter .
Chrystal
Pottery
Wicker'
Bed, Bath, Kitchen
and Table Linens

JUS f Sf op ,In
'
d f'll
On I OUt
our Gift Registry Now in our New Larger Location
412 2nd Av~:, Downtown Gallipolis

Groom's t\fx FREE with 6 cir more.

~~~~:~ ~~~ ~c;~:::,s it~~~~~: gr~~~r~~~;~~n~equests that gifts

332 Second Ave.
G•tl:polio, Ohio

- !VJarietta,
Saturday, Ma y 9, .-~be~o:m~if~te~d~._ _:___ _ __;~·~J~~~~~;~~~~Sa~t~.9~·5~~~~r~~~,,~,,-~
, ~~~·-~···~·-~-';,~m~.·~~~~~~~~··~'!_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~from 2 to 4on
p.m.
''Mrs. Boney is the former
.'
Jlerneda
Stage, daught er of the
late David and Nellie 'Stage,
Marietta. Boney is the so n oil he
l~te Dennis Boney a nd Grace
Boney, Marietta.
•' Mr. and Mrs. Boney were
married on May 19, 1937 at Si. .
Marys, W.Va. They Jell Marietta
tir 19.18 and Jiv ed in Pomeroy for
•,
over 20 yea rs where he worked
Jot Krogers as a Market Man·
•ager. After th at they moved to
~lorida for 15 years. Boney was a
~Mk ei manager until he was
~a rc ed to retire in 1976 as a result

THISIS
r
·ADVACARESMMEANS
BY COMPLETE
HEALTH CARE ·coVERAGE

iCur~is' note
~ Jewel Curti s observed their 60th
~wedding anniversary on Aprill4
tat their Breez'y Hell,(hts -home.
' Attending 1w ere t~eir grand -·
:'ddughter, Mary Rose and her
hu sbaild , ' Tom, of Winter
JSprlngs , Fla .. Julia Sayre and
her husband, Th omas, AUgusta ,
&gt;Ga., and their two childrl'n,
!Abram and Anna ; Dav id and
~C~rol Riggs, Paul Riggs, Sam
:and J essie Curtis an Travis,
•George and Gail Francis, and
: Ruth Francis. Mrs. Rose pre: pared the d\nner for the family,
: On Thursda y, April 16, an
. annivera ry cake bakf)d by thei r
'
~da4ght er,
Carol Riggs and
:served by Ruth Francis, was
~erved at the Senior Citizens
followin g the traditional

.

Out ol N!'&lt;ice 11M. care at any llllllltblt medical
taclfity, provldod lor tile--toning """"l'""t iea
0&lt; o1her

.I

""•g:cv flKJuidno lmmediato

and relaled services

room

Hurry!
Mothet'sDay is May 10!

TAWNEY JEWELERS

sendherthe
Porcelain Rose
Bouquet.

424 Second, Gallipolis

ullraloond

Covered In luH

physicatlh4lrapy and
Sllon-term tntefVentioo physical and occupational
.
oerviceo

MASON, W.VA. - Robin .Jean renee Bryant and Betty .Jean
Foreman and .Jeffery Leon Ro- ' Foreman, Mason. W.Va ., and he
berl s will exchange wedding Is the son of Bobby Gene and
\'Ows on Sund ay. Ma y 10, 2: :10 Edna Louise Roberts, Glenvi ll e.
p.m.. a t th e Rej oicing Life W.Va .
A reception wil l be held in the
Rapt is! Chu rch in Middlepor t.
fellowship room at the . chu rch
Mu sic begins at 2 p.m.
She is the daughter of ~aw - following the wedding .

CO'IIIod in lull

occupational

Covered in luU

To aii8Uro undtlrltandingofll&gt;o aHa&lt;rgemeniS and localiool in which HfViCtt 11ft covered tty AdYaCare, applicant• will be oHerod aStatamenl o/Underotanding
to sign the! ro-emphalizttlhe program's requiremenll.

THE DOWN UNDER RESTAURANT
300 SECOND AVENUI'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4563!
(614 1 446-2345

CELEBRATE MOTHER 'S DAY,
WITH US

URGENT
CARE CENTER

SPECIAL
MOTHER 'S DAY
HOURS
1 am to 3 pm
SUNDAY
MAY lOTH

Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis
NO APPOINTIIIENT NECESSARY
-Mo.·frlday
Wa~bllcle • Holklave
1.:00 P.M. to ~:00 P.M.
5:00 p·,M. lo 9:00P.M.

II

Covered In fuN

We want you to know that
we are here ... for YOU I

446-5287

CO'IIIed In full
AdvaC.re mwrl be
nolllied wnhin 72 hooro

modlcal flflln

Foreman-Roberts

URGENT
CARE
CENTER

The Boise State Broncos play
in the Big Sky conferenl'e and
Iheir ('Oiors are orange and blue.-

If you're going to be a
New Bride we have a ·
··
FREE GIFThome,
for your new

service to hetp you took your best
on that special dey. Priced from

o POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.

· 1/4

Charles Nungesser, the pilot,
and Francois Coli, the navigator,
· were trying to l'Ollecl a $25,000
prize for successfully flying from
France to New York ·City.
Searchers believe the two fliers
may have headed for the Maine
('Oast when they realized they
didn't have enough fuel to make
it to New York.
The Levasseur bi-plane left
France May 8; 1927. Lindbergh
collected the prize 12 days later
by flying his Spirit of St. Louis
from New York to Paris, landing
,. May 21, 1927, after a historic
· flight of .'!3 hours and 29 minutes.
Some years later, it came to
light that people In northeastern
Maine had heard a plane's engine
-!overhead in cloudy weather May
9, 1927. Those ~eports, combined
with sightings by hunters of an
engine in the woods, led
searchers to the Second Lake
area.

Let Us Help ou
Plan
Your
Wadding
We offer complete tuxedo rental

~ ~nntve~sary

MAmESS &amp; FOUNDAnOt
SET

.

Ja('k Lemmon won the 1973
Academy Award for Best Actor
in his role in "Save the' Tiger. "

)

Advacare~

Advaeare
P.O. Box 680,385 jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631

614/446-5283

Pomeroy
flower S~op
106 luttornut ....

I

We offer delightful dining in an eleRatll atmosMere.' ~
Our menu was carefully selected with Mom in mind. Call·
for reservations.

,,

~.1

See for yourself what a new and beuer
kind of health care benefit can do for you.
For more information contact us at:

Loving flowers and an exquisite,
hand-painted porcelain rose.
Mom wiD treasure thisbe&lt;!utiful
keepsake... forever. We can
deliver anywhere in town. Or
wire it anywhere in the U.S. and
Canada throogh Teleflorn. ·

".

,_.,,ow.

992·2039. 992-5721

·-of
e; J

.

'

iidMirtriGfNtlulerc.nta,utSNeld~"X ' ::IOrL
"'"-Holl*'CirliCICennl..,._~ ....... a~

'

•'

�~~~~~~:;;=;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~O~h~io~P~o~in~t Pleasant. W. Va.

g~~s!::~e.~~;~

GALL!POLI.S - Mr. and Mrs.

Ave .. observed
65thSecond
wed· .
Lowell
Glassburntheir
of 1154
ding anniversary May 3. Th~y
·were married May 3, 1922 in
Bidwell. -by the late Rev. L.L.
Roush .
Caribbean is la nds
Although you' ll never hear of
Quit a Sueno Bank , Roncador and
Ser rana in the travel ads lor the
Cari bbea n. they arc three Is la nds
In the Caribbean Sea between
. Nicaragua and jamaica. The
United States relinqu is hed It s
. claim to the uninhabit ed Islands
In a trea ty with Colom bia in 1981.

RUTLAND FURNTURE .co.
spec .I aI o'f t ·8 Wee •
·

.STRATFORD·. SECTIONAL...................
. ·$1290°0..
With Recliner and Hide·a·Bed, f?r•en.
·BROYHILL
.
·
$89000
OAK DINING ROOM SUITE ..................
.
China, Table, 6 Chairs.
$ . . OO
18
•

r •

f

•

With Light, Bridge.
Mr. and Mrr. I?IIJJe/1 Nit :::

'

Nitz anniversary is observed

'

'

,
•

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
R ussell Nlt z were honored rr·
cently wll h a ce lebration in
observa nce of their ;~Jth wPddl ng
ann iversary.
They were marr ied on Aprl l1 7,
19.17atCilfton,W .Va. by thcRcv.
W.A. Cera heart . Th e couple have
live child ren, Coy, Djly', and Hoy
Nl tz, AnnPtte BiJrtoc•, and
Na
nett e Blumena uer.
1
·. They have 14 gra ndch ildren,
three of which are deceased ,
three step-grandchild ren, a nd
seven step-grcat·gra ndchlld ren.

The ill hea lth of Nitzpret luded
a n open ce lebra tion or the occa·
slo n, but most mem bers of the
fam ily were· present for the
observa nce held a t the home of
the honored couple.
Refres hme nts wore served to
the honored gues ts. Pam, Hoy,
Shan non, Shaw n a nd Ange l Nitz,
Ann. Joe and Nickya Ba rt oc,
Nan, Rickie and Nicole Blume·
na uer, Chris Nllz, Chris, Rick
Jennifer, Ma ndy, Jos h a nd Marie
Se ha eler . Nora, Coy, Brian a nd
Donnie Nftz.

GALLIA MEDICAL
SUPPLIES
53 COURT STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
614·446-6949

Located Between Oscar's and
Mack's Auto

NOW AVAILABLE:

Emergency Medical
Identification
Bracelets and
Pendants
$495.$795
Recommended for those
with non-obvious medical
conditions, including:
Diabetes
Asthma
Epilepsy
Glaucoma
Heart Disease
Ccmtcl!t Lenses
Rare Blood Type
Penicillin or
Other Drug Allergy
Bee Sting Allergy
Horse Serum Allergy
ENGRAVED AS YOU DESIRE

OBSERV ES ANNIV ERSA RY
Mr. a nd Mrs. Lawrence
William Mc Quaid ,Jr., Pomeroy, observed their 40th wedding
annivers ary on April ·16. A family celebration was held In

iiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~

observance of the o&lt;:ca.• lon.

Hit and run,
by airplane
KO DIAK , Alas ka (UP II - A
rare airpla ne hlt -a nd· run incl·
dent Is under probC' by federa l
lnves tlga tors.

Protect yourself or your loved
one with America's finest
medical tog.

REGULAR

5148.00
ONLY

$119
SYLVANIA COMPACT AUDIO SYSTEM
•AM'/ FM stereo tuner •Stereo microphone jacks

1

•Cassette play/ record deck •Headphone jack
•Semi-automatic belt-drive turntable
•Bass reflex speaker system

" I t' s unusual. il' s strange."

FAA spokes man Paul Steucke
su i d.

Timothv Donahul•, 29, was hit
bv tht• wing tip of a sma ll pla ne

19 INCH PHILCO
COLOR TV

and knocked to the gro und as the
plane took off. suffering a broken
arm. thr Coas t Guard sa id.

$238

"Thr rf' an' 1wo S('enarios ,"
Stcurkr sa id . "F.IthC'r thr pilo t
doesn' t know hi-' hi t somebody, or
he rra llzrd he eame rlosc and hit
somebody."

13 INCH PHILCO
COLOR TV

ThP Coas t Gua rd said it wa s
' ca lled tor a medica l &lt;•vacua lion

; to n rn nn0ry nrar Zac·har Ray,

about 4o m i!Ps west of Kod iak ,
rarllrr in thr week and !lew
Donahue. of Cord ova. by lw lico p·
trr to l&lt;odl;tk lor medi ca l

$188°

0

•

·

BOOKCASES- 2 fm1shes .........................
.

UP·

O

Yo Above Cos·t

·

·

RECLINERS ............... ~ ••••••••••• Ask for the Specials
LA·Z·BOY STRATOLOUNGER

. .
$9900 UP
BAR
STOOLS.......................................
Wood and Chrome.
. TABLES. P1ne. or· Oak ...................................
.
$4800
3
3 TABLES, 3
~
$8 800
. 4-CUSHION SOFA ••••••••••••
. SS9995
STRATFORD
With Matching Love Seat
· $
·
4 DR. CHESt........................................... _4800
..
. . $5800
5 DR. CHEST...........................................
. ·
.
. . $16·8°0·
TABLE wI 4 CHAIRS.............................
ROLL TOP DESK ~1.q.~~'.t•••• Special Buy Only $2 8700
BUNK BEDS w/MATT -.......................... $29400
. CHEST ...........................$129°0
MATCHING.
'
.STRATFORD
SECTIONAL ....................... $998°0
Beige-Brown with indiner on each end.
r--

;inishes ••••••••••••• ..........................

'

"O ur probl em now Is trying to
find out who th l• pi lot Is." Steuckc
sa id. "Thr pilot quite likely is
goi ng to br s ubject to action."

START A LASTING
RELATIONSHIP

FALL IN LOVE WITH A GRAVELY
*PARTS *SALES *SERVICE
LAWN AND GARDEN EQUIPMENT IS OUR BUSINESS
NOT A SIDELINE

SAVE UP-TO 1 1,000 OFF

NEW HOURS: Mon .. Wed.&amp; Thurs. 9-S; Tues. &amp; Fri. 9~ ; _Sat. 9-1
ON THE SPOT FINANCING

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; Service
204 CONDOR ST.

.

992-2975

POMEROY
.

I"

. Jupiter Is the largest of . the .
planets. Its equatorial diameter Is
SS,OOJmUes, 11 times the diameter
otEarth, Jupiter Is approximately
4rom1Uion miles from the sun, and
.Jt takes almost 12 of our years to
make one complete circuit of the
sun.·

BEGINNING

•

CLASSES MAY 7
7 P.M.
CARLETON'.SCHOOL

•

SYRACUSE
FOR INFO CALL
992-6839 OR 992-5896

THE PERFECT GIFT FOR MOM!

REVIV'Al
SILVER RUN
BAPTIST
· CHURCH

She's always
running for all of you.
Now it's your turn. Run
out and buy your Mother
a pair of Jabst-Stridette®
sheer support par/-~~.ose.
For the busy Mother with tired legs, Jobst-Stridette® sheer
support pantyhose or Jobst Pumpers knee high suppOrt
socks is the perfect gift.

MAY 4th thru 9th
AT 7:30
PREACHING BY

BUD HATFIELD
SINGERS THURS. &amp; FRI.

ffilne
lili'lealittal §lnef9f:)l!, !limE.

BY THE

GABRIEL
QUARTET

BEST SELECTION OF LUNCH
MEAT NEW
ANDHIS.: CMEESE
IN TOWNI
MON.-SAT. I A.M.-9 P.M.
HOW OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M. 11 7 P.M. fOI Y!JUI SIIOPftNG
T~PES

WE NOW J.ENT .VIQIO
'

C~E

,

•o ru~e~r:n-m

WE Now SELL

LOMRY

SAUSAGE .

::· $199

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO. AND ONLY
RUTLAND FURNTURE IS EXTENDING
MAYTAG'S WARRANTY FROM 1 TO
2 YEARS ON LABOR, AND FROM 2
YEJRS TO 5 YEARS ON ALL PARTS
AT NO ADDITIONAL COST.

CHQICE IONnESS NEW YORK

· STRIP STUK

GlADE A

SLAB BACON

CHICKEN LIVERS

$369

LL .

59&lt;

$139

SUPERIOR

I

FRANKIES .

CHOPPED

$)39

II,

89 . .~==~

12 Ol.

POTATO, MACARONI SALAD

. USED TVs
.
. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.
$29000
RCA 25" DARK OAK

SMOKED PIC_NIC

STARTING
AT

$469 95

ZENITH 25". MAPLE .............................................. S20QOO
ZENITH 25" OAK ••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S33500
ZENITH 25" DARK OAK •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S2QQOO
ZENITH 25'' OAK .................................................. S33500
.
ZENitH
19' TV SPARE COMMAND........................ $2 7ooo

OR COlE SlAW

89C

89C

II,

~• • •}f" .

WITH TRADE
1011111 AMIIICAII

CHEESE SLIC
120Z.

S1 69

YAWY

-.T1 IWI COIIITIY mil

64 Ol.&lt;TN.

S1

19

Save

sumNG

STAmiiG

"
S36995

BASE CABINET ••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••:••••••••• S35oo
MAYTAG WASHER &amp; DRYER .................................. 539900
CERAMIC TOP ELEC. RANGE .......~ .......................... 529000
G.E. DRYER, gas ..................•......•.........•......••.... .-... S19995
40 IN. ELEC. RANGE ·!~.l.~ ....................... ~ ............... 539995

WITH TRADE

30'' ELEC. RANGE .............................................·•••• S29995

UPRIGHT. FREEZER •••••••••••••••••••••:........................... $239 95 ~

RuiiOnd Furniture Co~

,

MANWICH

·99C

AT

95
$499
WITH TRADE

SUNSHINE
DOG FOOD

742·2211

.._...of the Grttt Guys Wh.-t Yeu Gtt Gnat luyl
J

99C

HUNTS

:oou. 89&lt;

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742-2211
lmAII
"HoNe of ... Grateloys, Where Yo• Gtt Great B•y•"

IlL.

JAI

PAPER PLATES

SO BUY YOUR MAYTAG AT THE
.PLACE WHERE YOU CAN GET THE
EXTENDED WARRRANTY - AT
RUTLAND FURNITURE.

MUND

zum '

101.$399

I'IKE SAVEl

Save

PEPSI COLA

ANT COFFEE

79&lt;

$1 99

2HK.

HOUSI

211-

•u

CHillY POPS

ORANGE

•

' tOLL

AJAX

StilE FINE

lAUNDil tniiGENT

SUGAR

uoz.$1l 9

s~. $139

$2 79

I'IKE SAVII l'll·CIEAMED

.GLASS CLEANER

CHARCOAL

SHORTENING::

$)79

99C /

2S

oz.Sl19.
. ,·

(
$1
8
9
Bananas·. 39 · Potatoes
Tomatoes 59&lt;
RIPE

ll.

ro1~ I

~Gll.

FLORIDA

(

I

'

101 EVANS

GIBSON REF RIG ERA TOR ............ !.~.~~:.~!·................... S2 0000
SIDE-BY -SIDE GIBSON REFRIGERATOR ................... S2 5000
GIBSON REFRIGERATOR ............!9.t!.~H!~L ............ S2QQOO

,.

Jupiter

J~~
W1\SHERS--DRYERS --- DISHWASHERS

ZENITH STEREO •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $15000

~GRAVELY

getting s lr k or even fall as leep at
the wheel and die In a car
accident.
.
Car accident s ar e most likely
td occur during the .hours whPn It
Is most natu ral lor people tos leep
- the ea rly mor nlni( and eaPiy
afternoon.

SHOTOKAN
. KARATE
MEIGS CO.
KARATE CLUB

s _,\ ,.

LA·Z·B.OY ARMLESS CHAIR .................................... S12 800
.
$3300
WALL UNIT BOOKCASE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
· 6 PC. w·OODED GROUP ........................................ $14800
3 GLASS TOP BOYHilL TABLES .............................. S15000
RECLINER -(Rust) Real ·Nice ...................................... S4300
9 PC. DINETTE SET ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S4QOO
COFFEE &amp; ONE END TABLE ...................................... $6500
· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••
· 51·5oo ea.
3 SETS USED LAMP.S
3 PC.. SUITE, like new ........................................... 53990°
LOVE SEAT (like new) .......................................... 538800
. ••••••.•••••••••.•••••••••••••••.••••••••••.••••• $4800
CHEST OF DRAWERS

tr0il lm ent .

.

;::~~~~{s ,:~he ~~st ~~::i~· qu~~~

. . .·s1·88oo
CURIOS .~..............................................

USED FURNITURE

Skid row
"Skid row." wa s origi na lly
"Skid Road ," a tra il along with
newly cut logs were skidded In
the Pacific Nor thwest. It was
later a pplied to the section .or
town where loggers gathered In
taver ns , Inns, e tc .. The term
spread to other c ities as a
description for sectiof1s that are
havens for derelicts. In the
process. "row" replaced "road"
In many references .
·

r;:::::::====;:::==:;-1

HIDE-A-BEDS ......................... 12 to choose hom
.
S59· 900·
WASHED PINE DAY BED......................
With pop•up. unit and 2 mattresses.
·
·
$
OO
ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS................... 19.9
5 to choose from. .

.
~
By ROll STEIN
the body to rest a nd restore It se lf.
a.n important associa tion be· ·
UPI Science Writer ,
Bu't no one knows exac tly how •, tween sleep a nd death.
BOSTON tUP! i - When we'!"(' such rehabilitation occurs, what
So me expert s have estimated
deep asieep, nerve cells become drea.ms do a nd the exac t mecha· . that up to' 10 percent of a ll deaths
• active In the most prim itive parts nlsms oi sleep.
· may be a ssociated wttb .s leep In
of our brains, fi r ing Impulses "to
"F rom the sta ndpoin t of lunda· · some way , prlrnarlly by exacer·
· ou r thought cent ers a nd down the menfa l biological kn owledge,
bating other medica l condi tions
· spinal cord.
..
· one thi rd of our Jives Is a
such as hear t disease.
:· As mor e hi ghly developed mystery .'' said All a n Recht·
Contra ry to popula r be lie f, the
;. regions of the brain respond a nti schaflen of the Un ivers ity of
e lderly. need a bout as much sleep
·' apparently try to make sense out Chicago. " It 's one of the single
as the young. What Is true ,Is that
:; or this burs t or activity biggest ga ps In our biological
the amount of deep and dream
;. producin g dream s ·- our eyes knowledge.''
s leep those over 65 usually get
: jerk ra pidly a nd our heart rate
Recent s tud ies have , however.
decreases for reasons that a~;e
:. and breath ing oft en speed up.
added evidence. th at s leep Is a
unclear. .
,
,
'.- AJ the same tim e, ou r arms a nd pri mary need. · Recht sthallen
" If we could under stand more
:' legs are alnnost completely showed that without Sleep, rat s a bout· why the sleep In olde r
·: para!yzed.
·
eventua lly . die not from
people diminishes in qua lit y, we
: This ba fflin g. seemingly con· phys ical tiredness but !rom .might unders tand mor e about
:: tradictory but fund l)!l1entally
something else TC~liulting from
the aging prO('ess. II we could
~ i mport ant phen9menon ha s been
Jack of sleep,
understand wha t causes those
:· th0 locus or scientis ts ' wonder
While insomn ia Is common, c hanges and impede that pro·
·· and poets' ruminations lor scient ists had thought It was cess , we may be abl e to Impede
'. centuries .
impossibl e to die from too little other elements of th e aging
', Y.et, lik.0 much ' about th~ " sleep. Sleep deprivation studies
process as well," said Dr. Mil ton
found the dr ive to sleep is so E rman of the· Scripps Clinic.
strong it Is almos t Impossible· to
While the It alian Insomniac
; tions - why It happens a nd totally deprive someo ne of sleep. represented a rare; ex trem e
:, l&gt;xactly what it does- remain as·
But It ~ li a n researcher s re · case, up to ha lf the adult
, perplex ing as ma ny of the ported a case In T he _New . popula tion Is es tima ted to have ·
' fanciful irn ages that dance in our E ngland J ournal of Me dicine las t trouble sleeping for va r ious
~ minds In dream s.
fall of a ma n with ail Inherited reasons at some point , The mos t
T, "Som e of the key issues abou t form of insomnia that eventua lly common causes are stress. er··
sleep are, 'What is it ? Wh y do we made it impossible for him to ra tic schedules. drugs and brea·
~ need it?'" sa id Dr. J . Christian
s leep - and lin.ally kill ed him.
thing a bnormalities .
; Gillin. a sleep researcher a t the
The most common manifesta ·
Understa nding more about
: University of California in Sa n s leep ma y offer a greater under- tion of insuffic ient sleep is
,' Diego. "Th at rema ins a great sta nding of a range of bas ic daytime sleep iness. This ra n
~ mys tery rea lly."
biological functions a nd give Impa ir menta l capacit y, ca use
, Humans do not sleep simpl y insight s int o such things as the poor job performance, decrease
~ b eca u se they a re physica lly
nature of aging and life a nd death a person's Ina bility to fully e njoy
• tired. Peo ple sleep abou t the itself, resear.r hers say.
li fe, Increased h.is chances or
~ sa me regardless of whether the
"You can t fi nd anyt hing more
: day was spent sitt ing at a desk or fund amenta l to huma n exist·
•, out play in g tennis.
e nce, " said Merrill Mltler. direc·
:: Sleep is also not si mply thP tor of research or the sleep
: absence ' of wa kefuln ess. or a disorders center at the Seripps
•' slowed-dow n ver sion of being Clinic in La J olla. Ca ll!. "Sleep Is
: awake. SJ('ep is a dis tinct state fund a ment a lly imp orta nt to
; with It ~ own pattern and rules.
life."
• Rese archers have described
Stud ies have shown that more
;·the va rious stages and types of people die during the hours sleep
'
'
and
m any physiological
'·sleep
is most common, a nd tha t
:·activ iiies that occur durin g persons whose sleep Is ex tremely
: slumber :..._ often supporting the a bnormal have a higher mortal·
;'genera l notion sleep is a time lor
lty rate. sugges ting there may be
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2 PC. OAK WALL UNIT •••••••• 10

'II

tists probe sleep's .importance, · mystery

h

Open and with door, heavy duty.

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~~~~~7=========================~~~~~~~~~~~~0~h~io~-;·:P~~-~nt~~~~W~.~V~a~-==~====~T~h~e~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~7 .

Lt.

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Page- B-B~The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy+-Middleport-Gallipoi/s. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va. ·

0

May 3, 1987

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

• The Sunday Times-Se_
htinel-. Page ..... B-9
•

Skin experts give thmnbs down to tan accelerators
:

·'fly CEl.IA HOOPER
WASHINGTON IUPI\ -As
thebronzingseasonopens,a .new
class 101 Products called tan
acceldrators Is being offered to
. sun wqrshippers with the claim
the Iolions will help produce a
glowing color in less time.
. But skin experts urge caution.

TEAM MEMBERS - Mcmhcrs of the Gallla Academy Junior
High Science Olympiad team are, lrontlrom left, ,fame$ Gellles,
Adam Broyles, Tandra Adams, Alex Hardin and .Jo Harmon;

Susan Thomas,
Parsons, Amy
second row,
,Jackson. and William Strait; third row, Ron Tuccerl, Jennifer
Young, Chris Slagle, Doug Wilkins, .John Hollman and Gene
Sheets.

•

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PENTATHLON TEAM - The Gallla ;\cademy .Junior High
Science Olympiad placed third In' stale competition r~cently.
Memb..rs of the team are, from left, Chris Slagle, .Jennifer Young,
Susan Thomas and William Strait.

• •

GAHS sctence team tn state competttton
r. ,\LLIPOLIS - The Gallin
Academy Junior Hig h Science
Olympiad lea rn . lncluding 5 ninlh
graders. recently competed In
thcStat rSc ience Oi ymplad, held
at Ohio State Univers it y In
Columbus.
'['h(• learn represent ed sou·
theast Ohio afl er placing first in
the Ohio Universit y regional
cool es t in Athens.
Nationall y. over :l50,000 student s are involved In th e Science
Olympiad program . Th e pro·
gram off ers individual and tea m
contes ts to 15 member team's

from compe tln ~ schools. Com pi'·
ti tl on s Include ori ent ee ring ,
science bowl. science password.
egg drop, paper a irpla ne co nt es t,
.astronomy, metric I'Stimations,
and many other contl'sls.
The Galli a . Ata demy tea m
cosi sted of seventh gra de rs
James Gettles, Adam Broy les,
Ta ndra Adams, Alex Ha rdin . and
Jo Harmon, eighth graders Tony
Vance, Susan Thomas, Julie
Parsons, Amy J ackson, and
J ennifer Young and ninth grad·
ers Ron Tuccerl. Chris Slagle,
Doug Wilkins, John Hoffman ,

William Strait, and Gene Sheels.
This is the first vear that Ga ll ia
Acade my has participated In the
co mpetition . Mos t of Ga lli a
Aca demy's entries placed in the
top 10 In th e stal e. The Pent ath·
ion Team placed thi rd in the
state.
Members of the Pent athlon
tea m were Willam St rait . Chris
Slag le, Jenn ifer Young, and
Susan Thomas . They had to run
throu gh an obstacle co urse and
stop alt er each obsta cle to
answer a science question while
carrying a water balloon .

OI'EN F'OU SEi\SON - Thl' Boh Evans Farm.
ioll'aled near Uio Grandt•, IN opo•n daily from M: :m
a.m. to ii p.m., and ofl&lt;•rs a t'lmncl•lo I'Xperlence

tour~ . For Information on what the larm ha.• to
offer through Oeloher, call 24fr5305 or wrlh• the
Boh Evans Farm, Ucml&lt;• :15, Box :!30, UioGrande.

lift• nn u working farm hy :ow lf- ~uidt 1 d ~~q 'fagon

·ohio, -tati7-t

·Senior Center plans (lCtivities
POMCROY - The Me igs
Counl ;• Seni or Cit izen Cent er.
Mul bcl'l'y llelght s, Pomeroy , has
Ihe followin g act lvitles sc hr ·
ll ulrd for lhl' wee k of Mn.v 4-8:
Mond ay : Round and Sq ua re
Dance l &lt;l.
TuPsday : Spea ker and film on
Senio r Olympics at 11 :00. An
area S(•nl or Ol ympics will be held
ul Ohio Un iversit y on Ma y 30 and
:n. under lhl' sponsorship of 4
arra Civll:tn cl ubs. Choru s 1·2.
Bridge Class 1·2.
Wt·dnesday : Socia l Securil y
11epresrnta live 10·12, Bingo 1·2, ·
Bow ling 1: :10 .
Thursday : Ce ramics 10·121
Mic rowave Cooking Class 1-2: 30.
wilh Cindy Oli veri , Meigs Counl y
Ext ension Agent ; rc!(istratlon
fee of $1 10 covCI' food cost. please
ca ll the Cent er at 992·2161 to
register for th is class.
Frida y: AD/ RD Workshop .I to
3 - spea ker will b~ Marion
Palmer on Mus ic Therapy:
Round and Squa l'e DancP 8·11 ,
. wilh music by True Country,
admissiOn $1.50 pel' pe1·son.
The S.•nlor Nu trit ion Progra m

Microwave
class set
POMEROY - Cindy Oliveri, •
Meigs C ount y Home
Economlcs /4-H Agent will share
techniques and ti ps fo r Micro·
wave Food Preparation at a class
scheduled lor Thursdav , Mav 7.
l-2: 30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center on Mul·
berry Heights.
The class will featu re favorit es
from the spring microwave class
held recently and In clude an
English mullin recipe, chocolate
cheese cake, eggs In a bag and
other quick and easy Ideas.
Registration fee Is Sl. and
pre-reglslrallon by Wednesday,
May 6 Is requested.
To register call the Senior
Citizens Center at 992·2161 and
tell them you wish to sign up for
the Microwave Class on !\fay 7.
•

0

menu for the wee k Is:
Monday: Salmon · pai tle, Au ·
gratin potatoes, spinach, pud·
din g cake.
Tuesday: Pork Chop, sweet
potat o, cauliflower, ·hoi cln ·
namon apples.
Wednesday : Liver . mashed

potatoes. green beans, peac hes.
Thursday: Beef stew, biscuits ,
gela tin with lrull , cookie.
Friday: Chicken patty sand·
wlch, ove n browned pota toes,
tossed sa lad , mixed fruit .
Choice of beverage availa ble
with mea ls.

MOTHER'S DAY IS MAY 1Oth

The Science Ol ympi ad coach at
Gai lla Academ y Is John Lesler.
Also ma king the overnight trip to
Col umbu s was Mrs. Ca ro l Jackson .

Hush·Puppj~,§·

PVH honored

For nearly thirty years, no one has made more
shoes wjth .more comfort, value and quality than
Hush Puppies• shoes - America's best-loved
shoes:

PT. PLEASANT, W.Va . -The
America n Hosp!f al Associaton
IAHA \ has commended Pleasant
Valley for its continuing effor ts
to co ntrol costs a nd in crea se
productivit y. PVH was awarded
the 1986-87 HAS Certi fic ate of
Recognition for being an active
member of the HAS /MONl ·
TREND System .
MON!TREND Is a compara·
tlve operational monitorin g sys·
!em offered by AHA 's Hospital
Admini strative Se r vices Div ·
ision !HAS). th at ass ists hospl·
tals In redu cing costs while
ma int a ining the qu alit y of medi·
cal servi ces.
Through It voluntary pa rticlpa·
lion In the program , Pl easant
Valley Hospilal demonstrates its
commilment to provide high
quality health ca re services
while controll ing costs al!d im·
proving staff producti vity.
According to Mi chae l G. Sel·
lards, Execut ive Di rector of
PVH . assess in g operational per·
formances h e lp ~ to keep costs in
line. Participat ing In this pro·
gra m puts PVH In a better
posi tion to provide hig h qualit y
care to ali patient s as eff iciently
as possible.

I 'I~
Hush

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Black Pat•nt

$3700

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With Purchase
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from Majorca Worldwide

18" length - a $24.95 value.
Your free gift with any Hush
Puppies® purchase, while supplies last.

Get the Ottoman FREE

Spring Sale
Spring Co-ordinates
by John Meyer,
Jantzen, Villager

Choose either style

swivel rocker and get
the matching oHoman

absolutely FREE. Both ..
chairs IHture deeply tufted
bocks, and knife edQe welt
- t cushions In

Lit Claiborne

rich luxurtous velvet.rour c hoice of decorator colora.

20~/0 OFF

Don't mlaa thla exceptional

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Come In todayt

Spring Coats
&amp; Jackets

4_0°/o OFF

FURN ITURE

OfPONTlAC

COR~IN

&lt;I SNYDfR
fURNITURf CO.

300 Second Ave.
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis

t5S Seconcl Ave.
•
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f~vorable.

"Our lette rs say ' It 's a fa nlastir produ r l,"' he said.
, Nellher Lorincz nor. Dr. Wat.··
wick Mor ison, 'associal r profes·
sor of dermatology al J ohn s
Hopki ns M0dical School.,lhou ght
t11e Coppe rt one i ngrrd ir n1o

posed any immedial e dJ ngNs to

Hr saitl if the company'&gt;

user s, bu I Roma no s&lt;.licl until

claims wcr0 colTt'rt. t ha t l ht.;'

co mpanies were more for lhco m
i n g \vilh det a il s on how (I C('rlc ra ·
10 t'S work. he could not be sure

lhP producl was safe.
"There is no infor m:H ion In lh&lt;•
medical journals on Ihi s.·· li.o·
rna no said .

produ cl S(jimula l('d skin ce Ll
pigm{' nt fo rma tion, thPrr was a .

possibi lity rhal · ot hPr cells or :
pmcr·sscs \\'l'r c ;1 lso sti mulat ed ~
witll unprrdir tab l0 and per ht;ps:
un dE"sir~~ bk•

rt•su lt s,

II~;;;;;;;·~;;~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;,

April issue
oft he
. Writing inofthe the
:Journal
American
Academy of Dermatology, doctors from the Cleveland Clinic
•rrote. ".We do not ·recommend
: the use of these products, since
· their claim of efficacy could not
: be·substantiated."
,:. Another doctor, Interviewed by
•felephone, questions the safely of
: tan accelerators.
"I'm advising my patients not ·
to use it, " said Dr. John Romano,
a dermatologist at the New York
Hospital df Cornell Medical Cen·
ter, referring to a product called
Copper!one Nat ural Tan Acceler·
ator . "1 say don't use it until
there's more informatio n on how
it works."
, The Copper tone product, made
•by Schering·Piough Consumer
roperations Division, has been on
the market for a year. It is one of ·
several similar products deve·
loped In the wake of Estee
:Lauder's fast -selling "Golden
Sun Pre-Tan Accelerator" that
·has been sold for two years .
~ The companies sell the pro·
·ducts as cosmetics- not drugs•and thus have not had to prove
'safety and effectiveness to the
;Food and Drug Administration.
· But some specialists say
claims made In advertisem~nt s
for the products Imply that the
products work like a drug by
speeding up cellula r production
~I pigments: "Not a dye- or a
bronzer, It actually stimulates
your ooqy's own natural ta nning
process, ' says an ad for the
Coppertqne product.
: "Promotes a faster tan by
)lelplng accelerate your skin's
own natural production of me·
ianin - the skin component that
interacts with th e sun to make
you tan," claims the Estee
l,.auder product.
A spokesman for the FDA said
upon hearing the Coppertone
claim: "That's a dr ug. " 'He said
the agency had been looking Into.
the tan accelera tors and sent a
·l etter to Estee Lauder 'that
.r esulted In a change In their
product's formu lation .
I However , Morris Hersteln,
vice-president for research and
\Jevelopment at Estee Lauder,
. ~en ted that the company had
·received any regulatory letters
' .
on the tan accelerator
• He said Estee t'auder officials
" had s·ome dialogue a year ago
about this product with the FDA.
'they agreed that the claims arc ·
~osmetic claims, the product is a
fo&lt;rsmet ic and the case Is closed.··
: Scherlng-Plough's director of
Jlublic relations, JoAnn Brown,
said the company was not see k·
ing to have the Coppertone
P.roduc.t approved as a drug. and
lfefended Its mark eting as a
cosmetic: "Since 1948 the FDA
~as accepted 'tanning' as a

PIRE .FURNITURE
SPRING HOUSE CLEA lNG

OFF!
MATTRESS
BOX SPRING

~osmelic ' claim ."

THE IDEAL GIFT
TO 'AKE
MOTHER'S DAY

ALL

on her tan, but said she could no1
attr ibute that to the ta nn ing
accelerator;
· " 1 ta n easily· foi· a blonde. 11
could have been psychologica l-:1 wanted 10 believe it worked. ·•
she said.
Brow n said lett ers 10 SchrringPlough wer e overwhelmi ngly

'

YOUR CHOICE

2 5°/o OFF

produc t formed a uniqu e complexwilhthe tyrosine,enabl ingit
to penetrate the skin cells. He
said studies with radioar tlve
tracers had confirmed that the
tyrosine got int o the cells.
A young woman who used the
Copper! one prqduct last summ er .
said she got many complime.nts

446-1171 Gallipolis, Ohio

: David Bostwick, a chemist at
t)le FDA, said, "if it maintains or
affects the Ianning process of
oells, II it a ffects the body' s
J11etaboliC processes, it has some
polent!ai for misfortune and
therefore should be tes ted as a
't;lrug.''
HNs teln said the act ive ingre·'
dient In Estee Lauder's tan
accelerator is tyrosine. The
product also contains a number
of other amino acids - the
components cells use to make all
proteins. The Coppertone· pro·
duct adds vitamins and moistur·
Jzers to the tyrosine.
: Br.own said Coppertone's prooduct " gives the body the bu II ding
!block• that ar e important in the
;tanning process."
She said the company had
condu cted Its own clinical tests
"on hundreds of people" and
(ound that the product was sale ;
- ~ nd gave a significantly "earlier
and more Intense tan ."
I
. · ~er s teln said hls company had '
&lt;lone thousands of tests on
)lumans to ascertain safel y and
effectiveness.
' But Dr. John Ratz. a staff 1
liermatoioglst at the Cleveland •
Clinic, tested the Estee Lauder
and Coppertone products on 18
)ndividuals and said that alter .
line, three, lour and seven days , 1
{hey "failed to show augmented ,
Ianning."
··, Dr. Allan Lorincz. head of the '
dermatology section of the Unl·
'werslty of Chicago Prltzker ,
School of Medicine, said that
1'yroslne is inijeed a chemical .
building block of melanin, the
~rown pigment In skin that
P.roduces tan.
·
, The tyrosine must undergo a
~rles of chemJcal steps to make
Jllelanln. however. and there Is
ljo evidenCj' that tyrosine rubbed
~n the skin could lead lo acceler·
'ted melanin formation, he said.
"I am skeptical that you could
.lret enough Iyrostne through the
iiarrlers of skin to really make a
flif!erence," Lorincz said.
~~ Hersteln maintained that the
amino acids In his company's

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VISA

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�.,
Page- B-1 0- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Porneroy'-Middleport:....Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant.

When topic is smoking, people get vocal
By BILL LOHMANN
UPI F~ alur&lt;• Writer
ATLANT A 1 UP II - As I he
woman walk&lt;'d toward tho restaurant rxil . iJ not her diner f•x haled a cloud or ciga rett e.smoke
direct ly in her path . Th e woman
coughed. angr ily swatted the
sm oke ou t of hc•r l'a&lt;·e and shot a
nast y glant·c• " ' the cu lprit.
'' L CI' s gc•t nut of here and g('t
in to som&lt;' de&lt;.~ n ai r," sh&lt;'
snapped to her rom pan ion, mak ·
i n ~ sure tht• smokc·r heard everv
word.
ThP smokf'r..

tJ

m an in his 20s,

play full y off c•r ed her a cigarett e;
t he wom&lt;Jn w as. not amused . Th r

pair exc hanged dirt y looks and
mu ttered undrr their breat hs.
Th(' sce ne W i.IS Cal iforn ia, but it
co uld ha ve bcc•n anyw here In the
Uni1Prl StiJ t cs. WhPr e ! herr's
· sm okt• th t•sc d;, ys . ther e's bound
to be som eo ne obj ectin g to it .
The balll&lt;' lines have never
been drawn so clea r ly wi th
diehard smokers on one side and
non-s mokers, · th ei r rank s and
ro ura~e grow ing ear·h ye ar , on
the ot her . T he non - sm oker s
appar ent ly arc w innin g as they
ga in m om l'n1 um in their &lt;J tf (' mpl

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to cat. wor k an d hrea the in peacP
wit hou t bei ng invadc·d by tobarro
smoke.
" I think wr ;,rr now in a per iod
of dram a I ie c hange." said .John
Pinney. exPrllt ivr di rector of
Har v ard' s ln sti tut P for thPSi udy
of Sm ok ing Beh avior and Po lir y.
" Wr' rp s(•(•in g u wi llingness of
the non-smoki ng publi c to assert
Itself as a major it y. i\nd Ills. We
1:11 ' (',
i n r f fc&gt;('l. a non-sm oking
soc iety and w!' ' re begi nning to
beha ve l ike one."
Despite numero us vic t ori~s

: arra s~

1\mrr ic ;J ,

th"p

no n·

• smoking move m enl shows no

: signs of &lt;·o m pltH' r nr.v and lf'~td ·

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ers sa .v they ha VI' no intent ion of
slowing down .
"Th e non-smo kr•r s' r ight s
move men t is probably onl.v about
l fiyea r sold, " sa id .J ohn Banzhaf.
rxPcutiw liit n·t or of Ac tion on
Smokin g Hnt.l Health . a group
that l'h ampiuns lhr· r ights of
non· smoker s. " It slart r d a t the
begi nn ing of lill' 1!170s wh pn we
fi t·st askt·d for non-sm oking secl ions on ;lir planrs. Up until a frw
yea r s ago, that' s about all Wt'
r ould show .
" It wu sn ' t untll th r last \'c ar or
: two wht' n the repons ·by the
• Na tion al Aca dt·m v of Sc irnrf's
; a nd Su r gC'o n Gr n0r al ramP ou t

to ~ay things like. " Sm oking Is
the lea din g cause of sta tistics."
" I think the ev idenc·e s.hows
things have not gotten ugly and
we don'\ expect It to get ugly,"
sa id Shan e Mc Dermott, a spokes man for the• Am er ica n 1 Lung
Associa tion, wh ich would prefer
no smokin g what soever . " The
only peo ple who t ry to m ake. if
look l ike war is l he toba ceo
indu stry."
Said Ban zhaf. " I 've actu ally
been surprised at how little
oppos it ion tht're is to res tr ic ting
smoking in places l ike the
workplac es. Most of lhe opposition co m es from the tobacco
indu st r y. Five years ago, I 'd get
a barrage of'' I'm a sm oker an d I
have right s.' But today, I find
ver.v few .John Q. Citizens walking around saying . 'Damn il, I 'm
a smoker and you're infr in ging
on my right s."
There arc belli gerent nonsm oker s - j ust as there are
bc liigere nl smokl'r s - but the
maj oriJY of non-sm okers don'·!
ca re i f others smoke thei r lungs
out in pr iva te; they j ust do nol
want to breathe the smoke. ·'
Howeve r . as the number of
non-smoker s swells an d i t becomes more popular not to
smoke, m i ld -mann er ed nonsmokers have come out or the
elo set and arc more wi llin g 10
spea k up. Man y steadfa stly rr·
fu se to lei v isi tors smokp in their
homes or ra r s. and som e even
co mplain in publi c pla ces. surh
as r estaurant s, w hen smo ke
from the next table hov0rs over
I he! r m ea I.
" I t' s vr•r .1· clear thai proplc
toda y are m ore concern ed abo ut
lung ca ncet· th an w ith 1ear.v
eyes," Ban zlla f said. " I th i nk
these new re poriS are spurri ng a
new wave .
Yel for r vrry headl i ne abo ut a
dramatic non-smoki ng progra m,
t hrrc remain dozen s of other
places that haw no non- sm oki ng
po lirv .
Psyc hologists say a II hough o4
million peop le st ill smoke. m a nv
of I hom have trlr d or ronsldcrrcl
q'uittlng, particularly beca use of
the well -kn own phys ica l hazar ds
of long term use - lung ca ncer ,
bir th drft&gt;rt s. emphyse ma . hea rt
d isPa S&lt;' a nrl voc;;tl co rd dama ge.

Ccr ll cr said when a pN son
qui ts il ta kes onl y 4R·72 hou r s for
nicotine to leave th e bod y and
that physica l crav ings 'ror a
smoke las t on the average onlv oO
: tha t wf' cou l(l say ubso lu h •ly , seconds . Carbon monox ide ie\·els
in the blood drop to normal and
• posltiw ly th;~l smoki ng ra usps
oxygen
Increases to normal
: lung can rPr In non-sm okrrs,"
within
eig
ht hours, brcat flin g
: said Btll17. 1lal'. " law professor at
becomes
eas
ier and l ung ca par • Gcorgl' Washin gton UnivNsil v
il.
l
'
Inc
r
eases.
• In Wa shin gton ll C. "That h;~.s
Larry Woo l f. presiden t of Caebrr n tht' m a jor npw c at a l ~·s t in
sa rs Tahoe casino in Lak e Tahor,
the m ov&lt;•mflnf . II has C'SCa l al t'd
Ca li f .. said hr had trou bl e ex tin lhP m ovpm en t ... m ovPd it up a
guishing · th~ habit becau se ht•
quan t urn stPp ."
was told he looked good wit 11 a
The shock w;~ v6s have b(•(• n felt
rigo
rrl 1l' in his mout h.
aro und thP ro untr)' .
"
I
tried to1 qu it severa l t imes.
In San F'ranrlsro, a r ity
but it wa sn' t until I dcddcd t hat I
otdin anrl' buns smo kin g In offi .
didn
' t wan t to IJc a bad lnfluenct•
CPS i f on i)' one e mpl oy~&lt; · ro mon
m1
· son th ai I finall y quit ,"
plains. llow n thP&lt; 'oast in Beve rly
Wool
f
said .
Iii lis. Ca I if .. t h&lt;·rP Is no smok ing
T
he
casino is now cooper a tin g
in tha t tow n 's ritzy rrs to.tu r anl s.
wit
11
I
hl'
A m &lt;'riru n Lung Assoc laItt Holdr n. Ma &gt;S., n&lt;•w hires on ·
t ion In offer ing a ser ies of
,. 1111 : ilolitf' fntTt"' m ust proml sr not
e••ss ulion c lln.lcs for
smoking
to sm oke- &lt;'Vt'n off dul y.
emp
loyers.
:!0 of whom smashed
New Yor k wa~ in linr for
as
ht
ra
ys
rccentl.
v in a gest ure
SPVPr&lt;' s mo kin~ res tric ti ons in
sy
m
!Jolizing
tht•it·
committment
publ ic plares before a sta i r
to
quit.
suprl'm&lt; ' cou r t ju dgr stepped In
At Sl an forcl Univer si l v M edl·
;~ncl rulr d l hr n •g ulal lons Illega l.
cal Cent er , an expN imr nt al doBut !Ill' butt It • is C'x pl'(' IC'd to go
on. l·:l'cn In the So uth. lht• i t·)'Our self stop-smoking provol unt ee r s. all 'or w hom had 10
nation's tobacro bell . the nonagrre
10 qu it for 48 hours to
sm oki ng: m o\ 'f'mf'nt hlls ta kt•n a
partiripatc . T hey are then asfirm grip .
Th e sma ll loll'n of Waterford , sign&lt;•d ra nd om ly to one of sevMinn .. took tlw blgJZt&gt;st st&lt;• p. It eral eight -week progr ams.
" It 's a se lf-help prog t·am fOt'
bunru: d sn1oking ou tdoor s.
"Smokl'l's ,,.,, feeling a lot of people who clon't wan t to join un
prrs su ro." Ba nz haf said . ongoi ng support group" sa id
" T hey' re• be ing madt• lo fce l likr progr am dit·rctot· Bat·baru Newman. "W~' rp tes llng- t hings .thHt
serond·t·l '"s ri tizens."
lt w ould HJJPl'H r s m o kPI'S huvr peop le "" " · usc to stre ngthen
l hl'ir r h;m crs of sta y in g off
their barks 111 the wall. and
cigarett es on their own."
bloucl -thlrst_
, . no n - smoke r ~ nrC"
So m e pa r l lclpun ts rece ive
swoopl tt g Itt for thP ki ll.
wre~i~'
educat iona l mat C'rials.
But. fr:mk ly , tho situation Is
ca
lled
m
odules.
design ed to help
not qu ltc so one-sided or so Ui(i y.
starting ll'l th the fact som e o4 them stay o ff cigarettes. Others
milli on IJ&lt;'Oplc roughl,l' :10 rcrclve c ltlwr nicot ine chewing
gum or a placebo gum con tainin g
prrrt'nt of Anwrira n adu lt s still srriokr• . Non· smok ing groups lnNI substances. Onr grou p
receives both gum and modules.
wag tht' arru slng fin ~r r at lhr
Resea
r chers said they will col tobac ('(l indu ... r r~· . whle h sp('ncls
millions Itt ach ·Prtisr ment s eac h lect folloll' -up Inform ation ott the
.veur to r on\'ittc·e prop lr to light volunt eer s for tll'o years .
"Studies have shown that 95
up, and com patties such as Philip
pet·c
nt o f Am erica ns who have
Morri s. whir h displa y' little
quit
have
done so on t heir ow n,"
regard for !hOSt' \l'hO do not
sai
d
Dr.
Stephen Fort m ann .
sm oke and cnroura gf's smokC&gt;rs

W.

,,

Va .
Slammer s
A prison or peni tentiary is for :
thQse conv ic ted of seriou s crimes '
carrying a prnaltyOfmoret hana
year , A j ail is for those convi cted
of . relativel y minor offenses

a~sis taot
~ nd head

:

Ministerial
assooatton
sponsors
program

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OPEN DAILY 9-5, SUN. 1·5 ..

.

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300 Second
Gallipolis

The Shoe Cafe

Announcing money-saving .
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• All Steel tanltter Conllracllon
• 1-PitCI Abovt·Tht·flllt
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The Sunday Times-Sentinei....:.Page-B-11

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

Puzzlers to compete

the · news~----------.

By WILLIAM c. TROTT
Unlled Press lnlernatlonal
ROCK TO RUSSIA: BUiy Joel will perform six shows In the
Soviet Union lhls summer and says he's going strictly as a
musician and a well-lntenlioned tourist. "I intend to do a lot of
walking around and hanging out," he sa[d at a news conference
Friday in New York .
"I'm not a politician. I am going there as a musician.! want to
get more communications going (between Americans and
Soviets)." The schedu le Includes three concerts in Moscow July
26, 27 and 29 and three In Leningrad Aug . 2, 3 and 5, all in Indoor
arenas. Joel expects 100,000 people to attend the six
performances with tickets to be sold for the equivalent of $10.
But Joel says the trip won' t be a mone;y -maker for him .
"We're going into the red," he said. Joel, 36, plan~ to take hi s
wife, model Christie Brinkley, and their young daughter, Alexa
Ray, along and he's hoping for a chance to pl~ y with Soviet•
rockers . "We don' t know a lot about their rock bands but I'd like
to find out." he said.
~WVERNOR UP FOR EMMY: Massachusett s Gov. Michael
Dukakis is a Jongshot for the Democratic presidential
nomination but m aybe he'll have a better chance In the regional
Emmy comprtllion. Dukakis this week announced he wa s
seeking the Democrallc presidential nomlnallon and he also
was nominated for a New England Emmy award in the public
service category for co·hosting a January 1986 anti· racism
special tilled "What ' s in a Name?" Dukakis Is a te l ~vls i on pro,
having · served as moderator for public television' s ' 'The '
Advocates' ' series In the early 1960s.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY FROM RAY: Willie Nelson had a
belated birthday request of Ray Charles while they were
tllming a segment for Nelson's upcoming televisio n speci al in
Austin, Texas , th is week .
Midway through the show at the Allev Oops clu.b. Nelson held

ATHENS · - A . crow with a
passion for doveta iling puzzle
pieces will link up at the 1987
American Publishing National
Jigsaw Puzzle Championships In
Athens , Aug. 15 and 16to compe(e
with the 14·year -old reignin g
champion for nearl y $13,000 In
cas h prizes.
More than 800 contestant s are
ex pected to parti cipate In the
sixth annual timed coro petillon.
Prev iou s championships ha ve
drawn entries from as far away
as Guam and New Zea land , and
from 42 stat es throughou t the
1
nation .
To obt ai n Information or entry
forms , co nt act The Dairy Barn.
P.O. Box 747, Athens, Ohlo45701,
614·592·4981.
.
Prizes of $1,000, $750 and $500
will go to the top three winn ers of
the singles and doubl es event s.
with fourth through 15th pl ace
finish ers receiv in g from $50 10
$200 In cas h awards .
For the first lime In the pu zzle
championships. $340 in prize
money will go to winners of I he
junior competition. The child·
ren's cont est Is designed for
young puzzler s up 1o 12 ye~ rs old
and will be limited lo 100 entri es.
Sponsor s of the national evrn l

up a hand to hush the crowd, turned to Char1es and saUl. "It's
my birthday (actually, he had turned 54 on Aprll3) and I'd like
to ask you for a present. Would you play 'I Ca n't Stop Lov ing
You?'"
· Theduet turned out to be one of the highlight s· of the ~esslon,
. which wll·l appear In "Willie Nelson: Texa s Sty le" on CBS In the
fall . One more taping - Willie 's Fourth of July Picnic - is
planned before the special Is wrapped up.
DISNEY MILESTONE! A 27·year·old diesel mechanic from
Collinsville, Ill., Friday bec ame the 24 2, 831 ,300th person to visit
Wall Disney Wor ld In Lake Buena Vista , Fla.
KeniiWbertson, who was vlsltingwfth his wife, Aim, and t hei r
daughter. Andrea, 3, was given a lifetime pass for four people
and his family was taken on a V IP tour of the park. Disney
officials say the 242,831,300 figure Is significant because II
means the number of people who have visited the park ·In It s
. 15-y ear history now equals the population of the United States.
"We called. the U.S. Census Bureau and they told us that' s
what the popula t ion would be and we fi gured out thai visitor
would enlerEpcot Cent er all1:14 (a.m. EDTI," said D isney
World spokesman Jim Hampton.
GLIMPSES: Playboy 's Hugh Hefner is selling off two works
. by two of the biggest nam es in abstract expressionist art.
Jackson Pollack's "Number26, 1950" and ·"Woma n" byWIUem
de Koonlng go on auction In New York Monday at Sotheby' s, Th e
paint ings are part of the Pla yboy Enterprises Corporate Art
Collection and a spokesm an says they are being sold now to
capita lize on their value. Sotheby' s estimates the paintings will
go.for between $1.5 million and $2 million ... The guests at the
Whit e Hou se dinner for Japa nese Prime Minister Yasuhlro
Nakasoue Included actor Pat Morita, ballerin a Susan ,Jaffe,
Kans as City Roya ls owner Ewing Kaufman, co mposer Henry
Mancini, sin ger Johnny Mathis and actress Barbara .E den.

Include The Dairy Barn Sou·
theaster n Ohio Cultural Arts
Cent er . Inc.; the Atbens' Area
Chamber of Cqmrnerce; Amerl·
ca n Publishing (a dlvisiqn of the
Putn am Publishing Group,·
Inc . ) ; and J3il s .&amp; Pieces, a .
specialty mali order company .
Competitors in America's only
national puzzling contest w!ll tl1\
to beat l ast year's wlnni.n g times
in both singles and doubles
cp mpetltlon . Donna Klett , a ninth
gr ader from Stow, Ohio. captured the 1986 singles title with I!
time of 1 hour. 49 minutes and 28
seco nd s.

r--------:----EARN'

UP
TO .·

$20,000

Per Year

Ralalng CHINCHILlAS
For lnformtllon·wrlttlo:
(plfltf glv. nemt, •g•

end phon• numbtr)
RANCH~RS ·'
P.O. Bo• 3666
Dolton, Georglo 30721

14041 218-4828

:Task .force says Ohio mirrors nation
I

YOUNGSTOWN , Ohio (UP!)
' - The Physician Task Force on
: Hunger In America has disco·
· vered that eastern Ohio Is. in
; many ways, similar to other
: regions of the country thai have
: losl key industries.
· The group studied the area
, Thursday and Friday. gathering
~ informalipn in Youngsto.w n ,
• Warren, Steubenville and sev: era! other communities.
·
: , The Rev . Kenneth Dea n, a tas k
• force m ember, saldtherelscl ear
~ eYidence of hunger and malnutri·
: Jton resulting from the loss of
· thousands .of jnbs in the steel ,
!11:oal and ceram ics Indu stries.
, " We found here the same kind
· of condition we have found In
~ other parts of the country.
Througq the use of food stamps,
soup
kitchens and food pantries ,
1
' a lot of people get their food needs
: covered," Dean s~ld . "But there
; are those people who don't have
• enough to make lithe full month .
. the last fou r or
• They are gotng
: five days of each month without
I enough food."
Dean said task force members
were Impressed by the strong
•·
deslre ' to work exhibit
ed by
the
•
'!
'
.: people they interviewed, but he
·;; said many of those people have
been frustrated because the jobs
• they find don't pay enough to
:: support a family and , at the same
; 1time, disqualify them from r e~ 1 celvlng public assistance.
~ l Dean said the existing social
• s-ervice system Is not eq uipped to
; handle · the type of economic .
: . crisis now evident in eastern
; Ohio, and he said lor a I communi:
• ties aren 't able to fill the void.
&gt;'('he federal government , he sa id,
i .must assume a major role.
; , "It seems clear to me that the
'I Iochoice Is to either declare
these
•
•
' .areas eco nomic emergen cy.
~ iareas or watch the continuing
family and community
•
1

' ·
Task force members also were
in western Penn sylvania ·and
southern West Virginia this
week , visiting soup klt cbens,
social service agencies. health
clinics and private homes .
I nformation gathered In the
trl-slale area w ill be combined
with findings from the panel's

studies of ot her depres sed re·
glons In a report . to Congress
later this year.
The Physician TaSk Force on
Hunger In America. based at
Harvard Universit y, i s com·
posed of prom inent physicians
and clergymen from across the
nation.

All Patio
Furniture
on Sale
Now

If you're a MEDICARE recipient. ..

there is an insur;Jnce·plan you should review~

Maj'or
~ ComprehensiveCoverage:
Pays all Medicare deductibles. and
Medicare ~ * co-payments.
•
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:Suppp!!!!t!nt~ * ·not
pay, PLUS sets liberal limit on

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Bond You'r 'Nome &amp; A'ddrooo For Full lnlormoi!OI To:

Glenn C. Roberts

United American lnaurence Compl!ny
P.O . Box 336
Ravenswood .. W: Va . 26164

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Lyon·Shaw takes 'extra steps to ensure your
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wrought iron with a combination of xinc primer
undercoat and three coat,s of enamel top coat for
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Stop in Lifestyle today for the most exciting
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Corner

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Medicare's "approved" amounts.
Guaranteed Renewable.for
life ...coverage cannot be cancelled
for any reaso.n, including advancing
age or decli11ing heal.th.
Backed.by Superior Service ...on
average a benefit check is in the mail
to you in less than a week after United
American receives your claim.
FOR MORE INFORMATION SEND COUPON

To HoNoR THoSE WHo HAvE GoNE BEFORE
is to insPire those who follow • • •
~ ~L OVING

MtM 0 RY

of Third

Olive,

Gallipolis

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Morns the word.

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or the ITO Sewing Basket Bouquet,
which includes a ~I sewing kit.

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lust call or visit us today.

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Serving Southeast Ohio For.Over .SO Yea.-..

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~~FLORIST

JJJ L .....St., P••• .,, 011. "Often Imitated- Never Duplicated" Ph. 992·2644 .

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D Please
printed in full color with size and pr ices li sted .

Open Evenings
&amp;Sunday By

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4 IN. POTTED PLANTS
OVER 40 VARIETIES OF BEDDING PLANTS

f

TREAT YOUR MOM TO ·COMFORT

FROM SYRACUSE

(BLOOMING &amp; FOILAGEI

r-·---People in

I

· HUBBARD$ GREENHOUSE
NAN~ING

year, for civil offenses such as
non· pa ymenl of alimony and fOI)
those awa .i tin g tria l or(
se nt encing.

ha s .en ro l led J.lOO
director of m ed icine
of the federa lly -fu nded
project. " Wh at we'retry ingtodo
is hel p that independent process
alongabit .''
Joe Walsh, a Sunn yva le, Ca l if. ,
engineer. sa id he chose the
Stanfor d prog r am tll'ra uso he
didn ' t have to atten d meetings .
"I don't like tyi ng m yself up
every evening to be indoctrinated on all tht• evil s· of smokin g," sa id Wa lsh. who had a
30- yea r , three-.pa ck -a-day habi t
befor e j oining t he progra m las t
February. He sai d nico tine gu m
gave him t he support he needed
to kick t he power fu l crav ing.
" I won' t go back to ci dog.
~
ga r et tes," he savs. " II was too
hard to qui I. "
·
Newman sai d nicot ine addir·
lion is str.ong and Withd ra wal ra n
•
•
•White
l ea d to irritdbili ty, anxiel _\· and
sleep dislurba nces. Howeve r ,
she sa id , the hardest part of
quitting is "br ea king th e habit"
of II ftlng a cigarett e to t he I ips 200
I
or m ore times a day , usuall y in
connect ion wit h such things as
answer ing the telephone or sipping a d ri nk.
Surveys by the A m rrira n
GA LLIPOLIS - Th e Gallla
Cancer Society show th at in
Count y Ministerial Association,
general men wi lh co ll eg~ Pdu ca in cooper ation wil h the Jackson
t ion s. white-co ll ar occ upalions
,\rca Min is try , is again sponsoring a garden in g project for Galli a
and hig h-incom e l&lt;•vrl s are less
lik ely to smokf' t han high school
Co unt.r . The purpose of t he
graduates, blu e- co llar worker s
projee l is to provide seeds and
and mr n with low inr omr s.
plant s to low -incom e and noin come per son s and families.
Sta tistica lly, :1:1 perre nt of the
mal e populat ion sti ll sm okes.
making it . possiblr. for them to
State Farm Mutual policyholders 50
Amon g women. 28 percen t or
supply a porlion ' of their food
and over who have no unmarried
through their ow n garden.
the fem ale popui :J t ion sm okes .
drivers under 25 in their household
Ther e will be no applica tion
although i n abso lure numbor s
will now be getting a break on the
more women ar e sm oking th :m in procedure thi s yea r . Any person
.
'
cost
of their car insurance.
·
the past, ra ust ng lung cancer to
without inco me. or low-in co m e
',
such as unemploy m ent. general
surpass brea st ca ncer as the No.
If you're 50 or ·over, call and see if
CAROll
SN:&gt;WDEN
.'
&lt;E' lir f. A.D.C ., soci al security .
1 ca ncer killer among women .
you
qualify.
.
,/h
Cor. Third &amp; State
The disease cla im ed the li v&lt;'s ol
etc, is welr·ome und encouraged
~-· ,/
Gallipolis
to pcJrtkipat e·.
an estima l ed 41.000 women in
Pllo111 446·4290
1980, nea r ly doublt· the 22. 000
Seed pick-up will be a t the
(( '
'- .
Ha..... 446·4518
peaths i n 1971&gt;.
Galli a Cou.n ty Cooperative ExThe surv0ys show !hal wom0n
tensio n Sen ·ice, 1502 Eastern
, ''
w ho wo rk out side the hom e arc
Ave .. M ay 7, from 10 a.m. until2
m ore lik ely to sm oke than
p.m . An yo ne who is unable to
hou sewives and womr n in llOU Sf'·
pick up their seed at this ti!Y)e
Stitt Farm Mutual Automobile lnaul'llnce Company
hold s wit'h a low fam ily in com e.
ma y ra mo to the Ex tension
Smoking is :Ji so more li kcl.v i f
Offirc or the Com munit y Ac tion
H9me Office : Bloomington. Illinois
separat ed or d ivoreed. or. fn
Outreach Offi ce in Ga llipolis, 220
contrast to m en. i f em ployed in · Jackson Pikr• , at a later time and"";:::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;
t he $25.000-plu s inco m!' braeket.
recC' iV(' them.
I
For those smoker s consid ering
Re ci pi ent s will be as ked to
quilting, tho American Cancer
comple te a form indicating the
:'
Soc iety. provides th e follow in g
sVe and loca tion of their garden
tips:
and th eir source of incom e.
- Thr ow out all ciga rettes b.1·
i\n~ · per son or bu siness dps ir..
breakin g lhl'm in ha l f :md
ing to makr £J contri bu t ion of seed
wett ing them clown . Clean out al l
or money m ay do 'so by co nt act·
as htra ys in hom e, office and car
i ng t he coordi nator of the proa nd pul !hem awa y. Di sca rd
gram , Puston ,Joh n Jackson.
m atches and hide l ighlcr.
New Li fe Luther an Chu rch. 225
- When thl' urge l o smoke
.lackso n Pike. or Pastor Art
occurs. lake deep rhy thmic
l.utttl. trcasu tw of th e Ga lla
brea ths .
Coun t \' Mi ni steria l Assoc iati on.
- Exrrcisc to rel ieve tension.
who is Chaplain at Holzer M r di·
Walk up sta i rs in stead of tu k ing
ro l Center .
g;am

WITH FLOWERS FROM

20 VARIETIES OF

·.May 3, 1987

l·h c elevator.
- When tempted, think of a
negat ive Im age associated wit h
sm oking such as burning a hole in
clot hing, or being ou t of breat h .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
wa l king up a hill.
I'
. - Reward yourself. Try or al
subst itutes such as carrot st icks,
.
.
sugarless gum .
O l D M A . I NE TROTTE RS
- Eat three or more sm all
mea ls lo m aint ai n cons tan t bl ood
sugar levels.
- Change habit s con nected
with sm oking. Drive a differen t
rout e, ea t In a new pla ce.
-Drink lots of liquid, but avoid
ca ffelne 1and alco hol.
-S tay busy. Do a pu zzle. kn it il '
sweater . fi x th e sink, wa sh the

Remembet Mom on Moth_, '1 D1g
:

.....
carrying a penally of less than a
'

' .
--------- -- ---- ---- -----------~

'

LOGAN MON·UMENT CO.
POIIIIOY, OHIO
Meigs County .Display Yard
Near Pomeroy II!IIOn Bridge
1.11 L Va..._,

:r·

Phone t·2·2SI

'

'

VINTON, OHIO

Gallia County Display Yard
Ja11111 0. lush
Manager
Ph- 381·1603

�Page- B-12- !he Sypday Times-Sentinel

'

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

'

Community calendarj area·happenings
SUNDAY
PATR IOT - Gali Ja Co unty
Schools ar t show , Su nday J.:l
p.m., Southwes tern Elementary
School. No admiss ion. Refresh·
ment s ava ilable. Sponsored by
Gallia Count y Local Schools.

tL~t Church with Rev. DannY

through Sunday, services 7 p.m.,
and Sunday at 10:45 a.m . Evangelist Jerome Byrd of Loulsviile,
. .
Ky.

Boggs. Servlres 7:30 p.m.
GA LLIPOLIS - Grubb FamIly Sing·e rs ar French Ci ty Baptist
Chu rch, Sund ay, 7 p.m.

GAL LIPOLIS - Revi va l Sunday at Okcy Chapr•l Church ,
Amos Wilso n speaking.

RODNEY - Revival at Rodney Ch urch of God, Sunday
through Ma y 9. Services at 7
p.m., evangelist Steve Haskins.

BIJ)WE LL - Reviva l Su nd ay
1hrough May Ill , Prospect Bap-

GAL LIPOLIS - Good News
Baptist Church youth rev ival

'
CENTENARY - Cemenary
United Christia n Church· Is In
revival, 7:30 p.m .. with Rev.
Jack Holley a nd the Sta pelton
Family.
·
BIDWELL - Gospel meetings
begin Friday, continuing through
Sunday, Bidwell Church of
Chrlst, ?p.m. nlgh tly,a ndlOa.m .
on Sund ay. Speaker Paul Drake.

--In the service-Thomas .J . Robinson
Thomas .J . Robinson. son of
David M. Robin son of Rura l
Routr 2 and .Janice L. Robinso n
of Ru ra l Rout e 1. both of Bidwel l,
has been promoted In the L:.S. Air
Force to the ra nk of trchni ca l
sergean t .

Robin son is a rccru itrr at
Wr lgh t·P a t ter son Air Force
Ba se.- with the :J552nd Air Force
Recruiting Sq uadron.
His wife, Diana, is th e da ughter of Harry L. and Jun e M. Pugh
of 17 Woodsmill Road , Bidwell.
He is a 1973 grad uate of North
Ga li'i a Hi gh School.
Gene Walker ,Jr.
Army Private. Ge ne Waik(•r
· Jr .. son of Jud y K. Wal ker of
Ru ral Rou te 2. Blrlwrtl, has
completrd bas ic !ra ining at Fort
Sill, Okla .
During the tra ining, stud ents
received inst ru ctio n in drill and
cerrmonles, weapons. map rrad ing. tactics, military court esy ,
milit ary just ice. firs t aid , and
Army history and t ra dii ions.
Charles E. ,Jamison
Sgt. Charles E. Jamison, son of ·
William L. and Helen H. Jamison
of 60 Maddison Ave., Ga llipolis,
has completed a U.S. Army
prima ry leadership course.
Students received training In
superviso ry skills. leadership
principles a nd small unit train·
lng trchnlqucs esse nti al to a
fir st- line superviso r In a lcc hnl ·
ca l

or

admin i s t r&lt;Jt i v r

~nvlro nm e nt .

.Jamison Is a supply sergea nt
with the 2nd Engineer Bat talion
In So uth Korea .
His wife. Robert a. Is the
daught er of Howard and Harriet
S. McKenn a o! 218 !Jpper Grassy
Branch Road. Ashevil le, N.C.
Th&lt;· sergean t Is a 1980 gra dutatc of Kent State University .
,John M. Pickering
Airman 1st Class John M.
Pickering, son of J ohn T. and
Linda M. Pickering of Ru ra l
Rout e, 1, Leon, W.Va .. has brrn
drrorat cd wllh th e Air Force
Achievement Medal in .Japan .
The Achlevcmenl Medal Is
awa rd ed to airmen for meritorIous Sf'rvlce, acl s of counrgc, or
ol her accOmJlllshmon ts.
' Pickering Is a fuel s specla ll.q
with tho lAth Supply Sq uadron .
Hi s wife, Lisa. Is the dau ghtrr
of Dav id and Di n nc Drone of Ei20
W. Wctmorr, Tucson. Ariz.
The airman Is a 1!184 graduate
of Point Pl&lt;'a sa nt Hig h School,
W.Va .
lvun S. Lllmh..rt
Airma n Iva n S. La mbert . son
of Ivan F. Lamber t of Glenwood.
W.Va .. and Patty Arthur of 6320
Casr Drive, Lrsagc, W.Va .. has
gra du a lrd from th e U.S. Air
F'orre l'f'fr lgC&lt;ratlon and air ron·

dltl onlng course at Sheppard Air
Force Bas&lt;'. Trxas.
During thr CO UI 'S P , stmil'nts
were taught fu nd ament als of
rrfrigcratlon a nd aiy ,conditionIn g to t•epa lr and ser vice systems
co mponents lnrludlng comprr•-sors. rondrnsors anp rvapo rators. They also Parn&lt;'d credits

PORTER - Revival at Faith
Valley Church of Christ In
Christia n Union, to Ma y 3, 7:30
p.m., ,David Chase. eva ngelist,
Holly F amily si ngin g.

through th&lt;&gt; Commun ity College
of the Air Force.
He is · a 1985 graduate of
Barbour s v ill e High Sc hool ,
W.Va .
'

GA LLIPOLIS - Da n Ha yman
and The Faith Trio will si ng at
reviva l services at the Prospect,
Bapti st Church on O..J. White
Road, out oi Gallipdlis . a t 7 p.m.
Sunday evening.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Junior Wom an's Club Spring
Banquet, Monday, 6:30 p.m.,
Holiday lnn . · ·'

M1 'S.HI~f'

GALLIPOLIS- AAUW spring
dinner, Monday, 6: 30 p.m ., Rio
Gra nde St udent Cent er.
GALL'IPOLIS - Revival beg·
Ins Monday at Sil ver Run Baptist
Chu rch with Rev. Bud Hatfield
and the Ga brie l Quartet. Services at 7:30p .m:. through May 9.
GALLIPOLIS - DAR meets
Monday , 1:30 p.m., Bob Eva ns
Sausage Shop. Meeting then goes
to the home of Mrs. Wayne
Sheets.

Your
Photos

FrmP1 Th e Bible ..

PTL
William B. Kugh•
In ~ p cjking to fa !se .tcachers who claimed to have taught in the Lord's

name : exercised power over demons ; and engaged in miraculous works
fM1. 7:22). He !la id. "Not every one thai suith untu me, Lord, lr.ord, llhatl
t•nff•r into !It t' kinRdom of heaven , but he thai doeth the will of my Father
wMdr is i11 Ilea vi' II ·· (MI. 7:21 ). Again in Luke , ''And why call/e me, Lord,
Lord. und do 1101 the thi11g.s h'hich I say? " (Lk . 6:46). "Cal " denotes to
pmfcs~ : "Lord " means Master. Owner, or Ruler; and "do not" suggests
d i'obcdicm·c. Jes us is merely stating and asking, ''How can you profess me
tiS your Muslt' f. ow,er. or Ruler and di.wbey my will?" The world is
p\agur.:d with many religious leaders today who claim fellowship \\'ith
Christ in His kingdom. Their claims rest on their pious and repetitious
e ri c!~. " P n1 i~c the Lord, Praise the Lord." but not on "the word of the truth
·~I ''"' Ruspe/ " (Col. I :5 ). They "speak evil of those things which they know
not: Ina wlrut th f!y know rrarurulfy. as' brute beast.s. in those thin's thiy
cormp1 1lwmselves " (Jude 10). Knowing the doctrines and traditions of
