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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10 The Daily $entinel

~ Winston.'s

93rd birthday is observed

Mrs. Nellie Winston, Second
Ave. , Middleport, was honored
on her 93rd birthday , July 4, wilh
a lawn party hosted by her
daughter, Mrs. VIrgin!~ .Stal-·
lworth, and Mr. and MrS'. Marshall McMillion, the Rev . and
Mrs. Clark Ba·ker, and Mr. and
Mrs. Ike Neal.
Among those attending the
·:party were Ike and Mona Lee
;Neal, Dick and . Ruby' Vaughan
and family, Florence and Arnold
Richards, Rhoda Hall, Mr and
Mrs. Marshal McMillen, Barbara Shu,ler, Mary Alice Samuels, Martha Chambers, Nan
Moore, Beth Schneider, Dorothy

Young, Jolonda 'Root . Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Hapto nstall, Lula
Hampton. Zandra and Elizabeth
Well. Clark and Bonnie Baker.
Mar~are( Bowles. Kenny and
Lois McElhinney , Eva McEIhlnitv Struble. Toni Andrew. of
Pomeroy and Middleport.
Lenora Guthrie Smith. Bidwell, -Rev . Watson. Oak Hill ,
Julia Casey . Miles and Gar net
Manley, Robert and M. MargrN
Walburg. Na ncy Little, Pat and
William Kundr.lck. Hen ry and
Mary Key, Julia Mickey. Julia
Williams, and Joseph Moore.
Columbus; Palla ~ a nd Bett y
Cadle, Janet Lee and Jell Russell

'

Fair Queen.
Riehle is the son of Earl and
Glenda Hunt of Long Bottom. He
has been In 4-H lor six years .
Over 150 4-H members from all
over the state of Ohio will
participate In the program
geared to create a better under·
·s tanding and appreciation of our
natural resources . There will be
many ' ' hands-on" iearning experiences . Sessions will be condueled by faculty members of
The Ohio State university.
C~mpers will study the interdependence of land. water, forests.
and w'lldllle, and how they are
essential to our daily living as
sources of energy , food, fiber and
providing outdoor recreation lacllltles. The campers will be
challenged to share their new
learnings with people in their
community, county and loca14-H
club.
The Ohio 4-H Conser.vation

·I

Jury 11. 1987

flower s how where the latest In
flow er and vegetable designs are
ex hibited lor judging. This year 's
artistic designs will int er pret
country reun ions, hoe down s,
garden fence rows, kitchen
crafts , stores. a nd barns with
classes lor juniors and adults.
The s how chairman are Mrs.
Dean and janet Koblentz, a lso of
Meigs Count y. Bot h will be
exhibiting in the show along with
Pat Holt er, Ches ter Garden Cl ub,
a nd Judy Snowden. Rutland
Friendly Ga rd en~rs .
Most of l he ga rde n clubs in
Me igs Count y, a long with oth er
clubs In Region 11. have pa r t!ci·
paled In m a king the count ry
tabl e clot hes which will be used
at the ba nquet and then sold to
replenish the s tate treasury .
Hi ghlig hts of the conventio n

50 cents

Sunday

Garden Club convention slated

"A Country Classic" them e
and -Ryan. Kim and Mary Ann ·
will
greet members of the Ohio
Neal , Mason, W. Va:; VIrgil and
Association of Garden Clubs at
Edna Johnson, Akr on.
D. Casey, John and Patty the ir 57th a nntjal convention to
Winston, Gilbert and Pat Craig, take place July 29-31 at the
George and Es thcr Gilmore. Stauffer Dubl in Hot el In
.
Nyle Borton, Gene and. Mary Columbus.
Jane t Bolin of. Rutland Is
Oiler. Gallipolis; Virginia Ruth
Winston Williams. Xenia ; Bea preslqent of the state organlza·
Pay ne. Don Payn ~. l;let.ty Met· tlon and heads up the convention
c hum . Day ton; Warren Winston, commit tee. A feature of the
Waynes burg; Bob Winston, m eeting will be the installation of
Wadsworth: Gla(.lys Craddolph, Betty · Dea n, member of the
Glenna Wins ton Feggln. Pat and Chester Garden Club, as d'lrector
of Region lllor a two year ter m .
Chris ty Boyde. Oak Hill.
The conven tion will fea ture
Sending flowers were Mary
programs
on horticulture, [lower
Allee Samuels, David Diles, Mrs.
arranging, nat ure and cl ub orRhodes. a nd Marie Steiner .
ganizations, as well as cllnirs on
planning programs, garden ther apy, publicity, conservation and
horticulture .
Always a popular fe ature is the
Camp Is held eac h s ummer and
provides · an · oppOrtunity for
campers to immediately apply
what is learned during the
workshops to a practical problem. Campers will be divided Into
work groups of lour people ' to
develop a land use plan for a 160
acre tract of land. Alter explor·
lng the land, they will utilize their
new knowledge to develop a land
use plan lor the area. At the end
of th e week, each group will
present and defend its plan
before a group of peers.
A highlight of the camp will be
a bu s tour where campers view
land use and conservation In
et1 grade/
action .· Th&lt;&gt;y will tour a fis h
Spruce
hatch ery, saw mill, the Coneso6'
'8'
ville Generating Plant. a strip
promine, and the U: S. Hydrological
assembled
sectlona
Station . The tour concludes with
attendance at the outdoor
drama , " Trumpet In the Land"
at New Philadelphia.

4-H campers ready for activities
Pam Ash and Riehle Hunt ,
Meigs County 4-Her's. will be
particlatlng In the annual Ohio
4-H Conservation Camp, July
18-23, at Camp Ohio, Utica .
The camp Is designed to help
outstalldlng 4-H members learn
the principles of land use man·
agement and conservation prac- 1•
. they explore career
tlces while
opportunities relating to natural
resources .
Thetwowereselectedtoattend
the camp because of their 4-H
achievements and Interest In
natural resources. Bob Evans
Farms, Inc. pays the camp lees
tor all delegates to the camp 11nd
local donor, the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District
swnsors the cost of the educationa! field trip which is a part of
the' camp.
Pam Is thedaughtero!Ron and
Mary Ash of Racine and has been
In 4-H for live years. She is
presently Meigs County Junior

friday.

always include the g uest speak·
e rs. Th is year Nancy P ass fleld, a
na tional counc il judge from
Farmington Hills, Mich. will
demonstra te " Ins piration from
Extrem es" with natural plant
mat eria ls on opening.nlght.
Wednesday morning Doris
Stlfel ot' Toledo, who has done
ex tensive work on the migration
of Monarc h butterflies, will show
s lides of · their interna tional
fli ght . ").Jnllmlt ed Cou ntry" is
the title of the fl ow e r arranging .
program for tile c los ing session .
on F rid ay by QAGC .Judge Pa t
Tyso n, of Way ne .

•

Sparky wms 700th

Making
Our House
"ours' again
-Page 8-1

Rafsanjani a('tually terrorist
Anderson A-2

Others sending gilts to Katie
were Bill Childs , Tom Harris ,
Sybil Ebersbach. Virgil and
Nellie Brown, Josephine Shanabrook, Jon , Becky, Wendt,
Kenda, Aimee and Sara Kloes ,
Ed and Lettie Young, Norma
Goodwin , Larry. Gloria. Mary
Verna and Venessa Compston.
and Larry , Ma rla, Lucas and
Lance Grimes .

Vol. 22 No. 22

Auxiliary on Friday evening.
Saturday's activities included
committee reports and present a,
tlon os awards. along with voti'ng
for department officers. Speakers were students who had

Bible school set
A vocation Bible school has
been planned lor the Cliester
community at the Chester United
Methodist Church July 27 -31 .
Classes are lor ages to 10 years
and will be from 9 a.m. to 11 :30
a.m . Anyone needing lnforma·
tlon should call 985-3830 or
985-4312.

The Jay mar Ladles Tuesday
League m et lor play at the
Jaymar Gnlf Course. Winners
alter .18 holes were low gross.
Norma Cus ter, Joan Childs and
Becky Triplett; low ne t , Kathy
Gard; low puts, Joan Children
and Garen Snyder; chip-In -hole,
Gar en Snyder.

Ry HELEN THOMAS
Uf'l While House Re porter
WASHINGTON tUP i r - While President
Reagan rema in s silent, hi s aides are furi ous a t
Rear Adm . John Poind ex ter' s testimony th at
Reaga n wou ld have approved funding the
Nicaragua n Contras fr o m secret Irania n arms
sa les If he had been Informed.
As Reagan fl ew off to Ca mp Da vid F r iday to
spend the .weekend, ai des fa nned out Jo try to
knock down Poindexte r 's asser t Ions before the
spec ia l co ngress ional com mittees Inves ti ga ting
!he Iran-Contra scandal.
" Th e preS ident has sai d repeatedly tha t he _dld

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not kn ow about the (liv ersion of fund s, and it' he
had he known about it, he s imply would have
stopped it ," White House chief of staff Howard
Ba ker told re por ters. "That'is the reco rd ."
Baker co ntradict ed tes timony F'r iday by
Poindexter. former national security adviser,
who sa id he beli eved that if he had told Reaga n of
the sc hem e to prov id e a back -door bankroll for the
Co ntras. thc pres ident wou ld hav e approved it.
When as ked to res pond to Poind ex te r' s
statement , Ba ker hotly ins isted. "It Is not based
on any fa c t; it Is based on no conversation with the
pres id ent.
" It Is based o n no piece of ev idence." Baker

.. C..II. ItMU. M

UIM.

Alfred
happenings
Guests of Nellie Parker, Martha, Joe and Will Poole, July 5-12
were Jan and Eric Parker.
Tracy, Calif. , and Randy Parker,
Everett, Wash. The vis Itors
attended the Arts and Crafts
Fair, Ripley, W. Va. , historic
sites and malls In Parkersburg,
Alhel\s and Pomeroy. They attended Eric's Eastern High
School class of 1964 reunion at
Forked Run Lake on July 11.
Other visitors at the ParkerPoole farm were Cora and
Samuel Michael, Portland;
's haron, Gary, Matthew, Kim and
Todd Michael, Chester; Lenora,
Dorothy and Michael Leifheit,
Rock Springs; Wilma and Howard Parker, VIolet and Dennis
Pa~ker, Long Bottom;
Irene
Parker, Syracuse;
Willis
Parker, Debbie, Rodney, and
Bradley Parker, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; Tina, Russell,. Sbe.l ly and
Nicola Parker, Davisville, W.Va .
and Suzy Carpenter and Homer
Parker,. Rutland.

P.l.ll.

JM·42tt st4-42Jt

NICOSIA , Cypru s I UP II Pollee ringed France's embassy
in Te hran today and Iran vowed
that all F'rench diplom ats ins id e
the bu ildin g accused of s pyi ng
will be a r res ted to face " Is lamic
Ju s ti ce."
- A •urvlvor ol a
on
Guadalupe Riv er In Texas Is tak en to an ambulance alter rescue
from a tro•P hy military heli copter. (Uf' l )

AyI JULY 19th, 2:00 P.•M.

GENE AL ADMISSION-$3.00 lids Under 12 FREE
OPEN CUSS - $5.00 Entry FH
PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED BY AMOUNT OF ENTRY FEE
GATES OPEN AT 12:00 NOON-ENTRIES 12 TO 2

Located in RAINBOW PARK. 1Y2 Mila East of BASH AN
Store off Co. Rd. 28 on Rainbow Ridge.
WATCH FOR SIGNS. •·.

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR TAB
IS COMING ON AUGUST 14th

SUGARPOMEIOY
RUN MILL

s ion, had Po index ter as ked him
about it . "Tha t 's the whole idea
of denia bilit y, " he sa id .
Th e admira l resigned from the
Na tiona l Sec urity Council Nov .
25, 1986, the sa m e day Attorney
Ge neral E dwin Meese a nnounced news of the diversion.
Lt. Col. Oliver North, wh o was
Po mdex ter' s a ide, was fi red .
Poindexter st uck hard by his
sto ry F'riday th a t he approved
a nd never told Reaga n about the
di ver sion of the money to the
Cmnra rebels.
He added. however, that had he
thought more ration a lly la s t
November, he would have
a rgued that he should not res ign
so quickly, In order to give the
adminis tration time to ga the r
!)'lore facts and explain the affair.
On ce he resigned and a cr lmi·
nal inves tig ation Into the sca nd al
was begun , Poindexter hired an

Police protecting

4 W EEL ·DRI~E MUD BOO

WE HAVE WHAT YOU NEED FOR
YOUR FARM GARDEN
•SEED
•CHEMICALS.
•FERTILIZER •FARM SUPPLIES

added . "The only evidence is what the pres ident
himself has said. And the president has sa id ,
clearly and emp hatica lly, 'Had I known about it, I "
would have s topped it. " '
Spokes man Marlin Fit zwa ter a lso summoned
reporters to hi s office to reaffirm Reagan's denial
th a t he knew anything about the funneling of funds
to the guerr illas until . a Jus tice Depar tment
Inquiry was Initiated last November.
"The pres ident spoke on this issue in his March
19 press conference;" said Fitzwater. "He said
that if he had known abou t the dive rsio n, 'You
wou ld have heard me without opening the door of
th e office."'

By ,JOSEPH MIA NOW ANY
and DAN i\ Wi\LKER
WASHIN GTO N i UP I J
F'or mcr na tional sec urity a dviser John Poindex te r has no
r·e g rets abo ut not tellin g Presi dent Reagap thai money Jrom
the Iran arms sa les wa s sent to
the Nica raguan Co nt ras a nd
st icks to his clai m the president
wou ld have approved it.
Poindexter, wra ppin g up a
third day of tes timony to the
congress iona l committees probing the Ira n-Contra a ffai r Frl·
day , sa id he now believes that If
be ha d not resigned Imm ediatel y
a lte r the diversion beca m e public, the bigges t sca nda l of the
Reag an presidency might have
bee n slowed .
He added he was not s urprised
\Vhlt e Hou se official s we re deny Ing his claim tha t Reaga n would
have approved the fund diver·

More bodies found
'i n Guadalupe flood

su

ADVERTISING ·DEADLINE· IS
AUG. 7th
CALL DAVE OR PAUL TO PLACE Y·OUR
AD IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION
CALL 92-2155 FOR DETAILS

Fitzwater sa id the "bottom line is that if the
president had been told , he would not have
approved it."
Baker and Fitzwater went to unusual lengths to
dispute Poindexter' s testimony that he Is not
surprised the president now says he would not
approve of the divers ion to the U.S. - backed
Co ntras.•
" I expect him to say that. That 's the whole Idea
of deniability," s aid Poindexter, who earlier told
the committees he deliberately did not tell
Reagan of the &lt;jlversion so the president would be
able to deny knowledge of.lt.

'

..

By RENE E IIAINES
CO MFORT, Texas (UP I)
Seac hers tod ay found two more
bodies o n th e ba nks of Guada lupe
Rive r , bring ing to four the
num ber or people know n dead
from flood wa ters that swept
awa y a church bus a nd van
evacuating a ccnl r.a l 'Texas
c hurch ca mp nea r Com fort.
The body · of Mi chae l O'Nea l,
16, of Balch Spr in gs was spo tt ed
about 2 a .m. on the river ban k by
sta te troopers who s tayed overni ght . at the site. said Texas
De pa r tm ent of Publi c Sa fety Sgt .
Charles Seale.
Th e second body . found alt er
day lig ht , was that of a fema le
child , said Ke ndall Coun ty Sheriff Lee D'Spalrt. Th e c hild was
buried in mud and aut hor ities
asked lor shove ls to he lp recover
the body.
O'Neal' s body wa s found about
a hall mile from th e low-water
crossing where the cllllrc h ve hi cles were swa mped. The four th
body wa s found 3 mil es downriver o ut of the water . T he bodi es
were taken to a fu ner a l home In
.comfort.
"We s till hope, but it' s dim ,"
[)!Spain sa id of thc c ha nces of
finding a live a ny of the s ix
ca mpers still missing.
Searchers today spotted the
missing van 100 yards downsf rea m from the low-water crossIng. The -search continued lor the
bus that sta lled, s le~ed and
tipped on a road turned Into a
maelstrom by floodwaters Friday morning near Comfort, a ·
town of 1.000 about 60 miles •
northwest of San Antonio.
The river, which washed over
Its banks a half mile In either
direction Friday, was back
within its banks today.

F red Segraves, uncle of missing cam pcr Mike Lan e. said
today . he found some &lt;&gt;I his
nephew's clot hlng ca ug ht on tree
bra nches.
F rom 75 lo 100 people searc hed
a lmos t 12 hours Friday a nd
resumed their efforts at day-·
brea k utilizi ng m otor ized raft s.
three he licopt er s and dogs
tra ined to pick up thc scent of

•&lt;

attorney and refused to speak should have objected and made a
publicly about the matt er until he case lor slowing It down," he
bega n his tes timon y on said.
.
Wednesday .
Rudman told Poindexter that
Sen. Warren Rudman. R -N.H., while he believed him, he thought
the vice-chairman of the Senate his decision not to ask the
committee, told Poindexter Fri- president io a pprove the diverda y he helieved hi s s tory, but , sion was wrong .
as ked him why he did not ex pl ai n
" It's my view that presidents
his role earlier a nd perhaps ought to be allowed to create
avoid "the agony that we 've had their own political disasters,"
for the la st eight months."
Rudman said. "Nobody else
" What I don't understa nd is ought to do it lor them. That was
why it took us so long to get to not your intention. Unlortu·
where we go t," Rudman said.
nateiy, that's the' way it 's turned
"Well, this was a very difficult out."
t ime in November," Poindexter
Poindexter, testify ing with II·
sa id. " I wa s very ti red. I think if I mited immunity from prosecuhad thought about the whole t ion, has told the committees he
issue more rationally at that, was sure Reagan would have
point , I s hould not hav~ agr ~ed to approved the diversion of the
resign right. away.. In ·{act; the " mllney 'to the 1'/lcarat/ualt rebels:
events of November the 25th which occurred at a time formal
snowballed very ra pid ly."
U.S. aid was banned .
"With hindsight , I probably

Fr~nch

tored in Nicos ia.
Iran 's official Islamic R epub·
lie News Agency quoted Mohta·
s hami as stressing thai the
French Embassy was su rroundep by police and "t he spies

embassy in Tehran

will be arres ted and handed over
to the judiciary for Isla mic
justice."
Te hra n Tue s day acc us ed
French Cons ul J ean -Paul Torri
of espionage, drug and foreign

currency dealings and summoned him to appear In courl.
Torri took refuge In the embassy
and Paris said the charges were
manufactured.

Th C' I r an ian 1hreat raised t he

Carolina Lumber owner dies

sta kes In a 19·day -old war of
nerves betwee n Paris and Te h·
ra n over an Ira nia n wa nted for
qu est ionin g by F'renc h police.
F •·a nce and I ra n broke diplomat ic relations F'rlday.
As police blockaded Ira n's
E mbassy in P ari s. Iranian In terior Minis ter Hojatolesla m Ali
Akbar Moht as haml- sa id today
" papers a nd document s" showed
members of the F'rench Embassy and Consulate in Tehran
had helped dis s idents abroad a nd
"s plint er groups" In I ran. acCO I'dlng to radio reports moni-

Leon S. Thompson. 70. owner and operator of
Carolina Lumber a nd Supply Company for the
past 46 years , died Friday in the Pl easan't Valley
Nurs ing Ca re Un it following a short Illness.
Thomp son, ·of 1921 Maxwell Avenue , Point
Pleasant , W.Va., wa s born Aug. 12, 1916 in
Huntington, W.Va. He was the son of the late
Denver C. Thompson . and Gladys Thomas
Thompson.
He was a m e mber of Height s United Met hodist
Church, Point Pleasant, a member of the Masonic
Minturn Lodge 19 of Poin.t Pleasant, the Chapter
and Commandry of Point Pleasant , Pat Wilson

Shrine Club, a nd the Lumberman's Association of
Wes i Virginia.
Surviv ing are his wile, Genevieve Adkins
T hompson, one daughter Mrs. Rljndy !Marlene)
Sl usser of · Tampa Fla.; one son Richard L.
Thompson, Point Pleasant; and one sister Myrl T.
Ke ck. Huntington. !n addition, there are three
gra ndchildren; two great-granddaughters and
one nephew.
Services will be Monday at I p.m . at the
WilcOJ&lt;en Funeral Hom e with the Rev. Michael
Chapman officiating.

humans.

A di s pa tcher with the Kerr
County 's s he riff' s offi ce said
sear c hers we re not optimis tic,
but a Department of Public
Safety trooper sa id they " were
still holding out hope."
Survivors told of ha r rowing
hours huddled In trees above the
river , which rushed so rap idly It
tore the clothes from $O rne
children. Many were rescued by
helicopters that dropped rescue
lines.
" T he group In our tree , we
s tarted praying - as king the
Lord to he lp us all to be okay, "
said survivor Kyle Hankins.
"But there' s still more In there."
The vehicles - from the
Seagoville Road Baptist Church
In Balch Springs, southeasl of ·
Dallas sta.lled and were
knocked over by a wall of water
from the river, sw'ollen by 11 .
Inches cil rain. When the you:;:
people streamed through t
doors , many were swept do n·
stream and spent u·p to three
hours clinging to tree limbs.
The dead were Identified by
DPS officials as Melanie Finley,
14. who fell 90 feet to her death In
a field when she could no longer
cling to a helicopter rescue rope,
and Tonya Smith, 13, of Scurry,
whose bo(ly was found about
seven hours after the accident 3
miles downstream. ,

HEADING OUT- Jim Workman, of the Lunker Hunters from
Oak Hill, puts his boat In the water early Saturday morning In
preparation for the Gallipolis Bass Busters Tournament.

Repltlllons of this scene earlier In the morning enabled th.e 1
tournament to start about 10 minutes before the scheduled 7 a.m.
start time. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

--

'•,

I

A Multimedia Inc.

Poindexter s·a ys he was right n·ot telling

8&amp;40 meets
New officers were elected at
the recent meeting of the Meigs
County Salon 710 Eight and
Forty, following a picnic at the
Route 33 roadside park.
Elected were Catherine Welsh,
chapeau: Loretta Tiemeyer, chapeau premiere; Veda Davis,
chapeau deuxieme; Florence
Richards, secretarle-casslere;
Iva Powell, l'aumonler; Eunle
Brinker . !' concierge; . Lula
Hampton, historian. The officers
will be Installed in September.
Chapeau Pearl ·Knapp presided at the meeting.

9 Sectione. 57 Peges

Reagan would not have approved deal: ,Baker

attended the Freedom Founda
lion Seminar. In the afternoon
the American Legion parade was
held in downtown Toledo.

Women golfers
announce results

m,e

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. July 19, 1987

CopyriQhtod t 987

Auxiliary .holds recent- m~ting
Mrs . Ellen Rought of Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legloq Auxiliary, was elected alternate to the National Convention
to be held In San Antonio, Texas,
Aug. 22-27, at the 67th annual
Department Convention of the
Auxiliary. held last week In
Toledo.
Others attending from here
were Mrs.· Janet Jenkins and
Mrs. Catherine Welch. At the
convention. the Auxiliary took
first place lor poppy scrapbook
which was submitted by Mrs.
Rought.
Mrs. Ardith Cooper, first vice
presldnet, conducted the meetIng In the absence of Mk Iris
Shields. department president,
'l'hO was Ill.
Approximately 950 delegates
from over the state attended. The
convention opened at a joint
session lor the Legion and

•

-

Childs' first birthday is observed
On July 3 Mr. and Mrs. Childs
entertained with a cookout at
their home In Middleport In their
daughter 's honor. A Teddy Bear
cake and homemade ice c ream
were served lor dessert. Others
attending were her · grandparents, Jim and Emma Clat worthy , Henry and I?orothy
Clatworthy, Dorothy Long, Vlrgl·
nla Buchanan, and Marcia Karr .

Mostly sunny Sunday, with
highs · near 90. Probability of
·.precipitation Is near zero
through Sunday,'

Beat of the Bend
Along the River B-8

.

Katie Childs celebrated her
first birthday on July 1 with a
party at Showbiz Pizza In
Parkersburg ..
Attending were her parents,
·r.nck and Twila Chds, her grandmother, Joan Childs, her great grandmother, Martha. Childs,
Sheila. Resa. Jay and Abby
Harris , Esther Burns, George
and Cinda Harris, and Debbie
and Gary Ellis.

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July 19. 1987

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rcommentary and perspective

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Page-A-2 .
July 19, 1987 .

Kyger Creek pool reopened

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Thlrcf Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) H6·ZI42
(614) 992-2156

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ROJIERTt. WINGETT
Publis her

JlWr WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-ControUer

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor.

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A MEMBER of ThP Unit«! Press lnt erna tiona !, 1n l a ~ d Dai ly P ress Associa tion and the American New spaper P ublis her s Assoclallon.

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long . All letter s are subject t o ~itin g and mu st bf.s igned wil h name. address an d
telephone num ber. No unsigntd letters will be pu bli shed . Letters should bE' tn

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LEITERS OF OPIN ION are welcom(&gt; . Thf'V Mould hf.' less than

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good taste, a dd r essing is sues, not pE&gt;rsonalitles.

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.:~ ;David Eisenhower visits
:~:the
White .House
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WASHINGTON - Hashemi ·
Ra!sagjani, the Iranian leader
the White House believed was
" moder ate" enough to do bus!·
ness wit h. has been · deeply
involved in Iran.ian-sponsored
terrorism - and still is.
Ra!sanjanl, speaker of the
Te hran parllament : was the
Iranian behind the Reagan ad·
mini s tr a tion' s arms -fo r hos tages deal. President Rea·
ga n, Lt . Col. Oliver North and
others In Was hington were con·
vinced during the 1985·86 "initla·
tive" tliat Ra!sanjani was not
only sensible but anxious to
improve relations with the Unl·
ted States a nd the West.
But he is not, and never was. ·
We've compiled our own dossier
on Ra!sa njani, !rom CIA and
other in telligence sources as well
as Ira nian so urces. This Is what
we've learned:
- Ra!sanj a ni supervises the
Ira nia n government' s cooperation with Hezboliah, the Shiite
extremist group that still holds
American hosta ges - and which
has bee n beh ind almost every

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
·~ · WASHINGTON David Eisenhower, gr andson of President
' -;Eisenhower a nd son· in-law of Pres ident Nixon, vis ited the White
·~ House recently as a journalist.
·; He is doing a New York Times Ma gazine piece on White Hovsechief
- : of staff Howa rd Baker.
, Eisenhow er had good times and bad times in the White H ouse. He
&gt; was the foc us of adulat ion durin g the Eise nhower era when his
.: grandfather doted on him. He la ter left the you nger Eisenhower a
·:·-cache of important letters and memorabili a tha t were turned int o.a
/ critically impor tant his torical work on Eisenhower, the genera l in
-~· World War II .
· ~· In the Nixon era . Eisenhower a lso spe nt a lot of time at the White
·-;House, having mar ried Julie Nixon in 1968, just be fore Nixon was
-; ·inaugurated for his first term.
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;' But coming back to his old haunts, wh ich he left . durj ng the
··.unraveling of the Watergate scandal when Nixon was forced to
:Oresign, gave Eisenhower wnat he ca lled a n "eer ie feeli ng."
: The feeling s tem med !rom the doldrum· a tmosp here pervading the
•'White House at the time over th e Iran-Contra a ffai r.
:· Eisenhower wat ched Reagan's arrival by helicopter, having made
::many trips on such he licopters and there was no indi ca tio n that he
·:had an overwhelming nos talgia to be 'back at the White House
:·although from time to time there has been spec ul atio n that he might
; d-un for.. Congress.
• : Clea rly he has had no inter est in prac ticing la w although he has a · I:S; 1legree. ·
•• His wile. Ju lie, has written a remarkable book a bou t her mother.
; J&gt;at, that is a rea l cont ribution to fi rst lady hi story sin ce Mrs. Nixon
•..-ctid not write her own memoirs as so many of her predecessors have.

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- Rafsan janl hlmslf ha s
bragged publicly about Iran's
connection to the hostage kidnap·
ping. On April 3 he said In a
prayer sermon: "We rendered
the French so abject that they
begged us . They said, 'We will
expel the Mojahedln.' " He was
referring to the expulsion from
France of Massoud Rajavi,
lead er of the People' s Moja ~
hedin , the largest · and most
e!!ective anti- Khomeinl group.
On April 6·, In an Interview with .
an Iranian newsp aper, Rafsan·
jan! sneered at the U.S. response
to hostage-taking: " F 9r year
they had been repeating their
slogans about not paying ran·
sam ... but It became evide nt they
were lying. They have paid
ransom. Those who told France,
Britain and 'o thers not .to pay
ransom , the mselves paid ran·
sam. 0! course., -~hey .had pr e·
vlously pa id ransom , too; In
connection with the TWA fli ght,
they had 1.000 prisoners released
a nd I lnt!O'rvened the n, too."
- Rafsanja ni had his onetime
personal pilot, AII-Akbar Mo·

anti-American act of terrorism
in the Middle East since April
1983.
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Hezbolla h' s Tehran office Is In
a building at No. 1·61 on a street
known as Akabar Restaurant,
nea r Nlstan Seventh Avenue, In
the northern Tehran ·n eighbor·
hood of Saltanabad.
The Hezbollah leader In charge
there Is Haj-Hosseln Sham!: his
deputy is Abdulrahaman Ghay·
sar. Sham! usually keeps In touch
with Hezbollah headquarters In
Lebanon by courier, though he
spent 10 days there early last
month.
Rafsanjanl uses as a gobe tween a Lebanese m an In the
Iranian Hezbolla h office by the
na me of Abulma n. The Eighth
Burea u· of the iranian Informa·
lion Ministry also has conneclions with the of!icce.
A rece nt contac t between the
Te hran office a nd an Iranian
of!lclal based In Lebanon !dentitied only as Kha ksa r Included
open boasting a bout "pulling of!"
r ecent terrori st bombi ngs In
Italy.
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lose &amp; . DREW

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White House spokes man Marlin Fitzwa te r now ha s his own
;.photographs and pictures up in a n office that has cha nged ha nds two
;times previously in the Reagan administration.
; The fi rst occupant was Jim Brady, who was wounded in the attempt
. 'an President Reaga n' s life and s till retai ns the title of "Whi.le Hou se
· press secretary " in his remarkabl e recovery . The seco nd was Larry
. Speakes, who alter s ix year s, mov ed to Wall Street and greener
pas tures as a public rela tions executive.
Fitzwa ter has several clocks in hi s office, telling the time in vario us
parts of the count ry, includin g Abilene- dea r to hi s heart as a nat ive
Kansan.
-. A bo ok a bout J im Brady, entit led "Thumbs UP, " which will hit the
:Stands in November a nd deals with his courageous comeback . The
J it le is t'aken from a fa milia r Brady ges tu re. es pecia lly after
'(atas trophe struck.
~ - Brady is still a cult figure a nd beloved. Ma il st ill co mes into the
:White f{ou se and toy bears in honor o! his nickname "The Bear. "

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;. The pres ide nt got a loud chu.ckle a nd applause at the National
fi ssociation of Counties convention in 1ndianapolis rece ntly when on
· ·i1is us ual kick of denounc in g Congr ess told the gathering: " I bare ly
bad rime to figu re out wh a t y uppies were be fo re Congress started to
~bsidize them ."
:: He also has it in lor the Crown Prince of Licht enstein ; of all P.eop le.
a nd has singled him out specifically in several recent speeches
bi?cause the Crow n Prince is a wea lthy Texas Iarmer who has
'rJ!ceived more than $13 m il lion in su bs idies !rom the U.S. government
l~r his land.
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:; In berating Congress for its spending habit s, the presiden t also
rolled attention to t he law ma ker's approval in their " deep and
unfathomable wisdo m" of voting $8 million to es tablis h a center to
&amp;tudy weeds . "I don ' t know whether I want to kn ow any more about
IYeeds," he quipped.

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·· The preside nt told a m inority bus iness group that Congress doesn't
~eem to understand tha t he will veto any tax in creas e. "And I thought
I ,needed a hear ing aid," he said.

Letters to the editor
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a m writing in r egard to the

~ear drowning of m y daughter

~enee Straig ht , at the Ga l!ipoli~
swimming pool,
• I wou'!d like to thank Robbie
Dan leis for his alertness seeing
'Re nee under the water and
pulllng her out. Thanks to Kim
Canady for a dmins tering CPR.
Next I have many questions
~ncernlng this incident , that 1
\j'Duld like to have answered by
someone. One is hop could this
l(appe n when there were only 25
t9 30 kids at the pooL Where were
thl' llfeguards? Did they leave
tlielr chairs before everyone was
out of the water? It seems my
c~lld was found floating almost
djrectly In fran t of a lifeguard
chair.
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:How could Renee, with so few
pec&gt;ple to watch, sllp out of sight .
wjthout anyone seeing her. I have
h&amp;!IJ'd many - numerous rumors ·
cqncernlng tltls Incident, more
liNin I can repeat. This accident
has caused much alarm for me.
Wflo will be next? Will other
parents' children be well observed when there are so many
kills In the pool?·
Renee reports she heard no

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R~ting

Arabiacount
and ries
to pla
other
. n activities iri'
- Finally, Rafsanjanl is be:
lleved to have engi neered th~
hi jackin g of an Air Fra nee plane
In August 1983. Only two months
earlier, he had openly threa ten e&lt;j
to crack French airlin e security.
Footnote: This Is not our first
exposure of the real Ra!sa njant;
On May 11, 1986, we warned : "As
the Reaga n administra tion continues It s secret, concili a tory tilt .
toward l ran . the president' s
advisers should not IosP sight ol
the dubious ba ckg rou nd of the
jX'Opl~ they're coy lng up to."
We spe l!l cal!y fi ngered Rarstmj anl us thl' ad min istrati on's
grea test hop - a nd a man very
likely to betray a ny tru s t placec)
in him. We revea led to the White
House - and th e C1A - th a t
Rafsanja nl was the co-ow ne r of
an automotive shop In Tehra n,
when the bodies of two mu rdered
American service men were
found th e re In 1977. Ra!san ja nl a t
t h lime 111as a member of th t;"
a nt i-sha h terrorist ga ng that
pvcntuall y cam to power under
the Ayat ollah KhOmel nl.

start ling Infl ation · of damage
A dra mat ic case In point is
Democratic Franklin D . Roose· awards, h a s t~ reate n ed a self·
velt 's promotion to chief justice censorship which can as e lfec·
tively Inhibit debat e a nd critiof conservative Republica n Har·
c
ism as would overt governmen t
Ian F . Stone, who had be&gt;en
regulation .''
appoin ted by conservative Re·
Amen'
publican Ca lvin Coolidge.
S uch e nli g hte ned Hol mes Still ,. as Is true of Mussoli ni's
s.tewards hip , which at lea s t Brand ·Is sensitivity Is a fl eeting
part of wh at he charac jerlzes a s
made the trains run on tim e,
an " lnte lleQtual evol ution .:·
Bark Isn't a ll bad .
The que s tion Is : evolution
His reactiona r y.v iews on abor·
towa
rd wha t ?
tlon ma y be reprehens ibl e, but a t
Bark
has· not entirely a ban·
lea st they a r e consti tutionally
doned
a
91 -year-old racially
consona nt with the Supre me
Court 's states' rights position on divisive Supreme Court dec ision: " Theobjec ti veo!t.he (14th )
pornography.
On freedom of the press , he Amend me nt wa s undou btedly to
was part of a 6-5 Court of Appeal s enforce t he absolute equality of
majorit y dec lsl9n In December the two races before the Jaw, but
1984 tha t upheld two syndicated In the na ture of things It cou ld not
columnists who had written a ha ve been int ended to abolish
damaging opinion piece about a distin ctions based upon color, or
to enforce, as distin gu ished from
univers ity professor.
"In the past lew years,,., 'wrot e politic;~! equality, a commingling
Bark , "a remarkable upsurge in of the two ra ces ... " (Piessy v.
libel actions , accompanied by a F erguson, 1986).
God save thE: quee!J! Segr ega.

tlon, forever!
If not hing else, we can hall thi s
nappy-halred , scholarly jurist
for enrlc hlnJ&lt; our lexico n of
epony mous words (wh ic h al ready Includes s uch· exa mples as
Elizabethan , J e ff ersonia n ,
McCa rthyls m a nd Qu is lin g ).
" Stone's Dlc·tionary of Epoo
nymou s Neologis ms" lists the
following:
Bork,n . - a reac tiona ry scholar: a br~lll a ilt .but repulsive
person (He screwed things up.
What a brork !)
Borklsm,n . - an Intra cta bly
co nserva tive m lndset; a movement to turn bac k the clock of
progress; an a ttempt to reverse
judicial precede nt.
Bork,vr - to set ba c k (,Rea·
gan's Supreme Court a ppointment bork• blacks and women.)
Unhappily, on th e Constitution 's 200th anniversary, that
document ha s been barked by
Reagan 's appointment.

n ·a ture's 'ch~rch_-,--___G_eo--'rg=:.._e_P___clag~e__;__;_nz

People who don't go to church
will often tell you they !eel closer
to God on the golf course on
Sunday morning or otherwise
enjoying the wonderful world of
whistle. ln my opinion she had to na ture.
I have always been skeptical of
be under water before break . She
says she tried to yell for help, but such cla ims. Yet we all go on
'n othing would come out and she vacations or summer outings
when, come Sunday, we either
tried to. reach for someone.
forget
about worship or decide to
I have been told that parents
have
our
own service.
ha ve been dropping off their
I
decided
to have my own
children at the pool and going
service
last
Sunday morning
back after them later. I hope you
while
walking
alone
In the woods.
never have the experience our
wanted
to
see
whether
you can
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family had. Parents you were a
feel
closer
to
God
In
nature
and
long time In getting the pool. How
about seeing It Is safer for your · whether you can .get as muchchlldren. I don't kriow if more or maybe. even more - out of
lifeguards are needed or the ones worshiping away from church.
You can.
now n.eed tq keep a more
I
don't mean this should be a
watchful eye on the kids.
substitute
lor church, but, as a
I realize that accidents do
change,
It
can be a rewarding ·.
happen that ar., unavoidable. ·
experience.
Possibly could this one have
I divided my "service In the
been, since so few were .In the
woods"
Into the same .four
· pool? Please lifeguards stay'
alert, this could have been a categories I used when I was
much worse tragedy than It was. ra tlng · services for a . dally
. It's an experience I hope Renee newspaper.
WORSHIP SERVICE: In this
will soon forget.
section
of my reviews, I usually
Thanks toE .M.S., Holzer staff,
commented
on the overall ImDr. Simpson, the Gallla County
pression
the
service made. AmSheriff department and all who
bience
would
be another word for
sa)d a prayer.
tt. Well, the ambience on the
Rebecca Straight' Sunday morning was just
Waterloo perfect.

Near drowning raises questions

hammadl, murdered In Hamburg last Jan. 16. Hav ing received political asylum In West
Germany, Mohammad! de nounced Rafsanja!Ji and the
Khomelni regime on television.
He was gunned down by two men
as he was returning home from
taking his daug'nt er to
kindergarten.
- !Ahmad Kan'ani, expelled
from Tunisia on March 29 for
terrorist activity , Is a !mown '
protege of Ra!sanjanl. From 1982 ·
to 1984 Kan 'a ni personally dl"
rected terrorism from offices . In
Syria and Lebanon.
-Iran's budget for terrorism,
called "aid to the people of
Southern Leba non.'' Is person;
ally . approved by Rafsanjanl·.
Th e amount budgeted for 1986-87
· Is about a billion rials, or $12 .~
mll.llon.
- Rafsan janl was ldetitlf!ed by
the People's Mojahedln, wbos~
Information Is usually accurate,
a s the ma n behind the plot t6
disrupt the annual Mosle m pll•
grlmage to Mecca last summer.
Sa udi police arrested more thari
100 Ira nians, who had gat he red to
carry out activities In Saud!

Borking the Constitution _____:::c:..::::hu=ck~St=on.:.: :_e
Trying · to prevent n ober t
He r on Bark 's co n!lrma tlon as
Supreme Cou rt associate justice
is like s ta nding on top of a
garbage dump rin ged by cess·
pools and fumiga ting the air with
perfume spray.
The intent is e m inently noble.
The need is imperative. The tool
is misera bl y ln!O'f!ectlve.
Opponents ju s t aren't going to
be a bl e to block th e confirmation
of this preposs ing legal genius,
despite hi s Impassioned affinity
lor a n era that con!lned blacks to
lynching trees, women to pots
a nd pans, abortions to _ back
a ll eys, gays to non-personhood
a nd atheists to jail .
01 course, Ba rk' s ultra conservatism threa te ns judici al
balance, but presidents have
a lways factored In ideology In
their choice of Supreme Court
a ppointments.
The difference is that Demo·
c ratlc pres idents have been more
evenhanded.

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For my prayer I used some and red,
Theodore P a rk er Ferris of Trln - ·
"Turned the stone and looked
lines from book titled "Crea tlon
lty Episcopa l Church In Boston. ,
beneath 11 : 'Pea·ce on earth' was
Bea utiful":
It was tilled " The M"an Who '
"How majesti c Thy mind tb all It said."
Missed the Dinner" -about the ·
SERMON : As I cooled my bare
have dreamed this beautiful
people In Jesus' parable who :
world . Rounded mountains and feet In a running stream, I r ead a
were Invited to a banquet, but :
wooded hills and low masses of sermon by one of the great
declined because they had ot her ·
white clouds In summer mir- preachers of our time, the late
things to do.
·
rored In the crystal-clear water
of Upper Killarney .. :
"Tiny purple-rose heather
blooming in abundance in the
highlands of Scotland ... Apple
blossoms In France !llllng the air
with their lingering sweetness.
Praised by Thy name. You have
freely given thfs beauty to all
your children ."
MUSIC: Perhaps any feliowwalkers who might have heard
me sing "How Great Thou Art,"
"Lord, I'm Coming Home" or
"One Tin Soldier" would not
have given me three 'stars, but
they were sung form the heart wher.e all good . music comes
from.
You · never hear "One Tin
Soldier" In church, and !!tat's too
bad. It is, as you may know,
about a treasure on a mountain
"burled beneath a stone." The
valley people. In order to get the
treasure. killed the mountain
people. So now the •'riches burled
there" belong to them:
"Now they stood beside the .
"/ f!EG your pardon/"
treasure on the'. mountain dark

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Jack Anderson .
and Dale Van A tta

Rafsanjani . a terrorist

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

CHES IRE - The Kyger Creek Pool Is now open according to
pool officials. The pool was closed Friday for r epa lro!thepool' s
filter. The pool reopened Sat'urday and will resume its regular
sc hedule.
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ODNR fixes White Oak
COLUMB US- The Ohio Departmen t of Nat ura l Resources
a nnounced that It w!H conduct a g('oundbreaklng ceremony on
July 21 at 2 p.m . to begin the Whit eOa k I reclamation project. In
Cheshire Township.
The project, estimated to cost about $850,000, will repair 140
..... _., __acr es of barren, ~trip- mined land as eroSion and floodin g
problems will b!" eliminated.
··
Larry Ma mon e, chi ef of the ODNR's Division of Reclamation:
Is sc heduled to dedi cate the construction project. He will be on
hand to discu ss how this site, which was not properly repaired
fol llwlng strip-min ing operations In lhP 1950s, will be restore d.
The project is located s ix mil es west of Cheshire, along Poplar
Chu rch Road , just south or Ohio 554. Th e groundbreaking
cer emony will begin at Poplar Ridge Church , on Poplar Church
Road.
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For more information, contact Todd Ambs at (614) 265-6797.

Meigs patrol reports accident
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A head·on accident Friday, at approximately 6:40a.m ., on
Ohio 124 In Lebanon Townsl!ip, le ft two people ser iously In jured,
accordi ng to the Gallla·Meigs Post ofthe State Highway PatroL
Stanley W. Holt er, 22, of Racine. and Lyndon K. Pepper, 26, of
Ra venswood, W.Va., were admitted to Ve teran s Memorial
Hosp it a l alter thei r cars collided at th e forked Intersec tion of
Ohio 124 a nd Ohio 338. Holl er wa s driving eas t and Pepper was
trave l i n ~~; west when Pepper made a left turn in front of Holter's
car. forcing the co llis ion.

Mining exhibit set for fair

In addition, make- up credits were also offered to junior high
.s tudents wlth .a total or 12 each enrolling for En glis h and ma th .
Summer .school at Buckeye Hills began June 15·and classes
were held Monday through Friday, !rom 8 a. m . to noon . Bus ·
transportation was avail a bl e for studen ts In the three-county •
area .
.
Mark Cool, Gwen Danie ls, Verna Daniels and Jim McCarley
taught English; Jane Dunn tau ght American History/Govern ment : John Glenn and Ke nneth Slone taught math:

ODOT readjustment bids set
MARIETTA - :aids will be taken on July 28 by the Ohi o
Department of Transportation fo[/ !he contract of center line
inventory on various routes and sections In District 10.
. The Inventory Is to measure sight distance tn the passing
zones. "Because of overgrown trees and other obstacles, the
lines have to be readjusted to Insure clear dls.tance for the
driver," said Mike Lang, District 10 construction engineer.
District 10 Includes Athe.ns, Gall Ia, Hocking. Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Vinton and Washington Counties.
The estimated complet.Jon date Is Oc tober 31.

Police cite area man
James A. Drummond, 40, of Paxton Road , Gallipolis, was
clted .Friday night by the Gallipolis Police Department lor not •
having a ·valid registration sticker, as was Bill E . Angell, 29, of
E ureka Star Ro~t e , Gallipolis, In a separate InCident.
"

New associate announced
APPLETON. WIS. - David V. Russell, o!New Haven, W.Va ..
Is the newest associate of the Caron L. Eggemeyer Agency,
Worthington, Ohio, a s a district representative In this area [or
the Aid Association tor Lutherans .(AALI.
AAL, the largest fraternal bene!it society In the nation,
prov ides 1.4 million members In 6,600 branches with frat ernal
benellts and other financial services through Its ·a!!lllates.
The horne o!!lce of AAL Is In Appleton, Wis consin.
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GALLI.POLIS- This year 's edition of the Galli a Count y Fair
wi ll see a mobile mining exhibit this year , ·s ponsored by
So uther n Ohio Coal Company 's Me igs Di v is ion. ·
The ex hllilt , housed In a trail er , will allow visitors achance to
see the dramatic chan ges t.hat mining ha s undergone sin ce the
days of thP p ic k a nd s hovel, according to Jim Tompkins, v ice
president and genera l manager of the company.
The exhibit In clud es a displa y of equipment used by the
division's thrl't' mine res cue te am s, a working mode l of an
underground coal mine a nd a co ll ection o.f photos of employees
livi ng In Callla County .

BHCC .summer school completed
RIO GRAN DE - More than 100 high school students from
Gal!la , Ja ckson and VInton Counties took advantage of Buckeye
Hills c a·r eer Ce nt er's s ummer school offerings . A total of 49
s tud e nts enrolled for E nglis h. l7 for ma th and 12 for Am erican
HIs tory /Government.
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MAll. ~I I RSCKIPTIONS
Sunday Onl y
OnP Yr•;rt' ........... ... .. .... ............. :In:.! . :! ~
~i :o.: mnnlh!'\ ........... .. .......... SHU HI

1tnd Sunduy
1\lt\11 . Sl iRSC'HIPTIOSS
O t til~

lnsid1• ( 'ounly
1:1 \\'pf•k ii ............................ .. .... $17 .:lfl

2ii w ."'t ·k:o; ..........., .................... S:I.J .Oii
:1:.! \o\' f'( •)\ )i .. .............. , . ............. .. $t~; , r,J-i
Halt'S Onlsld r County
l .'t \Vi''t ·k~ ..... ... .... ...... .............. , :!;Ht:.!O

:Hi WN'I\:- ............. ... .. ............... ~1.'1 . 111
~) 2 Wt'('k :-; ..
.. ..... ....... Sti7 .00

Hospital news
Veteran's Memorial
Admit ted Friday : Lydon
Pepper, Ravenswood, W.Va.;
Stanley Holter, Racine: Russell
Seymour, Dexter; Hilda Hart.
Racine.
·
Discharged Friday : Cathy
Pridemore, Wayne Rockey,
Frances Roush.

Build Your Dream House
This Year

JIM BARNA
LOG HOME

- Beauty•Strength•Economv
- Heat EHiclencv-Rustic Charm
·
- Affordabilitv
3 bdrm. tog kit ao low •• t8808
"Model Home shown by appointment ..

The

Lo~ . Home

Conne('tion

!50 Comer Comoterf!ld.
Oa~ ~ill , Ohio 45656
. (614) 682-8417
Miles West ol Ook Hill Oft St. Rt. 279)

..

'

~

.

]oint-county meeting set
Th ere will be a meeting of the Buckeye Joint -County
Self-Insurance Council will be held Friday , 'J uly 31, at 10:30
a .m .. in the Assembly Room at the Washington County Welfare
Offi ce, 222 Putnam St., Marietta, according ,lo fiscal office r
Randall L. Lambert.