men . they "speak •·••i/" ol' the truth and "corrupt themseiV&lt;s " (Jude 10).

They. being presumptuous, selfwi llcd, and not afraid to speak evil (2 Pet.
2: tO). i~n o rc the Lord's warning against oovetousness and His command
for disc1pline . Let us obse rve these two:
Covetousne11
"Cuvewusnes-'1·" is to be greedy of gain, having a st rong desire to have
more bv taking th at which be lon~s to others. "Covetousness , which is idol·
ru ry " rtol. 3:5). has beco me thetr god. Not bein_g satisfied with their mil·
linn. they throw a.bout'themselves the "cloak of co.etou•ness ' (l Thess. 2:
5). and with much pomp. they seek to take the millions that others of their
u~· n

number arc mak ing. They. "through covetousnen" and :"with feigned
··
, mukt• merclumdise ·· of many (2 Pet. 2:3). They unleash their idol a·
trO ll !~ pnH:ticc of "fo vc/0/4JI/eu ·· upon the sea of humanity, "making mer·
('/l(l mli.fl' " or "nwki11g gain " of the poor, the hard-working, and the
\~ l·:t llh y peop le so as to promote their own wealth and luxurious lives. Not
only &lt;In they " mulcP merchandis(• (gain)" of the people, but they' "make
11wrdwmlisr• (gain)" of religion so as to build their ivory palaces. They are
a~ "rtiRiiiR ~~·aw·.~ of ril e sea. foaming out their own shaine: wandering
stars. to whom is reserved the blacknes.s of darkness for ever' ' (Jude 13). _

LETART FALLS - Letart
Townshlp Trustees meet 7 p.m .
1
Monday , town hall.

.

'

ship Trus\ees meet Tue5day, 7:30 ·
p.m .. Reedsville Fire Station. ~

, ---

By
David
Tawney
StR'S - FOR IHE CRIAIIYI
PHOTOGRAPHER
An autofocus SLR con add to your creativity by fr~ing you of many tash. ld·
v~nltd ftalures can also give you cant rol of
exposure and focus.
Many of thtst canwros allow tither o single outofoc.us, continuous outofocus, or a
form of monual fCMus. 't ou can select the obitct you wont In focus and then re-compose
your pKtwe in tither autofoc:us Of manual
fowl mode. ktcontinuou• outofocu5, you can
follow on objed as it movu, and pick t~
pecic of action Jo trip the 1hutter.
Yar;ous programs allow lor a choict of
speed/aptrlurt combinations 10 you can
seltd 6tpth of fotus or adia:n·tontroUing
shutter "'tds. Ovtrridt COfllrob Itt you
choOH lht exposure tfftd you Mtd.
Whtn spttd is nt&lt;Hsary, tht outofoeut
CGMt'O with 1oom ltM con locuJ and determint tapowr• befort a human could. AbuWtin motor drin/ rtwind trontpclfll film whitt
you commtralt en tht nut imege.
Dwing tht montll of May, 2 &lt;ofol:
pilotos trtody in S minutes) rogular pr&lt;o
$1.91, May rportat '5.91. Only
Many arhonrod phot-hon 01 wofl•
beginntn wiH find an autofocvs SIJ !*ftd
for tt.oir kind of
So&lt;
EHtiDn of fin1 ccntn~t
424 2nd AvL, Goltipolis, Ohio j,i.::ii.lo' ·I

pas"'""
at,......,,

Alysheba cops I 13th
Derby; Bet Twice 2nd
.

',_ .

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport·
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM meeting Tues';
day, 7:30p.m.
!

GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Lions meet Tuesday. 6:30p.m ..
Fortification Hill.

POMEROY - Xi . Gamma
Epsilon Chapter of Bela Sigma'
Phi Sorolty Mothers' Tea meet ';
lng Tuesday. 7 .p.m .. at the
Pomeroy Senior Center.
•

REEDSVILLE - Olive Town·

---

By POHLA SMITH
UPI Sports Writer
LOUISVILLE . Ky. tUP II
Alys heba, the son or 1978 Tripl e
OfOWn runn er-up Alyda r, won
the 113th Ke ntu cky Ocrby Sa tu rday . Bel Twice was second and

•

POMEROY - Pomeroy Chap;
ter 186, Order . of the Eastern
Star, 7:45. p.m . Tuesday at the:
Masonic Temple. . Officers In
chapter dresses.

last -minu te Pnt ry /w ies Copy

was th ird .
De mons Bego ne , the 2- 1 fa vor·

ite to win t l1e $79.1,600 first leg of
thf' Triple Crown, was injured

SKY·L:INE

t'unnin g down th e backstrr tr h
and pulled .up.·
The victory by Dorothy and
Pamela Scharba.uer 's Alysheba
was the fir st Derby .triumph for
Hall of F'amc train er .lack Van
Berg, . who suffered the em bar·
rass ment of the firs t di squalifl ca-

LANES ~
SUMMER LEAGUES
MEETING, DAlES
.

MONDAY4 MAN TEAM HANDICAP
MONDAY -MIXED
CHURCH TEAM HANDICAP
TUESDAY -lADIES
TRIO TEAM !!ANDICAP

7:00 P.M.

MAY 11

7:00 P.M;

MJ.Y 18

. 7:00 P.M.

MAY 12

THURSDAY -MEN'S
TRIO TEAM HANDICAP

ALYSHEBA WINS DERBY - Alysheha, wilh
Chris McCarron In the saddle, won the 11 3th

M cCarron, \vas bumped leav in g

the gate and pu shed well back.
Ne also had problems as he
made his winning charge down
the s tret ch. Bel Twice, in the lead
under Cra ig Perret . ducked out
frol)1 a· left -hand ed 'whip and
bu mped Alysheba and thr two

NEW YDRK (UPI\ - Tim
Raines. makin g his 1987 debu t.
belted a grand sla m in the lOth
inning for his four th hit of the
ga me Saturday to lead the
Montreal Expos loa n 11 ·7victm"y
over the New York Mets.
Raines. who s lgned a th ree·
ye ar co nt rac t Friday, co llected
his fourth ra r·cer gra nd sla m and
made a loser of .Jesse Orosco, 1-2.
Wi th the score tied 6-6. Reid
Ni r hols, Casey Cu nda ele and
Herm Winnin gham eac hed
singled in the lOth to load the
bases. Raines followed with his
gra nd siam in to the lrfl -flrld
bullpen.

running of the Kentucky derby in Louisville
Saturday . (UPI)

Cubs 7 Padres 3
CHICA GO (UPTI I - Rync
Sandbe rg belted a three-run
homer· to hi ghlight a four·t'un
seventh Inning and Andre Dawso n ro llceted his fifth homer ln
his last eight ga mes Saturday to ·
lead the Chicago Cubs to a 7-3
triumph over the Sa n Diego
Padres .
lllu&lt;• ,Jays 9 Rangers K
TORONTO I UP I! - Ton)·
f'erna ndez kn oc ked In two runs
wi th a two-out double in the ninth
Inning Sa tu rda y th at lifted the
Toronto Blur .lays Jo th eir fifth
straig ht vic tory. a 9-8 derls!Qn
over the Texas Rungcrs.

MAY ' 13

click ed hee ls. f) •l ys h e b~ . ·
stumbled. almos t unsea ting his
rider. But McCarro n regiJi ned
control, and Alysheba 'overtook
Bet Twke on his third try.
Bet Twice finished 21-41engths
ahead of Avies Copy, a memlier
'of the 24-1 mutual field who was
not comm Uted to the Run for the
Roses until late Monda y. Avles
Copy was thlt'd In' a pholo finis h
by a neck over Crypto~ i eara nce .
Templa r · Hill. anot her field
horse, was !iflh followed by the
Leroy .Jolley- trained Gulch .
Alyshebacovrred thell-4m lle
in two minutes. three and twofifth s seconds - well off lhe
record 1: 59 2·5 run by Secreta riat
en routr to the Triple Crown ln
197:l.
'

~carJct IU, c.; rays 7
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) .lim Bt·yant's 4-yard touchdown
run and a 50-yard field goal by
Pat D'Morrow, both ln the second
quart e1:. guve the Scarlet team a
10-7 win over the Grays Saturday
In the annua l Ohio Sta te spring
ga me,. dominated by the delense.
- Bryant' s TPrun,wlthll:471eft
In the period, came three plays
aft er rover ,Jim Peel picked off a
pMs by Gray quart e rback Mike
Chancey and returned It to the
Gray 10.
O'Morrow's :;(I-yard field goa l,
which proved to be the !Ina! score
of the game, played before more
than :\8, 000 In Ohio Stadium.
ca me with l:(lo left In the half.

MAY 13

7:00 P.M.

FRIDAY -MIXED
TRIO l'EAM SCRATCH
FRIDAY -MIXED
SCOTCH DOUBLES

1ion In Der by history in 1984. That
year, Ga te Da ncer finished
fourth but. was di squalified and
placed fifth for fouling anot her
horse.
Alys heba , di squalified after
fini shing fir st in I he Blue Grass
Stakes on April 2:\, had to
ove rcome trouble to earn !he
fi rs t st Hkes vic tory of his ca rePr
· by thr ee-quarters of a lengt h.
The co lt . ridden bv th i·ec·tlme
Erlipse Award winner Chris

.

Rajnes paces Expos 11-'7 victory

.

WEDNESDAY-LADIES
AFTERNOON TEAM HANDICAP 1:00 P.M.
WEDNESDAYMIXED TEAM HANDICAP
7:00 P.M.

Section. C
May 3, 1987.

. LO NG BOTTOM
Flame•
Fellowship' meets Tuesday, 7: 3a
p.m., Mount Olive Communjt y
Church, Long Bottom. l'peaker$ .
officers from trl-county ar,ea . •

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

GALLIPOLIS- Spring Valley
Co mputer Club meets Tuesday, 7
p.m. ,bDhio Valley Bank Jackson
Pike ranch.

'

.imW&amp;!l 'mimes~ icntincl

"

l

John A. Williams
MIDDLEPORT - Ash Street
Al'my Pvt. Joh n A. Will iams
F reewill Baptist Church revival
recently retur ned form Aomori .
Monday through Sunday a t 7:30
Japan af ter participa tin g ln
p.m. with Evangelist Rick
"Northwlnd '87." a n annu al
Weaver.
Special singing.
exerclsP des igned to tra in soldi··
BURLi
NG
HAM
A
famllv
ers in movemen1. surv ival and
. ,- --·
RA CINE - Raci ne Chapt er
tac ti cs in a cold weather affair pa rty , hosted by the Junio-r
Woodmen Club, will be held 134, Order of Eastern Star,
environment .
'
Williams i.• an Infa nt ryman Sund ay, 1:30 p.m .. ai Woodmen annua l inspection 7: :!0 p.m . Sunday . Officers In chapter att ire.
wi th the 22nd Infan try a t 'sc ho· Hall in Burlingham .
field Barrac ks. Hawa ii.
RACINE - Racine Chapter . TUPPE RS PLAINS -Orange
He is the so n of Freeman
134
, Order of Eas tern Sta r, will Township Trustees meet MonWilliams of 50620 Hoback Road.
Rac ine, and Vondovlne Bias of hold inspection prac tice 2 p.m. day. 8 p.m ., home of clerk
Dorot hy Ca luway.
4343 Honey Locust La ne, Braver- Su nday.
creek, Ohio .
·
MONDAY
· LONG BOTTOM - Pyth ian
His wife, Cindy, Is the daughter
GALLIPOLIS
Advisory
Sisters,
Rockland Temple 615,
of WilliamS. and Nett le Cross of
Councl,l
ofGa
llla
County
General
meet 7:30 p.m . Monday a t the
Raci ne.
Long Bottom Communrty
The privat e Is a 1981 grad ua te Health District special meeti ng,
of Sou th ern High School, Rac ine. 7 p.m., Monday, Second Floor Building.
Conference Room, Gallia County
Co urthouse.
A

POMEROY
Meigs Junior
and Senior Hig h School Band
Boosters meet Mond ay, 7 p.m ., in
the band room at Meigs High.

.

.•

Sports

••'1

'

GALLIPOLIS - Revival Poplar Ridge Church, beginning
Monday, services at 7 p.m. •

(

MAY 21

7:00 P.M.

,.

:iw.~t
..._,;

MAY 15

~

·,._

""'if
7:00 P.M.

MAY IS

SATURDAY -MIXED
TRIO TEAM HANDICAP

7:00 P.M.

MAY 23

SUNDAY -MIXED
DOUBLES HANDICAP

7:00 P.M.

MAY 24

FOR INFORMATION INQURiaE AT THE FIOlfT DESII
OR PIION£• 446·3~62

'32

Dlaclpllne
. J cs u ~ has i n s t~uctcd us that , if 'Ye see a b~other .sin, then we are to go to
tum pm'tltcly. It he hears us, we wlll have gamed h1m . But, if he refuses, we
an: to take '"'O o r three witnesses. If he refu ses this admonition in view of

the wit nesses.

brought before the church (Mt. 18:15-17). Paul
rh,in~s " and "shall cover a
r~Hdlltudl' of""' (I Cor. 13:7; I Pet. 4:8); that ts, love does not publicly
and .Pctrr

he

is to

~ fl!rn~ .

be

that love "beareth all

cKpose the sins of the brother. James instructs us to seek aad convert the
brother who errs from the truth so as to "save a sou/from death. and hide
u multitude uf • ius .. (lms. 5: t 9,20). Those who do not heed the words of the
~ord in rcgoud. to ~ov~t~u~ness wil.l not heed His words in regard to the lov·

tng treat ment tn dtsctplmmg the smful brother. When the truth is violated
nt thi s point , thr brother's sins become public and damaging. Beware of
such teachers! Do.not let them "make-merchandiJe" of you!
~.._,,Free Bibk Co,.spondena Coor:w, Wrltt .•.

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
... · Hula , lllto Ruad • 1•.0 . Oox 308
t;allit!Oii•, Ohio 45631
'Swully M•mlnat
Bible Study ••30

Wonhlp tOtlO

Wtdrtetday t
Bib~ Study
·7100p.m.

SumiiJ E•e•lqt
Wonhlp 6100

.'

-'""'"'""

-~ ~--~- ~J L~

·j
I

".\M...... F...

I

o.IIJ • WJ'EH
11155a...

'I

'th1rh " Tht Blblt Amw,n" WOWK-1V 13 • h30 a.m. s-clar

towa rd ah a!4sorl atC' deg rE'!'

Y·ou Can

SEE
the dirt come

,JOE BARKER, Ashland, Ky.,.enters finish lane just seconds
hefore ca pturing the 1987 5-K race Saturday In 15: 47.

out of your
carpet, or we
will clean it
.
agam

FREE!

More than 350 take part m Saturday~s French City Run
Free decorating ideas and hanging·tips.
Look for this display

Anyd'ling Goe18 Carpet from Arm·

more than 200 -pte walking
through your living room OVOt'\'dav ..
... tot 25 y..ttr). Not only 4Hd, ,, • . ,

cleaning restore the OVMIII appear·
ance bul a olote examination of Ihe
individual tufts showed virtuei,Y no
change I"

Frontier -Cleaning Syst.ms
(A Dlvlsloll of lice's Funlittrel

,t,IIMSfJIIONG CAll PETS AD • 1m1111 HOMES
AND GARD ENS MAO,AliNE • SI!PTEMBEA

1911

-

*8 ROOMS
• Any large living room, recreation room, or L· shaped
room is considered 2 rooma. Hallway and bathroom is
one room.

Call 446-7470
I

DR. CHt\RLES E. HOLZER (In hat on corner), official slariN,
, awaits lnstrucllons from Fren&lt;·h City Fun Run official prior to tht•
o·K event Saturday .

•

ROOM*
MINIMUM 2 ROOMS
strong wes installed in an e;~ehibition
at the Knoxville World's Fair, where
it was expoMd to an estimated
2.249.000 vltitoro. (That'o like

LINDt\ MCCALL, Charl eston, W..Ya. moves lnto'the finish lane
to win the wom en's 5·K rae!! In 20:47.

WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET a BLIND SHOP
704 Grand Central Ave.
Ylenn1, W.Y1.
295-4132

"'

,.........

111'011 ,,.. Ohlc Cen~
' '
I

Hlii.W.¥1..
7010

.

. GALLIPOLIS - Joe Barker, Ashland, Ky.,
captured the 5-K 13.1 miles ) event In 15:47 while
Linda McCa ll , Charleston. W. Va., captured the
women' s division in 20:47 to hlghllgh l -the 1987
French City Run In downtown Gallipolis Saturd ay
morning.
t
More than .150 area runners partic ipated
a"ccording to ' Dawn Meadows of the Holze~
Medical Center Recreation Committee which·
sponsors of the event .
One-hundred and flfty.slx runners vied for top
spot in the 5,000 meter run . Placing second behind
Barker was Marcus Be.ss. Ma ysv ille, Ky., with a
time of 16:22.
Demaris Crawford, of Millwood, W. Va ..
finished second In the women's divis ion with a
time of 21:54.
Dinosaur Dub
Following completion of the 5-K race, the
annual one mile Fun Run (Dinosaur) was held.
In the male group, Mark Brown, Syracuse,
linlshed frlsl followed by Eric Dunn, Oak Hill and

Steve Harmon, Lexi ngto n, Ky.
First female across th!' fini sh line was Kltly
Bach-Davis , Pomeroy . She wa s followed by
Roby n Stewart, of Lillie Hocki ng.
• ·
Dr. Charles E. Holzerserv!ld as starter for both
races.
I
Results
Here are the results of Saturday's age-group
division winners :
MALE DIVISION
10 Years-Und er
Brett Boot he, 21:37 and Aaron Dunn , 21:.10.
11· 14 Years
Todd Booth, 17: 08 and Steve Briscoe. 21:39.
I5-19 Years
Jason Thomas, 18:16 and Matt Smith, 18:2 1.
26- 24 YCal'!i

Rick Rees , 19: 13 and Bob Bryae. 20 :21.
25-29 Years
Randall Cole, 16:59 and Dav~ Sa pp,lS: 4.7.
30-34 Yean
Ron Rowsey, 16:29 and Jim O'Leary, 16: 49 .

'

•

35·39 Years
E:d Sams. 17:24 and David Davis, 1R:IKI.
40·44 Years
Fn•d Wolfe. 1 8: 0~ and Delmar Snowd en. 18:27 .
4!H~ Year•
Larry May, 17:56 and Richard Starr, 19:44 .
50·54 Years
Jerry Fischer. 19:24 and Jack Adkln, 20 :27.
55· 5~ Years
Donald Roush, 23 :12.
60·1U Years
Hal f.J nd erwood , 21 : 29.
~and Over
Ca mpbell Nee!, 2.1:40 and BllHReynold!j,. 25:23.
WOMEN'S DIVISION
· 10 Years, Under
Eri n Krawsczy n, 27:29.
1J-.14 Years
Andr ea thelss. 25: 45 and Shayna Chapman .
32:31.
l ii- 19 Years
Rebecca Mosser . 26:35.

211·24 Yo•urs
Tina Ke ll ey, 2:1:08 and Tam I Slti llon. 29::11 .
25-29 Years
fl.egl na Park. 2:1 :10 and ncbccca Collcrlll.
24::11.
·.
.
30·:11, \'•·ars
Edit h Baker, 2:.:16 and Dwanna Fraley, 27 : JR.
35-:19 \'ears
Karen Tillis, 2:1:86 and Bu rba ra Ros tad, 2o : l!i.
40·44 Year•
Donna Daniels, :11 : 57 .
45-!lll Yl!ar.
ln gorborg Ada ms, 30 :36.
iiO-M Y&lt;•ars
No runners.
55-59 Years
Sara h Walker , 49:14 .
60-&amp;1 Years
Barb Morgan 49.19.
65 and Over
No runners.

�\

I ,

..

t.:

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..

Mav 3, 1987

The Sunday Times-Sentinet-Page-C-3

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

Raines
.
signs 3-year de~l; other fre~ agents return Friday·. ·
.

. EW YORK I UP II· - The
,' N
Jll!ontreal Expos, Boston Red Sox

~C~Ibn~A~~-•ru~

ONE-HUNDRED AND FIFTY-SIX entered the
~ K -( 5,1100 -·meier, 3. I mile) event during
Sautrday's annual French City Run in downtown

Gallipolis. ·loll Barker, Ashland, tKy., was the
men's winner. Linfa McCall, Charleston, W.Va.,
was the women's winner.
,JUST IN CASE- A Gallia County EMS unit was
on hand In case of an emera:ency during
•

·• •'
SJDEI.INE CIIA'r - Clarcnet• Fowler, with
.• towel around his m•t· k, l'imts with Frank (Chink)
•

llasklns, Gallipolis, (on bench) shorllyhelorethe
5-K run In downdown Gallipolis Saturday
morning.

..

FUTURE RUN PROSPECTS - They came
from all over and In many ago groups lor
Saturday's annual French City Run. Youngsters
ahove are ~~;randchlldren of Dr. and Mrs. lsom C.

Saturday's annual French City Run in downdow"n ·
Gallipolis.

Walker, Gallipolis. Lefl to right are Taylor '
Walker, 2: Erin Walkt•r, ~; Michelle Walker, Sand
.
'
.Jessica Walker, 6.

Rinker Vegas leader after 2 round$.·

·• Wll.DCATS HONOKED - Hannan Trace
:: athlete• honored recently from left to right: Mark .
· ' Jenkins Solfolastle Award; Klchard Stitt
. Schnla•·
. ~ lie Award; Rick Swain Best Field Goal

Percentage; Scott Rankin Best Defensive Award;
Chris Petro Most Rebounds; Tim Brumfield Best
Free Throw Percentage; and Jake Jones Most
Assists.

.

.

honored
.••~.f Hannan Trace athletes
.
:: MERCE RVILLE - The H a~
·.•nan Tra c~ Spring Athletic ban; ( quet wa s held rccen lly at I ht' new
'' Hannan Trace Elementary
·~ school.
·
·
·
:! The meal was provided by the
.\•a thletic boos ters, Paul Dillon,
· tprlnclpal at Hannan Traer Hi gh
; ,School. served as ma stet· of
· ~ccrcmonlrs .

; Sharon Barnes. J r. High Gi rls
·Basketball coac h, presented
:awards to till' followin g girls :
;!Tracey Jenkins. Stephanie Dii ·~ Ion, Beth Mat·s hall. Nikki Clary,
:' Tammy Thomas, Hea ther Hur :~hlnson . Kim Trtpl~t t. Cindv
:Waugh , Tina Randolph: and
;Mi c helle Ours. Mrs . B:trnrs
. [mentioned th at she ex pec ted big
·:Jillngs from thr gi rls who were
: ~~~~~~-~~:~~nt ~~~~;llta Cou ntv
~ Dana .Jeffers recognized the

1

;~~~o;~~gJ~~~~o~~~~~ht~:~e~~~~~;.
(one chrcr leadrrs at the Jr. High
:,Tournament : Tony a Short ,
.:Christy Short . Tracey Jenkin s.
·:A.mv Pugh, Stephanie Dillon.
· ;J.Icathrr Hut chinson. Kris t! V:tn·
· :!~i ,mr. and Nikki Clary .
::. J ohn Lusher presented awa r·ds
&gt;lo the foll owing st•venth g r·adcrs:
· 'A lan Qllcen. Shane Wells. Brian
::unroe. Jimmy Brace. Chad
·:swain. Matt Davis. Ja so n F'rN•·
··man. Tim Petro. Brian Unroe
::recei ved !he MVP Troohv .
-~ Mr. Lusher prese nted the fol ·
: itowlng el~thth grade boys patrhl's
' fl
. ilh Gu illa County .lr . High
· r:bamps: Craig Rankin , Rieh le
, 't&gt;tllqn. J .J . &amp;van. Jason Black.
Todd Boothe. Chris Stone, John
· Woods, Jason 'f\'alson. Chris
· Strow and Matt Sanders . Special
· pwards were presented to: Ci·aig
• .R)!nkln. B!&gt;st Offensive Player,
)'odd Boothe, Best Defensive
:Player , and Chris Slone. Most
· ~mprovt:'d Player.
·; ·Girls Basketball Awards WNe
·,presented by George Nichols:
. Missy Strow. Heathet Swain,
~lckole Swain. Carrie Waugh.
' i.ralerie Dillon. Terri Queen,
' Michelle Unroe. Lori VanHoose,
' Jnd ~ Paula VanHoose. Specal

,,

•'

\

Awards wt •nlt o Michelle Unroe.
a nd Scott Rankin, Best Defensive
Best Rebounder. Valer ie Dillon,
Aw ard.
Mos t Im proved. and Paula Van Mr . Jenkins stated that this
Hoose. Senior Award .
years players would have to
High Sc hoo l Cheerleading
eo~ tlnue working hard to repeat
awards were presented to the this years success He urged the
followi ng by Mary Jenkins:
team to set their goals higher
Mi ssy Halley. Valerie Dllion. than winning the league and that
Cat hy McG uire. Michelle Unroe.
they were good enough to win In
Nlki. Sma ll. Tlfflni Swain. Jodi . the §ectlonaltournament.
Ruck~r. and Missy Gooderham.
Don Saunders presented
' Mike Jenkins boys varsity awards to the following reservt:'
basketball t•oach presented the players: Brad Cremeens,. Jack
tea m members with patches Swain, Larry Jarrell, Bill Bailey,
stat ing SVAC Champs 86-87: Gary Hurlow. Scott Caldwell ,
Scott Ra nkin. Rick Swain, Chris Todd Saunders, Steve Sanders,
Petro. Richard Still. Mark ·Jen· and Charlie Wood. Special
klns. Tim Brumfield, Jake Jones. Awards were, Leading Re·
Brad Ct·cmcens. a nd Larry Jar- bounder. Bill Bailey, Best Foul
rell . Spcclni·Awards went to Rick Shooter, Larry Jarreli. and Best
Swain, Best FIPid Goa l Pet .. Tim Defensive Player. Brad
Brumfield, B&lt;•st Free Throw Creme£&lt;ns.
Pet.. Jake Jones. Most Assists.
Student athletes In track, baseChris Petro, Most RebOunds, ball . a nd softball were recogRichard Stitt. SC holastic Award, Jiized and will receive awards
Ma rk Jenki ns. Scholas tic Award after the season Is comoleted . ·

Hannan Tnwt·

~in~

5 gamt&gt;!' in 5 days

MEHCEHVILLE - Hannan
Trar P pla.r cd fiw basrbali
ga nws la.sr Wl'('k in fi ve da~·s winning no :tnd l!i·l over the
No l'ih Gallia Pir:lles; 10·6 over
K;·ger Cree k: 7·4 a nd !i-4 over
Sl'mmcs Valle,·.
·Tim Rrum fl(•i d . •Ia\' Jarrell
a nd Hlchard Sti tt were crt•dlted
with wins -

th(' 7 - ~ win over"'

Symmes Valle)' was the completion of a suspended ga me earlier
rhis s pring. P l&lt;~y was resumed in

the top of the eight h and after 10
innings. HTHS was the winner
behind Tim Brumfield. The
nightcap11gainst the Vikings also
went ex tra lnnln~s lelghll before
HT triumphed.
The Wildcats upped their rerord to 8-5 and are slated to play
Sout hern Monday.
In the Class A Sectional Tour· ·
ney at Coal Grove. HTHS will
play Ironton St . Joe on Thursday.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. tUPI I Larry Rinker headed into Satur·
day's third round of the $U
million Panasonir Las Vegas
Invitational with a two-stroke
lead and the tourn ament record
for two rounds.
Rinker's two-day tot al of n.
unde r 131 was two shots better
than Hal Sutton and one stroke
better than the 36-hole record fo r
the Las Vegas tournament se1
last year when Bob Lohr wa s
12-under par through two rounds .
Rinker. No. 8.1 on the PGA
money list with $.18.147 in winnings so far'thl s year. ca n more

than quintuple his tour earn in gs
by capt uring the $225.000 top
pr ize in last week's rain·
shortened tournament.
The 90-hole format was reduced to 72-holes when a thunderstorm forced a three· hour d&lt;&gt;la y
Wednesday and pus hed ba rk the
second round until Friday.
Following a doubl e bogey on
the opening hole of the tourna·
ment Wednesday, Rinker scored
15 birdies and 2o pars over the
remaining .1!i hO les of hi s two
rounds.
The a,ader. who has never won
on the tour. shot an opening

round 6!i at the 7,088· yard
Spanish Trail Country Club apd
fashioned a 6-under par 66 at th.e7.162-yard Las Ve!(as Cou ntry
Club Friday.
..
Rinker 's sternest test cam_('
Sa tu rday when he played at t.ht:'
7.111 -.vard Desert Inn Cou nt ry
Club. considered the roughest
tes t among the thr('{' cour~e~
lx•ing used in the tournament. .
" I' m putting well." said
Rinker. who says he is just now
returnin g 'to form after being
hospitalized briefly for " slum·
ar h virus follow in!( two round ~ a_t
the Dora! Open. " It's been g09d
• nd solid so far ."
_

Entry deadline for tournament set . June 22 . :
CHESHIRE- Sign-ups for the
1987 Kyger Cr~ek Little League
Tournament are being accepted
until the June 22 deadline. The
tournament Is srhPduled for the
week of July 11-18. Th ere is a $10
ent ry fee for each team.
,
This year's rourna'mcnt will be
open to only 26 team s. The first 2ti
teams to sign up by the deadline
will bE' accepted . No teamS' will
be accepted beyond the June 22
deadllnt:'.
Last year's tournament fe atured the Tuppers Plains Tigers
as champions. beating a team
from Vinton ,
The foliowlng awards for this
year's tournament will he given
out as follows:
Individual awards for first·,
second· and third-place teams .
A sponsor trophy for first -.
second-, third · and foJ!rlh·piace
teams. ·

Individual trophies consist of
the following :
Most home runs.
Most hits .
Most strikeout s.
First home r u~ of th e 1ourna·
ment tnew baseball ba t !.
A new baseball g lov~ fo r the
first no-hitter pitched.
Most outstanding defensive
pla,·er of th e tournament.
For each home run hit over t11C
fence. the player will ha ve his
choice of receivin g a new baseball or the ball he hi t. He will a Iso
receive a free hot dog and a soft
drink. All players will receive a
free soft drink following their
first game.
A total of 150 Kyger Cree k
l,.ltr le League Tournament T·
s hirts will he awarded to pla yers
of ten different teams.
Please con1act the following
people for signing up for the 1987

.Kyger Creek Little L~a~u~
rournament:
,
Steve Nevill e. t~Oft 675-67ij1 ·
Jim Crace. t6141 367-0110; Rage ~
Dec!. 1614 1 .188-81!iJ; .John Ma :
nuel. 16141 949-2759; Bill Rhodes,
13041 675-1928: Dave Walker
1~141 446-.1402; and Paul Hesson :
l.lll4) 882-229:i.
.-,
,
"-£.');'

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Sandblasting, Painting, High ··
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Sealing, Traffic line Painting, lr
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CALL ON US TO DO YOUR·.
DIRTY WORK!
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266·1247 or 266·1653 .·

·CLIFFSIDE GOLF CLUB
SPRING _DANCE
IFOIMEILY GAWPOLIS GOLF COUISE)

gllng without Tim Raines, Rich
Ot!dman and Bob Boone F.tlday reached agreement with
IOelr former players less than
one day after 'becoming eligible
to negotiate with the free agent s.
: Raines. the defending National
League batting champion.
signPd a three-year contract
e~r ly Friday with the Expos,
be,comlng the first major free
a~ent to re-sign with his former
c!ub since January . Gedman
reached a two-year deal. with the
R~d Sox and Boone signed a
O!Je·year pact with the Angels
F{lday afternoon.
;Financial terms of the contracts were not revealed when
the slgnlngs were announced. ·
"Other free agents who were
eligible to sign with their former
cl~bs had 'nor reached agreement
as of Friday afternoon. Prolfli·
nent In the group were pitchers
Ron Guidry, whose agent was
still meeting with the Yankees
F.~day afternoon, and Doyle
'A'l.exander. who concluded meetF.~Iday without reaching an
ings_
with the Atlanta Braves
a~reement.
· Under the terms of the collec·
ti~e bargaining agreement be·1\l'een t·he players' union and the
leagues, free agents. were not
allowed to negotiate with their
-previous employers between
Jan. 8 and May 1. The union ha s
filed a grtevence claiming that
the owners have secret ty agreed
to · not pursue free agents from
ofher teams in an attempt to curb
salaries.
· Raines agreed to his contact in
Sarasota , Fla., after Montreal
officials John McHale and .Bill
Stoneman met In a post- midnight nt:'gotiallng session with
Bill Landman, an associate of
Raines' agent, Tom f\eich.
The Expos, 8-12 entering Friday's games, began negotiations
· to re-sign Raines at 12:01 a.m .
EDT and reached a settlement at
·,about 3 a.m., club spokesman
Rich Griffin said. Raines was
srhedul~d to rejoin the club
Friday night In New York a nd
'cou ld play as soon as Saturday.
:&lt; '&lt;Manager) Buck Rodgers has
to talk with him," Griffin said.
1 '' He'll take a look at him, see
wliat kind of s hape he's In And
determine if he ca n play."
Raines. who batted a National
League-high .334 with 70 stolen
bases in 1986. has heen working
out on h'is own and claims to be in
good shape.
·· Montreal had nlore I han two
months after the 1986 season to
$ign their star outfielder. but
·Raines turned down a threeyear, $4.8 million contract offer
before the Jan . 8 deadline.
' Several clubs, including San
Diego and SeatTle, expressed
i'riterest In Raines after this
spring. but none met his salary
demands.
The defending AL West cham·
pion Angels, who were tied for
secb)id place with Seattle enter·
lng Friday's games , said Boone
Will report to the club's Palm
Springs California League alfllate. Friday night. The .19-year old , four -tlmt;&gt; Gold Glove
catcher will return to the major
leagues " In the very near fu ·
tur(';" Gt:'neral Manager Mike
Pon said.
. '·'Physical cond itioning-wise,
l'm probably In the hest shape of
my life," Boone said. "I've
. 'worked extremely hard and have
ltad a lot of Inspiration Ia work
hard."
· Boone said his contract was
pro-rated to account for the
month of the season he had
mLssed but did not sa~ what he
!'Jould be paid. He turned down a
one-year contract worth a re·
j&gt;orted $800,000 on Jan . 8.
• Gedman. whq turned down an
~tfer of $2.65 million over three
¥Bars from the Red Sox last
. ~anuary, was sla ted to join the
' team Friday eveni ng In Ana·
:helm, Calif.. and be In uniform
:for Saturday's game against the
·tall!ornla Angels . General ManLou Gorman said earlier

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T~~~dlqALchamp~ur~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::;

got orr to a 9-13 start withOut their
All-Star catcher. Red Sox
catchers Danny Sheaffer and
Marc Sullivan·have combined for
a .16'7 batting average this
seaso n.
Gedman batted .258 with 16
homers and 65 RBI last season.
In 1985, he batted .295 with 18
homers and 80 RBI:
The contract wa s reach ed
Friday In negotlallonsat Fi•nway
Park Involving Gorman, team .
gene~a I counsel John Donovan.
Gedman and his agent Jack
Sands .
Gedman tested the free-agent
market during the winter, talk·
lng to several tea ms Including
the Oakland Athletics and Hou'ston Astros . However, he fail ed ro
re ach an agreement with any
tea m.
"He is one of lhe top young ·
ca tchers in the major lea!(ues
and getting him bark in our
starting lineup will be a grea t
asset to our ballclub at this
time," Gorma n sa id.

Come on

••

POINT PLEASANT MOO_SE CLUB

EIM'IE FURIITUIE

WoodY Woodward metwithGu id··
•Y s agent. Reggie Ringuet , in

•

SPECIAL GUEST - EDDIE REASONER

CARDINAL

this week The club's or iginal· offer
remained on tht:' table,

r • • • • ·• • • • • •- • • • • • • • • • · ·•

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PIPIIIIpe ....;tdowr Cac1 Colld-* lntute tfttl natkmMde.
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~'~-~-•• - ••••••• \--- -'1

�Page- C-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

May 3, 1987

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

Wilkins nets 30 in· H~wks : IOl-97
~~y GE RRY MONIGAN

his retirement effective when the
UPI Sports Wr ller ·
76ers' season ends.
Dominique Wilkins made cerAlter be log dominated by
l ai n the Indiana Par ers' season Pacers rookie Chuck Person
· endedFrlday, andCha'ries Ba rk- most of the game al Indiana,
ley helped prolong tea mmate Wilkins won a cruci aj one-on- one
Jullus E r vlng's careerbya rleast batHe. Th.e Pacers had tied the
one more game.
score 93-93 on· a John Long
Wilki ns scored 30 point s, In- j umper with 2:03 to play , buJ
eluding 14 In the fOurth period , to WJ,Iklns rebounded a missed free
help give the Atlanta Hawks a · throw and scored.
101 -97 victory and eliminate the
_
" Once It ca me off, I sa id, 'Boy,
Pacers frqm the NBA playoffs. I have got to get this next shot. · I
Barkley scored 25 points and knew we had to have it to win the
grabbed 13 r ebounds as th e ser ies," Wllkins said.
Philadelphia 76ers came back to
Aft er the basket. Wilkins stole
defea t !he Milwaukee Bucks the baU from Per scn, forced a
124-118 and even thelr bes t-of-flve · foul and made 2 free throws to
playoff series at Jwo games give Atla nta a 97-93Iead with1 : 15
left . Randy Witt man and Cliff
apiece.
The Hawks advanced to an Levingston each hit a frl'&lt;' th row
Ea ster n Conference semifinal
in the fi nal 12 seconds to secure
series against Detroit by win ning the victor y .
their best-of-five opening-round
Per son, a f avorite for NBA
. ser ies th ree game;; to one.
Rookie of the Year . scored 40
Philad elphia for ced a fi fth and
points to lead I ndian a. ·
dl'!' iding game Sunday at Mil"Tough loss," said I ndiana
waukee. Erving has announced 1 _
J ack Ramsay, whose

Cl~lshed

team
4Hl . thei r best
record In six years and a
lea gue-high 15 games betl er than
last season. l nct lana also won li s
flrsl playo ff game in beatlnglh e
Hawks on Wednesday.
.
At Philadelphia, desp ite _trat l·
ing the B ur ks by 17-pomts tn the
second quarter F r iday night, th e
76ers r emained undaunted.
" 11 was too ear ly In the gam e

win ~::

Bowes advances to .Eckerd semis

w~~

Evert needed 81- minutes to , " !thought lwasgqlng lo ":in,' ·
oust Glldem elster.
Phelps said. " I 'd played and beat
."She had me moving. She her before, but this time she
didn't give me any freebies. She made very few er ror~ and played
has a gr eat forehand." E ver t really well. ,I wanted to play
said.
I
6-1.
Chris in_the semis. ! was a.seeded
Bowes, a senior at the Univer Phelps said she may haw been pl ayer. to play Chris would have
sity of Texas. took 1 hour and 59 caught loOking ahead to a possi· been great. But Bowes played a
minutes to defeat Phel ps, of ; ble matchup 1&lt;/ith Evert. '
good rna tch."
Larchmont, N.Y. Also'advalt clng
to the semifinal s was serond seed
Kathy Rinaldi of Amelia· l slan(l
Pl antation. a 7-5. 6-4 winner over
qual!fler Gisele M iro of Brazil.
Bowes met top seed Chr is
Evert Sa turday In the semifinals.
E vert. of Boca Raton, adva nced
Friday night wit h a 6-2, 6-1
Supreme 5254
victory over " slxth seed Laura
Glldemelster of Peru . Rinaldi
•19" lightweight push
played four th· seeded Ka te Gemmower
pert of ,Rancho Mirage. Cal!! .. In
HP rated engi~e
the other semifi nal . The firstprize money Js $32,000.
•Cast aluminum deck

far behind," said' Barkley:
scored 12 points In the fourO!_,
qu.~rter .
.
•:
I never ~~~ exctled with ·1!.:
17-polnt lead, ~ll~au kee co~ch .
Don Nelson satd. I think I . ~t! :
Cl)ached about 1,000 !(ames.! v~ ;
~n thro u_gh thts too m arfli .
ltmes. Now tf t.herewer eacouple;
of m ln~.tes left, I would get .
exr tted.

LARGO, Fl a. !UP!) - Qualifier Beverly Bowes adva nced to
the semi!Jnai s of the $150,000
Eckerd Open Friday , upsett ing
third seed Terry Phelps. 6-3. 5· 7,

~~fo;r;u;s;to;;"~-o~rr!y~a~bo;u;t;li;'e~in~g;t~ha~t;;;;;;;;;;;;~;~~~~'

..

' ·
•

-

Your Vole &amp;· lnll ~er.ce Appreciated

,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
'
.

John

BLAETTN'AR
Republican C~mdidate For

POMEROY VILLAGE COUNCIL

; SAFE AT SECOND - Cincinnati 's Tr acey _
;Jones slides safely Into second as ball reac hes

~··•** '''''*'*****'*''****''''''''*'*
Paid ror bY the Candidate_:

John Blaettaar. 325 Wrlrbt St.
Pomeror. Ohio 992·2855 ·

The Sunday Times- Sentinet -Page~C-5

Pomeroy- !"'iddleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point .Pleasant W. Va.

•Recoil start .
•Two-year limited warranty

.

Davis
belts
two
homers
·
a
s
.
Reds
.
'
.
~~eat Phillies, 8-5, regain first place
.

•4

gl ove ol Phlillcos ' Luis Aguayo during- Friday
night' s Nation,\1 League
contest In Philadelphia.
.
The Reds won, s-5. (UPii

.

'

'/

'

• PHILADELPHIA iUPO - In

solo homer s in the second bV from Bob McClu re. 0-1, over the
Glenn Wjjson. his fourth, and wa ll in left to give rPliever .J essP
·of home runs. Eric Davis hit two. John Russell. his first.
Orosco. 1-1, the win.
: With his second , he broke the bat. .
The Phlilies pulled w ithin 5-4 in
Montreal start er Bry n Smith
·. " ! don' t recall ever hit ting a the third after Vo n Ha ves made his fir st appearance of the
·home run with a broken bat."
walked, and Mike Schmidt hit-his season after elbow surgery and
. ~ai d Davis, who leads the Naseventh home ru n of the season. gave up six r uns on eight hits In 2
' tional League with nine homers
Da vis opened the si xt h Inning 2- .1 innings.
·
this season and has hit 54 since wit h his ninth home ru n and,
In other !(a mes . Chicago
the Cincinna ti Re.ds draft ed him aft er Bell doubled to IN !, Tom down ed San Diego 7-1, Houston
in 1980 on bls gr aduation from Hume relieved Carman. Tw o clubbed Atl anta 12-:1. Pittsburgh
Fremont High School in Los outs later, Ro n Oester tri pled beal San F r ancisco 4-2 and St.
Angeles.
home Bell. then scored on a
Dav is open ed with a grand single by pinch-hitter Terry lnnln'gs.
Louis Pdged Los Angeie&gt; ii-41n Hl
·slam F rid ay night and added his F'ranco na ro·make it 8-4.
Cubs 7, Padre'S 5
bat,-brr aklng solo as ~ n encore to
''Carman gat every thing up on
At Chicago, Andre Dawson
power the Reds to an 8-5 victory a Iough night for pit cher s."
homered
and Shawon Dunston
over the Philadelphia Phill ies.
Fel ske said. " The ba ll was r eally
notched his first RBI of the
"I wasn't sure t'he grand slam I akin g off."
season in a th ree-run eight h
was going out. but the ball wa s
Inning to lift the Cubs.
.moving tonight," Davis sa id.
National League Wrapup
;" I 'm an agresslve hitter and I
At New York, Tim Teufel r am ~
Astros 12, Braves a
knew they would co me at me t o the plate In lhe ninth Jnn'ing
At Atlanta, In a game delayed
F r iday nighl and was told by his
hard aft er the grand slam ."
twice
by rain , No lan Ryan
The 24-year-old outfielder won m anager to get on base so he
cr acked a three-run homer and
p ra l s ~
f-r om bo t h t ea m s' could be dr iven ln. Instea d,
allowed t hree hits over 6 2-3
·
Teufel did the driv ing.
managers.
Innings to pace the 1\stros.
" Davis Is aw fully ta lent ed, "
Teufel's one-out solo hemerun,
sa id Cincinnati manager P ete his first of the season. lifted tlte
Pirates ~ - Glunls 2
'Rose. " He's making strides Met s to a 7-6 decision over th e
At Pitt sburgh, Mike Dlaz and
:every day . He has a chance to be Mont rea l Expos .
Sid Bream each cracked his fi fth
one of the grea t ones. He's about
" Davey told me that if (lea doff home run of the season lo support
the only guy who can lead !he batten Lenny Dykstr a didn' t get
the four-hit pitching of Rick
league In home run s and stolen a hit I was going up th err,"
Reusrhcl to lift the Pirates.
-bases. He has good Instinct s. He Teufel said. " He sa id, 'Go up
Cardinals 5, Dodgers 4
there and gel a double so Ke'lth
; ha s ail the talent in the world..
AI St. Louis; Steve Lake
; From P hillles ·manager John · {Hernandez ) r an drive you ln ."' singled hom e Jack Clark from
-Fel ske: " Davis may beoneorthe
Teufel didn't give Hernandez a second ba se with two out In the
; bestto playt he game before he's chance as he drove a 2-1 pitch lOlh inning to li ft the Cardinal s.
·through. He has tremen-dou s
' ·
: strength and ca n do .so many
: t hings. He has a deceiving bu ild.
· He hides his power in the wrists
: and for earms. Hr was Ihe dl ffer:cnce In the ball game tonight."
• But on F riday night Davis was
:only one of six player s to get
; hom e runs, as the fir st six
• Sen ice.s indu de:
· Cincinnati r uns and all five
Philadelphia t uns ca me on
Birth C~trol; V.D. Screening;

:a gam e that turned into a batt le

IILO&lt;.:KS SHOT - Warriors' Chr is Mullin pu ts a shot to the body
of ,Jal1. K••lly Tripu~a ( 4) . f&lt;•nl&lt;•r Mark Eaton blocks Mullin' s shot
during first rocriod action al Oa ~ la nd. (UPI)

Logan rehires
U arem~e

Perry as

SPECIALS AT JIM COBB

head grid coach
LOGAN - Logan Hig h Sc hoo l
1'('!1irC'tl Cla rrnrt~ Pc· rry as hP:J cl
'fo&lt;llhal l C'OiJCil l a... t Wf'P k .

CHEVROLET- OLDS-CADILLAC

P&lt;•JTy hat! rr sig netl &lt;'ar i!Pt l hls
p;1sl sehonl yt'ar t o &lt;WC'f'p l l hf'

lwad foollxd l pos t at Wil min gton
lll gh Sclwol und his posit ion at
l.o}.!a n wiJ s g iven to Da l r·A m .vx In

MarC'h.

1\myx rrs i.r.m r cl t1bout 1wo
Wf'Cks l:.d Pr , and indiru tf'd tu•
wou ld pr('IPr to r0m ain ;Js an

Wish Mom
a glowing day.

ass ist" "' r oac h on thr Chidltl in

sr afl.

Send Ihe lfO®Scented Candle

La st wrf'k . thC' l.nga n· Hor·klng
IJo arrl vntf'd to r f'f'rn ploy Prr ry
afl rr Jw ha tln•s iJ.(m'd his pos it ion
al Wilmin gton. m1d had nppllrd
for his old job a1 Logan .
· i'&lt;' tTI' guWr d l hr Chicft;li lls to
un l H 2 rf'cord tlw pas t tv"'O
st•asons.

Bouquet.

Mother's Week slu rl~ Mily

\

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FLOWER SHOP

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PLANNED.PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

POMEROY:

GALUPOLIS

Mtig1 Medical Building

Ionon from Veterans Ho1p.)
992-5912 Monday-Friday

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. 446-0166 Mon.-Sat.

ClOSED THURSDAY
Also: Jackson, Chesapeak,, Athen s, Chillicothe, Logan

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OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN ·
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MR2173t

HOURS: MONDAY-WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY, 8:30 A.M .-8 P.M .
TUESDAY-THURSDAY 8:30 A .M.·5 P.M.
SATURDAY, 9 A.M.·4 P.M.; SUNDAY 1:00·4:30

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Ohio Vlllt y Christian SeMol is a minlslry of First Baptist Church
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Glllipolil, Ohio 4563 1

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for individuah and couples.

Davis ronnected for his second
·:car eer slam off loser Don Car: man, 1·2, In the third Inning,
-giving Cinci nnati a !i-2 lead. The
' Reds loaded the bases for navis
when Tracy Jones and Kurt
:st lilw ell singled and Dave
' Parker was hit by a pitch.
· Mar lo Solo, 2-0, pitched the
firs t five innings for Cincinnati.
allowing seven hits; Incl uding
; three home runs, struck out two
and walked one. Ro~ Robinson
: finished for his four th save of the
: In the second. Buddy Bell hit
: his second home run of thescason
;lor_the Reds' first run. Phlladel.phta countered with consecu tive

•'

The
Shoe C·a1~e

SilVER IRIDGE

PlAZA
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�IVI~Y 3, 1987

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

Columbus tops Syracuse in IL play ·

Royals ·slump continues as
l11dians post 2-0. w~ Friday
.

CLOSE, llUT NOT CLOSE ENOUG JI
· Cle•clandc Ind ia ns lclllielder Me l II all di:vcs to no

a•all afl er a douhle hy Kan sa!; City's Kevin
Seltzer In I he llrst lnn lngol Friday nlght 'sgame in
Kansas City. (UPI)

'

'

All eye.s on Browns Mike Junkin
at mini-camp at Baldwin-Wallace
'

By ROBERTO DIM\
. UP I Spo rts Writer
. BEREA. Ohio iUP IJ - Mike•
Jun kin, the fifth pla ye r taken in
the first round of the Nfl' L drafl ,
$lands 10 be 1he focal point of the
Clevela nd Browns' mini·r amp
beginning Sunday.
.All sc~ c n of the Rrowns'
draft ees will parliC' Ipal e In the
six-da y ca mp at Ba lclwin· Wa l· .
lace College. Thcr&lt;' will h• ·
morning and aftrt·noon practices
eac h day, a nd vrtr rans must
report for ph yskal s by Tuesday
and work out Wedn t•sday.
. Saturday, the• drafted pl&lt;tye rs
joined all 1\rs l-yea r Browns on a
tour of the welghtll flln g fac ility
at Big Crec•k Rac·quet Club in
.Berea and Clevela nd Stndl um
orforc busin g to lhP Pro Football
Hall of Fa me In C.tnlon.
. " It 's a bit of a n orient al io n."
~aid Coa r h Mar l)' Sr ho tt~ nho&gt;i ­
.mer. " Very' frw new players
·!\ave· bee n to the stt•d lum or the&gt;

'

Hall of Fame. It gives them a
Gregg Rakoczy, the center·
cha nce to sig ht see, bu t it also Iackie from !he Univers ity of
put s;dl of us In a team sit ual ion." Mi ami, · Is 'Cleveland 's second·
The selectio n of Jun kin . who round pick and Is ex pec ted to
starred as a lincb;;ckcr at Duke, ehal lenge Cody Ris ien. Rickey
was accomplished by Cleveland Bolden and , eserve pla yers at
tradi ng fouf-timr Pro Bow l line· tack lr.
bar ke r Chip Ba nks to San Diego
Rakoczy already has lm· ·
'" the two team swapped ·fir st· pressed Scholl enhelmer with his
and secon d-rou nd picks du ring 6·6, 290-po und frame.
Tu esday 's dra ft .
" He's a bi g boy and he's a
terr
ifi c a thlete," says Scholten·
.I unkin . a ti· foo t·3. 2:1&gt;-pounder.
helmer.
" I'll bet his body fat
play&lt;•d his cnt ire collegiat e ca·
rn• r at inside li nebacker, but the ra tio is low, beca use he looks to
Bmwns cxpt•ct hi m to makr the be in excellent shape. Gregg' s
sw itch to the outside and replace known a s a very capa ble pass
blocker ."
Banks .
Third-rou nd picks fu llback
"II lot of people have been
Tim
Ma noa of Penn State and
asking me If I ca n do the job." he
says. " Well. I kn ow I r an. The kicker .J e ff .Jaege r of Washinglon
Browns must think so. or thev also are expected to mak e the
would n' t have t radccl one of t hr i.r team . Ma noa is ex pec ted to
sta1·ters In ordPr to g i\ €' ml' a balt ic J ohnny Dav is an d Major
Everelt a! the bloeklng bac k
r hunr c here.
SRO
I.
" I'm no! overco nf ident. but I
·.Jaeger
probably.will move int o
know my left knee's sound . This
the J':lo. 1 spot at kicker since Matt
mini-camp will show th at."
Bah r is slow ly recover ing from
. knee surgery and :18·year·old
vetera n Mar k Moseley has yet to
Ind ica te his sta tu s for the 1987
sea son.
Sc hollenhelmN says the other
three dt·aft ees. defensive ba ck
3tc·phcn Braggs of Texas. Steve
Bull ill of Texas A&amp; M and Fra nk
Wint ers of Eastern Tilinois also
have " more than jus t your
Jverage chance" to make the
ti na! rostet·.
1

'By JOEL SHERMAN
llth·placeon theaiHi mewin list.
UPI Sports Writer
" He gets s lower a nd slower,"
The Kansas City .Royal hitters Gardner said of Nlekro. " J1e just
have given their pitchers no throws that' knuckleball up there,
margin of error wit h which to but he throws It for strikes."
work.· ·
Niekro, ·z.o, gave · up six hits
Royals starter Mark Gublcza · over 7 1-3 Innings . The 48-year·
surrendered just six hits and two old right -ha nder allowed more
runs over 8 2·3 Inn ings Friday than one r unner In an Inning just
night . But that was too much for twice. The second lime Yett
the Royals' anemic offense to · came on a nd ended the threat en
make up.
route to his first save.
Mel Hall cracked a twO-ru n
Elsewhere, Toronto edged
homer and Phil N!ekro and Rich Texas J2 In 10 Innings, Chicago
Yett combined to tag the Royals dropped Baltjmore 5·1, ,Mi nne·
with their sli&lt;th shutout In their sota topped New Yor k 7-4, Bos ton
last 11 games In the Clevela nd routed California 12-3, Milwa ulndlans' 2·0 triumph .'
kee outlas ted Seallle 10· 8 and
"If's to ugh to get beat when Oakland defeated Detroit 2.J In 13
you get pitching like I hat," innings.
Rpyals Manager Billy Gardner
Blue ,Jays 3, Rangers 2
said. "Gublcza did a heck of a
At Toronto, Jesse Barfield
job. It' s tough to lose on one belted a pair of home ru ns,
mistake."
Including one to lead off the lOth
The Royals have been shut out inning, helping Toronto end
seven t imes th is season. They Texas' six-ga me winn ing streak:
were not shut out for the sevent h
White Sox 5, Orioles I
lime until Aug. 8 last season.
At Balt imore, Iva n Calderon,
Ka nsas Cit y is trying to make do Tim Hulett and Greg Walker hit
without Its best hiller, George sixth-inning hom ers to enable the
Breit. who Is on the disabled list, White Sox to hand Ba lt imore its
and wit h its best powe r hitt er. sixth loss in seven ga mes . Twins
Steve Ba lboni, mired In an 0 for
7, Yankees 4
30 slump.
At Minneapolis, Randy Bush
" I'm not worried about It tt he highlighted a fi ve-run four th
s hut outS! at this stage of th e inning with a two-run single to llft
season," Gardner said. " I know the Twins.
we are going to bus t loose and
Red Sox 12, Angels 3
score some ru ns. You hav e to feel
At Ana heim , Calif., Wade
bad for the pitchers now with Boggs drove In five run s wit h a
what they are goi ng through. pair of homers and Dwight
We're just not hilling down EvaDs added a three-run shot lo
through the lineup.
support the combined six· hitter
Gubicza . 1· 4, had retired 10 of Roger Clemens. 2·2, and
straight Indians - eight on fl y Calvin Schi ra ldi , sending Bos ton
over California in Ill€ teams' fi rst
outs and two on strike out s before Joe Car ter ope ned the meeting since last year:s AL
seventh
wit h a double. Hall
fo ll ow~ wit h a shot to straighl a·
wa y rent er that carried onto th e
terrace beyond the wa ll.
Meanwhile, Nlekro used his
knu ckleba ll to wo rk toward ca·
reer vi ctory No ..313, moving him
wit hi n one Gaylord Per ry for

IL standings
1:'\flo;RN,\ TIONAJ. I.Jo:Ma ' I&lt;:
" . 1. r1·1. 1:8
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FOR MOTHER'S DAY

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::ATHENS - Cincinnati Ben· seatin g. !:lot h sponsors and Super
g~ls head coach Sam Wyc he will · Sponsors will receive recognition
Ill! the speaker for the Green· an? In the program. ·
WJti te Club's 25th Annuai,Senlor
Tickets and Infor mation on
~thl et e Recogn ition Banquet to being a sponsor of an athlete are
lit! held Monday, May 11 a l 6:30 ava il a bl e b y co nt ac tin g
p.}n . at Nelsan Co mmons.
mem bers of the Green and Whil e
: Senior athletes at Ohio Un!ver· Club board of directors or from
sily will be honored Includi ng various loca tions In Athens.
•
p(esentatlon
of award s to the top Persons wanting Info rm ation
l{!·a le and F emale Senior At h· about becoming a Super Sponsor
ie\es. Add itional honors will be shoul d call J ack Bortle at (614 1
~s towed Including the J onsey 592-2516. Deadline for purchas ing
. Sams Award and cer tificates to tickets or arrangi ng to be a
other Ind ividuals.
sponsor or Super Sponso r Is
Melvin He!ilzer, an assista nt Friday, May·1. Information may
grofessor of journ alism at Ohio also be obt ained by wr lt!njftOthe
ll1nlverslty and a top author on Green and White Club, P.O. Box
tiumor writing, will serve as 961, Athens. Ohio 45701.
waster of ceremonies.
• Wyche has guided the Benga ls
tb a 25-23 record In his three
seasons as head coach and the N h
•
iea m has been a lllle co ntend er · ort western Wins
~ach year. His 1985 learn scored
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP !i
441 points (a n average of 28 per
Nor
thweste r n wo n a ll It s
game), best ever In Benga ls
matches
Fr iday In the fir st round
Ills tory .
of
the
Big
Ten Women's tennis
• Tickets for I he banquet are $15
per person. In a.ddltlon. per sons tournament.
No rthwes te rn played Ohio
(tlay help th e club delray banquet
State
and won all six si ngles
eosts by sponsoring an athlete,
ma
tches
and the th ree doubles
iralner or c heerleader 1$10 each).
·
ma
tched
.
qr by becoming a super sponsor
All 10 schools are represented
t$125). Those who are Super
In
the three-day round-robi n
gpo nsors will receive two tickets
style tour nament.
~ the ~a nquet · and preferred

Mother's Week starts May 4. .
Ius! call or visil us today.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP '

106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, "Ohio
992-2039 or 992·5721

•

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Licensed Psychologist
is ple~ed to announce the opening ·
of his new office located at , '.
2 52 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio
.

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providing Individual Psychotherapy,:
Couple and Family Counseling, ·'
Psychological Evaluations and ·
Employee Assistance Programs.

t:,,m,.,.

-.

By Appointment Only

f elumhus

In Ironton:

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(614) 533-9074

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REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domestic and Iorelgn subs ldlries of tbe

Send her
Telefloras
Bud Vase
Bouquet.

Charter Number 9815

e"'
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-......
=
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1'0111\d We can deliver anywhere
in town. Or wire it anywhere in
lite u.s. and Canada tluoogh

Thleflo!ll.

106 lutt1rnut An.
Pomeroy, Ohio
•-•
992-2039 or 992-5721

"'yche named Green·White
~anquet speaker at OU

Send !he fTO®
Sewing Baskei Bouquel.
II even include-; a travel
sewing kii.
\ ;.

of Racine In tbe state of Ohio, at the close of bUlllness on March 31', 1987 published In
response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under Iitle 12, United Stales
Code, Section 161.

Pomeroy
Flower Shop

..

on Mom.

HOME NATIONAL BANK

For Mom, lovelyflowers in a
graceful, silver·plated bud vase
that will reflectyour love year·,

·, CO·CHAM P IONS - The WIIShington 76'ers
&gt;yere co·champlons ol the 1986·K1 Gallipolis
jllnky·Dink bas kelhl\11 league, sixth grade
division; The 16'ers posted a 1·1 record and phiced
oecond In the post-season tournam ent. Team
)i&gt;embers are, fir st row , left to r.igh~ , .J. D.

Spring a swpriSe

Hurry!
Mother's Day is May 10!

GETTING UNDER Til E TAG - Nt•w Yol'k Yankee ~ horts lop
.:W,Iyne To lh•son co mes down with the haii JIS ht• trlt•s to tug out on
' Minn esota Twi ns lt'ft flc ldt•r Tom Brunansky •L~ he trit•d to slt•al
· second In Friday nl~hl' s J(ltnU' In Minncupolls. Brun.msky wliS sal~
:on lhe play. (UI' I)

I

;

Ril'hmon.l al Mulnt•
T11k•w11h•r ai PliWitjj 'kt•l
ltm·h•"SC,I' r IU Tuh•du

1M

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Local bowling

1

I

ltl j·hmond 111 M• ln•·

..,,.,,.

&lt;'

WILLIAM R•.WHITNEY, Ph.D. ·

2' 1

lld i'Wllh•r a.( r ~t'ff llll'kN
Rul·h1'SI.o•r llt Toh•tlti

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~

l'il""' llll: kti ~~. Hldmunwll
Rudu~l t•r i. TDII'IIo '.!
Sidurd iU' '~ (i am t'S
1'\,v ruc·u,.. al f 'jllumhu "

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I 9 .:1811
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Pu11' IIM~ kt1 ( Rus )

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CRAFT IDEAS FOR MOTHER'S DAY
HANDMADE
PURSES AND POTHOLDERS
HAND-EMBROIDERED PILLOWCASES
CHIPWOOD BASKETS - FLOWERS

fi
II
II
II

1:1
I'!
II

By United Press Internationa l
son. combined wit h Randy Gra· and Eric Rasmussen combined
Chris Ca nn izzaro cl ubbed a ~am on an . e ighl·hi,tt er and · on a s!'ven-hitter and Carl ·
gr.and sla m Fr iday to send Ihe Improved IO 2- l . Graham ea rn ed Nichols homered to power the
' Pawtucket Red Sox . 10 . a &gt;·1 his flr,s t sa ve_. Odell Jones. 3·1. Red Wings. ·Jfi mes Wright· was
tr iumph over the Ric hmond was the loser .
the . Jos ln g pitcher. Tim Tolman
Braves In an· Int er national
AI Toledo. Ohio, Brad Havens h.omered fo r the Mud Hens .
Leag ue game.
Cann ~zaro. the des ignated hit ·
ter. homered off los ing pitcher
Tom Glav ine, l-2. In the fourth
in ning. Todd Benzi nger's infield
'
Tlll'IISilA \ ' S\I'I NG 1: Rs
J(lr Ccil n. Atl\' .. Pat Johnston. ~ 50 :
hit, Dave Sax's walk and an eri'Or
SIBndln ~ n10 of i\11rll \!:1
JOf'd an Ca .~ ~rr \• k('. J nn l'! Gob\(', 382;
by Braves shortst op Jeff Blauser
TPtu n
U"
1.
M oo n l' ~· ·~ no d~ · snop, J_ O~' t'l ' Moon('y, ~90:
P la nh ~ x .-; n n .... ......... ....
X1 ,19
C:i ov:l ntll' g Pl•n a, Gf, ncvu Mk \ns. 455:
had loaded the bases .
Mnonr.v's Bnd~ Shop ..
R\
.19 · E IC'Ct l'lt' Motor,S('t'Vkl ' Hacnr l Whll('halr.
. Richmond· scored it s only run
~li
:li:\: ~5 . \'onda Jorda n, 422: Ru tla nd Mi ni'
Jm• Cain. r\tt y.. .......
~;~
~7
~ u p pl y . U nch1 - PC'!I'l'Son,· 416:
Plttnts
Qlov:,llln i'l' Piu;a ..... ......
f"
In th" seventh inn ing on s jng l~s
All)m'C'on. \n(•. .............
"' BO
F. xxom. Hur.cl M 111'cu m. ' " ' Albare on.
by Ma r k Strucher and Jo hn Rabb Cocnru n·s E xxon ....................... 5)1 li2 1nt'., Lc•c BrHd shaw, 41A: Co1•hran EJomn .
and an RBI groundout by Mi ke R u1hllld Milw Suppl v ................. a2 I~ Ku rrle Swphen&lt; . ~JB .
~~ ~L .... .......... .. ... ........................... a1
lifl
200 garnPs:· .JOyrl' Mnu nrv . 211:' Spills
Brow n.
Jordan (;~~~ Sr' rY\rP ................... &lt;17 · 13
CO il\'l' l'h'd : P at Jo hn:&lt;ton. 2-7: ROS('
·'
Ell'r t rlr Motor Srn·1rf' ............ 43 77
Tom Bolton. 2·L allowed only
Coope r. 2 · 7 - ~ : K a lh ~' Butcher. 6·7.
six hil s In seven innings to
r----~-..;,...----------------­
the victory.
Else.1fhere, Columbus downed
Syracuse 6·3 and Rochester de·
fea ted Toledo 7·2.
At Col umbus, Ohio. Pele Dal·
ena hit a two~ run homer to
Shrader, Dennis Mitchell, Larry Howell and highlight a fo ur· run fourth.lnnlng
Craig McCormick. Rear -:- Larry Howcl_l. ,Joey that . carried the Clippers. Bob
Pollack, Dav id Dovenharger. Sam DaviS, Mr. Tewksbury, demot ed by the New
Shrad er , and Tim Howell. Not present -:- B1lly York Yankees ea rlier this se ~ Armstrong and Ric ky Kim hie.

I

Brewers 10, Mar iners 8 ·
At Seattle , Jim Ga ntner went 4
for 4, ln~lu ding his second, hOriJ4»~
of the season, and drove In f&gt;l£~
runs to power Milwaukee. • ••
Athletics 2, Tigers I
At Oakland, Calif.. Ter(Y
Steinbach delivered a one·dll t, .
bases· loaded single lri the. 13th
Inning to !Ill the Athletics. ·
• '

.

iiiiiiiiiJ.;:~~~~~~~~:~~

playoffs.

.The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- C-7

Oate- Gymn a... lum
May 3-1-3 p .m . Opt•n Rf'c .. . .
• A :0. p.m CIJI!Pg P F.t•&lt;'

.. ........ _....

May '1 -7-9 p .m. Collrg•' Rr'C" .................. ..

runl
.. ............ !-:\p .m. Opf'n Swim
.... ...... ti· ~ p.m. C'olll•gr Swi m
.... 12::\0- 1: :\ll p.m. F lt lll:'ii~ Sw im

7-!l p.m. ('Q I)(']i!(' s"·tm
U::l0-1:.111 p.m. Fl1 1l('!o:s Swim
CJosNl

May !5- Ciosed . , ................. ... .. ......... ..
t\ol a.v

ti- 6·~

p.m. C'oiii"J!f' RPr.

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

1 ~ : 30- 1 : .'10

6·P.

............. 12::10·1:30 p.m . Ri o Kid!&gt;
Clnsrrl
.. 12:30· 1: 30 J&gt;.m. F llnr,.sSwlm

!\l ay 7-C'Josr d .......... .. ............... ..

May R-6·:0. p.m Opl'n

J).m F il nf'sg Swim

p.m. Co iiPIH' Swim

R (' C ........ .

fi .:O, O)H' Il Sw im
...... :... 1-.1 p.m . OJlf' n ~wlm .

·"·

M ay 9- 1·3 p.m. Open RN'.,. :.:,t .. .......... ..
M ay 10-1 -3 p.m . Opr n Rec .~...
6-8 p.m . Co ll r gr RN ..

VALLEY·LUMBER &amp; SUPPL·YCO.
555 Park St.

Middleport, Oh.

...... 1 :1 p.m. OpPn Swim
... I:.B p.m . Co llf'gt• Swim

catch
all the action
.
'
.
•
aim·and·shoot ease.
••catch the new "Can Do"
•
~mm Camcorder.
;,

•

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~~
-.y IIIIT'I

:j.,

....,.. .....,.... ....
our, IALf PlltCl • , , It"

'I

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48-c
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Comptroller ol t he Currency, 4th District

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Cash and bala nces due from depos itory Institu tions:
Nonlnteres t·bearl ng bal ances and cur rency and coln ........ .. ..... ....... 1,224.000.00
Securlt les ... ....... ........ .......... .. .. ............. ' ......... ............. ....... .... .... .. .... 4.610.000.00
Federal fun ds sold and securities purcha sed under
agreements to resell In domesllc offi ces of th e bank
,•
and of Its Edge and Agreement subsldlalres, and In IFBs .. .... .. .. .. .. . 5,401.000.00
Loans and tease fi nancing receivables:
.
Loa ns and leases, net of unearned income ............ .... 15.068,000.00
b. LESS : Allowa nce for loa n and lease losses ............... 247.000.00 .
Loans and leases. net of unear ned Inco me,
allowance. and reserve .......... ...... .. ... ................ ..... ,...................... 14,821,000.00
Premises a nd fixed asse ts (In cl ud ing ca pll alized leases! ........ .. ...... ...... 20l 000.00
Other assets .... ... ........ :..... .. ... .. .. ... ....... ....... ...................... .. .......... ....... 405,000.00
Total assets ........... .... .. ......... ............ .................... ...... ....... ...... ..... :.26,664.000.00 _ _.....;.,

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~: world of creative possibilities. Ws pocked with professtonal
b eatures .. . yet Ws lig htweig ht. compoct and easy to use .
'
.; • 'Neig hs only 3.5 1bs.
:• • Auto focus for sharp pictures
•: • Canon f/1 .2 6X power zoom lens with macro
• Yl" advanced CCD for great color a nd clarity
• Low-light copobili~eS ot 8 lux
• • Flying e rose head for c lean ed rting
• Instant ploybOCk directly throug h TV
Ta ke rt a nywhere ot a ny time for Instant fun. Enjoy being
your own movie d irector with the "Con Do" camcord e r
( from Canon .

.I

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Deposit s
In domest lc offi ces ... .......... .. ......... .. .. .., ... , ...... ............. ........ ......... 23.682. 000.00
Nonlnteres t·bearing ... ............ ............. .... .... ..... ..... .. .. 2. 453,000.00
Interest·bear!ng ...:.......... .... .. ................ ...... .. :.......... 21.229.000.00
Other lia bilities ..... .......... ... ....... ....... ... ....... ....... .......... ....... ........ .. .... ... 34 7. 000.00
Total !Ia bllltles ........ ....... ......... ... ... ... ...·................ ...... ....... .. .. ........... 24.029.000.00
Common stoc k .... ......... ....... ............. ... .... .................... ... ........ .......... :.. 12:\, 000.00
Surplus ........ .. ...... ..... .... ...... .... ....................... ....: ............. .. ............. .... 12:\,000.011
Undivided profit s and ca pllal reserves .................. .. .. .. ...... . ........... .... 2.38&gt;.000.00
Total equity capllal ... .. ...... ..... .. .............. ...... ....................... ......... .... 2.635.000.00
Toia lllablllt!es, limited-life preferred stoc k.
and equity ca pital ........... :... .. .. ....... ... .... .... ... .... ........ ............ .... .... 26.644.000.00

!.VNE CENTER SCHEDU U ;
" r••f'k of May :1. 1 9~7

(DAILY)
We will be making dl!ily deliveries
to the West Virginia area 'during
the period of time the bridge is
closed. Just give us a call with your
order.

•.
4.

'

'

~: The VM·E2 8mm vid eo cam,corder can open up a whole

.

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Cauon
Canovision a·

I, Gary P. Norris. Cashier, f the above·named ba nk dci-hereby d ec lar~ th ai this
Report of Co ndition Is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Gary P. Nor ris
April 24. 1987

We put the whole YoOrid in yoor hand~
••HI
..ra•-·r----------------------~-----.....,
...."'"'"
,...
UPPERRT. 7
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

We. the undersigned directors , att est I he correctness of th is statement and lia bilities. We declare thalli has been examined by us, and to th e best ol our know! ·
edge and belief has been prepared In conformance with th e !nstructlons and Is tru e
and correcl.
JOHN T.• WOLFE
CLARENCE PRIE:E - Directors
GEORGE NEIGLER

"NEXT TO IMRFIONT
'· HONDA"

..•. . . .

OUR ~,_.,

,,,,,,, ,,, lt.M

............. ............ 2.00

8!~
Hou•s

Mon. thru Fri. I Io I

s.tur•y I to 6
Sunday 9 to S

2499
SILVER BRID_
GE PLAZA
PH. 446-9335
DAVE MICKAEL- MANAGER

Ani~

�Page- C-8 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Scoreboard ...
Majors

....

II

f'lthi burlh
Mllnlrul

. 5~1

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Hnulllon

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tTruull · l ),2: 20p.m.
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l('onr 0·2), 2:_31 p.m
SIUI Fr!'IH:l'lcu !Uv"'IP" ~- O l llt l'lth•·
Wr~eh I KipJM"' Z.~J . '7 : 1~ p.m.
4'lndnnllll IBrnwmn.- 2-J) ul J'hll 1uh ·l·
Pltla f Ruffin 1· 1), ~ : n p.m.
Houl4on (IJeHhh•,. ~ II ) al ,\Uunt u

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M'orr ell (!It, Honan (10) and Lalit. K'~

'''"l'rl cKil kap~
110 lnnln )C:"' J
Tt'lla.'l OOIOOIOO!I I.l - ~ 60
Toronl 00o 0'«1 00!1 I - 3 '1 I

Sweden: who,beat Spain's Emilio
Sanchez 6-2, 6-1.
pnseeded Eduardo Bengoechea of Argentina, ranked 86th,
upsej Mikael Perhfor s of sweden
6-4. 6'1. Th e 27-year-old Argentine· ri eeded only 67 minutes to
beat Pernfors.
"I have proven I can beat th e
top players,'" he said.
Bengoechea met Mil os lav .
Mecir of Czechos lovakia In the
semifinals. Meclr who beat
J...endl last month 'In Key Bls·
cayne, Fla ., defeated Martin
Jaite of Argentina 6·1, 6-3 In a

=
ausiness

match Interrupted b y rai n.
He took the fir st set In only 21
minutes and the second , in 46
minut es'.
Mecir won the German cham·
pionshlps i~ 1985 and last y~ar
was defea ted in t,he fi nals I&gt;Y
•
Henri Leco nte of France.
West ' Germa n star Boris
Becker , the two-time Wimbledon
champion ; did not come • t0
Hamburg for the championsh\Ps.
but Claus Sta uder , president ·of
the West German TennisFedera· ·
tion, said' Friday Becker will pla y
in the
next year

010001000 - 5!1 1
DOO II4Ml 010 - I !I 0
IIMnnMl'l' lind l&lt;'l&lt;~k: M(' liN',I!Or, Kinnunen li), Arnold 171 . "':... Btlnnllil ~r
1 ~ · 11 - J. - Mc Grf' II:O r ID- •H. HK" ('hll·iilfO , \\'aUtf' r (31, Ckt.l df&gt;ron 12), flul('(l
~ I ): Balllmllrf', Rlpk1•n ( j) ,
Hi~lllmr

Sao t•r,WI 001 1)041 IIIII - '! I (I
I'H-.hru 1111111111 -.Ji~ - I '1 2
M. lll i ll~ . f; t•ll 1~1 untl Hn•nl,t·:
lt• • •~&lt;•dwl mul Ortb , W - lti'U!&gt;t'h l•l t lll .
1.- ,\1 Un\ 1.-. 1!1· 1) . lltb - l 'ltlshurjth,
IHa1. 1,\ ) , lln•:u u 131 .
---

I m·nrtl OllllU:I UIIII -

1\'w \'rk 000 lfHI 01 %- '- x 0
~lnr~ 100 &lt;lO 1 00~ - ' 10 I
Rhodt&gt;n, .'lhlrlcy 14) , flem ~nh HI) a nd
~l nn~r. Blyii:"V r n. H.- ardon (9) 11.nd
Sal100. W- 81y iP.'·en ('!- 1). L - Rhudton 12·
:t1 . HRN-Nf'w l ' urk, MaUinl!y 13) ,
11lf'!Qua 121: Mlnn el'lota, Lon'thardoul ~
131, Oaelllt7 ).

fl r\' lnd 000 000 :lW - 'l6 1
Kn.~ ij 1·c)· ooo ooe noo ~ o&amp; o

~

I

In II

1'11!1u ~tJOI)I) 180 - .i 11 1
~ uho , Wlllhu11,. {fil . ~htqthy ti, , H11hln ·

R~~ondu:

riu!Jkt.a .

ljul~" niJt&gt;rry (9 ) and Quirk. " '-Nir-ltro
('t-Q) . 1.- Guhll·tll l l·-1) . HR- fiM'f'land .

llallt1 1.
llll'lln 000 332 lltl - 12 13 I
l 'ullrn :!OUOOOD!fl - :t ~ !i l
fk&gt;mms , Schiraldi ell ~tnd St ha.(•flt'f:
1--u ~~;u . Lu ca.o; (6) , Bu.it'l' !91 ""d Mlllt&gt;r .
\\'- ( "ll'm cu
(2-\!) . 1.- LIIKO ( IJ-1) .
lllts--C "altrurnl ll. .loyner 16) : Roga:s :!
Ill . E.: \-a n" (l) .

Mllwk
St•uHI

110 0:1.111:t0 - 10 1-1 I
:1111 I'l l 1110 - .. II U 0

Rlri'M ·c· ~ .

Mlrw.h(•ll a t-1 ). frlm (ti l,

l,t• w-;~tt ·
~on

t MJ and Su rhofl; Trujillo. Wllldn(5] , ltf'l•d (i ) and S, Hradll',\'- \\'-

Mir:ttH'Iht

12-111.

1 , - "'llkln.~u n

(1 -411 .

IIH ~- MIIw uu~ t'l;' ,

151, f~ u nlnrr
Qulnonl'l'l 1:11 .

'87 Mark Ill Astro Vail

Starting at

-

'

St~te,

community leaders blast
Akron layoff announcements

'86 Chev. Cornaro Z-28

America's #1 Conversion Van.
· 3 In Stock ·

Snurn ( :1) , Hrllll'jt.4
(tJ : !&gt;W • ultl ~. l'rr .. lt'f (5).

l t:llllnln,_.. J
(1000111000&amp;000 - 11011
001 ()IX) 000100 1 - '!MH
Tt•rrf'll , Thunnond ( Il l. K1•lly (I I ),
Srwll 1 1 ~1 11nd Nokel'l: HlliL'!, Onllv~· r us,
14:1 ), l.t•lp•&gt;r I' J. Ec:~•·r~ l t'Y {IJ and
SJ rlnhll.r k. Tf'Uit&gt;~on. \\'-Et:krn&amp;lry 12·
1) . 1.- K.. IIy 10· 11. HR - Oukland.

..

·.).

Only 6,000 low miles. Loaded with T·top, air
cond .. auto .. cassette, etc. ·

$14,900

Save A Bundle At

$12,900 ·•
.
'

:\I1·0wlrf' 151 .

Transactions
Ky IJnll l•d I' reo .~ lnt11"md kmal

Hn lil'hall
!O IJ',:IIt'd !rt'f'·liJI:I'nl I 'IIH' hl'f
lt lr·h f; Nim~Ut to 'b yt•u.r t."'nlr••·t.
f'alltor.Ua - .'il11nl'tl lrt'i'· UJI:I'nl ~.Ut· h"'r
~~~ ltHI -