Emergency calls -reported
POMEROY -Four calls were a nsw ered by local unit s Friday
the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports .
On Friday at 8:11 a.m .. Rutland took Harry Rambo from
M&lt;&gt;lgs Mine 2 to O'Bieness Hospital in Athens: Racine at 12:03
p.m. took Ben Philson !rom Broadway St ., to Holzer Medical
Cenier; .Rutland at 12: 09 p.m . took Thor Carsey !rom Sal!'m St.
to Holzer Medical Center, and at midnight Syracuse took Eura
Largent from Route 124 to Veterans M!'morlal HospitaL

Democrats say they cannot
depend on Iran-Contra affair
JOO 1988 Democratic Convention
B)' RICH EXNER
CLEVELAND (I)Pil - The del egates.
The appearance of the candi·
Ira n-Contra alfalr Is certain to
d
ates
was thr eatened by pickets
become a ma jor Is sue In th e 1988
or
s
triking
NBC television crews.
presidential ca mpaign, bur poParry
officials
said they opposed
l'en tlal Democratic nominees de·
voted much of th eir time Friday non-union NBC crews· covering
to matters outsldl' the Co ngres· the meetings . But a U.S. District
Court judge ordered just before
slana! heari ng room.
" WI'' re not going ro get e lec ted the start oft he meet lng t ha r NBC
by al l the fal iures of this - e mployees s hould be allowed to
admlnls t ration." sa id former en ter.
Way ne Anderson, vice chairAr izona Gov . Bruce Babbitt, on!O'
m
a
n from Oregon, left the room .
or ' five presidential hopefuls
say
in g, '1 ca n' t sit and take part
speakin g ro the Association of
In
a meeting that Is having
Sta t&lt;' Democra tic Chairmen.
coverage
by scabs."
Three other prospec tive c andl·
Rep. Richard Gephardt of
da tes are io speak Sa turda y at
the met"tlng. at tended by nea rl y Missou r i. the first presidential
.candidat e to speak, said the
controversy s howed " I he d!Her·
e nce between the Republlc a n and
Democrat pa rties ." .
"Even though there continues
to be a disagreement , I can say
(")!.1 h llo. tu'4l " ·'' h Su mt:" . }t.IS Th 11 d A\ ,~ .
that II this was a Republican
C ,dl! p~ t li' Oh io. h\ lht'Ohlo\' ,11\('\ 1"\lb
meeting, this question would
lh hl n,c Cfotn j ),l n\ M ulll nWI I\. 1 In c Sl •
(1'lfli l I l, tl-" p! .._ ',IJ:I ' p:dcJ It I C.!tll itll.t!i:O. .
ha ve never come up," Gephardt
Ohl u ~ ,..1h1 1 t:nll 'll 'C I .1 " ' l'('fl Od 1' 1.1'"
said.
m .•lli n)! m .•ll•·• ,, , l'n m• •J'ft\ . Ohlf• '" "' '
()frlt ·t•
Gephardt was !ollow.kltn the
question-and-answer
session by
:\1.-mh"' L' nil1•d P rr' "" lr1t ••r n.i!l(•n. t l.
Massachusetts Gov. Michael Du·
I n l. •ntl D.11lv 1"'1 1 '~'~ ,\ ~&lt;'nd:llion ,', ncl 1h r·
C lh l t~ f\.t •\1 " P·l\)1'1 A.-.snd .tllnn . ~ .1!1011. 11
kakls, Sen . PauiSimonofllllnols,
;\ du •i il' tnp R.-.pt •·' •·nl.•t h·f·. 1\r.tnh .•m
Babbitt
and Rep . Patricia
l\t·\1 ... p.tpt•) S. d P~ . 7U Thll d i\ \ I 'IHH' .
Schroeder
of Colorado. Satur' r''' Ynt k .Nf•\t Yor k mH 7
day 's scltedule Included appearSt ' ~!l . \1' 0~!.\'
ances by Sen. Albert Gore of
Sl ' ft~( ' fUP'flllN R,\ 'l' t: s
.,
Ry (~ arrll't ur Mrtior Rout('
Tennessee. Sen. Joseph Biden of
On •· \\'•'•·k ............................ hO ('ro nt !'
Delaware and Jesse Jackson. All
n rw ) ' (•.Jr . .... ..... .... • . . •. ~ n '.!n
but Jackson and' Schroeder hav e
SINGU·: C'OI'\'
PRICE
declared their candidacies.
~und ;J\ ............... .. ...
:il C'P nt 10
Dukakls said the party must
'
No s u b~('Tipll n n :-. h\' m ull pt ·rm ltt N \ In
win respect on the economic
arr;1,.., •.\'lwr •· mntor c·ar rlt •r !'t'JTif 'f' I!'O
lssu!O' if It expects to win the
a\ ':rll n hl r'.
presidency for just the second
Ttw ~ uml ; ,~- T l nw, · S f' nt i n• · ~will nr11 h1•
Ume since 1968.
r'l' "'pnn:-; lbl f• f&lt;ll' a tl\·;tn rf' pannPnl :"'fhe reason we have lost the
m .Hil • In (':rrrl t"r!-..

Cash Rebates

OR

3.9°/o
5.9°/o
6.9°/o
9.9°/o

Financing - 24 months
Financing - 36 months
Financing -

48 months

Financing - 60 months

No Money Down With Approvd Credit ·

a:ro
•• llll

~

presldenflal e lections," Dukakls
said. "is that we' ve lost the t - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
economic high ground .
"Our economic future , once
again, will be the most Important
s ingle Issue In this campaign,"
he said. " If there Is one unique
s trength that I bring to this
campaign, It is a person that Is
not only committed totally to
economic opportunity for our
citizens, tiut who has an understanding of those issues a nd a
track record."
Schroeder, who said she would
make a decision In September on
whether to run lor president, said
mu ch of the deficit problem could
be solved by cutti ng defense
spending.
" It's very Interesting that the
American taxpayers lor the last
few years ha ve been spending
between $150 billion 'and $200
billion a year to protect allies In
Europe and Japan, " said
Add tong-tasting beau1y and
Schoeder. "And those figures
protection to your home. Choice
have almost been exactly the
of
colors , textures and materials.
same as our trade deficit ."
Schroeder said 6 percent of the
world' s population, meaning the
United States, cannot entirely
support all the defense of the free
·world.
Babbitt said he could balance
the budget In three years without
o FREE PLANNING
tlie Gramm-Rudman amend·
ment if sensible cuts are made In
• FREE ESTIMATES
military and domestic spending.
o INSTALLATION
•
"For the sake of real growth,
ARRANGED BY SEARS
we need to adopt a concept of
o ASK ABOUT SEARS
need. testing, which looks at
. CREDIT PLANS
every Item In the budget and
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
says, 'Is It really necessary?'"
PH. 446-2770
th!O' former Arizona governor
said.

---~~~~~~~~

LI:IIJIIIIftl

LEGAL NOTICE
SEALED BIDS will be received by The Ohio
Valley Bank Company until12:00 p.m. (noon) on
the 15th day of August. 19'87, for the purchase
and removal (not to be razadl of the. residence
located lit 442 Third Avenue, In the City of Gallipolis, Gallia County, Ohio. known locally as the
Cornett residence. Said residence must be re·
moved at the sole expense of the successful bid·
der by the 16th day of December. 1987. All bids
should be addressed to the attention of Morris E.
Haskins. Chairman. The Ohio Valley Bank
Company. 420 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
46631. Said property may be viewed, by appointment. by telephoning Mr. Haskins, (6141
446-28311. The Bank will require at least 90
days for t"e ·present tennant to be able to relo· ·
cate. The Ohio Valley Bank Company reseNea
the right to reject any and all bids.

OR

3.9°/o Financ:ing
5.9°/o Financ:ing
6.9°/o Financ:ing
9 •9°/o Financ:ing -

24 months
.

36 months

48 months
60 months

No Money Down With Approved Credit

S-10
Pickups &amp; Blazers
Sl 000 CASH REBATES
or Low Rate Financing

HUGE .INVENTORY
Biggest &amp; Best
Selection-of N•w
Che.vrolets &amp; Oldsmobiles
In the Valley!

Before you huy- Trv Ud
You will he Surprlcedf
/

Chevrolet-Olsmobile
) 616 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis

•

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'·
~·

·: Page A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

:t

Long Bouo.;.

wo~an se?ten~ed

POMEROY .:.. A Long Bonom
woman, Christi Dawn Francis.
31, was placed on probation· for
five years Friday when she· ·
appeared before Judge Charles
• H. Knight in the Meigs County
:common Pleas Court.
' F'rancis, who earlier entered a
:plea of guilty, had been charged
with grand t heft in connection
with a June 71ncldentwhen $385
was stolen. Grand theft is a
· ;felony of the fourth degree and
~ arries a poss ible Penalty of six.
'
•

1

12 or 18 months in prtson and a
fine of up to $2500. or both .
Ju~g; Kn t~ht F'rld~y . sen t;,
enceth . :!~c s to a mad~ mutm 1d
m~ll. s
ore suspen ng 1 an
placmg her on probation fo~ fiv e
years, the maxtmum permilted.
She was ajso ordered to _make
restitution, obtain counselmg nd
perform community service
work thro_ugh the Me t_gs County
Commun~?h Crre~t to~sl . Pr~
· ghram h~h cp s at m.m sftef.re
t roug
e rosecu or s 0 tee.

1

; Racine man sentenced for breaking .;1nd entering·

•

POMEROY- Monte L. Riffle,

ao. Racine, was given a one year
· sentence on each of two charges
when he appeared before Judge
· Charles H . Knight ln the Me igs
:County Common P leas Court
:Friday.
·. Riffle ha d entered a plea of
'·guilty to one count of breaking
· and entering and one count of
. receiving stolen property. The
charges were contained in a bill
of lnforma lion prepared and filed
'·by the office of Prosecu Ung
Attorney Fred W. Crow III and

result ed from two separate lncident s. The first count , breaking
and enterin g, occurred Ju.ly 9 a t
Effie's Resta urant in Letart: t he
second occurred May 19. Each
charge is a felony of the fou rth
degree.
Riffle had prev iously been
conv ic te(l on a t heft offense and
so was not eligible for probation.
the Pros ecu tor repor ted.
Riffle was tran s fered by the
department of Sher iff Howard
Fra nk to the Chill icot he Correctional Institute to begin serving
his sente nce.

.,. .
••

'

;' Gallipolis municpal court cases h~ard

...• '

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GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
, ... Municipal Court e nded nine
• cases Friday, thus witnessing
~· 0 ne of its light e r caseload days.
,•
Mary L. Hurt, 46, ofKer'r, had a
• $50 fine and a six -mont h jail ter m
; . suspended for shopliftin g.
•·
J erry D . Ca lley, Jr., 20, of Rt. 1,
:~ Bidwell, was fined $20 for
~ speeding.
;.
James Racer, 19, of Rt . 2,
:= , Vinton, was fined $17 for having
, an open container.
• J anice K. McKe nzie, 49. of Rt.

4, Gallipolis , wa s fin ed $11 for

speeding.
Margaret E . Armstrong, 68, of
Rt.. 2, Crown City, forfeited a $40
bond for driving 'left of center.
Ear l F . Norton , 25, of Hamde n.
forfe ited a $40 bond for not
having valid license plates.
.Speed ing bonds were forfe it ed
by Edna J . Brumfield, 42 , of Rt. 4.
Gallipolis, $40; Char les P . E llis,
21. of Rt . 2, Vinton , $38: and .
Marcella M . Klove, 52, Bloomfield Heig hts, Mich .. $41.

'•
•

Four

~dieted

lly

. July 19, 1987

July 19. 1987

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

Meigs

gran~

POMEROY - Four indict- firearms specification, if Barley
was indicted on a c harge of
ments were returned by a Meigs Is found guilty, would add three
receiving stolen property In
County grand jury which con- years . to any other sentence
connection with an Incident on
vened .ln Pomeroy Thursday.
ordered.
May 19, 1987 In whine!) a weed
Indicted , a.ccordlng ' to the
trimmer was stolen and subsereport of Meigs Cou nty ProsecutKeith Allen Niberi. 25, C::rown
quenUy disposed of. Riffle has
ing Attorney Fred w. Crow III City , Ga llia Co unty , was indicted
been convicted of more than ~
W&lt;'!re:
·on a charge of grand theft (auto)
half dozen prior theft offenses
Charles W. Barley, 48, Ruin co nnection with an incident on
a nd was on phrole at the lime of
lland, indicted on a felonious June 2, this year. A 1986 pickup • the most recent offense, accordassa ult cha t·ge, with a firearm s
truck was taken, under false
ing to the prosecutor. Receiving
s pecifica tion, in connec tion with
pretenses !roin Coope r -Ch rysler" stolen property, as charged In the
an ' incide nt which occured on
P luy mouth In Middleport. Grand
Ind ictment. Is a felony of the
Ma y 23, this year , a t The Cove.
theft, as charged In the indict- third degree and carries a
David Talbot t , 21, Racine. was
m ent, Is a fe lony of the third
possible penalty of o ne, one and ·
wounded in the incident. Felon- degree and ca rries a . possible
one-half or two years In prison
tous assault ts a n aggra va te d
penalty of a determinate sent - and a fin e of up to $5.000. 0r both.
felony of t he second degree and
ence of one, one· and one -half or
Timothy E. Davidson. 28, Dark
carr!es a possible pena lt y offrom
two .years in priso n arid a fin e of
Hollow Road, Pomeroy, was.,
three to 15 ye&lt;~rs in prison and a
up to $5,000 or both.
Indict ed on achargeofcarrylnga
ft~e up to $7500 or both. The
Robert L. Riffle, 32, RaCine,

jury

•

Area deaths

concealed weapon In connectlqn
with his arrest In Pomeroy on
June?:/ on an earlier Indictment
charging l)lm with the possession ·
of a dangerous ordinance (dynamite) and possession of crlroinal tools (dynamite ). Carrying a
concealed weapon Is a felony of ·
t he third degree and carries . a
possible penalty of one, one and
one-half or two years in prison
·and a fine of up to $5,000, or both,
Davidson Is currently confined to
the Meigs County Jail .
Prosecuting Attorney Cr.ow
reports tha t arraignments' of
t~ose Indicted will begin Monday
morning before Judge Charles H.
Knight In . the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

keeper at Womeldorff and Thomas a nd Holzer Hos pital. She
also operated · Robinson 's Meat
Graves ide services for Nor·
Market. She retired in Ui74 from
rrian J . Lemaster will be con. Ohio pureau of EmploYment
. due led Monday , July 20, 1987 at
Services.
.
11 a.m . In t heSuncrest Cemetery
Born- Sept. 1. 1905 In Ga llia
under the dlrec!lon of 1he t rowCounty, s he was a daugher of t he
, Hussell funeral home.
late Ezra C. and Gold ie Burnett
Niday.
· She was preceded In death by
Nellie Mattox
her husband. C. Frank Robinson.
in March 1971. They were ma r ' PT. PLEASANT. W.Va. Nellie Mattox , 73, Point ·Plea- r ied In July 1927 in Gallipolis. .
Survivin g are a son, J a m es D .
sant, died Friday In the Pleasan t
a nd Mary K. Roblnw n&lt;&gt;fGa llipo ' Valley Nursing Care Unit . foll owlis; one sister, Eloise Brown of
Ing a lo~g illness .
Fr. Myers, Fla .; two ·g rand sons,
Arrangements are being m ade
John
C. and Robert D. Biack; two
• by Wilcoxen Funeral Home .
gran ddau g ht e r s, Suzella
Snowden. and Jenl Robi nson; two
g r ea t grandc hildren. and one
Hilda Riddle
sister, Eloise Brown of Ft.
Myers, Fla.
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va.
She was preceded In death by
.- Hilda Jean Porter Riddle, 52,
one
daughter, Charlene Black
Par k Drive, Point. Pleasant , died
Burnette
In April: one brother.
Friday In Holzer Medica l Center,
R
Burnett
Niday.
following a long Illness.
She was a member of · First
• She was 'born Sept 15, 1934 at
Baptist Chrurh In Ga llipolis,
Hurricane to Lorna Porter Bilwhere .she served In many
lups , Hurrica ne a nd the la te John
ca pacities .
-~ F . Porter.
Serv ices wil l be conducted
• A m ember of the Main ·s tree t
Wednesday
, 1 p.m ., at First
·' Baptist Church,' s he was a
Baptist Chruch, R ev. Joseph
: Sunday school teacher a nd a
Godwin officiating. Burial. fol : m e mber of the P o int. Pleasant
lows at Mound Hill Cemetery.
. Woman's Club.
F'rlends may call at Willis
Surviving are he r hu s band, Funeral Home on Tuesday, 6 to 9
:- ceber t, Point Pleasant ; · two p .m . The body will betaken t1&gt;the
•. dau ght ers, Tara Riddle, Point c hurch one hour ' prior to
: ~ Pleasant . Patricia White , Hurrl- services.
• cane: two •·sons, Bernard and
· · Randy, both · of P o ir• Pleasant:

·Norman

J.

~

The court passed _out a decree
Seven divorces were r ecorded
of divorce Wednesd ay for Larry
in Gallia CounlyCom mon Pleas
Court the week. of July 13-17.
· Broyles, of Rt. l. Gallipolis, and
Sharon L. Broyles , of. Hampton, .
A divorce was decr eed Monday
Va.
for Lewis T. Bowman, . of Rt. 4,
Gallipolis. a nd Jan T. Bowman,
of 138 Second Ave.
rp;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l
Neal Steven Fu lks and Vicki II
Lynn Fu lks, both of Eu reka Star
Rou te, Ga llipolis, rece ived a
decr ee of divorce Monday.
Roy B. Lon gfellow , ·of R io
Grande, a nd Sandy A. Longfel low, of Ho lla nd , got t he ir decree
of ivorce Monday. Sa ndy A,
Longfellow also had he r ma ide n
BB4600"Hi-Top
name of Huling restored to her.
A d ecree of dissolut ion was
BASKETBALL SHOES
ha nded down Monday for Dona ld
$4595
$6ft95
D . Newell. of Ri. 1. Bidwell. a nd
From .
to
7
Shaton Newell , of Bidwell.
A decree of divo rce wa s passed
out Monday for La rry D. Snyder .

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• Comlortable, easy-to-use
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...

~~Yci:!~~~~~t~re~hi;;d

Lois M.
A decree of divorc e was give n

Radford, Va ., a nd Susan Ba nks,
Wednesday
forAve
Mar
of 1006 Fourth
. k Banks, of

THE
SHOE CAFE .

.

~: :7u~rl~~~:~sShl~:;~ollf~:n~~~

York: one br other, the Rev .
: : Dwane Port er. Huntington: two
! step-sisters, Dorl Lewis , and
' Billie Sue Sovine, Hurrica ne: one
sfe_p-brother , Regg ie Billups.
Hu rrlcanp
a nd
s ix
. gra nd c hildren.
Services will be Sund ay at 2
p.m . a! Wilcoxen Funeral Home
wit h the Rev. Don J ohnson and
the Rev . LeRoy Keeney o ffici at Ing. Burial will follow in Kirkland
Me m orial Gardens .
Friends ma y ca ll Sa turday
from 2 to 4 p.m . and 7-9 p.m. at
the funeral hom e .

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
tlbtll

300 SECOND AVE.

~~~~~G~A~L~L~IP~O~L~I~S~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~

Gallia marriage · license requests

=. Deaths.••
,; (From DEATHS, page A-5)
~ ters, Joyce Ann Thomas, Lock• bor n, Ohio; Darlene Newell,
Long Bottom: four sons, Paul
·Jeffry, Ra cine: Thomas bou ' ;glas. Rac ine: Ronald Steven, ·
~ Columbu s; James Albert , Ra : ·~Ine; four brothers, Ray mond ,
- .Racine: Charles. P heonix, Ariz : u na; Holly , We llsville, Ohio:
; Delmer, Racine: three sisters,
.• 'Francis Parsons , Paducah, Ken ; lucky; Ma rtha Enerson, We i~ Jvllle, Ohio: Tessie&gt; Wolfe, Racine
a nd seven grandc hildren.
Services will be Tuesday at 1
p.m. at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. Char les Bush
pres iding.
Burial will follow at Le tart
Falls Cemetery.
Cal ling hours are 2 p .m .-4 p.m .
a nd 7 p.m .-9 p.m . Monday a t the
fune ral hom e.

GALLIPOLIS :_ Ttle Ga llia
County Proba te Court handed out
three marriage licenses for the
week of July 13-17.
Earl Ray Myers, 26, of 425
Green Ter race No. 6, a nd Brenda
Sue Board , 30. of 450 Lar iat Dr ..
received their lice nse Monday.
Carl Duane Bing, 19, of Rt. 1,

Ga llipolis. and Di a na Yvonne
Ca ldwe ll , 20 .. of Rt. 1, Bidwe ll ,
were gra nted their ll cen e
We dnesday .
Allen E uge ne Halley, 22. of Rt.
~ - Gal lipolis, a nd Tami Lynn
Co mer, 20, of Patriot Star Rout e ,
Galli polis, got their license
Friday.

Mamie Robinson
GA LLIPOLIS - Ma mie M.
, Robinson . 81, of 7.1 Garfield Ave ..
, Gallipolis. died Friday a t Holzer
· -Medical Ce nter. She worked at
; ' 'GIIllla Produe&lt;'' (:ompany for
:, several years. a nd as a book-

(AMARO OWNERS
IROC APPEARANCE PACKAGE, GROUND
EFFECTS, SPOILERS &amp; MORE.
INSTALLATION AVAILABLE -

J. Lemaster

.-

Gallia County divorces decreed

o

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

sisters , ' Ma e Taylor, Hou ston,
Texas. and Kathryn An n McGhee
of Co lumbus: seven grandchild·
ren and three great -granchildren
~rvices were he ld on Monday ,
July 13, at lh£' Gross F un eral
HomJ" and burial was in the
Crestview Mausoleum, both in
Hot Spr ings .

kon S. Thompson
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va .
Leon S. Thompson, 70, owner a nd
operator of Carolina Lumber and
Su pply Company for the past 46
year s, died Fr iday morning, July
17, 1987, in the P leasa nt Valley
Nursing Care Unit following a
s hort Illn ess.
H&lt;'- was a resident of 1921
Maxw e l l Ave nu e, Point
Pleasant.
Born Aug. 12, 1916 in Huntington, he. was !he son of the late
Denv e r C. Thompson a nd Gladys
Thomas Thompson.
HE_' was a m ember of Height s
Un ited Methodist Churc h, Point
Pleasant, a m ember of the
Masonic Minturn Lod ge 19· of
Point Pleasant, the Cha pter and
Commandry of Point P leasa nt
Pat Wilson Shrine 'Cl ub, and th~
Lumberman' s Association' of
West Vi rginia.
Su tvlvlng are his wife, Gen evieve Adkins T hompson, Point
P leasant: o ne d a ughter Mrs .

POMEROY - Ida Ma e Smith
Sargent, 80, died July 9 a t her
home In Hot Springs. Ark .
She was a native of Pomeroy
and spent ma ny years In Houston. Tex., and . had lived In Hot
Springs for the past 33 years .
She was an active participant
In the family insurance. real
es tate a nd construction busi ness.
She had served as presid e nt of
the Houston Realtors Auxiliary
a nd Houston La Sertom a a nd was
a past m e mber oft he Hot Springs
Emblem Club.
Survivors include her hu s band,
Charles H . Sarge nt , Hot S prings;
three sons, Dr. Dway ne Lee
Sargent , Sa n Angelo. Texas; Dr.
Charles Rolland Sargent o f San
Dl egll. Calif:, and Frank Melvyn
Sargent of H o t Springs; four
brothers. Harley Smith . Roy
Smith. Charley Smith a nd Gene
Smith , a ll of Po meroy: two

Randy !Marlene) Slusser of W.Va.; two nleces, .Kay Karver,
Tampa' F!a.; 'one son, RichardL. Schaumburg, Ill. , a nd Donna
a nd Sharon H. Thompson, Pl. Williamson, Rutland, a nd three
Pleasant ; one sister Myrl T. nephews, Bill McCool, KetterKeck, HuntJngton: three grand· lng; Gene McCool, Arizona, and
c h II d r e n :
t wo g re at - Keith McCool, Germany.
granddaughters or Mariettta and
Besides her parents, Mrs.
a nephew of Huntington.
Worner was preceded In death by
Services will be Monday a t 1 her husband,. Harlan D. Worner
p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral on March 10, 1983; a brother,
Home wi t h the Rev . Michael . Howard, and a siste r, Syvllla
Chapman officiating. Entomb- • · McCooL
.
ment will be at Woodmere·
Services wi ll be held at 11 a. m .
Memoria l Park In Huntington.
Monday at the Rawlings-Coats. The Minturn Lodge or Point Blower Funeral Hom e wit h the
Pleasant will have Masonic Rev . Lamar Bryant of!lclatln g.
graveside rites.
·
Friends may call a t the fune ral
Friends may call Sunday from home from 6 to 9 p.m. Sund ay . On
4 to 6 p .m . and 7-9 p .m . ·
Monday, the body will be at the
Mina
Womer
Borkoskl Funeral Hom e a t Ad~
e na where friends may ca ll from
MIDDLEPORT-' Mlna Ale cla 6 t&lt;r9·p:m . Graves ide rites will be
Worner, 78, The Maples, Pome- held at 10 a.m. Tuesday a t the
roy, died Friday at veterans Olive , Branch Ceme tery in
Memorial Hospital.
Ha rrisville.
Born April "2. 1909. she was a Ronald Grady
daughter of the late Joseph C.
and Daisy Thomps on East hom .
Ronald Grady, 58, form a lly of
A h_omemaker, s he was a Racine. died Saturda y a·t Pine
m ember of the First Southern Crest Ca re Center aft~r a long
Baptist Churc h, Pom e roy , a nd illness.
the Meigs County Senior Ci! izens
He was born Sept. 6,19 28 to t he
orga nization. ·
late Onle a nd E s ta Walls Grady.
He was a retired truck driver.
Surviving ar e a son Ri chard
Arlen and Ma rcella Lou Worner, He was a member of Mount
a nd a grandson, Richard Arlen , Moria h C hurch of God and
Worner Jr.. .Bar boursville, American Indian Ce nters 2998,

Page-A•S

Athens , Ohio.
He was preceded In death by
his wife, Belly Jean, In 1973; an
Infant daughter. Virginia MaxIne: a brother; a s ister and a
granddat;ghter.
,
He Is ~urvlved by two daugh(See DEATHS, page A-4)

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Pon1eroy-M

Tmes-Sentinel

19.1987.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

.,

Debate on facilities for the handicapped
DAYTON, Ohio (UP I) - Prob(erils besetting Montgomery
County's · home for mentally
retarded chlldren and adults
speak to a larger issue of how the
mentally handicapped will be
cared for, officials said.
ThP Stillwater Health Center
was informed this week the statemay cut $1.8 million of the
center's Medicaid funding,
which could possibly force the
facility to close, meaning the
state would be left to search for
new homes for the residents.
The state has proposed eliminating the .funds because StU·
!water has failed two state safety
and health inspections, which
c:ited problems such as falling
piaster and unsanitary
conditions.
Joyce Hannah, Montgomery

County director of community
and human services, said the '
·problem stems from the state's
thougher standards for county
institutions. And ·that, she said,
has occurred partly because o! a
federal cracildown on state
inspectors.
Donald Kristola -of the ·U.S.
Department of Health and Hu man Services said the federal
~overnment has begun enforcing
more stringent requirements be·
cause Of poor conditions in such
facilities nationwide.
"Inspectors ... sometimes wer·
en't ·too well trained, " said
Krlstola , - HHS chief of
. intermediate-care facilities for
the mentally retarded.
The crackdown may leave
states scrambling for housing for
handicapped people.

" I think the state's gone a Iit.tle
overboard," said .Montgomery
County Commissioner Paula
. Me Ilwaine.
Hannah · said she stands by
eariier statements that Stli·
!water was providing quality
care for patients and that ·" substantial changes" · have been
made to remedy problems.
"I think it would be 'good if we·
could ·work together with the
state on this, because in the end It
is the patients who will suffer if
we don't," s he said.
·
For the past year, HHS inspectors have been clamping down on
facilities in Ohio, and have
recommended that one privately
run home for the mentally
retarded and three state-run
facilities lose their Medicaid

July 19, 1987 -Page-A-7

Ford·

IN lHE ClASSIHEID

·recalls . ·
ambulancesl_.

funds. said Brenda Whitney,
community services director for t _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _";'
the non-profit Resident Home I"'
:.
Association, w~ich provides
group homes and apartments for
the retarded.
· "The federal government, for
whatever reason, hasn't been
happy with the job the state
surveyors have been doing,"
'
Whitney said.
In addition to ihe $1.8 million
proposed reduction: the state
earlier called for $3 million in
cuts to Stillwater, which would
•
nearly decimate the faclllty's
$5.5 million Medicaid budget .
The county has requested a
....,,..,;,•., makes it even better.
hearing and is considering ap·
peals. Stillwater might stay open
Call me.
even if It loses its Medicaid funds,
CAROll SNOWDEN
but its Medicaid patients would
(w. lhird I Stato
be forced to relocate:
. Gollifoel~
Phano:4A6-4290
'
Homo: 446·45 II

WASHINGTON (UPII - The
Ford Motor Co. Said Friday it will
recall 16,000 ambulances - including 250 that ha ve already
undergone special repairs - to
prevent the rescue vehicles from
spurting fueL and bursting into
flames .
Ford ~hich makes !lO
percent of the chassis that . are
built into ambulances in the
United States- has notified the
National Highway Traffic Sa !ely
Administration of its recall.
The company will seild recall
notices to fire departments and
other emergency medical services during th e next lwo weeks .
Ford .expects to co mplete it s
inspections and modifications in
the nexl two months at a cost of
about $30 million.
A coalition of ambu lance operators pelitioned the safety ·ad·
mlnist ration fo r a recall. noting
th ere have been 12 ambulance
fires in the past 12 weeks. Ford
estimates 90 ambu lances of every 10,000 on th~ road hav e had
fires.
Helen Petrauskas, Ford ''ice
president for envionm cntal and
safely engineering , sa id a t a
news conference discussions
with ambulance operator groups
convinced her of the necessity of
a nationa l r~all .
Pel raus kas said "we have a
very high level of confidence "
!hat reva mped modification kit s
ror the vehicles "will make these
u~ll s safe irom fires" caused by
high tl'mperaturc and high pressure co nditions around the fue.i
systems of the E-3&gt;0 mod el
cha ssis.
Ford denies !here is any
inherenl flaw in the chass is that
ha s caused the fire$ , bu t attributed problems to th e usc of high
vo iali lity. winter -gra de fue ls and
an array of mod ifi ca tions that
are made whPn 30 or more
different manufacturers convert
1he ch ssts into ambu lances .
" In all of the ambulances
we've looked al it was so methin g
that-was don~ tot he vehi cle after
it IPft our control." Petrauskas
said . ShP a dd ed that no matler
who was to blame lor the
problems. " I can say we' rc going
· to fix it."
"We'll worry abou t getting
11(!imbur cd la t ~r," Petrauskas

..

..

Youngstown seeks Federal Express hub
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI) operation, as well as land for
- Economic development offi- expansion.
cials from the Mahoning Valley
Economic development agents
are convinced that Youngstown from Mahoning and Trumbull
Municipal Airport is tailor· made counties have made initial confor the expansion needs of the tacts with Federal Express execFederal Express Corp., which is utives, and Mollterno said the
considering operation of a new first hurdle to be overcome is
regional hub.
convincing the company to give
John Moliterno, president of Youngstown an opportunity to
the Youngstown Area Chamber compete with larger cities in the
of Commerce, said Friday the region.
overnight express delivery firm
If the company is receptive,
may build a fourth regional Moliterno is certain Youngstown
facility somewhere In the geogra- could hold its o~n against other
phical area that Includes Pitts- bidders for the multi· mllllonburgh, Cleveland and Columbus: dollar facility .
Mollterno noted that Young"To ihls point, what we've been
stown is located "smack in the
trying to do is make them aware
middle" of the area under .of what land and facilities are
review, and he said the underava'llable at tlie airport, " he said.
utiliz,ed municipal airport could
"I doubt if they have given us any
easily provide Federal Express
consideration at all, up to this
with sufficient space for its
point."
Rep. James Traflcant, D· Ohio.
agrees that · Youngstown Js not
currently . under review by the
company, but he has taken steps
to remedy that.
At Traficant's request, Rep.
Norman Mineta, D-Calif., ch11ir·
WASHINGTON (UPi l -Fed·
man of the House Avia lion
era! aid will be available for
Subcommittee, has written to
individuals and businesses in
Federal Eltpress. urging the
four Ohio counties that have been
company to consider Youngdeclared disaster areas as a
stown as apotentlal site for the
result of severe flooding earlier
hub.
this month.
"Sixty-five percen t of the
President Reagan paved the
midwestern population is located
way for the aid by making the
within a 12-hour driving distance
declaration Friday. Gov; RI- -- of our airport," Traficant said,
chard Celeste had requested that
"making it an Ideally suited
Reagan declare Richland, Crawlocation for Federal Express.
ford, Marion, Morrow and Dela·
Most Importantly, it would be a ·
ware counties, disaster areas,
bli boost to the Mahonlng
but officials said there wlls not Valiey."
enough uninsured property damMoliterno said the company's
age .in Delaware County to
warrant a disaster declaration
there.
More than 1, 200 homes and
businesses were damaged In
floods that followed heavy rains
July 1, and damages were
roughly estimated by the governor's office at $21 million. No
deaths resulted from the disaster, but 21 people were reported
injured.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency wlll coordinate
the relief efforts, said Carl
Suchocki, an official with the
·
agency in Washingto n.
Suchocki said the federal assistance available will be for
individuals and businesses' and
will not cover damage to public
areas.
Sonya Eiam, an official with
Disaster Services In Columbus,
said her agency will assist the
federal relief agency in setting
up disaster centers where vic·
t ims can get help. She said there
sho uld be three centers set up by
Tuesday.

Reagan declares
fout counties
disaster areas

existing hubs in Memphis, Oak·
land (Calif.) and Newark (N.J .)
employ about
workers
each. A similar number of jobs

VJ??

would ..be anticipated at a new
facility

He said th-e" Youngstown air-.
port does not have the air traffic
problems that exiS t at Cleveland
and Pittsburgh.

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She noted insp&lt;&gt;eUons ol the
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days and would doubt -check at
Jeasl 26 ·problems that may
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Page-A-S-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

l

Jyly 1 9. 1987

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

·:FBI investigates reports of Salvadoran death squads
By ROBINA LUTHER
into the possibility that El
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -The Salvador death squads are oper·
FBI Is Investigating possible · ating in the Los Angeles area,"
terrorist ac!lvltles by right· wing FBI spokesman Jim Neilson
Salvadoran death squads that sal d.
political activists are blaming
"Recent information reflects
for a series of threats and' one the possibility of terrorist actlvi·
torture-rape.
ties within FBI jurisdiction," he
The bureau's announcement added.
Friday came hours after · a
Los Angeles p&lt;illce, who ,have
Rol)'lan Catholic priest told a been investigating the threats ·
news conference,that he received since last week, did not know
a death threat, apparently the "whether any or ail (of the
latest In tlie string of threats .that threats) are connected," police
began nearly two weeks ago .
Lt. Dan Cooke said. ·•we just
"The FBI has opened · an can' t tell you now . We just don ' t
Investigation into allegations know."

By PETER GILLINS
billowed ' clouds Of thick smoke Arizona. California, Idaho, Mon·
By United Press International
carried by winds 500 miles south lana, Oregon, Washington, Utah,
Cool temperatures and seal• to San Francisco and weather . and Nevada.
tered showers aided firelighters forecasters said the smoke could
In addition, t he. Army was
but the death toil rose to three In · reach Los Angeles. another 400· cleaning up hot spots on a
forest and range fires in Alaska miles down the Pacific Coast.
25,()()().acre range tire on a
and the West that have charred
"I have never experienced
military firing range near Ya·
more ·than 100,000 acres and smoke like this before," said Dan klma, Wash., that was not
destroyed 32 homes.
Guido. spokesman for the Na· included in · the fire center's
A worker cutting _trees for tiona! .Weather Service in Red· figures.
firefighters battling a 400·acre wood City, Calif. "Smoke plumes
Hartigan said four large !Ires
blaze In Washington's Okanogan have been so ·thick that we have in remote areas of Alaska east
County was killed Friday. appar· been able to track the fires on our · and north of Fairbanks bad
ently by a falling tree, officials weather sateillfes."
scorched abou t 49,970 acres, but
said. .
Arnold Hartigan of the Intera· were dying out because of the
Mike Adams, 38, became the gency Fire Center in Boise, rains.
third fatality in Northwest tires Idaho, said between 4,000 ·and . Cloud bursts dampened the
this week.
5,000 firefighters were battling largest of the forest fires in the
Fires raging in southern major blazes o!i 35,000 acres of Western states, an 8 ,~· acre
Oregon and Northern California private, state and federal land in
'

wildfi~e

Custom Furniture

blaze that began on Bland
Mountain • near Roseburg in
southern Oregon.
The fire, touched off by sparks
from the faulty battery of a
tractor driven by aranch hand,
kllled two loggers Wednesday
night and destroy_ed eight homes
when It jumpedla'cross the South
Umpqua Rlver.
Despite the rain, the blaze was
still burning out of control in
forests of fire and pine and 552
firefighters were on !he lines .
" My men are fighting
hundreds of little fires ," said
Scott Hays of the state. Forestry
Department. ''If It was just one
big fire, It would be a lot easier to
fight...
.
'

Repair and
Rejin~hing
DONE BY HAND
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REASONA~LE

fRE£ ESTIMA1tS - CAll FOR AI'POMJI'INrS

their intended appeals for a few
moments with the la wyers,
"It was a chance for them to
say goodbye," Hansen said.
"That Is the last time they will
see each other."
The couple's brazen daytime
escape by helicopter from the
prison yard Nov. 4 gained nation.
wide attention. ·Th.ey were cap·
tured ·w days later In a Sacra·
menta. Calif., shopping mall
while attempting to i;luy engage·
ment rings.
Lopez tearfully told the judge
Friday that Mcintosh, who was
just a year away from rel ease at
I
the time of.Jhe escape, should be .
.
. trea ted with leniency.
" He' s not violent, he Is not a
The nearly 2,500 NOW bully, " she said. "He's a very
members at the conference were compassionate man, a very
slated to elect a new president loving man. Sentence him with

150.000
members in 756 chapters
nationwide.

Carol Novak, Owner

Welcome

675·6899

layaways
Welcome

--

Lopez, 37, serving a :;o.year
term on- bank robbery charges
before the breakout , was sent ·
enced to an additional five years
in prison for escape - the
maximum term. But her parole
eligibility date will remain 1991,
according to Assistant U.S . Af:
torney Mark Zanides.
Geoffrey Hansen. Lopez's at ·
torney, said he was certain they
would not be allowed in the sam('
prison .
After the sentencing. the judge
allowed the couple to discuss

Saturday.
Created
in 1966,
NOW
1s the nation's
largest
femlgist
organization with -more than

Layaways

LOCATED ON RT. 2 PAST MOOSE LODGE ON RIG

NOW leader calls for feminist "POl •t•tea} power
By BETH O'CONNELL
trend .
PHILADELPHiA (UP!) - , Smeal, stepping down aft er
Outgoing National Organization serving seven of the last 10 years
. for Women President ·Eleanor as NOW president, told the
Smeal said Friday the next phase opening session of the organlzaof the feminist movement In· lion's annual. conference it Is
valves electing more women to · · time ·tor- the "femjnlzatlon of
public office and reversing the power," especially political
nation's conservative political power.

'COME TO OUR HOUSE'the courtyard
has been made simpler since
the garden gate was broken.
This gate, · and many other
parts of the Our House museum are In need of repair.
Curator Michelle Corbin, pictured, said the fond-raising
.. drive currently underway will
be used to make repairs need
now' and plan for those of the
future, in addition to operatIng ~xpenses.
Leavi.IJg~ from

SLEEPY HOLLOW
INTERIORS

A tearful farewell by the prison lovebirds
But the pudgy, decorated VIet·
nam War helicopter pllot was
sentenced to 25 years In prison
for armed air piracy and aiding
his girlfriend Lopez's escape.
Mcintosh, 42; would be eligible
for parole in nine years.
Mcintosh tried to make a
statement In ·his own behalf,
saying, "I did not have a gun"
during the hijacking of the
helicopter he flew into the prison,
But he broke down in tears and
the hearing was halted for 15
minutes.

'

aid to El Salvador.
. ' lobby legislators against con· ceived as ·communists In de·
Rep. Don Edwards. D·Cal!f., tlnued mUltary aid to El Salva· manding social change.
•
chairman of the House Subcom· dar, said he believed the threat
Olivares said the threat waso
mittee on Clvll and Constltu· also was directed at his church . not the first against him, but Jt
Ilona! Rights, said he may hold
Many priests, nuns and lay was the first time a threat was
hearings on the Incidents.
church leaders have been killed "clearly linked by the methods
' 'I think It's a matter that by right-wing terror squads In El used by the death squads In F;l
foreign agents may be involved Salvador because they are per· Salvador."
in Los· Angeles In these assaults .----------------~-=====;;;;;=
and activities that have the
appearance of death squads,"
Edwards said. "We don' t want
that sort of thing In the Un !ted
Stales:" ·
.
.
Olivares , who recently tra·
veled to Washington, D.C., to

Rev. Luis Olivares, 53, told
reporters he received a death
threat Wednesday in an anonym·
·.ous letter bearing the letters
" EM" and a circled No. I.
' Th·e initials are believed to be
those of "Escuadron de Ia
Muerte." or squadron qf death.
Ollveres. whose church provides
sanctuary to Central American
refugees , said the No. 1 meant )le
may be the gro~p·s n~xt target.
The letter was the latest in a
series of threats received by
Salvadoran refugees and political activists in the Los Angeles
area who oppose U.S. military

Tree cutter dies in Washington

By J'\MELA A. MacLEAN
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) Prison lovebirds Ronald Mcln·
tosh and Samantha Lopez, who
' new to freedom in a hijacked
helicopter, spent a few brief
moments saying goodbye after a.
judge ordered the tearf~i couple
back to prison.
Lopez made an impassioned
,plea to U.S. District 'Judge'
Eugene Lynch Friday to show
"mercy and compassion" for
Mcintosh, who "I know and love
deeply."

Section ·: B

.'I..··• .

Our House ·fund drive
set ·on making.community
museum source of pride

A BRAND NEW SYSTEM ••,
IT'S CALLED SER~ICE!

The Medical Shoppe Inc.
666 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 46631

By LEE ANN WELCH

Celehratlng 10 Vean Of quality
Service To The People Of Thlt Areall
Complete Rehabilitative Services, including:
Physical Therapy
Back Rehabilitation
Work Hardening
Cardiac Rehabilitation
Industrial Medicine

M

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Sports ed•cme
Adult and Corporate Fitness
Herman L. Dillon. Physical Therapist
Phone 614·446 -:2206

rm~e~rc~y~an~d~c~om~p~a~ss~l~on~.~..~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

SJI AI ItS Cata

\

S ecial
faetory rogratn Cars
GARDEN PLANNING .:... Plannlnr the herb JRrden and
visualizing the beaulllitatlon 18 belns taken on by several area
residents, among them, Bea Evans, left, and Vilma Plkkoja.

Tlmes·Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - " Come to our house!" Th at was the cry of the
1800's a long the Ohio riverbank.
The Our House was a tavern, . among other things In Gallipolis
history, and Is now a musuem . It Is also In need of many repairs- and
that takes funding.
·
To restore the house to his past state, and to rid the walls of peeling
paint' and cracks, there Is a drive to make th e Our House a source of
pride In "our community, " according to curator Michelle Corbin.
"Making Our House ours again,' ' she said.
·
According to Corbin, there are plans to paint, wallpaper and cover
the floors at the Our House, in addition to work in the courtyard,
placing benches. a knot garden. rose garden and trellis and repairing
tlje brick wall.
There will also be a heating and air conditioning system installed
with a two-fold purpose :- first to preserve the collection housed
there. and secondly, to make the Our House. comfortable for club
meetings and community functions.
There are also plans to allow weddings In the refinished courtyard,
·
' ·- ·
. sne sat d.
The Our House Is managed by the Chamber of Commerce under
contract to the Ohio Historical Society, Corbin said , The chamber has
a committee made up of members of the Gallia Coun ty Historical
Society and other interested groups apd individuals, she said .
·
The three story tavern, built of brick In the Federal style, boasts a
taproom, public and private dining rooms , a ladles parlor, three
bedrooms and a divided ballroom. At the rear, a separate kitchen was
built.
The name, Our House, was applied by the community because of
Cushing's practice of inviting patronage with the words 'come over to
our house.'
It was also at th is hostelry that Ge neral Lafa yette, on his
triumphant tour of America, was entertained on Sunday, May 22,
1825. by the prominent cltize.ns.
In the current fund drive , there are two levels of giving. Corbin said.
The Friends of the Our House will be contributors of $20 for
members of the county historical society and $25 for non· members .
The extra $5. Corbi n said. is forwarded to the historical society for
membership there.
The Third Century Fu.nd has many levels, Corbin said. Dear
Friends are one· time gifts of up to $49; Special Friends are one· time ·
gifts of $5().$499; French 500 Friends are one·tlme gifts of $500-$2.499;

AN A-PEELING WELCOME- Becky Ramey, a guide at the
Our House, is pictured at the.front door, which welcomes visitors
with pe&lt;;llng paint and cracks.
and the Lafayette Club arc one· time gifts of $2.500 or more.
In addition, Corbin said, individuals and groups or families
endow specific rooms or project s of the Our House, and they, awnl!'l
y;ith the Lafayette Cl uti members will be permanently recognized
the museum.
Money from the Third Century Fund will be u ~ ed for current Cajlitailr
needs, capital endowment and operating endowment.

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IN NEED OF FIXING The Our House museum Is In
need of repair, both Inside and
out, according to furator
Michelle Corbin. Pictured at
lett Is a window In the
ballroom, which 18 painted
shut. When repairs be~tln, It
wlll be opened and draperies
hung. At right, the wall of the
courtyard has several gaping
holes, like the one pictured.
Above, Corbin shows the peelIng paint which currently
greet~ visitors to the Our
House. All these wUI be
"spruced up" or fixed with
funds from the current drive,
which got underway Friday
ntsht In the Galllpol18 City

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.Times-Sentinel
photos by
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II

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Wooten-J ames

SUNDAY
P OMEROY - Reunion of the
GALLIPOLIS - Special s ing- children of the late Char les a nd
Ing by Gloryland BeUt&gt;vers . Alma Snyder,Sunday a t the roadFaith Templ_e Independent . side park on Ro11te 33South . Ta ke
Church, .Sunday, 7 p:m.
covered dish. ·

·GALLIPOLIS- Sisson Family
at 'Elizabeth Chapel Church,
Sunday, 7 p.m .

.®
'
•
•

Jacks-tJoff
I

LANGSVILLE- Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Jacks announce the en·
gagement and approaching .marriage of ther daughter, Carol
Annette Jacks, to Delmas Keith
Goff, son of Mabel Goff, Langsville, and the late Darrell Goff.
The wedding will take place on
Aug. 8 at 11 a .m . at the Church of
Christ, Danville. A reception will
follow at . The Restaurant,
Wilkesville. ·
Miss Jacks Is employed at The
Restaurant In Wilkesville.
Goff, a graduate of Meigs High
School, Is employed with Magnum Drilling, Ashland, Ky.

MONDAY

GALLIPOLIS Ga llipolis
Busi ness a nd P ro fess iona l
Women meet Monday, 6:30 p.m .,
Down Under.

RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern Star,
wUI have a picnic Sunday at 6
p.m. at the sheller house near the
Syracuse tennis courts. All otflc·
. ers and members are Invited and
each Is asked to take, a covered
dish.

IZeS

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuttle
lamlly reunion Sun'day , Tuppers
Plains II rehouse. Dinner at 12:30
p.m .
CAROL A. JACKS·

SYRACUSE - London P ool
will offer swimming lessons
starting on Monda y. Adult
cla sses will begin at 9 a.m .;
advan ced beginner s and intermedlat&lt;&gt; at 10 a .m . and begi nn er
at 11 a.m. All cla sses a re$12 with
registration at the pool, 992-9909,
or wltft He idi Cobb ; 9~2- ~40 2 .
RUTLAND - Rutla nd Ga rden
Club will meet at the home of
Mrs. VIrgil Atkins fo r a garden

I

POMEROY - The daughters
of Daisy and Charles Blakeslee,
Patricia Ann Circle an'd Jennifer
Sue Butcher and their famllles,
are inviting friends of the family
to attend an open reception In
observance of the 50th wedding
anniversary of their parents.
The celebration will take place
at the United Methodist Church
in Pomeroy on Sunday, Aug, 2, 2

•

to 4 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs . Blakes lee wer e
married at Newber ry, Mich. and
have spent 47 of the ir 50 years of
marriage In Meigs County. He Is
a retired agent for the Meigs
County Extension Serv ices. Mrs .
Blakeslee Is a rt&gt;tl red sc hoo l
teacher. ' •
They request gift s be omitt ed .

~~~E

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STORE HOURS 8 A.M.-I 0 P.M. MON. THRU SAT. ·
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. SUNDAY: 9 A.M.'til 9 P.M• .
WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS
WE RESERVE ·THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
LOCALLY OWNED BY BOB AND SUSAN TURNER

Mr. and Mrs. Clarrence Irwin

·Golden agniversary planned

Extra s pecial savings on famous Serta
sleep sets , Including Serta Per fec t
Sle eper8 mode ls. He re are jus t two eX·
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.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI) ...,..
Donna Rice and Gary HarLgot
together for a dinner date chaperoned by their spouses.
Hart, 41, a maintenance supervisor at .a Rochester General
Motors Corp. plant, and Rice, 56,
a housewife, accepted an lnvlta·
lion ·by WHAM radio station
morning· personality Dee Alexander for dinner Friday night at
the Crystal Barn restaurant.
Alexander planned the date
after the more famous Donna
Rice was lntervlewe'd on ABC's
20120 television show about her
widely reported relationship
with the more famous Gary Hart,
the former Colorado senator who
bowed out of the 1988 presidential
race shortly aftt&gt;r reports of his
involvement with the Miami
model.
Alexander said he found a
Rochester Qonna Rlce and Gary
Hart In the ielephone book.

· POMEROI' - M.r. a nd Mrs . . a nd Lydi a MacC umber Ca rl, and
ret ired from the Ohio DepartRalph E . Ca r l, 41 292 Kin gs bu ry
men! of Hi ghw ays with 32 years
Road. will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversa ry on Satu r- of service.
They are the parents of E va
day, Aug. 1. 2 to 4 p.m. with a n
Loraine
Kin g a nd Vi rgil Carl,
open recept io n a t the Rock
bot
h
of
Pomeroy.
Dwight Carl of
Springs Grange Ha ll. The celeNew
Cas
tle,
Delaware,
and Rod·
br ation Is being ho sted by their
ney
Ca
r
l,
Belpre.
They
have 14
children.
grandchildren
an'd
four
great·
- Mr: and Mrs . Ca r l were margra
ndchildren.
ried.on Aug. 4, 1937 a t Rutl and by
The couple reques ts that gifts
the late Rev. Boltma n. Mrs.
Sadie Ca rl is th e dau ght er of the be omitt ed.
Ia t e CIyd e and Han na h Rus se II r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ii
Harrison, and she is a reti red .
oook In the Meigs ' Local School
District. .
· He is th e the son of the late John
SINCE 1933
c

n

ll ~

f:. . ....

V\ H :.r- , 2 1•.-.

~~

" ".Ito .... 9

n u . t:a. r ...

(JI U :'4 . 2: l'r. " '

1 179

1449

H.. -. •:t 58

•

.. ,1 wondered what kind of he ll

anybody named Doona Rice
must be going through these
days," Alexander said.

9SS Second Ave.

44•·1171 Gallipolis; Ohio

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2% MILK

(·

SUP£1101
PRE-SliCED

·GATORADE

VALLEY lEU

Reg. IZZ .... Now 110.99

SPORT SHIRTS

CHUCK
ROAST

BOUNTY
TOWELS
JUMBO ROLL

POOL INCLUDES

,aTAUAnON ......

12 01.

the

$2-5!

5 LB. BAG

Outaide Dimension&amp;
24' X 15' Swim "'••
,4'Dtep
,

99~

G~ILLING

SUGAR

.'31 ' X 16'

KNIT SHIRTS
SO!If. OFF

500fo OFF .

C~OICE

$p9
Ll.

GROUP OF MEN'S

WALIC SHOll$
1/3 OFF

SPARE
RIBS

SIRlOIN

REG. •96.00 ... ...... ... .. .. ........ ... ... .. ... .. .. ..... NOW '47 .60
REG . '110.00 ...................... ... ... ... ...... .. ... IIi OW '62.60

GIOUP OF Wlmlll SIIAP

LB.

HOLlYWOOD

$189
lB.

$38!

MEN'S SUITS-500fo OFF
lEG. S165.00 ................ NOW •12.50
lEG. S2JS.OO ..............NOW S117.50
~-~--~·~EG=--s~27~5~-•~•~--~.. ·=··="'="·~·"=o~w_s_J_3_2._so____~----~ •
MEN'S SUMER SPORT COATS
•
500/o OFF

DRESS SLACKS

$139

614-221-0888

L. W. CENNAMO

FRANKIE
WIENERS

GRADE A FRESH

SCOTLAD

Qattery Chargers
Smell Welders
Motor Controls

AUTOMOnYE EUC• .IEPAII:

they have been li vin g In Chillico the for 30 yea rs.

HASKINS-TANNER'S SUMMER

GROUP OF MEN'S

SALES: .

H"at. fN 9
1

CORI:&gt;IN &amp;! SNl'()fR
fURNITURE CO.

GALLIPOLIS ELECTRIC SERVICE
446-2362

: CHILLICOTHE , Ohio - Th t&gt;
$0th wedding anniversary of Mr.
.and Mrs . Clarence Irwin wlll be
:observed with an open house
·Aug. 8. from 2 to 4 p.m .. In the
Fellowship Hall of Tabernacle
Baptist Church, Chillicothe.
The lrwlns were married Aug .
8, 1937 In Thurman, by the Rev .
·w .T. Packer.
They are the parents of four
children, Ray Irwin ol Chillicothe. Ph yllis Hiles ol C ~llll·
cothe, Hope Mills of Athe ns, and
Yolanda Elston, South Bend, Ind .
The y also hav e s even
grandchlld,ren.
Irwin retired from the Federal
In 1976, and
Correctional

5 129

5 89
1 229

JIM BILL'S

Altameto,.
Generators !Tractor) ' ,

SUPERIOR

FRESH LEAN

Carl
golden anniversary planned
.

•

LIST PRICE 13768

--

Ralph and Sadie Carl

'

V· S , Auto .
WAS '5995

'2 year limittd

warranty.

...

Gary Hart, Donna Rice dine

'

capo&lt;ity

..

Mr. and Mr.r. Roderick E. Grimm

-;

swiflh •44 inch m•wtr

d01k '4-U.S. gallon futt

~­

'i

A cave In Rosamond, Callf.-,
holds the Troplco Time 'funnel, a
tline capsule measuring -10,000
cpblc feet . Ii -w as sealed Nov. 20, '
1966, by the Kern Antelope
Historical Society and is ln,lended for opening In 2866.

*Eiedric: start, ··
t 5 amp charging system
'Na cut in nnnt ·1afety

•

OIIII.T

a picnic reunion for former
employees of Evans Grocery and
their friends , AUg. 1, beginning 1
p.m. at the Bob Evans Shelterho~se . Bring table service and
covered dish. Reservations may
b!' made by July 25 with VIrginia
Slnims, PO Box 203, Rio Grande,
Ohio 4S674. Cost Is $2 per per so!l.

trailsa~le

-'

.:- RACINE - Mr. a nd Mr s . re nee Grimm, La keworth, Fla. ;
: Roderick E . -Grimm, Broadway · Larry Grimm, Westerville; and
:-Street, Racine, will celebrate Rona ld Grimm, Green Acres,
· their 50th wedding anniversary Fla. They have f-ive grandchild·
: with an open reception. July 26. ren and one great-grandchild.
HC was a construc tion worker
; from ·2 to 4 p.m. in the fellows hip
fo
r several years, operated
-room of Racine Baptist Chu rch.
heavy equipment and was a
: They were married at Ca t lett s· member of Loca l 132 of Charles·
Jmrg, Ky. on Ju ly 31, 1937 and are ton. W. Va . They are members of
·the
parents of three sons ' Law- the Ba ptist Church In Racine.
-

: J:tlU G.RANDE - There will be

'84 'CHEV. s~ 10 PICKUP

•ingl• ?.~:::r

•Kohter

cast iron engine ·~

Abila Fordl

STATE RT. 93 · 614-682-7731

50th anniversary set

.,

1204-12-H.P.

·
MOW
SEE BOB ROSS FOR THE BEST DEAL
IN THE AREA!

'

Evans Grocery
ieunion
planned
.