1\(! h Boone tu 1- y, •• , t'llnlrac t
Lo.~ AIIJII'I'Io•s - ,\ cii VIIII'd lhlrd hast~
m1111 BIll Madlocll : pi11Cf'dnutn ..ldl&gt;r-HI'lll
h ,v.,•mM I.o~•n

MatuJCZf'lt on 15- day
mrnllil dls11hlt&lt;d lbol.
Monlr4'111

-

~ uppl r­

St~~:nPd lri'("-IIJI:f'DI oul -

ltcold••r 11m Ralru_"' lu l-yt'llr cconlraN .
,...,.." , l 'nrk ( AI.) - sl.-nr(l lrf!t'-a,;ml
pllt•ht.- Ron Gul*)' 10 2-yu r t ·n nlrllf·t .
Ollkland - o\ ctl\'lllt'd plt chrr M~l'
ll u~ lrom li'M&gt; dl~oii.Oif'd II!M : piiiCl.'d
pllt:lll'r -IDL6QUin ,\ndujar nn 11M• U-dll.)'
dl.• !tllll'd ll.&gt;ol; roo\ll!d o ulfteldrr Dwaynr
Murphy from t ht• 15- lo Utt 21· da.r
.u~;il•h• d IL'! I,
Rul'l lwlhll.ll
Nt1W -lf'r:tl'Y ~USHtl - Namt"d H.-nry

'86 lincoln Town Car

Champayne metallic with leather. '87 Park
Ave. trade . 15,000 miles. Sold new for

$23.900.