Value that's
tough to beat

BARNETT

~~~ ·~·o.soo

Daisy and Charles Blakeslee

~ Grimms'

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page-8·3

With Woody Pkg.. 6 cyl .. au1o .. air. cruise. roof rack, 20,000

Blakeslee golden anniversary set

.I

FERT1LE, Iowa (UP I) ~ Smith to his fa rm . Tuesday
Lloyd Pope called ln.- two ve teri- beca use the cow had been stand·
na rlans when he suspected one of ing by herself In a pasture for
his cows was abcut to have twins. nearly three hours unabl e to
deliver her calves.
He should have c'alled four.
. For the fi rst time In 29 years of · " I pulled one out, and then I
raising cattle, Pope saw a cow pulled out the second one," said
deliver four M ives - hear the Sm ith . " We .went back In as a
town of Fertile, no less.
joke and there was a third one .
" 1 was pretty sure she would
Then we fo4nd the fourth one way
have tw ins as big as she was. Oh, in the back."
she was big," Pope said.
Mostrum said ex·perts a tiowa
Pope summon ed veterlnarl ans t' State University told him quad·
Truman Mostrum and Matthew ruplet. blr t.hs occur once 111 every
rp;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;.; ;50;;00;;0;b;lr;t;hs; .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

tour and picnic Monday at 5 p.m. Methodis t Women meet TuesThe pr9gra m wil Include a day, 2 p.m. a t church.
workshop usi ng t he Me igs
Co un ty Fa ir flower s how
ME RCERVILLE - Guya n Lasc hedule.
di es Auxilia ry meets Tuesday, 7
POMEROY - Ora nge Town· · p. m ., fire sta tlon.
ship Trus tees will hold a s pecial
GA LLIPOLIS Lafayette
mePti ng Mo nday a t 7 p:m. at th e
White
Shrine
meets
Tuesday,
home of Dorothy Ca laway. cle rk,
7:30
p.ni.
to discuss · . a levy a nd other
bus iness.
RACINE - Wor k session at
--'POMEROY - Me igs Hi gh Southern High · School, 6 p.m.'
School Alumni Associa tion meet· Tuesday and Wednesday to tear II
ing 7:30p. m . Monday a t Ma in St. down old bleachers on footb a ll
fiel d; In case of rain postpone to
Pizza , Pomeroy .
Wednesday and Thursday; take
tools .
T UESDAY
GA LLIP OLIS - Ga llipolis RoE AST MEJGS-' - All boys
lary meets Tuesday , 6 p.m .,
interes ted _in playing var sity
Down Under .
·
footba ll at Eastern High School
GA LLIP OLIS Ga llipolis this fa ll are to attend a meeting at
Li ons meet Tuesda y, 6:30p .m ., 7 p.m. Tuesday at the high
Mound Hill.
school; those Interested In help·
lng as managers are also to
PATRIOT - Patriot United ~ttend the m eeting.

~78

'-'

Caw calves quadruplets in ·'Fertile: Iowa

' GALLIPOLIS - Straud and
· Nellie Swindler Houck reunion ,
--.- Raccoon Creek County Park . VINTON - North Ga il la Hi gh
shelterhouse 2.
School band bcoslers"m&lt;&gt;et Monday, 7 p.m .
GALLIPOLIS - Marlon Clary
reunion, Sunday, Raccoon Creek
CROWN CITY - Bi ble sc hool
· Co11nty Park shelterhouse 3. ·
a t' King's Chapel Chu rch,' ages
three t.hrough teens, 6: 30-8:30
LEON, W.Va. - The Grubb p.m .
Family Singers wll1 be at Shllo
Community Church, Sunday,
POMEROY - Winding Tr a il
7:30p.m.
Gar den Club will meet a t 5 p.m.
at the Ohio Power Co. lot on
GALLIPOLIS - J.H . Sheets Spring Valley Lane and t hen
reunion, Raccoon Creek County travel to Gallipolis for a dlhner.
Park, shelterhollse 3, Sunday, 10 · Following return to the hom e of
a .m. -3 p.m.; basket dinner at A'ddalou Lewis for a meeting. ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
12:30.
, Plans for participation In the .II
Meigs County F a ir flower show
•Ford
POMEROY - Biggs family will be made: with .t ht' sc hedule to
reunion Sunday , home of Nathan be discu ssed and tickets to be
•Mercury
Biggs . Basket dinner at noon .
sold.
•l-incoln

~:h:ig:h:-a:n:d:-t:l:gh:t:c:u:t.:"~

BIDW ELL- Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Wooten, Bidwell,· announce the
engagement and approaching
mar riage of their daughter,
Teddi Ann Wooten, to Brice
David J ames, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Ja mes of Ct:,own City.
The open-church wedding will
take place July 24 at E lizabeth
Chapel Chu rch.
Miss Wooten is employed liy
Pl e a sant Vall ey Hospital
laQoratory .
James is employed by Gallipo1is Fboctland.
.

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

---,---·Dillhoff-Gaul - - -

The Ollie Cut' newest men's hair style

JUDY ANN JONES

•

Calendar/ happenings

RACINE - Mr . and Mrs.
POMEROY - Mr. a nd Mrs. Chu rch In Chester.
There will be an dpen law n
David Zirkle of Racine and
Victor E . Gaui ·Sr. , Washington
reception
In their honor at 2 p.m.
Walter Hayes, Letart, W. Va.,. '
·Court Hou se, announce the forththat
day
at
the home of Mr. and
announce the engagement and
coming marriage of th eir son,
Mrs.
J.
rvi.'
Gaul, Lovers Lane,
approaching marriage of their
VIctor E. Gaul, .'Jr. to Laura Beth
daughter, Terri Ann Zirkle, to
Plllhoff, In a private ceremony Flatwoods Raod, Pomer?Y·
Bruce Anthony Hysell, son of Mr.
on Aug. 1 at the United MPthodlst
and Mrs. Norman · Hysell,
S'Omeroy.
"
The open,churcll wedding will
take place on July 2S at 2 p.m. at
DEPTFORD, N.J . \UP! ) --1 whose . shop clipped 10 " Ollie
the First Church of God In New
. New J ersey hair stylist h.a s what Cuts" In four days. He began
Haven, W.Va.
he feel s may be Americ a's offerin g them Monday.
Caruolo' s wife. Dolores, sughottest new fashion statem ent _
The ceremony will be per·
"the
Ollie
.Cut."
gested
the cut after watching the
formed by the Rev . David Fields.
Modelect
after
Lt.
·
Col.
Oliver
Marfii't"'TestlrY
during telev ised
A reception will Immediately
North's tightly cropped G.l.· Ira n-Cont ra hearings.
follow In the church social room.
style cut , Anthony caruolo 's
" She said, 'Put the name on It
'Miss Zirkle Is a graduate of
creation Is the newest hit at his and It'll go crazy for you,' a nd
·Southern High School and the
TERRI ANN ZIRK.LE
Designer's Gallery of Hair Fa- • that's exa ctly what It's done ,"
Gallipolis Business College. She
BRUCE
ANTHONY HYSELL
is the grandaaughter of Mrs.
shlons In Deptford.
Ca ruolo said .
"The man Is popular . He's
Caruolo said the $12 cut Is a
Roberta Swisher, · New Haven,
and Mr. and Mrs. A.W. Hayes, . High School and Is employed by really popular ,'' said Caruolo, re lative ly s imple varia tion of the
Mld'dleport.
.
Tr!Stae Roofing an'd Sheet Metal r;:===========:::":b:a:
si:c:.G: .:I
Hysell Is a graduate of Meigs of
Charleston, W.Va.
I

TUP PERS Plt:INS- Mr. and
Mrs. Tony J ones. Tupper s
Plains, are a nnouncing the en·
gagernent of their daughfe r,
Judy Ann , to K en n~ t h Dwain
Tagga rt of Little Hocking.
Miss Jones 's a graduate of
Easterri- High SchOol and is
employed by Nas hua Photo.
Pa rkers bu rg, W.Va.
Her fiance is a 'g radu ate of
Warren High School a nd is
employed by Win ams Whit e
Glo ve M ai nt e n ance.
-: Parkersburg.
·
Wedding plans are in comple~

..
July 19. 1987

July 19, 19$7 ·

Jones- aggart

~

VELVE

7-:UP or
PEPSI

SHELLS &amp; CH

a-- 16 OZ. BOnLES

$149

FRITO-LAY
lEG. ·ol RUFFLES

POTATO ClftPS

''h99C'

oz.

uo($1 09

G&amp;W

FROZEN
PIZZA

!~.

79(

KIA"

MAYONNAISE

!!.

Sl aq

I

�' .

THE CORNER OF _
GENERAL HARTI~NGER
PARKWAY AND PEARL STREET IN MIDDLEPORT, OHIO - .
TELEPHONE: 992·3471

'..

"'

STORE HOURS ARE:
8 A.M. to 10 P.M ..:7 DAYS A WEEK

.'

AD EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, JULY 19 THRU SATURDAY, JULY 25
.

U~DA

CLOROX
BLEACH
CANS

.

Wit~

J

.

PER LB.

Coupe• &amp; *10.00 Pmhm

KRAFT REO. OR SPIRAL .

With Coupon &amp; *10.00

$259

Cider ~inegar
IIEINZ

7-UP

KRAFT 32 IZ ,

$159

Mayonnaise

s

$ 19
Cranapple Juice ~~~

OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRY or

39 oz. e..•

~

. TIIOROFARE 40 oz.

99

Pork·n·Beans
ALL 16 .~.

MIXED

Buv 1, Oet 1 FRE
20

2/89~
2/89~

~egetables
FRESHLIKE 11 oz.

Spinach
HUNTS 15'/, oz.

'

Manwlch
POST CEREAL 14 u .

CT. J01

99~

. Awake

KRAFT MIMI or JET PUFF

Marshmallows

16 oz.

79

DAIRY VALUES.

BUY 1; -GET 1

KRAFT

Vlhl ••ed
T In

6411.

$1 59

89•

SUPER DIP

IIOROFMOIIUOII

Amerioatt ·
Cheese 12 ..-z.

$ .

129

THOROFARE MIZURELLA or SHARP

Shredded
Cheese

'

$119

. et.

.FLORIDA 80LD

FAMLW PAC

89·t

loa Crea111
Bart

*189

Orange
Julee

12oz.

'

· ltu.

.

.

· .

.

.

.

CALIFORNIA TENDER

10 oz.

.

99•
'

.

Ptrehtl

PER LB.

Ja

.

rge Selection
~arlety Melone

MICHIIAII WHITE U..S. N0. 1 ~

Cuibra - Cranshaw

SA'JOY CABBA8E
per 1••

J.

S9,.

Dew

SJIOW WHITE

I
I

"

I

I
I
I
.I .
I

Mushrooms'··· 99,.

COUPON

KRAFT REIILAR er SPIRAL

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE

3/$100
•••• e••••• •• •1o.oo ,.,.•••

S'lt TO 71/4 OZ. 80MES

·

Pe1ha • c.. ary •
Ho111ydew

Ja

.

----r---

COUPON

~

I
I
I
I
I

FRESIILIICE

Corn, Peae or Green Beans

3/*100
u.,, ' e••,,•.. •1o.oo ,.,•••••

12-14 01 . c•••
.

'"~

-------------------------~-.,

I

'

$349

Oruge Fluh Honey

COUPON

e••,•• 114 t

$249

CALIFORNIA TENDER. SWEET

·

-

···~

BREAST

lb:

P" lb.

69•
10.00

·

HOMEOROWN

MEW CROP CALIFORNIA ,B,ARLETT

69+

.

TURKEY

$299

S9+ Ore en Beins S9v
9
+
$.
6 Carrots . 3 :~!;. 1 ·
Pears
. .
,
yJa
9
6
9
1
Celery . !~~.~ ·••lk · Potatoes ~:t "

L8;

$129

PRODUCE VALUES

Tomatoes · ,.,

PLUMS

OALLOM.

~

AMERICAN CHEESE ....................P.tUA·... ..

HOME8ROWJI

CLOROX BLEACH

.

.

YELLOW

per lb.

DELICIOUS TENDER

9
9
+
JELLO SALADS ...........................P.,••LA·•• .. .

IIOM_EMADE

JUICY SWEET
R... 81••• er Ire.. ••···

$1 69

Slieed

.

BANQUET

-

,,

·

Celery Cabbage
Buffet
Dlanart
Jeno's ·
Plzzat

LOUIS RICH

$1 89 BoIogna .

- DUTCH LOAF ..............................P.~••L.B.......

SOUTHERN
PEACHES

29

t 111.

RUMP ROAST
.

SUPERIORS

SWEET RIPE
JUICY

Per Lb.

Corrt
Dogs

9
9
+
MACARONI SALAD ......................P.\U.P........
.

HOMEMADE

.

FREE

KAHN'S 6 PK •

USDA CHOICE

DEll "'I'H I \I"'

2 Pe. S11eek .-!Salad Roll

Buv 1, Oat 1

PIRIB.

POLB.

99+

39~

$199

.

Sliced · $189
Bologna per lb. · .

6
*1 9

$139

CHICKEN

Fieh Filiate

ECKRICH

"COUNTRY STYLE"

GROUND CHUCK

BROASTED

12 n.

• PORK

VAUGHAN'S

~AIJOHAN'S

LIGHT BAnERED

lee Cream

Margarine
Orange
Juice

*199
'"199.

MRS. PAUL'S 1t oz. pk1.

+

FREE

PERLB.

FR(lZEN \'A.LllES

. Cottage Cheese
. . 24 oz.

$199

~h~~. "'" $189

$189

U.S. 00~.

CUBE STEAK SPARE RIBS

U . OO~T . IMSPECTEO PORK SIRLOIN

DZ.

THOROFARE

MINUTE MAID

$229

·FREE

·

I

NU MAID 4uarim

*1 19

Uu.

$149
so t~.
Ia 899
Buy t, Oat 1 SUJISHIJIE
HI Pro Dog Food "

~

,.

Eye of ,., lb.
Round Steak

SHOWER SlfE SOA

rile Bread ~:~DRY DETER8ENT

"BUCKET"

perlb.

Bathroom Tluue- ·"· .
Irish Strin, 2 , •. $129

FREE
NEW YORK 16

LEAN. TENDER

. ISDA CHOICE BEEF

FABRIC SO,TENER CORONET a ct.

Buy 1, Oat 1

$219

Honeycomb

FANTASTIC LIMOtt t2 u .

·'"Oownew 64u.

81RDSE1E 10 oz. etn

FREE

SMOKED JOWL BACON .............. ~., lb. 99~

$199

Beef
Stew

FABRIC SOFTENER

Buy 1, 8et 1

1 LB. PIC8.

CENTER CUT LOIN CHOPS ..... ~., lb. ~ 209

Trath Bags

Spray ·Cleaner
Janitor In
~IETTI10 oz. eus
a Drum
~Hot Dog Sauee
Pladae 14 •r.
I~
Buy 1, Oet 1 FU.
RIITU1E POLISH
FREE Bounca4oet.

lee Cream Cone·Cups

$ 99

PER LB.

RUFFLES u •'·

$149

8/16 .,,

CRISPY SER~E
BACON

USDA CHOICE BEEF UTRA LEAII

Produets

-$199

While ~inegar

~E8

Para~ue

l

IIEINZ 1 t•ll••

+

JUMBO
ROLL

· OZ. BOXES

· KAHN'S

. RIB
PORK CHOPS

PAPER
TOWELS

$ 00

HOMEMADE HOTDOG SAUCE ...~., lb. *1 49

U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED PORK CENTER

• DELTA

MACARONI&amp;
CHEESE

.

BONELESS ~HUCK STEAK .....~ per lb. *149

Lllllif 6

S1/2 TO 7'1•

SIZE"
HOT DOGS
IL8.PK~. $ 69

59 .

+

OAL.

.

~'BUN

BONELESS
·cHUCK ROASTS
.

12·14 oz .

ICAHN'S

CHOICE BEEF

4

.•

�, •

.

o

- ~·'

.

.... ..

, ~,, ., .,, -

.

, ..

'M " ·' ~

..._- ·- "'··- ·-

-

- - - "-• ''

-- - ..• --.··-

- -· - - -- ~ - ·

-

-··- . ·- ........... .- ...

, ___ _ _ --.---

~

-- ~

'
Pllga B-6-The Sunday Timls-Sen1inel

Koetz-Willis

People in the News--------~-----.,..· ~

~

COLUMBUS, Ohio - On June
6, John W. Keotz and Libby Willis
were united In marriage at First
ConJI'egatlonal Church · In Columbus, Ohio.
The · bride Is the daughter of
Raymond anQ Mary Willis of
Galllpolls. The groom is the son
of Edwin and MarUyn Koetz of
Columbus.
Rev , Dale Rosenberger con·
dueled the ceremony . Marianne
Campbell of G{lllipolls was the.
lector. Matthew Griffin ofCoium·
bus was vocalist and Dan Erick·
son of Marion, Ohio was · gull a ·
rlst. Den! Bernard of Columbus
was organist. A reception was
held at the Grand Catering.
Matron of honor was Linda
Craft Tetrick of Alameda. Calif.,
and best man was Randell
Havelsen of Columbus.
The groom Is a partner with
W.E . Davis Insurance Agency In
Columbus; He is a graduate of
Ohio University with a B.F.A. In
Music Theory . He is a member of
the . Columbus USA ~soclation,
Professional InsurancE&gt; Agents
Association and tht&gt; First Congregational Church choir.
.'
The bride is manager of
Jus tines In Columbus. She has as
Associate of Arts degree from
International Fine Arts College
of Fashion, Miami, Fla. She was
previously a buyer for nine years
at Sutton and Lightner of Marion.
They reside at 80 Thurman
Ave., Columbus.

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
the supporting cast. Filming
HUSTONS MASSING FOR begins In Newport, R .I., on July
MOVIE: The movie ~ ·Mr. North" 27 and the movlefsexpected to be
wm have nothing to do with . released next sprln~.
Oliver but a lot to do with the
'C.(RE . COES ABOUT
Huston family . John Huston· and WEAVER: Actor Dennis Weaver
daughter Anjellca wlll appear In was eloquently modest In acceptthe film, an adaptlon of the ing an award at the 40th gala
Thornton Wlldernote~"Theophl· celebrating the 40th anniversary
Ius North," and his stln;"Difillel, of CARE. "All the volunteers and
wiJI direct. "John directed his the CARE people . plow the
fathe~. Walter, In 'The Treasure
ground a.n&lt;l ht&gt;re I am just
of the Sierra Madre' and l)bth picking the fruit," Weaver said
received Oscars," said co· ' as actress Valerie Harper and
producer Steven Haft. '.'We look . Dick Clark honored him with the
on this as carrying on a tradition charity's highest award for huof fllmmaklilg In the family ." manitarlan work. "Dennis 's
Anthony Edwards from "Top very being Is an invitation to get
Gun" wlll star and·Laliren Bacall Involved," Harper said after the
and Harry Dfan Stanton are lri presentation. "He's so damn

~

We Reserve The' Right To
limit Quantities .

.

.

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
KAHN'S

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, JUlY 25, 1987

WIENERS

'
•,r

BRIDES I
on your wedding gown
and two or mar•

Limit 2 Pkgo. Pltast

•'

•
...

AJAX
DETERGENT

bridiMIIidt drHtet,
•l
(all lor on appointment 4odlly.

Mr. and Mrs. John W. Koetz

~:

S&amp;B BRIDAL
1&amp;1 MOillE 110111 PAll

•'·

USDA CHOICE

....

T-Bone
CHICKEN
Leg ·atrs. ••••••••••• 39&lt;

\,

·-

LOT 21

•' -

446-1311

·:

,......,
. ,~~,....---.,..
\ ·~..)

·iDIK'.S IRK

yg ..
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groom, was the ringbeaer. Scott Jack and Lenora OHenbergt&gt;r,
Anthony Hubbard, son of the &amp;lpre; M·a ry Grimm, New
groom, was the best man and Haven, William and Hazel
ushers were Larry Byer, brother McKelvey, Ravenswood. W.Va ..
of the bride, and Junior Offen· and Barbara Florez and Robert ,
berger, brother-in-law of the Cincinnati.
'
groom.
The bride's mother wore a r;::::::::::::::::::::::~~:;::;::;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;;::;;;11
beige street-length dress with I
coor.d inating striped jacket,
matching accessories, and a
whit~ rose corsage.
A reception was held In the ·
church social room. The bride's
table featured lavender netting
over white with lavender satin
ribbon bow accents. The four
EJIPIIIS AIG. 19
tiered wedding cake was topped
with a miniature bride and
groom.
Members of the Eleanor Circle
served at the reception. Lisa
Webster registered the guests.
They reside in Syracuse.
Th e bride is a graduate of
Meigs High Sc hool and Ohio
University wit h a bachelor's
. REG. PRICE S35 &amp; S40
degree In elementary education.
She Is a teacher at Pomeroy
CALL FOI APPOIITMEJIT
Elementary School.
Hubbard graduated from
Southern High School and is
employed at the Central Operat80 RACE ST.
fng Co.
Among the out-of-town guests
992-3751
attending were Lawrence and
BEV BISHOP, STYUST-IIAIIIE MEDLEY, OWIR

•

!IIIU! !lSI Uf

:::.:;;.

'

1114-311t __....

99
Steak ••. ~$3

36

oz.

69&lt;
Limit 1 Plecise

.

'

KINGSFiRo

MIXED

CHARCOAL

Parts •••••!·•· 39&lt;
Frxer
HOM MADE
$199
Sand.
Spread
••••• 99&lt;
BUCKET
.
.
$199
Cube Steak ........
R.C.
CANS
_BAR .. S BRAND
.
10 LB.

lliOil-sAI" 10 All 'TIL su•r AT: mn 'TIL DAia

SHREVEPORT, La . (UP!) Ja y and three companions
Five ballet students were on their chased the thief while the fourth
toes when it c.ame to lighting notified police.
crime.
·
Jay spotted the thief, who was
The dancers chased a thielwho several inches taller than hl'r .
swiped one of their purses. One of hiding in a wooded area . He
them caught and punched him. punched ht&gt;r In the fa ce. She hit
He ditched the purse and dashed him ba~k .
away .
"II made mt&gt; even madder that
The ballerinas were walling he was going to hit me In the
outside a converted train depot ' lace." Jay said. " I think I
for their ballet class to begin shocked him when I kept. coming.
Wednesday when a thlt&gt;l ran up, I kept hitting him and saying It
grabbed Denise Jay's purse and was my purse and he couldn't
fted .
have It!
Jay , 31, an Oklahoma City
woman In town to visit her sister,
said she had been burglary
victim three times and was just ·
fed up with crime.
"I just got mad, " sbe said. "At
first I was going to let him take It.
Something snapped and I decided I wasn' t going to be a
victim."

Mr. and Mr.r. jeff W. Hubbard

~::L

I· 'Ill RIDES • ~NIMAI.S • PICNIC
\REAS • MINI GOlf • tiFTS

Ballerinas beat would-be purse snatcher

·

LB.

}-_ IACASOM, OIUO

... . "'

ALL IN_A DAY'·S WORk· Kaly Quln watchl!ll as "Stewart", an
l1111eet deteetlal dor, ACraleJ.es wllere he found powder ·beetle!!
over crypts In the Old Nortb Church In Boecon.

99&lt;

LB.

-...•'

SALE - .1S% off

: •oft.212·2111

LB.

limit I Pltaso

LB

LB.$

:~ Chopped

139

6 PACK

Ham ••••
CRISPY SERVE
(
:::KAHN'S
·Bacon •••••.••.••••••
~. 99
'
:Wieners ••••••••••• ~SJ 29 ·

NEE !AT/ SUN &amp;W£0
ALL SEATS S2 . 75
A~ISS I OO EVElY TUESDAY S2.71

BARGAIN

~!I

L JULY 11 """ 23 _j
FRlQA.Y t"N TtiJasOLU :

99&lt;
limit 2 Plest

VIETTI

HOTDOG
SAUCE
•

10

oz.

PIAn'S .BEAUTY SALON

PIE-SCHOOL
SPECIAL

limit 2 Please

KAHN'S

WIENERS

PERMS

20°/o
Off

'been charged with third-degree
assault, a misdemeanor. Den!son allegedly sprayed the
youngster Tuesday as he deli·
vered mall In a residential
neighborhood, a postal official

anotherflghtinfrontofhim.
Rodney D. Denison, 38, has

said.

GALLIA COUNTY
JUNIO·R FA1R
DEMOLITION DERBY
.
.

'

·

,

AUGUST 3, 1987.
7:30 P.M.

LARGE SELECTION
·'

IARGAIII MITE EACH WED.

Grapes •••..••••••.•~·. 69~

1st Place
2nd Place
3rd Place
-

Rock of Agee offeri you a choice of 6 different colored gran·
hee. Whatever your requirement• may be, complete satl1fac·
tlon il allUred with Rock of Agee.
MONDAY. TUESDAY, THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY 9:00 TO 4:00
Other houre by apt. by ceiling 693:1466

$TANLEY A. SAUNDERS
MONUMENTS
M 446-IU7

.S600
$250
$100

**No Chrysler Imperials••

---- -----

Gallipoli1, OH.

OUR ONCE·A·YEAR

PARKAY

RED DOT SALE
J~ly

Powder Puff class to be runt

1st·31st .

Our Regular 523.99 Double Roll :.

imperial .

NOW$
y

BUYONEDOUBLEROLL
FOR'I.HIGET2.D ONE

99
•

. Entry Forms Avail•l• At:
Empire Furniture-Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy
or .
Gallia County Fajrgrounds 614-446-4120

Marga nne ••••••'! 3I 1
BROUGHTON'S
$ .
.. ..
2°/o Milk ••••••• :~•• . 139
DAIRY LANE
: HANOV{R
Pork , ·Beans •••• 4/$1 Ice Cream ••••••••• $1 09
ARMOUR
._- $ BQNQUEl
iVienna Saus•••••.Sl 2 TV Dinners ••• ~~~."!·. 79&lt;

FREE

.

=
•

....... .

304-344-4414 .

......... )I&amp; ......fri.

• ..... s.3o ,.nt. Sat.
•

I

'llllr~

A,.., ·acrooo lrOfll

(lwk (ltller

"·'·' .

., .. "-'TPON
. .• ••••
1'11'\1

304-525-7090
Mto.·Fri. 9 a.m.-1,.....

Tu ... Wtd., Thur. &amp; Sot.

' ......s,JO

LB.

99~
GROUND
BEEF

112 GAL.

3 LB.
CAN

$199

'
Umit 1 With (o-.on
Gooll Only at Powell's Supormarkot
Ofhr Gooll Thru Sat., July 2S, 1917

I.

LB.

99&lt;.·

....,•

•

•

NABISCO

•• .•••.

• CRISCO SHORTENING

PARKERSBURG, WV

704 Grand
(tntral Avt •
304·295-4532
9 a.m.·9 p.m. Maq•• fri.
9 a.m,-5,30 p.m. Sat.

WIENERS

•
!•
•

.

,... . c....... ,

KAHN'S

•

D/R'

:WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET'
~
.
....
· AND BLIND SHOP·
"'
IIUNTINGTON, WV

$

•

• •

~

CHAIUSTON, WY

limit 2 Plea11

WHITE OR RED SEEDLESS

ALL FIRST QUALITY ALL SALES FINAL

PRIZES

99&lt;

LB.

PRATT'S BEAUTY SALON

FREMONT, Neb. (UP!)- A
pasta! carrier accused of spray·
lng a 7-year-old boy with a dog
repellent after the boy squirted
him with a water gun may have
won that battle, but he lias

352 I'Wrd A...

beautiful In his work lor a:It:
mankind. " The celebration .,•
which was taped in Los Angeles ~
Coconut Grove nlghtclubandwm&lt;
be aired Aug. 28. featured host$::.
William Shatner, Morgan Fair~·
child and Robert
Guillaume and-:
.
entertainment by Pia Zadora_:
t.he Fifth Dimension, Rich Little: .
Reba McEntire, and Ben Vereen.•'
wHITE HOUSE COOKING: A;.•
,Dallas chef says he put theWIIitet
House on the back burner . Dean&lt;.
Fearing, executive c hef at Th~
Mansion on Tu rtlt&gt; Creek, says h
turned down an offer to IntervieW·•
with first lady Nancy Reaga n fort'
tht&gt; job of Whit e House execullve:chef. " It was a great situation bUt-:.
!just had to tell 'em I'd catch 'em:~
next time, " Fearing said. ·
'

.-

p~;t;~;~~";p~iY~" t;;}rM'' ~:::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~

.

.•'

•

Hubbard -Eyer
MIDDLEPORT - Julie Anna
Byer and Jeff W. Hubbard
exchanged wedding vows In a
ceremony at the Middleport
Heath United Methodlsf'Church,
April 4.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and ·Mrs. Robert E. Byer,
Middleport, and the groom is the
son of the late William al\d Mary
Hubbard.
The Rev. CI~mente Sonny
Zunlgo performed the doublering ceremony. Music was provided by Mrs. Donna Jenkins,
organist. Vases of orchid and
white flowers flanked by sevenbranch candelabra with a center
unity candle arrangement deco·
rated the altar. Family pews
were marked with white bows.
Escorted by her ,father, the
bride wore a formal gown of
taffeta and chantilly-type lace.
Re-embroldered . chantilly-type
lace arid simulated pearls
trimmed the close-fittl,ng lace .
bodice. A b{lsque style waist,
elasticized puffed sleeves and the
V neckline front and back were
included in the styling. The
bouffant skirt and chapel train·
were trmmed with lace.
The bride's finger-tip veil was
attached to a tiara and she
carried a cascade bouquet of silk
white roses and baby's breath
accented with lavender ribbon.
The bride wore double pearl
earrings and necklace, carried a
Bible and an antique silk embroidered handkerchief, all belong·
lng to and used in her mother's
weddln~ .
.
·
Mary Teresa Byer, sistt&gt;r of the
bride, was maid of honor. She
wore a lavender taffeta gown
with shoulder bows fashioned
with a scoop neckline, puffed
sleeves, and a slight empire
waist. She carried a silk bouquet
of white roses and baby's breath
accented with lavender ribbon.
Her headplecewas of silk baby's
breath with lavender ribbons and
she wore pearl earrings and
matching necklace.
Stacey Hubbard, daughter of
the groom, was the flower girl
and wore an orchid street-length
dress with ruffles on the bodice, ·
elbow length puffy sleeves and a
.full s kir t. She wore a circlet of
silk flowers In her hair.

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va .

July 19. 1987
•.

Pomeroy-Middlaport-Gilllipolie, Ohio-Point D11111nt. W. V1.

WHITE CLOUD

SUNSHINE

TOILET .TISSUE

DOG FOOD
2 LB.

$239

Umil 1 With (oupon
Good Only .at Powtll't S..pormarkot
Offer Gaoll Thru Sat., July 25, 1917

.
..

4ROLL
PKG.

a·9c

Umit i With Coupon
Good Ottly at Pawoll't Suparmarlctt
OHtr Good Thru Sat., July 25, 1917

NIL LA
WAFERS

TIDE DETERGENT
1470Z.

·-.
•

$5 99

limit 1 Witlt (aUJ!IIn
Good Only ot Pawtll't Supermarket
Offer Gaoll Thru Sat., July 25, 1917
,.

•

lB.

89&lt;

'•

..

�.'

Page . B-8-The Sunday Times-sentinel

July 19, 1987

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

Beat of the bend

Ohhhhhhh-kla-homal

Senior citizen center announces activities··
GALLIPOLIS -Activities and
menus for the week of ,July 20
through July 24, at the Senior
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson
Pike, are as follolvs:
Monday: Ceramics,-9: 30-noon;
chorus, 1-3 p.rri. .
Tuesday: S.T.O.P./ Physical
Fitness, 10: 30 a.m.; health maintenance seminar with Dr. David

By BOB HOEFLICH
Plain Dealer about our area.
Times-sentinel Staff
Pomeroy is target of this
The popular musical "Oklaparticular article and again
homa" will be
we' re not presented very favora ·
presented In the
bly . !love to be criticized by the
Fine and PerCleveland writers, . don't you?
forming Arts
And especially, so since I
Center on the
wouldn't live in Cleveland if you
. Rio Grande Colgave it tome. ·
lege Campus
James Napier, vice president
July 31 and Aug.
· of the National . City Bank in
1 at 8 p.m.
Cleveland, sent Pomeroy Banker
The cast is not only st udents
Ted Reed a copy of the article.
' but various others ,from the
So -Ted fired a letter back to
GALLIA COUNTY
Immediate · area. In the cast
Napier offering to make arrange·
GALLIPOLIS - The Dr. Salisting Is D.R. Smith of Rutland
ments for the editor of The Plain muel L. Bossard Memorial Li·
who is playing' 'Will'' and Sharon
Dealer and some of the officials brary announces its bookmobile
Hawley of Middleport is also
of the National City Bank to come schedule for the week of July
listed. There m·a y be others from
to. Pomeroy so that they can be . 6-13.
Meigs County In the cas t but
entertained and really see what
Monday: Lewis Dr., 9: 45those are the only two names .I
life on the river Is all- about. Ted 10:15; SunValleyNursery,10: 25·
could pick ilp on.
also is seeking the name of the 10: 55; Pinecrest, 11-11: 15; 35
"Oklahoma" is such a lively
author so that. he
. can be. enlight· West Apts .. 11:20·11:35; Scenic
show alfd.has such great songsened a bit on our area.
Hills li: 40·12: 10; C&amp;S Bank,
direction Is by Jonn Dougherty.
By the way, I hope you were In- 12: 15·12: 30; Joradan cas, 1: 05General admission is only $2.50
a good position to see the' beauty 1:15; Rio Grande (Jones), 1:25and tickets can be obtained at the
of our area as the Delta Queen 1:35; Rio MiniMart. 1:40-1:55;
door or be reserved by calling
moved down the Bea·urlful Ohio Geiger, 2:15-2: 30; Ewlngton,
245·5353, extension 364.
Thursday night. I know. I loved 2:35-2: 55; Vinton (Dyer), 3:10the caliope too. _
3:25; Kyger I, 3:45-4; Kyger II ,
One of the Holsinger twins of
4:05-4: 15; Kerr. 5: 15·5: 35; BidReedsviiie has problems.
Ten-year-old Adam Krawsc- well, 5:50-6: 10; Cochrans, 6: 20·
He Is Jay who recently fell
zyn of Pomeroy has earned his 6: 45; Deer Creek I (Fulks ),
from a building trying to retrieve
way into the National Junior · 6: 55· 7: 10; Deer Cree k II
a cat. He was rushed to Ca mden- Olympics at Brigham Young (Church). 7:15-7:30; Rio Grande
Cta.rk Hospital in Parkersburg,
tln lverslty In Provo, Utah this Estates, 7:45-8:30.
W.Va., where he underwent
Thursday after qualifying on
Tuesday: George's Creek, .Rospeen surgery· and he. also
several levels of .competition In
berts, 10·10:20; Bulavllle Trailer
received a broken arm in the (ali.
the shot put.
Ct., 10:30-11; Addavllle School,
He's been allowed· to"' return ·
The athletfi'S competing - and
, home but Is under strict orders
Adam will represent Region V
that he Is confined to the home · composed of youngsters from
with practically no activity. Jay
Michigan, Kentucky , Lake Erie,
would be encouraged by cards
West Virginia and Ohio - must
and they can be sent to him at
pay their own expenses to and
35394 Success Road. Reedsville,
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
from Provo. Adam, accompan· ·
Ohio 45772.
Orange
Township bicentennial
led by an adult sponsor, will fly to
Perhaps, many of you · recelebration
has been set for
Salt Lake City on Wednesday to
member Jay and his twin attend opening ceremonies of the Saturday, July 25, in Tuppers
brother. John, sons of Grace and
national competition. By the Plains with a 1 p.m. parade. to
·Junior Holsinger. The boys both way, Adam is the first youngster . kick off the afternoon and evenunderwent open heart surgery at
from our area to ever re~ch this Ing festivities .
Children's Hospital 'in Columbus plateau in the National Junior
A program will be presented at
some six years ago ,
Olympics. Anyone wishing to 2 p.m at the school and old
And I don't mean to spread help defray expenses --' and this fashioned · games and contests
gloom to the maximum but I does cost bucks - can send a have been planned for the
thought you would want to know donation to Adam at 213 Union afternoon.
that VIrginia Overturf who was Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769-and
Firemen will be on hand all day
col)flned to the Holzer Medical do hurry since the departure is so
to
serve food and beverages and
Center for eight weeks is now a . close.
at 7 P·l'!l· In the evening there will
patient at University Hospital in
Columbus. Cards may be sent to
I watched one of the late night be square dancing and folk
·
her at University Hospital,. Doan reruns the other evening. The music. ·
"200 Years and Still PioneerHall, Room 1102, Columbus, Ohio moral of the story as I grasped It
Ing"
will be the theme~arried out
43210.
was that It's okay to do prostilu ·
for
the
celebration. Plans are
lion as long as you use· the
also
being
made for a pioneer ·
Another uncomplimentary ar- proceeds for attending medical
dress
contest,
and residents are
ticle has appeared In the maga- school. Pretty wholesome phi·
being
Invited
to
display antiques,
zine section of The Cleveland losphy , eh? Do keep,smlllng.
equipment and tools, quilts, and
primitive crafts, as well as to
demonstrate pioneer homemak-

Miller on chronic back pain, 1
.
Wedllesday: Card games, 1·3
p.m.
.
Thurad&amp;y: Bible study, 11noon; Herbalists, 12:30 p.m.
Friday: Art class, 1-3. p,m.;
craff mini-course, 1-3 p.m.
·
Menus consist of:
Monday: Hamburger with
cheese slice, oven browned
p.m. ,

french fries, penny carrot sa-lad,
bun, ice cream.
Tuesday: Pinto beans with
ham, kale with vinegar, cornbread , sliced peaches.
Wednesday: Spaghetti with
sauce and parrriesan cheese,
tossed salad with red cabbage
and french dressing, rye bread,
.
fruit cup with coconut.

Sports

Section

July 19, 1987

Thursday ; Sliced turkey
breast wilh_gravy, mashed pota·
toes, waldorf salad, whole grain,
tapioca pudding. ·
Friday: Tuna patty lfil h
cheese. sauce, potato salad,
stewed tomatoes, whole grain
bread, yellow cake with gi;!Ze.
Cholee of Coffee, Tea, Lemanade, Milk or· Buttermilk ·with.
each meal.
,.

Henderson blast leads Boston
BOSTON (UP!) -Dave Henderson belted a· two-run homer
with none out In the 10th 'toning
Saturday to give the Boston Red
Sox a ·5-3 victory over the ·
Oakland Athletics.
Henderson, who has played .
sparlrigly the last two months,
homered off Gene Nelson after
Dwight Evans opened the inning
with a single off Dennis Eckersley , 6-5. Henderson hit a 2-2 pitch
around the right-field foul pole ·
for his seventh of the year and his
first since May 26.
Bruce Hurst, 10-6, scattered
nine hits walked two and struck
out six In his lOth complete game.
The Red Sox tied the score 3· 3
In the ninth on Jim Rice's two-out
solo homer off Eckersley. Rice,
who fanned·with.the bases loaded
to end the third and again with
two on In the seventh, belted a 2-2
pitch over the left-fi eld screen for
his eighth homer of the season.
Eckersley replaced starter
Jos e Rljo with two on and one out
In the eighth and surrendered a
sacrifice fly to pinch hitter Don
Baylor before escaping the jam.
'Baylor's RBI pulled Boston
within 3-2.
Jose Canseco's 19th homer, a
towering drive over the screen
above the 37-foot left-!leid wall,
gave Oakland a 1-0 lead in the
· fir st.
The A's made it 2-0 in the

Bookmobile routes announced in counties
' .

11: 10·11: 25; Bidwell Old School,

12: 30-1; Bidwell Nolans, 1: o:;.
1: 15; Porter, 1: 20-1:_50; Eno
2·2:30; Africa Road, 2:35-3;
Roush Lane, 3:15-3: 30; Roush
Lane, 3:15-3: 30; Roush Lane II,
3:.35-4; Cheshire, 4: 40-5: 35; Add ];
son, 5:45-6;
Georges Creek . .
Kelly Drive, 6: 1().6: 40; Kanauga
5th Ave., 6:50-7: 10; Fos.ters :
Trailer Ct., 7:15-7: 40; K&amp;K
Traller Ct., 7: 45~8: 05.
Wednesday: No route, maintenance day.
Thursday: Crousebeck Rd.,
9:45-10: ~5; Quail Creek, 10: 25·
10:45; Children's Home, 11·
11: 15; CRTP, 11:20-11: 45; SR 790
(Small), 1: 30·1: 40; SR 790 (Hal·
ley), 1:45-1: 55; SR 790 (Lincoln
Pike) 2:05-2: 30; Mudsock, 2:453:15; Patriot , 3:30'4; Cadmus,
4:10-4: 45; Gallla, 5: 30-6; Center·
point , 6:15-6: 30; Centerville,
6:45-7: 15; M&lt;:adowbrook, 7:35-8.
Friday: C0 ra, 10·10: 15; Lin·

coin Pike, 10:25-10: 45; ·cente·
nary, 10: 50-11: 20; LeGrande,
11: 30-noon; Eureka, 1-1: 15; Huf!man's, 1:2:&gt;-1:40; Goody's,l:452; Myers, 2:20-2: 35; Imogene
Church's Store, · 2: 45-J: 15; Mercervllle, 3: 20-3: 45; Burd' s, 55:15; Crown City, 5: 05-6: 05;
Roma Myers, 6:15-6: 30; Ohio
Townhouse, 6:45-7:10; Kenny's
. Carryout, 7:25-7: 5(1; Teen 's Run ,
'8-8: 25.
.
Saturday: Gallla Metro Est·
ates, 10:45-noon; Allee, 1·1:30;
Vinton, 1: 45-2:15; -Morgan Road,
2:25-2: 55; Morgan Center, 3-4.

The United States Achieve·
ment Academy announced today
that Laren Wolfe, Racine, has
been named a Collegiate Aca· .
demlc All-American.
The USAA has established the
Academic All-American Collegiate Awar(l Program In order to
offer deserved recognition to.
superior students who excel In
academic disciplines. The Aca·
demic All-American Collegiate
Scholars must earn a 3.3or beller
grade point average. Only scholars selected by a school official
or other qualified sponsor are
accepted. These scholars are
. also eligible for other awards
given by the USAA
Wolfe, who atttends Rio

' Grande College, was nominated
for this National Award by
Ronald Tuccerl, chemistry prolessor, and Carolyn Quittner,
MLT Instructor, will appear In
the Academic Ali-America Collegiate Directory, published
nationally. ·
·
"Recognizing and supporting
our youth is more important than
ever before In American history.
Certainly, winners of the awards
should be congratulated and
appreciated for their dedication
to excellenc and achlevemnt,"
said Dr. GeQrge Stevens, executive director of the U.S. Achievement Academy.
Laren is the daughter ·o f Larry
and Dolores Wolfe of 'Racine and

Wrong Way Corrigan: flight a mistake
HEMPSTEAD , N.Y. iUPI)Forty-nine years after piloting
an airplane from New York to
Ireland on a solo flight that was
supposed to take him across the
country, Douglas "Wrong Way"
Corrigan still maintains It was
all a mistake.
Corrigan, 80, was honored on
the anniversary " of his zany
historic flight Friday In a
"Wrong Way ' Corrigan Day"
parade on Long Island.
· .On July 17 , 1938, Corrigan had
U.S. government permission to

HASKINS-TANNER
t~~r~

w~

Golllpolis. Ohio

lhu1

Sot 91

BOWMAN'S

"Complete Hospital Equipment For Home U1e"

• • • • COU!aON • • • •
hi• MIIUIIIIIt Co.
0

Pt--

Pomorov or Vinton
1111 FREE -.eta

ohawtng _...,..., ptlntod In IIIII
co4o&lt; wun ,,_ and p&lt;1ooo llotod.

.... del..,.

-t

•Ho1pitel Beda
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•Lift Cheir1
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•Adult Briefs
•Underpeda (Chuxs)
•Crutches
•.Braces
•Cervical Pillows
•Egg Crates

w..- . wttnout Ol&gt;llgetton.

IBtre"'t or Route·_ _ _ __
orTown _ _ __

•Wheelchairs
•Bed1ide Commodes
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•Ostomy Supplies
•Diabetic Supplies
•Gown•
•Blood Pre11ure Kits
•TENS Units
•Nebulizers

UP IN THE A :R - BrothPr
Wayne llftd Natlllic Seyho ld

By MARTIN LADER

UPJ Sports Writ er
MUrRFIELD. Scotl and 1 UP I t
- Paul Azinger survived hor·

MANY ITEMS MEDICARE/MEDICAID APPROVED

·446-7283

Homo owno4

Olld Oporettd

63 PINE

Call Colltd

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VINTON, OHIO
W. Main Street
388-8803

POMEROY, OHIO
Pomeroy-M..on Bridge
992•21188

frH Dtlivtry

_, Troi!ling

GAUIPOLIS, OH.

'

PRE-IM~ENTORY
'.
.

WOMEN'S SUMMER

SALE

, •

Dress shoes &amp;
12 PriCe
.
'I
.
Women's Handbags ..................... 2 pnce
GROUP OF WOMEN'S
, . $ OO
Sandals ....•...•..••.......•....••••.•.....•.••.••..... 5
Sandals ................. 1

u;b!t• ...
THE CHURCH OF CHRIST AND HEAVEN
Wi/lium B. Kughfl
"Does th&lt; church of Chri&gt;1 think that you have to be a member of the

A Mf'S$Ugt• Fmm Th e

church 9 f Ch ri ~t before you go to heaven?"
11 h not wha t t h~ church think s. but ~.~o•h at does the church teach in re·
"flC'C'I tn the church, ~31\la.t ion , and heaven as revealed in the lrUth of which
till' l'hurl'h b " r/11• pillar umJ grou11d " (I Tim. J: IS).

TMChurch

t. The ehun-h Is the body of Chrlot :

••
••
••
•
••••

•
••
••
••
••
••
••
••
••
••
•

Tennis .•..•••••..•••••••.••.••,•••:·············· 1/2 Price
GROUP OF CHILDREN'S
$ OO
Shoes ..•...•..•••••.••...•......•..•.••••••••••••••••••• 3
GROUP OF MEN'S
,
1
HushDUDDies .................................. 12 Pnce
GROUI&gt;

at' 'MEN'S

Western &amp; Work Boots ...................
Men's A~iva 830 •••••,;•.••••••••••••••• l/2

Po•ir•

Brooks Techniques
Tiger AL51-AL52 .................... 112 Price
• f s.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
V- ...00 to tU.OO
$500
Group of T•Sh1r
Basket of Socks................................ 50C

"A r~d hath put al/thi"ll' under hiJ

uuJ /:ii i'C' him 111 he tht: hcuJ rw•!rallrlu',gs 10 the clu~n:lt. which is his
body. 1hv .fidnm rif him that fille!h all in all" (Eph. I :22,23). Christ, the
head. is the l'hurch':, sourcc ·of authority front whom she receiv~ life and
instruct inns. The church is the l'Dmplement of Christ in whom dwells the
futne ss of tho Godhead. To be under Christ's control; to be complete in
Him : and to be nf thc fulncss of God : yo u musl' be in the church!
2. There Is on&lt; iK!dY of Christ : " Thm· ;, o11• body " (Eph. 4:4). ''0••"
expresses union . a single one to the exclusion of all others . The church is
one in number. united in Christ , and excludes jill other religious organila·
1ions . To be in the ..one body " is to be in th e one t'hu~h!
•
The Church Aod Solvation
I. Salvadon Is In Christ: "Ther•fore I endure all things jQr the elect 's
!Wkf•. thut th~~ mu1 also obtain the ~iJI~a!iDrt wllicli itt i'! f?lrrist ~~~·us with
etemulglory 12 Ttm . 2: I0). "Salvatw• 'IS the approprtaiiOn of hie 1ha t is
in Christ Uno. I '4: I Jno. 5: t2). To have access to salvation or li fe. .you
must be in Chri~t's spiritual body . the church, where life reigns!
2. Tht saved are added to the chureh: "A nd the Lord odd•d tfJ tilt•
,·hurch daily sud1 as should be saved" (Acts 2:47-). They were united in

}L'f'f ,

Christ.the cburch . To be savetl&lt;tnd united in Christ, you must be' added to
· the church by the Lord!
3 .. Chrl1t Ia the Savior of the church: " ... as Christ is the head of til e
church : u11d he i• tlw .&lt;aviour of the body" (Eph . 5:23). Christ is the delivercr .and preserver (savior) of 1he church. To be delivered and preserved by
ChrisL you mu st be in the church!

The Church And Hea•en

·

re nd ous we'a thcr

condit ion ~

a

For Free Bible Co,.,..spondeitce Coum, Write ...

Chltpel Hill Church. of Ch~ist ·
Bulavllle Road • P.O. Bo• 308
Gallipoli•, Ohio 45631

..

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

. W~Ip IOo:IO

W"'*'p 6.00

. :.::~- :::'1
.: ~ 1.

. -.

;· r··

Mon. ,&amp; Fri. lo30 to IP.M. .
tv..., lhtl. lhur. &amp; Sot.

Weekend• &amp; Holiday•
I :00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M.

•••o Ill s

•

Weda.da, ,

Bible Stud)
?tOO p.111,

Radio
''A:M-..From

Thelltll"
D•lly ~ WJf.'H.
1hS5 a.m.

SPARKY ANDERSON ·

l'
..._...

...

-~

~

'

~

,._- .;·---- ·-- ---·--·-·--·-----·-· -·-

.•

--·--- - -·

.

~

By RICHARD L. SHOOK
DETROIT (UP!) -There's
always another mountain to
climb so now that Detroit
manager Sparky Anderson
has rea~hed another peak he 's
got his eye on Mount Everest.
Frank Tanana earned And·
erson another line In base'
ball's record bo.o k With a
vintage performance Friday
night, an 84-pltch three-hitter
that helped the Tigers to a 7-0
victory over the Seattle
Mariners.
The win was Anderson's
700th In nine seasons as
manager of the Tigers and, .
combined witl! his 863 while
managing the Cincinnati Reds
of the National League, makes
him the first man In major
league history to manage 700
wlnnlnl;l ga.!Tles In each

" Sure it mea ns something to
me, " said Anderson, whose
1,563 total wins is 12th highest
in major league history. "A lot
of people hav e managed In the
majors, an awful lot of people,
"God chose me, " he said.
"That was awful nice of Him
and . I appreciate it very
much."
~
Anderson is the only manager to pilot teams that won
100 games In tioth leagues and
tlie only one to this point to
have managed a World Series
winner In both leagues. His
selection to the Hall of Fame Is
almost certain .
"I'd like to hang around a
while yet," said Anderson,
who three or four years· ago
was talking · retirement but
now feels he's having so much
fun he wants to manage . as

long as somebody will have
him .
"I'd like to see what might
happen," he said. "I_told my
wife the other day I'd like to
try for three (3,000). I'm on the
.
other side of it."
At Anderson's current pace
of 89 wins per season he'd need
16 ·more years on the job to
reach 3,000wlns- most of any
manager save Connie Mack.
Mack, who owned his club,
slept through more victories
than most people manage. He
had 3, 776 wins - and 4,025
losses.
•
No. 2 ·on the list Is John
McGraw with 2,840 and that Is
Anderson's ta·rget. Bucky
Harris, with 2,159, is third on
the Jist. Another 16 seasons of
m·a naglng would make Ander·
son 69 years old.

. Wtldl"1'hllllbleA.M.,n".!i0Wk-TVIJ I '•30a.m;s....~
- -- ·
.
.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

;

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---- ~----~----------~---------------~--:

Wiseman tops at SEORC
Fairgreens golf toumey

·'Sparky'_sets new mark with 1,563rd win

(t Cor. I5 :24 ). Christian citizens who "arefaith{ulumo death" (Rev. 2 : 10)
ar~ the "blessed" who "die in the Lord " (Rev. 14 :13). The Christian ·
citizens who are "i11 Christ shall all be made aJ;ve " and "are Christ 's at his
coming" (I Cor. IS: 22,23). The Christian citizens who constitute "the lcinq- '
dom of God " will be the ones whom Christ will deliver up to the Father tn
· heaven. To be among the blessed dead ; to be made alive: to be Christ's at
His coming; and to be delivered into the hjjnds of the Father in hea ven:
you must be in the kingdom; the church!
_
The truth boldly and clearly teaches that you must "be a member of the
church before you go to heaven"!
·
.

s••., E••lna,

and

bogey on the final hai r
Sat urday to maintain a one-shot
lead after the thi r d .round Of the
·British Open.
A zl ng ~r. bidd ing- to become 1h
first player since Tom Watson in
1975 to win the Open on his first
attempt, and only the fourth
during th moder n era. shot an
even par 71 to comp lete 54 holes
In 6-und er 207 .
Watson, looki ng to equal the
record of six British Open cham·
plonshlps, closed his round of 71
with an 18-foot bi r die putt and
wa s In exc llent pos ilion only two
shots off the lead.
"I've played In wind like this.
but not co mbined with the cold,"
Azlnget· sald. ''The bad weather
took the pressure off m~ . I knew
everyone would have trouble
today . II was survival of the
fitt est. ..
Azl ngcr, a 27-year -oid Floridian, saved his lead by si nk ing a
1J.foot pu It on the fin a I hol e for
his bogey.
··r desperatel y wanted to make
th at putt so I could have that
lead. and I'm proud 1 made it, "
hE' said. ·
Briton Nick Faido, Azinger's
playing partner. who wa s cele·

The kingdom or church will be delivered unto God : "Th'!" cometh tlw
end, whe11 he shall have dtli~red up tile lcirrgdom to God. even the f'wlwr "

·.._.,Mon...,
·
Bible Shoot, 9o:IO •

By JIM SLATER
responded by winning the final
hot ," Wllander said. "I had
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) -Top four games of the set.
trouble getting my grip because
seed Mats Wiiander of Sweden
"'I started out really well," said of the sweat. It 's a different game
scored ·a 6·4, 7-5 viciory over
Wilander, who is ranked No. 2ln when It Is hot."
Joakim Nyst rom Sat urd ay to
the world. '"I sort of knew that
improve to 12-0 over his cou ntry- was how the match would be. He
Despite the one-sided rivalry,
man and advance to the finals of was playing the. ball long and Wilander and Nystrom remain
the $375.000 U.S. Open Clay Court
deep. I missed a few and my close friends. They practice!!
Te nnis Championship s.
with each other and Carlsson
confidence was down. Maybe my
· Wilander will meet. the winner co ncentration was down because before the match.
of the later semifinal between of the two easy games."
"We're like brothers, I guess.
anot her Swede, third seed Kent
It's hard to play someone you
Long exchanges of deep volCar lsson, and lOth seed Guil- leys dominated the match along
know " Wliander said. "It's &lt;lOt
' '
lermo Perez-Roldan of with 90-degree heat that bothered
so hard
to play the others
Argentina.
(Swedes),
but It's different with
both players .
Wilander . the top seed, conJoakim."
"I was tired and it was very
tinued to fru strate hi s friend and
doubles plirt ner. He broke Nys· •
trom's serve to take a 6-51ead in
the second set then held service
to win the mat.ch, taking the fin al
and· sl,ltter team; H•lorJ1).Uielr l'OuUne illlhe Pairs Sbort.Pro&amp;J'&amp;OI · ,p_oint .Olll!ll JHICQnte'i!ed fo,rehand
"
•
.,..
...
t
• ·-·
at the U.S. Olympic Fesllvaf Saturday. (UP I) - - drop volley. ·
of ~11\rion, l~d .
·JACKSON - Tom Wiseman.
His gross score was 75. In
·
In the first set, Wilander an insurance agent at the Wiserecognition of that performance,
scored four straight points to rnan Agency, had the lowest
Bill Childs, on behalf of Fairbreak Nyslrom' s serve in the individual gross score in the
greens, presented Wiseman with
fir st ga me a nd easily he ld serve SEORC Tournament Thursday
a golf bag. Childs Is a golf pro at
for a 2·0 lead. Nystrom. won the evenin g, at the Fairgreens Coun·
the Jaymar Golf Club in
games
before
Wiiander
next
four
try Club, near Wellston .
Pomeroy.
•
bratlng his 30th birthday. also double bogey In a round of 81 to
bogeyed th e final hole wh en he sta nd at 226 for the tourname nt.
missed an 8-foot putt in· gusting - "It's not good walking off a golf
wind to fall bac k into a tie for course with 81 a nd feeling you
seco nd pla ce at 208 with South pla yed well ," Nicklaus said.
.
.
African Dav id Frost . Faido reg·
The rain stopped by early
islered a 71 a nd Frost, who took
afternoon and !he wind settl ed
thP lead temporarily with a
. .
before blowing up again late in
.~
bi rdie on the seve nth hole. snot
the day.
·
70.
"it was very brutal out there
Watson, despite playing what
early in the day, " said Greg
he termed a poor round. over·
Norman, who di smissed any
came a double bogey on the
thoug ht he could r etain his
second hole for hi s 71 th at left him
cha mpi onship after a 74·216 left
only two shots off the pace.
him nine shots off the pace~ "The
"If it blows again tomorrow
fifth hole seemed like the longes t
we're going to have a heckuva
hole I ever played ."
championship, " Watson said.
Also playing themselves out of
Tied with Watson for fourth
contention were the co· favorit es,
place at 209 were [ellow Amerl·
West German Bernhard Langer
cans Craig Stadler and Payne and Spaniard Seve Ballesteros.
- .
Stewart. Stad ler, winless on the Langer. with a triple bogey on the
U.S. Tour since 1984. had a seventh1hol e where he took thr ee
scrambling 71 and Stewart , who shots .to get · out of a bunker.
said he was "tlckied pink" with wound up 76- 214 and Ballesteros
his posit ion, s hot 72.
collected two double bogeys en
"Wit h the elements today, the route to a 77-220.
idea was survival," Stadler said.
Raymond Floyd, who can
Conditions were at their worst complete a Grand Slam of th e
&lt;luri ng t hC' morning, when early
four major championships by
starters were greeted wlt·h near winning the British, will go Into
freezing cold, winds estimated at the final round only three shots
50 mph and ra in .
off the lead following a 70-210:
The average score for the day
Australians Rodger Davis and
on a course shortened by 182 Gerard Tayior, Jifter starling the
RE!'-DY AND WAITING- Boats with' anglers River when the start signal was given to begin the
yards was 76.
, day tied with F"aldo and Stewart
from seven bass fishing clubs wall for the signal to search for the biggest bass in this portion of the
Jack Nicklaus was one of the one s hot behind Azi nger, both fell
'begin lhls year's edition of the Gallipolis Bass river. Thirty-four boats participated In the ·
. major vic,tims of the weal her,
back. Davis shot 74 for 211 and
Busters Tournament, which started early Satur- lournament. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spence(
registering n"lne bogeys and a
day morning, The fog hiul not cleared off Ihe Ohio Osborne)
Co ntinu ed on C-4

Azinger maintains Open lead

IIOIUIIINTS All 011 OILY
IUSJIESS; lOT A SJDIUIE...

QALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Monday-Friday
5:00 P.llf: to 9:00P.M.

332 Second Ave .

HOURS

r.eon &amp; ru 9 8

HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY

0 ..._ -

LARENWOLFE
the granddaughter of Eldon
Kraeuter and Mr. and Mrs.
Hilton Wolfe, Sr., ajl of Racine.

Wilander scores win over Nystrom

Groom'a tu11 FREE with 8 or more.

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Monument Co, f'IIK't 1'"*"" GIN
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holM.
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HCLZE.- CLINIC

446-5287

WATCH FOR DETAILS

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GROUP OF CHtLOREN'S

Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

IT. 160 NOITH GALliPOliS
1 Milo from Holtlf Mooli&lt;ol C111tor

We offer complete II!Jtedo rental
aervice to help you look your belt
on ' that special day. Priced-from

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0 Kindly heVo In 1Uthol11*1 Login

But 28 hours after he took off
from Floyd Bennett Field~ In
Brooklyn, he landed at Dublin's
Baldonnei Airport.
Corrigan said that shortly after
takeoff, he misread the compass
on his $900 single- engine Curtiss
Robin monoplane.
"There were clouds below me .
so I couldn't see the water, and
clouds above me so I couldn't see
the &amp;un," he recalled. ·

URGENT
CARE CENTER

Tanning ond Toning Salon

Ut Help ou
Pl1n Your W•••lng

ing skills and crafts.
Anyone with questions con·
cerning the celebration Is asked
to contact Lloyd Blackwood,
985-3805.

make a flight from New York to
California.

"CONVENIENT HEALTH CARE- THAT
DOESN'T COST AN ARM AND A LEG"

COMING SOON
SUMMER IMAGE

MEIGS COUNTY
Bookmobile service in• Meigs
is
·
the Meigs

Bicentennial celebratiq_n planned
at Tuppers Plains on July 25

Wolfe named by_USAA
as academic All-American

Public Llbraray under coniract
with Ohio Valley Area Libraries.
Monday :· Burlingham. count y
mobile home park, 3:30-4: 30;
Harrisonville, church, 5-6; Ne.w
Lima Road, 1 ml)e south of F t.
Meigs , 6:40-7: 40;

second when Terry Steinback 17, 1985. He yielded eight hits
si ngled and Mickey Tettleton while striking out one and walk·
singled him home. The Red Sox fng twp. Hammaker was backed ·
prevented another run when by three do~ble p'iays as the
Steve Henderson, who singled Giants ran their major'league
leading off, was cu 1 down at leading total to 115. .
home by Wade Boggs' relay
Thompson drove In a run in the
throw on Steinbach's double,
Giants' five-run first Inning and ·
The Red Sox made It 2-lln the belted his eighth homer of the
third when Danny Sheaffer year In the fifth to make It 8-0.
scored on Rljo's balk before
San Francisco roughed up
Boston left the bases loaded. Bill Greg Maddux, 5-8, by scoring
Buckner lined a leadoff single five runs with two outs ·in the
and was forced at seco nd on first. With one out, Mike Aldrete
Sheaffer's grounder. Ellis Burks walked and Jeffrey Leonard
looped a single to center, sending singled. After WIJI Clark flied
Sheaffer to third. Rijo· balked out Bob Brenly singled home
home a run, Marty Barrett Aldrete io make It 1-0and extend
reached on Carney Lansford's his career· high hitting streak to
fielding error and Boggs walked 11 games. '
to fill the bases before Rlce
The Giants broke the game
struck 0 ut.
open after center fielder Bob
The A's made it 3-1 In the , . Dernler dropped . Kevin Mitfourth. With one out, Henderson cheil's fly ball, allowing Leonard
singled, moved to third on and Brenl:y to score f~r a -3-0lead:
Steinbach's double and scored on
Mitchell went to third on the play
and scored on Mltcheil's single.
Tettleton's roller to short.
Jose Uribe then doubled home
Giants 9, Cubs 2
Thompson
to make it 5·0.
Robby Thompson belted a twoAldrete
singled
home Eddie
run hornet and singled home
another run and Allee Ham· Milner to make it 6-0 - In the
maker fired his first complete second.
The Cubs scored two runs In the
game In mor.e than two years
· Saturday to lift the San Fran- seventh when Keith Moreland
cisco Giant s to a 9-2 victory over singled and Manny Trillo belted
his sixth home run to make it 8-2,
the Chicago Cubs.
Hammaker, 5·7, held the Cubs Brenly slammed. his lOth homer
scoreless for 6 1·3 ilmings, for his of the year in the seventh to make
.
first complete game s ince June . it 9·2.

'•

'

.,

Fayette County team .
leads bass toumamenf
GALLIPOLIS- Seven teams,
fielding 34 boats, were out on the
Ohio River ahead of schedule
Saturday morning as the Gallipolis Area Bass Busters Tournament began from the Gallipolis
Launch Ramp.
The early leader when the fish
were 'weighed-in at. 4 p.m. Saturday was the team of Fayette
County No. 2 with 11 pounds and
three ounces. Other top teams at
the Saturday weigh-In were
Lunker Hunters No. 1 with 9
pounds 14 ounces, Gallipolis Bass
Busters No. 2 with 9 pounds,
Fayette County No. 1 with 7
pounds and 12 ounces, and Round
Town with 7 pounds and two
ounces .
·The tournament .began at 6: 48
a.m., 12 minutes ahead of the

scheduled 7 a. m. start time.
Boats carrying members of the
Gallipolis Bass Busters, Sou· . ·
theastern Ohio Bass Masters of
Athens, First Capital of Chillicothe, Lunker Hunters of Oak
Hill, Roundtown Bass Masters of
Circleville, Fayette County Bass
Busters and Lake White Bass
Masters of Piketon, went up and ·
down the river to their -favorite :
locations,' in search of the largest
bass available.
There were no two members of
the same team on the same boat
for two consecutive days, a
measure that insures integrity
among the anglers.
The fishing was good reported
a spokesperson for the tournament. The tournament continues
today with the final weigh -in
today at 4 p.in.
tl

•

•

�•

Ohio-Point Pleaant. W.'Va.

July 19. 1987

_,July 19, 1987

'

.

Meigs Legion downs Athens in. tourney .
'

By JIM SOUL§BY ' .
POME.ROY - Meigs took a
step toward the Eighth District
American Legion Championship
Friday evening as they broke
open a close contest In the ·
seventh Inning to defeat Athens 7
to l. _The Meigs nine held a 2 to 1
lead at the ·end of the first frame.
Brian Durst led off with a
single off losing pitcher Brad
Rodgers. Then came a strikeout
after which Don Becker got
aooard when he was hit by a
pitch. After a seconq out, Rob
Young stepped to the plate and
ripped a double to right center for
two RBI's. Athens plated their
only run of the game In their half
of the Inning when Ed Robe led
off with a single and stole second.
Dave Amburgey retired the next
two batters and then Rodgers
banged a single to left to score
. Robe.
From that point until the
seventh frame, when for all
Intent and purpose Meigs put the
game on Ice, nellher team could
muster much offense. Chris
Matters came on in the top of the
sixth to pllch af.ter starter
Rodgers suffered severe cramps
In his pitching arm, retiring the