'84 Pontiac Trans AM

C&amp;SOE c~ief plans
to retire from firtn

Da•k blue . Auto .. air. T-top, deluxe interior
package . local trade . Not $10.900 .

Priced Right At

$899 5

Hl hhy t.·nc: h IUid Pt'h • 8roiU'a ll-K!IIliCanl
t' OI W' h: ~IKIJ I!'d forw ~ rd

Dl4rren

Rowt•,

CONSOIJDATEil RE PORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and •"orelgn Subsidiaries)
State Bank No. 130

The Ohio Valley Bank
Company

'84 Buick Centurv St. Waaon

We sold it new to a very c'reful owner .1&gt;ark
red. Expect qu&amp;lity.

Only

$7295

'82 Pontiac Bonneville Bgh~.

~

dr., charcoal exterior with grey velour into·
rror.

Affordable at

$5995

Federal Rese r,/" District No. 4
of Gallipolis, Galila County , iutht• Stnte of Ohio at the close of business-on March 31 ,
19R7.

ASSETS
Cash and bala nces due !rom deposi tory lnstl tut ions :
a. Nonlnterest-bNt ri ng balances and currency and coln ..... ........ ..... 4,408.000.00
b. Interes t-bearing bala nces ........................................................ 5.500,000.00
Sl'curlt Irs .......... ....... ..... .................. ..... .... ....... .............. ..... ............. :11.470,000.00
Federa l funds sold and securities purc hased und er agree ment s
to rPsell In domestic offlcPs of the bank and of Its
Edge and Agree men t su bsidiaries. a nd in IBFs: ........... ................ .I9.350.000.00

;f Money Ideas

Lou ns and IC'asc fina ncing r ccrlvn b\('s:

Loans and leases. net of unramod lnc om~ ................ 90,267.000.00
LESS : All owa n c~ for loa n i! nd lt'aS&lt;' losst•s ................ 1.350.000.00
Loans and lC'asPs. 1t1C'I of ttrtf'tiJ'n(·d incomr.

, allowa ncr . an&lt;! resctw .......................... .. ........ ..... ....... .. ........... .... 88.917.000.00
Premi ses and fixed a"rls tlnl'ludi ng capltaliwd louses) ................ .. . 1.596,000.00
OthN rea l es ta te owned ....... ... .. .. .................................................. ...... 22,000.00
Ot her asse ts .............................. ............................................ .... ....... 2.018,000.00
Tolat asse ts ............................................................................. .1 59,281,000.00
U •\BILI'fiES
Deposit s:
a. In domes ti c offices ................................................................. 147.826.000_00
(I ) Nonlnteres t-brarlng .................................... .. .. 12, 490,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ........................................... 1.15,336,000.00
Othet' ll a bllltle~ .. .. .................. ....... .. ........ .... ..·......... ... ..... ... .... ... ..... .. _1.345,000.00
Total liabilities ............................................................................. 149,171.000.00
Ell\JITV CAPITAL
Common stock (No. of shares! a. Au th orlzed ...... 266,660
b. Out sta ndlng. ·... 259.255 ......... ..... ... 2.593.000.00
Surplus ..... .. ............................................. ... .... ...... .... ......... .............. 4.179,000.00
Undivided profits and capita I reserves .............................. .. .. .......... .. 3,338,000. 00
Total equit y capltal ... .................. ......................................... ... , ....... 10.110,000.00
·Total lia bil ities. limited- life prl'ferrrd slack.
and equit y capital ........ ...... ................. ........ ................ .. ............ 159.281.000:00
I. the undersigned offi ceo·. do hpreby declare that this Report of Condition has
been prepa red In conforman ce with offlcl.11 instructions a nd ts tru to the best of
my knowledge and belief.
·
'
Mad ge E. Boggs
VIce President and Controller

We, the undr r sl~ n ('(\ dlredors. at tes t the con·ectness of this RPpop of Condl·
lion a nd declare tha t II hus been examined by us ·and to the best of our knowledge
and belief has been prepared In confor mance with offl cia l tnstructiQns and Is true
a nd correct. •
•
Robert II. Eastm an
Jeffrey E. Smllh - Directors
Frank H. Mills. Jr .

'84 Cavalier St. Wagon
Extra clean aconomv . car. Local owner. Tilt,
cruise. auto .. air. 43,000 miles . Lt. Blue.

$5995

~\

"

-.

$6995

'·'

:: Selecting the best
..: money market fund

8 Passenger, F&amp;R air, 62,000 low miles. Au
purpose vehicle. Loc!ll one owner.

'•' •

Bargain Hunter's

Specials

"

,.

'81 BUICK SKYL~RK ••• S199 S

'79 Ford Thunderbird

Local ana owner. Showroom clean! Full
power Including seats, windows etc . White
with red Interior.
·
'

A Bargain At

$2995

'78 MERCURY COUGAR •• $680
'76 PLYMOUTH FURY ••••• $680
'80 WY SCIROCCO ....... $1200
'77 CHEY. PICKUP .......... $780
4 wh . dr. Needs work.

u,

More To Choose From ... "Come On In An' Look" ;,'

I

I

By STAN EVANS

disgr untled sharehold ers might
start a run for redemptions.
Choosin g a money- market
;: invC'stors. These
fund only beca use of Its high yield
:: fund s bu y shortca n be a mistake. Since most
"' te rm gover n·
ordinary money fund s make the
same kinds of In ves tment s, th eir
.: ment , bank and
returns are usually within one or
·~ corporate obll·
gallons. and
two percenta ge points of each
other. You might be wise to seek
,. though the_l r
. , yields declined
out money funds that let yOu shift
. from the stratclsplim
your assets Into other kinds of
J98.i. thev were stilt far higher mutual funds when you think that
• than the Inflation rate.
interes t rates are heading down
· Some safety-first In ves tors a nd the stoc k market Is headlnll
' flocked to money-market funds up.
~ that buy only government securl·
Some money funds have exties, such as Capital Preserva· change agreements with lnde·
tlon Fund and Cardinal Govern- pendent mut.ual funds . Other
ment Securities. But these often money funds belong to one of t'he
, • pay less than do ordinary money many fund families . These rami·
· ' ·funds and the new bank money- lles also have mutual funds that
•; market accounts. Almost lnva rl- invest In stocks, and sometimes
•• ably, you ran feel quite secure in corporate and . tax -exempt
·
Investing In a regular money bonds.
AWARD - Jan Gettles, sister of the late Ron 'fltomM, IH
n,rtlr•u '" rly If it Is run by a
Once_you Invest ln a family,
Riclyred reeelving the Pr!'!!!drnl'•~ul! ~11rd on behalf of her
-J--•:.;irert:e s:Tal&gt;lishea mutual- ruM - you usually can shirt your cash
brot.ller from Jim ,Jesse of American Standard Homes. The late
from , say, a money fund Into a
::;voup or brokerage firm .
Thomas was awarded the honor through hill work and 8ales volume
, &gt; !-.:But t~ sleep more soundly al stock mfllual fund ll)efely by • In hill area. He was chosen u one out of the 12 dl8trlct
·: ..Sight, check that the average, making a phone call. Often the
.representatives to become a member of the President'·• Club. As
: • J]'iaturlty of ihe fund's securities transfer costs nothing, and gen·
district representative, Thomas wa.~ over an 18-county area oi
:! ;)&amp; 60 days or less by asking the erally you can mbve your money
bullder·dealeno. Annually, American Standard Homes runs a sales
•:-lbnd or looking at " Donoghue's around as oftl'f! as you like. But a
total 011 each dlllrlct representative with the lop 121n Well volume
;•.;Money Fund Report Table," few fund families llmlt tlie
receiving plaques and becoming life members of the Pre~~ldent'o
:: )ivbllshed ln more than 70 news· swltches tn v.arlous ways to
Club. Ceremtinlefl were held ln March at Martlnsvlile, Va., during
: ~pers . Longer maturities do not protect the funci against a sudden
the compallf'l awards banquet. The late Thomas, who w88 a
of
assets
In
any
one
fund
and
loss
•-cfve fund managers enough
realtor and office ml!llarer at Jan Gettles Really ln .JackAon, was
.:"'xlblllty. II Interest rates rlse to, deter the shareholtters from
not aware before his death there he had earned the outstanding
; '&lt;lllld the fund Is locked lnlo hasty decisions .
award. Thom88 ill a former Melp County resident and attended
illeurltles that pay lower rates,
elementaey achoolln Bradbuey.

~= be~nonary~~·~;~n:~nf~~ sh~~~

'

State of Ohio, County of Gallta, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 28th day of April, 1987 and I hereby cer·
tlfy that I am not an officer or director or th is ba nk.
My commission expires March 25, 1991.'
Cindy H. Johnston, Notary Public
AKA Cindy L. Harrington

,.

'80 Suburban 4 WD

Ma 3, 1987

abou t 1.000 in past years. IBM · years.
By MICHAEL MOLINSKI
·'We've see n a real increase irt
SAN JOSE, Calif. (UP!) -The has been one of the leading if not
the leading recruit er for techni- demand for liberal arts majors."
1987 college recruiting season
showed that while recruiters $till cal positions at MIT, but thls.year she said, crediting bankln!( and
-are competing for the best minds they're only looking for market· consulting firms for the trend.
While the nature of the highamong graduating seniors, the ing students." .
Weatherall
said
semiconduc·
tech
Industry has changed , so
· number of new high-tech jobs has
tor manufacturers are doing less have the p(iorities of the students
.(allen sharply.
.
' College recr uitin g directors recruiting than a fe)" yea rs ago. entering the field. ·
In other fields, the "o il indu s"Salary Is not number one
. and officials in high-tech busl·, nesses sa id In Interviews that the try is slow, the auto industry is anymore,' ' said San Jose State's
, :Slump in the sem-iconductor being careful , the chemical in· Brody. "Students are more con·
du stry is slow, ·• Weat herall said. cerned with the nature of the
,indu stry and a slowdown in
"There has . however . been a work and the reputation of the
,aerospace work following th e
:Space Shuttle disaster mean rush of int erest in technical company - including job securthere are now fewer technical job -studen!S from Wall Street fir ms Ity and the climate and cul ture of
and management co nsulting th ~ company. "
•. openings for graduating seniors.
.Jim Osborn, director of corpohe added. "This stems
firms."
Nonetheless, most companies
rate
relations and placrment at
from
the
fact
that
on
every
.• $1111 are v!siting campuses and trader' s desk now is a personal Georgia
Ter h, agreed.
~om petlng as hard aseverfor top
computer."
seem much more
"Students
students In' a wide range of
GRAND OPENING - Fiesta Hair F:~shlool;,
llu• Gatli tJOlis Retail Mcrclmnts.Assoclatton; City
Linda
Cher
nick,
associare
di·
seriou
s
about
their caree r~." he
• , professions, said Jerry Brod ~ .
ope~ed II~ doo rs to the puhlk Friday motnlngwilh
Manager Oak hnan ; Gallipolis Area ('luunher of
• career placement director al San rector of t'a reer servi C'es at sa id. "I don't think salary is the
its
Gallipolis
salon,
located
at
322
Second
,\ve
..
Commcrct•
Prt•sidt•ut Dan Davies; Karen Kumpf,
Harvard. said "fina nciaJ serv i· top thing. They' re Interested In
• Jose State Uriivers ity .
from
the
City
Park.
Pictured
at
tht•
across
division
managt•r;
and Dnnita llulwrt, dlvlslon
"'It's slower in the high·tech ces ha s been the real growth an environmen t that is conducive
tibbon·cutting
Ct'rcmony
are,
(rom
leU,
\'vonnt•
mana_g-t•r.
• Industry than it wa s a few years industry here in the past couple to career grow th.' '
Blair; Kim Rohhins; Frank Doollltlt•, prt•sidt•nt ol
ago," Brody said . "We haven't
seen the difference as far as
recruit ing, but I suspect that
when It comes to hiring it will be
&lt;}own a little. "
Traditionally. hi gh-tech firms
have been the largest recruiters,
•·. Brody said. This year. however,
' finance and accoun ting majors
are in demand , having been
city of· Akron received no ad ·
targeted by the financi al serviBy ,JEANNE REALL
" I am -dismayed hy lh&lt;·
'·
ces Industry . · _
va nre notice that they were eve n
AKRON \UP I\ - In what may
decision to mo.V l' Firt•stont''s
consider
ing such a move. Our
"This Is definitely a high·
have been "the most diffi cu lt
corporat.•
hcadquartt•rs
from
visibility year for banking and
doors have been open to them,
week since World War II," four of
Akron to fhlcagu." (iov. Rl·
accounting." sai d Yolanda Mo·
bu t they did not Inform us they
the area 's la rgest emp loyers
chard Cci•·•h' told Unit~d
rales, recruiting superv isor at
were co nsidering i his action."
have a nno ~ed layoffs, firings
Pr~" lnto•rnnllonal In Coh•m·
Rep: Tom Sawyer, D·Ohlo, .
Stanfo rd Universit y.
· and 1ransfers affecting I. :lOO htis. "Fireslmw's roots ar~· K'7
Brody sald school dis tric ts
said he was " disappoi nted but
workers.
years dt•cp In Akrim.
not surprised" b.r the move.
looking for teachers also are
Communit y a nd politlcaitea~­
·
"This corporal&lt;· nomadism,
"Fit·estone ha s made a de~l ­
recruiting heavily this year.
ers reacted Friday with sharp
movln~ from on(' dty lu
sion.
ri gh t or wro ng , happy or
At Lockheed Miss iles and
criticism of "corpo rate nomaanother
without
·
n
otlco·
and
not,
tha
t It does n't wa nt to be In
Space Co. in Su nnyva le, entrydism, " support for the victims of
wlthonl
rt•gurd
to
lh&lt;'
costs
for
the rubber bus iness anymore:"
leyel job openings are down
corporate raiders and eco nomic·
the pt•ople involvt•d. wlll hurl
he sa id. " It 's go ing In to retaiL
significantly from a few years
hardships,
and
optimism
for
"a
.James C. Fenstermaker
Will lam J ..Lhota
th e company's stahlllty and ho•
Tha ,. sa sad day for a one('- proud
ago, said Lonnie Crawford, a
community of survivors ."
t•xlrt•mely costly for till' stock·
co mpany that a tot of people have
• company recruiter.
Fireston e Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
holdt•rs ..•''
Inves ted thclo· lives ln .
Ed Tahg, a project manager at
announ ced Thursday It will movP
"This may have bee n the most
Hewlett -Packard who wa s a t San
its headquart ers to Chicago restructurin gs and ~cn 0ra l l' CO ·
difficult
week for Akron since
• Jose State recently to tal k to
within the yea r , taki ng with It as nomic malaise. so ml' leaders
• : potential recruit s, sa id 1he same
many as 4:&gt;() corporate, high· openly criticized Fires tone for II ~ Wor ld War II."
Sawyer sa id the co mmunity .
: • .Is true or hls firm.
pa ying jobs.
t•etoca tlon.
·
•
"We
were
hirln&lt;&gt;
more
than
now
must focus Its att ention on
Inc
..
as
part
of
its
"
I
am
dismayed
by
the
dec!
·
GenCorp
•'
h
COLUMBUS - James P. Fen·
Lhota. a native of Ca nton,
• 1,000 college students a nnuall!l stermaker , Groveport, president received his bachelor's degree In att em pt to recover from a rec ent slon to move Firestone's corpo· !Is strl'ngths. such as polymer
• about four years ago, but il has
hOstile takeover attempt , Friday rate headquarters from Akron to researc h.
·; dropped since then, " Tang said. and chief opera ling officer of civil engineering from Ohio State announced lt was fi r in!( 225 Chicago," Gov . Ri chard Cc les lr
non Stevens, dit·ector or the
: • "This year we will probably hire Columbus&amp;SouthernOhloElect- University In 1964 and his mas· employees and and transferr ing , )old United Press Int ernational i\ k•·on Regional Development
ric Co., ~as announced that he ter's degree ln management
.• •• Iess than 600."
100 more to Its General Tire • In Columbus. "Firestone's roars Board. opt imisti ca lly agreed.
•: • In the changed clrcumstanc·es, wlll retire thls summer. closing a ' ' from the Massachusetts Institute subsidiary . General Tire is for are 87 yea rs deep In Akron.
" I've been watrhlng this Iran·
3~ · yea r
career with th e ofTechnology,whlcbheattended
::: many smaller Silicon Valley company.
sltlon
taway from m~nufaetur­
"This
cor
porate
nomadism.
s_
a
le.
as a Sloan Fellow, In 1977 and
• compa nies are not hiring entry·
lng)
lake
place for many years,"
Lora!
Systems
Group,
fo
rmoving
fr
om
one
city
to
another
William J. Lhola, th e senior 1978. He ls a registered profes•: level workers for tec hnical
he
sa
ld
.
"
I might have jumped
vlce presldeni, will be nominated slonal engineer and a registered merly Goodyea r Aerospace without notice and w!lhout r&lt;:&gt;·
: • positions.
out
the
wIn
dow seven or right .
Co rp .. announced Wedn esday lt gard to the costs for the peo pl e
, .'
"We don 't do mu ch entry-level to succeed Fehstermaker as professional surveyor In Ohio.
yt•a
rs
ago
after
u week llke·thls,
He joined C&amp;SOE as senio r was lay ing off .17o workers as a Involved, will hurt the company's
•. hiring because we don't have the president and chief operating
but
th
is
com
munit y Is a
cost-cutting measure. Th e com- sta bility and be e~ tre m cly cos tly '
time to train them," said Scott off leer of the company . Both vlce president In December 1983. pany also as ked 120 workers in ror the stockholders ...
surv ivor.''
ac tions are schedu led to be He joined America n Electric
:: McNealy, president and chief effective
Manu rort urlng now accounts
the
airship
division
to
take
two
"Flr
es
ton
~
·
s
executi
ves
just
July 1.
Power Co. Inc. In 196&gt; as an
' executive officer at Sun Mlc rosfor
only abou t 2S percent of the
weeks
of
vacation
beginning
decided
to
fold
their
ten
ts
and
A Pickerington na)lve, Fen· associate engineer fot transmls·
ystems In Mount ain Vi ew. a
area's
jo bs, whl r h parallel s a
stermaker· served in the Navy sian for the Ohio Power Co. In Mon ~ay and laid off 67 tcmpor- steal awa y," Celeste sa id. "Thl'
nat
iona
l
trend . Stevens .~a ld .
• fast-growing computer company
from 1943 to 1945. He graduated 1977 he was named transmission ary workers because of delays In Firm to llaY. fint~s
·: expected to enter the Fortune ;J()Q from
"Th
is
whole country Is In a
Ohio State Univers it y in and distribution engineering the awardin g or a Navy blimp
• • ' this year .
stat
e
of
tt·ans
llion, a nd we're a
eon! rart.
1949
with
a
bachelor's
degree
In
manager.
COLUMBUS
tUPii
i\Shrl
by
:
The Ea st Coa st reeruiting
pat'l ort t .'' he sa id . " We just bad
Babcock &amp; Wilcox an noun ced
electrical engineering.
He beca me executive a ss t~tant
County firm has pleaded ~u llt y to more to lose than a lot or.rcglons.
! trend appears similar.
Friday
that
6:!
Barberton
emHe began working for C&amp;SOE to the president of Ohio Power In
violating Ohio's ha'l.ardous waste This area has bee n averaging
, "Many of the firms vis iting this
in 1948. Fenstermaker became a 1978. wlth federal and state ployees In the domes tic foss il law and agr·eed to pa y fines alm os t 4() new, small plant s a
•' year have ma.ny fewer jobs to
fuels divis ion would be laid off or
• flll ," sald Robert Wea therall, company officer In 1971 when he leglslall ve responslbllitles. He transferred because or a con· to ta~n g $105,mO, according to yeu r. They're small, but I think
• career services director at Ma s- was elected vice president of was promoted to transmiss ion tlnued decline In busi ness and Atlohcy General Anthony .1 . th o trend will be tha t the big
Cetebrczze .Jr.
sac hu setts In s titu te of generation and transmission. He and distribution manager In 1982. Increased com pet It ion .
l'ompanlt•s ur&lt;• go ing to grt
was
promoted
to
senior
vice
He
Is
a
direc
tor
of
C&amp;SOE
an
d
the
Mcr hant cal Ga lv-Pia tln g s maller and the small companies
. Technology .
While
many
of
the
fir
ings
and
:; . " Bell Labs has only about 200 pres ident In 1973 and was elected American Electri c Power Ser- layo ffs were expec ted as part of Cor p.. Sidn ey. a )llcta l ptatlnR arc goi ng to expl'rlenre the
vice Cor p.
and flnlshln J:: co mt&gt;a ny. was growt h."
:• o;)enings this ~ca r compared to president In February 1984.
accused of hiding &lt;·&lt;Jdmlum
"This area has bl'en hit as hard
'•
sludge under regu lar tra sh a'nd as any In the country by the
dumping it In the Shelby Co un ty enrporlot &lt;:&gt; raider sy ndrome. and
landfill.
It' s sad.'' he sa id. "But It' s not
Ce tcbrezze said F'rlday that Iike f'v&lt;·r yhody Is ju st si t ling herr
plant superint end ent Edward R. wai tin g to dlr. I th ink leaders hip
Spangler co uld race a two-year In Akron Is stronger than ever. "
prison sent ence for his parlin the
scheme.
·

Chka11o

Nh •ltro. \'4'11 Ill) il.nd

·.

Section D

:High-tech job Slump
doesn't ~top recruiters

Gu·t mlill . · \-\'llllwns 171 1111(1 SI~UrJ:hl i
Kl'y, F.k:hOOrn (J'J, MuN'!4 1miVI tllll and
Whllt. \\1- Mu .. ~t·lm lill ! ~OJ, L - M' III ~
:~ rrr.oo !2·'! ). HH!i- Toronto. Harftf'ld 2 ('H :
Tt.'XIl&gt;l, llli' Ul' lllill (,) ,

S. ·I!U , lluu Ill:

~. Rll.lllmtoro· I
Mllnw,;ota 7. N••w Yurk I
( ' ~PI Wid 2, Ka n~ ... fit)' 0
MIIWIIU~M' Ill, l'W •11H if' M
HOMion 1a. f~tllfDrntaa :t
Oalll!ll*ll ~. U•• tn~ll I, 1:1 hmlnW'

!{al urrhcy 's fjltll\1'!0

HRII-MontreaJ, Fh:r.jCi!!r.ILid O J, Foley
(1) , W• .folaf!Jj;Oft 11}: New fork. Slrawhfrr')' il l. LyoM 11: ). T'N rei IH-

·.•,.

Lmdl loses set, hut advances in tourney
HAMBURG, West Germany.
(UPI) - Ivan Lend! dropped a
set Friday .but· defeated Thierry
Tulasne of France ln a quart erfinal match of the Wes t German
championships at the Rothenbaum club.
The world's No. 1 player
dropped the first set 4-6 but came
back to take tbe next two6-4, 6-3.
" It naturally Is not a shame to
lose to Lend!," Tulas ne said.
"But I had a real chance of
winning and didn 't use it. "
,
.In the semlfl]1als Saturday
Lend! will faced Kent Carlsson or

'

llu•• )1: ('ora, S II, -lonl!l, ('In and W1• tllllrr.

Uyan, ll 11u

( "hi i'IIII'O

Darlln-. Slitk (7) , 0~ II ) and LyoM .
W- OrCHIIOO (1-1). L- McCiu re jf.l) .

lld'rton I 1·0) . L- \ 'uuna ~ ~~ ~- HR-Sl.

!&gt;i t ri~I~IU I S

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2A ,:J:Ijl .

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1-1 .117

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1 I ~ . :1&gt;611

Montrl 013 ... aG-illl
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l'-4 .:t-u
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fo'pr nmtdt•t. ,'-; \ ' ;1.1: lf•·rshlM·r. 1,1\ :J~ .
:\mo·rictUI I A · a~~; ut • - fl• •nw n .~ . Hur. und
l.alt Kl'llt lt, St·a :111: lll,;tJf'r a , 1\111 :11:
H I.~ I'" '' '" • ~finn :J'!: \\111 . f11l, :11.

14'~1111

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1\MY.KU 'AN I.F.M; Ut:

Toronto

·e1 70
tl 91
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'01!'111,
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l"ltc hln,; \'hi nrl~

~ Ana:ell'll at St. l..i)ub!
8IUI DleKQ 111 fhll-~t.ro

New \"ork

'tl 1\li
tl 11.1
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l'o •kl l 1
lll'f , \11

h pd.

Nationl$1 1A•JtJI;Ul' - F'• •rn:uidt•:t, ~' \' I· I:

Hqlt!tlon lit .\lluta

MIIWIIUill•

llh r
00 HI U
19 n ~
~ 110
u
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,\rnt'f'klln IA'"Itl' (' - 1'. Rrntllf')', ,'i,.a
l't; 11-l !illlur, M II and ,"''I~ on. St.• a II: Kf'dtl!&gt;,
l 'hl lill d l.ll nk iOrd, Oak It

1

MIUtlfl'al at Nt:"W l'urk
f 'lndftnatt at '"ttllawl•~lphl ll
!ian Fr1111dll'D Ml PIU N itur ~~; h

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10 %.'1 .333

l'ur k•-r. I' ID ~;

PllhlhurKtt ·1. Kiln Frant·l"tn 2
( ' lnd nnatl tl, Pblllldt&gt;lphi ij -'
NP~ \ 'ork ~ . M,.ntr ~ ll.l 8
N( , l.oul.ll 5, 1.011 i\n~tt'l r.~~ ·1, m lllnln,IC'o
l
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Hbhrd.

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L-CarmM 11-t) . HR•...Cla-d nniiiiiL O.vill/ 2 (I ), Bell (1): Ptiii..Si!!tphl ., \\'1..011 (.I J, RuHell (I ),St hmhl (1'},

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Nrw Ynrk

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110• (R) ~d Dtaz: ·C.;mM,. Hume (I) ,
IUi cble ('7 ), Tehlve (II ... dftaudl. W-

May 3, 1987

J

•

PVH names
food service
administrator
POINT PLEASANT - Ster ling
Max field was recrnt ly appoln trd
as the new food service director
at Pleasa nt Valley Hospital,
accord in g to a hospital
spokes person .
Max field rcc:l'ivcd hh associat e of occupation sc·icnrc do!gree from the Culin ary lnstliutP
of America . Prior to comin g to
Point Pleasa nt, he served as an
executive chef at a hospital In
Honolulu, Hawaii , and Troy,
Mich. He atsti was a food
produc·tlon director at Nor lolk
General Hospital In Norfolk. Va .
" I would like mea l time to be a
relax ing tlme In a warm atm os·
phcre, per haps like a cou ntry
store," he said. " 1 believe In
ta king rood to the limit s, beca use

Ste rlin g Maxfield
food, ca n b1.• excl t in g." he added.
Maxfield and his wife , Cor inne.
have a :l-ycur-oltl ~on, Rya n, any
arc cxprctl ng ~ second child In
Ma y.

Gallia County native receives promotion
COLUMBUS- James E. Noe,
a Gallipolis native, has been
promoted to district mana ger at
Bob Evans Farms Inc., accord·
lng to Roher t S. Wood, executive
vice president and chief operat·
lng officer of the c6 mpany's
resta urant division .
Noe was promoted f rom man -

uger or the Bob F:vans' resta urant
In Rey noldsbut'g to district mon·
ager In th&lt;' &lt;'Om pany's Cent ra l
zone. The restaura nt s under his
dlrect!Qn ln&lt;'l udr three In Columbus an d two ln Springfield.
Noe started with th e companv
In 1971 as a gri ll cook. He Is ~­
gradua te of Rio Gra nde Collc•gP.

f

�'.

'Page- D-2- -The Sunday Times-Sen1i11f!l

' May 3. 198'7

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

·couple's lofty _goal~~;'

Bank

I

bran.ch
office
'fUPPERS P LA INS - The
TUppers Pl ains B ranch of Ba nk
; On~. Athens N .A., Fr idaY mornlng became the ·Tuppers Plains
I Ol!lce of the Far mers Bank &amp;
~ Savings Co.
A l:jr ge sig n deno ting the
~ Institution Is now owned by the
J;'armers Bank &amp; Savings Co. wa s
i put Into place In fro nt of the bank
~ Thursday aftern oon a nd on Frl·
! day morning, the Far mers Ba nk
I took ov ~r operation of the office
; In Tuppers Pla in s.
~ :Theodore T. · Reed J r., pres!·
1 dent of the F armers Ba nk &amp;
: Savings Co. In Pomeroy , re·
! celved word a month ago that th e
; Bqard or Gov er nors of 1he
· • Federal Reserve System In Wa·
· . ~hlhgton, D.C., 6a s approv ed th e
applica tion of the Far mer s Ba nk
to a cquire cer ta in assets a nd
al sume certain lla bl ll t les of the
Tuppers Pl a ins Bra nc h of Ran k
One ..
Reed , accompa nied by a tt or·
ney Fre d Crow, Les lie F . F ultz,
Rich ard Follr'od, m em bers oft he
Farmers Bank bOard of directors, and Paul Kl oes and Bru ce
Reed, F a rmers Ba nk em ployees,
met In Ath ens with Ba nk One
olllcla ls on Thu rsday to comp lelc
· the fin a l pa pers for the trans fe r

1
1

NEW - Richard Follrod, · a member of the.
hoard of directors of Farmers Bank ; Th eodore T·.
Reed .Jr., Farmers Bank pres ident , and .fon
Karsc hnik, Farmers Bank employee, stand
hes ldc a sll(n marking the T uppers P la ins office of
of the Tuppers P lains bra nch to
the F ar mers Ba nk.
P resident Reed was on thr sit e
in Tuppers Pl ai ns F rid ay mor n·
ing as th e trans itio n was mad e.
,\ eco mpa nying him we re P au l
Heed and .Jon Karsc hnlk, em·
ploy ecs of the F armers Ba nk in
Po meroy , a nd boa rd mem ber
Follrod . Karsc hnl k will be ma nager of the Tupper s P la in s
operation.
Some Improve ment s will be

·Market gets back
I; on winning track
iwith active ·trading
By ELLEN FREILICH
coun t r iPs - such as Ja pa n - tha t
UPI Business Writer
have bu irt up large trade sur·
NE W YOR K i UP il - The
pl uses with the Unit ed Sta tes.
stock m a rket, he lped by a s ma ll
• The stock mar ket a lso focused
abeya nce of Infla t ion a nd ln tN · · on corporat e ea rni ngs news,
· es t rat e fears, ad va nced las t which prov ided Wall Street with
· week In ac tive, nervous tracll ng.
mo rr ch!'l'r t han mos t analys ts
The Dow Jan e~ indu s trial aver·
had ~ nt i dpa t cd .
age rose 1:i.!l1 to close at 2280.40.
" The market is pay in g allen After a small loss on Monday, lio n to ear nings, wh ich have bee n
the Dow finished In the plu s l&gt;&lt;'tt er th an cxpec l&lt;'d , par ticu·
column Tuesday , selling the Iar ly In the ma nufac turin g sec·
s tage fo r dou ble-dlgll gai ns Wed· tor . and It' s ta kin g the view tha t
nesday a nd Thu rsday. But the Jhe economy is s till in a long• three-day ra lly sta lled F' rl,d ay In term g rowth pn ll c rn, " sa id Pet&lt;'I'
• thewak eo!bank pr·Jmr ra tc cut s, F'ur·niss. vice preside nt in eq uit y
::; wllh the Dow s lippin g a bout 6 tra din g at Sm ith Barney . Harri s
~ point s.
Up ham &amp; Co.
: Ad va ncing is~ u es outpaced
On the Big Board, Standa rd Oil
:. dec lin ers 1,070-8ti5 CJ mong thr · was thr mos t activo NYSF. -Iis ted
~ 2. U9 . iss ues that crossed ,thr
iss ue . rising 2Y, to i4'(~. Bri tis h
~ NYSE. Ja pe .
Pe troleum boosted its ofl'er fo r
;
Pa rticipa nt s sa id th r ma r ket ' the co mpa ny to S7 U O a sha re
: gol a psychologica l lift as the plus w&lt;l!Ta nts, from a prev ious
• dollar st renglhPncd ag ains t lo r· off&lt;&gt;.r of $i0 a share. Bri t Ish
~ clgn eurrencics and bond pr lres
Pr lrolc um climbed G% to G6.
~ reboundf'd.
Texaco fol lowed. cl imbing :l ••,
~
Bo nd prlrl·~ climbed Thursday to :to a mid rumors th at it either Is
• when Federal Hcservc Chair · close to a set llement with Pen
; man Pa u! Volcker ack nowlr dgcd nwi l or that It is a ta keove r
0 thai the Fed had t ighte ned ca ndid ate. P&lt;' nnzoil rose li' &lt;, to
•· moneta ry pollr.v slig htly, a m ove R2'~ ,.
• he sai d would prevent mor r
IRM was third. jump ing
to
~ d rastic l.nt rrest ra te hikes.
1 611';~ . IBM's (' ha lr man sa id at
~
The dollar drew support from th e ro mpan;·'s an nual meeting
~ Volrkcr' s assert io n !hut II "a bsO· Monday th at firsl'-qu arter s hip
: lu te ly a nd fun da m r nt al ly" hat ) ments In 1987 exceeded levels
• fall en fa r l'nough a nd frolll fro m th e yea r-ago pcriocl.
: conc ilia tory sta tr m r nts em a nti!
Other high terh nolog,v issues
; ln g from meetings bPI ween .Ia pa· - were featured on tilt' Ilsi of Ihe
= n('sr Pr lmr Ml nls trr Ya s uhiro wrc k's bi ggest wi nn ers. Digi t.1l
~ Na kaso n P and
P r es id e nt Equ ipment ad1·ancC'd HI"" to
1 Reaga n.
172' 2 . NC R &lt;Hided 6" 1 to 7o .1 nd
~ · As thr lwuds of s ta te th rPw oil Unisys rose"'' to ll R',.

..

K',

~ (on

'

:
•
:
;
~
~
~

:
:
;
•

wat er s troub k d by currency

Ford Motor C'o. wns the- we0k's

la nd trad e tr nslons IK'tween the
two indu s tri al powe rs. Na kaso ne
,said Thursday th at he had
directed .Japanese ba nks IO cut
their short -ICI'm lnteresst r«l es .
On F riday, Hcaga n and Naka son e· co ncuned that fur the r
declines In the dolla r would be
"counterprodu cti ve ."
The s t a t Pm r nt ~ were mea nt to
slow the pmtcc(lo nlst momen·
tulll .a ppa re nt In Wednesday's
passage by the House of Re prl'~e nl a tlv es of the so-ca lled Gc·
phardt a m endmen t , :tn addition
to !he House' s trade bi ll tha t
would require r·rta llat lon aga inst

bi g ea rn ings s tor;•. The s tock
jumped 15\ to 9B aft er repor ti ng
reco rd flrs t·qua rtcr rar nings
tho! cxcrrdr d Wal l Street' s mos t
optim is tic es tima tes. The For·d
result s gave Inves tors a br ig ht er
viPw of thr au to group :· c;e ncra l
Motors drove a hea d ~'• to 91 %
and Chrysler add ed 2.1' to ~9 'h.
i\mong ot her blue chips. Uni on
Ca rbide rose 211. to 2\J', , Ge nera l
Electr ic eased 'h to 102 \1, a nd
i\mer lcan Express added 2' ·2 to
;,g:14.
Chrmlcal Iss ues adva nced.
Ra yc he m j umped 17' , to ) 1:\, the
week's biggest point -ga lnpr, lm -

1
•
•
~
:

...

,l

Dow Jones Weekly Closings

I

2 80.40

Weekly Change:

2440
2420
2400
2380
2360
2340
.2320
2300
2280
2260
2240
2220
2200
2180
2160
2140
2120
2100
2080
2060
2040
2020
2000

45.03

success~

'

By MARY TOBIN
to sell real estate . We teach them
UPI Business Writer
.how to make a profit at It, " he
NEW YORK tUPll ...., When said. His agent s net about $70.00(/
Dav id and Gall Llniger fourided a year.
their Denver-based real estate
David, with a background l_fi
firm In 1977 the ir sights were set sales but no business experience;
far beyond the regional market. , formed hls concept then."wt&gt;lit
"The startup money we had out to . lind a parlnt&gt;r who coulll
been promised didn't come compensate lor my lack of
th rough, we made mistakes. we business know-how. "
were threatened by local real
Gail, tht&gt; 27th per~on he Interestate brokerages , we were over- viewed, had worked lor Ralstoh
whelmed by the problems we Purina and other firms and fllle'il
faced." Linlger sal~ . " But from the bill. "Sht&gt; .took a substantidl
the very first day we had lofty pay cut, came on board, an~
gol(ls, to build the largest multi- became her own secretary. book:
national real est ate lirm l'ver."
keeper , and administrative
David and Gall are co- staff." he said . "I was on the roall
founders . · and chairman and 300 days a year In tht&gt; early
president respeetlvely, of prl· years."
'1
vately held Re-Max Int ernaThen the'. ener'gy and real
tional. which In 10 years has estate crunch hit and local !art!!
become second only to Century 21 developers who l!ad promised to
In the number of real estatE' back him pulled out. "We had no
tran sactions It handled in 1986 money , we kept the office open
and ranked ahead of Coldwell 'one more day ." ' h~ said, he!~
Banker. ERA Inc .. and Merrill by a personal bank loan taken oltt
Lynch &amp; Co. In the top live by Gall and by two oth£-r
national real estate firms .
employt&gt;es who bl'cami!partners
Linlger said Re-Max had ap- and who art&gt; 19P officers In thl&gt;
proximately $24.4 billion in sales firm .
'
•
In 1986 on 300,000 real estate
Re-Max had turned the corner
transactions and earned roughly Into prolltablllty and "become ~
$816 million In total commissions big company with offices all ovf-r
from Its 1.010 offices and 14,027 the country, " when tragedy (if
sales associates, as Its agents are another sort §tfuck.
·•
called.
One week before David and
"Our associates outproduced Gall were to be marrlt&gt;d In lat'e
t,he average agent by more than 1983, she was In Canada for the
thrl'l'-to-one. dolnj1; more than 23 opening of a new offici' when a
transactions last year compared seaplane In -which she was riding
to the national average per crashed. killing !ht&gt; p_llot and
full -time agent of seven a year ," gravely Injuring her and two
Llnlger said In an lntervl~w .
·
other passengers.
Their sec ret Is not a revolution Gall was In a coma and lri
ary Idea but had not been applied hospitals for more than a year
to the real estate Industry. with sevPre head lnjurlt&gt;s and
Traditionally, agents keep part brokt&gt;n bone's. Tht'Y werr ma't of their commission and the rest rled ·about a year alter thf.
goes to the brokerage thf'y work accident .
.
for. with th&lt;' owner pa,v lng most
•Gal~ who still must takr'
expenses.
tht&gt;rapy treatments . walks with
" Re-Max takes on only expe- the help of an electrical lmpul~
rienced real estat e agents, the device In her shoe.
'
highest producers In an area, and
"Shl' doC's not have as heavy !.
gives them all, or In areas where work s chedule as before but she
there are restrictions, nea rly all , Is tenacious and committed to th~
of the ir commissions, .. Llniger busl.n ess." David sald
·,
1
said. "They pay overhead and a
Thry both wePI' out oltheolflre
fl ., ed monthly management for about six months after the
fee, " which total s roughly accident and "We continued to
$12,000-$15,000 a year.
grow according to our plan," he
"Our people already know how
said, " testimony to !he ability of
our top officers," referring to two
minority partners.
'
"The firm ran rral fine without

Firm sells shares

Mar.

May

CLEVELAND tUPi i - The
Sherwin -Williams Co . has
reached an agreement to sell its
remaining Gray Drug and Drug
, Fair stores to the Rite Aid Corp.
of Shiremanstown, Pa. , SherwlnWilllatns announced Friday .
The sale wlll be lor between
$115 million and $120 million.
Sherwin· V,.'llllams said.
Rite Aid purchased about 100
stores In Florida and the Bait!·
more area from from Sherwin·
Wl~lam s In March. Another 350
stores are to be sold under the
latest transaction , SherwinWilliams said.
The deal, which Is subject to
government approval, Is ex pected to be completed In June.
Sherwin-Williams said .

•

US ."

1

They arc very much In chargp
now. Re-Max has offices In 46
states and 10 Canadian provlqres, with much of the growth
coming In the last fpw years . Next stop, sur.passlng CPntury
21' s 700,000 projX'rty t rans11c·
lions with nearly 100,000 agents.
"The bigger wt&gt; get th&lt;' easier It
is to grow ," Llni~f'r said.

'·

DOW .JONES AVE RAGE - The Dow .tones Average of 30
Industri als closed the week endln~ May I at 2280.40 lor a weekly
ehang&lt;' of up 45.03. (UPI)
pr•ri al Chemic&lt;1l cl imbed 711. .
end ing at 90.
As precious melals prices
skiddrcl, min ing stocks took a hit .
Su nshine Mining fe ll 1 to 7% on
vo tumr of 5. 7 million sha res and
:'&lt;rw monl Go ld I 11 6711 to 91%. &gt;'· 1
Slacks of J apa nese multl na·
lion~ is rose. Ma tsushl !a E lectric
clim bed 9\-\ to 113 34, Hond a
added 8\-1 to 90% a nd Hitachi
jum ped 5% lo 68' ~1 •
BI'Oad ma rket indexes rose.
Sta nd ard &amp; Poor' s 500-stock
ind Px climbed 6.51 -to 288. 0.1 and
the N~w York Stor k Exchange
co mpos it e Ind ex rose 3.27 to

162 .64'.

'

T he num ber of s hares changing hands on the New York Stock
Exchange during the week totaled 919,562,670, compared with
866.100.000 a week earlier and

with 692. 560.130 sha res traded
during the same week a year ago.
The Dow transportation Index
rose 2.98 to 916.45. The utility
index added 2.77 to 202.10.
P r ices were mixed In modera te tradin g on the American
Stock Exchange.
The America n StoekExchange
ma r ket valu e Index rose 3.37 to
325.17. Loser s led gainers 425-361
among the 929 Issues traded.
Volume was 62,737,445 shares,
compared with 66,902,680 last
week and 56,444 ,450 during the
s am e week a year ago.
Wang La bOratories class Bled
the Amex actives , rising 1 tol7%.
Hom e Shopping Network lol·
lowed, climbing 2 ~ to 16% .
Conquest Exploration was third,
uncha nged at 5%.

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 'til8 P.M .

d:
!I
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~----:;--~-----=--~~~~~~~~~~~~

SEA :
'
HOST FAMILY _

rTL
founders -look
.
toward dim future
'

By BOB BRILL
-, fA LM SPRINGS, Calif. iUPI)·
'&gt;:/ Disgraced PTL founder Jim
Ba kker, vo wing he never
S\l'apped wives , consorted with
fipmosex uals or patronized .pros. IIIUI~s . said Frid ay that ba r ring
1m1rac!e " we' ll ne ver min ister
'!!(• in."
Bakker and his wife Tamm y
c~ lled swel,ter in g reporters to the
~E ivew ay of the ir walled deser t
!Jlansion lor his first publi~
~P,pearance sin ce he resignf d
(Jiom his vast televis ion mini stry
tn,a sex scand al March 19.
, ,Their $1.6-mi!llon- a-year sa·
l_wy was cut off this week.
1 1 " Fina ncially, we'll not be a bl e
to survive probably six months at
(/le most, " he said, " but God is
~!;-vay s ta king care of us. I've
ryever ha d to ask for money for
mYSelf.
·
0 .,' 'We ~ope they will give us our
r,oyalt ies. We ha ve $8 million or
$_~. million out there we have
n~ve r received. " he said. " We
(.!on't know if we' ll receive that or
I

e

riQt. "

' Tammy, tear s strea ming down
l)er cheeks, sa id " I would love to
:.vork in ado ctor's off ice . We have
to, get a job and that' s wha t I've
·~ !wa ys want ed to'do . So if there '
are any doctors out there .. ."
1, "I'm writing a book and we'll
l,ell our part of the story quietly,"
!ill'kker said. " We hope al.l tqe
people we love so much will
forgive us .. . We just feel we don' t
want to be in a circus.
,·... I ha ve never been involved in
wife swapping," he sa id . " I 'm
not a homose xual and I 've never
been to a prostitute."
iHflakk er resig ned a ft er admit·
t19g that he ha d paid more than
- ~!\50 . 000 to keep quiet a onP.tlme
trysl with a chu rch secreta ry In a
!';lorida ho te l seven yea rs ago.
.I'

''
'By ESTHER PESSIN
' !NEW YORK I UP! I - Subway
gunman Bernhard Goetz came
face to face with one of hi s fou r
black victims in a dramatic
cOurtroom confront ation Frid ay
and heard the youth recall how
Mis · buddy cried, "Why did he
shoot me? Why did he shoot
me?" a s he fell to the floor of a
graffiti-sm eared subwa y.
It was the first m eetin g Jx-.
t\(.een Goetz and Troy Ca nt y, a
reformed crack addle!. s in ce the
s ~ooting Dec. 22, 1984 .
· Goetz, :r.J, con tends he gunned
down . the lour teenagers in
..self-defense after they s urtried to rob him.
previou sly had· been mugged
ltllree tim es.
He has been char ged with
jatten1ptr~d murder, ass ault .reckend angerment and crimin al
Jpc&gt;SSI!Sslon of a weapon and faces
much as 30 year s In jail.
Cant y, now 21. told a
loackE"' cour tr oom ' In s ta te Sulon&gt;me Court In Manh attan It wa s
six harmless words th at
lr lggered the shooting.
Canty testified that he and his
three co mpanions were on their
way downtown from the Bronx to
Manhattan to steal money from
1 vt-aeo games ma chines . He sa id
the lour had been roughhous in g,
but all' were seated when they
spotted the tall. bes pecta cled
Li:Jertrorlics specialis t get on t~e
-subway ca r. - ·
· He sa ld he went over to Goetz
with his hands empt y a nd at his
and asked him In a " r egula r " tone of voice , "Mister . can I

The chair, wlllllill n~lllllnl pall·
tlops. Is bound to Ill'&gt;~ you hDIIrl
of comfort, pe•ce.. and relua·
tlon.
··

lnft•rm,lt14tn call or 11op by today!