first four men lie faced.
However, in the seventh with
one out, Brent Bissell was safe at
first on an error at short and
advanced to third on two consec-

utive wild pitches. Young was;
given an Intentional pass and
Mike 'Bartram grounded out as
Bissell scored. Jeff Caldwell;
Brian Freeman and Dave Am•
burgey all drew. bases on ·balls td
force In .another run. Bryar(
Durst then drove a single to leU
for his second hit to dri.Je In two
more tallies before the Side was ·
retired. With one out In We ninth
frame, Caldwell tripled••to cen1
ter. Freeman squared to bunt as
Caldwell broke lor the plate. The
catcher could not handle the ball,
a law· outside pitch, cl~nly and
the runner was safe on a close
play to post the final run of thfl
game.
.
Amburgey who seemed to get
stronger a~ the game pro'
gressed, had a super day on the
mound as he fanned eleven and
showed good control walking
only one and hitting on·e batter.
He struck oul!ive men In arow In
the fourth and fifth frames and
scattered six hits over the nine
inning contest. Behind him his
mates played excellent defense
wllh no errors. It was a total
team victory for Meigs and the
type ol ball they must play to
unseat defending champion Laocaster.· Ed Col!ins and Brent
Blsselll)ad singles lor Meigs and
Rick Walls, Kevin Barr and Tony
Coles hit safely for Athens.
·
·
-

GALliPOliS, OH. and HENDERSON, W. VA.
.YOU'RE OUT - The Mets' Tim Tuefel (left) is called out by
·home
. plate umpire Doug
. Harvey after being .tagged by Cincinnati

catcher Bli Diaz In Friday night's game. Tuelel tried to score in the
third Inning on a hit by Gary Carter. The Reds won the game In the
ninth inning on a home run by Nick Esasky. (UPI).

Esasky homer .lifts ·Reds over Mets
NEW YORK (UPI) - Ron
niels) got hurt , Parker went back
Darling pitched a rare complete
to the outfield and I got a chance
game Friday night and it turned
against left-banders. Now he's
out much the same as his las t
using me against ·the rightone.
banders too and I want to take
With Cincinnali trailing 2-1, advantage of it."
Darling, 4-7, who last went the
distance Sept. 30 in a 1-0 loss to Buddy Bell led off the ninth with a
Frank Williams, 1-0, who
Montreal, saw victory vanish in a single and Max Venable pinch pitched a hitless eighth lrinlng
four -run nint~ which culm,inated ran for Bell. After Eric Davis was the winner. John Franco
in Nick Esasky's three-run ho- struck out, Dave Parker singled earned his 18th save by pitching a
mer that gave the Cincinnati Venable to second. Tracy Jones hitless ninth. The loss was
Reds a 5-2 victory over the New singled sharply off the glove of · Darling's first complete game in
third baseman Howard Johnson 21 starts.
York Meis.
·
to
score Venable with the tying
:'It was a forkball down."
"There's nothing that ca n
Esasky said of the pitch he sent run.
make me feel better about this,"
.,
:into the left-field bullpen. "He
Darling said, ·'I know I pitched
)lad struck me out on a forkball
Bo Diaz fl ied out and Esasky well, close to my best this
1he last time and I kind of followed with his 12th home run,
season."
:guessed I was going to ge t it a shot into the left-field bullpen.
The Mets had taken a 2-1 lead
· Tm happy to play now. I'm off Torn Browning in the third
,again. I stayed back on it, waited
hot now and whoever's hot plays when Tim Teufel led off with his
&gt;On it and saw it good."
; The decision snapped Cincin- . here," Esasky said, ': When seventh home run .
·nati's four-game losing strea k Parker went to first base a while
Cincinnati jumped to a 1-0 lead
:While New York lost for the first back, I thought I was out of it !n the first. .Barry Larkin led off
completely. Then when Ka! (Da- the game with a bunt sin gle. Bell
;ume in its last five game.

Friday's game

and Davis walked to load the
bases before Parker hit a sacri fice fly to right field .
New York tied the score on
consecutive singles with two ou t
In the first by Keith Hernandez,
Gary Carter, and Darryl Straw·
berry with Hernandez scori ng on
Strawberry's hit.
The two teams are scheduled to
meet again tonight, with Cl ncin·
nati's Ted Power, 6-5, to oppose
New York's Sid Fernandez, 9-6.
on the mou nd.

WEDNESDAY 4~9 KID'S NIGHT
20c CONES - FREE BALLOONS

Every Sunday •
Every Tuesday
Evening
Evening
4 P.M. til 9 P.M. 4 P.M. til 9 P.M.
HAMBURGERS

99.&lt; 30&lt;

ANY lARGE SANDWICH

·

EA.

y

- HOUSTON ! UP! ) -Four New
:York Mets who scuffled with
"officers at a Houston bar are
. being sued for $10.2milllon by the
policemen, who say they are now
· known as "the cops who beat up
'the Mets."
: Mets pitchers Ron Darling,
Robert Ojeda and Rick Aguilera
·and second baseman Tim Teufel
.are accused Of assault, battery,
:slander and libel in ·the suit filed
·Friday in state district court.
: "The officers' position has
really been one that they did not
intend to bring suit if this thing
.- would have just died down. but it
. has~'! died down. It' s . gotten
.worse," said attorney A. Lee
:McLain.
"I just really feel !ike t hese
'officers have been victimized by
:prima donnas , and (the Mets )
were able to get away with it
.because they're celebrities.' ' he
said.
. · The players were arrested July
,19, 1986 at Coolers after scuffling
,with officers Randa! Gresham
•and Dale Bristley, both of Hous' ton. There were no injuries.
"We have no comment at the
present time," the Mets said In a
statement. "We have not seen the
, papers, nor have we been served,
•and until we see what we have
been charged with, we reserve
comment.''
Houston attorney Dick De-

Guerin, who represents the Mets
public ridicule, mocki ng.
players, called the suit "the They've had threats, (been)
stupidest thing those cops could
unable to carry out their jobs."
have done.··
"They're immediately noted
·'The cops got off light last t!me
as being the cops who beat up the
because they didn't have to go tp Mets players. That's totally
trial. If they had gone to trial,
opposed to what really hapthen everybody would have actu- pened ," said McLain. "That's a
ally seen what had· gone on at stigma they've had to live with,
Cooters. Now, we wlll go to and It's just gotten worse."
tr ial."
Also named in the $10.2 million
Pollee said the dispute began suit are the Mets, Manager
when Bristley tried to slap Teufel Davey Johnson and fiv e emfrom lea ving the bar w!Jh a beer, ployees and executives of the
club.
a vio lation of the law. '" · t
"Everyone there, wh* •they
saw was Darling throw an punch
then throw the officer across the
room despite the fact that hew as
wearing a uniform, ... and Teufel
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - Dan
striking an officer, and the others
tryi ng to help them get away," Denier guided Jambo Nifty to a
2Y, length victory over Disco
said McLain.
Freight
in Friday night 's fea Darllng and Teufel were intured
lOth
race trot at Raceway
dicted on felony assault charges
Park,
but pleaded no contest in JanuKing Domarr finished third.
ary !o misdemeanor charges of
Jamoo
Nifty led all the way,
res isting arrest. Each was fined
covering
the .mile In 2:01 and
$200 and served one month of
·
returning
$5, $3 and $2.40. Disco
their one year probation terms
paip
$6.60 and $2.80,
Freight
before their sen tences were set
while
King
Dornarr
kicked back
aside In March. ·
$2.20.
Aguilera and Ojeda were arBlack Chetah won the first race
rested on misdemeanor charges
and
Little N Speclal\rlumped In
of hindering arrest, but charges
the
second
to set up a 2-5 dally
were dismissed Jan. 26.
double
combination
that was
McLalfi described tHe Injuries
worth
$19.40.
suffered by the officers as mental
A crowd of 2,432 wagered
angu.ish, "being victimized by
$207.090."

•

: POMEROY - In recent Pony
;Lea_gue action, Middleport
•picked "up two wins over Racine
:and New J'{aven by scores oflO to
4 and 7 to 6 respectively, to up
:their season record io 6 and 2.
: D.J. Herman was the winning
·pitcher against Racine as he
: gave up seven hits while fanning ·
;-three batters. He also led the
· team at the plate with a double
: and two singles. Teammates
: Mike Walls doubled and singled,

..' .
'

Rodney Brewer and Jeff Cougar . good mound performance alloweach tripled and Joey Hysell, Ing just two hits, striking out 13
Chris Stewart, and Mike Cre- and walking seven. Torn McDermeans contributed a single each. mitt's home run and Torn
Todd Grindstaff, on the mound Knapp's single were the only two
for Racine, Issued three free · safeties for New Haven. Knapp
passes and struck out two. Roy handled the mound duties for the
Johnson was the leading hitter losers whiffing twelve men and
for Racine with a double and two giving up twelve free passes.
singles. Jason Quillen had two Middleport hitters were Chris
base hits and Grindstaff and Stewart with a pair of base hits,
Collin Maidens· each singled.
·Mike Walls with a double a.n d
In a close contest against New D.J. Herman and Rodney
Haven,. Chris Stewart turned In a Brewer with a single each.

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CLEVELAND !UP! ) - The
Browns Friday re·
leased free agent linebacker
Brad Van Pelt a nd signed three
frre agents to the team roster.
The Browns signed linebacker
Lucius San lord, who played nine
professional seasons with the
Buffalo Bills. Sa nford, 6- loot-2,
216 pounds , graduated !rom
Georgia Tech and was ~ 4th
round pick In the 1978 National
~·oot ba ll Lea~ue draft .
While he was with Buffalo.
Sa nford started !n 106 of liS
games played. He had 794 tack·
C l~veland

II'S, five and
in tercep
tio ns, seven
fumbles
recovered
three

Sveum and Mattingly hit ·big.home run~
By DAVID AVITABILE
No one will confuse the New
York Yankees' Don Mattingly
and Dale Sveum of the Milwaukee Brewers, but on Friday night
both made big home run news in
the American League.
Mattingly set an American
League record when he con·
nec ted for a homer In his seventh
straight game In the Yankees' 8-4
victory over the Texas Rangers.
Sveum. meanwhile. hit three
home runs, two left-handed and
one right· handed. and drove In
six runs, to push the Brewers
past the California Angels 12-2.
Sveum' s success was almost
more surprising considering his
recent outings against Angels
starter Mike Witt. Entering
Friday's game, Sveurn was 0 fo r
6 with three strikeouts against
the right -hander this season.
··1 had no confiden ce going into
the game against him, beca use
he's owned me," said· Sveum.
""I 've never got a hit a nd I dofl't_
think J"ve ever hit a ball hard."
Sveum hit two horn&lt;' runs off
Witt, a solo shot !n the third and a
two- run blast in the fourih, and
then hit a thre£'-run horner
batting rigltt -handed in these,··
cnth off reliever Chu ck Finlqy.

Tribe's Fran.. o placed
on disabled list
CHICAGO iU Pi i -Shortstop
Julio Franco was placed on the
1&gt;-day disabled list today by the
Cleveland Indians, a club spokesman said.
Franco has a hyperextended
right elbow. which he injured
while sliding In Cleveland's serIes with Texas earlier this month.
Cleveland orthopedic special ist Dr. John Bergfeld has instructed Franco to rest the arm
for 10 days, alter which another
examination will take place.
Franco, 25. was-batting .315 In
87 games, one of the top 10
averages in the American
League.

r::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::::;;;;::::;:;:;:;::::\1
$AYE

''There's no better way to get into
Wyandot Lake and the Columbus Zoo.
And there's no better time than now.
New this summer, the Wyandot
Lake/ Columbus Zoo Combo Ticket is
available for only $9.25 el(clusively
through AAA~ This one ticket gets
you into two great parks for the
price of one.
Wyandot Lake has more than
50 different rides and attractions,
both wet and dry. Including two
brand new 70-foot-high water
slides and a special children's
play area, Uncle Al's
1reeHouse by Rax ...
Fast Food, with Style.
Plus water chutes, a
wave pool, a roller
coaster and more.
The Columbus
*Not available in
Columbus,
Marysville or
Delaware
offices.

Zoo has more than 9,000 wild animals
waiting to see you. Some special
deliveries inchide.i)urnew baby
. zebra, cheetah, tiger, llama and
gazelle. Be sure to see the pride of
our zoo famil y. four generattons
of gorillas. ·
.
You can really make a day of it
and save with the new Wyandot Lake/
Columbus Zoo Combo Ticket. Available to everyone at AAA* offices.
Wyandot Lake and the Columbus Zoo
are located ciff 1-270, Sawmill
Exit. Follow the ·
signs. Park in the
same lot for both
parks.
Come on out
for the wettest
and wildest day of
your summer.,,

8

Jack
Executive Director
Columbus Zoo ...
~

cw~~2:~

West Penn top
seed is upset
MOUNT LEBANON, Pa.
tUPl ) - Elizabeth Alexander of
Columbu s. Ohio. top-seedl"d
woman In the tournament , was
upset Friday In the semifinals of
the 98th West Penn . National
Amateur Clay Court Tennis
Cha mpions hips.
,
Fifth-seeded Carrie Cun·
nlngharn of Livonia, Mich., wfio
lias lost a total of only eight
games In hl"r fivl" tourney victories so "far , beat Alexander G-1,
6·1.
Cunningham , 15, Is the youhges! player In the women's draw .
and the youngest finalist in the
tournarn,ent since Kathy Horvath
got there In 1979.
·'I've · been playing well all
week," Cunningham said. "lt·•s
kind of weird how well things
have been going. I just hope It
continues."
Alexander said she hit the ball
well but still couldn't score
points.
·"She just outclassep me," said
Alexander. "I've had trouble
with my·concentratlon all week.
That's part of" what ilappened
·today."

.&lt;
.•

lrt 't'- wrt·nl nn•nl•l ti ...... Dour l'wRv•• ·-

touch(!owns .
· The.Browns also signed Jackie
Cli ne, a 6-foot -5, 276 pound
defensive lineman from Alabama. Cline played In thE' United
States Football League for the
Birmingham Stallions from 1983
to 1985.
Larry Mason. a 5-foot ·ll. 205
pound running back, played In
the USFL for the Jacksonv.ille
Bulls. While with Jacksonvilll"
from 1984 to 1985, Mason gained
826 yards on 194 carries lor 12
touchdowns.

••
Wilson slides In safely with a triple In the third Inning of Frlday's·; •
game. He later scored with the Royals first run. (UPI)

DIRT FLIES ~ With dirt flying Kansas City Royals' Willie

frt 'i'-U·•·nl ll~ht o•ftd .lohn "' nenlo: Ji "d
rw-l"l t.-.·k Drrrk-k Hannron: i'&gt;l1m4•d

Browns release Van Pelt.

Toledo raceway
Friday results

.Middleport downs Racine in Pony League

f\11111•11:

1\MERJCI\N U ; ,\(IUE
R)' Unllt'd Pr8.•1ntft'•ilonal

l' iiWiua k•-t {II .. )

four Mets sued by police officers

'" The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C;3

Leaders

•

Sandwich
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Friday's uames
~·

Sveum·s llrst multi-hom·e r
game in his two- year career gave
him 12 home runs this season.
The six RBI also were a ca reer
high.
Bi!l Wegman, B-8, pitched
seven Innings for the victory,
allowing two runs on five hits. He
struck out four and walked one.
Wit t. 1J.6. lasted 31-3 innings and
suffered only his second loss in
his last eight decisions. The
Brewers collected nine of their
season-high 20 hits off Witt.
In Arlington. Texas, Mattingly
put his rrcord-breaking home
run streak !n perspective.
" To me, the record wi!l affect
me later, as I think about it ,"
Mattingly said. "But the !mpor·
tant thing now is t.he wins. After
my first hit was so close 1a double
off the centerfield wall) and
didn 't go out. I didn 't think I
would hit one tonight."
Elsewhere, Detroit blanked
Seattle 7-0. Minnesota nipped
Toronto 3-2, Baltimore beai Kansas City 3-1. Oakland dropped
Boston 11-6 in 10 innings and
Chicago nipped Cleveland 4-3 in
10 innings.
Tigers 7, Mariners 0
At Detroit, Frank Tanana
pitched a three-hitter and Mike
Heath and Tom Brookens · had

•
RBI singles in Detroit's four- run Bell struck out a career-hig")l~
second inning to pace the Tigers nine. Tom Nledenfuer got one out:
over Seattle. Alan Trammell and for his fourth save. Mark Gu-•
Darnel! Coles hit solo home runs bicza, 7-9, took the Joss.
'
as Detroit touched Mark Lang·
Athletics 11, Red Sox 6 (10)
stan, 10-8, for eight hits in six
At Boston, Mike Greenwell,
. forced to make his major- league
innings.
Twins 3, Blue Jays 2
catching debut in the lOth inning,
At Minneapolis, AI Newman co mmitted a throwing error to
doubled home the winning run in ignite a seven-run outburst thlrt
the seventh inning and Frank pow.e red Oakland over Boston.
Viola . 9-6, struck out nine to Rookie Greg Cadaret. 1-3, picked
carry Minnesota over Toronto. up the victory in relief. Bob
Viola scattered eig ht hit s in Stanley, 3-9, took the loss.
seven innings . J eff R.eardon
White Sox 4, Indians 3
hurled rheninth fo r his 18th save.
At Chicago. Ca rlton Fisk's
Mark Eichhorn, B-5, was the infield single with the bases
loser.
loaded scored Gary Redus in the
lOth inning to lift Chicago over.
Orioles 3, Royals I
Clevela
nd. Redus singled wltf!
At Kansas . Cit y, Mo .. rookie
Eric Bell. 7· 7, pite-hed a six-hitt er one out off Doug Jones, 3- 3. Ivan
over B 2-3 innings and Eddie Calderon and Greg Walkec
Murray snapped an eighth- walked to load the bases ·and set
inning ti e with an RBI single to t.he stage for Flsk"s single and
help Baltimore over I&lt;ansas Cit y. make a winner of Bob James, 3-4.

Another Reduction Has Been Taken '
'
Check Out the Markdowns At Our

-SuMMer Clearance Sale!
'

THE SHOE CAFE
300 Second Ave., Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis ·•

Walker Machinery Comes to
the Bu(:keye State!
Walker Machinery Company proudly announces the
opening of our Jackson, Ohio full service branch store!
Now. Caterpillar quality products and service are
.available in a more convenient location for our Ohio
customers - and that means faster parts availability,
faster service, and reduced time and travel costs to
your job site by our field service mechanic!
Store Manager Gary Hunley is looking forward to
returning to the Jackson area. He's been with Walker
for 15 years - and spent 3 years as a Parts and Ser·
vice Representative in southeast Ohio.
Stop by our new store - Rt. 35 west of Jackson,
and see how Walker is committed to the Buckeye
state. We're looking forward to seeing you!

Gary Hunley
Store Manager

• Jackson, OH

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'

�The Sunday

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Springer blast leads Tidewater

-·.-.~

•

By United Press International
Steve Springer blasted a threerun homer In the third inning
Friday night to 11ft the Tidewater
Tides to a 4·2 International
League vtctofy over the Richmond Braves.
After .Kevin Elster, Andre
David aod Randy Milligan
singled off Marty Clary, 7-6, to
load the bases, Mark Carreon
lUted a ~acrlf!ce fly for the Tides'
first run, Springer than hit his
fifth home run to put Tidewater
ahead 4·0 and make a winner of
Bob Gibson, 7-5.
Jeff Innis pitched the ninth to
get his fourth save.
· Darryl Motley's two-run si ngle

••'

~'
!:

••'
..•!
I

tl
•

,•
'

1:'

.,••
.'.'
I,

·WITH A COOL DEAL•

'.

'
·:
••

.••·••

..;'

•

••

••

.'..
VILANDER RETURNS - Mats Vilander of
· Sweden, the top seed, eyes the balllnte11tly as lie
readies for a forehand return to Richey Reneberlf

of Houston: Wllander won 6-4, 6-4, Friday In the
U.S. CLay Corts Championships In Indianapolis,
Ind. (UPI)

·lntemational Te~nis Hall of
·Fame inducts ·five members
By FREDEIUCK WATERMAN
King defeating Riggs.
• NEWPORT, R.I. (UPI) Pam Shriver ts one of the
Billie .!tan King, inducted'Satur· women currently on the tour who
• day into the International Tennis played against King and appre·
• Hall of Fame, wants to be elates what her predecessor
• remembered more as a promoter accomplished.
; of women's sports than as a
"She understands so much of
· player.
·
the game from a marketing a nd
"I don't really care about my publ!c relations stand point ,"
' _playing efforts so much," said Shriver said. "Billie Jean was
~ -King, the ' winner of 39 Grand
ruthless (on the court) and rea!ly
• Siam titles, 20 gained at smart. At39 (yea rs), to get to the
: Wimbledon.
sem!ftnals of Wimbledon (In
• "I !Ike more what I've done off 1983), is really something."
: the court, as far as helping open
Also being inducted in the Hall
• tennis (admitting profes.siona!s are Americans Stan Smith, Deninto Grand Slam events), helping nis Ralston, Peruvian native
found the Women's Tennis Asso· Alex Olmedo and Sweden's Bjorn
elation, Women's Sports Founda· Borg.
· lio n and Women ' s Sports
Of the inductees , only did not
: magazine.
attend the ceremonies at the
"Those are the things that are Newport Casino, where a
• lasting."
women's pro tennis tournament
· But she knows one cannot Is concludes this weekend.
choOSf? one's legacy.
King regrets that, unlike
" What I know people wil! golfers. tennis players often ha ve
· -remember and what I'd like no histor ical perspective or their
them to remember are not the sport. She points to Borg as an
• same," she said. "They"' !I re- prime example.
member Bobby Riggs; because
"You get moreoutofyourl!feif
• 80 million people around the you 've got some sort of historical
• world watched that."
· perspective, but you ha ve to
• The famous "Battle of the know the history to be a b!e to
.Sexes" match was In 1973 with respect it," she said. " All the
•

players to be inducted - except
one- have a sense of history.
"It's a real privilege to be
there, for It says I contributed
something to the sport . It's
always wonderful to be appre·
elated. II will be a day of
reflection . and thoughts of the
past. "
Borg won five consecutive
Wimbledon titles and a total of
six F.rench Open championships,
but never capt ured the Australtan or U.S. Opens. He wasa not
able to attend the induct ion due to
other commitments.
Ralston , playing with Chuck
McKinley, won three U.S. dOU ·
b!es titles - in 1961 and 1963-64,
and helped the United States win
the 1963 Davis Cup.
Olmedo, a rrat!ve of Peru, grew
up in Southern California. He
helped the U.S. win the Davis Cup
In 1958 and won Wimbledon In
1959. beating Rod Laver In ·
s traight sets in the final.
Smith won the U.S. · sin gles
crown ln 1971 - defeating l!le
NaStase In a dramatic five-set
fi nal- and triumphed at the 1972
Wimbledon. Smith was also a
mainstay of the U.S. Dav is Cup
team in the 1970s.

~·U.S.

underway

Olympic Festival

•

lS

"•,

By IRA KAUFMAN
:· DURHAM, N.C. tUPI) ~After
•,a sluggish start highl!ghted by
:·sarah Anderson's record· break·
•'ing swimming performance, the
:us. Olympic Festival races
: ah~ad today with 16 sports across
'five cit ies.
The sum mer competition feat '
.uring som&amp; of America's best
young amateur athletes off!. cially began Friday night at
Raleigh's Carter-Finley Stadium
,with the lighting of the Festival
torch. University of North Carol·
' ina stars J .R. Reid and Aprtl
'Heinrichs, chosen from the Fest!·
val' s 3,000 athletes In 34 sports,
· carried the U.S. Olympic Fest!·
, val Flame into the stadium
before a raucous crowd of 52,700.
• Reid, 19, the At!antic Coast
Conference basketball Rookie of
the Year last season, wt!l play for
the South when basketball action
begins Saturday at the Dean
Smith Center. Heinrichs, 23, was
named U.S. Olympic Committee
Female Soccer Athlete of the
Year las I season · by the U.S.
Soccer Federation.
"Carrying the torch means so
much, because it represents
people - athletes and everyone
else who works hard and strives
tor a goal," Heinrichs said.I " It' s
one of those golden morne.n ts In
life."
· Anderson, a 17-year -old
swimmer from Riverside, Call!. ,
headed for Cal-Berkeley this fall.
e njoyed a golden moment Thurs..day by setting a Festival record
with her sixth gold medal. Robert
'Helmick, president of the U.S.
Olympic Committee, spoke Frl·
day about lh~ chances of American athletes enjoying golden
jnoments in the '88 Olympics at
Seoul.
: "South Korea is quite -capable
nf protecting itself frol'!l outside
&lt;t hreats, " said Helmick, "and
there will be good security. We
could have our best Garnes ever.
I'm not in a position to say what
:Will happen, but I'm confident all
the. Eastern countries will be
"there. The Garnes ,re bigger
than ever and we' re working
' bard to get all countries repres·
·
.en ted at Seoul."
"'· No Festival medals were
a;_,arded Friday as competition
'Continued In diving and Grecoftoman wrestling. Greg Louga·
•I

•
'•

(UPI) - The PhUadelphla
Ph!!lies downed the Houston
:• Astros 2·1. Shane Rawley scat ·

;:~e:t~!~~~ h~~~;~~~8;;Jn~~~s~

1987 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY EUROSPOitT VR "Special Edition"

Power IO&lt;ks, powor windowt, powtr trunk aponer, tintN gloJJ, pvho wipo&lt;t, •fogpr, llr &lt;trlllililln,
&lt;ontolo, tport mirron, 11uin. Y·6 tngino, ""'"· '"'ns., till whttl, aluminum wltools. gaoips, AM/fM/calltllo, tothorMier, H.D. &lt;oollng, IJH!cial. "looutiful 114."
STOCK NO. 0533
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: Wilson each deitvered a "ri.ln·
• scoring· single In the !!rst tim trig
, • to pace Ph!!adelphta. Rawley.
11·5, walked four and struc k out a
• career- high nine. Steve Bedro' stan notched his 25th save. Mike
· Scott feU to 10. 6.
• In other games, Ph Uadelphia
', defeated Houston 2·1, Montreal
; edged Atlanta 5-4, St. Louts
1 shaded San Diego 4·3. Los An·
~ geles topped Pittsburgh 3-2 in 10
•, Innings and Chicago beat San
' · F ranctsco 5-1.
·,
;
Expos 5, Brave~~ 4
•: At Mo ntreat. Tim Raines
:; singled home the tie-breaking

200·.

I ..

•

••
:: Seioto D6wns
•: Frid!ly results

1987 CHEVROLET CORVmE

WAS 533,797.00

MOW

• COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPit •• C'Mon Ashley grabbed the early

$29 I 962

GOlF TIP OF THI Wll~
It's a tommon mimscon1eption thcit a "full"
Docktwing 1imply meom that tiM dub mods
back a long way. Hawtv•, it' 1 poniblt to gtf
the club baclc bflttting your ..ft arm bnak
down instiCICI o •. in~"9 your body. lt't how
lor Jot.~ caR coil your botty tiMtt lietlffhifttl the
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dirKtty away from tM tor91t Dftcl y01.1r IMide
dirKtly at it. Thtn you'll truly lllfm-*i111 a ful
bockswing.

run with the bases loaded and two cl!ffe pitched five hitless in rungs
out In the eighth Inning to lift the en route to his 13th victory and
Expos to their fifth consecutive Keith Moreland hit a two-run
BILL CHILDS. PRO .
vtctory. Tim Burke Improved to homer to lead the Cubs . Sutcliffe,
2·0 and Jim Acker feU to 0·4.
13·4, · finished with a six-hitter
JAYMAR GOLF CLUB
Cardinals 4, Padres 3
over 7 1·3 Innings . . Lee Smith ·
, PHONE 992 -6312
At San Diego, Greg Matl!ews pilchPd 1 2-3 Inn ings for his 23rd
POMEROY, OHIO
allolfed six hits. over eight -plus save. Kelly DOwns. 8·5, was the
Innings and W!U!e McGee and loser.
Tony Pena eac h drove In iwo r-7-~----------~--------L---------------------------------------------~---L-----------------------­
runs to spark the Cardinals .
Mathews, 7·6. was knocked afier
three straight hits to start the
ninth. Todd Worrell earned his
19th sa.ve. Mark Grant dropped to
2-4.
Dodlel'!l 3, Pirates Z
At Los Angeles, Mariano Dun·
can singled with the bases loaded
to score Franklin Stubbs with one
out In the lOth Inning. Stubbs,.
Steve Sal! and pinch hitter Ken
Landreau)l singled to load the
bases offrel!ever Don Robinson , .
6·6. Duncan th en blooped an 0.2
pitch Into shallow center.
·
PACKAGE OF :l
NO '.. 1003BP, 104M!JP,
Cubs $, Gla1118 I
1151BP, 1157BP, 211·2BP
At San Francisco, Rick Sut·

; • ~~~t~:!~~t~~~a~nnf~oh~t t~h:O~~s~
· • Hi length victory in the featured
;:.10th race pace at Scioto Downs.
·: Driven by Martin Wo!!am, the
:• winner covered the mUe 1: 561 -5
;; and returned $2.80, $2.60 and
•: $2.10. Sharon Again finished
&gt; second and Ad-On came In third.
; • One untdentted bettor cor.: rect!y picked the twin lrtfecta to
!• win $18.180.60. The bettor picked
•: the 6-:&gt;-2 combination In the
fourth race and the3-7-6cornbo In
; the sixth race to claim the big
; · jackpot.
•
A crowd of 5,812 wagered
~ . $508,433.
•

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MAIL,.. REBATE ... 1.00

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· :· OSU's Butch Reynolds
:· toees for first time
•

•:

PARIS (UP!)
Harry
• "Butch" Reynolds ot Ohio State.
: • the newest 40Q.meter star, has
• . lost for the first ttme this season.
: ; .Innocent Egbunike or Nigeria
: · won the event at an International
•, tra ck and field meet Thursday In
:· 44.64 seconds, the second-best
: performance of his career.
•. Reynolds was second In 44.n.

1987 OLDSMOBIE TORONADO TROFEO "SDKial Edition"

DOWN FOR COUNT- Craig Pittman (left) of Dumfries, Va.
checks the unhappy results after being pinned by Morris Johnson
of San Francisco duriong the 286 pound Greco-Koman wrestling
matches in the Olympic Festival. Johnson won the match 5·4.
(UPI)

•

MINI BULBS

••••

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The Chethire Township TruJtees have a contract with
the Village of Middleport which provides Fire Depart·
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Township. The Meigs County Volunteer Emergency
Squad services are also free _of charge in the case of a
medical emergency. Should you require the services of
the Fire Department or the Emergency Squad, please
call the MEIGS COUNTY EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICE at
1-992·6663 for both fire.and/or medical emergencies.
There will be a smoll toll chorge for the telephone call,
but. costly delays in receiving assistance will be avoided
by calling t~is number.

base Friday agalpst the Padres:•Shortstop Gary
Templeton bobbled the throw. (UPI)

~ Phillies hot: dawn Astros 2-1

•

WAS $19,091.00

WHO GE,TS THERE FIRST? - St• .Louis
Cardinal VIce . Coleman did, as he stole second

AI · Columbus, Ohio, Roberto
Kelly's bases-loaded walk In the
ninth inning ltfted the Clippers.
Luis DeLeon surrendered three
runs in the ninth to take the Joss.

ATTENTION CHESHIRE
TOWNSHIP RESIDENTS

••

.•••

In the fourth accounted for the
Braves' only runs.
In other IL games, Pawtucket
po\!nded Maine 19·6, Syracuse
decked Toledo 10-7 and Columbus topped Rochester 6-5.
At Pawtucket, R.I., Steve
':urry coasted to his ninth victory
uf the season. The Pawsox
reached J\)e Cowley, 3· 9, for
eight runs.
At Toledo, Ohio, Glenallen Hill
singled In Mike Sharperson from '
third base In .t he third inning to
lift the Chiefs. Tom F!ler pitched
six innings to pick ·up his first
victory . of the season. Don
Heinkel surrendered four runs in
the first four innings to fall to 7-5.

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nls, who won two gold medals' in
the 1984 Olympics, and Michele
Mitchell, seeking a third consec·
utive Festival gold medaJ ·in the
platform, each won comfortably
in I he preliminary round of the
tO-meter platform diving.
Mitchell has a huge lead over
15-year-old Genna Weiss and
Louganis Is fa r ahead of peren·
ntal rival Bruce Kimball. The
· springboard finals w11! be held
today, with the platform !Ina is
scheduled for Sunday.
"This Is my best event," said
Mitchell, "but I don 't know why
because the platform scares me.
I think It would be bad not to be

afraid of the 10-meter p!att'orm
because you are fall!n g into the
water at 30 m!les per hour."
Two-time Olympian Mark
Fuller, Gresham, Ore. , ad·
vanced to Saturday's final round
of Greco-Roman wrestltng corn·
petition by defeating Steve Bled·
rycki, 3·2 and 8·2, at 114.5 pounds.
Brothers Dennis Koslowski ; 220,
and Duane Koslowski, 286, wU!
wrestle for gold medals today in
the final two matches .
On the sixth da y of the
Festival, new competition begins
in 14 sports, including basketball,
boxing, figure skating, baseball,
soccer, volleyball and tennis.
'

Azinger. ·. . ----~col!!nwtt!!Lnu!!l:et!!.d.!!frCQo:n:muc"'-lL..._ __
Taylor had 75- 212.
seventh hole he sank putts of 20,
Tied with Davis at 211 were 18 and 4 feet.
Azlnger bogeyed the lOth and
Mark Calcavecchla, Graham
Marsh and Nick Price, aU with 12th holes, missing a 2 1· 2 foot
72.
· putt on the 12th when he rushed
Az!nger, winner of three tour- his shot. This dropped him back
naments In the U.S. this year and into a t.ie for the lead with Faldo
No. 1 on the earnings list, and Frost, but he moved tn front
bogeyed his first hole Saturday to again with a 10-fool birdie putt on
drop back Into a tie for the lead ·· No. 16.
with Faldo and Stewart.
·On the final hole he drove Into a
He got that back with a 2(). foot pot bunker to the right, the first
birdie putt on the fifth hole and time ht: did this all week, got out
for the second straight day he put with a sand wedge, then chunked
· together a string of three succes· ·a 4-lron to 13 feet, from where he
slve birdies. Starting on· the saved bogey with a 13-foot putt.
~

.,

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Automatic, air, cruise. tilt, power windows, power locks. power suts.
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•

1986 PLYMOUTH COLT .............................. SS79S

1987 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO SS AERO COUPE

· Bu&lt;kot -"· power locks. power l!'lndows, T. gila. P. ~..,k Ofllnlr, floormats, 5.0 Iller Y-lliwJi out·
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1984 RENAULT ENCORE ............................ S3595

4 spttd, air, AM/FM radio, 39,554 miles. Real good car.·

1986 FORD TEMPO ................................... S699S

Air, auto., cruise, tilt, AM/FM stereo. power steerina. power brakes,
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·

1985 BRONCO ll ..............................:..... s10tSOO

lOUIS:
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1984 DODGE ARIES 4 DR......................... S2700

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Air, auto1111tic, AI/FM stereo, powtr stHrinaand brakes, new tires, 1
lot of miles, but special this wtek.
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Mon. thru Fri. 8 to 8
Saturday 8 to 6
Sunday 9 to 5

MEIGS AUTO SALES INC.

605 GIN. N~ PIWY.

.n

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SILVER BRIDGE PLAI.A
PH. 446-9335
DAVE MICHAEL - MANAGER

MIDDLEPORT'

·'

. I'
\

,,

�.

'-

...-

.

..

Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point

•

•

•

•
•
•
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-::

•

FIRST TENNIS CAMP - The Gallipolis Parks and Recreation
Department ran their first tennis camp from Monday, July 13,
through Friday, July 17. "If the interest is there, we'll do it again.''
said department director Mike Simmons. Members of the first

•

tennis camp were, in the front (left to right) Adam Bctz, Michael
Willis, Molly, Jenny and Katie Gills David Morgan and Keith
Koby . In the back row, from left to right, Mike Eachus, Scott Blhl,
Michelle Williams, Jennifer Zarnoch, Susan Tope, Brant Pauley
and Tony Blhi. (Times-Sentinel)

•

~:Azinger
'

.,

birdies. Stewart, who missed the
cu t In the U.S. Open, feels he lost
his incentive becauseoflucrative
sponsor deals and is again
working hard on his game.
Faldo, who played most of his
round In heavy rain, s hot 69 and
Taylor 68. Taylor earned his
berth In the championship only
by getting an eagle on the final
hole of qualifying, which enabled
him to move into a pla yoff.
Tom Watson, seeking a record·
equalling sixth Open crown, shot
a confident 69 when the rain and
wind were at Its worst to stand at
138, two shots o(f the pace,
Joining Watson at 4-under par
were Craig Stadler and Bernhard
Langer, both also with 69s, and
South African David Frost, with
·
a 68.
The morning players were
greeted by rain, .cold and wind,
while those going in the afternoon
had somewhat better conditlons.
Wa.tson, though, considered to be
the best bad weather player in
the business. said he enjoyed the
conditions and was pleased with
his game, except for the putting.
Bob Tway, with a bogey on the
final hOle when he drove Into the
right rough, managed only a 72 to
share 11th place at 139witl! feliow
Americans Mark Calcavecchia
(70) and Larry Mize (71). South
African Nick Price (71 ). Austral·
ian Graham Marsh (70 ) and
Briton Carl Mason (69).
Raymond Floyd, needing this

title to complete a Grand Slam ol
the four major championships,
shota68tostandatl40alongwith
British hope "Tan Woosnam (69 )
andSouthA!ricanMarkMcNulty
(69l.andamongthoseat141were

Johnson, England
advance in U.S.
Amatuer toomey

like to be in conte ntion , to see
what th a t pressure feels like, and
1 guess I ' ll find out tomorrow
rrtorning.
·
"l'm welcomi ng that feeling .
You'd better wP!come it or you·

Fohel ·is leader at .Hardee's classic

•

•

4 \WHEEL DRI~E MUD 808

REPRESENTATIVES - Nlkl Meier, Elise
.Meier and Tracy Michael (left to rlsht) Meigs
County 4-H club members, will represent Meigs
County at I he Ohio State Fair this year as a result
of the county 4-K slate lair qualifying show held
Thursday evening at the Rock Springs Fair·
gro~nds. Nikki and Elise are dau~~:hlers of Robert

GENERAL ADMISSION-'3.00 lids Und.r .12 FlEE
· OPEN CLASS - ss.oo Entry FH
PRIZES WIU IE AWARDED IY AMOUNT Of ENTRY FEE
GATES OPEN AT 12:00 NOON-ENTRIES 12 TO 2

(UPI) - Helsman Trophy
runnerup Paul Palmer, the Kan-

Located In RAIN !JOIN PARK. 1 y, Mila E81t of 8ASHAN ·
Store off Co. Rd. 28 on Rainbow RtdgEt .
·
WATCH FOR SIGNS.

r~b~e~tt~et~·g~o~ho~m~e-~";;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=;~

Kyger Creek tournament championship is tonight
CHESfRE- The Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament con·
. t lnued Friday as the Mason
County Bar Associal'ion beat the
New Haven Reds 6·4 . Jim
Barnette picked up the win,

back.
The · consolation game will be
played Sunday at 5p.m., followed
.by the championship game at
6:30p.m .
·

24·5-9111

CAROLINA LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY COMPANY

Will Be Closed
Monday

•Sliding fee scQie~ Jlo one refused services because
of inability to pay.

•TIRES MOUNTED FREE
•COMPUTER BALP.NCING
FREE

Due To The Death OJ Our
President~ Mr. Leon Thompson

3-USED

5-USED

GAS
RANGES

ELECTRIC
RANGES

5-USED

1-19 IN. ZENITH

CONSOLE
TV's

PORTABLE
TV

2-USED 2 PC.

2-EXtRA NICE USED

LIVING ROOM
SUITES

. LOVE
SEATS

'

GALUPOUS

Mligs Medical Building

414 Second Avo.. 2nd floor
.
.
446-0166 Mon.-Sat.
CLOSED THUISDAY

(across from Veterans Hasp.)
· 992-5912 Monday-friday

Also: Jackson. ChE!aapeeke, Athens, Chillicothe. Logan

WlNNER - Jim Carpenter, assistant superintendent of the
Meigs Local School 'District, sits In a golf cart which he won In
conjunction with the recent Melp County Heart AMoclatlon Golf
Tourney held at the ,Jaymar Golf Course. Jim Frecker of Delta
Metals and the J . .r. R. Sport Shop donated the cart.

CAROLINA LUMBER
AND SUPPLY COMPANY

•

676-1160

87 DODGE

3/4

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SALE IN EFFECT
NOW lHRU JULY 31, 1987

312 6th Stmt, Point Pleasant, W. Va.
SIG&lt;e Hours : Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. 10 B p.m.; s.turdoy, 8 a .m . to 12 noon. CtoM&lt;I Sunday.

•
'
•

.,•
••

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TIRF !:tZI'

P155 / 80R · 13
P165 / 80R ·13
P175 / 80R ·13
P186 / 80R · 13
P185/76R · 14
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P216/75R -14
P205/75R · 15
P215 / 75R·16
P225175R-16
P235175R -15

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$28 .95
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Exclusive Ropd Ha1ard Warranty•
IIllA PIOliCnGN YOU WON'T GO FROM GOODYEAR,
GOODRICH, SEAlS, GENDAL, UNIIOY AL, MICHELIN,
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•at you have a tire failure due to any roed hinrd.- lncludlng.chuckholas,
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tire and charge you only for the actuel treadwear . Aak us for details. •Ra dlol A/ W oxcludod. Ropalrobto punctureo ••ctudod.

RADIATOR
PROTECTION·

FREE
OHer bplres Jvly 31,"1917

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· 14 CHEY. CAVAliER WAGON, air, auto ....................................... SHOO
86 PONTIAC 1000, likt now, auto~ air ..................................... '5995
86 PONTIAC SUNIIRD, 4 dr., auto., air ...................................... S6995
IHHEY. (HEYEn£, 2 dr., air, 4 sp. 20,000 mi ..................... '4695
IS FORD ESCORT, 3 dr., air, auto .. ihorp .................................. '5295
· 84 DODGE DAYTONA TURIO, air, cruise, loade4 with axtras ... S6995
84 lUlCK SICYHAWK f.TYPE, turbo ,air, cruise, 4 speed ............ '6295
83 FORD LTD, 4 dr., pwr. seats, )Windows, locks. ...................... '499S
82 OLDS OMEGA, 4 dr., extra sharp, 39,000 miles.................. '4295
82 CHEY. MONTE CARLO, T-top, V-1, auto. air ......................... S4995
• 82 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, lots of extras................................... '3695
14 DODGE 600,-auto., air, tilt, cruisa, 2 dr .............................. S5495
83 FORD ESCORT WAGON, air, auto., P.S., P.1.......................... '4395
16 CHEY. ((l£1RITY, 4 dr., air, cruise, steno..~ ....................;... '1495
86 FORD TAURUS L, 4 dr .. well equipped, 20,000 miles .......... '9995
13 FORD ESCORT, 4 dr., auto., air, p.s~ p.b.............................. '3295
IS AlUANCE l, 4 dr., oir, auto, much more ............................. $4650
IS FORD RANGER, 4 cyl., 5 spud, sharp ................................... '"995
IS CHEY. S-1 0 PICKUP; 4 cyl. 5. spttd, 23,000 miles ............. '5395
. IS CHEY. S-10 PICKUP, air, Q;to., stereo, 20,000 miles .......... S5995
DODGE 4X4 PICKUP, Prospector Pkg. extra sharp.............. 'l750 ·
•86 FORD F150 PICKUP XL Pkg., I ft. 1Md .................................. ll750

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ATLAS PINNACLE TIRES

though he allowed six hits, two of · ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
those being home runs by the I
Reds ' Shane Grimm, the losing
pitcher. Barnette redeemed him·
self by walking only one aqd
striking out nine. In the first
frame. U.te Bar scored four runs
on tour errors, courtesy of the ·
Reds, without benefit of a base
hit: The decision was the first loss
of the season for the Reds.
In other tournament actlon, the
Tuppers Plains Bears scored
blackjack in defeating the Galli·
polis White Sox 21-10. Though he
gave up 10 hits, RandY Kaylor
struck out six to take the win,
besting Dennis Mitchell. The
Bears .ripped' Into the White Sox
early on, scoring four runs In
each of the first two Innings. The .
Bears put the game away with a
seven· run fifth and never looked

sas City's first-round draft cho·
Ice, signed four one-year con·
tracts with
Chiefs.

..-...-y

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· Your privacy is respected
Your questions answered

M,ILLHONE'S

(UPii - Gary Joe Gallup,
ass istant at hletic director at
Southern Methodist, ha s been
named at hletic director at South·
e~n Utah State. Gallup's appoint ment was approved 'by the SUSC
Institutional Council, effective
Aug. 1. H.e succeeds Steve Lunt.
who has been athletic director
and chairman of the SUSC
Physical Education Department
for the past 10 years.

HOT SIZZLIN'
SUMMER BUYS

•s.rvlcu include:

ATLAS SEASONAIRE ® TIRES

Veteran nose tackle Tony E i·
liot signed a two-year contract

equaled the Jti·hole tournament In 1977.
record set by Scott Hocl) In 1980.
"To make a long story short, I
His 36-hole. total is the lowest this just made all the putts today and
year on the Tour.
missed them all yesterday,'' said
"You might say that I find this Smith, who opened with a 71 .
course to my liking," said Fabel, · "Actually. I thought I hit the ball
whose best Tour finish was a better yesterday ."
third-place tie here In 1985. "I
Smith, who was tied at 132 with
just see the putts better on this Mike Sullivan, Charles Balling, .
course. .I played good all day, but Jim Gallagher Jr. and Fred
It leaves a bad taste In your Wadsworth, said his concentra·
mouth to bogey the last hole."
·!Ibn was broken when he-reached
Smith tied the-low score on the S-under after 12 holes and started
1987 Tour logged by Danny thinking about the possibility of
Edwards in the Bob Hope Clas- equaling Gelberger's record.
sic, broke the tournament mark
"I was pumped up, for sure I
of 62 held by Jon Chaffee In 1983 was pumped up, and I lost my
and Ron Streck in 1985 and was train Of thought tor ll few holes,"
two strokes Qff the all- time PGA said Smith, 36. "I'm tickled to
record of 59 set by AI Gelberger death with 61, though."

Pahner signs contract

Sports digest
By United Press International
Baseball: Bakersfield catch er
John Minch, playing despite a
pulled leg muscle. collected
three singles and knocked in two
· runs to lead the Northern Div.
ision to a 6-4 victory over the
Southern Division in the Cal!lor·
nla League AII·Star GameThursjay night .
Basketball: New York Knlcks
forward Louis Orr underwent
back surgery to repair a her·
niated disc. Dr. Mark Snyder,
who performed the surgery in
Ci ncinnati, said the operation
was' succesful and Orr will be
able to repdrt to Knlcks' training
camp In the fall .... The Inter national Basketball Association.
for players 6-foot-4 and under,
will hold a series of tryout camps
in New York, Chicago, Los
Angeles and Toronto over the
next three weekends. Players
selected will play in China. South
Korea• and the .Philippines In
September . ·
· Football: The Cowboys came

• By ROD BOSHART
COAL VALLEY. Ill. (UPI ) Brad ·. Fabel moved Into the
. second-round lead at the $500,000
Hardee's Golf Classic Friday and
• then explained how little It
meant .
Fabel, 31, !ired a 5-under 65 io
stand at ll·under 129 at the
halfway mark of the four-day
tourney ~t the Oakwood Country
Club. Mark McCumber, Tom
Purtzer and Ray Barr Jr. are all
two shots back.
First· round leader Dave Rum·
melts dropped five strokes off the
pace at 134 after opening wllh a
63.
Fabel, winless on the PGA
Tour, fired an eagle on the par· 5
16th and tour birdies during
Friday's round.
"That means . absolutely no·
thing," Fabel said of his lead.
"Anything can happen. Sixty-·
one was shot today,,these kinds of
scores can be shot out here. I'd
like to get as far ahead as I can.
· "I just try to make every putt
and hit every ball the best I ca~
on every hole and let the chips
fall where they do."
Mike Smith shot a 61 to set a
tournament mark. Kenny Knox
and Marilyn Meier of Bradbury. Road, Middle- had a hole-in-one on the par·3,
port, and are members of the Meigs 4-H Pleasure 190-yard 17th hole. However,
Riders. Tracy 18 the daughter of Mrs. Ruth Knox finished at even-par 140 and
Priddy, Beech Grove Road, Rutlud, and Is a missed the cut by one stroke .
member of the Blue Ribbon Riders. The three
Fabel, who missed a Hoot putt
girls will compete at the Ohio Stale Fair on Aug. 6, on No. 18 to end his round with his
7 and 8.
first bogey of the tourney,
.. -. . -

setts Amateur title. won the llrst
CINCINNATI (UPil - Kevin
two holes against Bridges and
Johnson of Pembroke, Mass ..
held a four-hol e lead after nine.
and Jimmy England of Gastonia,' He extended his lead to five holes
N.C .. each won quarter· and
alter 12 holes before losing toe
semi-final matches Friday .to
14th
and 15th holes.
..
advance to .the finals cif the 62nd
England, who works In his
U.S. Amateur Public Links Golf
father's tire store In his home·
·Championship.
town. buUt a three-hole lead after
Johnson upset co-medalist ·
eight and never trailed In his
Eric Woods, · Newport Beach,
match against Smith.
Calif., 3 and 2 In the quarter·
Bridges, 18, who plans to enter
finals , while England eliminated
Kent State this fall, eliminatE-d
Mi c ha e l Smith. -Beaumont,
defending champion Bill May·
Texas, In 19 holes.
falr, Phoenix. Ariz ... 1 up 'in the
In the semi-finals. Johnson, 20,
quarter
-finals and Wilson
a junior at Clemson University,
downed
Scott
Munroe. lndlan,a·
scored a 3 and 2 victory over
polls. Ind .. 2 and 1.
Brian Bridges of Whitehall, Ohio,
The 36-hole final .match beand England beat Rodney W!l·
tween
Johnson and ·£'!1g lan&lt;f ·is
son, Petaluma,. Calif: 2 and 1.
set to begin at 7: 30 a.m . . Ep1'
Joimson , whO missed practice
Saturday
on the ~. 777-yard, par·
rounds for this tournament while
.
1
2
Glenview
golf course.
•
he was·capturing fhe MassachU·

(70),Trevino
Ben Crenshaw
(68) aZoeller
nd Hal •
Lee
(74), Fuzzy
Sutton (70).
Defending champion Greg
Norman shot his second successive 71 to stand s ix shots off the
lead at 142, Jack Nicklaus came
through with a 71 that enabled
him to survive the cut at 145 and
Seve Ballesteros had 70 for 143.
The cut of tow 70 and ties was
made at 4-over 146. and among
those to miss was 57· yea r'old
Ar nold Palmer, who took a 10 on
the 14th hole to finish 78-153.
•
Also missing the cut were
Americans Davis Love 1149).
Corey Pavin (150) and Jim
Thorpe (]47\ .
Azinger. winner of three tou rnaments In the United States this
year. - tl)e first three of his
career- said he wants to feel the
pressure of being In contention
for a l)lajor title. His-· best
~Gu~rant~;~ed performance with 'a xclulive i ·vearfreere·
performance in a m ajor wa s 17th
placement - no mileage or trud limit•
in this year's Masters, but he
· •50,000 mile assured treadwar
missed the cut in the U.S. Open
• S.tEtel belted radial ·c onstruction
last month when he feels he
•All -weather treed design
s uccumbed to the pressure.
•Exclusive Road Hazard Warranty
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probably more so than norma l,"
P156 / 80R -13
the 27-year-old Floridian said. " I
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P185 / 80R·13
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P185/75R ·14
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P195175R ·14
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to contract terms with two draft
wit h the New Orleans Saints, but
P235175R · 15
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choices, including guard Jeff · 16 other veterans remain
P185170R· 13
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Zimmerman of Florida. Zimmer-. unsi gned
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'63 .95
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ninth-round pick Alvin Blount, a
Former Eagles All -Pro defenP225170R
·
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'78.95
'64 .95
running back from Maryland. s ive bark Herman Edwards and
agreed to terms on a series of form er Montana State assistant
one-year contracts ....
coach Jim House were nam ed to
The 49ers came to terms with
the coaching staff at San Jose
two veterans, tight end J~hn State. Edwards, who was an
Frank and running back Derrick assistant coach at Monterey
•Economy steel belted
Harmon. The club also report· (Calif.) Peninsula College, was
•Aggressive
traction
rib
tire saves fuel, delivers
edly was close to terms with two named defensive ba ckfie ld
design
provides
great
a
smooth. quiet ride
veterans, noseguard Manu Tuia · coach, replacing Larry Petri!!.
all
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weather
perform·
•Exclusive.
Road Ha.z ard
sosopo and center Fred Quilla~. who resigned in May. House
a
nee
Warranty
and seeond-round draft pick Jeff takes over as Inside linebacker
Brege!, a guard from Southern coach for Sam Grunelsen, who
METRIC STYLIZED BLACKWALL
Cal.
joined the starr of the NFL 's
Raiders.
155SR-13
833.!J5
The Patriots' 12th-round draft
165SR-13
835.95
pick, running back Elgin Davis,
165SR-15
&amp;39.95
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185170SR-13
841 .96
The former University of Central
1B5/70SR-14
841.96
Florida standout Is expected to Gallup named SMU
195170SR-14
843.95
sign his contract w hen he arrives athletic director
In training camp.

The

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

=

SUNDAY, JULY 19th, 2:00 P.M.

moves into British Open driver's seat

By .MARTIN LADER
,
UPI Sports Writer
•
MUIRFIELD, Scotland
• , Hours after making an expensive
: promise to himself, Paul Azlnger
• moved into the driver 's seat by
•• taking a one- shot lead Friday at
'· the mil;lway point of the British
&gt;; open ...
.: The lanky American, playing
: • in his first British championship,
• ' shot his seco nd successive 3~. under- par 68 for a total of 136.
;. providing him with a shaky
~: one; shot lead over four players.
1• Another four men were at 138and
'·~3 were within seven shots of the
'""· 1ea d .
,.
:• Azlnger, the leading money
•:winner on the U.S. Tour this vear
: with $586,962, promised himself
~Friday morning he would buy a
·:Jaguar if he wins this tourna·
,-ment. He helped himself,consid·
;;,rably with a string of three
:Successive birdies midway
: through his round.
•• · Australian Rodger Davis, the
;opening day leader by three shots
-after a 64. fell back to 73 to drop
•, jnto a tie at 5-under 137 with
j\merican Payne Stewart, Briton
\"tolick Faldo and Australian quail·
tier Gerry Taylor. Davis lost his
· chance to share the lead when he
.&lt;missed a '15· foot putt on the final
'hole for a bogey .
Stewart. who like Davis wears
knickers, turned in the best
rou nd of the day with a 5- under
66. including four · consecutive

July 19, 1987

19, 1987

W.Va.

•
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Mill Finish

RACINE
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'July 19, 1987

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

'

Nofziger says he ·will be .vindicated of criminal charges
•

.
felon ."
illegal lobbyiQg for the scandai- Nofziger and his partner. Mark
By LORI SANTOS
Nofzige r ' s r esponse came torn Wedtech Corp. after leaving Bragg, broke conflict-of-interest
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Ex-promptly
Friday as independent the government.
·
provisions of the 1978 Ethics In
White House political director
·prosecutor
James
McK~y
an"I
am
Innocent
of
any
dellberGovernment Act that ban former
Lyn Nofziger, the second key
nounced the six-count felony ate violation of the law, and If the .high- ranking government offiaide o! Preslden t Reagan to fall
indictment
accusing the White independent counsel wants my cials from lobbying their old
to criminal charges in four
House
political
point man of · scalp. he will ha,·e to get it the agenices for a year after leaving
months , vows he will be vindiold-fas hioned way." the tough- office.
·
cated .and says he Is "not a
. talking.lo9g-timeaidetoReagan
Bin ' Nofziger, 63. declared; "I
said in a statemen,t.
am not a felon."
In addit.lon to four counts
At a news conference, fils
involving Wedtech : Nofziger also attorney , Paul Per ito, · said Nofand Sam Colabianchi. 29. who faces two charges of illegally ziger never intended .to violate
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (UPI) Two Cuyahoga County men who were discovered missing Friday h 'ying to use his influence to the statute. ''An lnadvertant
escaPed from the Southern Ohio morning during a routine head benefit another defense contrac- violation Is not a violation," he
claimed.
Correctional Facility at Lucas- count . They are both from tor and a union.
The indictment charged that
Perito also said the defense
vOle early Friday used 15-lnch Cuyahoga County · and consihandmade bolt cutters to cut dered dangerous.
"We've got an alert out in a
through a doubl~ securlty fence.
spokesman for the state correc- tour or five .state area," Scioto
Cou nty Sheriff's dispatcher Rotions department said.
bert Bailey said Saturday. "We
Authorities continued to are aware they could be outside
search Saturday for the prison- the area."
Prosser said the fence is
ers, the first pair of inmates to
supposed
to activate an a larm if
!$Cape from the maximum seit
is
shaken
or moved in any way . .
curity prison at the s ame time
since 1975. On Friday. the search He said he did not know why the
Involved more than 100 law a larm wasn'nriggered.
Colabianch i is serving 22 years
enforcement officers, trained
dogs. a helicopter and employees to life.for murder, breaking and
e ntering , grand theft and felon of the prison.
The Staie Highway Patrol set ious assault. Flores is serv ing 14
up checkpoints on major roads in to 50 years for attempted murder
the search for Angel Flores, 27, and felonious assault .

Lucasville _inmates escape

tn connection with the parucular
matter of the proposed Army
engine contract."
If convicted on ali charges,
Nofziger races up to 12 years in
prison and $60,000 In fines.
Bragg, named In one count, laces
a maximum penalty of two years
·in prison and a $10,000 fine.
•
Nofziger, who was White
House political director until
January 1982, Is the first top
administration official charged
with conflict-of-Interest violations under the ethics law and the
second of Reagan's inner circle
to be Indicted.
·

team intends to challenge the
constitutionality of the independent counsel law, as another key
Reagan aide, Michael Deaver.
and Lt. Col. Oliver North have
done. so far unsu.ccessfully .
,A s~keswoman In McKay's
office, which Is also Investigating
-Attorney General Edwin Meese's
contacts with Wedtech, said the
grand jury Investigation
continues. ·
The indictment di sc losed that
Nofziger on April 8, 1982, :with
the intent to influence, made a
written communication on behalf
of Wed tech to Edwin Meese III ...

a

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your

~y

FRANK T. CSONGOS
WASHINGTON rUPli- PresIdent Nixon wanted mass firings
at the Central Intelligence
Agencyfo put in his own people,
calling the spy agency "muscl ebound" and "completely paralyzed," newly released presidential papers show.
In his first term. Nixon said he
wanted an immediate study of
how many people in the CIA
could be fired by presiden tial
action, the papers releasect Friday show.
"Of course the reduct ion in
force should be accomplished
solely on the ground of its being
necessary for budget reasons ,
but you will both know the real
reason," Nixon wrote.
In a May 18, 1972, note to White
House aide H.R. Haldeman ,
Nixon wrotE;' the CIA "particularly needs a house- cleaning."
"The problem in the CIA Is
muscle-bound bureauc racy
which has completely paralyzed
Its brain," the former pres !dent
wrote.
At the height of the Watergat e
scandal, Nixon suggested the
Internal Revenue Service audit
. ali members of Congress and was
ready with a cover story if
questions were raised.
Nixon discussed the tax audit
scheme in a March 12, 1973,
"eyes only" memora ndum to
Haldeman - part of 353.000

1987 RANGER SUPER CAB 4X4

pages of White House papers
released by the Nat ionai
Arch ives.
"What happened to the suggestion that the IRS s hould run
a udits on all members of the
Congress?" Nixon wrote.
"What I have in mind is that
the IRS r un audits of a ll top
members of the White House
staff. all members of the Cabinet
a nd all members of Congress,"
Nixon wrote. "It could be sa id, if
a ny questions are raised, that
this is what we are doing because
of letters we hav.e received
indicating that people in government do not get IRS checks
because of their special
position. "
The papers also show that
Nixbri 's famous "enemies list "
eventually included not only
politicians and reporters. it also
singled out ent~rtalners. including Gregory Peck and Bill Cosby.
In a Nov. 30, 1970, memo .to
White House aide Charles Colson , Hald ema n suggested , .
"Please prepare, after consult- •
ing with our political analysts, a
list of those who are and will
continue to be our major opponPnts between now and 1972."
Cosby, whose current television show Is the most popular
program on the air, apparently
made the list because he had
refused an invitatio n to the White
House.

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V-6 ENGINE
SPEED CONfROL
Till WHHL
POWER WINDOWS
TACHOM£TER
. 5 SPHD TRANS.
CLEARCOU PAINT
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KC HIUTES

BESTOP TONNEAU
COVERS
IJIGFOOD DECAL
MONROE GAS SHOCKS
UL TR AlUM. WHEELS
B.f. GOODRICH

TRAILMAKER II TIRES

s 1 U8~:88

FORD MOTOR REB.ATE
SAVINGS OF

3,502.00

Ia• &amp; lith Nat lnduclt4

1987 RANGER 414

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Is Pleased To Welcome

Breton L. Morgan, M.D.

ON
ALL 1987 BRONCO. II &amp; RANGER 4X4's
LATE MODEL PREVIOUSLY OWNED CARS &amp; TRUCKS .
.
FIXED ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE AVAILABLE 36 MTHS.

9.90°/o

1984 Ch~ysler New Yorker
4 Dr. Sed., Leather Int.
!!LOADED!!
Lotal Owner

6 cyl., topper, 16,500 miles.
Local Owner

1985 F-250 4X4
nr.' Horl!nn -~·trmd.~

witlr hi.. (11'0 off;('(' m.~ i.o: tfltH .... Frnrrrt•.o: l'otlfl!! (1, .,11
IJJif' l .w111 Hill,.,., (ril!hrJ-1'" tltr•ir IH' II' o((it''' • ·" " if•• 1 f ;' of ''''' PI H
\ff•dimf O((ir•t• Ruildill!!.

nr. Wnrgan wadtWII'd r.uml-ut,td(' from . Wnr.&lt; hu/1
llnil&gt;er.•itv with II B.S in Znnlngv and ri'Cii'Pd hi.• w.n.
Virjlinia U nit'l'r.litv. fie compll'ted
def(rl'e from
hi.• pn.•r trrud11.are traininf{ in lnternul Wedicint&gt; nt
Char/p.• tnn .'4 rm l-1Pdicnl CPniPr.
nr. Hnr~~:an ;,, a mPmber n.f the 1merican Wedical
4!1.'10ciarinn. Wa .&lt;nnic tndf{e #/9 n.f Point Plea.1ant, rhe
Srntti.1h RitP and Shrine Club of Charle.•ton.
nr. Wnr~n ~~ n((ice ;,, Inca ted in.Sr~ite 117 nf the PVH
'\.1edical Office Buildinf( tvith office hours '\.1nndav Pridav from 8:.10 a.m. to 5:00p.m. 4ppnintmenl.l mnv
he made bv collin!{ 675-6492.

fr/.,,,,

Dd
!l~!«
.
Plea~~-~~!5~~~~!~4~
YJ.
"We treat vou like family."

•

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1985 f-150 Pickup ,

3S1 Eng., 4 sp. trans., bed liner.
Local Owner.

1984 Chev. Celebrity 4 Dr.
V-6, air, auto. trans., tilt wheel,
cruise control.

1984 Escort Wagon
Auto. trans., air cond., .P.S., cassette,
38,000 miles.
Lotal Owners.

1986 Mercury Cougar

1985 Ford Tempo 4 Dr. GL

Air, AM/FM, S speed, tilt, rear defrost,
road wheels, factory soli car.

Air, auto. trans., AM/FM, rear defrost,
low mileage. Local Owner.

1984 Grand Marquis
4 DR. LS
Local Owner

1985 Mustang Convertible
Auto. trans., cassette, power locks,
P.S., P.B., Sharp!

ON THE SPOT FINANCING
.

PAT HILL ·FORD I
461 ·s. 3RD
'

992-2196
,,

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MIDDLEPORT

campus. one-sixth larger than
the Davis Technical Career
Ce nt er.
Eighty perce nt of the cost of
the project will be financed by
the state, with Rio Grande
College and Communit y Co ll ege
funding the remaining 20
percent.
Bids for the construction project were received on April 4.
Contracts were Issued by the
state in early July.
Vesta Cons tructio n Co., of
Bellefontaine. will serv~ as genera l contractor. Gra ndview
Plumbi ng &amp; Heating Co., Wav er ly, received the plumbing
contrac t. while Slark E lec .. Inc ,,

"There are no incentives for
horne builders to construct multifamily projects unless shortages
prompt them to do so," Patenberg said. Sales of exls ting
multifamily units, llowever, are
doing well.
Sales ofmostexlstfngcommercial structures are brisk, in fact ,
throughout much or the United
States.
"There Isn't that much property for sale," said Gidei, "be- '
cause there Is so much money out .
there looking for real estate.'' ·
That is helping prop up prices,
Pafenberg said. Prices should
remain stropg because of the
s hort supply of quality, leased
properties and bec;;ause of the
cotnpetillon to invest in them, he
·
said.
Even In Texas, Oklahoma and

the optimum buyers' marketin · '
Colorado- states affected by the
oil Industry slump - price Texas still Is about six months
away
· .~
declines appear to have botthis a good time to buy Z
tomed out, or will do so shortly.
commercial real estate? Yes,"
There appears to be increasing
said Pafehberg,
interest by investors in buying
"But you have to pick your
existing· structures In Dallas,
properties
carefully." he added. · '
Houston and Denver. Such propsayipg
too
many people have
erties may not make much
entered
the
market
without ademoney now. and could actually
quately
und
ers
tand
ing its ·,
lose money in the sljortterm, but
complexities.
,.
could be highly profitable in
The
best
starting
point,
he
sa
id,
future years.
is to examine the market area
Til)ling is everything, said
first.
Make sure there Is not an
GideL
oversupply
of the real estate In
"The key is to know when the
question - office space, ·indusmarket has hit bottom." he said.
"Investors · have gone into trial properties , multifamily unHouston and made some pretty · its and other properties.
The next step: make su~.t.OO­
big acquisitiOns, and there will be
Iocal
economy Is strong enough •
trem e ndou s opportunities
or
is
going to be strong enough · •
there.'.'
to
justify
the investment. ·
Gldei, however. said he feels

"ls'

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•••

Huntington, W.Va. , serves as
elec!rlcal contractor.
Ca pital Fire Protection Co.;
Columbus. will fulfill ihe .fire
protect ion contract, and Mechanical Construction Co., Portsmouth. received the contract for
heating. ventilation and air
conditioning.
Total construction tim e for the
project Is set at approximately 16
months.
.
The )ocation o f the new build·
ing, near Lyne Center, was
selected and the land purchased
on Nov. 22, 1985. The2.3acreslte
Is bordered on the east by LYne
Ce nter and on the north by R~dge
Avenue . .

8)' TOM TOWSLEE
; SALE M. Or&lt;:': (UP'll- Oregon
- where 1lriiber and agrlcvlture
rel~n - Is ro llin~ out 1he red
c ar P&lt;.' ! for co rpora tr America In
the . hope of becoming "the
.E)&lt;&gt;Iawa r&lt;' or !he W!'st. "
ln th . pas t s lx.months the s tate
has na t!'d la ws to p rotect

Oi"cgon lndusirles. the state's
New York Stock Exchange, 40
lar.gest business lobby .
,.
percent are incorporated In Dela'!'he dnvlng force behind the
ware. f·ncluded in that list are
elf&lt;:&gt;rl to putout thewelcomerhat
severa l of Oregon's larges t busifor business orglnated with Gov.
nesses - ' Fred Meyer, Inc.,
Nell Go ldschmidt , a pro- busi- Louis iana -Pacific Corp . .' '!nd ,
ness Democrat who took office in
Pope and Talbot, Inc.
Ja n4 ary alter fi ve years as a
Under the revisions of 149
corporate of!lcer with Nlke. Inc ., sections of Oregon corporate
bu:-.i n e~~ fr om caq)()rat e raiders ,
thP athletic apparel compan.v ..
law, a U.S. -based business can
s implified t h&lt;' laws or incorpora "The real question Is how
incorporate In Oregon for $40 and
tion a nd \lmltrd thr liability. or hospita ble do we want to be to a foreign company for $440.
cor pora te offi cers.
business." Goldschmidt sa id,
The changes also:
" It I'C'all )' mak es Oregon the calli ng the new Incorporation
- Est~ blish procedu res a
Delaware of lht' WPs t ," said .Jim
laws " a · marketing tool for s hareholder mus t' follow to gain
6Nnau. dii'&lt;'C IOr of lh(' Oregon Oregon th a t he lps e liminate a ny
access to company records .
chapl er of the National f'edera · a nti-business reputation ."
-Repeal the requirement that
lion ot lntlcj)Pndc nt Bus iness .
Oregon ear ned s uch a reputa- shareholders approve share dp• ' It 's no1 jus t b l u~ smoke and
tion because of Its high Income
tions for corpqrate officers and
m irrors."
and proi)erty taxes , the toughest employees.
: The cumulu tlvc e ffect of 'the
land -use laws in the nation and a
-Allow corporations to mort- ·
~an ges In s ta le Iuw Is cxpceled
message born In th e 1960s that
gage property without sharero mak e Orego ~ a· ha ven for said "visit, but don't stay."
holder approval.
Corpora tions si'Ckln g s uc h pi"OThe state has attempted to rid
While the new la&gt;¥.S do not
!tct lon. and give Oregon a
itself of that reputation by.
exactly mirror Delaware's, they
eomp tltlvc edge over other among other things, reducing the
offer the added advantage of
wes te rn ta tcs in PI'O\'Iding a
taxes paid by foreign corpora- limited protection from corpoQome for corporat.lons with an
tions that do business in Oregon
rate raiders. the sponsors said.
eyi- on buslne§s OP.POrtunitiPs in and actively wooing Japanese
Oregon now requires a " coolJ a pan , China and o ther P a cific elee tronlc firms .
! ng off" period between the time
{tim countrl s.
Oregon also has lowered
a bid is made to take over an
• " What s ta rt ecl out as a law workers' compensation insu- Oregon-based company and
(e form bill turned out to be an
rance rates for business, reduced
when shareholders have to make
con6mic developme nt bill." At - corporate taxes, started work on
a decision on whether to sell their
torn cv General Da,·e Frohn - a new convention center In ·stock.
tna vL;r said . "Now Orego n ca n 'Portland and witnessed the start
Hill. who was the measure's
~!aim a busin ess climate that
of direct air service between
c hief sponsor. said it is an
R)ay wrll Ins pire businesses to
Portland and Tokyo.
attempt to eliminate the need to
fpca tc here rather than just fil e
.:Oregon is trying to say that it
make quick decis ions . under
i~ corporalion papers ."
has a good business climate and . pressure from hostile takeovers.
• " In th e las t s ix months Oregon that it Is easy to do business
"It is an attempt to offer
~as gonr from being a nice place
here." said state Sen. Jim Hill, · Oregon companies that provide
f:J !jvc to creal lng a business D-Salem. who shepherded the Oregonians with jobs protection
~llmaiC that encourages cxpanincoporation bills through the
from the T. Boone Pickenses of
~lon . .. and we s till have the same
state legis lature.
the world ," Hill said.
., ~ alit y of life, " said Richard
Of the companies listed on the
t&gt;U\ric k, director of Associated

•••
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the project; Miles Epling, President ol the Rio
Grande College Board of Trustees; State
Representative Jolynn Boster; \\'illiam McDonald, President of the Rio Grande Communily
Coilege Board of Trustees; and.. Randall L.
Kirschner, of URS Dalton, architecls.

GROUNDBREAKING College officials.
contractors and dignitaries broke ground for a $4
million classroom/ laboratory building on Thursday, July 16. Pictured during the groundbreaklng
ceremony are (left to right): Richard Nease, of
Vesta Construction Co., general contractors for

••

SEC 'sues ···
over phony
takeover

Money Ideas ·

An update on local stocks

By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS- An updat e' on
stocks of local interest:
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Goodyear
Securities and Exc hange Co m - Tire &amp; Rubber,
mission filed suit Thu rsday cur rent price against the man who made a $68 \!l, annual
phony takeover bid for the high - 70 )-1 . a nDayton Hudson Corp. last mpnth. nual low - 42.
The suit claims David Herr lin- Record profits
ger · of. Cincinnati profited by · are expected for
trad ing options of the Minnesota this year. The
reason
firm before and after the bid, stringen t cos t cutting r eduction s
which the suit also claims wa s impl emented, which s hould dave
fraudulent.
the company $270 million at the
Herrli nger's June 23 bid of $6.8 end of .the year.
billion caused the price of Dayton
The profit trend s hould remain
Hudson stock to dramatically healthy to 1990-1992. That' s beincrease. But hours after making cause the repoacement tire dethe offer, Herrlinger, formerl y mand is likely to strengt he n
an employee of Capital Manage- considerably in coming year s , as
ment Inc. , was admitted to a long-wearing rad ials are reCincinnati hospital for psychiat- placed and import penetratio n
ric evaluation· and the bid was moderat&lt;:&gt;s.
·
found to be a ruse.
American Electric Power, curThe SEC suit, filed in U.S.
re
nt price- $26%. an nu a l highDistrict Court in CincinnatL also
31%,
annual low - 25. AEP's'
asks .that Herr linger be stopped
finances
s hould strengthe n in the
from making further fraudulent
bids, be restra·lned from destroy- years ahead. With the recent
ing documents about the Incident completion of a major trans m'isand that he surrender any sion network. the utility's only
significant construction projects
profits. ·
Following the bid , tfte suit underway are the Rockport 2
says, Herr linger told his brother, plant and the co nversion of
a stockbroker with E.F. ijutton Zimmer from a nuclear to a
in Albuquerque, N.M., to sell his coal-fired facility .
The threat of acid rai n leg is laDayton Husdon shares, which he
did at a gain of $17.500.

non may res tra in s hare price ·'
performance.
In ves tors looking for current ~
income may be attracted by
AEP's current .y ie ld of 8.33 "
percent.
.
Federal Mogul, current price
- $46)-1, annual high- 46, annual·low - 39\-1. The company•s·"':
automotive a.fter market division ~
is likely to have increased
earnings in the current 12-month '
cycle as the replacement parts •
industry slowly awakens from its :
three-year slumber.
w
The company recently opened •
•
a duty-free warehouse in Miami ~
to fa cilitate the dis tribution of 1
auto parts to Latin America.
.,
It is projected that almost 30 ~
percent of Federal Mogul's sales ••
through the erid ofthedecadewlll :
be gener~ted from overseas
•
sources.
•:
Upcoming offerings
&lt;
Tax-free bonds:. Meigs County \.
Convalesce nt Center, Grandview (
Heights Library Building, city ot, :
Akron notes .
•
Stocks: Control Resource In- :
dustries - $21-23/ share, Mac-.• :
Gregor Team Sports - $11- •
14/ share. Pickett Suite Hotel - :
$10 / share.
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(Mr. Evans is an investment · i\
broker ior The Ohio Company in :
its Gallipolis office)
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-Are 'junk bonds' good for the
r ln Long of Lipper Analytical
By DAVID VESEY
Services.
Ul'l Business \\'riter
For some companies, Drexe l
WASHINGTON tUPii - The
officials
say, these bonds are the
W&lt;~il Stre!'t brokerage house.
best
way
to raise money at fixed
lilrexel Bur nh am Lambert, pref·
t
rates
to finance longinteres
o~s to call them " high ' y ie ld"
lerm
growth
and they come
I?Bnds, but they are·better known
with
fewer
restrictions
than
u*dcr a different nam e. · .
funds
from
banks
or
other
~ 'Most people ca ll them "junk"
ljonds, and a debate Is under way lenders.
I11terest rates on junk bonds
w]lhin the financi al community
whelhcr lhese high- yield, generally run about 4.5 percent
l)lgh-risk bonds are good for the higher than the prime rate, and
they are sold primarily to insueconomy and for inves tors .
:•Drexel , under the guidance of rance companies, mutual fund•.
pension funds and savings and
~ichael Mllken, hs California·
tiased superstar, pioneered tlie · loans;
Drexel officials, Including
t)se of junk bonds as a means for
West
Coast E xecutlve VIce Pres I- ,
companies to raise capital and
dent
John Kissick, were in
iltvestor&gt;to make above- market
recently to meet
.
Washington
profits.
;Drexel has underwritten about with members of Congress.
"We're here to get as many
h~lf of the $140 billion In junk
facts
as possible .on the table,"
~?ends float~d In thepast!Oyears.
Kissick
said, "so that people here,
ltl1986, junk bonds were responunderstand
what junk bonds
Sible tor about half of Drexel's
are."
pretnx profits , according to Per·

on

SEE: RICK TOLLIVER, BILL HAAS or PAT HILL ·
.

investment funds would pull out
of the market, he said, but that
has not tia ppened.
Forrest Pafenberg, an analyst
with. the National Association of
Realtors, agreed. Many of the .
industry and investor reactions
to tax reform - which eliminated most Incentives to invest In
real estale - already have
occurred , he said.
Interest fates, which have
risen in 1987, now s how signs of
sta bilizing.
"What's really driving the
markets today are fundamental
economic conditions, basica lly
supply and demand."
Some parts of the commercial
real estate Industry -.:ill continue
·w suffer from changes in the tax .
code. with construction of multifamily units hard est hit.

Oregon attempts to become
the 'Delaware of the West'

t,ooo:oo

S14. I 18000
..

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

nr. Breton L Worf{an rpcemlv joined the Plea.m nt
ValiPY Hn.1piral WPrlical Staff. f-ll' will hl'n•.m min10hP
Gef~;eral HedicinP practicl' r~( nr. .fohn W. Grubb and
i.• currentlv accl'ptinf{ llP IV patient.&lt;.

. R IO CRA ND E - College off!.
ci a is. cont ra tors a nd dl!(nitarles
broke ground Thursday , ,J.u ly 16,
for a ne w $q million classroomtlabo raJory bu!idln!{ a t Rio
G ra nd ~ Col lege a nd Communit y
Co llege.
Thr build ing will con!aln 12
class roo ms. plus a lecture hall ,
40 fac ult ~ olfl ccs . a n audio-visual
cc&gt; nt er. a l ~ a r nlng ce nter and a
nu rs in~ laboi·atory .
·
In dPscrlbin!l' thP build ing, Dr .
He rman Koby, &amp;&gt;cretary!Trea s~rer ol Rio G rand e Co mmunit y
Co ll e~c. called the new fa cilit y,
"a building for the 1990s."
Wl!h IOta ! square footage of
37.rXJO sq. lt. . the new building
!Jill l&gt;r- th r larges t s tructure on

SUPU COOLING
WESTEIIN DUA.L
LITE BAR

~jJ fNf~ISCOUNT

1987 BRONCO II

-outlook~ is

Rio Grande breaks ground
~n new classroom building

BIG FOOT CRUISER

Nixon wanted to
clean house at CIA

July 19. 1987

.•

Commercial real estate
According to this scenario. real
By DAVID VESEY
WASHINGTON iUPl i -Less · es ta te .prices would plummet ,
properties were going to be
than one year ago, the future of
the multlbillioh-dollar &lt;'Ommer - dumpe(! and investors would
take a bloodbath.
cial real cstatC' ind u.r...t ry was
The crash didn't come.
viewed wi th di smay - mo~eso. it
"ll's a relief," sa'id Robert
appears, than was nece~sar y .
Gide
l, president of BaltimoreRecent surveys by rea l estat&lt;e
based
Alex. Brown Realty Advi analysts indi cate tha t commersors.
Inc.,
who added that the
c ial real estate, on . a national
more upbeat assessment of the
scale. is ad justing to the new
economics brought on by the Tax real estat e m ar ket is a recent
development.
~eform Act of 1986. Aft e r a s low
' " We've been holding our
!&gt;tart in 1987. It now appears that
breath for six months, but now
much of the industry can look
we' re seeing some . positive
r,orward to relative health.
• ' In late 1986, whe n tax reform developments. "
The most significant news.
was on it s way, some analysts
Gidel said. "Is that real estate
~;~a· edi c led rea l estate - which
priCes have not cras hed. and
h~d
prospered · &lt;:&gt;ncirmous ly
ha.
v e not declined dramatically
0\rough boom yPars ·of rapid
across
the board." lt was feared
growth and g-enerou s tax breaks
that money managers for large
- would go Into a depression .

.,;_
Section
~·

Business

•

"

-~

-

.

Kissick said the ongoing meetIngs ,with lawmakers have been
"excellent," but Drexel Is
clearly worried about potential
congressional efforts to curb the
junk bond market.
Why?
Congress is cencerned about
junk bonds for a number of ·
reasons:
-They have been used to
finance hostile corporate takeovers, and some legislators say the
takeover game Is b~d forthe U.S.
economy and harmful to workers
and communities.
- Thi!y create massive debt for
companies that fioat them instead of-&lt;Olr.eatlng equity through
stock ·offerings.
...:.they have been linked In the
mind~ of many to the Wall Street
insider trading scandal.
Drexel officials shake their
heads In dismay when the corrup·
lion scandal Is mentioned, or
when references are made to

'
--:--~---------~

Mllken' s bu s iness dea lings with
convicted inside trader Ivan
Boesky .
" Drexel has not been implicated i.n any way," said Steven
Anreder. senior vice president.
He also expressed unhappiness
with published l!'POrts - -based
·on ·anonymous'• sources - that
said Mllken had secret dealings
with Boesky.
While trying to fight these
rumors, Drexel Is trying to
emphasize the contributions junk
. bonds can make to the U.S.
economy.
There are 23,000 American
companies with. revenues of
more than $25 million, Kissick
said, but fewer than 800 ·are
considered Investment grade. or
rated as good . Investments by
sucb agencies as Standard &amp;
P.oor's or Moody's.
The 95 percent of'the companIes that are non-investment

ec~nomy?

•

•.
~

t
\.

•
•
•••4

faults," hf' said .
grade, he said, ca n rai se cap ital
through junk bonds - for plant
Long said smaller companies 1
construction, research and detha t have floated junk bond' are '
velopment and Internal growth.
not highly diversified and thereDrexel ha s underwritten bonds
fore would be es pecially vul nera- !
for more than 350 companies,
ble to a weaker economy.
:
focu sing on small to medium" When times get tough they •
sized ,firms that are well manare going to have a ha rd er time to :
aged and growth orient ed.
c.ome up with payments."
.,~
"We look ' at performance,
David Jones . of Aubrey G. ,
revenues and growth potential. "
Lanston &amp; Co. said interest rates •
said Kissick, "and many of the
are a clear danger to the junk '1
companies we've dealt with are
bond trade, and with good 1
healthier than irvestment-grade
reason . .
..
companies."
"If and when that money. •
The default rate of Drexel
crunch happens, junk bonds will ;
clients has been impress.ive ~
fall in value faster than low-risk ~
just 0.2 percent.
securities."
,
"
"That's true at the moment, " ·
Jones said his best advite: ~
said Lipper's Perrin Long, who
buyer beware.
d
sees ~orne dangers to the junk
"This is the moment when ·,
bond market.
objectivity is needed," he said. ~
'·'If interest ra,tes go up , ·sug"You hav e to be sure the ~
gesting a weakening of the
(investment) is safe and less q
economy, then you have a higher
vulnerable to high interest "i
possibility of additional de- rates."
. ."".

••

'
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+·-

---'----

�July 19, 1987

Farm

'
Page-0..2

COLUMBUS Ohto 1UP I 1 ThP most dtfftcult labor p10b
lems fo r farms and othe1 small
bus messes can be the ones at
home
Employing family members IS
the greates t labo1 challe nge

•

County Agents Corner

Dairy tour set for, July 22

MYSTERY FARM - This week • myster)
farm featured by the Me 1gs Soil and Water
Conservation Distnct 1s located &gt;Omewhere m
Meigs County lnd1v 1duals w1shmg to part1c1pate
in the weekly contest may do so by guessmg the
farms owner Just mall or drop oil your guess to
the the Da1ly Sentmel lll Court St Pomeroy
Oh10 45769 or the Galhpohs rr1bune X21 Third
Ave Gallipolis Ohio 45631 and you may win a$5

cash priZe from the Ohio Valley Publishing Co
Leave your name address and telephone number
w1th your card or letter No telephoae calls will be
a ccepted All contest entries should be turned In to
the newspaper office by 4 p m each Wednesday
In case of a tie the winner will be chosen by
lottery Ned week a Gallla County farm will be
featured by the Gallla Soli and Water Conserva
liOn DistriCt

Farm Flashes

Alfalfa hay production is
major local farm enterprise
By Edward M Vollborn
CEA Agriculture
GALLIPOLIS - Alfalfa hay
production has become a maJor
farm enterpnse In Galha Count y
Several of the leadmg producers
a re no" completmg th ird cut
tmgs Potato leafhopp er popula
t1ons are htg h in most I eids
Symptoms a re st untmg a nd
yellowing tops Dry weather m
ma ny cases IS blamed for stun t
ing when leafhopper damage IS
the real problem The deep
a lfalfa root system allows the
plant to g r ow m very dry
s1tu a twn s
Several local alfa lfa produ cers
are trymg a new ma nagemen t
concept Poast Herbtclde has
been labeled for use m a lfal!a
Poast her bicide Is a selec t! \€•
broad spectrum pos te m ergence
herbicide for control of an nual
and pere nm al grass weeds m
a lfalfa Application s may be
ma~e
to new stands or to
esta blished sta nds of a !fa fa A
nonphytotoxtc 011 concentrate
s hould always be added to the
spray ta nk Th1s managemertt
concept a ll ows the producer to
control such things as foxta il fa ll
panlcum crabgrass a nd JOhnson
grass In pure a lfalfa sta nd s Ca ll
1! you wo uld hke a sample labe l
A few local tobacco ftelds have
sun scald problems For var
Ious reasons one or two leaves

nea r tne growth point of a
tob acco pla nt ma y w11t during a
hot period Once leaves have
wtlted seve rely and portions o(
the wilted t tssues haY practically
co ll apsed those leaf portwns are
k1lled One ca use of wtlling and
s un sca ld 1s the st ing of a stink
bug These bugs attack the
tender s tal ks The leaves above
the feedmg area rnay w11t badl y
and deve lop s un scald Local
fie lds show mg sca ld should be
c hecked for st ink bugs They are
gray brown shie ld shaped bugs
a round 1-S inch long Call for more
Information
The feeder p g sale average on
2284 head of graded p1gs dropped
under one dollar per pound at the
Hillsboro Producers July 9 sale
Average ptg pnce was $51 7Gper
head or $99 45 per hundred for an
average weig ht of 52 04 pounds
Top "as on 66 head we1ghing 35
pounds a nd selh ng for $131 per
hu nd red The 4U,50 pound pens
sold m the $101 130 per hundred
pnce ra nge
Most crop analyst feel that
record corn yie lds are possible In
the US thiS yea r tf moist
wea ther m the cor n belt con
tm ues The cas h m a rk et could be
vo lltlle in co ming weeks Some
Economist fee l that heavy
reserve rollover 1n August Will
essen tia ll y pull the normal sea
sona l lows forwar d mto late

summer Other Economist see
so me 5 1 billion bushel projected
carryover on August 31 Cur
rently some 5 7 billion bushels
are Isolated from the market by
various government programs
This line of thought points to
higher cash market prices neces
sary to encourage loan redemp
tions of somewhat around 100
million bushels per week The
recent pattern Is around 80
million bushels per week Only
time will tell'
A two hour satelli te TV presen
tation on Farm Chapter 12
Bankruptcies will be given on
Tuesday July 28 from 7 00 9 00
p m Home viewers should use
Galaxy 2 Channel 1 You are
Invited to view the presenta tion
a t the South District Extension
Center near Jackson Ohio Reg
istration ls not necessary but
helpful in planning Our 0 S U
Extension Specialist in Farm
Law Dr Paul Wright and
Columbus Attorney Mack Cook
will be the fea lured pe rsona l!
ties Other program participants
will be two farmers a judge in
c hambe rs a bankruptcy trustee
an appraiser a n Ag Business
Firm and two other attorneys
For more Information on this
program contact Mr Bryson R
Carter Farm Management Spe
cialist at 614 286 2177

Review tax code before starting
By Patty Dyer D C
Soli Conservation Servtce
Even thou g h most peop le are
not thinking much about taxes at
th1 s lime of year th e rev1s tons tn
the federal tax code as they
re la te to so1l or wa ter conse rva
lion practices s hould be re\ 1ewed
pnor to msta lhng new practices
The present federal tax code
tSec tlon 175 ) prov ides that a
taxpa yer m ay deduct certain
expenditures for SOi l or water

conservatio n pract 1ces that oth
Hw1se would ha\e to be capital
!zed Among the expenditu res
eligible are gradm g terra omg
con tour furrow mg co ns truct iO n
of dra nage d tches 1rngat 10n
d• ches d a ms pond s and
windbrea ks

The Tax Reform Act of 1 9~ti
rev 1sed the tax as follows Soil
a nd water conserva tion ex pend!
lures eligibl e fo r the expensing
eiE&gt;Cl lOn are limited to those
cons sten t with a conservation
plan approved by the Soil Conser
'auon Servtce of the Department
of Agr c ulture or in the absence
of such a plan a plan of a
compara ble sta te conservation
agenc) s uch as thes tateforestry
a gene)
Expendttures tn connectinn
with the dral nm g or filling of
wetl ands or prepa1 mg la nd for
mstallatlon or operation of a
ce nt er pivot IrrigatiOn sys tem
are not eltglbl e for deduction
under thi S proVIS IOn 1 hts prov1

swn

a pplles

mcurred after December 31
1986
The bu rden of proof of expend!
tures re,sts with the taxpayer as
does the responsibility for ma in
talnlng records of expenses and a
copy of the conservation plan or
similar plan
For answers to particular
questions and to take full advan
!age of the tax laws as they apply
the taxpayer should consult a
qualified specialist or their near
es t IRS office
The Soil Conservation Service
does not provide tax guidance to
the taxpayer SCSdoes however
provide planning and design
assistance for installing various
conservation practices

to expendit ures

Sign-ups invited for consenration program
By Constance S White
Gal ho Cou nty farmers are
being mlt e d to s1gn up on the
filth a nd possibly fin al Conserva
uon Reserve Program s1gn up
Th e s ign up wtll run from Ju ly 20
thru July 31
Produ cers may bene! t by
partici patin g 1n the CRP In
severa l ways On the ave ra ge the
soli erosion has been reduced by
19 tons per acre per year Annual
rental payment s ca n replace
income from crops and e hmmate
worries about wea ther prices
a nd costs from the fie lds entered
in the progra m
Those fi elds In the program
would be In compliance with the
1985 F arm Bill Another area
where income can be gene ra ted
from this part of ones farm Is
charges for recreationa l access
such as hun ting No hassles with
te na nts either because of opera
tlon concerns or payme nts Also
the existing ba ses will be pro
tected and returned to the

la ndown er at the end of the 10
yea r contract penod
The Agncu ltura l Stabilization
a nd Co n serv at ion Serv1ce
IASCSI wtll cos t share up to 50'11
of the costs of seeding these fields
back to grasses and legumes or
pla nting them to trees If needed
hme and fertili zer can also be
cos t sha red on
The 10 year life span of the
pr ogra m has been a co ncern for
so me consider ing 11 but re
me mber this also means a
gua ra nteed renta l mcome to the
producer for the that fixed 10
year pe riod If the property is
transferred the money received
ca n be paid back wit h Interest or
the new owner can assume the
contract
To be eligible a field must
ha ve been planted or conside red
planted to a n agricultural com
mo~it y for at least 2 years
between 1981 1985 An agricultu
ral commodity Includes anually
planted crops and alfalfa or

multi year legumes and grasses
in rotation Also the field must
be predominately highly
erodible
II you would like more lnforma
lion on CRP or would like to see lf
your land Is eligible contact your
local ASCS or SCS office

Acreage is down on
five major crops
COLUMBUS Ohio tUPI) Ohio acreage for five major
crops Is down 470 000 acres from
1986 and 990 000 ilcres from 1985
according to Ohio Agricultural
Statistics Service
Corn at 3 2 mllllon acres
showed response to the farm
program dropping 700 000 acres
from 1986 and 11 million from
1985 The corn acreage is 120 000
more than was grown during the
PIK program In 1983

By John C Rice
County Extension Agent
Avlculture
POMEROY - Di!lry Tour
Scheduled - This summer s
dairy twiligh t tour will be an
out of county tour The tour this
year will be at the Ron Hartman
Farm in Athens County The tour
Will be held on Wednesday
evening J uly 22 beginning a t 7
p m To reach the Hartman
Farm go north on State Route 33
out of Athens Turn right on State
Route 682 and take the first road
to the left (s igns will be posted )
The tour will feature feeding
facilities and crops Ron has a n
85 cow herd and does an excel
lent job Everyone Is Invited bring the entire family
Speaking of Dairy - Here are
fi ve points for efficient produc
lion These five points are
feeding breeding milking prac
tices and mastitis control stress
re duc tio n
and labor
managemen t
Feeding factors Include every
thin g from what goes into the
feed to how those ingr edients are

put together Also feeding time
and how often the cows are fed
must be eva luated
Genetics is the breeding key to
better dairy produ c tivi ty
Farmers must use the best bulls
available through artificial In
semination to Improve their
potential milk yields At the
same time pregnancy testing is
critica l toward reducing unpro
ductlve time
Improving milking practices
and reduci ng ma stitis " Ill in
crease the produ ction pote nt ia l
of a cow herd The spread of
mastitis must be reduced during
milldng
Less stress turns good dairy
herds into the best herds More
space more eat in g time a nd the
temperment of the people work
ing with the cows are t hree
factors that 1educe cow st ress
and lmpove production
With increased production
comes an increased need for
qu alit y labor Higher production
mean s more work a nd more
knowledga ble workers
As a he rd s production level

•

Special problems

July 19. 1987

'\

tiiOn
I nen sa\s
In tht
mam cases 1\hcrc&gt;thce,tlahelp
IS a famll\ mrmbcr the1 c are
mam m01 P challenges

opt

lld)F.I\(fll,l!IC'UI

lUI 1L tc'OnomJs1
Unl\clS !\ I h&lt;

Oh tu Stall

&lt;J!

!abo dt mands
of a da11' farm ran make the
s uuation C'\ en mo• e d fflcult
Datn farmers t\ p•call\ h "r
some kmd ol he lp n 1 unnmg th• 1

Appleton WI - David V
Russell 402 First St , New
Haven West VIrginia Is the
newest associate of the Caroll L
Eggemeyer Agency Worthing
ton Ohio as a district represen
tattve in this area for AAL
AAL the nation s largest frat
ernal benefit society provides
1 4 million members In 6 9JO
branches "With fraternal benefits

Thf' dJ]Pm!Tia Js h0\'1 to

tt ammg he says
When it comes 10 paying
children be car efu l Paying
\our child to work and then
expect mg them to buy cloth ing or
other It ems 'ou would have
bought ot hem 1se is not the same
as prO\ tding for them as your
ch1 id and pay mg them a fa ir
wage for the work th ey do
D1sctpllne and JOb ass ignmen ts
should be the same for all
employt?eS If a family member
gets preferent ial treat ment eve
ryone s hou ld know ahead oft !me
that tt s go mg to ha ppen a nd why
Recognize that mo Uvatlon ca n
be a problem when you employ
famll; members Does that lndi
vtdual really want the JOb or is he
being forced to take it? Is It rea lly
her best JOb optwn? Forcing a
per son to take a 1ob IS likely to
cause problems especially if the
person does not receive equal
pay
You have to r each a n under
stand mg Erven says There s
always gotng to be that gray area
where ra m1ly a nd employeeemployer relat tonsh1ps ovetla p
But 1f ever; one knows what to
ex pect from the other and

t J ('Jf

t tm th \\OrkC't s F 1 \f'n sm s thP

p obit m

'' dt a11 mg the line
bcti\N'n !aml i' and emplovce
II hJlt I 1m11\ mf'mbers may
nt 'r1 llf' t C' \ C'd 1he s tme as a
non fam11\ emp lo}ee a~ 1 cc!ng
on boll the' atctobctrcatE&gt;d\llil
m a k&lt; t hm gs bett er m the long
IUfl

and through Its affiliated com
panies other financial sen ices
In addition AAL members are
offered volunteer opportunities
to help others in their own
communi ties AAL s home office
Is located In Appleton
Wisconsin
Russell joins more lhan 2 000
full time AAL fi eld personnel

Par('nts •clation shlps w th
adull ch tldren complica te

1 hcu

\\Oik co nd ittons

E r vPn says

The kc' 1s to make lhings less
casual 1f vou want a n employer
emplo\eP relat 1onsh1p
!';e1 up specif iCS fo1 employ
mc nt - dut1es hours wages
be nefit s - a nd m ake sure yo u
s lick to that agree men t ff yo u
don 1want to bP that stnct m ake

Muck Crops Branch holds open house
and Mack Riedel Ohio State
plant pat hologls ts will s how
their disease work with pota toes
lettuce peppers radishes and
celery
Hassell chairman oft he event
will show res ult s with culttvar
eval uations plant spacing and
seed priming
Muck Crops
Bra nch is at 4875 Route 103 South
Sponsors of the open hou ~e are
the OARDC the Ohio Coope ra
tlve Extension ser vice and Ohio
State Unlverstty

WILLARD Ohio (UPJ) -The
Ohio Agricultural Research and
Development Center Muck Crops
Branch will have Its an nual open
house at 10 a m July 23
Giving tours and descr ibing
research activities will be Rl
chard L Hassell branch man
ager along with Ohio State
University faculty members
Weed control on onions car
rots lettuce a nd celery will be
described by Stan Gorski Ohio
Stat£&gt; horticu lturist Randy Rowe

hiring family

~ Ill

Russell named district representatwe

increases the performance abil
!ties and dedication of the people
who work with the herd play In
Increasingly Important role In
the future of the herd
When we re talking about
producing the sa me a mount or
more for less input and lncreas
lng the level of management It
goes without saying that the
people In the bu siness are going
to have to do the job
Crossbow - Recently I mentl
oned th e use of Crossbow a
herbicide to control lnronweeds
in pastures When usio ~ any
pesticide READ THE LABEL'
Lactating dalrv ca ttle ca nnot be
grazro In ~ pasture "here
Crossbow has been used for one
yea r
Pota to L&lt;'af Hopper - Watch
for this cntter In yo ur third
cu tting of alfa lfa P otato leaf
hopper reduces protei n and
yields Some Insecticides ate
cygon sevi n and methoxyc hlor
The signs of damage are yellow
wedg€' s haped areas on the leaf
tips

The Sunday T1mes Sentmei- Page-D-3

Porneroy- M1ddleport- Galltpolts, Oh1o- Pmnt Pleasant, W Va

sUrf' vour cxpcclal ons are ad

justed accordi ng!)
E \€n e ncourages parent s to
trea t emploved !am ly mPmbeJ s
as lhn \\Ould othe• employees
Assummg your so n or daughter
kn ows so me thin g because
the\ VP been around 1t a ll thel1
t fp '' not a good polic\ Make
sure lhe\ understa nd t he task
and gl\ e th em a n\ nE&gt;cessary

e\ eryone works hard at co m

mumcattng there s hould be a
m1nimum
o f
m 1sunderstandmg

Harreld named senior
vice-president at [(raft
GLENVIEVI Ill - J Bruce
Ha rreld senior vice president of
strategy and development of
Kraft Inc a nd a native of
Gallipolis Ohio has been named
president of the Kraft Venture
Group Mi chael A Miles pres!
dent and chtef operating officer
of Kraft Inc annou nced re
cently Har reld will also continue
in hi s role as head of corporate
strategy tor Kraft
The businesses of the Venture
Group include the Tombstone
Pizza Corporatio n which
markets the number two brand
of frozen pizza In t he United
States Lender s Bagel Bakery
the nation s leading brand of
frozen bagels and The All
American Gourmet Co mpa ny
which m arket s the second
largest fro zen entree brand
under The Budget Gourmet
label
Harreld Jotned Kraft In 1982 as
vice president of strategy and
planning a nd was named senior
vtce president of strategy for
Kraft In 1985 He previously spent
seve n years as a prlnctpal of the
Boston Consultmg Group mclud
!ng three years as m a nager of its

J BRUOE HARRELD
office in Munich Germany In
1973 Harreld was assista nt to the
preSident of Epsilon Data Man
agement He has a B S degree
from Purdue University and an
M B A from the Harvard Gr adu
ate School of Business
Harreld Is the son of Mrs Ann
L Harreld of Galllpohs

The first defense against insects
By John C Rice
County Extension Agent
Avlcullure
The first line of defense aga inst
Insect pests of stored grain Is to
elimina te all remnants of grain
tha t ma y substaln an Insect pest
population from one storage
season to the next Because
insects feed on whole grain
flou r and fun gi and mold a
thorough san it a tion effort Is
required to elimi na te C\ery pos
slble source or Infesta tion Under
no conditi ons s hould newly harv
ested grai n be s tored on grai n
from the previous season AI
though you may believe that a bin
of old grai n is insect free the
practice of storing new grain on
old will sooner or la te r lead to
problems o f se ri o us ins ec t
Infes tations
A thorough sanitation progra m
should Include the entire grain
storage area in cluding ali grai n
handling equipment and asso
elated structures ln modern
grai n storage bins particular
a tt en ti on s hould be paid to
cleaning under perforated floor s
and arou nd grain ha ndling rna
chinery (for example augers
spreaders motors etc ) Clea n
ing ma y be accomplished with
the aid of brooms vacuum
cleaners and If necesssary
scrubbing with a cleaning agent
Successive build up of caked
grain on the walls In the co rn ers
and around various profusions
shold be preve nted as some
lnnsects stri ve on deposits of
moldy grai n Clea n a nd empt y
bin immediately after lt is empty
a nd agai n about two weeks
before binning new grain
Sa nit ation in a grain storage
fa cility is bas tca lly a year round
effort because period ic picking
up of spills a nd dtsposa l of
unwanted qua ntities of gra in will
eliminate sources of infesta tion
Empty Bin Treatment - Aft er
a bin has bee n thoro ughl y
cleaned a treatment shou ld be
applied to the empty bin to
elimina te remaining Insects and
provide a protectl\e residual
treatment agai nst pests that
invade the fac ilit y prior to

binning of grain Tre tt all
su rfa ces inside a nd If possible
outside the bin pius scams
co rners and ere• ices where
partic les of grai n accumulate
and s upport Insects Mate•lals
approved for trea ting e mpt y bins
are as follo14 s premium grade
malathion 57\t EC- mix one pint
In three gallons of 14ater Each
ga ll on of mixture s hould treat 500
squ a r e fee t Metho xychlor
25'ifEC m lxmg one quart in 3
ga ll ons o f ""'" ' a nd one gallon
will CO\ er 500 squa1 e feet or
methoxyc hlor 50' WP I pound in
three gallons of water and one
ga llon of thi s "Ill rover 500
sq uare feet Rea d~ to usc mix
tu res including malathion me
thoxychlor are avai labl e as
cmptv bin sprays
Spring Developme nt For I I
ves tock - If you ha H' e\er
considered developing a s pr ing
for llves tock now is the time to
make your site selection A
couple of things to k ~ p In mind
whe n making this si te selec tion
are I ) will It fit in with your
pasture rotation svstem or be
easily accessible to livestock
a nd 2) m a king the se lection no\4
should insure adequ ate water
supply during dry 14eather
So m a ny springs are what we
term as wet weather springs
that Is springs that only flow
"hen we have plt:-nty of moist ure
In the ground and then when we
get dry " eat her like we ha\ e now
there Is no spring there So a ny
wet area that you see now s hould
provide quite a bit of wat e r year
round for your lives lock
Summer Seedlngs- If you arc
think ing a bout making a
summer forage SE'Cdl ng I t hlnk
now is the tim e to start ma king
your dt cis Ions Those deci s ions
involve variety selection a nd I
reco mme nd that you select a
varlet\ th a t has been trt•a ted
wit h Apron to help prevent root
rot You s hould get your ferti lizer
lined up so that you can wor k the
ground and make this seeding as
ear ly In August as possible I am
making this recommendatiOn
wit h the belief th at we will get
some moi sture between now and
then I realize tha t as dry as 1t is

Vegetable Crop Day
FREMONT Ohio rUPI There s help on the way for
vegetable growers both la rge
com mercial opera tions and the
home ga rdener s at Vegetable
Crops Day July 22 a t the Ohio
Agricultural Research a nd De
velopment Center s branch
Growers are encoura ged to
br ing disease and insect prob
!ems to either or both sessions of
this field day accordmg to Dale
Kretchman Ohio State horticul
turist and chai r man oft he event
A session for. commercial
growers begins at 1 30 p m and
anothe r program for home gar
deners starts at 7 p m Both
programs will be wagon tours
with Ohio State faculty describing research at s pecific stops
Stephen T Nameth director of
Ohio State s Plant and Pest
Diagnostic Clinic will be at both
sessions to help address grow~rs
questions and to tell about
equipment and new methods for
detecting diseases and viral
Infections In plants
In lhe afternoon commercial
session a new Ohio State disease
control program will be des
crlbed by Mack Riedel Ohio
State plant pathologist and
others
Growers will see sensors re
cording such variables as air and
soli temperatures humidity

•

•

IS

~rai n

You stil l want 10 use 2 4 D If
bt oad leavrs " ' e prescnt a nd by
all means usr Paraquat Bcsu•c
to remove lhe straw folio 14ln~
your small g1 a in han est and
"hen us in~ the 2 4 D do not f~ed
for t-.o WN'ks follo-.lng a rai n In
order to permit the 2 4 D to
dlssfpale You also should se&lt;&gt;d
s hallo" and that means placi ng
the lc!!ume seed not more thap
one fourth Inc h det&gt;p Into the soil
to be aware of
\ ou need
aggressive pcrrnnlals suc h as
quackgrass dock and thistle If
prc sl.' nt ap pl y g lyp hosate
(Round Up) P• lor to S(.&gt;edi ng
Pa1 aquatc and 2 4 D shd uid not
be needed in areas where Round
Up is app led prior to seed in g
When blyphosate or Round Up is
used wail at least two " ecks
making the forage
be for
seedi ng
Land Values- I would like to
discuss 14ith YOJJ "'hat land
val ues ha ve done O\ era period of
a quarter of a rentun in Meigs
Count y These figures arc taking
from the U S Departmen t of
Agricu lture Agricultural Sta tis
tics and thi s ls th eaveragev alu ~
of far m land and buildings per
ac • t by state a nd count y si nce

7

Help Weoted

11

31

1 805 887 1000 Eat R 9805
tor t;:urr.-t fedenl I tt

Gal1ipolls
It V1cin1ty

Auto Meeh. .ie. 8 yn

e.,_..,bocfw
to buld . . .ge Clfl

nMCIH
For inter

tn11n

-

·- ...

Y•d ..... S.CUtd.y. Juty 1llh.

127 fl1N,eent It ,._ ,......,.,
UntfonnL oddl • -* do-

8

,

Call 114 311 H11

....... &amp;.writ';~ in loceA store
Iter I dell.-lllwe. ttM1 at I 3 II
, . hour trainiftt praeram •
..........,..t iftc:luo.d S.nd bedl
• ....,... iftfofY"Itlon Wit" phone
nu,.., 10 F'-h. . Iii WhH4
NO 1 I
100 w.. t.lngton
S..•e W•hlngton Ct House
OH 4J110 Ann L P Mtneglf

TypMta •toO weHf¥ et hom•
lnforllllttlon '

Public Sale
• Auction

ttnd

"'11

Protr•m D i rec tor
Compf"'-NI outpatient sub
. . . , . , . . , . Pf'Oiflm Anpon

3041113430

9

..,.....,.,.""'- eJtPI'tenctl and
H\ prOONI of cenifiOMion Send
a.t1• lftCI r.um• II¥ July 31 to

Wanted To Buy

1945 tht&gt;
average val ul.' of farm land and
buildings per acrf' wa $30 Thirt y
yeaJS later In 1974 the land
val ue of farm la nd a nd buildings
In Meigs Co unty had dscn to $307
per acre In 1982 the ave rage
va lue of far m la nd a nd buildings
per acre In Meigs County stood at
$700 15 1 thought thi s m ight be of
so me Int erest to you not onl y as
your pr.icc farm la nd but also
JUSt as a reference r might
mention th at si nce 1982 (I don t
have fl;:ures to back thi s up) i
would guess that the value or
fa1 m la nd a nd buildings per acre
in Me igs Count y has decrea sed

WI,_. C8eh fot 1111 model d_..

UMde••

Jim Mlntt Chtw 0* Inc
861 Gene Johneon
114 .... 3172

TOP

CAIH plld fo&lt; 13 -

1nd

MWif

UMd c:.. lm"h
Buidl Pontiee 111 1 Eelt.,..

. . . Gall,.... Cal 114 2212

33

Homes for Sale

Wentild to buv Appro• 3 lc:tll
land PrM• AMI Orandelouthwwtern Dltt CeH t14
24&amp; 1211
aubm•llllbt• wat ... pump 'h to 1
HP. Calf814 3712111«143

0081

lu.,... &amp;tending

Timblf Call

014· 379 2751
Older home or mobtle in oountrv
wlth ect. . . . on lend contract or

Wi ll be neall ng ma turlt\ at the
fi eld day R J Precheur Oh 1o
Sta t!&gt; hm fl cultu rlst will ' cpori
about tomat o vancties br mg
Cxd min cd f01 pOSSi ble g11 e n
wrap sa les In the f1esh m u k&lt;t
mdu str)
Home gardenr1 sa t the £&gt;vcn mg
sess io n Will sec a p1 ev lew of the
1988 All Arne• ca n Selectwns of
okra cucu mbet pepper s\4 cet
co1n shasta da sy celosljl a nd ,
pe tuma The\ II a !so see row
cover opt tons im hom e ga 1den
er s as well as 1ou r muskmelon,
tomato a nd s11 cet corn va11cty
trials

rent with optk&gt;n ta INv Mult
hiWI at le•t 3 BR C1H 114
44t 1231
Buying d4Mty gotd tiiYII colnt
rinQI jewelry tt...ting war1 old
colnl lqe currency Top prl-

cea Ed lurk.rt lerblr Shop
2nd A.. Mlddl"""" Oh 114
192 3471

w.... tld to buy

...ndtng timb«
Call AI TroMfft It 114 742

2321

One IO two

ICfM at lend In
country tor tr.U• Mult hwe
uptlc: ter* trail• Mok up 1nd
w•ter Wrtte Alberti . .CIIul
2 2 2 - l t Mlddl- Ohio
U780

WANTEO TO IUV N- oomonl
blo&lt;ko CoM 114 882 3t40

...

iJIIjilll'lilll'lli

•

'•

SOUTH CHARLESTON OhiO
(UP! ) - More th a n 200 fa• mets
are e/(pectcd to a tte nd a special
research 11eld day for the la tes t
Information in field crop produc
lion and farm ma nagement
The July 21 event at th e •
western branch of the Ohio
Agricultural Research a nd De
in Clark
velopment Center
County will feature tours of test
plots a nd presentations by agri
cultural sc ientists and Extension
specialists Th e morning pro
gram begms at 8 30 the after
noon program at 1 30
l

:, t r 1J

11

Help Wanted

Lo~

mAnufact:urlnt

firm Is

sMkiftg 1ft electro/ mMtl•icat
engtn.., who conlkl
era Meigs M••on or Ckllle aree
horM
pr. . . . periOft
abou1 20 , . .1 In a broad rtnp
of electriGIII. • m..,..... H-

vr...,..,

w.

*""

olgn .....~. . . . . . ...., .. ~
etile. ,.... HftCI ru~ • to

T CD 100 c/ o OollDa41y Tribune 121 third
A - Qolllpolio OH 41111
lnolud., lduOIIIIon •PifllftOI

.and p.renu. •I'
WMtld At Aero• the l1rwt

l•plrlena.d h••tvht Prlflf'•
....
-fo&lt;lroat&amp;
- Coiii14......
,00 ...

l

S~tlc

tan It pomplng r11ldent ial
comm•lul 180 per ktld
Ron EvAnsEnterpnsn Jackson

Ohta Call &amp;14 288 5930
J1m • odd 10b1 painting drive
wty relllling CtfPtnt.. work •
roof repah' tre11 &amp; hedges
eaper 1ncad Ctll 114 ~79
2418

Babytitdng don• In my home
V i nton 1r1a

Call 114 388

8238

Room and bo1rd lor elderly and

(or

lit:MtM

pendfftel b't the lttte of OhtO to
pt'IICtlct IOd.. WOfk hteftiN'I
toeel triWM r-.u•ed Stlary

Snider 814 949 2629
handlceppld wtth persona l care
Call 814 992

In Middleport

1973
Grover 1 lawn Mower Repa r
We II p1ck up and dehver Good

uMd mowers for ta le
81.t 742 2393

--

Mktdleegld ltdy needed to 1tay
wtth widow Light houHWOf'k

Coli 114 44t 1023
O"lo VIlli¥ Vlslt:ora Centllf'
. . . . Ofglf'lbed enthuaa ... lc
,.,..on to Df'OmQtt tourlam In
Gallie Countv Mu11 blal&amp;illed In
promotion pubUc rthltiona end
written tnd ""bel communi~

lion a. to ..........,
HtiUNGI Oov~n~ment jobl your

. . . t11 000

ee8 000 Ctll
102 131 . . . . ht I 449

AVON no tervlet eh•g.. open
terrltoriea phone 304 871

1428

VETERANS EArneatremon_,. n
the Anny N1tlontl Querd 304
875 38150 or 1 800 142 381 9

v.

AVON

w..

•r••

All
Ctll MtrUyn
304 882 28415

hbyslttll' w•ntlld for I month
old M11on New Heven " "
Ref•II'ION required 304 7'13

1111

Call

or 614 7 4 2

lOll

t11 000 1 ye• EJtCellent be-

nefit Dldl..... lend r"ume to
lllotMn Elty. luekltfl Community
S.vle• P 0 loa 104 J1cll;
.on Oh 41140 Oedlne 7
27 17 Eq~el opportunity

-oltl•

Include modlcal Mobil
11V - - PEIII - t - o
penonAI d.,e; 1te lneur.,.ce
Thit ll 1 nine monlh poettlon
wtth I 30 am 10 3 30 prn
wortdltt heun Po.e:lng Ute
July II. 1H710Jul'l 23 11187
_,.Oinll Moukl Hnd reeum•
to
County l.,..d of
Metttll .._.ArHtion P 0 lox
307 IYJt- Ohio 417711
Attn ICethy M I "ebllert !du011
tlonD.._

M-..

goo d loc •tion t37 000 Call
Bud M cG hee Reelty 614 448

0662

Ftnancial
21

Busmess
0 pportumty

f o r ltle by owner 2 Jtory house
1n M1ddlepon o~o~e rlookl ng park
30 yr guarnteed vlnyle s d ng
w w tlfpel 1 V, bath unique
woodwork 81 4 992 5128
8 room ho use Rose H II Pome.
r oy Oh 1 3 ecr es f17 000 AI
Mart n 814 678 2513

Gov•nmen1 Hom .. from tt ~U
rep• r) Otl nquent ttA property
Rtponu• on• Ca 1 80 6 887
6000 Ext GH 9805 for cu rrent
repo I It

Four bedroom house 2 7 acres
ltnd M L need• work. f 1 2 600
One m 11 pnt Me1gs H1gh on
r ght W !Ism Snowden res
dence Co Ad 215

I room hou .. two bathl new
roof Nusuh windows garage
246 N Fourth Ave M ddleport
Mtk e off« 614 247 -4672 or

814 247 2132
GOVERNMENT HOME S from
f 1 00 (U repair) also ttx delln
Quint and forecloure propet ee;
l'llailable now For list ing ca ll

Distributor needed 0ppor1un ty
for the right p•rton N•mebrand
ctndy chlpa snacks Un que
vending unill M1kl • net
ncome

ot

• 1200 15000

per

mqnth dependmu on .JIU of
lnvntm.U • numbtr of un t1
Turn kl\f buainnt Call now
811 741 9218 •• t 800 317

2109
Opportunity tor Soft Frozen
Yogurt Store Complete lllfOUt
order •••lstan ce and equipment
,.ckeg• No franchise tees No
royeh1• Ca11304
6410

•z2

For 1111

Cov1 Bar

bu It In TV bu11t I range gflddle
&amp; oven very large tee-thru
f fepltct nnw shurs tully car
peted full basementlfu rn llhtdl
M nt eond 3 •er11 plus 1 V.. sere
stocked lake * 150 000 Rt 7 tl
Five Polnls Pomeroy 0 end
elec Lowery orgtn A 1 thspe

07 000 hm I 8\4 992 2671

Rt

7

Pomllf'OV Oh1o UO 000 f rm

tlol-192 9901

NEW AND

HOMES

US ED MOBILE

KESSEL S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SAlES 4 Ml
WEST GAlLIPOLIS RT 36
PHONE 114 448 7274
1972 Ctstle 1 4x65 w th 1982
Exptndo 12x20 FireplACe Can
trll Air 2 Baths 2 ttOrtQI
bulld1ngs Muat Sail 113 800 or
reasonable offer Ph 614 246
6884

1984 14a66 fenced ytrd 3
lots Rt 1 80 at Evergr11n
e11 500 Call614 446 1339or
814 446 1628

1914 Shultz 14x70 w th ••
pando 3 BR a. 2 bath• Land
contrACt IYallabla Call 114

441 8726

1978 8..,.tlno 14x70 3 bod
room complete with 1 h22

Home for 8111 by' Owner
Oreenbr1., E1t 3BR bi 1... a1

on 2 4 let• AC W 8 F P wet
ber 2 car u•av• Ph B1tore

4 OOPM 114 44e 4001 Aller
4PM Ph 004 171 381t
2

IR 10 vr

mint conditiOn
beautiful locttlon N. .r Nor
thur Priced right or wiU trad1

Urb1n patio cover 1nd door
canaPV Like new c:ondition

tiO 800 1974 12x80 2 bod
room

••eellent condition
t8300 Delfvlf'ld bloc:ked and
leveled on vour lot Kingaburv
Homn 900 E M1in St Pom•
roy Ohio 114 892 8587

lcHolly

Oelllpolll Will cOnaldllf mobile
home ea trM•In e47 &amp;00 Cell

., ...... 1031

I bedroom home Like niW'
Rural wat• 4 I •cr... Melga
Countv Reduced under

uo 000

114 742 22111

Parlt

1 4x64

2

bodroo,mo, eentlf' kitchen front
Mutt 111 to
be • ..., at
Ptrk on
pm

Col tl4 21e UOO

Lovaty new 3 IR home buHt th 1
IP'ing, 2 car gertge. nice tree
Cley • city 1chools. I mR• from

bedroom• $8 000
675 6966

34

Busmess
Bu1ldmgs

2 bedroom house and apt for

Commerc al bu ld ng s for lean
Downtown Pt Pleasant Sto es
off cas
A One Real Estate