446-7213
I

Mother's Day is May 10!

Send her
the Antique ·
Frame
Bouquet.

tu it ion. books a nd ins truc tiona l
ma lei·ials.
Co urses in clude E ngli sh coin·
posit ion/ communica tion skills .
fu nda mentals of romm unlca ·
I ions, li stenin g a nd psyc hology of
ra rrcrs. Th e r lassr s will be
ta ught by a spec ial group of
facu lt _v selec ted for the ir proven
dedi ca tion to wor king with stu ·
dents on an ind iv idu al basis.

Stude nts who pa rt icipa te In the
11Et\ Program wil l be monitored
throughout the s umme r and will
be provided individu a l a nd group
counseli ng coo r·dinat ed through
the coll ege's counsl'llng c ~nt e r .
Upon compl cllon of the pro·
gram , stud ents will have ea rn ed
M ~OICAL

SERVI CE

Gallipolis Township Trustees and Clerk support the
proposed (0.5%1 Sales Tax increase. We beline
this is priority to all people. EMERGENCY MEDICAL
SERVICE can make a difference. Let's keep it
available to family and friends.
Gary T. Bane
Clyde Burnett
David Mckenzie
Paid for by These Individuals
Wayne Niday

blown-up photogra ph of the
youth , casually dressed and
leanin g aga inst a wall In his
a par tment building, s nee ring .
"I s this the Troy Ca nt y th at
a pp roached Mr. Goetz?" Slotnick asked .
Cimt y replied, " Yes."
Slotnick left the ph otogra ph on
a n easel In front of the jury
th r ough o ut . hi s c r o ssexamination.
Through o ut th e c r os sexamin ation, Ca nty answered
dozens of the defe nse attorney 's
ques tions by sayin g. " 1 don' t
remember .''
He said he did not remember
~elllng pollee Immediat ely fol·
lowin g the shootin gs that the four
you'ths had surrounded Goetz a nd
wanted to rob him .
Later, wh en a sked what he
thought of the youth's testim ony,
Goe l z j o k e d , "! d o n ' l

Hurry!

EMERG EN CY

EMERGENCY

MEDICAL

MEDICAL

SERVICE

Lovely flowers and a separate,
silver-plated picture frame. An
elegant antique design for Mom's
treasured photos. We can wire
anywhere in lhe. U.S. and Canada
through Teleflora. Or deliver it
anywhere in town.
'

'

Pomeroy
·Flower Shop
106 lullernut Ave.

....;....

Pomtroy, Ohio

992·2039

M

992-5721

SERVICE

'

re m emb~r. "

Cant y did admit he once beat
up a teacher and stole It ems
collec ted In a WOR ra dio st ation
lund -ra iser for needy childre n.
j-le was expected to continu e to
tes tify Monday . -

Marriage licenses
GALLIPOLIS- Gallla County
Proba te Court ha s granted m arriage licenses to E ugene J ohn son
Jr ., 32, R1. 2, Crown City, a nd
Ca rol Sue Sander s. 22, R1. 2,
Crown City, a nd to Timothy
Eugene Merry, 21. R1. 1, Thu r·
ma n. a nd Lisa Da rlene Burris,.
19, Apple Grove.

II

I

,• Clie&lt;k
..CUI!ll' i1111 toll
~~~ Cif!Ur,
· ~ ltSivthiC it

~&amp;u
•

_ ..,

II

1

Lll!'"!:":. .!'e'~'- - - -- --- - :"':- J

i,oJ &lt;/:&lt;~(~L
RUTLAND
TIRE SALES
Main St.
Rutland ; Oh .
PH. 742-3088
1

.Sf.o~iRE.O.I.~'$
EXCHANGE

204 North Atwood
Rio Grande, Oh.
PH. 24,5·5131

REDS BASEBALL

1·800-44·SHARE

Ef ··"-F

to bt tm A-.lam."

' 1

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

-~CAI3101

•

Brought to ·you by Metra 2S
on Channel 23 W.VAH

Clll flf Dlfllls • Don Utllt .
24 tlolrs · 1•524-2233 Ext 302
Give JOUr name, ... • and piMme number to one of 011r aperatars.
A'tGIISUitant will rtbn
caH •
•
.

or Clll toll·fNI

Bowman's Homacare
ST.

have $5?"
Goetz was standing s ix to seven
feet awa y from him, Canty said .
''You can all hav e it, " Ca nty
sa id Goelz replied.
Then, Goetz turned awa y from
him , unzipped his leather jacket,
turned back to Canty with a
sliver pis lolln his hand. As the ir
eyes met , Goetz pulled the
!rigger , Canty said.
"He fired. I grabbed my ches t
and I went to the floor ," he said .
" I heard a nother s hot.' I heard
two more afterward," Although
Cant y testified thai' four shots
were fired. there were actually
fi ve gun blasts.
" ! heard Darrell Cabey cry,
'Why did he shoot m e? Why did
he slioot me' " Canty said .
Cabey . . the most seriously
wounded of the four, Is paralyzed
bel ow the waist from a bullet th at
severed his spinal cord.
Canty , who spok e In a monotone , sta red at Goetz during the
tes tlmony before the four wom a n, eight -man jury. At one
point he left the witness stand to
act out bOth his own r ole and that
of Goetz.
Goetz smiled gr imly a s as
Ca nty s howed the jury wha t
happened on a diag ram of the
subway car.
'
Alter the shooting, he said
Goetz sa t down a few feet away,
mutterin g, "Gatta get ou tta
here ." before disa ppearing.,
.
At the start of cross examln a·
lion of Canty, who appeared
neatly dressed In a suit , defense
att orn ey Barry Slotnick drama tica lly s howed ju_rors a large

a tota l of 13 hour s of college
credit .
·
The appll ca tlon proc PSs will .
inc l~de the completion of the
a pplication for m and a $5 applica tion fee submitted to the
Admi ssions Offi ce .
For more informa tion. contact
the Adm i&lt;slons ()ffic~a t 24.1-5353.

sc hola r ship which w ill cover

EMERGENCY
MEDICAL ·
SERVICE

446-2319

clal burden aslt II ~lcare approvM.

!'IN(

we

RIO GRAND E - In a contlnuing effort to better serve the
needs of student s f rom the
f~u r-co unt )' commumty co\iege
d1s trort , l11o Gra nde Conege and
Commumty Coll ege rs a nno~ncing the beginni_ngo fthe Hio Ea rly
Action Progra m (R EA P I .
The progra m , funded by a
g ra nt fr·om the Loren M. Ber ry
Foun dation, is des ig ned to be·
neflt area hig h sc hoo l s tud ents In
m aki ng the 1no nsi tion fr,om high
school to co ll ege. 11 will assis t
student s ,. lo develop adequ ate
spea king an d wr iting skills.
deve lop · a hea lthy self- Image . .
-evaluate and clarify personal
a nd career goa ls, and develop
good study skills.
" This prog1·am will strengthen
acad em ic and in terpe rsonal
skill s In addition I ~ providin g the
stud ents an opportunity to exp.c·
l'lence higher edu cat ion." sa id
Dr. E dwa rd Sofranko, direc tor of
1he program .
Th is progra m offe rs and eight ·
week intensified a cademlr a nd
persona l skill s building expe·
rienc'e. sc hedu led from .June 22
through Aug. 14 . E ach student
· ~nr o ll ed 1vill at len d on a summer

USA KOCH

Tbe lift chair will aot be a llnu-

. 63

...

. ~omeo,wners in this eeneral area willlle given the opportunity of hning superior quality, in·
dtvtdual custom measured Jeplacement wmdows or insulated vinyl siding installed in their homes
for a very low cost These amazin1 products have captured the interest of homeowners throughout
our state who are fed up with hilh bellini .bills a{ld old worn out and drafty windows.
Both the insulated vinyl sidilll and the teplacement windows are custom measured and manufactured lor each specific home. EMilY loss is dJISiical~ reduced. Your home will be the show·
, place of your nei1hb_orhood and we·will malle it worth JOUr while if we can use your horne.

Call today :

The lilt chair comes In a varietY .
ollabrlcsalld-colon; maf!lllllla
stylish addltlon to any decor.

The charges of hol)'losexuallt y.
frequ enting pros titutes and con·
doning wife-swappin g among his
fo llowe rs were r aised last week
by the Rev. John Ankerberg to
· foresta ll a threatened return to
power by Bakker.
His s tatement F r iday indicated that he has discarded any
plans to wrest PTL back from the
Rev . Jerry Falwell, to whom he
turned it over when he resigned .
" Ou r future plans - we have ·'
no future. plans." Bakker sald.
" Rig ht now without a miracle of
God we'll never minister aga in
• but we don't know wha t the
future hold s, we really don 't .
That's in God's hands ."
Bakker's voice quavered with
' '
emotion at the outset but as the
tO-minute·appearance went on he
'I
a ppeared to gain control and
even joked a bit.
"We just wanted to say hello,"
Bakker said . "We just wanted to
EMOTIONAL MOMENT - PTL founder Jim Bakker hung his
s ay hi, we're here, we 're alive .
head
and his wile, Tammy, burst Into tears Friday at a press
Not well. maybe , but al ive."
conference
at the Bakker mans ion In Palm Springs, Calif. (U PI)
" One thing we've found out,
.Jim and I, we haven't sweat ed
secre tary and the las t rema in ing pea red to ra m ble.
drops of blood ye~ " Tammy said . · Ba kker loyalist on the PTL
" l ha ven't been home t to
"Well, we've almost," Bakker
Her itage USt\ 1 since I had
boar d, had resigned .
said with a laugh.
Wat t did not attend the board pnu emonia . We le ft four months
Ba ck at Heritage USA, PTL
meeting Tuesday at whi ch Fa l· ago, " she wailed. " I had pnuem o·
bO ard member J erry Nlm s
well ou sted Bakker 's right -hand nia an d I hav e n't walked in to mv
pra ised Bakker' s stat ement.
man, the -Rev. Ri cha rd Dor tch, house a nd not seen my pu pple's
"Per sona lly, I appreciate what
and c ut off the Ba kkers' salaries and kit tens and dear fr iend s that
he had to say and the m anner and
and tru st fund pa yment s to we love so much,,. she said .
s tyle In which he said it. It hought
" 1 feel th at god has forgive n
Jessica Hahn , th e secretary wlt b
it wa s a very good presentation whom Bakker da lli ed.
me of so much that I wi ll forg ive
from his standpoint, a nd had no
" I think J ames Wa tt had to do ever yone who ha s hur t us,"
ho~ til e feelin g against a nyon e ...
what he thought was necessa ry Bakker sa id. " We just wa nt
Regardin g the Bakkers' fina n- for him lo do." Nims sa id. " We' ll everyone to begin to love one
cial plight , Nlms said , "Let me consider replac ing him at the a nother and tha t the C' hurch
put it this way. We' ll just do It by
wor ld will love one another a nd
next bOard meeting."
the numbers. Wha tever con·
At limes during the Ba kk ers' th at the people of god wil l not
.
tract s we have .in writ ing we will
10-mlnute a ppeara nce Tamm y. fight. ..
honor."
"Our go al is Ihal Her it age USt\
who has been und ergoing Irea I.
Ma rk DeMoss, a spokesm an ment for a long-s tandin g ad dle· will go on. T hat the wor k
ha ve
for F alwell , also announ ced tha t tion lo prescr iption drugs , ap· pioneered wil l go on and lila! the
•
J ames Watt, the former Int er ior
people of God will be bless ed a nd
we jus! love everybody."

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS OR
IN$UUTED VINYL SIDING·

Your local EF Foundation Area Repre·
sentative is interviewing prospective
families now. Host families are able to
choose the student best suited for their
hontr.'
'

needed to stand uprtrbt.

transition program

WANTED
DISPLAY HOMES FOR EITHER

Discover another culture without leaving
home. Share your country in a fun and
fascinating way. And gain a special
friend for life.

A lilt chair ls desltned to live
you confidence and freedom. An
easy to use control brlnl lbe ·
whole cbalr up, tlvlnr you tile
additional support and liability

• •

' I'

A select group of English-speaking
teenagers from Europe, Asia, and Latin
America will arrive in the U.S. this
August • each one looking forward to
living with an American family for a
· high school year.

Stand With Confidence

.

,So-called vigilante confronts
$hooting victim in courtroom

YOU could H ont of tlttst jamilits!

!

I

Frlda~'s Close:.

30 Industrials
May 1, 1987

'

The num ber of worker who
DETRO IT tUP i l - Genera l
Ml&gt;tors Corp. sa id Frid ay tha 1 will be jobless as a result has not
May 22 w il l be the fin al date of yet been determ ined. "Ou r hope
is to !Ind jobs for everybody," he
ope.r·atlons at It s Pontiac Cent ra l
Found r y p la nt in Pontiae, ,M lch ..
said .
T he gia nt aut om aker curre ntly
whi ch e mploys_l,650 workers .
about 37,000 U.S. workers on
has
In Apr il 198!&gt; GM sa id II wou ld
i cease opera tions a t the pla nt. Indefinite layo/'r . ·
: which m a kes cast Iron engine , GM has said It will close other
• blocks a nd cylinde r heads . At ' foundr ies. Last Augus t It sa id it
would cea se operations at its
: that time the 'a ut om aker did not
nod
ula r Iron foun dry In Sagi naw
i give a fin al date.
a
t
the
end of August1 988. At that
t
"The last pouring wlll be May
time the plant employed abOut
22. but tt wIll take a while to clean
1.750 ho uo·\y' a nd s a lar ie d
• up oP,.ra tlons the r e." company
! spokes ma n David Li ppert said. workers, but because of production cutbacks. the play now only
; About 1.500 hou r ly a nd 150
about 1,300 worker s.
• sa lar ied wor kers will be a ffected
GM a lso stUd In August It wou ld
; by the closing. Mos t workers will
end
die-cast and perm anent·
t have a cha nce to transfer GM
mold
opera tions at It s a luminum
' foundries In Defian ce, OhiO, or
foundry
In Massena . N,Y. to
. Saginaw, Mich . Others may opt
on making cas tings_
concentrate
: to transfer Into other GM operausing a new " lost foa m " prpcess.
tions, Lippert sai d.
•
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the Farmers Bank whlchopenedlorltsflrstdayol
business Friday, previously having been the
Tuppers Plains Branch .o !Bank One, Athens, N.A.
Karschnlk will serve as manager of the new
ollice.

made to th e Tuppers . Pla ins taln 'Wednesday afternoon office
bu ilding in the near future. The hours . It . previously has been
ex it of the dri ve- th r u will be closed on Wednesday afternoons.
widened a nd a ca nopy insta lled Pho ne numbers will remain the
at that side of Ihe building.
sam e.
The lobby will be open from 9 . Employees In addition to
a.m. to 3 p.m. Monda y th roug h Karschnlk Include Mary Grover\
F riday and from 9 to noon on a ssistant manager: Sheila Rach
Sa tu rday. T he drlve- thru w.lll be a nd Jill Dixon with Betsy flawQpen from 8:30 a. m . to 3 p.m . thorne and Paul Reed to work at
Mond ay th rough Thursday, fro m both the Pomeroy operation of
8:30 a. m. to 6 p.m . on F r iday and . Farmers Bank and the Tuppers
·
from 8: :to a. m. to noon on Pla ins oper ation .
Sa turday. The bank will ma in-

:GM to close Mich. foundry

.

t

,

now maJor

~opens

.

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3. 1987

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Farm

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Page-D-4 ;

May
3. 1987:
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MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallla Soil and Water
ConS&lt;·rvatlon District. is located somewh&lt;•r&lt;• in
Gallla County . Individuals wishing to partlcipal!'
in the we&lt;•kly contest may do so h.v guessing the
farm's owner .•Just mail, or drop off your guess to
the the Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomt•roy,
Ohio, 45769 or the Gallipolis Trlhune, K25 Third
Avt·., (ialllpolis, Ohio, 45G:!l, and you may win a$5

cash
Leave your name, address and telephone numb!•r
with your card or letter. No. telephone calls will he
anrpted. 1\11 co nlesl entries should be turned in to
the news paper office hy 4 p.m. ellch Wednesday.
In ca."' of a tic, the winner will he chosen hy
loltt•ry. Next w,&lt;•ek, a Meigs Cou nty farm will he
..featured by the Meigs Soil and Water Conserva·
lion District.
·

Farm

Flashe.~

of .fiber and building materials '
we all need to be reminited ofth~:
serious loss that could result:
frqm damage to our basic nafu -(
ra f resources - soU, water and'
air," said Baughman.
.
r
. Since 1955 the Nationa l Assoc i-'
ation of Conservation Districts!
h~s sponsored SOil and Water'
Stewardship w·eek. ·in cooperiJ.:
lion with nearly 3,000 conserva.:·
lion district, as one way to'
emphasize the Importance of!
good stewardship of basic soil'
and water resources.
:
. Materials especially designed;
to carry the 1987 theme of "Help,!
Hope, and Healing" are b!'lng
distributed by the Gallia SWCD 1
and may . be obtained by calling!
or visiting the district' offiee!
during business h ou r~ at 529:
Jackson Pike Room 308-C or'
446-8687.
'
:

Insects will invade area
with arrival of warm ·weather

•

.

or.

bf:

~pring

activities picking up

Time for treatment

We're the
in the
Tri-County area for ....

SNELL

~

'

;fishing derby
set next weekend
' REEDSVILLE - Forked
:•R)!n State Patk thi rd annual
,fish ing derby will be held
Saturday, May 9, 8 a.m. to 2
·,p.m. Open io ail ages. Prizes
•to be awarded.
r·

~Jlof!sters plan

pld uniform sale

Softliall tourney
·set
May 15-16
,,

Ohio resid~nts still have lots
of work to do in soil consenration

corner

, ! RUTLAND- Meigs County
,Hor.sesboe Club Is sponsoring
"~ . six-man card tournament
,May 9-10. $8 entry fee. Contact
}eff Tillis . , 742 -224 3, for
information.

'

her male descendan ts. This was cia list. has announced-his retire-~
By Edward M. Vollborn
Co unty Exlension Agent
accomplished by mal) ng male ment as of July I . He has been'
Agriculture
budworms wit h fem ales of a Involved in many G~llla County;
related.
harmless insect. The Dairy Programs over the pas t1
GALLIPOLIS - Now is the
time to be watching for lnfesta · result ing hybrid produces not several years. He ha s been!
tio ns of pine Sawfly. Last year's on ly ster ile sons. but fema le respected as the leading dairy~
needles on the termina l shoots of descendants that co ntin ually nutritionist in Ohio. Presently,:
there is no provlsion to fill !haP
pines are usually the first to be pass on the male sterilitv trait .·
spot.
'
eaten. The young larvae of
There are several opportu ni The loca l ASC Office has:
European Pine Sawfly usuall y ties to demonstrate practice
a
nnounced
a sign-up period fo~
That
goal
of
CRP
nationally
is
be planted with permanen t ve- operate In clustprs. They may changr in tobaceo production
By Robert K. Kissler
the
ACP
practice.
You . should~
to
retire
40-45
million
acres
of
select a few trees to work on or I his summer. Our sta te office has
getative cover.
Public Info. Officer
cont
act
them
for
a
complete
list
highly erodible cropland by 1990.
and
Participan ts receive co st· co nce ntrate on the whole plant· made a few do llars ava ilable for
of
conse
rv
ation
practices,
but
the,
SCS officia ls say If that goal Is share payments of up to 50 · lng. Sawfly larvae ca n b!' found tobacco demonstrations In Galli a
Michael R. Ouhl
most
commo
n
will
be
ta
tI
met. approxima tely 825 million percent of the cost of establishing In both landscape and comm!'r· Cou nty. Some of the Ideas being
District Conservationist
ton s of soil wil l be saved each trees or grass on the acre3ge cial Christmas tree plantings. considered are: Ridomil for summer forage seedings. SignPOMEROY - Red uced ero·
year.
slon Is saving 209 million tons of
·placed in the program . The Pesticides such as Malathion. Black Shank control: Furadan up will end on May 15, 1987. ThJ
"The
avNagt•
annual
erosion
soil annual ly on the Initial 8.2
average cost-share amoun t to be Sevin , and Orthene are usually for sys temic insec t control and cost share level Is 60",; for!
rate on the 8.2 million· acres paid by USDA Is $37.51 per acre, the prod ucts used for control. ·
use of rai sed beds or· ridge prectices qualifying and ap.'
million acres of land enrolled In
plantings. Ridges could be pre- proved . Soil tests need to be sen~
1986 In the -United Sta tes Depart - c~ nlracted under CRP in 1986 , These payments partially reim·
Wi ll drop from 27.3 to 1.9tons per burse farmers for the one-time
pared by mod ified cultiva tors or almost Immediately to assu re~
More for the home owner!
ment of Agriculture's Conserva ·
,
acr0.s
when
In
perma
ne
nt
special
"Bedd!&gt;r" implements. If amp le turn-around time.
cost of es tablishing required Mowing Is a vit al part of
lion Reserve Program ICRPJ.
"Biadex".
a
com
monly
used'
cover."
Sca
ling
said
.
you
would
like
to
take
part
in
one
conservation practices on the maint a in ing an attractive lawn .
said Wilson Scaling, Chief of
"Our Information shows th at cropland.
Dr . John Street , Exte nsion of these demonstratio ns on a . corn herbicide was recently put:
USDA's Soi l ConsNV&lt;llion SerUSDA
is
enrolling
land
with
a
Farmers also receive annua l Agronomist. offers some pain· small part of your tobacco field. on the "restricted" list. Local•
vice iSCS).
in Ohio. four signup periods. very high erosion rate. that Is the rent al payment s for reti ring ters In basic law n care. Sharpen please call the Extension Office . fa rmers have used Blad!'x when}
intention." Scaling sa id . "Gener- their land through 10 yea r the mower blade. A dull blade (446-70071. We arr still opm on they wanted to limit the trlazl n
three In 1986 and one In 1987, have
a
ll y, the stales with the highest co ntracts. The average rental tears the grass and causes a things to trv . so wr WE' Icome your carryover effect. Farmers not 1
brought nearly 115,000 acres Into
· ' "certlfJpd" may have trouble,
number
of acres enrolled in the rat e paid to participant s in 1986 browning tip. Mow at a proper suggestions.
lht• CRP. Es tim ated soli savings
program
."
The Southern Ohio Sheep and purchasing Bladex. Aother op-•
was $45.53.
height. Mow bluegrass at 1\12-2
Is just over 2.:! mi llion tons per
Farmers from 44 states a nd
The next CRP signup will be inches In the spring and fall and Wool Festi va l is sched ul ed fo r tion to consider would b!' Ext ra-:
year.
, "We still hav!' some work to Puerto Rico are participating in July 20-31, at the count y Agricu l- 2-2'h Inches during the summer. . Saturday. June 13, from 9:00 zlne 4 L. Ex trazine is made up
Mow as often as needed. Never a.m.· 4:00 p.m . at the Hocking Bladex and Atrazlne in a 2 : I'
do." says Harry W. Oncth, slate CRP with Texas and Colorado tural Stabiliza tio n and Co nservathe
larges
t
number
of
having
lion
Service
Office.
remove more than half the grass Co un ty Fa irgrounds in Logan. ratio. Accord ing to an official:
conservationist in Ohio for the
acres
contracted
through
1986.
For more Information on the blade at any one mowing. Change Ohio. Ent ries arr due by June I. from the Ohio Department
SCS. Oneth points out that Ohio
La nd enro lled in CRP is program here In Meigs County mowing direction regularl y. Call for an en try form or Agriculture, the Regulatory\
has about l.4 million cropla nd
Agency. Extrazlnr is not res-\
ineligib le for cropping and must conta ct the Meigs Soil and Water Mow grass when It Is dry. sc hedule of activities.
acres eligible under the CRP.
Thr Cooperativ~ Extension tricte"d this season. I have not
Conse rvation ·District Office at Removing clippings will mea n
992-6647 or the Meigs County morr nitrogen is needed to Service is ,s tarling to go through a co mpared the cos t. but Extrazln 1
·Meig~
Agent:~
period of timrwh0rea lot of staff may be a way to by-pass the,
ASCS Office at 992-6646.
produce greeness and density .
will b!' r&lt;'liring. Dr. John Sta~­ Bladex res triction. So goes tbe:
bus. Stair Extension Dairy Spr- regulatory red tape!
I.. A total of 50 graded bulls were
GALLIPOLIS _ Now Is the sold at the April25 Southern Ohio
time
to complete vegetative G~aded Bull Sa le. Average sale
By ,fohn C. Ri ce
the key to farm ing today . Don't
treat
ment
of Multiflora Rose. if pnce was $1293.50, Price range
Cou nty Extension Agent
abusr your pastures n'ow and
you
are
participating
In the was $750-$2200. Six Limousi n
Agrh:ullure
slash thei r production during the
TILLERS AND
1986-87
cost
shar
e
program
. bulls lead the breed average at
'ATIACHMENTS
POMEROY - Graded Bull
rest of 1987.
Treat
ment
should
be
done
be·
$1870.
The
majority
of
the
bulls
Sale - Guernsey Coun ty Fair·
Dande!ions- A drift of golden
were 2 and 3 years old weighing
grounds, Saturday, May 2. Sale dandelions in your lawn may not tween now and the end of May.
To
ass
ist
landowners
in
the
over
1500 pounds. Approximately
star·ts all p.m. Thrsa le fcaturrs insplrr poetic though ts. Even a
treatment'
progra
m
a
60
gallon
one
fourth
of the bulls sold at or
19 A n~us, 1 Charolals. 1 Chlanla,
den se, healt hy stand of grasssprayer
will
be
available
to
use
very
near
their
slaughter value.
19 Pol led Herforcls. and 2 thr ~est form of weed control May
18-29.
The
sprayer
ha
s
a
SO
Some
of
the
top
bulls of the sale
Simmcntal.
ca n bt• lnvadrd bv these pretty .
Wild Turk&lt;•y Festival- McAr- but prsky weeds. You may ner d fool hose a nd can be transported came to Ga lli a County :
For a limited time, this wrap·around bumper (retail value $59.00)
The tobacco budworm has
thur, ~' rida y and Saturday. Ma y to use a postcmcrgrn t hr~bicldr on a wagon or In the back of a
IS yours FREE with the·purchase of a BCS Model 205 tiller. Now
Includi
ng
truck
.
caused
many
problems
1 and 2. Starts at noon on Friday
to get rid of th em.
you can protect your BCS lractor lrom lrees large rocks and other
Bookings need to be mad e by deve loping resistance to pestlwith loca l and regiona l arts and
Spring Is thr brst time to lhose wishing to use the sprayer c1des. A new U.S.D.A . break·
obstructions with ~hi~ new heavy duty bum~r. The new .wrap.
crafts booths and ex hibits. The control dandelions and othrr
around bumper: Jt s 117 ounces ol prevention" - at no extra cost.
firs t photography and art . sl1ow
broadlea f weeds such as plantain by calling the Ga llia SWCD through ca uses the female to· ·
Office
at
446·8687
.
bacco
budworm
to
sterilize
all
wi ll be j udged on Fridav and clovN. Pos t emergent cheminftPrnoon .
·
ca ls Il l'&lt;' most effective when
An t•vrnin g of stage rn t0rtal n- weeds arc actively growing,
.,d'a tt~t,
dea~r
mcn t begins on Fritlay at 5:30 Makr spring app lications from
jJ.m. with the lora I srnior ci tizens mid -April through &lt;'arl)• June.
kltchrn band. fol lowed bv Don't apply broadleaf weed
"Marko the Magic Clown." The control herbicides during July
PAlM StJft[t
local Wf':o;tC'rn ~ quarr dancl' rl ub,
and August . W,rrds arr not easily
'l&gt;GAlL~GIIER
the Ba ck-Up Stars. will give an
killed then , and law ns are more
,, ,,
(retail valu!t $59.00)
exhibition of I heir style of squ are likrl y to be damaged or
dancin g.
with the purchase of
discolored .
Salul'day's rvcnts will gpt
The che:nlcal s will kill only
a BCS Model 205 tiller
Model205
underwa,v at 10: 00 a.m . with
thosr W('eds prrsc nl at lh&lt;" tlmr
Shown
mu ~ic throughout th e day and
the hl'rbi cide Is applied . They do
evening featuring bluegrass. not prevent weed seeds from
country. and gospel. Also on germin ating and Infecti ng the
Saturda.v afternoon will br Barn- l"w n Inter. In a poor lawn. two
yard Olym pies Igu ITI&lt;'S and nct lv- a pplications PN v('ar mav b!'
needrd .
·
·
ltlcsl for the ki(l s 11 1 1:00 p.m.:
the Turkr.v C;~ IIi ng Contest and
The broadlt•nf weed control
the parade through the down - chem ica ls available to hO·
town streets at 6:00p.m.
meowners Include 2-4- D MCPP
Spring Cautions For Good
(mecopropl and dlcamba . These
Grazing and Beller p,lsture matC'r!als arC' safe to usC' on
Mana!(cmrnl - .John Under- Krntuck:v bluegrass. perennial
\"Ood. District Agronomist. has ry!'grass. tal l fescue and ftrie
these tips or suggestions:
fcscur lawns when properly
: Constant. close grazing wr&lt;lk· appl ied . You ra n,g&lt;'l good co ntrol
ens our cool srason grass&lt;'s and with Nthrr liquid or granu lar
VERSATILrry. h's the best way to describe the BC_S Model 205.
our pasture lrgumes. such as formulatio ns. The granular for·
Not only IS~ The Toughest Tiller on Earth" but~ easily converts to
Ladlno ClovN . to thr poi nt where mutations are oft en combined
a
sickle bar mower. a 22' rotary mower, a plow and a snow
seasonal producti vity ca n be with a fer til ter.
thrower.
Smoo4h-handling and lighlweighl. per1ect for home
rrduced by fift y percrnt or more.
Follow lab!'l directions caregardeners,
the BCS Model 205 leatures:
Wallin April until I herr Is four to fully when applyi ng weN! control
~lx Inches of growth before
chemicals. Don't apply these
• heavy duty clutch
• 5 HP heavy-duty engine
placing animals in your pas· materials If rai n is expected
• dlrect.drive, all gear
• all controls on handlebars
'
fures. Feecl them hay elsewhere within 24 hours. Don't mow or
transmission (no belts, no
• 18" wide. ,. to 8" deep rear tine
until this occurs.
water the lawn for at least 24
chains, no slippage)
tiller
Too rarly grazi ng Is harmful hours after app lying either gran• 21orward speeds, 1 rev~ ,
Siner grasses must drvelop al· ular or liquid products. Granular •
most a co mplet ~ new I'OOt system herbicides will work b!'tter If
See your BCS dealer today to find out how eaSy ~ is to own "The
each season. If thr top Is never applied to grass that Is moist with
Toughesl Tillar on Earlh".
allowed to grow. the roots will be morning dew. rai n or Irrigation.
starved and weakened so Ihat top The granules will adhere to the
growth Is almost Impossible. wet grass leaves. '
Forages develop top growt h at
Tak~ special carP when apply·
&amp;
, the expense of root ~rowt h . lng these materials near trees.
, Properly fertilized pastures, If shrubS, flowers 01' Vt'getable
240 Upper linr Road
Gallipolis, OH.
•allowed to make adequa te early gardens. If using dlcamba, do not
446-1044 .
:growth. will be productive the apply It within the drlpllne of
' rest of the season. especially If trees or shrubs. - From John
rotationally grazed . Efficiency Is Street ,-Lawn Specialist , OSU.

County

"Horseshoe Club's
tourn,ey slated

'

•

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Trophies is sponsoring. a
Mens' Class D. A.S.A. sa nctl'oned $Oft ball tourney Memor·
•Jill Weekend, May 23·25. Entry
· fee $65 'and two softballs. For
'more ln'formation ca ll 992·
2754. Ask for Bill.

: :Mo~hers

Day fete
::~lated May 10
'' TUP'PERS PLAINS
ra nge Township Volunteer
"Fire Department will hold Its
'~nnual Mothers' Day Chicken
~nd Rib BBQ Dinner on
' sunday, May 10. at the
firehouse lri '!'uppers Plains.
Serving will begin at .II a.m.
~os t per dinner will be $3.75
\vhich Included a half chicken
,o.r ri bs, baked beans. cole
Elaw. rolland beverage. Pie or
1aa ke for $.50.

FREE

SHADE - Shade United
Methodist Church will b!' In
revival Friday 'through Sun·
day at 7:30 nightly. Evangelist
will b!' Rev. Charles Norris.
jSpeclal singing to b!' featured .

'

Third Sycamore
Gallipolis, 01\io
446-2985

I

'

SHINNS TRACTOR SALES

'
Walsh, superlntndent of the High·
bankers, finance rompailles and
way Patrol. rlatm that If the limit retailers. ·
( is ·raised, speeds will only edge
Senate. President Paul E. Gil·
' higher despite enforcement lmor, R-Port Clinton; predicted
elforfs.
·
the bill would be returned to the
William M. Denlhan, directo~ Financial Institutions and Insuof Jilghway safety. and Col. Jack ranee C~mmlttee until the prob·
Hobson'sblllalsolncreasesthe lem is Ironed out.
fines. for exc~sslve speeding and , The main part oft he legislation
r~u1res . a .s,tx-month license , Is -aimed at correcting the regulasuspension for anyone convicted lion o.l savings and loan associa·
of exceeding 70 mph twlcewlt hln rtons from lax enforcement In
one year.
1985 and has the blessing of the
The House does not reconvene ' . Celest~ administration, financial
until 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, but instltu11ons and lawmakers from
the Senate retu rns at the same both parties.
hour Tuesday to face unfinished
Meanwhile the House, which
business from last week.
passed a similar billlastWednes·
AI that point, Wednesday. day, will .conrtnue subcommittee
senators were unable to move on work Wednesday morning on a
' a savings and loan regulatory bill series of , bills providing for
,which also freezes the Interest esta blishment of maximum In· ·
ceiling on small loans, credit terest rates on credit cards and
cards and cha rge accounts at 25 revolving charge accounts.
percent.
The Senate Finance Commit·
Sponsors needed a .two-thirds tee will continue budget hearings·
. · majority to give the bill emer· Monday evening with testimony
gency status and were unable to from · the Ohio Department of
get It, chiefly because of opposl· Natural Resources. the Ohio
lion to the Interes t provision Consumers' Counsel, the Ohio
inserted at th e request of the Department of Taxation and the
Ohio Department of Agriculture.

, jProgram set
: !at DAR meeting
RACINE - Return Jona·
'than Meigs Chapter of the
aught ers of the American
evolution will meet 1:.30 p.m.
rlday In the social room of
he Racine United Methodist
:church.
The program. "Meigs
County and Its one.-room
!School houses helped establish
~~ opportunity for a group of
f.ltlzens of the United States of
;America." will b!' presented
Mrs. Glenn Dill.

~

l

h p la ns
t;!lorhurcrevival
I

'

1'

:: CHESTER - Chester
1&lt;;:hurch of the Nazarene will be
jIll revival Tuesday through
1$unday with Evangelist Noran Taylor of Evans. W.Va.
, pedal singing will be lea·
red at the 7 p.m. nightly

t

.•1-'"----------..L
~rvlces .

'
•

DII\MOND RING WINNER - Donna Glbh!l. Racine, wu the
winner of a quarter carat diiUllond cluster ring In UK while gold
given awlly by Clark's Jewelry In Pomeroy liS a pari ollls Sl'Venlh
annlvel'l!ary. Susan Clark. left, made I he presentation lo Mrs.
Gibbs. Winner of a similar ring al Clark's Gallipolis store ·was
Nancy Buck of Glllllpolls.

Mine safety unit plans to develop new regulations
By CHRIS CHRYSTI\L
WASHINGTON !UPI) - The
Mine Safety and Health Admlnls·
!ra tion, prodded by a Sena te
panel examining Utah's Wllb!'rg
mine disaster that killed 27
people. agreed Friday to develop
new safety regulations over the
next four months.
Sen. Orrin Hatch. R-Utah. who
gave the Labor Department a
May 1 deadline to produce
timetables for Iss uing the new
rules, said he is troubled by
Indica tions of more widespread
coal mine safety violations.
A ' Senate Labor Committee
heari ng earlier this week on
safet:v problems at the Utah mine
showed "Wilberg wasn't the only
mine that had difficulties .. . there
may be other mines that are not
bei ng operated as safely as they
should. " Hatch sat d.
Hatch said the MSHA " has not

done the job with regard to
resolving the problems across
District 9," which Includes all
western coal mining slates.
"The danger Is neve( going to
b!' taken out of mining completely. but we ought to do
everything we can to make It as
safe as we can," Hatch told a
news conference.
Hatch said he was satisfied
with the tlmetabl~ for the new
regulations, whlrh .he had dl·
reeled 1\lan McMillan. the deputy assista nt Labor secretary, to
produce.
" I hope we'll be able to have
safer mines ... and still produce
coal in a reasonably Inexpensive
and compelitt,ve fashion ," Hatch
said. "'These aredefinateronces·
slons' by the MSHA and deflnat e
lmpostt Ions on mining."
The rules will relate to self·
rescue devices and seven lop
priority recommendations a n

MSHA task Ioree Issued in June mines, " he said.
By August the MSHA will
1985.
propose
longwall mine require· McMillan notified Hatch that
an emergency temporary stand· ments dealing with ventilation.
ard requiring " hands-on" train· environmental monitoring sys·
lng for miners using sell-rescue terns In th&lt;' rsrapeways and
breat hing devices. and a policy entries, and fire resistent strucfor storing the apparatus. wut be tural ma\er lals.
An advisory com mitt ee
Issued this month and apply to all
formed
to rec·ommend standard s
mines.
for
diesel
equipment In under·
The training requirement will
serve as a proposed rule un III ground mines will take up tht'
final rules are Issued In nine Issue In 90-120 says, McMillan
said.
months. McMillan said.
" I have made clear to tht&gt;
Regulations on safe travelways under supported roofs .secretary of Labor that I do not
through mine tailgates will be want these regulations to slip
developed by July and the MSHA b!'tween the crac ks ... a tradit ion
will decide by the end of August at the MSHA," Hatch said.
Hatch said he will ask congres·
whether to extend the regula·
tlons to all mines or apply them sional auditors to Investigate
only to two-entry mines. Hatch mine safely regulation back to
198.1. the yea r b!'fore the Wilberg·
said.
"I don't see any reason why disaster, Dec . 19, 1984.
If a General AccounllnR Offlc&lt;'
they shouldn't keep Jtallgatesl
Investigation
Indicates serious
open on three or more entry

problems , the Labor Committee
will take up thr Issue, Hatc)uald,
adding. "l hope the re!(ulatlons
will solve the problems."
The Wilberg mine, operated by
Emery Mining Co. for Utah
Power and l.lght Co., became a
death trap when an overheated
air compressor caught lire.
spreading smoke and fumes Into
the mine through an air Intake
and closing off the only two
escape routes.
A third escape In a caved·ln
tailgate area had been closed. •
1;1!1\C~ .s~ ld union members are
not pleased "even • wit~ . ~W~
concessions." but he believes the
MSHA Is "making a legitimate
effort. "
'rhe purpose of the regulations ..
Hatch sa id, "Is to Ret thesemtnes
as sa fe as we ca n get · them
without shutting them down and
taking away jobs. These mines
ca n be made safe."

Federal judge delays decision --Ohio Briefs:-Jury issues murder conviction
relating to Glenn's civil trial
COhUMBUS tUPii -A U.S.
District Court judge has post poned his decision on whether the
chairman of t he Federal Election
Comml ~s lon must testify at Sen.
John Glenn's civil tria l beginning
next week.
. Judge Joseph Klnneary had
said he would announce his
drclslon Friday. However. a
Glenn spokeswoman said no
decision was announced.
"We have bern waiting for that
word all day and it has not
come." Carolyn Arnold said late
Friday.
There was no word from the
court as to why Klnneary did not
announce a decision.
The FEC has accused Gle nn,
D-Ohlo. of violating campaign
finance laws during this 1984 bid
for the Democratic presidential
nomination .

S!iOO.OOO apiece from BancOhlo
Na tional Rank, Bank One and
Huntington National Bank. all of
Columbus. and Amerltrust of
Cleveland.
The banks did not demand or
receive enough collateral for th e
loans to provide a reasonable
assurance that the loans would
be repaid. the com missio n said.
Atlorneys for the defendant s
say the commission acted un·
fairly In choosing to prosecute
case.''
Glenn ' s ca mpaign ~o mmlttee. only Glenn from among other
cam paign chairman William presidential candidates who
White and four Ohio banks are have used similar ca mpai gn
also defendants In the case, finlmi:e methods.
The lawyers say they want to
which Is scheduled to be tried
tion 1\lkens to determine
ques
Wednedsay b!'fore Judge Joseph
how the commission settled on
Klnneary.
The commission says Glenn · Glenn as Its target. .
Noble said the decision to
accepted what amounted to llle·
gal contributions when his com· prosecute Glenn was a matier of
mlttee .arranRed for lo~ n s of prosecutorlal discretion that
should not be questioned.

During a pre-trial hearing
Thursday. lawyers representlnl(
th e commission ~ld allow_lng
Glenn's attorney's to question
elect ion commission Chairman
Joan Aiken would set a dangerous precedent.
John Noble, the commission's
general counsel. said the ramlfl·
cations of lelllng the attorneys
question Aiken "would be far·
reaching and far beyond this

'

1 MIDDLEPORT - Middle·
port Eva ngeline Chapter 172.
Order of Eastern Star. will
ihold It s regular meet lng 7:30
;p.m. Thursday. , Deputy Grand Matron
Linda Davis will attend and
:25-year pins will be presented .
•Mrmb!'rs are asked t'o bring a
· ~covered dish for refresh ·
:ments. Officers practIce will
;b!' 4 p.m. Sunday. Inspection
.practice w111 b!' 7:30p.m. on
, ;May 13.

If you !'love not tried Kent
Products you don't know.
what you are missing.
Kent guarantees quality and performa.nce.
Stop and ask - we will furnish you a list of
our satisfied customers.

If you want more pound!. of milk, more
pounds of beef, more pounds of pork and top
quality lambs try the Kent Feeding system.

By LEE LEONA.RD
UP I Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate High\llays. Transporta lion and Local Government
Commillee will open hearings
(hls week on legislation raising
Ohio's speed limit to 65 mph on
freeways outside city limits .
The initial .presentation Is
sc heduled for Tuesday afternoon. and Sen. Theodore M.
Gray, R ·C ol~mbus, committee
chairman. said a lull set r1f
hearings will be held to deter·
mine the bill's late.
Sen. David L. Hobson, R·
: Springfield," the chief sponsor.
pointed out that Congress has
authorized the states to raise the
55 mph lfm u on rural intersta te
highways, and that It only makes
se nse b!'cause motoris ts already
are traveling over 60.
But the admiqistratlon of Gov.
Rl~hard F. Celeste. led by the
Ohw Department of Highway
Safety and the Ohio Highwa y
Patrol. is firmly opposed , sayin g
the lower Umit ~a.s grea tly
reduced traffic fa ta lities.

1

.!OES·chapter
,meets Thursday

Snell Gallagher is the original high tensile
fencing company. We service and" guo·
rantee the Snell Gallagher system. There
are several imitations, but only one Snell
Gallagher is the real fence.

to raise state's speed limit

;Trophy shop plans
'for tournament

jRevival begins
on this Friday

HIGH TENSILE
FENCING ...

'

.. ' RACINE - Southern High
• School Athlet ic Department is
•spons9rl ng at independent
softball tournament May 15·
'16. Sponsor trophies will be
.oawarded for the first three
finishers.
'. Individual trophies for first
.-and second place. Entry fee
-· $65 and two soft balls or$75a nd
no softballs. If interested,
.contact Howie Caldwell at
&gt;Southern High , School, 949·
r~611 , or evenin gs at home,
J949·2954,
'

EXTRA PROTECTION ·
NO EXTRA COST

WRAP-AROUND
BUMPER

Legislators .to consider -bill .

"·in Brief:·

1. MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
J unior and Senior High School
Ba nd Boosters will be selling
old uniforms , $25 each. at
MiddleJl!)"rt Park on Friday
and Saturday.·

t

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

·· Local News

\

'Soil-water stewardship week ;1
By Constance W. White
Gall Ia County clergy are in·
, Gallla SWCD
vited to at1end on Wednesday.
GALLIPOLIS - , The Gallla May 27, a Soil Stewardship
SWCD Is - encouraging local Prayer Breakfast. The Break·
churc hes, organizations and lndl· fast will be held at the Bob Evans
vlduals to join ·the nationwide . Shelter House _in Rio Grande at
observance of Soli and Water lf: 30· a.m. This will be a .time to
Stewardship Week. May 24-31.
sharf wlth the ministers in our
The local district, which pro· county the concerns for SoU
motes soil and w~ter co nserva- Ste~·ardship. Literature will be
tlon measures throughout the ava ilable to take back to your
year, Is providing literature own church and share with yo.ur
which draws attention to the need congregation. We ask that If you
for help, hope, and healing to are Interested In attending the
bind the economic and resource prayer breakfast to call the
wounds on America's farms and Ga llia SWCD office and make a
ranches.
.
reservation by Ma y 21. .
On May 24. the New Life
James Baughman . chairman
Lutheran Church will be holding of the Gallia SWCD said the
a special outdoor service at the surv.ival and welfare of farmers
Raccoon Creek Park. Bring a and the la nd they till must be a
lawn chair or blanket to sit on. ma-tter of deep concern to all
The servtce wtll be at 10:30 a.m. people. "While the grain bins are
and the public is invited.
now full and thrre is no shortage

3,1987

Ex-UAW chief seeks responsibility
"Our leaders are refusing to concerns oi po.lltlcal leaders
WOOSTER IUP))- Corporate
lead." he said. "They don ' t want often stymies moral convictions
leadership lacks a system of
checks and balances for accounto,take the political risks to make of Issues.
decls)ons until a crisis arises. "
"Why Is II OK for politicians to
tability, said former United Auto
Fi'bser, currently a professor cheat on their principles to get
Workers President Douglas
of labor studies at Wayne State re-elected? he asked. "This no·
Fraser. ·
University In Detroit, ad dressed tlon ought to be challenged."
" If peopl'e abuse power, the
both corporate and governmcnManklewlcz said that political
American people eve ntually do
tal leaders hip.
officials are often re-r lected
something about 11 ." Fra_,ser said
"Leaders shou ldn 't b!' a prJ- because "the electorate and
Friday during the College of
soner
of history or a creature of media too often accept lhe notion
Wooster's National Leadership
Sympos ium . "Government a l habit, " h~ said. "A true leader that elected officials should not
conlrols rome about because must ha ve the courage to cha nge b!' held accountable."
Silk said moral leadership Is a
peopl e neglect their with time and events."
Fraser shared Friday's ses· matter "of personal choice and
responsibility."
Fraser said socially responsl· slon with former National Public conscience. Ethical behavior
ble leaders must listen to their . Radio president Frank Mankle- carries Its own reward ... and
constituency and reflect their wlcz and New York Times I n n e r h a p pIn es s a n d
needs, and hr said many Amerl· economics columill.st Leonard contentment."
·
He said tM Impact of money
can · leaders fall' to address Silk.
Manklewlcz focused on pollti· and POlitics must be reduced:
problems until they reach the
crisis stage.
calleadershlo. savln11 re-election

Canadian ~fficial urges united front
By MICHAEL O'MALLEY
CLEVELAND (UP I) - In
order to protect the public health
and environm ent In New Eng·
land and Eastern Canada. the
United States should join Canada
In Its plan to cut the amount of
arid rain In half by 1994, says the
environment minister of Ontario,
Canada.
"Both of · our countries are
producers of acid rain," said Jim
Bradley, speaking Friday at an
International ' evlronmental forum sponsored by Cleveland
_State University.

"We want to encourage our
American friends to take similar
acllons that we are taking In
Ontario In putting forward an
acid rain program to reduce the
amount of .sulfur dioxide produced In both countries."
, Bradley said the plan sets
specific timetables and reduc·
tlons of acid rain which Is caused
primarily by emissions from
electric power plants burning
hlgh·sulfur coal.
Most of the plants are located
In the Midwest region of the

United States.
Some argue that reducing the
amount of sulfur dioxide emls·
slons means expensive clean lng
projects lor coal-burning power
plant s, or the loss of lhousand of
Jobs tor people who mine high·
sulfur coal, primarily In the Ohio
Valley.
" I know that there are power·
• fullnt~rests that are opposed to
the reduction of contaminants
going Into the atmosphere ll@!:
cause of the costs In reducing
tliem ," said Bailey.

CLEVELAND (UP! I- A Cuya hoga County Common Pleas
jury d&lt;'l.lb!'rated abo~t 90 minutes before mturnlng a guJity
verdict against a Cleveland man accused of killing another
Cleveland man outside a West Side tavern last October.
Roger A. Matth!'ws. 24, was convicted of killing Jose Cruz.
Matt hews claimed King Edward Leonard, 21, also of Cleveland,
had fired the shot that kllletl Cruz. But charges against Leonard
were dropped and he testlfl!'d against his friend.
Cruz was shot In the chest after a ser leso far ~t ument s between
Hispanic patrons of the bar and several black visitors.

'

Elderly man held for assaults
COLUMBUS 1UP!) -A 79-ycar·old Franklin County resident
faces sex and assault charges for his alleged Involvement with
12-and !~· year - old girls.
Bernard Eugene Orwig Is charged with three counts of gross
sexua l Imposition and on&lt;· count each o! lmportunlnl! minors
and assault. Mifflin Township Pollee Chief George W. Francy
said.
Orwig was arrested Friday after pollee searched his house
and confisca ted weapons and letters from the girls and letters
written anonymous ly by neighbors warning Orwig to st0p the
activity, Francy said.
Officers found photo~ of clothed juveniles but no porno·
graphy, Franey sa id. Thrre were pictures of boys In their
underwear. he added.

Bond official

i.~

found guilty

CLEVELAND !UPI) ,- Cuyahoga County' s bond co mmls·
sloner has been found guilty of 12 felony count ., relating to an
al leged scheme to steer crimi nal cases to rertaln judges.
Ray McCool. 55, a llegedly took $300 bribes to fix judg&lt;'
assignment s durln!t crim inal arra ignments.
He was reported ly vldt'Oiaped taking brlb!'s b&lt;&gt;tween Oct. 2R
and Feb. 19 of this year. A search of his office turned up $61KI
allegedly paid to him by a pollee Informant.
McCool's sentencing has b!'cn delayed until next month. H&lt;' ·
fares up to 15 years In prison a nd a $60,000 fin~ .

Railroads complete merger move
RICHMON D, Va . !UPll -TheChesapeakcandOhloRallway
Co. and the Baltimore a nd Ohio Railroad Co. has announced lh• •
completion of a merger of the B&amp;O Into the C&amp;O.
As a resul1 of the merger. an nounced Frida y, B&amp;O minorit y
shareholders will receive $124 per sha re for th~lr common stock
and $100 per share lor preferred stock. This Is pursuant to a
previously annou nced merger plan and nolle\' given to B&amp;O
shareholders.
The merger was effective Thursday.

Ruling pending in fatal . ~hootin¥
CHILLICOTHE (UP!) - A Chillicot he man may have been
showing his 14-year-old son".how 10 play Russian roulette
Thursday when he was fatall y shot.
Ross County Coroner Donald L. Berling said rrlday he has not
Issued a ruling on the official cause of death of Carl E. Cyrus. 39.
Berling said Cyrus apparently shot himself In the t ight temple
with a .38-ealib!'r revolver.
Russian roulette Is a game of chance In which a person spins
the cylinder of a revolver holding one bullet. alms the gun at his
· head and pulls ihe trigger.

�Page- D-6- The Sunday Trmes-Sentinel
t.IATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 PM EST 5-3-87

. ETII

SHOWERS
C2JSNOW
-RAIN
-slalfc ftOc:cluded
FRONTS: wwarm
Map ahl- maximum llmpera~'" AI least 50% ol any ahadad area It pt8dcl8d

I to recewt prec~ptation indiCated

UPI

WEATHER MAP - Ram IS foreca't Sunday for part" of the
Pacific Northwest and the northern and •••ntral Plains Showers
rm· predicted for parts of the central Plums, the Ohro and
Tcnnes,;e~ Valle) and the Middle Atlantic Coast (UPI )

Weather
By United l'rc.s InternatiOnal
Ohio
Parli&gt; cloud y Su nd ay with sca ltcrcd sho11crs and thunderstorms
Hr ghs wrll be between 611 nort h and 7o sou th Conlroued pa rll &gt; cloudy
stalewrd e Su nd ay ni ght 11llh a low hfl11ren 4Ci and oo Sunny Monda y
wllh high tempera tu res betw een 6o and 75
Wesl Vlrglma
Scattered showets and thunders torms th ro ugh Monday Hr ghs
Sunda y will be between 70 a nd So w!lh a low Sunday ntghl tn the OOs
and high lempr ralurcs Mond ay between 6'i and 811
Western Pt nnsyl\lama
Variable cloud rncss nollh Sunda y wllh parfiy cloudy sktrs and a
chanre of mor nin g showers a nd lhund crslo r ms sou th Hr ghs
area wide wI ll be bet ween 'J'j and o'J Pa rtlv cloud) Sunda y nr ghl wrl h a
lo"' In the lOs Sunn y Monda y wll h high lompera lur cs aga in bPiwrrn
i') and fi'i

Northwest Ohio Northeast Ohro
Inland West C•• nlral Ohio
Central Ohio Highlands
( cntral Lake Erll' Shore
•~a.'t

J,ak &lt;• Eri~ Shore
Sund&lt;~Y partl y cloudy wtth srallercd sho11ers a nclthu nders tor ms
In the morning ll lg h lilllo 6'J Nor thrasl wrnd ]() to 20 mph Cha nceol
r arn 40 per cent
Sunda y ntghl par tlv r loud y Low ncar 40
Monday su nn ) Hr gh nca r lio
Ohio Mlamr Vail&lt;·~
Sonthw••sl Oluo
~outh Central Ohio
Sunda y pdtll\ &lt; loudv wllh scd llercd showers anclthundcrs tOJ ms
Hi gh 7() In 7'1 No rt heas t wind 101 0 lo mph Chan ce of r arn 00 pcrrrnl
Sund,ry ni ght partly r loud y w1 1h a chanre of showers Low 50 to Ci'&gt;
Chanrr of Ialn 40 per ren t
Monda v par tl y cloudy Hi gh ncar 70 Cha nce of ra rn 20 prrrenl
( cntral Ohro
E.&gt;st Ce ntr.rl Ohro
Sun d&lt;~v partly cloud\ wr lh sra llet eel showers .mel lhundcr&gt;lor ms
High ncar 70 No r thr.Jsl wrnd 10 to 1"1 mph Cha nce of r ar n 40 prrrenl
Sund dl n1ght par ih &lt;loud \ I 011 nl•.t r'&gt;ll ( hanr eof r,lln 20purcnl
Monda; sunny Hig h n c&lt;~r 7(1
Extcnd••d FoT&lt;•ca.'t
Tut•sdl\y lhrough Thursday
r d II 'I uesd..t 't ~.nd Wed npsduv WI \ h ,j chance of s h OW('! s T hu I sdm
Highs thr oughout lh r period will b~ In tho 70s wllh ,, loll m lht• 40s

"Censorship' at U. S.
military paper assailed
Wr\SHI NC: TON IUP II- S1•n
Wll ll .rm P r ox mlr t• 11 Wis
r ,Jii('d fo r an lnves trga tlon Sa tur
dd V Int o char gp~ of nl'ws CC'OSOT

ship by lhP mllit dl 1 In ilfl•
r, ur Op!'.tn and Paclfrr rdllrons of
'
St
ar s &amp; St IipPs •
,I
•
We sim ply cc~n n o l In good
ro nselr nrr sPnd 11 oops,, bro,Jd to
lead thr stt ugg le for ft crdom a nd
censot Star s &amp; Slllpl's at tht'
same li me Prox mlr r sa rd rn a
stalcmcnl Our pcoplcoversc,Js
dcsct vr bC'Itcr th.rn srro nd class
lr pa lmcnt
Sta rs &amp; Stripes pu t out In
Eut opea n and P.tcl fl &lt;rdlllons bv
th£' mililllt \

•

,
'
•

1s d dttt!} nl'\' s

' p.1prr pr ovld ~rl mrmbrt s of tho
armed set viers
11 Proxmlrc surd ht• \( Jii ln lro
pdu cc lcgls lutlon next " rek thd l
t~vou ld req uil ~ Oefell,eSccr Plar v
Caspa r W~lnbt'r get to .rppolnt .r
c'Ommlsslon of five clvlll.•n jour
1nulr s ts 10 lnves ll g.II P t~P
ail{'gatlons
Once form(•d tho rom mrsslon
would h.rvr Q() d.rvs lo m.1k o a
rcpml of li s flnd rngs to W&lt;'in
bl-r ger dod Co ng1ess II II OUid be
authori zed lo trromme nd
whether the role of civil ians on
the staffs of Stars &amp; Stripes
should be s 11 englhPned
Ocfl'nsc [)epa llmenl spokes
man lim Turner said
We

brlrew !hal lhr Star s &amp; Slrrprs
nr 11 spapcrs .r r r fu lfullrn !( th ~ l r
mission a nd rcs ponslbrlll y to
pt O\ ldt. uncensOJrd nl ws to the
men and women of tho armed
lot Cl'S Wc ther r f01 e believe
lhdl ' u( h a brll IS unneceSSH/1
Pt os: mtre sm d hE" was ln t t odtt&lt;'
mg thr bill In response to so me
vl'r v sci rous concerns that the
so ldi('l S

\\1('

SC nd

OVC I SCLIS

lo

pr otcr t fr ef"'dom ma y not bl- full\
enjovl ng a lithe b nellis of one of
I he mostrmpor tanl freedom s we
ha ve In th rs rountrv- th at is Ihe
rlg hl to a flee ptess und er the
Ft t s l r\ mcndm cnt
Pt oxm u e said Staffer s allhr
Pac rflr Stars &amp; S111pes ha' r
&lt;OmpiH rncd that unfavorable
news Is bel ng rensorrd ou 1of 1he
ncw spH pH bv the mrllta11 high
comm.md
rhr lm phca tlons of these
char gcs a r!' very serious he
Sd ld
It mea ns that sold ret s
basl'&lt;l In the Paclflr ma y not
r eallzr the full benrflls of a free
pr ess l t'n though thev put their
lives on the li ne for 1t an d other
freedoms every d,ry
What a coni! adlctlon Wh at a
deecptlon We send soldiers out
10 protec t democracy t.Jnd ) at
thr same time deny them one of
the most important fteedoms we
have Pt ox mire said

Thornburgh turns offer down

,

•
'
•
,
•
:
,
•
•
••

)

Wr\S HINGTON 1UPI I
For met Pennsylvania Gov Rl
chard 1 hor nburgh has declined
an offPt It om Allorney Ge neral
Edwi n Mcr·se to become director
of the FBI citing famllv and
professron.1l ~o mmltmenl s
Thornburgh a lso sa id his new
job al the institute of Pollllcs at
Harvard Univers it y, where he
will begin WOI king June I, was a
reason for reJecting the offer to
head lhe FBI hi s spokes man
Davltl RunkPI '" rrl FritiAv
Thornburgh told Meese from
Plltsburgh that ' at this time Ills
not pc~~~slble lo accept a posiUon
with the FBI." but that he was
··extrrmely honored ' sa id
Runkel.
An adminlstrallon source who
requested anonymil y ci ted
'nombUrah's poss ible political

I

amb lllons as anmhet reason for
not

's lat

May 3, 1987

:~May 3, 1

OhiO--Point Pleasant, W. Va

South .has hail;
Cold
front
drops
iemps
.
By United Press International
Thu nderstorms rn the Carol!
nas and Texas that spawned
large harl and strong wmds
weakened early Saturday and
brisk wmds swept Ca hfornra the
Pl arns and parts of lhe Mrssrs
sr ppr Valley
A cold fron t that moved across
the Northeast Fnday dropped
temperatu res rnto the 30s and low
40s over the northern Atlantr c
coast stales and rnto the upper
20s and 30s 10 the upper Great
Lakes Much of the rest of the
country by co ntr as t bas ked In

'9fCOid

)

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

tmg a new ca 1ee1 '

'l'he source sard the altar ney
general called Thor nbur gh this
week and •the lor met governor
co ns ldcr l'&lt;l whet het to take the
job for sever a I days before
deciding aga inst it late F riday
The New York Times teported
F tlday Thornburgh had been
app1oached by Meese at Prest
denl Reaga n's request to take
over from William Webster
whose nomination to becomeCir\
director was unanimously ap
proved Friday by the Senat e
lnlelligence Committee
The eommlltee sent Websler's
name to the Senate which must
vote to confirm him Any noml
nee Cor the FBI post also would
have to unde rgo the confirmation
process

record warmth
A thunderslot m north of
Greenville S C prod uced hart!
mch rn drameter and htgh wmds
that downed large trees A
thunderstorm dropped golfball
srze hall at r\nsonvllle N C
Thu nd ers torm s rn central
Texas whrch produced harl as
large as baseballs Frida)' afler
noon also weakened durrng the
evenrng A fe"' showers and
thunderstorms lingered over
Texas and Arkans as
Storms sca n ered across the

central hr gh Plarns and the
mrddle Missouri valley early
todav brought marble srze ha ll
west of Sioux Fa ils, S D
A travelers advisory was
posted for strong, gust) winds rn
I he northern deserts of Souther n
California ,
Westerly wrnds gusted lo 50
mph at Daggett, Cairf . la le
Friday Brisk south erly winds
conlrnued rn to the nrghl across
the southern and ce ntral Plams
and southeast winds swe pt over
parts of the mrddle Mr ssrssrppr
va lley

to

Ytrd Stle 4 fam1ly 232• B~reh
, Line acrou from Blue Fountam
Motel Rtfrlgtr~~lor 911 stove
gu dryer, large &amp; 1m1ll lach•
1 clothn 6 uniforms ltlluee
awn•rt~~• II much much more
Mty 1 &amp;2 46 5 Aemorahine
Yard Sale May 1 2 3 Clothet.

The repofl satd power com pan
1es ha ve r ece1vcd warmngs of

future short ages from the
E net gy Depart ment and from
prrva te anal;s ts emploved b\ I he
utJIJIJes

Knteks

71Evergreen Ad

etc

Fe1rv1ew

811ement &amp; yard nte Frl bt
thru Sun 9th P!tntt Subdlvl
110n Grtvely 11techments B
tpetd elect tttlrt gltuwera
furntture houuhold 1tema
children m.ns and Iedin n1ce
clothes

3 flrntly yard aale May 4th end
6th from 9 tll14 at1 08 Petri St
MrddltpOrt

Ed s Ga,hpol•• Flat Market
Open Frid.ya too 300 rolls
r vlnyla wallpaper f1 60 roll li ke
new tiller t226 excellent JUnk
and new 1tuff too Every ~tek ·
end Routet 36 &amp;. 160 Ph
" 614 «I 7037 O.alerupectal
1 ~00 lq h Indoors end 800 IQ
,. ft out doors at a cost of •&amp; 60
JMit' day Onty 4 available

WUI do

~·-----------------YardSaleMiy12 16 900to7
1!J mtle e11t of Porter on 554
Clothat and lots of m11c
Y~rd

ONLY

4 family yard stle 708'11 Vlend
Thur~
Fri Sat Ttlble.
dlthes mi&amp;e Parakeet bird

Yard Sale Frland Sat 2301 Mt
Vernon Ave I 00- 3 30 lott of
everyth1ng

~Kerr

Yard Ill&amp; I 00 to 7 Monday
May 4 to May I I mlln out
Jerry&amp; Aun at Apple Grow

1&amp; ftmtlln Mondey thru latur
diY Rtd bnck houtt be4ow
Sldert Jewelry Oalltpolia Ftrty
Spiel" l&amp;ct!Oft stuff 1 bag for
11 00 ChiP prk:•

•

•11

•
E)"/.JOV AACES- Several hundred spectators
were on hand for Salurday's annual French City
Run in downtown Gallipolis, including these
lndivrduals seated on the historical marker on

Babysitter needed m Thurman
•rea Ph 812 7808 1fttr 5pm
1

Frlst Ave. Weather for the event was perfect
according to members of the Holzer Medical
Center Recreation Committee, sponsors. Results
and pictures appear on C I and C-2 today.

*"Gawrnment Jobt 110 040 •
tel 230 yr. Now Nnng Cell
101 U7 8000 Ext A 9805 for
'..cur,_t f.d••l lilt
Hiring! Government JObe your
ire• 111 000 til 000 Phone
cell refundable 1102)831 8885
E~~:t 1441

J

Tnbune -- 446-2342
Sentlllel -- 992-2156
Reg~ster -- 67~ 1333

Fed*•' St11e and Civilslt'Vica
'1ob&amp; .,, 707 to t59 148 yaer
Now hlnng Call Jab Una

1 518 459 3111

_ "".Jor Info 24 hn

Pubhc Notrce

Pubhc Notrce
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Galllpohs C1ty Plan
nmg CommiSSIOn w1U hold a
pubhc heartng Tuesday May

19 1987 at 700 pm,.
the Mun1c1pal Court Ro om
518 Second Avenue Galh

polls. Oh1o

The Planntng Comm•ss1on
will hold 1he moetmg on be
half of the Commerc1al &amp;
Savtngs Bank 25 Court
Street who des1res to co n
struct new dnv e '"and add•·

ttonal customer parkmg fa
clht1es on the lot adJacent to
thetr bank that was formerly
owned by the Slandard Otl
Company
The proposed lite 11
located '" a Htstor. c Urban
Square Otstnct and requ1ras
t~e rev1ew and approval by
the Planmng Comm111lon

MAY 3

REQUEST FOR

BIDS

Contractor to btd on pro·
f&amp;Ct

1 Thermal Wtndow Pane

t10ns for the po•rt•on of secretary at the Santor CitiZens

Center 220 Jackson Pike
Galllpoho Apphcet10no well be
recetVed untll4 00 p m. May
5 1987 Job dMCnpl•onoand
applications may be obtatned
at the Semor Center. Monday
through Fndey from 8 00 a
m to 4 00 p m The Gollia
County Counc1l on Agtng IS a
nonprofit corporation and an
equal opponunlty employ.,
Apr~! 28 30 May 3

11

Ann uu nce 111 ents

Cash tn 1 day the Auction w1y
Click s Auct1on Serv1c1 304
89!5 3.UO license No 754 87

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cath for l1te model clean
used cars
Jtm Mink Chn Olds In c
811\ Gene Johnson

814 448 3672

2282

448 0175

Oldtr hard co....r Grace LN'tng
tton Hill Book&amp; No patperbackl

Ph 8t44489629

m1n 56 or oldiH' Photo IPPre
etated P 0 Bo11. 717 Racm•

45771

ReviVal Apr~! 30 May 3 7 30
PM Moore 1 Chf11114 Untted
Methodlll Church Athlon

2 Metal Door Frame and
Threshold Replacement
3 Ory Wall and Metal
Frame Repair
4 Pa•nttng Metal and
Wood Doors
5 Atbeatos T1le Replace
ment
Contact Date lamphter,
Mamt Pmecreat Care Center 446 71t3
Brds to be received by May

6. 1987

MAY 1 3, 4

Pubhc Notrce
PUBLIC NOTICE
V1llage of Cheahtre Council

wrll mMI Monday, May 4
1987 It 8 30 p m wh~ Mr

4

Full blooded female Getman
Sheph•d puppy 5mo old Ph

PUBLIC NOnCE

2

m•

11 Help Wanted

Pu-

llome

miROII -

304-e711-IHI

IO good

Elec:tric ttow naada .oma ,.

""' -.us 1157
Houtt windowa. 304 171

8937

~

N&amp;lded Medlell Records C\e'fk
for • 100 bed SNF ICF F1cllity
located rn Jaekaon Oh10 Pte
VtOus med1clll rteord .. .,.,~ce
In loftV term utt ft.
ExceUant bt'l"te'flt&amp; tend resu
to Four Winds Nurttng Can
215 Seth Ave JaCkson, 0 10
45140 Att Admtnlttrator ~

pratwr£

Fo, bualnet&amp; ICCOunts Full
t•me. t8o.ooo teo 000 Part
ttma t12. 000 •11 000 No
Selling, ropHI buolne6. Sot
your own hour&amp; Trllildng pro.
VldOII Call 1 812 I:M 1170
M F lam to lpm (Ctntr.,
Standord Timet

RADIOLOGY
TECHNOLDQIIT

STAFF

ltittent 1 blaQ I . .Y

Instructor• needed Trl St~te
Betlt.lty College lmm«&lt;tlte
entng di'/S a. even lngt Ful~ or
Pan t1me Call 114 817 851.2

WARE Ph 514 354·4001

'.J !1. I' ,

REPS NEEOED

---·:MS1

The Gltlo County Council
on Aging wil ~"""'"'""

\1

Ph 6\4 448 2384

lnv!Mdto1118nd

Public Notice

1 •t'l'ltylll1'lll

2 Mtlt Ballgle pupprtl 8wk1old

phordo 304-875 2201

Coli 514 446 2158

Full ttme ••ellament s F~m
prizes :Z pan t1mt, 1 full tr e
Ctr S. phone nHdld TUPP R

446 7025

BI8Ck Cock• Sp1n1t1 to 8fVt
..,.., I months old • , 4 912

-'.VON Beneftts u1 employ}td
•nsurance evallebht prizes gqod
etrn ing own producu It cost

••

8 Adoreblt puppl• half Bord•
Collie FrM to • good home. Ph

Jec
bl... outllde ~~~ • 2 3wk
old kittens Ph 371 2117

Local food service eomp1nv
needs P8fson to letvtca atltbhthed routes 11 well 11 d.,tlop
new custom•• Compenv veht
cle prov.ded Hourly w1ga ptu1
commt111on Must be Hjgh
S i:: hool Grtduate and hiWI g~
methskilla SendRttumetolox
T 829 Care of GalllpolitTrlbune.,
925 Third Ave Gallipolis 0h
45631
•

LPN posklon IY'IIIable 1ppiV! In
perton or ph 114 441 1820
The Med1cal P\111 203 Jack!On
Pike Gllltpolla Oh

Turkey hen s 304 773 5878

5S78

2 b..utiful OOarman She

Cltrlt-T,...urer

cone t 4 992 5848

Small brown m .. e puppy Ap
pro~~: lwka old Ph 114 248

-ton.

Ful!---tniollift
Mutt M¥11 CID111111Mid IIIJIIOiJtid

.

Aer T.chntaln murt b~ Wrl
I~ to trev.t wtth PQrtallla uftit
Send rnume wtth qualiflcatton
lo P 0 lox l3 Gtllipolls, O~to
45131
1
JC

•~ tht Army Nltionel

I'll

Ca(d of Thank•

•

2&amp;515

12

CARD OF THANKS
Thanh to our many
•• fnendsand nttlhbors
for their kindness. the
,, wonderful food, lhe
beauttlul flo-s and
your prayers dunn1 !Itt
loss or our husband.
• lathet and step-father.
Dale Sanders A
•
special thinks-to llrs.
Gatllletl, llr. and llrs.
Rey Eilts. and llrs
" llary Ward for betnt
there so qurckly
To the EllS. lhe
emer~ency room slaff
at HIIC and Dr Ltnder
antlllrs. McMahon. a
very specral think you
To all my wonderful
family end to all the
Sanders lamtly for
'*Jihtnl you ltlve
done to help. To the
llomilll Dawn lodp
and tilt VFW for the
beaU1iful CtrtiiiOftttS
,: To tlllspeclll friends
IIIIa e1• to t~e hoult
to llttp, think you so

•

mucll. Also to !ltv
lonnie l.ttlley for htS
e0111forti11C words. to
file Willis f111t11l

H-. tlllttk lOU

614 448 3858

Will do mowmg pamttng day t
Baby littmv eventnvs 304 882
2010 anytime

Frnattm l
21

Business
Opportumty

do
w1th
people
you
knowbusina&amp;•
and NOT
to send
money

Situations
Wanted

5589

15

423 8818

For 1.... Sun 011 (Sunocol
location 282 W Mem St
Pom~ Ohio For lnformltlon

ell! 808 838 4423

For rent lUll or Mle vlluabla
property In downtown Middleport 2 rat11l buainiiiii)ICII (1
ltrt.. 1 email} 4 renowted
office rooms atontge rooms
Will divtda to suit tenants tor
rental or inwatmtnl pt'Oflllf'ty
Contact Yvonne Bailly at &amp;14

992·2313 or 114 584 2881

23

Profaa11onal
Serv1ces

Schools
Instruction

Retrain Now Southtlt1&amp;rn Bus
lneu College Call 814 «e

4BR 2 bt1h1 LA Of\ lthehen
In city 127 OOD Ph 814 446
8183
Remodeled double w\da 7
room1 2 bt1h1 new furnace
new roof on lsrga lot a mil•
out of town on Jahnaon A1dge
Rei t29 000 Ph 114 448
2846
FOfulabyowner 2ttoryhouse
In Middleport overlooking park
30 'If gu1rntatd vlnyla 11d!ng
&gt;&lt; b h
1
w·w c•,..,.t t 11 tt un Que

woodwork 114 992 5126

Go .... mmant homH fl'(lm t1
IU rtp11r1 Delinquent tJx prop
eny Rapo11eu6ont Call loti
8876000 Ext GH 1806 for
current rapo list

3 BR recreation room kitchen
dining room 1trgt front and
bKII parch b10 wooden buUd
1ng yard with chain llnll tenet
Ruldlc Hlll1 Syracuse Ohio
114 849 2910 between 8
4p m 114 112 &amp;811eft•r4 00
pm
5BR Home lor Hit 20 acrH
Owner finlncing t31 500 or
rtnt 1t t300 PIH' month C.ll

514 912 7110

7 rooms 1 'h bath house In
A Uttle De1tgn mter+or design busin••• tor paopls on
limited b~.o~dglt Independently
owned. 304 &amp;71 8135

304 075·

Carpet lnrtlflltlon

8884

Chntlf Ohto Price reduCed
from 127 000 to U5 000

8\4 985 3571

MhJdleport reft~shad lntidt 6
roomt bath lerge porch gar
•oe work ahop good lo cation
c.u 814 992 2102

A nice ranch hom• wtth ettached
v••gaon. beauttfullot inerul
convenient lacatton Mulb.rry
Ht1 Pomeroy Ohio I 1 4 892

Homes for Sale

Nnw 31A 2 c• garage brlcll
front front porch nice lot I

mllu

of G1lllpolls
8 t4 4441 11038

So~.o~th

Mu&amp;t 1..1 M1kt Offer 1BR
c•port aundec:k, Hlament g11
furnace. 14 Mil Craak Rd Ph

614 448 2539

11000 Down U13 pll' mo
&amp;malt 2 bedroom houH C1rpat
&amp; air condltion&amp;f 100 x160
Lot 5 mUM from town 814
448 8598 I 11m to 5pm

28R Raneh Stytt HouM full
blllmtnt 2 blthl onuttached
v•r•v• a brttnwty Sur
rounded by 1tand of plnn on 13
Kftl Pond ntw ftnce barn
Call days 814 448 2107 or
avenlnas 245 8100

4387

3 BR HOf.IM With 32

17 Miscellaneous

dom U1
2208

ICf'H fOr

Furnlthld 3 room •cott•ge 53VJ.
Spruce Newly decorated
1dult1 no pet Dep tnd required
Call 814 448 25413

WEST

EAST

• 865

+AJ 10 932
•8 5
+J
+J 8 4 2

.14

•Q98643

+Qs

Newly remodeled 38R out Df
Ctty hmttl Ph 514 448 8278
UnfUrn ished 2 bedrooms ~II
ntw jNIInt Wtll ICCepl 1 or 2
children No inatdl pets Oepottl
rtql(tred Call 61 4 992 3090

SOUTH

.Q

.KQ\0 9 62

HoUII!!II and apartment• tor rent
tn Pornaroy and Mtddleport Cell

.AK5

+163

614 992 2403

Vulnerable Nerther
Dealer East

2 bedroom turn11hed clean AC
no pat&amp; New Havl!ln 304 882

2465

w...

Nortb

East

Pass
Pass

3+

Pass
Pass

2+

5•
Pass

Pass

For rent 8 room1 and bath m
Pomeroy 614 992 3436
2 bedroom •n Middleport Beau
tlfullnllde New curtains carpet
and kitChen cai:Hnets $275 plus
deposit No pe1t 614992

Pass

Openmg lead

+8

5858

2317 Mt Vernon Ave 2 bed
rooms gas furn• ce AC car pet
nice y1rd USO 00 ref tnd dep

clubs, declarer can take a ruffrng fr
nesse agarnst East's Jack ol clubs
That will create the extra club wrnner
he needs to take care of hrs losrng dra
mond, and the North-South aggressrve
b1ddrng wrll be rewarded

304 875 265t

882 2&amp;83

5 rooms and bath t250 00
month plus dapotlt and taler
ence 304 875 6678

42 Mob1le Homes
for Rent

Books
@ 1111 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

32 Mob1le Homes
for Sale
1980 F1irmont B•yvtew Delun
141170 furnished :ZBR n•tural
ges halt CA on private rented
lot On Rt 31 Rodney Ph
114-448 7844
1983 Skltne 1411: 80 2 8 R AC
extfl nice frtnch City Broker
age Services Ph 114~448
9340
2 BR
Ill electric 12xl0
applilnce&amp; W 0 included On
ranted kJt In R&amp;A Mobile Home
P~rk 13700 Ph 814 441

2124

Pomeroy no down p1yment
needed Thru bedroom
equipped hitch• bath bela
ment AC carport C•ll 614

112 2to2

3 bedroom houN 2110 N Main
St PI Pit 030 000 00 304
458 · 187&amp; 'No Rea ltors
PltiH
3 bedrooms 2 car gar1gt
basemjtr1t 1 •c,.tot fo1.1r mlln
from Point Pl•11nt, ptlctd In
mid flft1R1 can 304 175 15831
HouM tor ul .. rent 3 btdroom
2 full beth bUIH In kitchen
ctntrtl 1ir 3 miles from town on

Rt 2 NoniJ 304 675 2885

Farms for Sale

Commerc ial bulldtngs tor 1111e
Downtown Pt Pl1111nt StOfet
oHice&amp; A One Atll Esta te
Carol Yeagar Broktt" Call 304

t~ct

814 992 7713

Alhton building kits mobile
homtt permitted Ctyde law.,
Jr 304 1571 2331

41

33

Unfurniahtd hou11 31A A ad
noy Vlll111e II 1275 Ph 448
4418 ehar 7PM

3 Announcements

Houaea for Rent

Sho11trlng Aldgt Country
Homt 21R Lw Livingroom
new eerpeUno fenced yerd
pref• edult&amp; refar.ncn
qulred *1 00 depoelt UOO rent
Pav own utMitiH Ph 814 440
1758 Opm to 10pm

3 Announcements

Gallipolis Business
&amp; Professional
Women Support

EMS levy.
Vote YES or EMS

304 875 3030 or 875 3431

Ph 8\4 448

3 IR lnck 1 'It baths CA ntar
Lawn Mower Repa11 &amp; SerVIct
Uaad lewn mower&amp; for 11\e &amp;
ltwn cu"lng 304 e7B 1563

In Memoriam

Holzer Medici! Center Fenced
IIWn t48 500 Call 614

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

In

258 8285

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSELl QUALITY
3 Btdtoom with tttaehed ger
MOBILE HOME SALES 4 Ml
10.. forced atr e• fnpl.c:t
herdwood floor~ in town WEST QALUPOLIS RT 35
t27 000 Ph 814 448 I 171or PHONE 814 448 7274
448·4305
1872 Caatle 14xl15 with 1812

NANCY ANN
PATIERSON

Who passed away

Andy. Trm. Amy and
Chasity

WE LOVE YOU

plo1 loc ated 1 mile North of
Crown City on 81g Crtek Rd Ph

614 246 5t90

44

Cell 814 25 8

Apartment
for Rent

1 Bedroom basic ,.nl t 1 78 00
plus electric Also required 1
$200 00 secunty depoah CON
TACT Jackson E1tatet Dept Ph
446 3997 Equ1l Houalng
Opportunity

•

Furnlthld &amp;. ..,nlurnished apt1
t 1 50 00 end up raferenc" Ph
304 fJ75 7738 or 304 171
!5104 A 1 Ra11 Est111
New ap1ftment completely
furn Aef &amp; Dep 1 or 2 adultt
only Cell 614 448 033B

Pd Ph 448 4418 oftor 7PM

448 44t8

(Scram-let Pu:zziE on Page D-8')

---

-- ---

.r-1
ANSWERS TO
SCRAM-LETS
Olflcer "Find out what that
IGNITE
guy did before he lolned the ar·
TURGID
my." Sergeant "Yea, slrl But
SOFTEN
why?"
Olllcer: "Everytime he
JEJUNE
tires
his
rifle he takes a rag and
MANURE
wipes
off
hil FINGERPRINT."
PIP/~
FINGERPRINT

......

11 Halp Wanted

REGISTERED NURSE
IMMEDIATE OPENING, I.C.U.

FULL TIME- NURSE WITH EXPERIENCE IN
I C.U. C.C U PREFERRED
Excellent beneftls pension plan. lona term dtsabll·
tty, hospttalizalton, salary commensurate wtl~l tx·
pertence
Equal Employment Opportunlly
CONTACT TERESA COLLINS, R N
VETERANS IIEIIORIAL HOSPITAL
POMEROY. OHIO

614-992-2104

DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS
Rro Grandt Colleae/Communtty Collefe annDUncts
an optnina of a poStlton ot Director o Admrssions.
The Orrector wrll provide dtrectiaadership to therecrurtment-admrsStons proaram to tnclude tnroll·
ment planntnc. development of outreach strate1its,
rtcru1tm1nl publications, bud1et computer support and supervrston ol stall
,,
This sucmsfulappltcant wtll possess alltnllour
years ol drract admtsstona expertenee. 10011 com•
munlcatton sktlls and a linters dqru tn a rllaltd
area Further. demonstrated manacement stralllits
and lrtnds are essenltal
Salary commensurate wtth educatron and exper11nce.
Interested persons should send a COPJ of lhtir updo-date resume. includrna names of thrtt 1relerenm. and a copf ol thttr transcript befote the
deadline of May )5. 1987 to
Ms Phyllis Mason, Personnel Ollrcer

Rto Grande Collece/Communlty Collep
Rto Grande, OH 45674
Rio Grtnrlt Collect Is an Equol Opportunlly/AfflllllliYt
Action Empio)tr
·
PO losllm

5114

May 2, 1984. You are
very sadly missed by
your husblnd
Harold: Connie. Bub.

2 Bedroom Ferm Hou1e Garden

P 0 . BoK 969

b~ndo 1 Z.ZO flr~a Can
tr1l Air 2 81th1 Z storage
buildings Mull Stllt13 800 or
rtiiOntbla ofttt Ph 614-241

IN MEMORY OF

43 Farms for Rent

r•

Nit In Eureke tCfOII from the

900

requrred

.a

Coll814 992-7479

110 acr•t Leon Baden Ad
HouM • outbuilding Strttm
through pfop•ty 304 458
1011 ~

~=~2

614 992-62\5

room Pltrtly ftirnlshtd 174150

20 acr1 t•m Hannan Tr1ct
Rolcl, Glenwood W Va for
mora Information ct\1304 n3
5118o,n3 5180afteriOO

14x70 mob1la home partially
furnished cennal air cioN to
school&amp; hosplt1l &amp; ttore• 304
876 5789 after 3 P. m

Furnl&amp;htd Apt t240 Utllltl•
Pd 1 BA 243 J1ck10n Pika Ph

1171 12Jtl0 Hlllcrtat 3 bed
room cantril '" Good condl
lion 814-992 3191

ond buildlngo Ph 304 522
1918

304 675 6372

Trllfet' above Kroget"s In Pomeroy for rtnt Totti electric Call

Business
Buildings

29 tcret Pllture land Good
plaftty of wsttr 111'91 two
ttory bern nice garden spot 2
out bulldlnga an mi"erel righ11.
working 911 wtll room hOuee
located nttr Bntdbury school
Will 11l• hous e ttparate Call

71 tern GuVIn Creek 1t Gl.,
wood h11 wells sprlnv• bern•

2 bedroom furn11hld mobUo
home 14 BurdetteAddn. Pt Pit

34

1977 12~~:10
refrlgarttor
&amp;love wether &amp; dryer wood
&amp;tova Cell 251 1108 Of 258
1781 1fter 8pm

Farms for Sale

2535

740 Second Ave 1 BA t111
per mo Deposit requtred Call
614 446 4222 betw11n 8 Ill

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

1973 Freedom 141170 3 bad

Two bed room trtlt er eduttl
depo 111 reQ.utred 304 · 675

:JBA 1 1.; bath In Evergreen 3
mlllt patt HMC Ph 814 448
1323 ore u 245 9170

Ph 814 378 2227

1973 12xl&amp; Kirkwood Ramo
deled WIU consider oHer &amp;14
882 2414 after 6 OOp m

2 bedroom .UI•Ier couples 1
small oh1ld "tticust Ad At 1
Pomt Pleaunt 304 675 1011

Furnished Apt 1 BR 701 Fourth
Ave GaUtpollt U25 Utilitlea

1913 Liberty 1211:68 total elect
ric exctlltnt condt11on t750Q

814 985 4387

Furn11hed mobile home 3 bed
room with wuher end dryer no
pets 614 949 2253

2 Bedroom Mobile Home Pat to
loclted In Gllllpolll Ph 614
245 5190

1970 Allen Trallllf 10d0 2 IR
lor "'• uooo Ph 814 388

1974 Gr1rwllle 14x70 3 btd
room 1 'h battl 1• tltcule Mutt
be moVI'd ta200 080 Call

2 Bedroom Mobrle Home Rei &amp;

------------'--'-

7471nddustrltlltoraae12 foot
av.r head door 3 phe&amp;es of
electnc 1 8x48 steel building
1114 448 23&amp;2 For
appointment

8115

2 bedroom furn11hed or unfur
m&amp;htd Clean No pet1 New
Haven 304 882 2411

93 acre• 7 mll11 on AI 12 from
Point Plaa11nt Timber miner
111 waH 1tptlc Owner fintn e
lne 137 200 t4 ZOO down and
t242 22 par month 304 &amp;25
83157

871 5104

1984 Shultz Owner llnanoing
1vallable Ph 114 448 &amp;7215

AU Butch GreeniM

All brick: 2 · •torv 3 b.ctroom :z
beth torm•l d ining room b ...
mtnt 2 car a••o• sereen In
porch Yt •era lot (fenced bldll

33

bedroom tra\lef for rent 1n
Recine Cal\614 912 10!9

2 bedroom unfurnished New
Haven reference• and depot h
required I 1 60 00 month 304

A new book by James Jacoby and h1s
IaUter, the late Oswald Jacoby Is now
svaJiab/e at bookstores It rs Jacoby
on Card Games "pub/Jshed by PhaCQS

8323

31

448 7025

~;;:::;:;::::::;:::;;:;::~r;;;:;:;~:;:;;=::::=j.;:;=:;;==:;:=;;:;::~