Carol V•tger Broker Cal 304
676 6104

4 rooms beth one floor house
attached garage n M dd aport
Carpeted stoue and retr geretor
furmshed deal for a-angle or a
work.ng couple Sorry no pats
or c h ldran $175 plus secur tv
deposit Phone 614 992 5292

Cell 304

1978 8rough1m mull home
Sleeps 1 x. •c ha1 generetor
1 12 000 304 676 2674
1971 Schult mobde home 2
bedrooms pertielly rurn11hld on
rented lot Underptnmng and
blo cll mcluded * 4600 304
882 2048

33

Farms for Sale

8acresonTribbeRa offRt 62
Plut ttore bu d ng wlrlhouse
3 BR house barn cellar plus 2
other buildings All black top
ro1d Call 304 458 1818 C1ll

after &amp;PM
8 3 ac;;re f1rm 4 Br houu lg
barn p us 3 other budding•
Aprox 3 acres tobacco pltnted
IPfOX 8700 lbs alotmenl I P OX
20 acre t•tlable 30 acre• nt ce
ptsture Wdl u ll w11h or with out
tabacco crop Call 614 379
2676 John Owens

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
For sa le or trade for aometh ng of
equal value
1 ac e lot n
Harr sonv li e on Rt 681 A I
utll tin 82600 Ca 614 992

6053
--------~~~~ "

1 92 acre1 w1th 2 bed oom
mQblle home Approx 4 m1
from M iddl eport
Ask ng
1 12 000
Hobstener Realty

8t4 7423092
1 1-'J ec lot on Jerrys Run Rd
Apple Grove w th ural water

Nashu1 3 bedroom 1 l.t bAth
p•rtt¥ furn61Hd Would conllder
renting ground with tree e••
water and g~rden 814 817

1136
For ull 1973 1 2dSII VIking
1Yaacrn JultoutofiAihlflon
Eoglo llldgo Ad tl1 000
0 0 Polk

446 2543

Hoell ng Tech Student Rentals
Men exper ence the compan
on sh p of fa low students w th
t he pnvecy of own room Share
1v1ng room wit h TV and HBO
s howers and k tchen No rete
n crease f or 87 88 yeor 614
992 2094 Of 614 992 6742

N ce f ve rooms bath love y sun
porch one floor plan home on
Mulberry Ave Pomeroy Full
basement carpet ed stove retr gel'etor and drapor es pro
v1ded o ft ttreet parkmt~ $225
a month pus secu r ty depos t
Adults only

Sorry

no pets

304 576 2383

614 992 5292

v, acre tra ler s1tes S6 900
County wetar a f ew hundred
feet from Rt 2 304 676 2026

3 bedroom On Uncoln Htughts
n Po m eroy Phone 614 99 2
7689 after 5 00 p m

2 bedroom house overlook ng
perk 1n M ddlepon Call 614

Card of Thanks

992 2698

CARD OF THANKS
I would ltke to thank
everyone lor their cards
prayers flowers and v1
s1ts dunng my recent 1!1
ness
Spec1al thanks to the
staff at Holzer Medtcal
Center and to Rev Joe
He1fner

ERNIE NULL

CARD Of THANKS
Our stncere thanks lo
those who sent cards and
flowers or who came to
share the day wtth us
To Alice Jeanne and
Altce for then help
To all other famtly es
pee tally our daughter Su
san Oltver who planned
the day

HAROLD AND
ANNA ROSE FITCH
CARD OF

THANKS

Words cannot express
the thankfulness m our
hearts to the many
frtends famtly nerch
bors our church lamtly
and so many others that
shared 1n sorrow wtth us
dunn&amp; the loss of our
son Dallas Wayne Wat·
son

Rentals
41

2 r m cottage furn t had utllit es
pd $66 wk S1ngieperson Call
304 675 3100 or 676 6609

Houses for Rent

N ce ly turnilhed small hou.a

only References re
qu red Off street perkmg Ph

Two badroom mobile home 1n
8 dwell Water turn shed Oep
os1t refet"ence requ red No pets!
Call 614 388 8&amp;48

2 BR mob Ia f or rent at Ever
green Call 614 379 2178
2 BR trailer &amp;160 mo t76
daposll Call614 379 2435
Mob Ia home for rent 2 bed
rooms tu rn thad phone 304

676 6612

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartment• fo r
ren t
Bas c rent tor 1 bdr
$183 00 2bdr e219 00 Allo
requ red • 8200 DO sec:urty
deposit CONTACT Jedtaon
Estat81 Dept Ph 448 3997
Equel Housmg OpportunJtv
Furntshed &amp; unfum11hld aptl
$150 00 and up referancn Ph
304 676 7738 or 304 876
510• A 1 Real Estate
FurmshedEff c anc;yS145 Utll1
pa1d sh~re bath ,... 607
Second Ave
Gall pol 1 Ph
446 4416 tfter 7PM
t es

Remod e led 1n Chester New
panall ng and carpeting 3 8R
w th small den Reasonable rent
Call 614 881 4888

8209

1

cnttag&amp;S turn shed 3
rooms All newly redecorated n
towm Adu tJ Only Ce I 61 4

re nt n Pomeroy Pan ally fur
n shed depo t t requ ed Call
614 992 2381

Mm Farm 9 6 ICrll e room•
bath full basement Small barn
1 ou t bu ding Bashan Rd

1973 F eedom 12x60 2 BR

379 2730

Homes for Sale

42 Mob1le Homes
for Rent

Two

7479

1oul a le c Underp nn ng
04000 Colt 614 388 9724

1969 Naw Moon 10a10
e3 000 Call 814 379 2292 or

31

Houses for Rent

20 acre farm Hanna
1race
Rold Glenwood W V&amp; fo
more 1nform at on-call 304 773
6118or7736186afte 500

Me gs Co 126 000 614 378

33 ,;87 ranch home 3 br 2 VJ
batht hv ng room d nlng room
&amp; knchen 2 ctrgtrage All birch
paneling lerge utU tv room 37

32 Mob1le Homes
for Sale

1 NOTICE
THE OHIO VAllEY PUBliSH
lNG CO recommend• that you
do bualn... with people you
know and NOT to tend money
througt. the mall until you h8\l e
lnvHdgatld tha offering

1980 l ber1v Total •lectr c 2
bedroom turn shed WISher and
dryer centrtl a r Call 814 992

1 2x70 Wind sor w th exptndo 2

fwe room houM ce lsr 1 ~
teres on J1m Hill Road County
water rndv fo hookup Owner
flnam:ing with down payment
304 676 4182 Of 876 2666

IEM'n e40 tr11 m~rchandiM and
more Have • Chrlltmu Around
The Workl PflriV C1ll Carmen
3()4.t71 1111

lllglltle lor Ololo lpoctol Educe
tion Ctrtlflcetetotuch atudents
wtto h8w1 modll'lll. ....,.,. or
profound mentll ratanl.tion
tMIPIII Pion d•olop ond lm
pa.ment trlining progrema for
. . . , _ :!ild to the c:l•a
Mvtt M wll
to work with
IJiudlntl who IWI ltverl .,.
ttwior problem~ IAIArY aom
menau,._ with qutlfflNUona

!h baument

1ome appliance•

1 316 733 8082 ... 0873

SOCIAL WOftK loael S~n~i&lt;*
CooniiiiiMor ne.ded for I amall

Job OIMifttnl tor Juntor High
lnatNCitot. ' lillult hiV'I or be

11 ,

18 Wanted to Do

.leckeon County Ak:ohol Po
p.n 217 Pe-' ltrMI Jtcttson
OH4M4t 101

ICF M .. 1 In loulhiMt"n Ohio
OuiiNIIolt._ .,..,... of 1n
.tecr•.a .odil wort1 JN'Otflm
Itt ' - t 1 .,• ., ot socitll work
eJt.,.ienCI in I hllt1h c•e

In rown 3 BR

gtnge C A

41

Farms for Sale

for Sale

3 bedroom house for sale in
Pomeroy 614 992 2285

Can do light h.ul ng and roofing
R•tsontbl e rttll M ar on

Mttlnf: liCMNCI

W~~~nttobuv uMd mobUehotn•
Coll114 441 0171

Vals aeeep1ing 1pplicat10n1 for •
tuM ttm1medic•l Lab Technician
quthflld appl e~tnt will hr~e e 2
or 4 year diQrn 1n Medlctl
Teehnvlotrt _...d 1 eurr~tnt ASCP
RIQlstry Hotpitll oHiltl excel
lent Ill ltV and benlfh • tor more
nfgrmatlon c all Personn el 0 r•
cotr 304 372 273 1 or 1ppty at
Hospital bu111inMs off c:•

•

11billtlu lnctud• progrem
•dMinlltrtllon supervision
oou~ end ~~UIIIIe rell1iont
QualtfloillkM'tl lhOukl inekld&lt;l 1t
l..at two .,.... llpll!'lenol In
. . bnlnce lbuH field .ume

Auct....._, Col Oac• E Clici.

L.AB TECH
Jeckson Oen.,tl Hosp Rlpty W

ulf

•"drHNd en" elope to M r
Moyer 101 132: C•roUton OH

Rlett P'e•10n AYCt lon. . II
...,..,. In Ohio ond Woot Vltglnkt ,.e .. £.wt1 antktue f•m
liquidAtiOn lAIII 304 '773
17111 .. 773 1430

1n

eJtpe-

rience Mu11 htr#e ow n t OOl I (On
commauionl Send reaume to
Oallv S1ntlnel Boa 729M
Pom•oy Oh1o

ftet-:aa .. ComrNit11. Vinton

Field crop day
planned in Clark Co.

Help Wanted

• 18 040
1158 230 ye., Now hK ng C1ll

1945

In Mc1p.s Co un ty

11

Yard Sala

GoWJnment Job•

July 22

rai nfall a nd le ngth of "rt
periods on leaves - a ll tn an
effort to a ppl y necessary che m l
cal s m precise mln 1mum
amount s at speei~-Wmes for
top qua lity vegeta bles
FrUi t a nd foliage 1s momtored
to see how programs a ffect
maturity and fruit qualit y
This research exammes the
economics and environmenta l
aspects of vegetable spray pro
grams Riedel says Growers at
plot sites will see large dtfferen
ces in treat me nts lor seedling
emergence with the use of seed
priming a nd coati ngs accordi ng
to the scie nmts
Seed priming a mounts to treat
ing seed usually w1th a salt
solution that starts germina tion
In the seed before planting but
does not let it fully develop until
planting
Researchers believe this prac
lice might result in better unifor
mlty In plants particu larly
transplants grown in the green
house Savings result with plant
quality labor and space
Weed control In tomato trans
plants will be the topic forSt an F
Gorski Ohio State horticulturist
Transplant quality hall Injury
and water management are
additional subjects
Some 19 varieties of cabbage
and 17 varieties of muskmelons

•

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

secd\ngs "ith this kind o[ condi
tlons probably would not germ!
nate a nd grow but "hat I a n
trying 10 s tress Is ea• IY Augu~t
&lt;eedings do better than !at~
September sredl ngs 1 might also
mention that no till forage seed
m~ s work good foli o" lng sma ll

S x r oom hou se F11rv ew Road
Camp C on ev 8226 per month
304 676 1371 or 675 3812

Upsta rs unfurnh&amp;hed tpan:ment
Ut ht1es pa1d Carpated no ch aldren or pets Clll614 •46 1637

Furn11hed tpartmlnt •2 1 0
utllit es pa1d 1 bdr 920 Founh
Galllpollt Call448 4418 tfter

8pm

5

Happy Ads

Adults

614 446 0338

42 Mob1le Homes
for Rent

Kitchen furmshed carpeted 2
8R 1 ~ bath no pets Dep &amp;
Ref 233 Second Avenu e
1350/ mo Call614 446 4926

2 BR al ubi t es pd except
alec furn o unfurn sec dep

2 bedroom br1ck below Swen

raq ad Conven ent lo cat1on
Call &amp;14 446 8668

C ruk den full basement a r
condit on ng fuel o I hut 1 car
gerege e250 per mo 2 3
btM:troom apartment In tow n
ulllit e. pad 1360 per mo 3
bedroom full b ..ement Spr ng
Vallev erea S3 25 permo 3 to 4
bedroom on L nle Kygar Road
Country atmoaphere $350 per
month CAll W11eman Real Est
ltl 814 446 3644

2 BR 12x80 unfurmshad Half
mile past HMC CA ret &amp; dep
requ red Cal 614 446 4369 or
304 676 9760

12x60 edge of town on 588
Pat o gu heat no pets Oep
req
$140 per month plus
ut I t e• Hu ttove &amp; refr1g Call
614 446 7124 or 614 448
7360

Newly rlnlodeled 3 BR home
~al 614 446 6278
fOf tale or rent 3 BR bath &amp;

~

famllv room located on 688
Ref &amp;. dep requ red No pets
Csll 614 256 6789 or 6 14

258 8206
8 Joom hou1e $76 per month 8
room houset176 per m onth Pt

Pleu
Estate

Call Broker A 1 Real

304 676 6104

3 Announcements
EXTERIOR STUCCO PlASTER
&amp; PlASTER REPAIR

3 Announcements
L~&lt;•nsad

D&amp;R lnsur•d

lt'l Bstn 45
R.ob,t I. Wtlldt
Htppg Annl~ltlllg

Contractors
Your Hometown BUilders
Srdmg - Roofmg
Remodehng - New Homes
Decks - Patios
446 7687
446 2251

CHAIN
LINII FENCE

ARTHUR'S

Rsstdent1al
Commerc1al Industrial

PH. 614·245·9113
ICen

Soles -

frtt Est1matt1

COMPl£11 INlTAILATION

The many kmd words
cards flowers 111ts of aU
ktnds the work of love

but

espec~ally

the lovt

and comfort we felt from
Nch wtll nevtr be fOlio!
lin We p11111 God for the
new home Dallas hu In

Heavtn with the Lord

May God nchly bless
all of you
Thank you from our
hearts
Hollts, Betty Jean and
' Mmdy Watson

DAVIS IIETAL SALIS IS the N111on s futestgrowln.IIANUFAC
TUliA of D-118 metal roofi111&amp; sldiRC. Wt olltrs profiles D
Rll HI RIB 5 V CORRUGATED Orden custom cut to the Inch
It no IIIII ChirP OilS olfersiO belutiful colon piUIIIIVIR
lml11td plwllumo. FREE dthvtiY 100 Sqtllres or m0&lt;11.Tnms
sllyll&amp;ltls and KCessontS Quality disCOttnts IVIJiable
1· 800 828-11148

A Pr11ttler Iaiiy
You'llleww S..
Happy llrthday
P1111ny, totlay 33
to PHIIJ
Sldll-• RatiH

�....... _ .
,,
.

' '

..

~·

••

'

~

- ~

. ..

yo .

Page-D-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
44

Apartment
for Rent

0

cw

mak e 6

to

?· rv l ~• 1er s c!
eocn rn 1H. ' "C o f $~ v o•e s

-~-------,--~

Upstairs, 3 BR , 1 ba1h, kitchen
furnished, no pets, Oep .- &amp; Ref.
238 First t250 / mo. Cell 614
446-4926.

.

2 BFI. 2 bath, carpeted. kitchen '
furnished, no pett, dep. 6 ref.

$325 / mo. 1 1 Cou~ St. Call

•

••••

'

~

..

••

.,.., Cell 814 -742-214&amp; or
a14-742-233t.

.- I -I' I I' I

Mt:r t: It .t~Hitse

WA M0 D E

Furnished Apt .. 3 rQoms, share
bath, 701 Fourth. Gallipolia.
S176 Uttlitiea patd. Call 61 4-

51 Household. Goods

446-4416 after 8PM .
614-446-0390.

1---r:-, _,_:::..r--:r--.:;-I' I
I1111

apartment with large
country; kitchen, new appliances. utility 'oom, water. sewet"
and trash Ser'Jicas provided.

room

O~tet

GOOO, USEO APPLIANCES
Wuhlt'l, dryers, refflgerston.
tlngea Skegg,. Appliances.
Upp..- Riv., Rd. beside StDne
Cr.. t Motel. 81•·448-7391.

1• I I I I

Brookttde Apartments . 4461932 or 446 -4639. One Bed·

SNUION

F~rnishod efficiency. $160 utili·
pd. Call 614-446-4416
after Bpm

I

ties

1 • BR, unfurnished apartment
near HMC . No pets. $169

mpnth t1 00 deposit. Call 614·
446-3617

I

II

I IO

ENODRY
1---r::...:-r.;;..,;;-,.;;.--'-1,--1

Comp lc tc the ch uc:k le quoted
1I-~
by 1.1/,ng in the mi SS&gt; ng words
L.-L---'-.---'-~-'----'·'---'· 'f Cu develop frorn step No. 3 bel ow,

1 '• BR apt. 740 Second Ave .
5185 per month. Depostt req~)rad. Call 614-446·4222 betw.tten 9 &amp; 5 .

I 1

~

., 9

Grecious
living . 1 and
bad·
room
11partment1
11 2Village
Manor and Ri"erside Apar1·
mjnu in Middleport . From
t2.1 6 . including utilities . Call

l pue PU!W uedo ue seM &amp;J&amp;41 eJ&amp;4M
J&amp;!IUOJj e eq shBMte PJnOM eJ9411841
&amp;Jdoed 6u!ll&amp;lj0 puOj SABMJB SBM 9H
'IS9M PiO e4110 S&amp;IBI PiO AUBW 6UOJB
passed J94111jPUBJ6 IB&amp;J6 AV&gt;j

-

44

Soi;3~-Y't\"'d:l'S

Apartment
for Rent

2 bedroom furn ised apt. ref and
deposit. New Haven , W. Va ,

304 -882-3267 o• 304-7735024

painted. Will accept applicattons
from sin9le

Dr

merrled nandi·

capped. elderly, or disabled.
Stop by office located on Union
Ave or call 614 -992·7772.
Rent based on income. Equal

3 room• and bath. gaa hoat,
ground floor, washer and dryer
hook 4P· no children, immediate
occupancy. No pets. phono
304-676·4480 ext 63 or 60.

housing opportunity
For rent : Efficiency cottage, Mt.
Vernon Ava. Pt. Pleaaant. Hud
approved. 614 -992-6868 .

3 bedroom apt. all electric. Crab
Creek Road , 304-876 -8609 al·
ter 5:30. 304-676-1087

3 room and 6 room furnished
apt. 614-992-6434 or 304 -

45

882 "2566.

Rooms for rent, day . week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Celt 614 ·
446-971 5. Rent as low as 1120

APARTMENTS , mobile homes.
houses . P1. Pleasant and GaUipo·
lis 614-446-8221

B

Furnished Rooms

month

45

VIlle¥ Furniture, new &amp; uaed.
Large uctlon of qu.thv fumilura . 12115 E•stern Ave- .
Gallipolis.

ON\fH 'DN/7"1/M
I:BONOA
31&gt;1::&gt;1d
NOSINn
Snl \fl/ol
M00&gt;/31"/

:f7n'DN3
S131·1'Y'II:I::&gt;S

0! SUMSNII

J
_

Furnished room . t75 . Utilitiet
pttd Sh.,e bath . Single male.
919 Second Gallipolis. Cell
446-4416 aher 7pm .

2:00-4:00 P.M.

~

of uNCI turntture.
NEW- Wettern boot• t30.
Workboots 111
up. tStMI.
110ft toe). Call 614-446-31&amp;9.

a

~dup THE WORKING

LOCATED OFF ST. RT. 141' ON NEIGHBORHOOD
·RD. , GREEN ACRES SUBD.
3 bedroom s. 1'h baths, LR w/ slone luelace. 24x241amtly
room. kichen w/ appltances. covered patio, carport-workshop $5 800 down payment, 10%lixed rate. Monthly payment $460.94 - 30 yrs Conventional loan $58,000 loan
amount.

.
CARPET
Aemnet'lta-AII slz...
carp.t· tl. 00 yard &amp;
rOOfT'I• '300 a up.
avellable. Mollohan"
Upper Aivar 'Ad. C1ll
744-4.

Space for Rent. h cellent
Accountant. etc.
House. Call
E•tat• Agency .

Mobtle Home Spac• 60 tt , or
smaller. 876 . Water Pd. 920
Fourth, Gallipoli•. Call 614·
446-4416 after 8PM .

play ground and pic:nic ern.
304· 676· 3073 !If no annw.,.
leeva m.. uge on machinel .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

and other buildmgs. Close tD Pomeroy. ASKING $42,900.00.

10:00 A.M.
Located 3 blocks above the bypass Intersection
. in Kanauga, Ohio.
The following will be sold:
·
Anttque writing desk . antique wa sh stand, chi ld 's rocktng chatr, very rare handmade chestnut food storage
cabinet, dresser, antique straight chairs, bureau, wooden barrels, 31runks, old wooden tool boxes, 2 treadle
sewing machmes, htg h chatr, tron runner sled, smoke
stand , mining auger, several mtrrors, one lot ol books
and pictures, and other miscella neous ttems.
,
Terms: Cash

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Marvin Robinson. Owners
t
Lee Johnson

AUCTIONEER

Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740
Nol Respon stble lor Accidents or Loss of Property

4.

2
PM

OF

REAL ESTATE
NEAR POMEROY, OHIO

Resource Marketing, Inc.
Consultants • Appralacra • Aucttonccre

· Phone: (304) 824-IS904
Al ThomJlllon, Auctioneer • Ohto Ltc. I 4419
Route 1. Box 180. Weal H8m•n. WV. 25571

114-446 -

IU-· 388· 810.&amp; .
Kenmor• u• range, K.nmore
10. &amp;00 BTU 11r conditioner Csn

NEW LISTING - SYRACUSE- Remodeled 2 story home. 34 bedrooms, I ~ balhs, basement, garage and old barn on
appx. I acre ol ground Pr iced to sell at $39,900.00.

lt4-.t41-3821 Baby bed for sale, 11&amp;. Ctll
114-44-8 -3548 .

NEW LISTING - RACINE AREA- Approximately 26 acr es
ol vacant land - mlly ntce buildtng sites. CALL TODAY1
$13,000.00,

l'wlf'l led frlml, 4 dfiWir

dr11aer. full mirror, dttk/ chflir &amp;
night stand. hell. cond tor
child Calll14-448-9324.
Oak drop l1af 1abl1 A -1 Condit ion. C•ll 11 4 -446·0737

TUESDAY. JULY 21, 1987 at 7 P.M.

New carpet furniture. lamp~ .- what-nots &amp; much.
much more . ,

53

mod 12·12 gu1_ge 30" full . 1
m od 12-12 guage 28" mod .
1400 Winchester 30 " f ull All
mint condition. All for S1000.
Ca11814 ~44&amp;· 3346 .·

Dawn to dusk light. f60. Topper
for Toyota truck, long whael
base, $36. Call 61~ · 446 · 2922
Cata lyli c Converters, only
$89 .96 Most model s lnstalla·
l ion also availabl e. Muffler Man.
9 Stlmpaon Ave., Alhen s, Ohio
1 -800 -843 -3767 .
Mas1ercard·VI1tal Regardltt~ s of
credi1 history A lao. new cred i1
card. No one refused ! For 1n lor .
call 1· 3 115· 7'33· 6062 . E•l M

992-2602

II. Livt:oluck
304-773 -6234,

TONV ' S GUN ftEPAIRS , hot
reblu'eing. now taking ordet"
ardara for cullom Mauaeu. c all

304-67,!i· 4631 .

FOR SALE: Restaura rlt E"qulpment. Two head 1oft ice cream
machine,' one 24' ' electric grill.
two burner stainle11 steal hot
plate, one salad bar • equipment. comme rcial 4 -ltice toaster, 1luah machine &amp; Juppties,
36" stalnleu steel equipment
tabla, automatic hot chocolate

mac hine. 6 A .M. to 12 Noon
Only. Ph 304 -882· 2955 .
Portable lighted stgn. 8299.
Fa ctory direct Free"Oelfvery &amp;
Letter• WV - 1 -800-642 · 2434;
Ohio, 1·800· 533-3453 .

55 Buildi ng Supplies

2021

1973 Pipe r Che ro kee 140
N66986 , 3260 hrs. TT , 1240
hra. SMOH. Com 11 -Nav!l,
Appollo 602 l oran, Auto Gas
STC , AT160 1r8Jnsponder. lf)ter•
com with dual headseu. new
tirea . new carpet. W~;tl l main·
taln &amp;d. 1-6 14 -949· 2.756

Gu ho t water heat4:1r . Good
eon d ltton

3673.

Phon., 614 - 992 -

.57
56

61 Farm Equipment

· Muaicel
Instruments

Pets for Sale

CROss• SONS

U.S. 31 W•t. Jacklon. Ohio.

Butldlng M aterial•
Block, brick . sewer pipes. windoW•. li ntela. etc. Claude Win·
ten. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 814·

24 6-6 121
Concrete blocks all ailea vard or
dl!!livery. M a~on u nd. GelilpoU&amp;
Block Co., 123\12 Pi ne S1 ..
Gelllpoll•. Oh io Call 614· 446·

27e3 .

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds ... AII
styles. Julie Webb Ph. 81•· 448·

0231 .

Oragonwynd Cattery Kenfl ...
CFA

HimlfiVan. Persian and
Siem"• kinens. AKC Chow
puppies. Ne"'!' kittens; Siam ...

and Himalayans. Call 114· 441·
3844 after 7PM ,
AKC quality Yorkshire Terri•
puppies, femalet t360, main
1260. Mature ' lb. female.
S375 . Call 814· 888· 6440 or
614-886 -8787

B••-

AKC register.d black back
tett pups . 1126. 614·667·
6758 .

AKC Bauett pups. 2 male, 2
female. t100 and up . 814 -8876967 .
Registered PDmeranlen puppy. 7
monthl old Orange male. $200.
Call614 -992 -3408.
·
AKC S•moyed pupple~ only 2
1eft. 7 weeki o ld, t176 00.
3q4-6711-2728 or 676 -3488

3 .miniature JH)Odle pups, AKC
registered. 2 famala, 1 male.
1126. firm. 614 -882-3872 .a

For Sale Spinet-Console Piano
Bargain. W•nted: Responaible
PI~ to take en~..- low monthly
p1ymenu on apinet-eontcHe pi·
•no. Canbls. . nloca11y. Call Mr.
White at 1· 800· 327· 3345. EXT.

101 ,

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

C1nning tomato• for ~ale. 7
milet south ot G•lllpolis pn St
Rt. 7 . Jim Baughman farm . Cell

614-258-6535 .

Home grOwn tDmatos &amp; sweet
corn . Other farm vegetabl• &amp;
fruita. Glauburn Farm Market.
St . At . 180 ne•r Poner Call
614·388-9027 .
For Ale. Hall runner baana and
Kv. wonder beens. $12 00 bushel. 614-742-2322.
Canning tom•to11 •!ready
picllad . 14.00 bu1hel. Alto
twHt peppers. Call early ~ M
or leta PM . 614· 247-4292 .
Quality Fruit• and Vegetables

retell and whoi8Hie. 8 . &amp; S .
Produce aero.u from Plrza Hut,
G•llipolia . Ohio.

Mauey Ferguson, New Holland.
Buth Hog Sal• &amp; Service. Over
40 uaed tractors to chooae from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; uMd
eciuipment. Largest aelectlon In

S.E. Ohio.

Hay &amp; Grain

62 Wanted to Buy

64

Now buying shell corn or ell'

Good, Clean, Mi1C8d Hay For
Sale .60 per b81e. Call61 4 ·441 ·

corn Call forletestquotas. Ri\ler
Chy !=arm Supply, 1814-44152985

63

1411 .

Hay. 76c off wagon. 304-676·
5679,

livestock

~14· 281-6461 .

AVON . Look at Ul now. Earn
E1ttra MOney. 304· 676· 1429.

Duroc Boars. Bred juat like 1he
· bo1ra we tea ted at the Ohio
Tettatlon that gained over 2 :6
lba. per day Roger Bentley,

Trdnsporlalion
71

Autos for Sale

S abina. OH . 613·584-2398.

1 yr. old 1tud Y:z quaner hona , 1f.z
Utility bldg: 27' x36'x9 ' • 13'K8' . Tennauee Walk~tt. t200 Call
trick door 6 3 ' walk door. 614- 379-2884.

1 97(1 Dodge Aspen station
wegon . 1977 Dodge Aspen
station wagon . Call 614 -388-

Polled Charolala Bull Reg., Ex·
cellant Quality 17 mons Cell
Ge'o.rgo Woodward 814-379·
2597;

19n Cor.vette. 360 L82 eng.
63,000 origlnial mile T-top
good condition. Cll 614· 446-

$4444 eu1cted , Iron Horse
Bldga. 814·332 ~ 9746 .

6&amp;0 Oliver tractor with loader,
.12360. Late modal 273 New
Holland hsy baler, 11296. 7ft.
flllil mower. •196. New e ft.
ettate mower. Call 614-2866522.
New Hollend ailage blower ,
Same 11 new. U1ed very little.

614-667-6937.
lnternatlonel Forege Harveator
with one row corn head. Good
condition . Come look -make
offer. 814-687-6937
Bars, chains, and 1prockets to fit
almo•t any a8w. SIDER!io
EQUIPMENT CO .. Henderson.
w. Ve. 304-676- 7421 .

FOR SALE - 140 International
tractor, 26 HP. disc plows,
cutti\tators wtth tide dresser.
Bigger than the Cub, $3,000.
Cell 304-676- 67CJ3.

•

9724

4316 after 8pm.

YOU , TOO, CAN BENEFIT BY COUNTING ON SMITH
FOR TOP NOTCH SERVICE. LISTINGS NEEDED .HOW .

cy~ Qt.

Q/nzdt

~ c;§.;,~a~e.
RESIDENTIAL

INVESTMENTS

m
-

G)
...
'"'mamtf

"Ll01i1

COM ME RCIAL · FARMS .

446-6806

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA L SMITH, BROKER 388-8826
RUTH GOODV. OFFICE IIANAGER 256-6156
DIAN CALLAHAN . REALTOR 256-6251
KENNY GOODY . REALTOR 216-9334

Real Estate General

WISEMAN

Antiques

· Vintagt oak ctuna cabilllt, orlgi·
nal eondition , Iron kettle with
nand. l04· 571!li· 4t04.

CALL CLELAND REALTY

"THE WINNIIIO TEAM"
IN REAL ESTATE

REAL ESTATE.

54 Misc. Merchand1se

'446-3644
E. M . WIS!:MAN . BROKER
DAVID WISEMAN , 446-9555 ·
B. J . HAIRSTON. 446 -4240
CLYDE B. WALKER . 245·527_!i
lORETIA McDADE. 446:'772!1

P1•tUc ctst..-n atat• •PPrO\Ied.
plutiQ •~~Ptio tank.l, pl11tlr;
culverts.. m_.al culvena. RON
£VANS ENTERPRISES . J1r:lt·
son. Oh. 11•·281· 5910

S,-wln'il m1chin• &amp; sweeptt
rtpaWo All matt•. mod-'• Ptrll
in ttoc:M . Work ouarant••f:l
Re110nable pric.. . Call &amp;1-4

$39,900 WILL BUY THIS CLEAN, NEAT HOME
With 3 bedrooms. alummum stdm&amp; central au
and carpeltng throughout. Located in town. Great
rnvestm ent or starter home.
#428

441· 1488 .

LOCATED ON SANDERS DRIVE-TAKE St Rt 141
to Neiahborhood. Approx. y, mile turn riaht.
3 DMroom rancn, trvmg room w/ cathedral ceilings &amp;w,b fireplace. Eat-tn kt!chen, new carpet &amp; lmoleum, ctty schools.
$4,800 down payment - 10%fixed rate Mon thly payment
$389.74 · 30 yr. loan. $48,000 loan amount, convenlronal
loan.

STUTES REAL ESTATE

1917 t8 t1. HorN &amp; "oek
trail• •24915 u.~ 2 .,.,,,.
trail• ready lo go 10 ahOw,
lt911 Call.14· 211-11822 .
4 a .. hNea full of tte• &amp;
ttoney. Com.,la18 outfit ln ~ luded . Cell 114 ~446 · 1301 .

Antique o• by"et, waterbed,
fk .ace inNf1, wDOdburn•.
mi.c. al ...war • . Cetl814· 388·
818&amp;,

HENRY E CLELAND, JR
' 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL
'
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" 949-2660
DOTTIE TURNER .
'" ""' "'"'"" "'"""'""992-5692
TRACY RifFLE ..
'""'"'" '"'"' ' '' .....,,949·3080
OFFICE
' "" .. ,. "' " ' '""'" . 992· 2259

RetpiOn..... prot•slonal couplt

.... Ant

1

niee tMlll hOme In Of

•round Oelllpoll1 &amp; P,, PlaManl
.,. . C)t turrouf\d lng areaa Must
.. low w .. l bM\tved peu Con·

tnt Steve Trubma., ate 14·448-

aday Realty
446-3636J~~

IF ON LY "VERY BEST"
0r11 w tena. cons1der.. lar~e fR. lormal dtnmg
a11d lat ge LR. each w1lh rrver vrew, 4 large BRs
lois of closets afid 21arge storaRe rooms. Beaultlul
new caroet CA and ;n tnground pool 2 7 acres
One mtle from down own
#13 4

I~

1J A,. ~~; h• flb..-vlau fol dd ow n
cwnp• 2 )Joh n0.JofaBtractor,
Fcwd ' Oala.. le. Call IU -250·

AUI&gt;R£l F CANADAY, R!AliOR
ROaiRT GOROON . RIALTOR. 446-6116
IIARY FLOYD, RIAliOI!, 446-llll
1~ LOCUST !&gt;IRI£1, GAlliPOLIS. OHIO

IU 10 R£CENTL Y MODERNIZED inside and out. 3 1&amp;- bedrooms, Ph baths,
prden tub. new country blue k1tthln wl sohd oak cabmets. screened
porch. NEW GARAGE. 211"r40" w/ hut , water. 200' wirina. Can be uud tor

car repilir, etc. Mtd S~s.

Aafrigera1or . r•nge. couc:: h. cot' " • and tabt11. tamp . OlnMta
,_._ CDIDI TV, tw in btld &amp;
w••h•. Call814- 446- 3224

NEW LISTING: Tne farm ttlat hn everyonelooktnt Also tor the man thlt
wants hts own workshop (32'x42'). "Includes 53 ac .. 15 cl11r, tob. base .
fruit trees. strawberrtes, 3 or 4 bedrooms. Erlrt 1&amp;- L.R.. hup country

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EARLY COLONIAL ATMOSPHERE - BRICK WALKS ANO
PORCHES, CHARMING $UNROOF, fAMILY ROOM WITH fl .
REPLACE, 4 BEDROOMS, ATTACHED GAR AGE. NICE PRIVAT E
PLACE TO LIVE ON APPROX. 2 ACRES ALSO HAS GREAT
"COMMERCIAL POTENTIAL LOCATED ON ROUTE 35 AND 588
REASONABLY PRICED AT $65,000.
FORTY ACRES WITH MOBILE HOME. SECOND MOBILE
HOME HOOKUP PRESENTLY RENTED SEVERAL EXCELLENT
BUILDING SITES. BEAUTIFUL SETTINGON RACCOON CREEK
ROAD $38,000 CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM
HOW SOON CAN YOU MOVE? GET THE MOST FOR YOUR
MONEY WITH THIS 2 BEDROOM FRAME RANCH REC ENTLY
REMODELED INSIDE AND OUT. IN CITY. $24,500

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THE "SINGLE" SOLUTION! RENTING' WHY? WHEN YOU CAN
OWN THIS NICE 3 ROOM PLUS BATH HOME IN CITY
$12,500.

COLONIAL STYLE ON 1¥• ACRE. WELl MAINTAINED 3 BR's,
1 BATH, FAMILY ROOM, WOODBURNER, GARAGE WITH
WORKSHOP AREA PLUS MOBILE HOME PRESENTlY
RENTED. BUY BOTH FOR ONLY $45,000.
NEW COMMERCIAL BUILDING! - CARRYOUT, STOCK AND
EQUIPMENT LOCATED IN CHESHIRE TWP. BLOCK BLDG.
LARGE ENOUGH FOR GROCERY BUSINESS ALSO ON OVER
HALF AN ACRE. DOES GOOD BUSINESS - HAS POTENTIAL
FOR MUCH MORE. ASKING $66,900
'NEIGHBORHOOD BAA - WELL ESTABLISHED. TERRIFIC
MOM AND POP OPERATION, LOCATED IN CITY, CALL FOR A
S_HOWING AND COMPLETE DETAILS!

HURRY ,, HURRY , , HURRY- 87 ACRES, $20 000. CALL
WE WILL TELL YOU WHERE' ,
'

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OWNER WILL CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT- 2 HOMES IN
CADMUS. $2(),000 FOR BOTH.

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WHAT MORE COULD YOU ASK FOR? IN TOWN; 3 BRS, FULLY
CARPETED, lARGE KITCHEN WITH RANGE, REFRIG.,
WASHER &amp; DRYER, BIG FENCED BACKYARD &amp; 2 CAR GAR·
AGE ONLY ASKING $25,000.
1980 FAIRMONT- MOBILE HOME 14x70. TWO BRS, BATH ,
LR, KITCHEN, ON 1'A ACRES ON BEAUTIFUL ROLLING LAND
WITH LARGE PRIVATE POND AND LOTS OF, SHADE TREES,
LISTEO AT $23,000.

9'hx60 MULTI-PURPOSE ROOM
Wh ich could eastly be divided. Plus 21x241amily
room grves a lamtly all the extra space needed lor
comfortable living. Maintenance free. th is 12 year
old home also fW 1.440 sQ. II. lhat mcludes 3
bedrooms, dmmg room , living room , and 2 car
garage located on 1 acre on Rt 160. $49,000
#411

Call6,4· 2fli6 · U89

THE PERFECT HOME FOR YOUR TREASURED ANTIQUES! IF
YOU LOVE THAT VIC TORIAN LOOK. BEAUTIFUL OLD WOOD WORK AND LARGE ROOM S THI SONE'S FOR YOU ANO ONLY
IN THE 60'S

BUY ONE- GET ONE FREEl!! ONLY $6,000 FOR TWO AD ·
JOINING LOTS. OUT Of TOWN OWNER WANTS QUICK SALE.

COUNTRY LIVING - AFFOAOABLE PRICE
3 bedroom ranch wtth nice stzed rear deck and
fenced yard lor rela11ng or enlertainmg. Th ts 6
yeat Old hOme h•s be en well cared lor and ts
priced rt gh t at $43,000.
#443

2 Kaw. mo~arcyc: l• pans. uo_
Welghtbwnc;:h and w• ISI ~II . 130.

Real Esta1e General

TIRED OF LOOK·ALIKES?IF YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR
AHOME WITH ASTYLE OFITS OWN YOU HAVE FOUNO YOUR
NEW HOME' WONDERFUL UPPER AND LOWER DECKS, 3
BEDROOMS, MASTER BEDROOM HAS ITS OWN PRIVATE
BALCONY. 2 BATHS, FULL BASEMENT WITH GREAT POTENTIAL FOR FUTURE FAMILY ROOM. $54,900

#203

Four Mt~undhill Cllfm .. lry loti.
10.1120. · Good loeat ian. C1U
&amp;14·445·4 7315

kitchen . pantry &amp; bath Unbelievtble view, you can see for miles. Best ot
all the pnce Ofllr $37,900.

CHESHIRE VILLAGE

DO YOURSELF A FAVOR AND LOOK AT THE BEST FIRST!
BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCH WITH FULL BASEMENT. 4 BR'S. 3
BATHS, FAMILY ROOM WITH FP PLU SBUCK STOVE INSERT
. GARAGE, KITCHEN HAS RANGE . REFRIG. &amp; OW ALSO
KITCHEN OFF FR WITH RANGE &amp; REFRIG. DECKON END OF
HOUSE OVERLOOKING POOL AND COVERED PAT IOIN REAR.
ALL ON YOUR OWN PRIVATE 6 ACRES - LOCATED ON
BLACKTOP ROAD ALL FOR ONLY $79.900

RENT IS A FOUR LnTER WORD
Get your act to gether, so you won't be guilty. Buy
thts 3 bedroom ranch with vmyl stdm~ Equipped
kttchen, lamtly room, Fenced yard. Furniture
stays tncludtng washer and dryer. At $36,000,
you can'l alford to pass this up.

1971,

SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1987
10:00 A.M.
Estate of Juhl Brumfield,

Rat Terriet puppi•. $!0 each.
Call 30•· 896· 3881 .

f.HIIl Slllllllii!S

882. 3307,

POMEROY - Older 2 story home With gorgeou s ooodoor k,
fi replace &amp;mce cabmets m krtchen. 3 bedrooms. huge llvtn g
room , dmmg room &amp; equrpped krtch en Central au, garage
and storage butldmg. MAKE OFFER. $39,900.00

ESTATE AUCTION

Vance Eugene Brumfield, Executor
Gallia county Probate Case #18652
Auctioneers Note: this is an exceptionally clean auction.
Very nice household items, good enou&amp;fl for any home. An
excellent selection of i\ems.
FLATWARE: Wtlliam Rogers tnlaid silver (serVIce lor 8), 52
pteces Holmes &amp; Edwards inlaid silver, 18 pieces Lady Doris
silverplate
·
APPLIANCES: Um co refrigerator, Hotpotnt electrtc range, GE
dryer, Kenmore heavy duty washer, Hotpoint chest freezer (20
cu. ft.), humidifier, Hoover portable washer / drye!.
SMALL APPLIANCES: Crock pot, mixer, master oven: can
op-ener, ice cream freezer, hair dryer, wmdow fan, hassack
ian 3 speed.
ANTIQUES: Wood s1ove2 burner, I&amp; crock brown glazed, old flat
crate wrrh metal handles marked Hosp. lor Eptleptics, Gallipolis,
Ohio, #2 stone tar. wooden tool box, copper bitter w/lld, copper
applebutter kettle (Dove tail), jg MR ,.Peanut glass 1ar.
GLASSWARE: Mt sc. Cornmgware, some depresston glass,
Homer Laugh li n plaller, glass coasters, milk glass pttcher,
oval glass, carntval drsh, ca ndy dtsh w/lld. glass swan, milk
glass hen on nest, other misc. glass.
HOUSEHOLD: 2 door metal utility cabinet, utility table
w/ drawer, oval dining table w/ 4 matching chatrs, Capehart
stereo, brown velvet occastonal chair, Sylvanta 25" COLOR
TV, brown tweed rocker, tan recliner, Flex steel couch, 2 end
tables, 13" TV, maple night stand, MAGNUS CHORD ORGAN,
3 sets coil springs, 3 pc. bedroom suite (blonde), bookshell, 3
pc. bedroom su~e dark wood includes tnple dresser, bookcase, metal uttltly, wood utMy cabinet, much more!
MISCELLANEOUS: Set porcelain pots &amp; pans, misc. pots &amp;
pans, misc. dtshes, bed linens, cooking utensils, canninlliars,
TV trays, pressure cooker, granrreware, granite canner complete set, lamps. wall clock, wrought iron wall plaques, pole
light, feather pillows, commerctal rollmg pm &amp; grader, set
Amertcan Infer. Encylopedias, bask massager, Footltxer,
lawn chairs, towels. old baskets I wicker egg. clothes
hamper, meat grinder, etc.
QUILTS: 4 handmade quilts. 1 star patterns, 1 blackbird, .
also several af&amp;flansl
TOOLS: Misc. garden tools, wheelbarrow, hose, 3 ladders,
sled, tomato stakes, wooden extension ·ladder, Briggs &amp;
Stratton push lawn mower, Sears Craftsman 8 horse power
riding mower (36" cui), other ~ems!
AUCTIONEERS: Ill. L (Bud) McGhee
•
&amp; Steve McGhee
P.O. Box 191, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446-0552
lie. &amp; Bonded Ohio &amp; West, Va.
TERMS OF SALE: Cnh or (:hedl w1th proper J.D.
Not Responsible for Accidents or Loss of Property!

Ready mnt e.onerete and all
concrete supplies. Call us Vallev
Brook Cement and Suppli•.

Callihan"• Uud Tlr• Shop Ov.,1 .000dr•. allu12. 13. U , Hi ,
11. 11.&amp;, I m'il• OU1 Rt 218 .
Calllt4-251· 1251

MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER

Location: From Gallipolis, take State Route 7 south
to State Route 218, T/ ri&amp;ht go 7.5 miles. Auction is
on right Watch for signs.
D. DEAN EVANS, Attorney

New, 8000 BTU Cllmatrol air
condttioner. S2 80. Call 614·

Pets for Sale

8royhtll tioral couch and ch lll1
Cetnappet r~llner . All 3 tor
1211iJ) Good - condition, 30.4

9640 durlno d., houra.

SPECIAL AUCTJON

56

dinette. 614-112-3143.

Real

From Gallipolis take 141 . turn left onto Rt. 775.
Turn right onto Patriot Cadmus Rd: Watch for si&amp;ns.

55 Building Supplies

Lo\li couch. 1100. Hld•a· bed
with inn..- aprlng mattutn,
I, 26. Sofa. chair, end kltch..-,

614-245-5152

Saturday, July 25, 1987

up. Living
Fln1n&lt;:lng
Fprnlture.

Stokermatlc stove for ••la(heating atovel . See Hollis Millor.

7479 .

Now thru July 31 flflt 3 montha
lot rent frH with 1 year IMBa.
Famity Prida Mobile Home Park.
Gallipolis F•rrv whete we eat.,
to tamtliet. SpaciDua IDtt. hugh

Alsa cut

Refr'aerator, aotaa , recllnMs,
!Wino room tebtM. It full sin
bedding. Corblrl &amp; Snydlr Furni·
wra, 91515 Second . eu. 4481171 .
.

Space for. -rt mall trallett. All
hook-ups. Cibta Also aftici.ncy
rooms, atr and cable. Maaon,
W.Va. Call304-n3-15151

47 Sp,aca for Rent

1---------------

MAN ' S FRIEND

PUBLIC AUCTION

REEDSVILLE, OHIO
LISTING NEXT WEEK
AUCTIONEER. JIM CARNAHAN

USED· Beds, dr...... bedriDOm
sultet . 1111 - t2tt . Deaks.
wring• welSh•. 1 complttte line

1- NEIHISTtiNG- MIDDLEPORT- Here is a2 stor yColontal
m Mrddleport, tnat has many great lealures, Great IIYtng
room. great woodburnmg !~repla c e, great workshop, plus a
great apartment lor rental tnco me, WANT $34,900.00

446-4206'

CASE NO. 25543

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

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom1 Pj,rlc,
Route 33, North of Pomen~y .
Aenttl trailers (:ajl 814-992 -

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

M.A. HALL GUARDIANSHIP

Full slle m.nreu 6 lound•Jan,
starting· e9t . Rectlnera

Furnished Rooms 47 Space for Rent

8

3 DAYS
JULY 29-30-31

12ft. boat, trailer, 3 horse power
Naw wood e pc. living room motor. Sea Eagle in flata ble boat .
1uit... t38t .8&amp;; New ltvlng Darton Compound Bow. Ben
tDOm aultet from t179.96 to P••10n Recurve Bow . Tent and
1700.. ChNt of drawers. 4 · all camping eqOipment.Movable
drtWer, U8 .• 1 drawer, 169.96: 10'•12' .if1tulatad aluminum
End tabl• frDm tl8 91 Mt building. Tools ol all kind.
Uaed Fumh:\lfe; bedroom suhes.
Canning jera. Celt 614· 4f6·
full sized IMds. twin ~~ and 9836 Will conaider gun1 for
rock.,. . RacUnlfl from 199.915 tr1d1 i n.

MIDDLEPORT - PRICE REDUCED - Tnts older home 1s
close lo stores and schools. 2-3 bedrooms, level lot. carpet ·
mg and other features mclud tng a ntce front porch. MAKE
OFFER. $1 9.000 00.

"~----------+-----------+---------~

61.4-992 -7787 EOH .
1 · bedroom apt. available at
Pameroy Chffs Apts. Handi·
capped equipt wtth roll -in bath
and kitchen . Newly carpeted and

'ON'9'H ONI111M e

\,H

Op.n BAM to IPM. Mon thru
Sat. &amp;14· 44&amp;· 1d89. 127 3rd
Ave. OaiUpolil. OH -

54 Misc . Merchandise

PARSON•s FUANITUAE

MEW LISTING - Over 70 acre farm with older home, garage

T~ Oaks Apt. newly reno\latftd
apanmenta with stainmaater

l!

County Appliance. Inc. Good
uud applitlnc• Md TV tilts.

Ohi9-Point Pleasant. W.Va .

51 Household Goods 54 Misc. Merchandi,se

0322.

1~35

66'1 3rd. Ave , 2 BR ., unfurnifhed , with refrig and stove
$250 per month plus deposit .
'C11ll 614-246-9596 .

51 Household Goods

ONv•lt .. O.lipolis.
NEW· 6 pc. wood arou~ e399.
Living room IIUkn· t191· t581.
lun• bedt with beddif\9• • 1 98.

3 Mll11 out
Bulavllle Ad. Open 9am to 6Pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. "814-448-

I'" r' I

ment by US . ShelerCorp. ,EHO .

SWAIN
AUCTION • FUIINITURE 62

approved credit.

...~ •.•,. •.•• '"'

Private parking Privata en trance. 1 BA furnished, all utili·
tift pd . S200 per month. Call
614 - 446 -7616 or 614 - 446 -

carpet. Playground area tor
children . Watet", trash. and sew·
ag·e paid. One or two Bi. apta.
aviilable. Ntce location tn quiet
area. For more infor call 614682· 7670. Office houra-Mon .
S~tt . 9 -5 . Closed Sun. Menage·

Mer chdtHitst•

90 D•vt nm• u caah wtth

Sunday, July 19, 1987

-19.1987

...... -..... ·

HOUSE

- --~-··

July 19. 1987'

--i

My great grandfather
_ _ _ _
passed along many old tales
._.--'--'---'---'-"'-"" of the old west He w'lls always
fond of telling people that
~__,.C::...:L;..:.I-T-P..::E:,.::K,__-1 there would always be a fron1• 1 j " I' o 1 tier where there was an open '
~=-=::-==-~-=::·~mind and a - -.

area.

Sof• and- chairs Pt"ic:ed from
1395 to t9115 . Tabl• t&amp;O and
up to 1126. Hid••·'*'• 1310
to t&amp;8&amp;. A•clinars f225 to
1375. Lampa t28 to e121S.
Dlnen" I 109 and up to t496.
Wood Uible w-t chairs t215 to
t7815. Oeak 1100 up Ia 137&amp;.
Hutch• 1400 and up. Bunk
beda compl.t• w-m.n,.. ...
1285 and up to •395 . Btby Mds
t1 10. Manr..... or box tprlngs
ful or twin eee. firm t71 • ..,d
t88. 0UMI'I aeta 1225, King
•310. 4 dr.w•r ch•t te9 . Gun
cablnMI fJ oun. 011 Or etecrtrlc
range $375. Baby mettr•Ma
t38 • t45 . 81d tram• e2o.
t30 &amp;. King lr1m1 t&amp;O. Good
saiHtion of · bedroom suitea,

.,.__ __ ~

m.wl c1blnats. hladba•rdt t30
end up to 116 .

A S H U 'T I

Modern 1 BR apartment. Call

... - .

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would like to r..,t tot tor tTailer
with all hook·upt. Pref« Langa-iillll or Oextet or Paint.,. Ridge

-~~N~u;.,.:.F.,G::..:;Er::-=L=-r-_,

614-446. 4926,

•

3 or 4 Bedroom houae in Kyger
Cr.- School District. Ref•en·
en Ph, 614-44a-8621 .

'!eo1ro m;e t" e 6 scro -rb led

word~ oe
, , .,.. ~ l e .... or .: :h

•

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Ohio-Point
Pleasant, W. Va.

THAT DAILY C!_ ~
PUlZliR ~~
- - - - - - - Ed it•d bv

Apanmen1 tor Rent : 3 rooms .
$125 / mo. Adulls. Call 30467.5-6104, or 675-7738.

•

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2 bedroom home wtth VInyl

Sldm~

'Remodeled
kttchen, dtnmg room. lull basement. Modern gas
forced'" furnace. 2 car garage Bar gam prrced al
$22,000
#22 1
BRANO NEW LI STING
Owne r Very An xious to Sell!!'
You 'll entoy the Qlllelness olthe count ryside and
conventence ol betng close ID town m th iS 7year
old 3 bedroom home tust 4 mtles ou t rn ctty school
dtstrrct The rough ced ar srdm gand a new wraparound deck (treated lumber) make 11 a standout
on the market Includes a n1ce ktlchen wtth range
and re!rrgerator, lormtc a countertops and nice
cabtnets. formal drnmg room and 2 baths There's
a large lamtly room wrth !~re p lace an d I car garage 24!30 outbutlding lor stora ge. You 'll like the
added outdoor summer hYin2 space the deck prDVIdes, above ground poolts exira. II you 're about
lo buy a home. see lhts one before you close on
anythmg else' $64,500.
'
#108
.
EXECUTIVE HOME
For the hrst l1me: th1s cus1om destgned and su pe·
nor qualrty home tsoHered lor sal e located on 11
beauttlul acres (more avatlabl e). thrs 5 year old
bnck home offers space. prrvacy and scenic VIew
wtlh tn a lew mt nutes ol H M.C. S orne ol the oulstandmg features are 4 bedrooms, 21h baths, spa CIOUSkitchen /ltvmg area, 20x40 pool, 2 car gar·
age plus a tu lly msulated 24x 36 detached mullt·
purpose burld mg wtl h,f)ath Call lor more inlormatton.
#413
COUNTRY BOY - CITY GIRL
Thts large spactous ranch wil l sattsly both Se·
el uded on a deadend street only blocks from
town. 4 bedrooms, 2\? baths,' large attra ctive living room/dmmg room com bination wtlh woDdburner, wile approved eal-in kttchen and lamtly
room. Plu s, above grou nd swimmin g pool. 2 car
garage. Plenty ol storage and workshop, Owners
want it SOLD! $64.900.
#210
- GENTLEMAN 'S FARM
Very well cared lor 2-3 bedroom home on 32
acres oilers peacelul setting Large bath, livtng
room . dining roqm and eal:in kitchen. Also, large
front porch and encl osed side porch New VInyl
siding, forced atr lurnace I car garage with overhead storage pl4s several outbuildmgs. Larg&amp;gar·
den s pa~e. frutt trees and lots ol flowers all
around. CLOSE TOTHE MINES $39, 90D.

#202

.
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f lotJ•,tnq
fj, ,trlqu.nl&lt;-1·,

BRICK RANCH ON 1.84 ACRES
Large spaciOus home offers over 2, 000 sq. ~ - ol
living space p l u~ large 2 car garage, IncludesIamity room and rec. room, both with woodburning fireplace Large eal-in kttchen with attractive cabinets, 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, large uttlity room
and move. Wen built and well cared lor home 1n
Green Township. $70's.
#229

NEW LISTING OF HOME IN THURMAN
Plus 2 adtacenl butldmgs and extra lot. Completely remodeld 5 room home. Forced air furnace,
bath, VInyl stdrng, stormwmdows, msulated. Old 2
story store bu tl dmg wtth basement. Good lorced
a1r healmg system, restroom. All pamted, in good
COfld1!10n . Vmyl Stdin&amp; asphalt Shingle root
Newer 40x48 xl3 butldmg, co ncretefloor, kttchen
area. restroDm. well insulated, attractiVe umt.
Dwelltng, 2 qualtty butldings and extra lot All lor
$8 2,000.
#325
MIDDLEPORT HOME
Cozy 3-4 bed room home. V&amp;ry well maintained
home, 11h story lrame oilers large living room,
lamtly room, nice bath and eat -m kitchen. Attrac·
tiYe oak woodwork. One car garage. Close to
schools. pools and ballltelds. $44,900.

m4

WATCH THE RIVER RUN BACKWARDS

BRICK AND VINYL: Charmln&amp;2 bldrm. split. OYerlookincOhio Ainr Elt-tn
kil , LR .. bath. Room to 1row. Ctty scbools. $47,700,

EYE FOR QUALITY?
Then come see thts modest but cute 3bedroom,
vinyl sided home. 18x24 garage. Low utilittes. Allordably pnced at $32.600.

#312

EUREKA!!
Investors. be one step ahead wtth thrs I ~ story
home. 3 bedroom s, dming roomand parttal basement Backed up by 32 acres ol wooded land
Locat.d next to the locks and dam. Bar gam priced
at $30,000. •

#427

GOOD CONDITIONE[t AND MODERN FEATURES
In older home located in Cadmus. 2-3 bedrooms,
I \? baths, liVIng room wilh hreplace, ll basement
Excellent garden area. Good storage butldtng.
45x45 barn. 22x24 garage. I acre, m/1 $36,500.
#329

wtndow ol your attractive bi-level located high DR
a hill 1ust 5 miles lrom town. This very prtvate
home mcludes 3 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, large
family room , 1\? baths, 2 car garage and over 2
acres to roam around on Home has had excellent
care and IS ready to move tnto. Enioy ctty schools
at\d country atmosphere $64,500.

A PLACE YOU'LL LOVE TO CALL HOME
Charmm2 2 storv vinvl sided home gives you a
wonderful warm feelin g Includes 4 bedrooms, I 1\
baths, liVIng room with ltreplace, attractive dinmg
room wtth corner ch ma cabinets, large eat-m
kitchen and lu ll basement with a second lireplace. Located on A quiet deadend street withm
walktng distan ce to, schols. 2 car garage. All lor
$65,000.
#209

TAKE YOUR TIME!
You have to go in to appreetale this lovely 3 BR
ranch. LR with !~replace, DR. eat-in k~chen and 2
baths. 2 car garage. I ac. lot. $57,600.
#304

3 bedroom flome .with all the trimmin gs. Fully

II tl ever does, you'll see illtrst from the picture

#120

NO HONEY-DO JOBS HEREI
Owner has done a fantastic job redoing this older
home. 3 spactous bedrooms, large krtchen.lormal
dining and family room wrth woodburner 24x30
metal garage and a workshop. Sit bac&lt; and relax
on the screened -In porch. One look and you'll love
1t. Allordably priced at $49,500.
#449
NEW LISTING - IMM.EDIATE POSSESSION
5 room remodeled home m Thurman. Move-in
condition. Nice bath. Kitchen woth refrigerator
and range included. Listed to sell al $20,000.

#326

ATTENTION!
Looking lor a reasonably priced one floor plan
house wtth low maintenance and a mce shady
town' We have it and would be happy to show it to
you Price- $39,000. North Gallia Schools.

#440
HOME PLUS RENTAL INCOME
Let the mcome Irom garage apartment help wrth
payments on this two bedroom home rn Oak Hill.
Priced at $45,000.
'
·

*439

OUTSTANDING BUY IN SYRAC.USE
equipped eat-in kitchen, dtn tng room, 21ull baths,
11vin2 room and lamtlv room Country style decoratin&amp; Large 2 car garage with heat and water.
ONLY $j~.~uu . Many other extras.

m7 BUilDER'S DRUM HOME AVAILABlE: Be theli,.llo ue. Betulilul
unftnstned ltome. OWner must move 1nd needs quick sale. 2 story, 4
btdrm .. kllehen. DR.LR w/WBFP. full bsmt. s•yli&amp;ht tn mast11 BR . l fin ·
tshed bitt! plus 2 more planned. Will sell wtth 8 acres. $35.000 Or buy all
38 ac. and another home for tot1l ol $52,000. It h 1 steal.

-'

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N236 -

If You're An "Old House Freak",
This One's For You I
With a coat ol paint and maybe anew Iron! parch,
'his could be one ol the outstandmg old homes tn
ihe area. Includes a formal entrance, large pine
paneled family room, decent kitchen (room lor im provement), utility room and large bedroom on
ground lloor. Two large bedroorros upstairs. Ntce
flat lot wtth 2 car garage. Pnced $25,900. At edge
ol town.
#119
HEADS WILL TURN .. ,
to take a second look at this newly ltsted
sided ranch. Owners have done a terrilic JOb .
finishing this home {some still needed). 1,752 sq.
ft. oHers 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, 18x20 living
room, formal dining room, kitchen, utility room
and full b8sement Concrete patio and breezeway
gives the kids a place to skate, ride bikes, etc.
Oversized 2 car garage has plenty ol room lor storage. 1.99 acre. AssumaJrle mortgage. Deserves
viewing today, $62,900. ·
·

11441

HOI! w/tNCOIE POSSI.E: Clotnolll lltdlro, lloiH. lt!p tl, IH,
sunporch, bsmt.111d11r. Just• little bh of htlwtn heft. htfiiOOd buildIna was 111d to 11ptir TVs. 8Mnlloullf, prdln and fruh. fl'tulllfrdtn on
1 lot acro11 tltt f'OIId. Also ~ookup for mobile hon.
Rd.

.-,..,..a,

fl4Z COIIHICIAL IUILDINtl: 10 Jll. old, 2GCI ft. ,..... .. bosr R.
...II. U71sq. II, ,..... coiocniO Willi•. . - olr I ~!loo!J Pllk·
~.D.
lood ...... ~ •
lillltt

...

mo.-1111.

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�19, 1987

Ohio-Point Ptu•nt. W. Ve.
Auto• for Sale

1113 Ford fairmont. 1 own•.
ftloa *2110. 1171 Ford Fietta.

-

tiZZ.

•711. Coli 114-211-

1171 hoer wllft 4 m-i whMia.

.,110, Coli 114-3117-0113.

71

1112 m•cl&amp; 121 d.tux. •eel.

cond. 4 door. cruiH AC . c..

114-441-1117.

Real Estate General

RNI Eatate General

1981 ChttYV C - 10, 306 V -8 .
4- sp., ps. pb. ae. aflmline fiber-"
OWn top, uaitAr hitch . bucket
87 ,000 rtl ilet, am-fm
~,•ue . U , 500. 304 -875•all or 87&amp; -4230 .

114-441-zen.

f•.t•.

1817 Chwy C.mro 306. 1977
Honda OoldWing GL 1000, good
concltlon. Coli 114-367-01&amp;&amp;

1807

••oo. 814·
367- 7767 ,
.

1980 Cia.tlon. Good concfition.

ft81

For plftt onty or all. 614-949:

.76-6662.

;980 Cordoba t1000. 304-

12 Trucks for Sale

R•e1111Chw. Nnell, orgin ..
"213 V-1. ,U,PI,48.000 ....nol
ml•. C•ll O.y-114-.UI-1?00.
MOftd.,.. lat . Evening-•14-

178-331&amp;.

tw&amp; PM.

FAIRVIEW. SUBDIVISION - 1,500 SQ. FT.
N1ce home. central air, rural water system, large fa mily room .
26'•22', garage, storage building, storm doors and windows.
~SI
Nice home close to Holzer Hospital. See 11 now.

3 BRs, LR, family room with fireplace, ·
equipped kitchen, l'h bat~s. carpet and
hardwood, in-ground 16x32 pool._ Low $70s.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE-446-7699

CALL FOR DETAILS - 446-8093

1.57 ACRES - 7 ROOMS - OWNER FIIIAIICIIIG

1913 Chev.. le. four door. •uto.,
lk. PS, PB. good condition.

t2,780. Coll304-17&amp;-2&amp;13.

1970 - -Chevel'- SS, red w "i th
bl.cll atr.,_, *1700. 304 - 875 -

FLATWOODS AREA OF POMEROY

New kitchen, bathroom, and carpeting
Yz acre - 17 acres available.

1711 .. 114-446-4803

CAll 446-2359

1976 Chevy pickup, 360, auto .,
PS . Ru111 good. Good for work
uuck, S5CO. Call 304- 676 -

2&amp;83.

Chevy pu-truck, 360
engine. 73.000 mites, runs
good, body fair, golld t iru .
$800. 3 04 ·882·3178 .
1976

1978 ~hevy 4x4, VJ ton , lhlln
wheel base, PS , PB , 4 apeed

304-458·1666.

1979 J eep C h~;H"okee. 3 speed,
4WD , · as i1 or p arts. C&amp;ll
614-742 - 31 18 unt il 2: 30p.m .

\988 Nisun piCkup, sta ndard 6
tpeed. silver facto ry mud Uops.
FM · .~M Caue ne and back
b\lmper, Call 614 -992-6319
aft« 2pm llr 1 -304 -676-4340
efctansion 377 after 11 :30 pm,

1976 Je ep CJ -7 , 304 aut o .. PS ,
1 1260 . Call 3 04 -675-2663,
1987 V am ah a 350 Big Bear tour
wheel dJive. 600 miles . l ike
new: 304 -67 5-11 26 .

1983 OR1bO . full floater , exc. l - - - - - - - - - For sale or trade for .umethingof
equel value. B•u Boet. 2 Pro
1981 KX 260
Baas swivels••••· Live wellt. 36
1982 KDX 176
HP Johnson Motor. Vary good
1979 CB 660
condition . t1600. Call 614 ·

cond. 304 · 676 · 1666 .

JUDY
J. Merrill Carter ......................... 379·21 84
PhyUis Loveday .......;.................. 446-2230
hcky laM ................................. 446-0458

, BLACKBURN
.REALTY
IUNN\' HI.Af:KOI : R~
Hro!u•r

.

Call aher 6 p.nl .. 304-67 6-

514 Srruntl AH•nut•
Gallirmli~&lt;, Ohio -1-S6:J
l,hon,. (614) .4 46-0008.

9829.

:{987 · GMC Truck 4WD ,will
Wk e old uuck on trade in Call

1985 Sutuki .230 Ouads port .
£)1callent co nd it1on A ski ng
1150 0 1983 Suzuk'i GS 550L

&amp;14 · 379 - ~820 .

1'579 Fo, d F 150 4 x4, pu, new
•ho c ks . and •• ·
tf.u11 .13000 negotiable

Good condition.

ttuke a,

Patrick Cochran ......................... 446-8655

'

614· 446 -1266.

1114-448-4225.

78 Superglide. Call 61 4 -446 ·

•

1306 attar 6 pm.

For d F - ~50 4"4 need s
1)11nt U$150. chro'm a'"CNheals 1h
teh Ford t 1 50 . C~t11 446 -1492
or 44.6 ·4044.

1983 Hont111 XR 1 00 · like ne w
1600. 304 -67 6 1758.

1976 Fotd he .... y duty v. ton fla1
bed plc .. ·vp Call evening, 614 ·

1985 M 11 gna ·vnooc 8,00 0
miles, m int ccnd .. will trade tor
truck S2.000. 304-576 -2174 or
614 446 -0009 af1er 6 pm.

1.,919

446·6610

915·3958

NEW USTING! IIICE 3 IEDROOII HOllE IN
. TOWN • .;. Includes family r.oom, I Ii baths and
wood burner. Home has recently been remodeled.
Immediate possession. $37.500.00.

t 1 000 .

19 84 Yemah•IT 490 w ith many
eJtttiUI E11. . cond1tio n. 1800. Ca ll

l980 Chev., lJ4 ton uuck. 4
w~e&amp;l drive , 4 sp -.ed, 59,000
m~"- Call aftet 5 00 p .m

SOUTHERN HILLS I.E., INC.

A a ~ ing

CaH 614 -4.46- 6262 6· 10 pm.

992-6053.

75 , Boats and
M otora for Sale
40 HP Johnson Boat and trailer.
*100. Call 614-992 ·3860 .

76

6636.

1977 Harley Sportster. Many
new perh, excellent condition,
c all 304 -675 - 1496 after ·t p.m.
1981 Harley, 80 c i. new tires.
batt ery, chain , excell.nt c:ondl·
tion, $3600. 304 · 676~ 2508 .

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

16 ft . B•yliner Boat end treil.,.
with walk through wind shield.
86 HP Cttrytler Motor. Call
814-992-7663 •fter4 :30 .

ClEAR THE DECK .SAlE: Winter pricu on all 86 ' 1 and 87's in

stock. Baylln•r. Ster&lt;:raft. Stra·
tos. Founh outboards. Force.
we must make room for 88
models. All uted boatl in s tock
reduced . Come in •nd see our
wide selection of boiits and
motors. (If you ere not buying
from us your paving to muehl.
Imperial Marine lnc. 1112 Mary
St . Parkersburg, W.V. 26101 .
304 -485·2118 .

1 985 2 4 tt. Pontoon floatboat ,
70 HP Evcnrude mot or, trailer ,
Lots·Extras . Stte ac Gallipolis
Boat Club. Ca ll 61 4 -446 -4782 .

.

14 ft . fiberglass. 1 B HP Even rude and tr•ller. •eoo. Call
304 -676·89615 .

14' boat. aluminum u-haul with
heiNV duty factory bo•t trailer.
~all 304- 773 -6004 . *400.

16 ft . Alum. f ishin g boat and
trai ler. Call614- 3 67 -767.7 .
Oeep· V Bow -Rider Boat. Sk i
and Cam p Equ ipment included .
Bargain pr ic8. Cell 614 -446 ·

1 986 Kawuelt l 1 10 4 -wh ea lor .
Ask ing $ 1100 . 1987 Ml!!r cu ry
l ymt sport s cor. PS , PB•4 11 pd
wifh sunrqcof ' "Ca ll 614· 245 -

and
IIIJotors for Sale

f.

1975 Honda c B 760, qressed.
Excellent conditiOn , 304-675 ·
5909.
. .

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

Motorcycles

74

tran1mll!t ion , lock-in lock·out
hubs, AM -FM radio, with inl .
f iberglau topp er. After 6 p.m.,

O!da Cutlau Supreme,
V·l / auto .. air cond., PS. PB ,
r..- ''window defog . tflt whfel ,
crulu. AM · FM , go o d tirea , Very
tle•n . Excellent condition . 304·

1874 Corvette eonverilbfe. 3_50

2711.

' t1100. C.ll ., ....... o7"f1 ...

.

1til6 c;hftutte, good condilion,

,14-371-2721.

·-----

·468-1568.

Ohio. 1-100-143-3717.

l82 engln .. auto transmia.;on.

1177 Cflw. C.prln St..ion
W•oon . Good Condition .

•soo.

Wtth IW.ttme warrenty. Mufflet
Matt, 9 8timpMn Ave ., Athens,

111? DadpCherg•. Mftometic
trt~M.. 700 mH•- ••zoo.Call

441-0487.

Chevy p ickup, $200:
1171 Plymouth Vol•re. e300:
· 177 Dodge pi ckup.

StatniMaltHt exhtuat ~Ytlema.
Now cuatom made tor your
trudt. motor hom a or C:l•slc cu.

Coli 114-912-3877.

Trucks for Sale

72

Real Estate General

1981 Pontiac Grend leMens, 4
doOI', AC .,AM -FM radio . AT .Call

11M Caprice Ciaeic.2-door
L.......-lv lo-.·Colll14·
,216·1740.

.

•

Ohio- Point

Autos for Sale

71

Autos for Sale

Orll?- ~1 :

• 1.1 12 C·ullaaa Suprema
lrougtwn. uc•. cond., loeded.
,.. 114-..... 1834.

.

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71

..

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•

2030

BUDGETTr•n•miaaions: U18d&amp;
Rebuilt . All types. Gu•rtnteed a
minimum of 30 d•v•. will
deliver, cuh &amp; carry or int,al.

Celt 61•·379·2220 or 1· 304-

87&amp;-8788.

B1

Hom&amp;

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Uneondition.t lifetime guaran-

tee. Loc.l refereftces furnished.
frM estimetes. Call c:oll•ct
1-814- 237- 0488. day or night .
Rogers811sement
W•tet"proofing .
swEEPER and aewing machine
repair. parts. and supplies. Pick
up and daliv~ry . Da'llit Vacuum
Cleaner. one halt mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call 814-

441 -02SA.

Duel ex-haust kits, 199 .96· insta!lad·. Moa.t Fords, i:hevy
Trucks: Vans , 4A4's. MuHier
Man , _g· Stimpson J\ve .• Athena .

Ohio1 -800-843-3767.

Will s~l for rarta •• 1979
Suberu, 1973 E C•mino, 1974
Cemaro, 1977 Dodge pickup
4x4. 1974 Deuun, 1976 Plymouth Volare, 304 ·468- 1 568 .

Plumbing.
&amp; Heating

82

Improvements

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . fourth and Pine
G•llipolis. Ohio
"Phon• 614-446-3888 or 614·

446-4477

Electtical
&amp; Refrigeration

84

Realdential or commercial wiring. New ser11ice or repairs.
Licensed electricia11. E&amp;;timate
free. Riden our Electrical. 304 ~
675-1786 .

General Hauling

Dillard Wtrter Service: Poolt, .
Clat•rns, Wells. Delivery Anytime . Call 614· 448-7404-No
Sunday calls .

Auto Repair

77

General Hauling

J &amp; J Water SeNiee. Swimming
pools. cisterns,· wells. Ph. 614246- 9286 .

W•tttuon 'a Wat er H1uling ,
re1sonable rstet, Immediate
2 ,000 vallo n delivery. ciatarns .
poO ls. well, etc. c•ll 304 -671-

2919 .

85
Ro1ary . or cable tool drilling.
Mo1t wells oompleted same day.
Pump salea and service. :,04 ·
896- 3802

85

Formerly t(en's now John's
Water Sar.~ l~t. John Watter1on.
Jr. Owner. 1.000 9' 2 .000 Ual
service. 304 -576·2 24"8 .

Upholstery

87

R &amp; M Custom Couches and
Reupholatery. St. Rt . 7 , Crown
City, Oh. 614· 258 -1470. Eve.
814 -446- 3438 . Open daily 9 to,
4:30. Sal . 9:30 to 1 :30. Old &amp;
new U phostered.
Mowrey ' s Uphol1tering stfVing.
tr i county area 22 years. The best
in furniture upnolataring . Call
304 - 676 - 4154 for free

8stim11tea.

FISHING BOAT - Coleman
Crawdad1 4 .5 HP Mercury tno·
tor, 1 year old. Like new,
:304-(?76-8640 .