~~~:~~~~:: ~~~~':tn::n~ou have 31 Homes for Sale

U7 500 Ph

Wor!ltwantedmowing oddjobl
light haultng Me igs G•lht and
M11on Counties 814 192

2

•

fl•illts.

I

Mtlt Cunar part ti171• Point
Pltlllnt 1ru S1nd name phone
numbw end '"uma to At 1 Box
347 Galltpollt Ferry W V1

wv

IHe, Clllrloltt
Sanders and clllldretl,
sltp·chlldrlll I

Wi¥lufllowt.O........M....,
tM Ha.pltel, Ht~tl.. Drtwt

Ohio 457111 EOE
114-IU-5111 101 ZM

304

Ptck up applicsUon
.. it VIUghan&amp; Market M110n

•

_ _., _ _ _ of

GU~rd

' thor• el•lt•

.,

...-=--.
................ .

Pert time meat cuner for sm•ll
gtOCIIPfY ttore Stnd re~uma to
1011 P30 care P1 Plea~ant
Atgllt&amp;r 200 Main St PI
Plea11nt

.-.75 3950 or 1 800 842 3e 19

•

ochool of X Roy T...........,
-"ARRT -~~~~~~ ...

A-

rcVETERANS
~----~~-----­
E1rnptramonwv•n

ROUTE SALES

9P

614 441 818\

..,,.... to dilcwa pro~alld
Y,C till ltvy AR -dtnto of
The Vll'-llo of Cltoehint are
Lota M Snyder

992 3478
prn

J1ck Hamton, Chlltrman of 3204
1ht To• Propout Commlnoe 3 yetr old b'ldt famllt Dach
Fred Wllooter. Orr.ctor of aund v~ gentt• Not apeytd
E"*CICY Mtdicll Systom 114-992 8719

!chord •Brown, TrO.:

Buying da•tv gold sliver coins
nngs itwttlry sterling war1 old
eoint farge CUrTtncy Top pr1
eat Ed Burkett S.r_. Shop
2nd A.... Middleport Oh e14

8uyiftg junk car&amp; C1ll Jfttf 5 00

Grveaway

Grow1n'l Rehabllttltton IQHCV
uekl Matteu d19rea l-"el
Speech Pathologist tOWOfkwith
u••atnc p1t lent1 Full a Ptrt
Ttme 11 Point Pleuant W \le ,
Gelhpolts Oh South Potnt
Oh ereat CCC CFY &amp;Kcallen~
11\ary and benefits Contact
Dtrector of Mum1n Rnouren
S G ''-habllltltlon Agency
13&amp; East Fayette It
Inc
U01ontown Pa 15401 Ph

' N1adad food trtnsport ••de 2
_._hourt dally Min wage plus
l"mll.,.gt Mu1t bt reliable 1nd
' have retlltbl" vehtcle Mult be
~ llbla to hft hatvy food cont•m
t '&amp;rs Appty tt 101 Second St
r&gt;Oid Moose Bldg Pt Pit

412 439 1444

Unci Mob•le Homes Ph 814

3 Announcements

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

he F 1388D

J VON no service chwge. open
ltrrllorltl phone 304 675
• 1428
'

SPEECH LANGUAGE
PATHOLOGIST
1

TOP CASH paid for 13 model
and newat' used pars Smhh
8u1ck PonttiC 19'1 1 Et~tern
Ave Gelhpolla Call 114 ·U8

Replecament

MAY3

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctron

Lady would like to meet stnc•e

Public Notrce

ond

8

11

Help Wanted

Will mow lewns in town Call

Werner Radio Shop end buamna
buHdlng at 172 N Second
Middleport for salt Phone 814

St

!

388 8490

Huge Yerd Salt 7 mtle out North
Rt 2 Ecktrd Ch1pal Ao1d
follow 11gn1 Friday May 1

Moy 4th 9 00·5 00

Moving Saki houHhold Item&amp;
clothing fumhura June 7-8 9
rain out 14 16 1&amp; &amp;07 Oak Dr

'

Dodrtlls Private Home Care
Hoe room tn my home for three
Mderty ladl• May 201h For
1nform~~1ton Call Pritetlll Ph
614 388 1193 after 4pm or

Yard SJie 3406 Mourn., Ave
nght pelt ltllm11de Church

&amp;
.....········· .. '

31tmtly g~rage 11la Frl.,d Sat
Ml'f 1 and 2 9 00· 8 00 3'h
mileaoutSandHtiiAoad Rolling
Acret

4 F1mdy Sale t.ke 110 N to
go to Bidwell Rodney
.. Croll Ads tum nght 2'11 mil•
ahud Farm on rtght Walch for
signs P1t1o Dr1pet 9&amp;1184 blue
twin apreads 111 n.w duckl
~owls cl01hes May 4 &amp; S 9 5 H1ll
:1;•nd Net!

in my home

EAtermrtal Chemicals Inc 11
looklnv for a person who wants
to be m the termh:e and Pftl
control bu 1mn 1 for themselves
Prtltnttyweh.vunattablilhtd
franeh1H for ula at 1 very
rt110n1bla pnce- term• evalle
btt It covers Gelllpollt Pom•
roy Oh1o and &amp;ufounding coun
tits
PltJte reply to
EXTERMITAL CHEMICALS
INC BOX 1533 DAYTON OH
46401 OfCIII 613 263 6144

Ssle 6 &amp; 6 4 mUtt out 688
on Van coRd Lot of mtK Item•
1ntlque baby bed playpen
calling light• crawn teparator
some clothat &amp; much mora

!Spring Volley)

bJby~ing

Ph 814 992 6067

Avo

3 family Third and Cherry Sts
At 124 Syracute Ohio Ktds
cloth" toy1 end more Mon
1nd lues . M&amp;y 4th and 5th

By James Jaroby

spade kmg and cashmg the A K of

814 245 9195

Newlv redecorated 3 4 BR
f1m1ly roo m Plenty of storage
tpace Ni ce locltton Ph 614

i-1 8l

• AJ 3
• 1412
• A K 10 9

lNG CO recommend• th tt you

Ph 814 448 2750

Bookeec:ung 1n my home Ref on
requatt Vlrgin11 Simmt Ph

May 4th end 5th 9 00 4 00
loy cloth1ng blnh through 3T
Matern1ty ctothn and mise
Behind Vett office on Mulbarrv

NORTH
• K74

1NOTICE 1
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH

Mthne chrlatlan man (lroul\d&amp;
keeping hancfor man lawn cere

.'
------;z
for Rent

Knowing beats
· guess!ng
"Don't guess at the d1s1rrbutron
when you have a way of frndrng out "
That rs une maxrm from H W Kelsey's
book "I 01 Bridge Maxrms ' Let s see
~ow that advtce would have helped toaay's declarer
South fell he had good values for his
three-heart overcall of East s weak
two-spade btd so he showed brs dra mond strength after North had cuebid North now decrded to rnvtte slam
reasonrng correctly that South would
not have btd four dramonds Without a
sound hand That got them there, and
rt was now up to Sou th to make 12
trrcks
East took the spade ace and returned the Jack Declarer ruffed,
cashed two hrgh trumps then played
the A K of clubs and the krng of spades
(on whrch he prtched h1s last club), and
ruffed a club Unfortunately the club
Jack drd not fall There was no longer a
way to avord a dramond loser and the
slam had to Carl
Declarer should do better Alter
takrng two hrgh hearts, he can then
safely cash the A·K of dramonds What
wrll that do' He wrii now know thai
East started wrth two hearts and only
one diamond Srnce hrs two-spade
openrng showed a srx-card smt, rt wrll
be apparent that East had four clubs
Then, after throwing a club on the

Tools roclt and reate wnnger
Wllher chttn aaw 307 Spring
Ave Pomeroy M•y 1st 2nd.
end 3rd

May 4th end &amp;th 40 Revervi&amp;'W
1
Tun Wed M.-, 6 6 9 6 187 Drive, Mtddleport 9 7 R.tn
jWoodland Dr Clothing. collectt postpone&amp; to May 6th and 7th
ble&amp; new craft item• and
Monday 1nd Tuetdav May 4th
,~ suppliel Lots of goodl•
and 6th Two 1nd two tenth•
. , 5 F1tnlly 3 mtln out on Mill miles on At 143 Clothm¥
Creek Rd May 1 lhru 9th furn•ture kn1ck knack&amp; electnc
range 9 00 5 00 pm
9 6pm Everythtng ctntap
''----~~--~--~-Garage Sale- 5 Famtly May 4 6 Mondl!y lndTundiiV, M1y 4 tnd
off 664 2 miles from Poner 5th Dew St off Grant St
Middlepon Three '" conditiOn
\~ toward• cheshire
era boys clothes StJ:II 10 12
,..,F~rtt time ever! 7 Family Yard Mens jean1 and Jhtrts houte
S.le 2 4 6 Ntce cloth• all hold ttamt Etc
11111 children 0 6.11 hou1ehold
goods lots of m••c items Ttme
Pt Pleasant
9 1 V. mila out Buhvtlle Rd on
George• Creek Rd trttle on
Vicinity
rtght R1ln or 1hlne
Porch Sale 1qu1re danc:mg
th lngt Jt~n t b•k" toyt lawn
mower Bob McCormtck Mon
TU&amp;I Wed

2418

PiJno Lesson• In my home five
mtnutat outa1de of Galllpoll&amp;
Call 81 4 448 1538 work Of
446 7649 home

! k ,rage

l 349to5

Jim I odd )Oba IN!ifttlng driw
way ,...,llftg cerpenttr work &amp;
roof riiiPtir trua 6 hedgM
uperlencad Call 814 379

In Gall1poh1 504 l.e Grand•
Mond1y Msy 4th 3 family
Clothe&amp; lsmps hot~uhold
Items much more

810 South Second MhldllpOft
May 1 9 1981 Buick b..troom
1ulta. rOCk. . refriger1tar other
furniture drtpll curtain• tow
els linens bidding dithll
Ytrd Stle at Mtrv Lavn• tool• jewelry clothtng mt&amp;e
Rttldent •n Ch"h1re Oh May
12346 9 to Dtrk ktte of Everything f 25 each Ftrat rotld
on lett pest Mllet Cematery out
f -.,furniture etc
of Rutlend flrtt houae on the
Sale 411J Uncton Mev 2 left May 2nd 1nd 3rd

Vagabond
garbage
heading
east
NEW ORLEANS &lt;UPI ) - A
homeless barge haulin g more
than l,OOO ton s of rotlrng New
Yor k ga rbage was abo ul f·'i mrles
south11 es 1 of Key Wes t Fla
Sa turdav and chu ggrng slowly to
the eas t wtlhJ10 known po ri of
cal l th e Coasl Guard satd
It has no deslrnatron at thrs
lime ' Pelly Offtcer Fred Ke
phart satd Sat urday m the Coast
(,uard s New Orlea ns offi ce
Kepharl said the bar ge was
moving at aboul 8 mph
lhe scow's dlrcctron contra
dlcl s claims fr om the ca ptarn of
the tu g pulling the vessel that the'
:J 181Hon load Is bound for coasta l
Loursla na Martha Madden sc
crctary of I he state Depa rtment
of f. nvu onment ai Quallly has
sa rd the vessel wou ld not rei urn
to Louis iana
The tugboat spent days las t
month In Loulsra na waters as
offrcrals wrestled wllh the prob
iem of what to do with the scow
Madd en sa id offtclals with the
Ne11 York Department of Envlf
onmenlal Conservation told her
Frid ay · they were working rn
some way wrt h the people that
had the barge to see If they could
assrsl th em tn some way wit h
gelli ng 1hi s g.11 bage bac k rn New
York "
A spokes man said the New
York DEC was co ntac tm g
owners of fou r pri va tely oper
ated upstat e la nd fills to sec If
thcv would accept lhe refu se
We ,rrr volun taril y providing
our good off ices m ft nd lng a
solution to this problem all hough
we have no responsiblhty to do so
since this Is pnva tely ow ned
gar bage said DEC spokes man
R W Groneman
The ga rbage whrch Includes
used hospita l bedpans and drs
carded hypodermic needles, Is
from Islip N Y Th e town re
ccnlly passed an ordm ancc that
bars lnduslflal was te from the
communit y landfill
The refuse belonging to Na
Ilona I Waste Cont ractors rs baled
and stacked on a barge leased
from Moody Brothel sof Jackson
ville Fla a nd bemg pulled by a
tug owned by Harvey Gulf
Internationa l of Harvey La
Since leav ing Lo~g Island
March 22 the scow has been
rejected by four states and
Mexico and Belize drspatrhed
naval unlls 10 keep It oul of their
wa ters Lou isiana North Carol
Ina Alabama and Mississippi
have refused to accept II
The trash originally was bound
for Morehead City N C . where a
la ndfill operator had promised 10
accept the load But North
Carolina ~ealth officials banned
II after ' New York officials
refused to certify the garbage
was not In any way hazardous.
National • Was te Contractors
later decided to dispatch the
garbage to a landfill near New
Orleans State officials. how ever, got a court order to prohibit
the dumping there
Rep Thomas Luken, D Ohio,
chairman of a House panel on
hazardous materials. planned a
hearing on the Issue, calling It an
Inte rnational embarrassment

Knick

1

'

But the st ud y sard those plants expec ted 10 cost more than
warnrngs are gomg largely un
$3 000 per krtowalt of Installed
deeded partly because the cur
capac tty
rent mar ket for electrrcrty rs
Ulrllttes also face other barrr
glulled wrth excess capacrly m ers to recovenng rnvestments
most regwns of the coun try '
and making a profrt , includmg
Taken as a whole, lhe nalron s unfa,o rabie tax laws, hrgh per
rn vcntory of power plants at the forma nee standards ancl slashed
end of 1985 compr ised 35 percent rates of ret ur n tmposed b, state
more capacrt y than clectrrctly legtsatures and regulators
co nsumers demanded - a lmos I
Stepping rnto the breach have
lw rcr the mmrmum percentage been rnd ependen1 producers who
recommended for relrable elec t butld small plant s that sell
ric service, ' th e study sa rd
eleclrlclty to ulrirlles 01 drreclly
In addtllon, new plants are to industry wrth California's two
ex pensrve wrth coa l frred plant s largest utrlrtres- Paci fic Gas &amp;
no11 going Into servrce ha1 lng an Electric Co and Southern Call
average cos t of more Ihan $1,200 fornra Edrson - th e br ggest
per kr lowatt of mstalled capacrty buyers of small power
and st il l unfinished nuclear

mvestors

••.••• 1•...

1

I

•

l :i month stud y of 12:1 ulrh t res
across the na11on Utrlrlres haw
rn recent years begun 10 regard
the burldrng of ne11 power plant s
as a lasl fesorl th e reporl sard
an d now see themsei\PS more as
marketers of energy servrces
tha n as suppliers
The 358 page study was re
leased Sat urday by the lm estor
Rcsponstbr ill &gt; Research Cent er
Inc a non pr oflt orga nrzatlon
funded prrmarrly b&gt; rnstrt ullonal

"Pomeroy ·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

GallTpolls
&amp; Vicinity

J..

Electric utilities have all but stopped
building power plants around the nation
Wr\SHIN GTON 1UP!) - The
natron s cleclrlc utrlilres have all
bul slopped bulldrng power
pla nt s despile war nrngs by the
gav e• nment and some rndu slr;
analysis of power shortages rn
the 1990s, a stud) released
Saturd ay sa td
lnslead, the sl udy sard manv
ull ltlies arc bu vrng add ilrona l
needed power from smaller
rndependent produ cers and urg
mg customers 10 reduce con
s umpt io n th ro ugh va rtou s
energy sav ing progra ms
The repo r t
Genera t rn g
Encrg:, Ail ernatr ves Demand
Srde Management and Rr newa
ble Energ:, at Amenca s Eierlnr
Ulllrlles
rs the 1esull ol a

BRIDGE

Septic tank pumping raatdentlll
&amp; commarlcll tiO per to..t
Ron Evtn1Enterpriln J1c1taon
Ohio CJII114-218 U30

Temperature readings nation
wrde early Saturday ranged from
28 degrees a! Marquette, Mlch
to 76 at McA llen Texas
The hrgh temperature for the
nation was 94 degrees recorded
at Col umbra, S C • Crestview
Fla Mft cheil S D and Cham
berialn, S El
Hi ghs rn the 80s stretched to the
southern r\tlanllc Coast A re
cord htgh of 88 was set rn
Pensaco la, Fla brea kmg tpe
previous high for the date of 87
esta blished rn 1943

42 Mobile Homes

3 Announcement•
3BR 2 bMh1, 1"101 lg
kitchen dln4ng room La living
room AC l 'h% Interest UOOO
down • tallt over peymantl Ph

814 448 2472

3 . . .oam 1 acre Herrlsonvlle
,,., t16100 Ph 114 742

3181

3 Announcements

ANIMAL PARK
Schools, Churches
Company Ptcntcs
Btrthday Parties
and flmify Reumons
384-3060

1-100-212·2167

RE-OPENING
MAY 4, 1987

PAUL'S
SHOP
STATIIOm 7
CIOWI em, OHIO
•o•AY liiiU .fiiDAY 1·6
SAIUDAY I··

(614) 256·6502

OWN YOUR OWN

CAMPSITE

"BIG FOOT PARK".
HAS IT ALL

BOATING •••
FISHING •••
HUNTING •••
NO MONEY DOWN

sso

PEl MO.

ALl CAIIPSinS lEVEl &amp; SHADED

ACCOUNT CLERK I

Rto Grande Collete/Communtty Collece announcn
an openrnc for an Account Cl~rk I
Dtpartment/Oivrston Dtrector of Ftnance
POSITION Accou1t Cltrk cltsStftcatton, non mmpt
standerd work week llond1y thoough Frrday I 001111 to
5 00 p m (40 hours weekly)
EFFECTIVE· May 11, 1987
QUALIFICATIONS lllnimum qualrlrcatronslncludea ht-"
schooltduullon orequlvaltltt with related backpound rn
busrntss counts includrnJ typrngand accounhna Prnl·
ous tsptnence tn accountrn1 preferred lndlvdtual must
be bondable
SCOPE OF POSITION Reporting duectly to the Director of
Finance or dtsrcnate, lheAceounhn&amp; Clerk will be rtsiiOR·
srblt lot tOlJIPUier entry of onformatron from 1 varttly of
business and studtltt records to control records. joumale
and ledatn vtrlfylnJ dtlltls of lransactrons for accuracy, dmloprna spectal reports and analySts roulina ac·
countin&amp;stalements and olher duttes as ass11ntd or the ,
Dtrector of Ftnence
COIIPENSATION Entry wa&amp;e 11 S4 80 per hour Insured
benlfits avatleblt Petd letvts after completion of 90
workonl day probltionary ptrtod
APPLICATION PROCEDURES Send letter of tnl1111t, II·
sume. rncludt~ thrH letters of reference before the IP·
p1tut1on deadline ef Mey I. 1917 to·
Ms Phyllis llason, Personnel Oflrcer

P0 Box969

DIRECTIONS: At. 7 So. 6 Miles
balow Gallipolis croll Raccoon
Crk Bridge - Follow Signa.

OPEII nll DAIK

Rio Grande Coll,e/Communtty Colleae
Rto Grandt, OH 5674
Rro G11nrlt Collece 11 •• Equil Opportunlty/Afllrmetlvt
Actton Employer

PO

um

•

�.

"

'

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
44

Apartment
for Rent

Merchonrl1se
51 Household Goods

c arpeted, AC 1226 per month
Depot1 t required Ph 614· 446·
1788,

Grac •ou&amp; l1v1ng , 1 and 2 bed·

room

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 02

apanmenu

at

V1lltge

Menor and R•vertlde Apart·
menu In M•dd tepon From
$2 16 IACiudtng UtllltiM Call
614 992 7787 EOH
2 bodroo m apt for rent 1n
Pomeroy above ca r wash Ce lt
6 14-992 8215
1 bed mom furnishftd apartment
Prwate entran ce and parking
O&amp;posn and ref11rence No pelt
Pho n e 614 - 992 - 6942 aher
5 00 p m

1 end 2 bedmom furnished
apanmenu for rent In Middlepan
AU ut1tit1 es paid Call
6 14-99 2 6084 after 6 00 p m
1 bed room lurnishod epanment
Ca ll 614 992 5434 or 304

882 2566
Clean 2 bedroom apartment In
New Haven, W. Va Call 814·

992 -7481

304· 882 3581 o•

304 -882 -3729
APARTMENTS mol::ule hnmes ,
houses Pt. Pleasant and Gallipo
l11 814 -446 8221
Furnrshed. lower half duplelt, 1
bedronm . pr ivet&amp; entrance,
carp et
yard Adult• only
$215 00 month plus electri c
ref and dep 304- 876 -2861 .
3 bedroOm apt, GallipoliS Ferry.
1276 00. 304-675 -6421
S PRING SPECIAL IMME ·
OIATE OCCUPANCY. lauraland Apu , George St , New
Haven. WV We are oflermg free
aectmty depo sit to qualified
BPPil t ants tor o ccupancy before
June 1987 Completely car·
peted, 2 bedroom range, refrigerator PleaJ&amp;nl surroundings
w1th play area Call 304-882·
3716 from 10·00 AM lo 9 00
PM E H 0

UMI

Owords
Rearrange t~e 6 scra mb led
below to make 6

uMd bedroom

suites, wringlt wuhers, •
shoes. New l•v•ngroom sultet

5 pc hvrng room 1uite $26C 00
New 5 pc dinning room set
S1 10 00 304·676· 5268

Prin t letters o f

52 CB,TV, Radio

I I~ I t.[l I I

Equipment

N

TV Equipment PartJ. &amp; lnstrumenls Call 614-U6-8622

E

used appliancH and TV 1tt1
Open SAM to &amp;PM M on thru
Sat. 614 -448 -1899, 827 3rd
Ave. Galllpoht. OH
Valley Furniture, new &amp; uud
Urge nc1ion of quality furnl ·
ture . 1 2UI Eutarn A \I&amp; ,
Gallipolis
•
GOOD USED APP.LIANCES
W11hers. dryen, refrlgeratou.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances ,
Uppoer R1ver Ad . beside Stone
Crett Motel 814 446 -7398
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sof• and chaira priced trom
1396 to S99&amp;. Tablet t&amp;O and
up to t126 Hide-a-beds 8390
to t&amp;95. Recliners t226 to
U76 . Lamps f28 to t125
Oinetttl f109 and up to U95 Wood table w - 8 cha~rs t281 to
17915. 08tk t100 up to t3715
Hutchet f400 and up Bunk
bedl complete w -mettrenet
*295 and up to S395 . Baby bedt
11 10. Mattr1111111 or box springs
full or twin f83. firm t73, and
f83 . Queen sets f226, King
1350. 4 drawer chnt U9 Gun
cabinet• 8, 12 gun Gat or
electric range $3715. Baby mattrtJ.. J 135 &amp; U6. Bad framet
$20, flO &amp; King lrama S60
Good telection of bedroom
su1tat. metel cabinatt, headboards taO •nd up to &amp;65
12 Month1 free financing with
1pproved credit UOO mlnumum purchase necHJary 3
M1le1 out Bulavdle Ad Open
9am to 6pm Mon. lfuu Sat Ph
614· 448·0322 .
Patsone Furnlrure
1416 Eattern Awnue
M1ttress II Box Spring•- f99 .95

I

CallatJan 's Uted Tire Stlop Over
1 , 000t~r e s , llles1Z. 13 14, 16,
16, 16 6 8 m1les out Rt . 218
Call 614· 266-6251

••

Building Materutls
Block. bnck. .-war pipet. win ·l.,
dows. lintels. ate: Claude Win· •
tart . Rio Gt1nde. 0 . Call 114,

245· 6121 .

Aeady mix concrete and all
concrete supph". Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supphes.

Concrete blocks all srzes yard of.
dehvery. Meton sand Oallipoltt_
Block Co.. 12l1h Plne St ..
Gellrpohs. Ohio Cell 614-446-,
2783
,,;

I

Plastic Ctt tern state appro\led,
plastic tept1c tanks . plastic
culvertt, metal cutverts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES . Jack
• on. Oh 614·286· 6930
New Weddmg Gown, 111e 9 Ph .

614·388·9306 .
Single axle ctr hauler f400
Snapper rotot1ller f200 Ph
614 -446 -8598 9 to 6pm,

.

.

~~G~I~P~N=I=P~~

I

Own your own campttte, no
money down 150.mo. Boat Fish-Hunt, 819 Foot Park Ph

I--,,~
1 ";;"0 'T,;1 ;1 TI.:.....;T--'--.--1

614 446 ·8698

0

no .

·~~~.....
E

I

rt

Refrigerator. mirowne, bunk
bed, ccuch &amp; chair, bedroom
IU1te antique table II ctlarrs
rocker, rechner Ph 614 -446-

3224
Satellite Un1den 6000, 760 over
wtth 1Oft. black mesh disk Ptl

614 446·8318
Good old used lumber fremtng,
flooring &amp; beamt. Sell all at
once Price cheap Call614 -446-

0646

9cu f1 Kenmore Ctleat Freezer
$100 Call614 ·446·4626.

2 Vear old Polled Hareiord Bull.
Monda 3-wheelef " Big Red" .
Call614 -448· 1062

Real Estate General

~agla Pupplet Bwks

. 3968.

54 Misc. Merchandise
1 bedroom suite 1 cheur. fold
out couch , side by side refrrgerator , gas steve, brealltau set.
antique dming room suite 614· ,

992 7791

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltveslock

614·266· 8461

old Ph

eso

each Ph

AKC ~lttered Shir-Tur:e mtle
end famate. t250 00 fe!l'lale.
,.t200.00 mala. phone 304 -895·

Real Estate General

PIANO FOR SALE . Wanted
Responsible party 'to assume
tmall monthly paymat~ts on
prano See locally Call mtnlg&amp;f'
at618·234-1306 anyt1me

9832

Mauey Ferguson, New Holland ,
Buah Hog Sales &amp; Ser\lice Over
40 uted tractors to choose fr(Jm
&amp; complete hne of new S. used
equrpment. largest selectiOn tn
S.E. Ohio
JIM'S FP,RM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 35 W Gai11polis.
Oh1o Call 614 -446 9777,-eve
61 4·446-3592 Up front treetors With warranty over 40 used
tracton. 1000 tools

Farm All, 200 qu1ck h1tcl'\
tractor, w1th hillSid e plow s. disk
shckl e mower, c lut vers hM
triclyce fronumd S1, 200 Call
388 9358 after 5 00-p m
Heavy 'duty m -axie trailer 20ft
$1 ,050 Ph 614 245 - 5223

61 Farm Equipment
Case 870 and 730 diesel tractors, Ford 4000 gas tra ctor w 1th
lNF tnd loader, I H. 444 gas
tractor, I H 990 9. h hayb1ne,
M F no 12 Baler with tht'ower ,
New Idea Rake. J 0 . 5 ft 3
pt,bush hog. Broo ks Equipment,

614 ·664-6635
~abbit Hutchs Free Stand1n g

1•12 tt long double tl &amp;f 8
sect1on, S100 1-12 ft tong
a~ngletl&amp;r4sectlon S60 1-8ft
long single tiel' 3 section, 640
Gelv1nlzed metal roof1ng on roof
and bac k All si des welded wrre
With removable waoded stdes
Exposed lumbar is tr ea t ed
lumber Call 614 -985· 4180
Cham u w parts, supp lies and
repaus Siders El!u1pment Sales
Henderson, W Ve phon e 304·
675 -7421
Allis Chalmers 2 row· co rn
planter Senes N o 333 .. no-till
pull type with f ert 1hzer bo~ees end
InsectiCide herb1C1i:le bOll, , put·
chased new 1985. Fo r 1nforma·
t1 0n call 304 · 676·417 0 day·
ttme. 675 -3566 evemngs

The

62 Wanted to Buy

Real Estate General

Now buymg sh!HI corn or ear
corn Callforl etestquotes R i ver
City Farm S'upply, 614 -446-

2985

REGISTERED ANGUS bullund
CHIANINA bulls. Bx cellent blod·
dlrnes. top performan ce Slate
Run Farms. Jackson, Ohio 614286 · 5395 01 614 - 286· 1187

Wanted t o buy grande logs
del1 vere d to sewmill
Peul
M er cer Sawmill, Mt Arthur.
Ohio 45651 614-596·5933
Wanted Ru ffed ~ G rouse eg g s.
304-895- 3972

63

2 limo usin Bull s COllieS $800
eech. Ph 614 - 388 - 84~8

Transportation

Live$tock

Duroc Do sr s Bred Just hke th e
boa rs we tested &amp;t th e Oh1o
Test ation ttl at gained over 2 6
lbs per day Roger Ben tley,
Sabtn a, OH 51 3- 5B4·2398
Fresh Hotstern Cows &amp; He1fe rs.
A I. Sired . M os l With 0 H I
records Call 6 14-286 24 9 6 .
Ho istem Bull s A I S1res Da ms
with OHI papers Hamm s V all ey
Farm s 614 949 ·2514 o r 6 14-

949-2419

'i
7;-;1; - --;A;-u"t"'o"'s;-f;-:0:-:r"'S"'a.,-l"e':-:
198 0 C hr y~ l er F1tth Avenu e,
go od c on drt 1an Ca ll 614-445 -

0 008
198 4 J eell Chero kee P1oneer
4 w he e l Or
AC , 5 spee d
stall dar d trans , t o urmg p1g ,
gre11t h un rly cnr Call 6 14 446
2055 Evenings (]I 446 8 289
Oay t1 me

New kitchen, bathroom &amp; carpeting. Vz
acre - 217 acres available.

446-2359

B N Ford Tractor, new pai11t
Plow s. d1sc. brush hog , blade
$2750 614 949 2013

Real
I

Real Estate General

Needed ...

BLACKB
REAL1Y

514 ~f'l'uncl AH•nu.•
• poliM, Ohio 456:~
Galli
l,hon.- (h 14) 446-01108

AUDREY f. CANADAY, R~lTOR
lllBERT GORDON. REALTOR, 446-6216
IIARY FlOYD. REALTOR. 446-3383
25 lOCUST STREET. GALLIPO,US.OHIO

For sale, new terv1ce equurp·
ment for A C High vacuurl'l
pump. charge check 6 no 1,,
gauges, 30 no 12, 30 no 22
refngerant Cell 814-992 ·2602f

300 gallon sprayer unk wit I'\ can
and 20ft bo(lms $295 New
Hollend 270 hay liner w1th
model 60 bal e k1 1c kor ,
$1 ,295 00 John Deere raike
$860, -John Oeer'e Hay condt
t1oner $1350 Call 614-286
6522.

Vermeer 504 Round Bal er used
1 season S6500 Ph 614 -388-

.Mala P1t1 Bull dog, 304-895·

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE-446-7699

16eu ft Adm1ral Freezer t160
Ph 814·446·2971

614· 388

CROSS &amp; SONS
U S. 35 West, Jackson. Oh10

&lt;3",530

~651

Utility Bldg Spl 30 ' .1140 ' x9' ,
16x8 0\larhead do~r . Ser\IICI
Door , $5333 Erected Iron
Horse Bldgs 614 -332 -9745

M 4-446· 1393.

:~14·446· 2971

t

Lowrey Mard1 Gras Organ, l1ke
new 1800 wit" hel!ld phone1.
Ph 614· 446· 1023

61 Farm Equipment

61 Farm Equipment

5, Pit Bull•

1.57 ACRES - 7 ROOMS - OWNER FINANCING
N1ce home. central a~ r . rural water system,large lamlly room,
26'•22', garage, stora ge bU1Id1ng, slorm doorsand windows
N1ce home close to Holzer Hosp1lal See 11 now

Musical
Instruments

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

Masaey Ferguson 65 t ract or
with plows, diSC lie cultivator.
eorn p!anter, bush hog $3500 ,
35 Massey Ferguson 018$&amp;1 w1th
6ft fimsh mower S3850 Call
614-286· 6522

:t'14· 379· 2652

Comp lete l~e c~uckl e quoled

by f1 llmg In the m1 s!mg words
1 1
you develop lrom step No 3 below.
L-L........L-..L...J_.J.......J
)·~
c _.....,. ...

Chell Freeter $75 ., Motor gu1de
bow mount
jotlnson ca
blet(12 '! f100, Chevy l1re
S-1 0 ~newl ..- 270, 30-30, 30:08
Riflet Must tell thlt week p:1
614 446 ·7019

Oragonwynd Canary Kennel
CFA Himallyan, Per•ian and
SiameSe kittens AKC Chow
puppiet New Chow pupp1es
Call 614-448-3844 after 7PM

'

.

57

Upnght Piano Ph
8791 after &amp;·OOpm

t.

Officer: "Find out what that
. guy did before he joined the
army." Ser_geant: "Yea, sirl
U N M A RE
But wtr(?" Ofllcer: "EV91ytime
t-:-~l.:.....;;.l.8:'-'-rl.;.....;r,;l9~,--l he II rea his rifle he takes a rag
. . .. . . . . and wipes off his
"
.

Aough Lumber D•k It Poplar
t 150 per 1.000 by bundle 20c
by board ft . 304·675 -4412 .

,,..glstered English Springer
lltlel Pups Excellent hunting
ell F T Champions Oed 81
andp~renu from England Call

I
1--r.:'l&amp;....:lr"-lrlii7=-,r--i
I
I
I
.

55 Building Supplias

p231

NUJJEE

.

&lt;

Groom and Suppty Shop-Pet
ca_rooming All breed1 All
'Style• Julie Webb Ph , 614-446·

I

FONSET

3,1987

- •

'

1179 96

304 876 ·6730

"
55 Building SupplieJ •·

Real Estate General

HALF P~1CEI Flashing trrow
tignt 12991 l1ghlad, non-arrow
$2891 Unhghtad f2491 Free
letters! See locally Call today !
Factory 1(800) 423·0163,
any11ma

Bunk Bed w1th Bunkl- t199 95
New Chest- US 00
New Living Aoom Su1te1

1 GiDlRT

54 Misc . Merchandise

•

55 Building Supplies

304 773 6234.

f199 -t599 , ltmpt Cell 614·
448 3159.

County Appliance. Inc Good

54 Misc. Merchandise

each •n 11$ lme of squares

aulte Ut9, bunk beds S199 ,

S.l
3 room lurmshed apt ground
floor, private entrance and parkmg all utllrties paid. U60.00

'UZllU

White 3 drawer sehest like new,
originally t179 00 will •• 11 for

, G111ipolls New. uted
wood-cot/stoves. 6 pe wood LR
recliner• new I

won

simp le wo rds

SWAIN
Oli~e St

3 Ro omApt 1Br Ph 814·446·
75 72 off ic e 446· 1980 home

TIIAT DAllY

51 Household Goods
$96 00 304·895 ·3422

Downtown 1 BR . turmthed.

3. 1987

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W.Va.

fir

I G ~ At H O US I ~ C

O f i' OII.l U ~ ITY

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

446-6610

JUDY DEWITT

BROKER

J. Mmill Corter
Phyllis Loveday
Jim (IKhron
Becky Lane
Patrick Cochran
Ron Pitchford
Charles Moore

lB

388-8155
37'1 -2184
441&gt; -2230
441&gt; -7881
446-0458
446 -8655
245 -'1490
446-6595

REALTOR•

Tony' s Gun Repairs hot reblue- '
ing Open 9 00 AM to 7 ,OQ PM

Coli 304 676·4631
3 bedroom trail er $175 .00 a
month mcludes water and trash
p1 clc up, phone 304 -676 -2247.

a.

Surplus, Army Camoufteuge,
Otrnim, Rente! clothing {Wild
Turkey Season Stant April 27)
S1m Somar\ltlle'J, JunctiOn Independance Road , Old Route 21
East Raventwood , Fr., Sat. Sun
12 00-8 00 PM

Pecan Hutch
dinette set.
microwave, bed couctl. cha11,
well unit, end t1bles Ph. 446 11087 9 to 5

For sale New 26,000 BTU
window atr conditioner . f100
Call 614-992· 3917 after 5 00

Olive Green· Kenmore Cold Spot
Chett Freezer. 1Bc:u. ft . w rth
b11kets Very good conditio n.
Furnished room 1100. Utdi118S Call 614 ·446-4886 .
paid. Share bath. Smgle male
919 SecOnd Gelhpolis Call 6 P1ece Wood Living Room
Suitet f399 . C1rpet remnants
446 4416 aft&amp;r 7pm
9x12 '67 and up. Sw1vel Rocker
&amp;100 Mollohan F~o.unlture 403
Fourth A\la . KMR Ph, 814 -448 Space for Rent
7444.

Catalyl\c Convartera. only
S89 95 Most modalt In stella·
tlon alto a\lallable Muffler Man.
9 Stimpson A\le , Athen1, Ohio

For sale - Limesto ne, sand,
gravel. till dirt firewood Deli·
vered. 304 - 675 4412

1 ·e00·843· 3767.

Uud 6510 01tch Witch
Trencher and 450 John Deere
Dozer 814-694 -7842 or 694-

Rouma fen rent day. week
mo nth. Gallla Ho tel . Call 614 446·9715. !=l ent as low as f1 20
monttl

47

Office Spece fo r Rent E ~e c eltent
for Attorneys Accountant, etc
Cloae to Cc.urt House Call
Wi .emen Re11 Eslate Agency
614 -446 -3644
Mob1le Home lot Plant Subd1vi·
slon, wooded, concrete pad,
county w11ter IIIVIIIIble Ph 614246 6 856 or 446-0 23 9
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk,
Rout e 33 , North of Pomeroy
Rental trai lers Call 614· 992·

7479
Sp1ce tor sm111ll trailers All
ahoo k·up s. Cable. Also ertr c1ency
rooms, air and cable Mason,
W V a Ca ll 304 -773 -6651

La rg11 h 111ler lot m Middleport
Ne111 sto rtJI and tc hOol Call
614 -992 -2101 or 614 -992·
231 9

Good used floor model &amp;
portable cc.lor TV 's Ph . 446
1149
Uaed IOta and recliners . Corbin
&amp; Snydet' Furniture Ph 614 446 · 1171

Wtute1llverty II Metal Detector.
Used only a tew t1mes, ttlllund&amp;f'
warranty.
614· 992 -3703.

ca.,

ezoo

2 trailer axlel for Slit.
or
batt off..-. Call 614·742·2462 .

.,-- - -- - - -·leSIONS Halt Prrcel Save 55 per
cantil Fla1h1ng arrow signs
82991 lighted, non-errow f2891
Unhghlad f2491 Free letteral
See locally. 1-800·423 -01 63
anytime

Couch and chair. Brown. gold
and green floral Good condi·
11on 1100 Call387·7284
4 Piece Oak Bedroom Suhe,
din ette 1111. 1ola and chatr,
PICture frt me, end tablea. chma
cabinet . Call614· 446 -3086
Kingtize bran bad, complete
Bedioom suite. Cherry coffee
stand ,and end tables Call

614· 992·6603 .
T~in

maple bad. Box sprrngs,
maltrets . dresser with mirror
Extra mattress and bedtpread

012&amp;. Co11614· 892· 3619.

Spaca lo r rent. trailer apa ces.
Locul i Rd. Rt 1. Point Pleasant,

304 676· 1 076

pm

Real Estate General

47 Wanted to Rent
1n

SIGNS Half Price! Save 56%11
Flnhing arrow Signs S2991
Ughted, non-arrow 8289 ! Un·
lighted $2491 FREE lettert! Sea
loc ally
11800)423 · 0163 ,
enytime

"Bud" M&lt;GHEE REALTY

·

· HOUSE OF THE WEEK

·

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

M~GHEE 414 2nd Ave., Suite 200
, .. ,
Gallipoli1, Ohio
~
446-0552 Anytime

Buying or selling. Call or stop by our new
office in the Business &amp; Professional
Building. We have room for more listings.
Darvin Bloomer, Broker .. .... ... 446 ·6764
Dona McGhee. Assoc ............ 446-0562
Beth Null, Assoc . .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. . 245-9507
Steve McGhee, Assoc . .. . ....... 446· 1255

- I BEDROOM HOME IN CITY. H~S VINYL
SIDING, GAS FURNACE, STORM WINDOWS 60XI30 LOT.
$12.900

ICygar

Cre&amp; k School Oi1tr ict ·~ e ter e n ·
cet Ph. 6 14·446 -86 2 1

601

Real Estate General

3 BEDROOM BRICK AND FRAME HOME IN CENTENARY :::
HOME HAS NEW ROOF ANO VINYL SIDING YOUWillENJOY
THE FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPlACE AND THE
CONVENIENCE OF THE ATTACHED GARAGE. BACKYARD IS
FENCEO TO PROTECT CHILDREN AND PETS SEEANO YOU'll
BUYI $48.000

E.Moln
. POMEROY,O.

992·2259

TEAFORom
Real Estate~
ILilTOI

216 E. 2nd St.
Phon a

1-(61 4)·992-3326
RUTlAND - N1ce level lot,
mce modern 6 vo old home.
range, oelngerat01 drshwasheo
carpeting. 3 BRs 2tub baths.
suruleck. pool and washer
$47.500
40 ACRES - Foee gas. hay
l1 e l ~ . n1 ce kotchen w1
th
range. panelrng. lg. rm s, 4
BRs. hen hou se &amp; root eel
lar $43,000
66 ACRES - Plus mrnerals.
lots of tr ees &amp; seclud ed 1n
lhe cou ntry Aboul $500.00
per acre
NICE HOME - 2 slory 2
lub ba ths, n1ce cook &amp; bake
unrts. carpetrng, basement.
lurnace. on old 33 at Rock
Spr10gs l ot about 200•150.
T.P. water &amp; garage Ask1ng
$41.000
40 ACRES - 9 RM farm
hom e. lurnace. bath. 11I
bank far m, fences &amp; mr·
nerals $4 5.000
100 ACRES - Sutton Town·
sh1p, Ohio R1ver lronlage, T r
P wateo, old house &amp; barn
30 or 40 acres ol tractor
land on Rt. 124. Ask1ng
$70,000.
•
POMEROY - 2 story 3 or 4
BRs on Mulberry. Hot wateo
heat. d1nin g, 2 baths &amp; 2
pooches Only $28.000.
REEDSVILLE - 6 rm. house
&amp; 2 lots. Set up lor lrailer, I
P. water &amp; dnlled well. Jusl
$16.000.
DUPLEX - Buy lh1s &amp;; lei
the rent help. 2 lois in Rut·
land neao the stOle.
Cerlified Appraisals
Stllinc PrH11111 1
C..ll M2-JJ25
H•ill' •rFj

H•·,Hiqu,nl• r:,

NEW LISTING- NEAR ROCK
SPRINGS ROAD - Country
homeon l 2/3 acoelot. Home
1n good condoton wrlh 3 bed·
rooms, new carpeting. m·
sulated. attached garage, siOf·
age cellar. B1g yaod tor your
kidS. $33,000 00
EARLY COLONIAl
- BRICK WAl~S AND
PORCHES. CHARMING SUNROOM. FAMILY ROOM WITH fl ·
REPLACE. 4 BEDROOMS. ATTACHED GARAGE, NICE PRIVATE
Pl ACE TO liVE ON APPROX. 2 ACRES AlSO ~AS GREAT
COMMERCIAL POTENTIAL LOCATED ON ROUTE 35 AND 588
REASONABLY PRICED AT $65,000. JUST liSTED'

EXCEllENT lOCATION! ClOSE TO TOWN, BUT NOfiN TOWN
' EXTRA BIG l00X200 LEVEl l OT. 3 BR. Ill BATH, EAT·IN
KITCHEN WITH RANGE &amp; O.W., GARAGE, GAS FURNACE.
SUPER PRICEOf $39,000.
.
ANIIOUS OWMEI REDUCED PRICE - lotrto
root hot nteJ hultr. ran11 and r~tr lc. . cement

Fltkl ftnc:td w/small pond

:~~~~:~:.,A:~I~N~~ :!·.~~~~~~n:~=-~=~i:i:.:~:,
blth, lamily rm , uttll ly rm ftnud yard. stDfm wtndowl. and doOrs. City
scflools 811y now and tlkt actvantlll of low interiSt r1lt1 and price

IR

down. l u ~.

lamllw kllthtn
sunporch. basement. $50s.

wlblr. l01d1 of cabintts . utlhty rm .

RECINfliMODERNIZED inoldt ond oul l

~ b•hs. I ~ bolhs. &amp;Jidon
tub, ntw country l&gt;lut t l1cMtt w/ sohd oak ubintU. scr11Md porch IIEW
GAIACl 21' •~· w/ht1t. water. 200' wlrina. Ctn b111Stdfor ur repair. tit

Mrd liDs
ALl!RICI IANCHIMAGNIFICENt VIEW Pluoll ltftl and pond. Pul I'"'
own peno1111 tO¥eh to work a11d tompltltthis wtll ftsi&amp;MCI hOlM. 3 e•s.
uv. and dlflift&amp; 1111 , 2 full bltt.s. 21' •sl.r btdr11..
~it.. lauRdry mt.

tc.

Dt&lt;l Oftfloollna 1)004. llrn. fru it~... WORtHSUIIIfl WOITHOWNIIIG.

Henry E. Cleland Jr.

992-6191

Jean Trusull ..... 949-2S60
Dottie Turner ..... 992·5692

~~

rs
•

GRAHAM SCHOOl ROAD - Very n1ce
ranch offers kotchen . w/ range, oelng,
OW. drspl , m1crowave. LR FR. dmette. 3
BRs. I bath. cent a1r, carpetmg 2 metal
ulrlrty bldgs. Sh own by app01n1ment.

STEP INTO ELEGANCE when you enter the
foye1 ol one of the French C1ty's lrnest
FormallR. formal doning, spacrous master
bedooom woth ofl1ce or sewmg room
adtacenl. den. 2 BRs upsta~rs, 2'6 balhs. 3
fireplaces. lg lamrly room, solarium,
covered patro, screened porch and muf h
more. Call lor an appt

TURN THE KIDS lOOSE HERE - 2 5acres
m/1,w1lh a lovely ra nch stylehome. 3BR s:
2 balhs. lR. krlchen has m1crowave. range
and relng. lull basement. carp et heat
pump. cenl a1r. atlached gaoa ge plus
una ttached garage l ots of room lor a
garden

PRICE REDUCED TO 139.900! -GREAT
BEGINNER HOME - l hos home oilers a
large lR w1th loreplace. krtchen. dmrng
area. 3 BRs. bath. lull basement. I cao
garage. deck. fenced yard tust mrnutes to
town on Rt 141 Call too an appomtment.

BRICIIND FR.IM! ClOSI TO HOllll. tleoiollllt- tnlllocalion. SR
1&amp;0. Ask to'" insldt this btf11tlf11l rJIICh.

rm , roblp. Cllpoft. t K. IIIII. Low $50s.

! II, country trttlltn, llfi'IIIJ

Somt dtscrimtMtinl larnity will tltt priOt in
- l p o1 lhrs loetiJ lficl ,,..~~, Locattd do,. to t-. lt 3 II. Z
bfllll flw/Wbfp, sltllld pm .-.loll
lit- _,.d
patio.' llttt-.I•·POIII4 pod wrth joel ood sidl. MUCH. IIICH 1,011.
ll GLAD YOU WAITED:

eq,.,_.

AINNI~ullll""ltf tlrttrt&gt;ioine. too DRASTICAllY IEDUC£01

111'11 YOIII 0Wt1 ,ltYili-IDIT DOCK. Z ~ '"" • II &lt;Old l&lt;ctll IG Ollio
llwr.
Off $1110-7 ACRES 1/L hulifol INoildrna localloo.
CIIGIIN
: 7t l!rtl. INom. loMcco biro. !Mid tOiflrKI.
10 ~,!:!.~'- Hams • II. t1t11 otfot.

:.!.::!!:~~·fit&lt;!!:.:__~,

YOU CAN1 BEAT THE PRICE! 4 BEDROOM BRIC11 RANCH
HAS 21! BATHS. FUll BASEMENT WITH RECREATION ROOM
ATTACHED 2 CAR GARAGE PlUS 24x40 WORKSHOP
GARAGE. NICE COVERED DECK. ONE ACRE LAWN NEAR
CITY. $65,000.
KERR-HARRISBURG IIOAD - JUST MINUTES FROM
HOtZER HOSPITAL SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH,
HAS 3 BATHS. FAMilY ROOM, FUllY CARPETED, NATURAL
GAS BOILER HEATING SYSTEM, CENTRAL AIR CONO. AMONG
THE MANY EXTRAS. AHOT lOB, ~ ACRE LAWN, BASEMENT,
ATTACHED 2 CAR GARAGE A lOT OF HOME FOR $79,500.
NEAR EWINGTON - APPROX. 70 ACRES, $18,000. THIS
COULD BE AGREAT lOCATION FOR ASUMMER CABIN, OR, IF
YOIJ lOVE PRIVACY A YEAR 'ROUND HOME. MOSTLY
WOODEO HILLSIDE.
TYCOON LAKE - 14x70 HOME. lEVEl LOT. FURNITURE
STAYS. $19.1JOO.

DUPLEX 4 SALE - Great 10vestment tor
th e bu ye r localed on Graham School Rd.
Each un1l oilers 2 BR s. llvrng room, bath.
kitchen and stove, relrrg . OW and drspl ,
laundry. large carport. central a" and
·stora ge well.

$64900 00

#2389

LAID, lOTS OF LAID! - 161 ACRES. 'IIOOOS MILL ROAD.t
ROOM COlONIAl SmE HOME HAS 6BEDROOMS 2BATHS
FIRST TIME ON THE MARKET. CAll US SOON YOU WILL
WANT TO SEE THIS PROPERTY!
' •

GET AW~IFROM ITALLI -

home loa

I

urban setting lUSt a lew mtl es h om Ga llipolis Custom
buill b11ck ranch 8 roo ms._3 Y,. balhs, dtY1ded basement
Bea uhlul stocked lake Cu cular dn ~g .,l,r n ed wt l h trees
and shrubs Nine acre hom estea d Calt'f01 appo tntm enl
Gallla Calmly's Oesl

HEW liSTING .
"THE HARD fO FIND" - lhrs Wl!li iiHl tnlatncd rRnch
o!letS 2 bedt ooms. car [lC II!d hv1nR 1oom ~ pano us
kitchen. bath cat pcler1 honl po rct1 Alum S ld l ll ~ In
town tocat1on Pttced a1 S28.000, lmmedrale possessrou

..m•• • B3

8 , 12' shed alla Ch!d Alsoacomplele. r... o•. ;·; ,
properly Chann you

must see P11c.ed at

STATE ROUTE 160 - CORNER LOf - Thrs
home oilers 3 BRs, l R, krlchen bath
uhallached garage
·
:

NEGOfiABLE' - Ow1w t marl y, wtlrp111 ami t1 bl c Ia
constder olhm 011 lht'l lovely 3 hC!II OOtn homr rull
drvtded basement garaRe 11". bHi h'&gt; dt•u , I•H RI'
sc1Pened m porch Vr1ry nt r.e woo!!work cathetl •al
r P1h 11 1~ m h vtn ~' room Make thiS;r homPto M'e bt•l ott ' 1111
olllers

3 larll'

bedrooms
ts 1us1 a small be gtnntnR LR tamtly
roo m, ltw1ng room w1th l11 ept ace . full basemen! k1tchen
looks as 11 SPIInR ha s SJnunR' Owner bu ill lhtS one lot
h1m sel f•

#2361

#1332

'

lOG CABIN IN RUSIIC 41 ACRE SElliNG - 3
MENU FOR lODAY' - How aboul a lasly d1sh ol
mcome?2 story home and 2 bedr oom garage apa rtmen t
loc ated 1n c1l y Call today lor more rrliOJ mal ton and an
appomtm ent.

! 2324
SEClUDED FARM ' 147 ACRES- All rn gra ss mepl lor
appro• 30 acr es ltmber land 3 good barn s and uh ltt~
burldtngs So ltd 2 star ~ house and good level ya rd arei!
and garden Tobacc o base Call now tm lu st

appornlmenl' IMM[DIAT£ POSSCSSION

a p pr o ~

I 5 a c r e~

Furnace app tox

I yertr

bedroom s

bath,

unallached~"'i"
Sf('

!tvtn g 100111.

~ll l hfl and

bilscm ~nl ,

old

Must Sf'P

')

car

more lor 1 ~ 8 900 MUS!

! 2302
NCW·liSliNG...
I MINUTES WAlKING DI STANCE TO ODWNtOWN

2 stor y home w1\ h ~')cat r,ar apt• 3
bedrooms 2 halhs, furplarr la tp_e tront p01c h
wor ksho n tn lull basemrnt Pnc ••rl 111 lhr S30s Can

MIDDLEPORT -

loda y

AliENtiON PROFESSIONALS! -

#2391

mooo

!2320
OWNERSRFDUC!D HOUSEBY $1 4,000 JUSl TOSHOW
HEMEANSBUSINESS- l xr rtlrl l' ""!'''"'""'' 1'1111-.1

MAKE AN OFF ER• !I on lh1 ~ 3 bed toom hom&lt;' wtlh tam1ty
room hasemflnt. &lt;.toragf' bu1 ldtng an rt IOI!i more Wtthm
cttv l tntrt ;. Prt&lt;rd tn l hc• $30\

#1 337

~ omc ul l hr ll •a tufl'', ~ r u l lhr• r1 ~ ou rall h11 an
apporntmcnt to ~ (1(1 1111., lovPiy h[lmP I hat ~Ofl'l wtth tht•llll
~ hrrtr oom&gt;; 311 hath ~ ~ludy f~m1ly tnom . tmmat Pfllry,
111 gtound pool An~wr-r ~ yo'ur lh r"ilnl ol prtvacy W1 i l1 CIVPI
1 acrel ot lr ePrt \U rr oundiOP."i Com'' 'ii'P lhc rP~f l

to apprectale

#2296
COUNTRY LIVING- 7 9 ACRES - MAJOR HIGHWAI
2 story 4 bedrootn s w1lh IVroo m. drmng room·

m the 4th

WASHINGTON ElE MENTARY - 3 her lroom hom!' tu.;;t
mmu les hom town. mcludP.'; tam1l ~ room I bat h~
ne wer krlc hen new ~ta~ lurnact' l oca terl on ;~ Qtnl't
dea d·etHl sheet Wrth m m1n utes h om ctl~ I Year Ouycr
Prntr&gt;c l1on Plo1n 1nduded $4 !&gt;.000

#2182

#2291

GROW YOUR OWN GARDEN, DOGS. CATTLE- KIDS on

thrs'Scentc l9 acre larm Jlh story trame home 4 or 5
bedrooms basement Gar3Re, bar~ stot age bwldmg,

large pond Call Ieday Th'1'S lhely~ of laom lhal ''
d&lt;ll rc ull lo lrnd $69.900
12330
FARM LISTING - 160 acres PfiVale 1oca1 1on Modern
house. 6 rms ~~~ b at h s Pr1vate water system sprlllf.\
development Tobacco base. barn. l tP house Many
spnn gs lor ll~estoc k water Pasture, tillable lan d and
woodland Ja ms Way ne Nat1onal Foresl Good hunhng
and recreat1on Southwe~t e r n sc hools Pr tced low $60s

#22 80

2 STORI HOME ANO 7'/t ACRES MORE OR l ESS.
OVERlOOKING THE OHIO RIVER' - Home ollm 4
bedrooms. 2 bat hs ltvm g room famrly roorn , ul tlrly
room remodeled ktlchen wtlh l treplace Storage '
butld tng and bar n l eve l land to liVer (rUIIIree~ and
more

#2328

1974 MOBI LE HOME w1lh IO'd4' e•pando 1
bed rooms Currently rn hailer par ~ R£ASONAB I ['

.

#2322

20 ACRES WITHIN MINUTESOf HOU!R ISR160)Rural wa!er available Srt ualed close to ne w ~r a de
school

#2266

l OCATION AND CONVENIENTTO THE VIllAGEOF RIO
GRANDE make~ lht s se ven room home a destrable
hst1n g LIYtng roo m. formal dm tng. com plete k•tchen,
parhal basement Lrke new shmgle roof Alummum

S1d1ns Allo•dable pnce range- low 130s

#2360

REDUC!O $4.000 DO' CAN1 GO WRONG At THI S
PRICE' 129.900 - 3 bedrooms, lrvrng room. balh

PRICEDTOSfll AT $11.000 - l our roorn house ann
utrtt ty room Iron ! porch Cfltlar and ~mokehouse
S1 tuolrrl on I WPm Addl')()rt l own•,h•r

#2317

bed room b11rk tam:h ~~~at H M C ln cludi'S ~ba t h ~ IY,
lamrly room 7 hrepl~tcrs lormal drntAP~ lull l mr~lwd
ba\e m en t nr Yier p,as lurn~ce ~ ru1 ccnl r ~t au r1f' wr•r
llwrmal wtndows and rTt uch mor,. C.:tH lor mmr
1nlor mat1on

#2358
NEW .NEW NEW. 93 ACRES MORE OR l!SS Seve ral tee! at road ltorlta~e . prod uc1nP, ra\ NPII
patt1ally ¥100dPd mrneral "~hi ~ ant:l nonr1 rut a! water
avatl abiP 1

#1377
WaiPr

!2 359
room~ and bath very nt&lt;.:e Bar (1 and lrke ne11 mPi al •,han
30' ~4 2 tnduf.tllal IYJH! 53 acres ot land wtlh lobar:co
base Has mumable loan P11cect 111 the 30~

! 2279

bed rooms and mor e 2 bBtn'i, pond, !ob.l cc o base 2
storage bUildtngJ. On ly appro.r: 7 m tle~ !r om town

#2163

!DGE OF IOWN - three bed r oo~ ra nch • rlh balh
eat tn ktlchen . h;udwoo&lt;JIIoon and 2 car r,a ra ge l'l'ilh
ell tctency apa1tmen1 In c•ly sc hools $35 000 Calt l01
compl ete l111tng

#2313
BUILDING tOT- localed al lower Ro 1. access 10
Ra ccoon Creek Approx I iltl e and restncl ed-no

BUilDING lOT - Near R~ Grande onSR325 lOOft ol
10ad lronlage, sood I~ 101 mo~l e home 16.500 Call l01

VINTON .. 120.1100 - 1slory frame home w11h par11al
baseme nt 3 bedroo ms, bath, eat rn kttchen and double
lol l et's golook'
#1 292

#2368
r 1986Cen tu ry,21 Rut Estat!' Corporaht.n

mm 1• loo rtumr•rous to m••nttOi t

'2 26 I
CtOS£ TO CITY -! illl~r· k'inuli rr11rnt Rrtrtlll1•ul~r 1 • 3
hrtJtoorm dt rlmP. rmm1 M• fJt wr1r1rl r -ih•ltfo\ • 1n ~d 1 l•r 11
,.,,1r;~ lar,rr• lo t Wit~h~n~ton flr ·rn 1v~fl

Hpt·

H1190

GREAt iHVE SIMENT PROPlRll - M"h'l' '"""' ow f

wr!h.IO rnohrlf• hllrm•&lt;; A vr ry mr • I hr•rfr(JrJIII ~ t1.1ttr
hornr With ba~cmr.n l "'nl l 11 ~(J ,r,o IJtilldrnv P~r~ 11 1•
r~nlt~l l1p,hii'IJ ~ tu•r•t ~ ~nrt II ''rl' •· 1m t~!f·rl rl! f/ 11,1- 1
'\t rPfj

#2 249
WHAI A CREAl OPPORTUN itY &amp; ASKI NG ONLY
$10,500 -

c~n u~ today ;wrl

n 1''' 11'

ct~mme r cr!ll bloc k hutlrltn!l {ii.Pfllli l

Tycvrm lake Perfect lor IMrl •I r r

~n ollrr on 1111'
to1 8'1 Cln· 10 "r
tr111' rh J11mr
~~

plu ~ water and ~e pttc

'1 161
WHAT A PRI CE' $17,000111 1&lt;. .,..ho~l 1111• O lm~&lt;r art'
a~ ~tn~ 101 lh t\ 1 bl•droom !Mil h I ~II tly I!IIJfll I'd' o(t
krlr hl!n, hath anrl rnor e OUIH rtl ~ltJ)rl ~ntl rt!!nlln (
it( If' ~

mss

133 ACRESMOREORlESS - 211ory older home wrlh 3

moMe homes Bu u11fol surroundmgs Prrcedal $5,500
#2316

more mlormall on

~nil

COULD BflHEFARM FORYOU' - Remodeled home 6

ul tlt ly area , ga s l01nace. central a11 C1!y sc hools Call
tod ay for an apporntme nt

#2318

#2336
OWNER Wi l liNG TO TA K[ HOME IN ON DOWN
PAYMENT OR Wi l l CONSID ER LAN D CONTRACT B~aul t lu l r.o nl cmpora ry home wrlh appr o~ 3 ?00 ~n jJ

!lncl app10w 17 11 arrr~ lull fm1~ hrd ha ~rment 3
bNh oom~ ? lull hrl l h ~ ~ ltdlf brllll' latmly room ~nrJ
lor mal tllfltnP. 70'140 tn~ r ound roncrrtr and ''t•PI l)l)(tl

A HOME FOR THE ENTIRE FAM ilY - SP"-''"' 4

1 153 ACRE S on Bula vtlle Ad dt son Roa d
rnctuded Mobtle ho m e~ l'lelcnmr

hU1Iri1ni

lnca tPd at/3 1ocu ~t ~t r Prl Au e~ rrl h · ut lora ltunlur tlw
IIIO!rw ou.tl pt•r 1.rl nt r.~ll (Ot rnou1 !lrtll tl s Pr tt·ed 111

1

!2 378

HARD tOBHI EVE. BUTTRUE - $14,000" lhe ask'"~·
prr ce on thts ntce 3 bedroom J story home srlualed on

- la r ~e

MAKE THIS YOUR NEW HOME - Brrck
oanch 3 BRs, 11\ baths, kitchen w/ ran ge.
doubleoven. OW liVIng rm . d~n etle, lamrly
rm. t"epl ace. lull basemel\l scoeened
po1ch. 2 car atlached garage. KC school
diSIIICI.
.'

BRICK RANCH -

NOT

#2 294

ano lialh Soulhweslern school diSir&lt;cl Ro I 41 Prrced

PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP - lovely home
offers 3 BRs, 3 baths, eQuipped krlchen.
14x44 fam1ly room. d1nene.lueplace. 2car COMFORTABLE liVING PRICED AT
unattached garage, 20•40 pool and $19.900 - Thrsattra ctrve home oilers 2
BRs. bath k1tchen w1th range, d1ningroom.
satellite dosh. Call lor an appomtment
LR. carpet. 1 car unattached garage,
BUY AUTILE OR BUY AlOT!- Th 1s home srtuated on two lois Call today
can be puochased w1th 5acres or 58 and
offers 3 BRs, 2 balhs. LR. k1tchen GREEN ACRES IS THE PlACE TO
woodburnrng stove. car pet. lobacco base. BL.mce ranch style home srtuated on a
40!60 barn, cellar house and several 70• 14811. lot oilers 3 BRs. I ll bath s lR
FR w / l~replace, eal·rn krlchen, gas heat:
sheds Call lor more rnlo1maloon
Green schools Call tod ay
TO $24. 900!!1 - N1ce home
room. kotchen wlfange, relng. VINTON - CORNER OF CHERRY &amp; ClAY
d1n1ng room, bath, carpetrng, - Noce lwo story home offers 4 BRs. 2
IW.~Ibur;tl~~ stove, unattached garage ba ths. lR kitchen, den, d1n1ng room. lull
olloce and shop Call today. ba sement. sundeck. lireptace Ca ll tooan
apporntment
I GREEN TWP. - 2 5 acres m/ 1, very mce
home offers5 BRs. 2 balhs,lk~c hen . d1non g AFFORQABLY PRICED AT JUST $29,9001
lR. carpet and hardwood, wood· -Close to CityonRt 141 1his homeoilers
Th"''""' new furnace Call for an k1tchen, LR, lam1ly 10om, d1nrng rO(lm and
lull basement large unattach ed block
garage. Call lor an appomtmenl. ·
GlfENfiElD TWP. - 88 75 A.. m/ 1,
lronts on SR 233 and Frank Shaller Rd. AD OLSON TWP - PossomTrol Rd. - 93
acres m/1all woods. Old bam on property
Owner reports t1mber
$21,900
AFFORDABILITY + lOCATION equals one
nice starter home near Green School 3 lOTS OF POTENTIAL HERE!- 2000 SQ.ft
bath, LR, kotchen, fireplace. lull burldrng Wllh fronbge on St. Rt 160.
I ba~ment, big yard. Call lor more det"l~ 1 2~20 walk·mcooter, 12 h. darry case. Call
lar more details

U CREI· PORIER. ON SR 514: h&lt;1nt~ mnodol.. lolo~homo LR. 01.1

RUTLAND - Nice rancb
type home on a level lol 3
bed1ooins. eQuopped ktt·
chen. all 1n good cond ~ 1on .

$39,900- I 7 acres m/ 1. Very noce ran ch
style home lealures 2 baths. 3 BRs, LK.
lam1ly rm .. and formal dm1ng, car peting.
woodburnon g slave Call lor more
onlormaloon
•
~

EWINGTON - WOODRUFF RD. - l.55
acres, m/1, 3 BR home. lR. kitchen. bath
North Galha school doslnct

RIGGS CREST SUBOIVI !
SION - REAllY NICE Split Ioyer home w1th 4·5
bedrooms all in e•cellent
·conditoon Gaoage, mce tot,
WB hooku p, blrnds and
shutters 1nctuded WANT
$54.900 00

KINGSBURY ROAD - Ap·
poo11mately 143 acre hoose
larm. House needs repair,
barn, horse cooral, free gas
lo lhe house, 3 011 and gas
well! ava ilable lor purchase.
All minerals Ask for deta1ls
on wells PRICE REDUCED
MAKE OFFER $47.500 00.

THE FAMILY Will lOVE THIS ONE'
$25,000 ...!. VAllEY DRIVE _ . TliiS3 BR Ranch slyle home on 5 acre mil. oilers 3
home oilers 2 baths kitch en LR OR BRs, bath, kotchen, lamolyroom.LR,carpet.
carpet, gas heat crty 'school s Call i.
heatalator lrrepla ce. WB stove, 2 car
appt
'
or an attached garage 16•32 ln ·ground pool
Cha rn l1nk·lence Ca ll lor an apporntm ent ..
PICTURE THIS - You and your lam1ly
relaxong on a wrap around deck enjoyrnga DON'T BE CRAMPED FOR ROOM ANY.
le111foc VIew of the Oh1o R1ver You can w1th MORE - Th1s lovely home oilers approx
lhrs home at lhe edge of lown Other 200 SQ It and ISfUSI l1ve mmutes lrorrl
atlractli features mcl ude 3 ~ BRs. 2 tow n - 4 BRs, I '~ baths. powder room.
baths.LR woth stonel11eplace and m~rrored k1lchen. dmette lR wrth corner wood·
wall that reflects the 11ver VIew, FR. rec buo ner. fa m1ly room. carpel and hard wood.
room, kitchen. dinette. 211replaces carpet gas hea t. cent a ~r . altached garage. cily
cent 11r II you like the fiver you'll iove th1s schools Call tod ay.
one

lOVELY BRICK HOME IN TOWN - Jhrs
home has a lot to ofle1 Kitchen w1lh range
and d1spl . LR woth lrreplace. carpel over
hardwood. lull basemen!, alta ched garage
wilh electric opener. gas heat. cent. aor
storm w1ndows You'll want to seethiS one

PRICE REDUCED - MID·
DlEPORT - Almost 2 acres
1n lhe count ry w1th a noce
mobole home. 2 olher build·
mgs Good location owner
wan ts a sale MAKE OFFER
$15,000 00.

lEE CIRCLE - SYRACUSE
- N1ce 3 bedroom ranch
w1th dinmgarea, large frYing
room. laundry area. carport
and outsrde stooa ge. Nice
neoghMohod owner must
sac rol1ce $31,900.00

ranch ha s appeal lh1 oug houl Ca thedra l ce1l tngs tn hvtn ~
roo m and master bedroom Ftre place. famtly room. 1 1 ~
bat hs lormtll dmm g 2 ca t gatage N t cel ~ lan r1 scapP.[I
lawn Ptcl uresque setttn g Can 1oday 101 more deiatls

.

to co untry hYmgl Oel1r,htl ul pt oper t ~ wtlh
stoc ked jl Dnd 5 acres sun ou nd thts ver y wen kepi 4
bed room home Cat hedral cetlmg compltm euls lrvm~
10orn and d1 nm~ room . ~ halh s 17'x 14' I 1 wtth

Statesman tlll&amp;r used 12-14
hours. rear tinas. 8 hp, 304 -4681&amp;91

'Real Estate General
J or 4 Bedroo m hou te

JAY DRIVE -lovely home lor beginners,
3 BRs, LR, eal·on k1lchen bat h. car petin g,
gas heat, cenl a11. attached garage Call
now lor appointment.

I
SAY t 00 ..

6006

Real Estate General
~·

JUST liSTED: .
CHAROLAIS HillS AREA - Thrs (aslelully decoraled

HO ME I N CITY - .f hr ~ 7 tJrd1rAw '''•II' hl!~;j Natrn ~n{l
chCerlu l atmo~ phr.r e N1CP wwtv k1lllll'n w1th rt~nl'fl
and rC II I~C r ator. lormal drnmr lhhrr iiVrOI' toom ro~tril
wtde hall way (larh al ba ',~&gt;rrwul rlflll liflnl prm h
Included also cur tatn'J hltr d' .,.~ ,h,•r ~nrl rlry{'r ilnrl
dehumrd1l1Pr

mn

MOM. DAD. CHI lOREN. 4·H'm . f.f A PROJECTS-

f HIS I S IT! - 3 berli oo'm hOm!' ltkr n~&gt;w 010~11111
ktlchen. barn Ex celle nt 2 ca t J!llf,. r.tl and gla 2r&gt;rl1Jior k
butldm~. 6 i!Cfe\ plu~ All m p,m~ Ntrf' gard en a r~&gt; a
located SR 775 101ns Raccoon Cll•t•k County P~r k
D•;trt ct Afl ordably prtced tn the uo~~, S30s Cali now

#2287

BUI LDINGLOI NEAR RIO GRANDE- V&gt;e~ nl lol Wlih
sepltC . wen water 163 II ol
lr onl~l{e ~oDd lor
mobllf' home or hou:.r. 8,640 Calllnr more mlormat ro n

roao

! 2369

.n trultee fOr lhr N AF ® and '· - tr4tdemarks o ( &lt;ientury 21Real Est at! Corpora tion /,rlnuuj'in U S A £qu ~l H 111J ~In~ Opp• rtu •
EACH OFFICE ISI ND EPENDENT L~ OWNED AND OrERATEO

Gl

�10- The
71
1965

Autos for Sale
Chevy

17,000 actual

m iles 100% Or igin al, e~tC8 11ent

co ndition. Ph. 6 14-446· 7059

Times-Sentinel
71

Autos for Sale

- - -- - -

.owner $3000. Ph. 614-4464286.
1984 Chevette 42, OOOmi Auto.
elr, AM &amp; FM , black &amp; wh ite
mterlor, Sharp &amp;2 ,700 Ph

6 14·379· 2682
19 84 Esco r1 4 -doo r, 4 -lpeed.
.new paint &amp; t•rea. 82 ,700 Ph
614 · 3 7~ · 2682

19 74 Dart 5400 1976 Ford
LTD $300 197 8 Fairmont
·uoo. Ph. 6 14-388 -96&amp;9
19 83 Oldsmobile Cutlass
Callas. Hurst Lim ited Edition.
low Mile age Ph. 6 14-446 -0 848
any1im11. 448 -094 1 after 6pm .
2

1982 Camaro, blue, V·6, AT ,
PS, PB, AC, spo rt wh eelt
u aoo Ph 614-446 -10 66 after
6pm Ca ll 446-4 623.
195 7 Fleetwood Cadillac limous ine. need s work . Be in
town thlt week only. mu utt 1ell
now. Ma ke offer. Call anytime
Ph. 6 14 -446 · 11 9 7 Pla n t s
aubdiv ition.
1977 Buick Reg al for sale or
trade for a 1mall t1r c ar Ph .
614-3 67-0 608.

71

1973 Plymouth runs good t5150
or btlt offer. Honde Arrow

Scooter 1175. Ph. 814-3670541 .
U79 Ford LTD 2 door. PS . PB.
AC , AM· FM stereo tape. 11200.

614·985·4440.

Real, Estate General

1977 Camaro. 8700.00 3 04-

675· 7829

'80 Datt un, exc cond, no tult,
304-676· 5689 atter 6:00PM .
'77 Ford Van. '78 Ford Van. '78
Cutla .. wagon. 304·468· 1 630

·as Mutlang, 3 door. V·6 , auto,
AC , crulu control.
milat. 304-676 -5431

~

31 ,000

'79 Cougar XR7 . now paint
rebuilt engine no miles. nice car,
Stearn• Garage. 304-676-7710
or 676-8749.
79 Ppntiac Grand Pr ix 11700

304-676·2466

1987 Dodge Omni, 5-spood .
Uk e now condition $ 6600 . Ph .

1

REAL ESTATE

S· 1 0 Pick· Up, 4 x4 extended.
AM· FM Stereo. 26. 000m~o. al·
ways garaged, excellent condi·
tion 88,000 Ph 81.4· 446- 7600

\ 446-3644

1987 Siera Cl.u sic 4-whflel
drive. loaded, 8 ,00 0m i Ph
614 · 37~ · 2820 .

E. M . •WISEMAN, BROKER
DAVID WISEMAN . 446-9555
B. J. HAIRSTON, 446-4240
CLYDE B. WALKER. 245-5276
LORETTA ·M-c!:!ADE ~ 446::-,.,2-!i ,

1983 Dodge 160-Pi ck·Up , 6 ·
cyl , auto trans ., long bed.
67.000 miles Good condit ion
82860. Ph. 814-266-1142 .
Nice topper with paneling for
lon g bed Pick-up • 126.00. Call
614 · 245·5223 .

IN OLDER
CADMUS - 2·3
bedrOOIJIS, l 'h bath s, hvmg room w1th fireplace. II
basement Exce llent garden area. Good stora ge
building 45x45 barn. 22x24 garage. I acre. m/ 1
$36,500

We
Need
littlnft/1

245-5488

*

VERY ANXIOUS TO SEll! 'I- You 'll enjoy
the QU ietness Of the coun try sid ~ and conven 1ence
of beingclose to town mthis 7 year old 3bedroom
home !USI 4 miles out in city school d1stnct The
rou gh cedar Sidin g and new wrap around deck
[treated lumber) make11asta ndout on th emar.Jet
Includes a nice kitchen w1th ra nge and·
refrigerator. lorm1 ca count ertop s and mce
cabmets. formal dm1g room and 2 baths There's a
large lam1ly room w1th hreplace and t car garage
24 x30 outbUild ing for storage. You'll like the
added outd oor summer livmg space the deck
prov1des. above ground pool is e•tra II you 're
about to buy a home, see lh1s onebefore you close
on anything else' $64,500
#lOR

URGENT - Owned moved out of slate Vary
Impo rtant to sell 3 yr old 3 BR quality home,
130x250 lot Shade trees. 2 bat hroom s, fireplace,
elllcle nl k1lchen. extra mce carpet an d wa ll fmish.
Heal pump, 2 car garage. 40' anten na and rolar,
very good receptiOn Ask1ng $53.800

75

'

~83 Suzuki RM -126 runt great
ftJUtt sell immediately 142&amp; . Ph.

11.14-2·1·9167.

•

MB1 RS·175, excellent condi-

1!'&gt;"· ••oo. Call614· 256· 1267

'(98&amp; Honda Shadow 600, with
2. helmets, low mileage, ucelltnt cond. Ph. 614-448 -9884 or
1186 Honda XR -80 very good
· ~nd .
Ph . 81~· 446 ·

7•••.

'78 Sea Star 90 hp Mercury.
power trim. 82 Ttnnenee
trailer, good cond . 83200. See
beside trl County Sports Shop.

Ph 30•· 115· 2988.

25 ft. pontoon boat. new 26 hp
Mere motor. trailer, 7 life
jackett, 20 gtl. 911 tank. e"c.
cond 6,4- 992· 7080 , after
8:00 AM and before 6 00 PM.

,..• .• 580.

••oo.

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

BUDGETTransmlstlons : Used&amp;
Rebu1lt All types·torque,EP nverters &amp; trantltf CIHI. CVC
Joints. Gtt~ranteed a minumum
of 30 deyt, will deliver, c•h •
carry or lnnall Call 614 · 3792220 or 1-304-87&amp;-6768 .

.

Used Ill Rebuilt Tranamlsaions
All internally Inspected &amp; gua·
ran teed. ln1tallatton tnd pick-up
IIVaHable. Call 814·446-0916 .
l6L Tire Barn. .Semi, farm
heavy equipment tires
135. TubesiB.OO, 13 In ch tires
126 pair. Other 111es and
bargamt May 1-10. 814-992-

tract~;~r,

~'t-985 Suzuki RM 260. E~ecellent
CJOnditlon. •1300 . Call 814492-1701 after &amp;p.m 677
~rownall , Middleport

6344

Dual exhaust kits. 199 .95 in·

, 981 Honda 4 trax. 2 month1 1talled . Moll Ford l , Ch811y

•1500. Coll&amp;1•·992· 74e7
.+old.61··
7•2·3154.

2225.
.1980 Oauun 310. Go od condi tion . 8700. Call614 59 3-7390
evening I.

3 BR HOME - 6 MO. OLD - 1450 sq . ft. living and full
basement, Zfull baths. lg. rooms. 12x26 country kit.,
tasteful decor. well insul./ddl. pane windows. all elec ..
crty water/sewer, cedar lap. siding. lg. deck, 2 balco·
n1es. storage bldg .. 4/ 10 acre, overlooks Bob Evans
Farm. VERY CONVENI~NT: Walk to cofle&amp;e. grocery/ bank/ P.O./Rio Grande Elem. nearby, Gallipolis city
schools, 10 min. to Spring Valley, 20 min. to Jackson. ·
25.min. to Meigs Mines . Owner Transferred, call for Appomtment.

- Here's your chance Good locatiOn on Rt. 588
1n c1ty hm1ts $18,000 buys th1s clean 1·2
bedroom ho me Includ esfull basement. forced alf
lurn ace, mce backyard w1th gardenspot Ca ll now
#223

NEW LISTING!
COZY J.4 BEDROOM HOME - Very well
mamtam ed home 1~ story Ira me off ers large
living room, fam ily room. mce bath and eat·in
Kitchen. Attractive oak woodwork. On ecar garage.
Close to schoofs. pools and ballfields. $44.900.
.
#224

NICE HOME IN RIO GRANDE - Near grade
school and college. Home on 'A of an acre lot w1th
30x36 barn E• cellent gar den area. H1stonc older
home occup1ed by former college pres1dents 1n
good cond111on 4 bedroom s. 2 bath s. large livmg
room w1th wood stove, lam1ly room, d1mg room,
modern kitchen and 12•18 sunroom .Gas f~red hot
water heal Chestnut wood wmd ow and door
facmgs '" main pa rt ol hom e. Just on eof the best
built and modernized )10 good taste) homes 1n R10
Gran de Pnced to sell al $54,800.
#350

ATTENTION!

COZY 3 BEDROOM HOME IN CITY! - Home
includes family room, hv1n g room, eal·m kitchen,
remodeled bath with shower. Well buill home m
good cond1l1op. Fenced in backyard. Pal1 o. New
ro of. Gas heat. $4.6.900.
#219

ou Need
Results!
Wt Need
Listings!

NEW LISTING ON DEBBY DRIVE - Very
. attractive 3 bedroom ranch home in a family
onented neighborhood. Oulstandmg kitchen with
bea utiful oak cab1 nets and tile countertops. Also
boasts fam1ly room with wood burner, livin g room,
1'h baths, plus dming room or study. Beautiful
land scaped lot, large parking area. City schools. 2
miles from town. $67,500.

#226

ATTENTION!

A PLACE YOU'll LOVE TO CALL HOME ·
Charm1 ng 2 story vmyl Sided home giVes you a
wond erful warmleehng Includes4 bedrooms, 11k
baths. hvmg room w1th !~re pl ac e, attractive dinin g
room w1lh corner chin a cabmets. large eal·m
·kitchen and lull ba se m~nt with :rmffil fl~ l m
· Quality deta~led construct01n throughout. Located
on a qu1el deadend street w1lh1n walkmg d1sta nce
to schools. 2 car 1garage All for $65. 000
"
#209

. COAliiiN~I!' fl\Dflli
anyone in the Vinton area. Located just••;,;"";.,
Vmton on State Ro ute t60. Pretty 3
homewith 1\\ baths, very nicelar ge kitchen, huge
living room and large 4'h acre lot witb mgrou nd
pool and small pond. $34,900 buys 1n and we can
get you fin anced!
#104
HOME IN KRISTI DRIVE - Attract1ve lri·level
offers comfortable living on emy floor. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths. Also mcludes living room
w1th l~replace and fam ily room. Nice lot with nice
view mquali ty nei ghborhood . Garage, centra l a1r.
$63,900.

#211
IS BUYING FARM - Needs to sellth1s home. Takealook Th1s 1s .
Ideal
a newlvwe(l COU pl e Of .retired folkS. Ca n purchase with only 5&lt;\i,
down 1$1.850.00). 3 BR, lg. l1vmg room 15x25. Includes stove, ref., dis·
hwasher. wb. K1n~ washc1 &amp;d ~yer. ce1lmg fan. Corner lot Cellar and smo·
kehousc an d IOx i Ostorage bu1ldm g. Heal pump/ cenlral a1r Pnced 10 the
30s IIns may be e•a clly whal you are lookmg lor.

RU~TIC RANCH - On 6 8 acres more or less. Spectacular v1ewand set·

lin g. l ots ol l and scapmg ready to burst mto bloom Pnvacy Lots of ex tras
Amust to see and you will agree adrea mhome lh1scou ld be. Pnced in 6o s:
OWNER WILL HELP WITH fiNANCING• AND DOWN PAYMENT! G1ve usa
call loo more - 4 bed1ooms. 2 baths. pool $48.000.00.

n

RARE OPPORTUNITY! - Boaters · fishermen · Re,trees-600 to 800
deep water lronla~e lncludm g3BR.2 bath homeand a28x48 metal build·
mg, lot s ol trees. boat docks, and very secluded.
MODERN RANCH - 3 bedr ooms. lg k1t chen and duun g. 75 acre more or
less. $41.900.
SPACIOUS HOME - 5.000 sq It 4 bedrooms 2 bat hs pool lots extr'as
$110,000 00
.
.
.
.
Monthly mcome $385 00 city Only $34 000 00

iU~~· MORE DR LESS - Storr and hall. 5 bedrooms. couniry.

Sl OP BY THE OFFICE AND WE Will BE GLAD TO HElP.

LISTINGS NEEDED!

8

1·800·843· 3767 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

"

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

MARLIN WEDEMEYER - AUCTIONEER

OEAl !OR'

WE ~RE WORKING FUll TIME TO MEET YOU R REAl EST ATE NEEDS -

Ohio

THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1987 at 7:00P.M .

lUTES
REAL ESTATE
m·
BONNIE l. STUTES·REALTOR
JIM STUTES·REALTOR
CALL
462 2ND AVE. , REAR
446-4206
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.•
:·•
,.••

Tru cks, Ven1, 4x4 's. MuHier
Man, 9 Stimpson Ao,~e., Atl'1en l ,

. LARGE GROCERY SALE

Real Estate General
•

AND LOT IN RIO GRANDE - 8 rooms in
all, l 5 bedrooms, I\\ baths, c1ty utilities. Energy
efficient. well insulated home. Family room with
woodslove, stepsavin g kitchen eq u1pped. All on a
nice 86'xl72' lot in the center of Ri0, oppos1te
Da VI s Hall Excell ent location for collegestud ents,
teachers and empl oyees. Let us show you this well
built, well conditioned home Pnced to sell at
$50,000
I

#317
FITS All FAMILIES - There's nothmg missing
here that any fa m1ly m1ghl need. Near schools,
churches. shoppmg and on a quiet street. 4
bedrooms. 2\\ baths, 2 car garage, above ground
pool. At tust $64.900. lh1s 1s the perfec &gt;place to
grow up and be gr own up.

#220
1ST TIME EVER OFFERED AT THIS PRICE! - One
• of the prettiest settin gs m Middleport. Modern 3
bed1 oom hom e surrounded by lar ge trees and
rock clifls. All kmds of birds, deer and squirrels
will visit your 1.27 acre lot every dar Th is very
well kept 20 year old home includes a nice eat·in
kitchen. for mal dming rooni. hardwood floors and
a full dry basem ent. There's a 3 car carport and a
16x32 mground pool. It's at the end of 'Vine Street
1ust off Grant. There's notratf1c, it's quiet. just like
liv1ng in the country yet only a minute away from
shoppm g, church aRd grade schools. Priced at
$56,900.

#ill
HOME WITH S~ALL ACREAGE - Near Vinton 17 acres with 1\! story home. Remod eled home
has vmyl s1ding. new w~ri n g, includ es 3bell rooms.
1 beth and lots of storage room. 10.12 acres flat
ground. Ou ght to look at it' $40.000.

LET'S MAKE A DEAL! - On lh1s 2 story home
overlooking the river. Includes l4 bedrooms,
hvmg room, dming room. lamtly room. 1\\ baths.
New roof, new lurnace,' new w ~rm g . Askmg
$32,500. Wants an offer. Would ~elp w1l p down
payment tb qualified buyer. Great deal lor a b1g
fam1ly w1th a small bud get. City schools.
#215
HERE'S A GENTLEMAN'S COUNTRY PLACE You'll have litlle to do except relax and en1oy one
of the bell buill homes in th e coun ty. Th is IS a
roomy 2100 sq. « , 3 bedroom brickw1th 3'h acres
of rolling land. Prestigious neighborhood in an
area restncted to higher priced residential. Three
large bed&lt;OOIIl,, ...format d1ning and charmmg
famtly room with see·through l l r~ p\ace Th~
kitchen. , includes Cornon'gWaie· 'ra nge, new
refngeralor, microwave oven, dishwasher and lots
of oak cabmets, 2 full ceramic baths, and an
oversized 2 car garage w1th automatic door You'll
be greeted by an outstandin g v1ew from each
w1ndow This stately appearing home will be hard
to match in today's market. Priced at $11 9,000
#105
WEEKENO .RETREAT - Nice 2 bedroom home,
bath. nice kitchen, 12x24 livin g room . All in good
condition, 7 years old. N1ce flat lot 85x250. Good
garden area. beautifu l view ol farm land and
woods. Only 9 miles from c1ty boat docks. Asking
only $27.900.
'
#302
HOME IN SPRING VALLEY AREA - Very
attractive brick ra nch w1th q u al~y construct1on
throughout. Includes 3 bedrooms, 11\ baths, large
living room and dining room combmation, plu sTV
room. eat·in kitchen and attached garage. Close to
~ os pita l and sho1J11ing. Lot provides lots of
privacy. Replacement windows, insulated well.
$67,900.

#201

LOTS Of REPAIRS HAVE" BEEN MADE - A few
more are needed, but at th is price, $1 8,500, you
are gettmg '· real bargain. 1\\ story in Vinton, 2 ·
bedrooms, k1tchen and doubl e lot. Make us an
offer'
·

#107

mo ·

FOR THE PART TIME FARMER - 10 acres crop
25 acres pasture, tobacco base. Two veins ol coai
reported. Poss1ble oil and gas. Ha s 12x6Q mobile
home in good condition Good waler supply Barn
for storage. Good buy All for $25,000..
#324
IMMACULATE BRICK RANCH - Owners h a~e
~ v en th1s home lots of TLC. Among other things
this boasts a. nice lar~e lamily room w1th a

woodburner mserted 1n fireplace, spacious
kitchen that any w1de WJII love. 3 bedroom ~ 1'k
baths and a.2 car garage. l ocated maqu1et family
'llnenled neighborhood,·lUSt off Rt 35 on a well
landscaped lot. Priced to please at $64,900.
#216
LeGRANDE BOULEVARD - 14 yr. old frame w1th
low utility bills lwoodburner Included) 3
bedrooms, living room, lg. k1lchen. covered patio
and .lenced backyard. Just the right s~e and
locatron for starter home or retirement. Green
schools. $39,9GO.
•
11412

28 ft . Titan motor ho~ 'com·
pltttlv •lf· contalntd, genera·
tor . 1lttpt 8. 18900. Call

Starkf TrM and l1wn Strviee.
lawn c•e. landiCiping . . stump
ramov1l. 304-578-2842 or

614·446-0008
1978 Self Contained Nomad
Cemper, · 21h. long Ph. 8,4.
446·0884

THURSDAY, MAY 7-6:00 P.M.
Located near Proffitt's Grocery (Portland Mall)
The lollowinc iteins will be sold:
HOUSE TRAILER
12x55 1972 house tra1ler. This trailer IS ingood cond1l1onfor·
the model Inspect at any l1me. Inquireat Proffitt's Grocery.
TRUC,--AUTO--TRACTOR
1970 F250 Ford PICkup, 1976 Bu1ck, auto., 1972 Cricket,
8x12 alum. produce van body, Farmall H. in good condition.
POWER TOOLS
.
Craftsm1n 10 h p., 4500 watt aux. gen erator, Jenny Car
Wash, complete w1th co1n box: Xll 2 chain saw; 5 h.p rolotil·
ler; Precision garden seeder.
GUNS
Model 87 Stevens, 12 ga .• deer barrel, model 30 Savage, 12
ga. pump, 20 ga. pump, BUlle12. doublebarrel; 5smgleshot
shotgun s, 1'10 ga. 3 H.&amp;R.. 1Springfield: Remington Model
66 Nylon 223; 5 22 Cj l. riftes: 3 Saturday Night Speci als;
Rohm 38 Special; E1 ecutioner 25, auto.. Clerke 22.
STORE &amp; HOUSEHOLD
Glass show Gase; 3 store scales, 1 is a push button: adding
machme; sandwich machine. frigidaire Pr osi·Pr oof side· by·
s1de refngerator · freezer combo.: Hot Point 15.3 cu. fl. chest
type lreezer; Chrysler Au ·Temp air cond.: Spee!l Queen
round wringer washer; 4 stoves, wood, coal, 2 gas &amp;fuel oil;
Cull1gan water conditiOner. sinks. Sears elect. range: old
rocking cha~r; bed; u ~ed clothes: 12 m. TV: 5 in. battery TV.
Mise il~ s and y1ng yangs.

GORDON PROFIT - OWNER
CARNAHAN -AUCTIONEER

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY•. MAY 9, 1987.
10:00 A.M.
"ANTIQUES"

Oak kitchen cabinets, cherry hutch · buffet and gateleg table, 4
wood chair~ oak stool &amp; sa nds, Honeymoon treadle sew1ng
.machine, srilall poster bed, round stands. Cavalier cedar chest, 6
quilts all handmade &amp;some never used !Wedding rin~ ftower
garden &amp; etc., very nice), sewing basket, picture frames, smok·
ing stand, oak &amp; willow rocke~s, mahogany Emngton player pi·
ano, 69 piano rolls, fern stand, lots of nice glass baskets, kbrary
table, wMe &amp; gra~ porcelain pans, candy jars, cB&lt;nival, depres·
sion ink &amp;green, ruby, cut glass d1shes, 8 place setting of Florence Rose ~rn chma. 2 small loaves of Rich loaf bread dated
1935 &amp; 1938, Shirley Temple cream prtcher &amp; cereal d~h. Iris
awner &amp; sugar. lro of ~d dishes, 6 rose backpadded bottom
chairs, wash boiler, stoneware water jug, hat pms, coffee grinder,
stone jars, wicker flower slllnds &amp; more.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Chrome breakfast set, living room surtes, nat. gas range, Kel·
vinator small relrigerator, cabinet base, servi ng c a r~ misc.
krtchen appliances. dishes, lmens, Maytag wringer washer,
glass door wood dish cabinet. sweepers &amp;atta ch.. wood war·
drobe, vanrty dresser &amp;stool. chest of drawers. 3 oc. bed·
room suite, new blankets and 2 George Washington bedsp·.
reads, luggage. coffee &amp;end tables, floor lamps, 12,500 BTU
Whirlpool air condrtioner and lots more.
"liNG"
Man's three diamond 14 K. yellow gold solitaire. .
I
"MISC."
.
Step ladder, porch glider, wash tubs, han d tools. glider,lawn
chair~ flower pols and other items.

OWNER: EDITH EVERITT
EJts

Posltin 1.0.

DAN SIITH: AUCTIONEER

949-2033 OR 992-7301

Olllo U-157..... 1344
Ill£ UIYII: APPIEIITIC£

"lot

85

General Hauling

e1•· 985·4464 .

570· 2903 .

Dilltrd Water Service: Pool1.
Cistem 1. Well1. Delivery Any·
t ime. Ca ll 614-446 ·7404 ·No
.sunday calls.
'

General H•ullng

Wattenon ' s Water Heullng.
reat ofleblt ret••· immlldlltlll
2,000 gellon dltlivtrv, ci1""'o.
71•
pools. w.tl. etc. caii 1 3C¥~ 171

2919.

cO al , limHtont. and
OtiNered 1 ton and up;
Jim L.anler, 394· 175·1247 or
Hou..

grao,~el .

675.7397 .

87

Upholstery

R 6; R Wate r Service. Home

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

clttern l , well1, pools filled.
Formerly Jame s Boys Water.
Sam e rate1. Cell 304· 675 6370 .
pools, cl tterns , w ells. Pt1 614-

245 ·9285.

ICCiMib

FOI SAL£

W. VI. M515-87

AUCTIOIIEEI

To his d1smay,'Harry learned his hotel was .
holding the door-to-door salesman
convention.
8 · Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1987
10:00 A.M.

LOCATION: From Holzer Hospital take St. Rt. 160 toward
Porter, Ohio, come to 554 and 160 at Porter, turn ri&amp;ht, eo
app. 4 miles. Sate on 554 on left side.
After sell in&amp; property at ENO GENERAL STORE owner must
vacate and will offer the following It auction:
CARS &amp; TRUCKS: 1948 Chevy Stylemaster, 2 dr car lcondl·
t1on fair to 1oodl : 1950 DodRe SlantS PU truck [condition fai r
to good); 1975 Chevy Blazer 4X4, new pamt. overhau led mo·
tor &amp; transler case, 8 n truck topper: 1974 Chevy 'A ton Cube
Van , good shape, auto., air.
STOCK - STOCK - STOCK!
Kennel &amp; hardware supplies. app. $4.000.00. Stove pipe,
bolts, nuts. paint. roofinc. tools, etc.
!Misc. Gilt &amp; Novelty Items Left in Stock App. 12.000.00)
l.E.C. Computer
,
HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC.: 4 pc. dmetle set, electnc cook stove. 2
d1sks, small coal &amp;wood cook stove: small vented gas heater, 6
sets of wood patio chairs !new), wooden 1\ barrels, 10ft. step lad·
der, pressure canner-cooker, electric charcoal gnll. I acre bug,
lite. misc. electric applrances·, Fra n ~in woodburner, electnc fans,
potbelly stove, rubber tin wheelborrow, 10 cases of canning jars,
Bare-cat scanne~ . electric lood gnnde~, Heal·a·la1or, push
mower and lots more still1n the bu1 l d~n g.
·
GUNS: Steven smodel 124·8 12 gau ge, 12 gauge smgleshot.
TRACTOR &amp; ETC.: John Deere Btra ctor, New Holland squ are
hay baler, belt feed grind er, 275 gal diesel ta nk w/stand.
ANTIQUES: 8 ft. wooden airplane propeller, Favonle gas
cook stove, F ~re Kmg 3 burner cook stove, 2 school desks.
mise chairs &amp; rockers, hand corn sheller, m1lk bucket, but·
ter mold, 12 gal. stone jug, 2 sets of platformscales, Sohio 3
ft . th ermometer, kerosene lanterns, wooden water bucket,
old bottles, Brass fire extinguisher. broad axe, m1lk can s,
crem e cans, misc. small metal cans, several other antiqu e
items to sell. Misc. items too num erous to mention.
NOTE: This is an all day sale and a good variety sale. Don't
miss lt. .Not responsible for accidents or loss ol property.

•C~! .~ 1£;RM~~S:~:C~A:~SH~OR APPROVED
CK.
E FERRELL

IJ 1 1

NEAL-614-367-7101
Finance, Dunbar, W.
Info.

ANTIQUE CAR COLLECTIO NAUCTION
-SATURDAY, MAY 9th, 1987
10:00 A.M.

LOCATION: DICKASON STREET, JACKSON, OHIO
Jackson, Ohio Is located lletween Chillicothe and
Gallipolis. Ohio and is south of Columbus, OHio on
U.S Route 35 and Appalachian Hi1hwey.
·
MI. T. K. Owens huspent manyyears collectinatheurare
cars and had them in his museum for display. The museum
has been closed for several years and llr. Owens has decided,to sell the lollowina em, trucks, tractors, engines
and parts:
1929 Chevrolet 2 door sedan; 1926 Chrysler 4 door sedan,
1924 Essex 2 door sedan; 1927 Hupmobile 4 door sedan;
1926 Nash 4 door; 1929 Willys Kn1ght 2 door cpu pe; 1938
Chevrolet 2 door sedan~ 1936 Chevrolet4 door sedan; 1926
Reo 4 door sedan: 1921 Jordan 4 door
936 Ford 2
door sedan; 1937 D6dge 4 door sedan;
I
4

..

Serv1r:es

81

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
UncondltiOtlal llfttlme guaran·
tee. Locel rtterences furnlthed.
Free utlmltet. Call coHect
1-81 • -237-0488. day or night.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofin9.

SWEEPER and sewing machine
rtPair, partt. and suppli•. Pick
up end delivery, Dtvlt VICUUI1'
Cltanet. ont half mile up
Gaorgu Craltlt Rd . Call 814-

441·0294 .
All typts carpentlf II c oocr.ha
work: Interior. exterior, remo·
dellng, palming, roofing, trea
ettlmates. Call61• ·448 -8174 .
.,ON ' S Televl•lon Service .
Houn oall1 on RCA , Quazar.

GE. Specialing in Zenith · Call
304· 678 -2398 or 614 ·446 ·
246 • .
Fetty Tree Trif"ming, stump
removal. Call ":304-875-1331 .

SUNDAY PUZZLER
.1 Small wild goose
6 Postpone
11 Sudden frlgh1
16 Female sludenls
21 Eagle's neBI
22 Gladden
23 Climbing planl
24 Dress proteclor
25 L.A. grldder
26 Railroad slallon
26 Foiled: colloq
30 Scolds
32 Neon symbol
33 Mayor Koch
34 "- Hat"
35RiverlnGermany
38 Produced
37 Neckplece
38 change color of

:~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~n
43 Clpner
44 Yelp
45 Robt. E. 47 Handles
49 Pasteboard
50 Mongrel
51 African anlelopes
54 Surtell
55 Wealhercock
56 Panlry
59 Hurried
BD Mournful
62 Hol-lempered
64 Gong
65 .. _ Law"
ol radio
68
67

~~~:4:~0~~~~~~!~:~;~~!,:~1i--ll-~~~~~~~~e

sedan:
1937 1928
Nash 1latavette
door
r edan;
HCH on 400 ;
4 door sedan; 1957 Nash Airfli.ght
door sedan; 1936 Chevrolet 4.door sedan;
Pontiac
Silve r Streak 2 door sedan; 1949 Crosley 2 door; 1959 De·
Solo Firedome 4 door sed an; 1960 Ca dillac, whrte1.4 door;
1957 Bu1ck Special 4 door sedan; 1963 Co rvair Monza 2
door hardtop; model T engin e, transmissi on, radiator an d
cover with hood and two wh eels; Fordson Steel Wh eeled
Tractor; IHC F.armall F\4; pluH everal old cars and tra clors
for parts onlr.
.
NOTE: All VEHICLES ARE IN RESTORABLE CONDITION
All VEHICLES ARE DATED TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE BUT NOT GUARANtEED TO BE CORRECT!
TERMS: CASH. CERTIFIED CHECK
NO OUT OF STATE OR LOCAL CHECKS ACCEPTED!
- BUYERS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR LOADING OF
VEHICLESLUNCH SERVED- NOT RESPONSIBLE FO.R ACCIDENTS

• , *ANTIQUES*

location: AI~ home of the late Julia Stewart just
inside Rutland Corp. on St. Rt. 124. Watch lor
sale si&amp;n.

C.sll

lh1identlal or commlfcltl wir:
ing. New tervice cr re pa irt
licen1ed electrician. Ettimate
tree Ridenour Electrical. 304875-1786 .1

85

J &amp; J Wate r Service. Swimming

DAY SALE

PUBUC SALE

EXTRA WELL BUILT HOME ONLY 4 MILES FROM
GALLIPOLIS - 3 bedr ooms, l'h baths. full
basemen t with fam1l y room and fireplace. Qual1ty
birch cabmels '" kitchen, hardwood floors w1th
quali ty carpet. all less than 2 years old. 2 car
gar age attached, 2 storage bUildin gs. 1acreto be
sur veyed. Listed lor $62,500.
#316

WATCH THE RIVER RUN BACKWARDS. .,. If il
ever does, you 'll see 11 first trom th e pictu re
wmdow ol your attractive bi·levet located high on
a h1ll just 5 m1les from town Th1s very pnva te
home mclud es 3 bedrooms. 2 fireplaces, large
fam 1l y room, 1~ baths, 2 car garage a ~d over 2
acres to roam around on Home hashad excellent
care and ISready to move mto En1oy city schools
and cou ntry atmosphere $69.900.

otors
&amp; ·campers

Concrete finiah, parting lots,
batemtntl · any 1iza job. Senior
Citizen Oitcount. Rick G~rfitld.

.

Boats. and
Motors for Sale

895· 3102

84
Electrical
.· &amp; Refrigeration

992·23dll .

body, run• good. •1.300.

.

NEW LISTING .. ..
MARVELOUS MAKEOVER!! - Thanks to canng
owners. lh1s 1 story's been &lt;eborn1Home has
been completely redone ms1de and out, and IS
beautifully decorated 3 bedroom s, lg k1lch en.
dining room and lamily room w1lh wood burner.
Screened·m sunporch. 12x24 workshop and
24x30 metal garage. Cl ose to tenms court and
playgroun d Pr iced at $49.500. and worth ever y
penny!!'

1·800·8•3·3767.

Rotary · or c able tool drilling.
Moat well• comPleted •am• dey.
Pump ..... and aervica. 304·

r•

1)80 Htrltv Sporhter. Good
conditiOn 29000mi., $2000 .
0.11 814· 379 · 2249 after
.. OO,m.

BY OWNER IN RIO GRANDE

Struts. n19.98 pair, lnllatl.cl.
Mott models. M...tfler Man. 9
Stlmpton Ave.. Attitna, Ohio

Sea Ray-20' SRV 200 closed
, , . Bluer, 4 whMI drive , new bow , 233 Mere Cruiser, EZ
loader tamdem brks, 392 hours
tPa. hNdart, ttrong vehi cle. .lib
new. stoted In gar1ga ..,.ery ·
~,~earn• Garage. 304-676-77i o t ime u1ed. mu.t ba 11en to
en. Ins.
appre ci ate. Ph. 614-593-8238
Athens. Oh .
'
•'(983 Chwrolet Gl•diator con·
,.mon vt~n. loaded with op· 15 foot fibtMglatl runabout, rect
t.ions, 21 . 000 mllu . arid Whitt 50 HP Merc._.ry
't.11 ,800 00 or make offer. motOJ, trailer , 82600. Ctll614-

.7 4 Motorcycles

1968 C orvette 327 engine,360
H.P. All numben met ch. Omiles
'tince total res toration No ax·
penc e • pared T·Top. 614-949-

RENTAL DUPLEX -

*"·

1)77 Ford pidl up, · • wflMI
auto with air , ttrong 400
Wlgint, AM ·FM • 1tereo. fine
~ck. Sturn, ~ Garage. 3041715-,n10 or 675 ·15749 .

~-JO&lt;I-571 ·2919.

11500 Caii614· 84J·5244.

304·675·•819

5431

Va.n s &amp; 4 W.O.

tiPod

Real Estate General

rtw

'85 Hondt KR350R . pricld for
Nil . Phone 304· 676·

;P in Jti1PCJ6, low miles, 6 cyl,

1979 Fo rd Cl900 C .O. 892
Detroit. 430 hp, 13 speed.
12.000 F 38.000 R PS AC
1973 Fruehauf 40 h . Flat Slider,

Improvements

614· 742·2581.
qUICk

1115.

19B1 ChiiVetta . Auto , AC , 4
new tires. Good condition .

1979 Trans Am 82860 FIRM .
Rebuilt engine, tranami11ion.
new clutch., p ren ure plpla.
throw out bearin g, 400 cu. ln .
H1gh Performance Ne eds Paint .

tiret, 16,200.00

(2 1h ft. Step Van , alumn body,
;.oDd cond. 1760.00. 304·773·

3163

Stainlet l 11eelvxhau t t IY i tem s.
' Now cuatom made tor your
truck, motor home or clasalc car
With lif• time warrenty Muffler
Man, 9 Stimpton Ave , Athens,
,Oflio. 1-800-843-3 767.

1976 8uielt 66,000 actual
mllet. Call614-992-3996.

6 speed

..,.·882·3311 .

#329

1967 GMC truck fletbed. Needa
a clutch &amp;260. Call 614-99 2·

1976 Ford F-100. 76.000 mi.
8596. Call614 -742-31 68

1982 Dodge Oiplomal Salon. 4
door, PO . PS, PW, AC, AM·FM
1tereo Ekcell ent condition Call
614· 992 ·2413 aft er 7 :00pm.

1984 Honda Shadow. VT700

~ine.

I cyl

•
if3

304· 882·3235

Oh

t..ntmlllion 2 tpetd ditteren'·
llo4-•58·1Q31 .

814·388·8708.
1986 Ford Etc or t 4 · t peed
83199. 1986 Cflevy Chevette
4 -•peed 83 199 J o t1n t Auto
Sale•. Bulavdle Rd . Gatlipollt .

11'77 Chowv .Modol Cl5 dump

1982 Suzuk1. RM 126. Wat«
cooled dirt bike Gooct condition .
Call614-992-6992 evening•

tiel. PI , 8K20

ISE

1977 Chi!Nrolet Auto , PS, PB.

360 e.ngine. Call 814-446 -

SNAFU®by Bruce Beattie

74 Motorcycles

Tiuclc. 1885 510 Mul Cob,
304'171·1375 .
t~Jc;k.,

Trucks 'for Sale

Pleasant, W. Va .

12 · Truck• for Sale

Real Estate General

1979 Camara Berllnetta. call
304 -882-2296 lete In evening.

72

~987

3,

----------~------~~~~~~~------------------~~~~~~~~~------~--~, .
.;
,I

6721 .

1981 Olds Delta 88, power
" "'· power brallas. powar
•tttring , tilt 11nd cru ise. AM -FM .
tape. Clean. like new interior.
non -sm o ke rs car . 304 -458 ·
1627

May 3, 1987

Autos for Sale

1984 Plymouth Reliant •ueel- 73 p
0600
lent condhion. t l$00. Ph. 81.tlymouth Valiant.
. or
246·9 5915 ,
best off• - 304·875-5 974.

before 6pm.

1983 Dodge_ Colt extra good
1hape. 24.000m i. For sale by

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

FRIDAY, MAY I. 10:00 A.M.

71 Decay
72 Caspian or Baltic
74 " Broken _ ..
76 Dawn goddess
77 Baseball's Musial
78 Summon I•
person)
79 Evalualliln
82 Sharp reply
84 _ Forces
65 " The - 1o
Bounllful"
86 Helmond s11com
68 Hindu garmen1
89 Oul of •
90
Monk
•

92
94
98
99
100
102
103
104
105
106

Boarder
Behavior
Merll
Numerous
Rend
Shill
Female doer
Frull drink
Hawaiian wrealhs
Musical
Instruments

106 Tricky
tD9 Elevator sign
110 Agave ptan1
111 Falsifier
112 Sandy wastes
114 Roman bronze
116 "- Llfe1o Live"
117 Deeply earnes1
119 Eal
120 Jot
122 oealh
124 Broke bread
125
or Roberl
126 Heavy drinkers
128 Three-toed SIOihs
129 Roman

R••

statesman

13t Conlalned
132 Cushion
133 Bishop headdress
135 Snade lroe
138 Aclor Vlgoda
139 Assistant
140 Equall1y
141 Exist
t 42 Babylonian dally
143 Italian river
144 Part of church
145 Monelary
penalties
147 Grownup
149 Coolidge's
nickname
150 Roman official
152 Choice port
154 Tip
156 Enlertaln
158 Trades for money
159 Subslanco
160 Poker slakes
161 Muffles 1he
soond of
DOWN

1 Aevealeil

2 Prepared
3 Limb
4 Nickel symbol
5 Actor Danson

6 Expel from
coonlry
7 Those who run
away to be
married
6 Unll of Latvian
currency

9 Near
10 Affirmative
11 Chubby
,12 Goals
13 Shorl sleep
14 AI home
15 Absurd report
18 Enclosure lot
birds
17 Harveal godOess
16 Teulonlc deity
19 Giver of gift
20 Move aboo1
lurllvelr
27 Scnod. abbr.
29 Oolong and
hyt on
31 Bolher
36 Simple
37 Pool
39 Verve
40 Clnclnnatllesm
41 Harveot
42 Russian plain
43 Mildly Insane
44 Mr. lves
46 Hall an em
· 46 The sweetoop
49 Veh icle
50 Sarene
51 Expunge
52 Cripples
53 Pony rular
55 Poems
56 Spero
57 Encomium
58 Evalualed
61 Arrow
63 lndlgen1
64 Whip
68 Deadly agenls
70 Banda ot color
71 Butlod against
73 Clolhlng
74 Mohammedan

noble
75 An Allen
77 More palnful
78 Scnool dance:
colloq .
,
80 Country of Atla
81 Scold
83 Youngater
"'
84 Aspiring lo be
artistic: colloq.
67 Read
89 Ravelled
90 Accompllsnments
9t "- Days"
92 Den
93 Ceremony
96 Spanlah pol
96 Parte ol speech
97 Indian l~n1
99 Average
10t It enda a ,

sentence

1

t 05 Key - pie
106 Grant UN of
107 Halt
111 Mother' of APoltq
112 Expired · .,•
t 13 Stalk
"
115 Scorch
t;
116 River In France ;,
118 Tardy
·
•l1
t 19 Eroee: prtntlno '
121 Daughter of Klnq
. Minoa
•
123 Mile: abbr.
··
125 Buy back
,.
t26 Biblical weed ••
127 Walke pompou
129 Sl-eleuclo
t 30 Residence
•
131 Towellnacrlptlon
t32 Jury 1111
•
13~ Lamprey
136 Rent
137 Men
'
139 Slmlana
••••
14Q Fiber ~I fni
144 EveryOOe
:
145 Suitable
•
146 Heellh rt1ort
•
147 River leland
,•
148 Scolllah cap
149 Sever
,
'151 Negallve prefix "
153 French artlclt ·
155 Running
157 Groek IaUer

•

-.

..

.,.••
-:

lOCATION: DICKASON STREET. JACKSON, OHIO
Mr. T. II. Owens hiS· collected many rare items

••
.,•

.."''

throueh the years for his museum. The museum hu
been close4 for stYirll yem1nd Mr. Owens h1s decided to sell the followme items al public auction.
Complete old time broom laclory; 2 very ea rly ice
boxes; several spinning wheel s; coblers bench ; many
old stone jars and jugs; old baskels; large cast iron
coffee mill, complete; brass kettles, dough cupboard ;
very early wood meat slicer; wood wa shing mach ine;
nice wood meal block; hall tree; wood collee mills: oak
dressers; old carpenter tools; metal and stone churns;
charcoal irons; flat irons: store counters and shelves;
pot belly stove; brass spittoon; schoolma ster's desk;
old trunks; apple peelers; cherry seeders: lanterns;old
lamps; brass railroad whistles; gran~eware; tin store
boxes: ox yokes; wood k~chen utensils: orean stools;
old ladder back chairs; lard presses; chalkware; wagon
jacks; wheat cradles; old sweepers; old stillards and
scales; cow bells; old drug store. bottles; platform dou·
, ble swing; toy mettl scooter train ; ice longs; milk cans;
old wood beds; cheese box; plus many more items not
mentioned in ad!
NOTE: There are many items duplicattd in this s.ale.
PlaN pl1n on stlyin1 l1te! Also, lhtrt 111 items
lhlt .. haw not seen thlt is buritd under' stacks of.
old furniture.
TERMS: Clsh or GoOd Clleck with Proper I. D.
-Lllnch Strvtd.

MUSTARD'S AUCTION SERVICE

2999 FIVE POIIIT RD.• JACKSON. OH. 45640
•(614)21&amp;-5161

lictnse4

tn4 londttl Still of Ohjo

® 1987 Unlled

Fealure Syndlctle

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