~~~~~~R~e~a~l~~~~~~~~~~~

~

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

W.Va.

STUTES
REAL ESTATE
BO NNI E l STUT £S ·REALTOR
JIM SlUHS REALTOR
CAll
4611iW AVE .. REAR
446-4206
GA ll POll S. OH 10

IB
n£MT0l1

79 Motors Homes

&amp; Campers
1986 Travel Muter motor
home, 26 ft., nB'W condition ,
loaded. Must sell. Meke offer.
Call614- 256· 1267.
1988 21 ft.· Frenklin travel
trailer. Sleeps 4. Self-c ontained .
t2600. Call 614-446 - 7106.
1970 Troutw9od Travel Trailer
tor sale. Call 614·446 -4282.
1976 Giles 18 ft. camper. Call

814·25e -1117.

Services
Home
lmprove':"ents

81

U445

MAKE THIS YOUI IIEW HOME - Brick
ranch, 3 BRs, I\! baths, kitchen w/ran~e
double over, OW, tiving rm., dinette. fam1li
rm., fireplace, full basement, screened
porch, 2 car attached garage, KC school
diSiriCI.
.

HOUSE AND 29.4 ACRES, 11/L, OHIO
TWP, - This home offers 3 BRs, bath, LR.
kitchen. large laundry rm. w/ wa sher and
dryer. There is atobacco base and a36•36
lob. barn.
·

IIEDUCED!IIOW ASKIIG$42.000 for this extre·
mely neat and clean 4 bedroom, 2 bath home wnh
lots of extras. 5 acres more or less wrth stocked
pond surround thishome. Chum you must see'
12390
HOME &amp; I\! ACRES, $35.000- Attractive 2
or 3 bedroom home near junction 77:&gt;

and 141. Has !amlly room, fireplace,
basement, 2 car garage. Immediate

pOssession.

N~ LISTING....

1

.

WHAT A
- With all the trees 1n l!loom
this home looks hke an ad fo1Be«er 11om~ and
Gardens. Br~ck and frame b1-ie,e1 senmg on 3\1
acres of woods. La. famrly room wrth stone lireplace, eal-rn kot chen, hving and dmmg room.
HOme needs some fm15h1ng louches Owner has
reduced house .$5,000. Crty schools. W1t h1n 6
miles of town. $69.500.

$42.000 Il-l [VEl - 4 bedrooms, living room. 3
baths, formal dining area. Storage building and
over I acre lawn. Within minutes of town.

12426
COUIITRY LIVING. IUT CLOSE TO TOWII- Crew
Rold in "'eip County. Splh level on 3 acres mil. 4
bedrooms, lg. family room wrth fireplace, 2 car
gara1e. brick and alum. siding. Nice home. Pnced
in the $60s.

ONLY $3 .600.00 DOWNPAYMENT. 10% Fixed Rate
$300 00 monthly payment, 30·yrs. On ly 21! miles from city:
11v1ng room. k1l chen w/ appilances, 2 bedrooms, full basement, 2 car gar. plus workshop.

•

~ j~ r'i

12341
GREEN ACRES IS THE PLACE TO BE Nice ranch style home situated on a
70d48 ft. lot offers 3 BRs. I ~ baths, LR.
FR w/fireplace, eat-in kitchen, gas heal.
Green Schools. Call today.
THE FAMILY WILL LOVE THIS QNE! - ·
Ranch style home on .5 acre m/. 1. offers 3
8Rs, bath, k1tchen, family room, LR, carpet, heatalator fireplace, WB stove, 2 car
attached garage. 16x~2 ,in-ground pool.
Chain link fence. Call for an appointment.

=

AFFORDABILITY + LOCATION
One
nice starter home near Green School, 3
BRs, bath, LR, kitche"' fireplace, full basement, big yard. Call for more details.
LOTS OF POTENTIAL HERE!- 2000 sq. ft.
building with frontage on St. Rl. 160.
12x20 walk-in cooler, 12ft. dairy case. Call
for more details.
STEP IIIlO HEGAICE when you enter the
foyer of one of the french City's finest. Formal LR, formal dining. spacious master
bedroom with office or sewing room adi•·
cent, den, 2 BRs upstairs, 21! baths, 3 fireplaces, lg. family room. solarium, covered
patio, screened porch and much more. Call
for appl.
OWIIER LIVES OUT OF STATE AIID WANTS
TO SELL IMMEDIATELY- Very nice and
roomy home in Spring Valley. This home
ovvers LR. equrpped kitchen (eat-in), di·
neHe, 3 BRs, 2 baths, family room with fireplacee, two car aHached garage, gas heat,
cent. air. Come look at this one and make
us an offer1

YOUR FAMILY WILL ENJOY THIS HOllE
- 4 BRs. 2 baths, equipped kitchen, LR.
attached garage, heat pump/cent. air,
whirlpool in master bath, above ground
pool. Shown by appointment.
$39.900- !.Heres m/ 1. Very nice rtnth
style home featues 2 baths, 3BRs, LR, family rm . and fo rmal dining. carpeting. woodburning stove. Call for more information.
GRAHAM SCHOOL ROAD - Very nice
ranch offers kitchen w/ range, relrig., OW,
displ., microwave, LR. FR, dineHe, 3 BRs, 1
bath, cent. air, carpeting. 2 metal ut"rty
bldgs. Shown by appointmenml.

YOU'RE IIISSING SOIETHI•G If you don't in- ·
quire about this 4 bedroom, 2 st01y, two baths, ·
formal li ving and dmingrooms. full basement wrth
I room, rec. room. utility room and patio w~h
l ·excelhlml view. City schools. Beautiful home. Call
to see.

$25,000 - VALLEY DRIVE - This 3 BR
home offers 2 baths, kitchen, LR, DR, car pet. gas heat, city schools. Call for an appt.
PICTURE THIS- You ·and your family 1e·
la.ing on a wraparouno oeck en1oying a
terrific view of the Oh1o River. You can with
this home althe edge oft own. Other attractive features include 3/ 4 BRs, 2 baths, LR
with stone fireplace and mirrored walllhal
reflect the river view. FR. rec. room,
kilchen ,-dinette, 2 fireplaces, carpet, cent.
air. If you like the river you'll love this one.
PRICE REDUCED TO $39.900!- GREAT
BEGINNER HOME - This home offers a
large LR with fireplace, kitchen , dining
area, 3 BRs. bath, full basement, 1car garage. deck, fenced yard just mrnutes to
town on Rt. 141. Call for an appointment.

Ill ACRE FARII - LARGE TOIACCO liAS£ Picturesque seHing, modern 3 BR home, like-new
2 car garage, rural water being installed. Good
fencing, 4 farm pond s, 88 acres alfalfa and 2
barns. This is a good profitable farm and well taken care of. Call soo11 as the tobacco crop needs
immediate altentionll'

AFFORDABLY PRICED AT JUST $29.900
-'-Close to city·on Rl. 14lthis h'ome offers
krtchen, LR, family room, dining room and
full basement. Large unattached block garage. Call for an appointment.

LOVELY BRICK HOME Ill TOWN -This
home has a lot to offer. Kitchen with range
and displ., 'lR with fireplace, carpet over
hardwood, full basement. attached garage
with electric opener, gas heat/cent. air,
storm windows. You'll want to s~e this one.

CATCHER! sharp
your eye for sure as you view the gorgeous cathedral ceiling in the living room and master bedroom, l'h baths, recenlly carpeted family room,
20'x24' unattached garage. Breathtaking country
view. Charolais Hills area. Price $61.000.00.
.
.
12389 ,

NATURAL BEAUTY SURROUNDS THIS
HOllE -. 10 acres m/1. gentle. rollingfa1m
land near Rio Grande. The 3 BR home
boasts an absolutely beautiful log addition
which featues a· great rQom with spir.al
sliars to loft, beamed ceiling, stone chimney and wood burner. Other features oflhis
home include formal drning. eat-in
kitchen, woodburner between dining and
kitchen, bath, part basement. Call for an
appointment.

2,090 ACRES M/L VACANT LAND - Ready to
build on with driveway and loundatron for ahome.
Comer lot $6 500. Calllo1 more in'form!tion.

THIS COULD BE THE OIIE FOR YOU! Jusl 5 minutes from town, this ranch style
home offers 3 BRs, bath, krtchen w/range,
double oven, DW, dispf., LR, full basement,
fireplace, gas and wood heat, 1 car gar~ge,
city school d1stncl. Call for an appomtmenl.

CAMPSITE - RACCOON CREEK - Near
Cora. Mobilehome on .85 acre. 2BRs, bath,
stove, refrig., washer and dryer. $10,0001
ADDISON TWP. - Possom Trot Road93 acres m/1, all woods. Old Darn on property $21,900.

otriiER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE TO
$39.900 - 132.9 M/L, pasture farm,
springs, 42x94 barn, tobacco base. Older
home in good shape. 3 BRs, bath, lR,
kitchen. Call today,

LOTS FOR SALE - St. Rt. 7. Rural water
avarlable. Mobile home welcome. Call for
more details.

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

29.8 ACRES M/L VACANT LAND- Fronts
on Rl. 160. Build or put a mobile home
here. $16,900.

IIIVm•ENT PROPERTY - 9 acres m/1,
approx. \! mi. from HMC with frontage on
St. Rt. 160.

OHIO RIVER LOT FOR SALE- 1.59 acre,
m/1, just at edge of town. Great place for a
camper and boat launch. $5,900.

LOCATION ANO COMVEIIIENT TO VILLAGE OF
RIO GRANDE makes thrs seven room homu des1·
rable listong. Uvmgroom. lormal dmmg. complete
k1tchen. partral basement. Loke new shmgle roof
Alummum SldiO&amp; Affordable prrce range - low
$30s.
N2360

THE FIOIITTHAT'S MAID TO PASS IY- 2story
brick is total comfon with just the righf amount of
class. 3,400 sq. lt.livin1 space plus 2 car garage.
Family room , formal living and dining, kitchen
plus sinint area. 2 tireplaces. Excellent woodwOik
thrQilghout home. We could list e•tras a country
mrle. We prefer to show you what $72.000 wrll
buy.
•
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•
*2425

.•

. '

*2442

NEW LISTING! WANT A BIG YARO? - To build
thai new hom'i!1 1f so, call us about these 3 acres
· more or less. Rural water and utilities on same
side of road. Land is level. Very mce buildm,\~~
5 MINUTES WALKING DISTANCE TO DOWN·
TOWN MIDDLEPORT - 2 story home wrth 2 car
garage. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace•.large front
porch, workshop in full basement. Pnced 10 the
$30s Call today.
·
2391

*

NEAR RIO GRANDE ON SR 325 -LOT WITH liE·
TAL BUILDING (30"x40") - 100' of road frontage. $10,800. Cal! today.
2371
l4'x70' CHAMPION MOBILE HOME -i.Jrge living room, bath. newer carpet, buiR-in pantry in
.krtchen, large deck, newer hot water heater.
Washer, dryer, ftlndow air conditioner, appli·
ances included. What a deal!

*

.

*2401

AGED JUST RIGHT- If you are young enough to
eniov and old enouRh to aooreciate the charm of
old homes come see this one! 3 bedrooms, bath,
dining room, breakfast nook and more.

12355

BUILDING LOT NEAR RIO GRANDE- Vacant lot
with sepfic, well water. 16311. road lronla.ge, gOod
tor mobile home or house. 8,640. Call tor Information.

112369

*2424

IF YOU HAY£NT SEEI THIS ONE m, CALL FOR
AN APPOINTMENT TODAY! - Neat brick ranch,
2 car garage wrth extra storage space. 3 bedrooms, I\! baths, living room, din111g area and
more. lot size appro•. 65'x85'. Nice neighborhOD(!. $40s.
·

*2223 .
CAREFIILI ITS LOADED with charm and loving
care. This quality buiR brick and frame bl-lev.:
features 2 baths, family room, living room, electric
heat pump/central air, 2 car garage, storage
building. IIi acres more or less. Call tpday!!

*2434

44

·

·

.

OWIIU IIAKES IT EASY! Will help wrth fmancing'
log ca brn and 42 acres more or less. 3 bedrooms,
formal dm1ng area. basemen!, appr ~ ..,25'x25'
garage (unattached). Elec. heal pump/ central
air, pond.

e;•·Buy
3 wav \ 111
$65.000 00 3

•

•

.....
.....•
'.••

YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING AIIO LOOK! fiG- STOP!
Call CENTURY 21, set up a showmg and see your
future home. Very nice 3 bedrooms ranch home,
20 plus acres, 30'•46' garage. 20'•40' metal
bUilding and so much more.
#2436
NEW LISTING ...
SUPER BUILDING LOT- $7,700.00 - Approx.
120'xl79', rural water. Walnu t and pine trees.
#2440
IIEW LISTING ...
GUY All TOWNSHIP- 37.24 ACRE FARM with 2
story 4 bedroom home. In cluding family room ,
formal dining, bath, two ca1 gara ge. Approx .
46'x60' barn, 2 corn cribs. $39.900. Ca ll lor more
information.
#2433
NEW LISTING ....
VACANT LOT! - Approx. 2'h acres. Very mce
building site. land lays flat. County wate1 bein g
installed. Mineral rights and small tobacco base
included.
#2438

'

-

-·

..

·

~,

,.;

~~;

£NJOY SPACIOUSNESS HERE- 20 acres more
01 less surround this 3 bedroom ranch with very
nice 30'x.36' fara4e with she don ons side plus
20'x40' meta buMdin' Southwestern schools.
- . . "
~2436

$$

OWNER ANXIOUS FOR OFFERI! - MUST
·SELU- 1.153 acres on Bulaville-Addison Road
incl.udes septic an~ rural water. Good location lor
mobile home or house.

.

:

, pn Evergrrrn Pros pec! Rd

A p ~u o x .

1

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•
•

nr:rflland . count y •

•
•
•

: NEW LISTING: THIS ONE HAS IT All! !- 70 acres with •
' barn, outbuildings·. 1,065 lb. tobacco base. Near Crown •
•
: City Hannan T1a ce Sc hc Jis.. Buy now lor $5B,OOO.

alon~ . •

..

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•
•

' BUY NOW: 2·. acre lot localed WltiHn Spr~ngheld lwp. •
~alha Co. $ 10. ~00
•

•
•

.APPROXIMATELY 5 ACRES ol level ground adta cen t lo •
·~ieasa n t Va lley Estales: 350 II road hontage w1th crlv •
: ~a l er. sewer and gas on pr emrses. $400 per Iron! foot.

•
•
•

:NEAT 3 BEDROOM HOME localed along Rou sh Rd .. .
;Ghe sh~r e lwp: Kyger Creek schools. Appro, . 17 acre. •
!!blp. pool. Buy now lor $49.500 . _ .
•

,

.

.

.,

•.

:·~4 A,CRES

•
•
•

:NEW LISTING! OVERLOOKING OHIO RIVER - 12'•65 ' •
·[967 mob1le home. One acre land with 2 car gara ge. Call •
:IJ&gt;day This one won 't las) lor $10.000.
•

•
•

L3S' COMMERCIAL FRONTAGE along Eastern Avenue. •
Lecaled "where the action is!!". Calf for more informa-

•

NEEO AN EXTRA INCOME? - This cou ld be for you! Home
and buSiness on BJ46 acres plus Rustrc home only 4 yrs.
old LR . 3 Dedrooms. k1t ch en, lg. patio area. also a nursery
busmess w1th 3 greenhouses 12x33. 12x55 and 22•96.
Starter bUIIdrng 16•35 with new fuel oil furnace and
wood burner back up. 2 wells for adequate wat er supply.This
is a ve ry eff1 cient busr ness. located in Southwestern_Sc hool
01st nct. Give us· a call for more details.

.

•

•

A-FRAME NESTLED IN THE WOOOS- 42 acres m/l. living
room w/ w.b. fireplace. Formal din in&amp; modern kitchen. 2
balh s &amp; 3 bedrooms. Large loH bedroom. master bedroom
fealures a deck. Spiral staircase leads to the second level.
l ots of landscap1n g 3 car garage, city schools. Shown by apl.
Prrced $90's.
.
MODERN BI-LEVH located rn G1een Twp. off Sl•t e Rt 35.
Home le.tures 4 bedroom s, 2\\ bath s. formal living room .
w/ w h .lirepla ce K1t chen w/ deck. Formal d1mng. famrly
ioom w/ w b. firepl ace Nrce neighborhood C1ty School s.
RARE OPPORTUNITY! - B·oater s':' Frshermen - Retirees600 to 80 0 ft. dee p waler lrontage. lnclud1n g 3 BR , 2 balh
home and a 28 , 48 metal building. l ots of tr ees, boat docks.
and verv seclud.ed

;3 BEDROOM HOME ON KATHY DRIVE near Holzer •
·Rosp1tal. Low lraffrc area. large backvard . WBFP.
:~allipolis crl y school d!Sinct. P r~ cc $45,000.
•
more or less. Hazel R1dge. $10.000.

~n
.
.
.
; ~ SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS...

CALL AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SALESPERSON
I .til W '') l lh 11!1,

*2359

-tndemarkl of Century 21 Real Ear. Corporal'lon. Equal Hou,ing Opportunity e
Y oWNID AND OI'DATID.

·''

~ NEW

•
•

•
•

.
~~

; j HRH BEDROOM REMOO[LEO larm home wrt h 144
: a¢rrs, 19 acre. holloon. lob base 3 barns Near Mudsnc
' Now $~3.000
LISTING - Newly 1emodcled. 3 bedr oom home
; near Pa1rro1. close to Au ctron Bar n I' or sale now.
~ lmiiiCdiai P PO&lt;SCSIIOn $29,500 00.
~ NEW LI STING - NIC E1 BEORM. HO~E ncar Evergreen
' water Purchase now lor $?4.500
;COMFORIABLE COllAGE -? bed1rns. srtu ated
&gt;Garfr eld AVe Buy now 16r $16,000

•

••
-·
c\.

•

; WE HAVE THE PERFECT COTTAGE alone Raccoon Creek •
: tor you to spend your summer evenm~s an d weekends •
: '-;- year arounri i1 V1ng Buy now. $42.o00
•

•
•

•

.·-. •.

N[ W LISl iNG

3 brd!OOm h(Hnp ·m! h 88 aer r s •

lmu"' w1ll13 ·'""'- $43 000 00
; Or IJuv thr R8 acre&lt; lor $21.500 00 Hannan ] ,ace Rd •

•

m24

#2263

e•

••

DOWN PAYMENT $5,200.00 10'11 F11ed Rat e. Mon thly pay men! $410 00. 30 yr s P11ce $5 2.000. 21\ cres plu s. woodland, rust1c ranch. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, kitchen w/ mi·
crowve, unfiniShed basement , heat pump/ central air. 2 ~
m1les fr om hosp1lal.

h~dr uo m

•
•
•
•

MEIIU FOR TODAY!- How about a tasty dish of
income? 2 story home and 2 bedroom garage
apartment located in city. Call today for more in · rormation and ah appointment.
133 ACRES MORE OR LESS - 2 story older home
with 3 bedrooms and more. 2 barns, pood, tobacco base, 2 storage build ings. Only approx. 7
miles from town.

. EACHOPFJCE

Looked Intently
Buller subslllute
Hairpieces
Thin sheet of
material
Conflicls: pl.
Separating
Release
Hearing organ
Observ'es
- beef
Football kick
Japan ending
Cui'
Caresses
Hard-shelled

.0~ of

Santa's

reindeers

REDUCED TO $32,000 - Owner wants a deal.
I.Jnd contract, rent or buy this I I! story, 4 bedroom home. Situated on I acre. Calf lor your appoinbnent today.
*2379

Cl1987 Century 21 Real Eatlltt Corporation •• tndlee for the

compartment

42 Athiellc group

BRICK RAIICH &amp; 3 ACRES 11/L OVERLOOKING
OHIO RIVER! - 1 car attached garage. 3 bed·
rooms. living room, formal dining area. kd chen
complete with.appliances. Addison Township. low
$40s.
LAIGE FAMILY ROO I 3 bedroom, two story home
in Addavilfe School area, full basement, elec. heat
with woodburner hooked to furnace duct. Priced· ·
• at $36,500.00.
·
*2402
IIEW FARM LISTING ...
FIRST TilE 011 MARKO Ill OVER A HUIIOREO
YEARS- Agood family livestock farm. 186 acres
more or less. 80 acres tillable, some timber, the
rest is beautiful pasture land with creek running.
through the middle. Complete set of farm buildings with a strong gravity fed water supply. You
must see this one. Calf now.
•

sentence

fruit
40 Datum
41 Actor Davis

IEAUTY Ill THE PitiES - Is this spac1ous brrck
and frame tri-level 4 to 5 bedrooms, newer plank
floorint in kitchen, family room wrth fireplace, formal dming, living room, rec. room, 3 baths, attached 2 car g1rage. All this situ1ted on 41\ aCies.
Calf today for your own personal viewing.
·
12393

mas

6 Baby powder
10 Those there
14 Analyze, as

1 Latticework
trellis

24
26
28
29
30
32
33
34
35
37
39

·mn

DOWNTOWN LOCATION - LIVE IN ONE
RENT THE OTHER or RENT BOTH! - 2
story home with 3 BRs. bath, LR, kitchen,
dining rm ., gas heat. Garage apartment in
rear offers 2 BRs, bath, kitchen, laundry
room . €all for more information.

LECTA AREA - $23,500 - 3.5 acres,
m/ 1, 2 story home in good condition, 3
BRs, LR, DR, ·kitchen, storm windows and
doors. Shown by appointment.
•

SUPERB SEITING ON 1.4 ACRES WITH LOTS OF
TREES- Great for the famly. 4 beilrooms, I Ii
baths, family room and 2 woodbyrners. l g
kitchen with lots of cabinets. House has been re·
cently vmyl s1ded making 101 low maintena nce.
Nice deck, rrch garden spot and 2 car garage. Call
today for an appointment
12374

86 In structi on

87 Resilient
89 Simian
92 Woody planls
95 Hostelry
98 Carry on, as war
99 Slorage

19
21
22
23

I CANT BELIEVE THIS ... THE OWNER Of THIS
LOVELY HO•E REOUCEO IT $11.500.00!1 2,300 SQ. n.apprOX. living Space is IUS! the beginning of this brick and frame ranch. (21 fireplaces.
rea. room, eat-in kitchen, 2 full aths, gas heal/central air. Within walking drslance to town.

BUY A LITTLE OR BUY A LOT! - This
home can be purchased with 5 acres or 58
and offers 3 BRs, 2 baths, lR, kitchen,
wood burning stove, carpet, tobacco base.
40x6(] bal'l), cellar house and several
sheds. Calrtor more information.

RODNEY-CORA RD. - Beautiful home on
12 acres m/1. This lovely house is sur.rounded by trees and offers a unique floor
plan. living . rm. features woodburner,
open ceiling design, kitchen, for.mal dming. 3 BR, 21! baths, lg. patio off dining
area l6x40 barn and 15x24 garage. Call
for an appointment.

THIS HOlE IEEOS A FAMILY- Previous owner •
myst hm loved this older 2 st01y house rn t~n.
2nd Ave. location within walkmg d1stance to shop.
Garage apartment fll! ·ldditional income. Calland
be the first to see this well cared lo1 home.
12407

ACROSS

) .• l

.. '

I ( I I' [

l

!

·f4b I ( lt

!1

(

')

lr1
1

I ( I

:

•

••

. PRICt RE.DUC£D TO $60,000.00- Rustic home settings on
6.8 +. W1fh eff1~1ency apartment. Owner is leaving area
would hke a buyer.
MODERN RANCH featuii~g formal living 'room, fg. family
le kl:6~~x:2:~4~w~/;;B;en
Franklin woodDurner, 3 bedrdoms, comw/appliance~ a~d washer &amp;dryer, plus snack
tuff unflmshed basement. Setting on a hall
mce home well maintained. Only

~ 3 01

46
47
48
50
52
53
55
57
58
59
60
62
64
66
68
69
70
71
73
75
77
78
80
81
82
84

Loot
Concocl
Slalk
Garden s~rub
Settled a bet
Mounlain: abbr.
Walk
.. _ Are lhe
World"
Locallon
Slepladder pari
Concerning
Joan of F11sten
Away: prefix
Yes. In Spain
Lampreys
Cry
lnslrument
Injury
Walks wearily
Pierce
S1rlp of leal her
Unsteady
Caspian. e.g.
Harves1ers
Enthusiasm

101 Eagles' nests
103 Part of face
104 Female sheep

105 Lean-to
106 Greek leller
107 Early morn
108 Supercilious
person

110 Chew the (to chat)
111 Hosp. asst.
112 Golf mounds
113 Advantage
115 ThaUhing
117 Slumble
119 You and me
1~0 Part of E.R.A.
121 Member of
Masonic order
124 Hebrew month

126 Depression
127 Trinket
128 Sends lorlh
130 Strike
132 Deposits
133 Part of fool
134 Bitter vetch
135 Genus of frogs
137 Mast
139 Actress Meyers
140 Diner sign

141 " II - a Thief"
143 Type ol slory
145 Anger
146 Clerical hat
148 Vegetable
15.0 Eyes: colloq .
.152 Occurrences
153 Mountain lake

154 Shadow

·

156 Bugs; fa\Jorite

157 Pee Wee or Della
158 War god
159 Pintail du ck

160 Slations
DOWN
1 Part of church :

pl.

2 Re1ract
3 Small-size pulpy
frUit: pl.
4 Anglo-Saxon
money

5 Corded cloths
6- and lro
7 High mounlain

77 Piece of cutlery

79 Fruit seed
83 Pallor
85 Wealth
86 Hawaiian wreaths

87
88
89
90

8 Producer Norman

9 Crown
10 Crook spirally
11 Clue
12 Urge on
13 Ed .'s concern
14 Animal's coat

15 Southern
blackbird
16 Held In high
esteem

17 Playground
equipment
18 Sinned
20 Profound
23 Small aperture
25 Sow .
27 The Bull
28 "-Soup"
31 Highway sign
33 SA rodenl
36 Bulter squares
38 Winler lealure
40 Counlenance
41 Ship 's prison
43 N.Y. baseballers
45 Visions

46 Sarcasm
47 Prohibits
49 "....J tl1e Press''

51 Rosters
52 Throbs
53 Small rugs
54 Jog
56 Minute parts
59 Typily
60 Bellow
61 Recedes
63 Small bouquet
65 Milk: Fr.
67 Body ol water
69 Gi, e.g.
70 Person having
loud voice

72 Fall into disuse
74 Above
76 Coated lava

Pilcher
Expanse of grass
Equally
Awaited ·
settlement

91
92
93
94

Musical sludy
Chinese pagoda
Negligenl
Teutonic deity

96 Brother of Jacob

97 Limbs
100 Hypothelical
force

102 North American
rail

105 Dispalched
109 Proposilions
112 Large casks
t 13 Spoken
114 Simpers
116 Journey
118 Cronies: colloq.
120 Pensioner
121 Tolls
122 Acquiesces
123 Tidy ·
125 Two-edged
sword s

126 Deduce
127 Phi - Kappa
129 Break suddenly
131 Colorlul bird
132 Sword
133 Chapeaus
134 Merits
136 Fis h sauce

138 Remains at ~ase
140 Ending with
kllchen
141 Biblical weed
142 Dtd name for
Thailand ·
144 -

Year

-~

.-.

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-~

147 Abstracl being
148 Equality
149 Key lime -

:.,..

15 1 -

-~~

bono publico

153 Tantalum symbol
155 - Mans

'

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..,.-..
.;:.· ..
..,

-·..-...~·

,,

---

·-

�Page-D-8 The Sunday Times-sentinel

Pomeroy

Middlepo~-Gallipolis,

Wheat yeild 55 bushels and acre

•
•
IDJUDCtiOD
•

Judge to .r ule on Firestone
By BRIAN MQOAR
,
.
CLEVELAND (U P! ) - After
three days of testimony in a
federal suit challenging the Fire. stone Tire&amp; Rubber Co.'s plan t.o .
move Its corporate headquarters
from Akron to Chicago. Firestone· Chairman John i'i~;vin says
he Is ready to go back to work.
"I'm not Interested In arguing
my _side of the 'c ase," Nevin told
reporters after the trial. ''I'd like
to get back to running a
business."
Final evidence was presented
. Thursday before U.S. District
Court Judge John M . Manos.
Closing arguments will be submitted In writing to Manos next
week.
Manos did not say when h!s
verdict will be delivered .
· The permanent Injunction suit

charges that members of the
Firestone Board of Directors
violated federal securities laws
when th'ey made a decision to
relocate the company In Febru·
ary - two months before shareholders were notified:
Company Board meinbers ·
Thursday said contingency plans
announcing the .planned Firestone relocation had been pre. pared In February, but no formal
decision to move the company
had been made.
Firestone attorney Patrick
McCartan Thursday renewed a
motlon to dismiss the case,
saying the company did not
viola te federal securitles laws.
Manos Is considering that
motion.
Attorney Norman Carr, who
represented shareholder plain·
tiffs Marlo Dl Federico, Frank A.

Goodrich

a~nounces

AKRON, Ohio !UP!\ -Citing
strong performances by its aeros pace. chemicals and plastics
subsidiaries, the BFGoodrlch Co.
Thursday announced record
seco nd-quarter net income.
Net income for the three
months ended June 30 was $38.3
million, or $1.54 a s hare, a 61
percent Increase over the $23.8
mlllion, or $1.02 a share, poste&lt;l !n
the second quarter of 1986.
Sales by Goodrich's core bus!·
nesses also Increased during the
second quarter, from $466.2 million to $551.1 million.
In 1986, however, results of
Goodrich 's tire oper,ations also
were Included, bringing total
second-quarter sales last year to

$759.1 million . Tire sales are no company's investment !n the
However, the company also
longer Included In Goodrich
Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Co.
took a one-t!me c harge of $5.2
results because In August 1986
Ong reported that weak million for ear ly retirement of
the company combined Its tire mar)&lt;et conditions, particularly $50 million of 12.75 percent
unit !n a joint venture company for original-equipment sales to long-term debt. With this step,
with Uniroyal Inc.'s tire automakers, held down results about $250 million of long-term
business.
for the three· month period.
debt w!lh an average cost of over
" The second-quarter resu lts
"While the level or Income Is 14 percent has been repaid s ince
are tracking in an excelle nt way less than we anticipated at this 1985. Ong said.
the company's overall recov - point In the development of the ·
For the first six months of 1987,
ery," said Chairman and Chief joint ve nture, we are satisfied Goodrich reported net income or
Executive Officer John D. Ong. that the benefils of forming $42.1 million, or $1.61 a share.
" Our core businesses - poly· . Uniroyal Goodrich are being compared with net Income of $3.1
vinyl chloride, specialty chemi- demonstrated," Ong sa id .
million, or 10 cent s a share, in the
cals and aerospace and defense
Goodrich reported two unusual first. six months of 1986.
products - are meeting or items in the company's second·
Sales reached $1.0 billion In the
exceed ing our expectations ."
quarter results.· Net income first half of 1987, compared with
beneflted by $7.6 million from a $1.5 billion for the same period a
Included in Goodrich's second· sett lement with the IRS on a year ago, when BFG Included
quarter 1987 results is pre-tax number of issues for the years t!re sales in its results.
income of $10.1 million from ..the 1977 to 1983.

Wahl and John R. Buck, said Page said the relocation had ·
Nevin Intended to liquidate Firestone Tire operations to streng- :;.n,:~~:~ssed, but no dectston
then the company's automotive
"My recollection Is that the
· primary focus was on the res·
retail and service business:
However. Nevin said the Fire: lr\!Cturlng Side, -not the reloca·
stone ·restructuring plan, which tion side," Page said. "You don't
Included relocation of co·mpany setlle On relocation Until You.
headquarters to Chicago, was know What you are going ~o do ... ·
designed to Increase company In broad prlnclple, 'lt was underprofitability.
stood what we were going to d o,
Nevin said. the restructuring but In detail, It was a very broad
was designed to focus company proposition."
Wllllam G, Phlllljls, another
efforts on profitable operations
board
member, said, "the mat·
while eliminating low-profit or
no-profit operations.
ter was discussed (but) · no
In a deposition taken before the formal action was taken."
Nevin said the company had
trial, board member Raymond
considering relocation In
C. Tower said !I "was under· '---n
un:=
stood" during a February 17 1985 as part of a restructuring
meeting that Firestone Intended · plan to make the company more
to relocate !Is world headquar- profitable and Increase share·
holder dividends.
ters to Chicago.
Board member Thomas C.

ocean. Every generallon Is a
wave," Neai said. "It could be
released ~very two or three
years. There will always be an
audience to see it."
Steve Frank, general manager
of Bakery Centre cinema In
Miami, which also expects the
film to do well, cited Disney's
extraordi nary publicity cam·
paign as one factor. The Disney
character has been feted on Wall
Street, In Disney theme parils
and on Hollywood's Walk of
Fame.
Cook declined to estimate the
cost of that publicity, or to say
how much the company expects
to make on the !lim this summer.
Disney will show the lilm 60
countries. In the United States
alone, Snow White will appear on
1, 700 movie screens, Cook said.
."It's the biggest break ever.
We don ' t really . know what to
ex pect," he said.
Recent releases of Lady and
the Tramp and 101 Dalmat!ons
grossed in excess of $30 million
apiece. Snow White is expected to
do al least as well, a Disney
pu bile Is t sa !d.
Snow White, which cost $1.5
million to produce, has grossed
$330 million since Its debut !n
1937. the publicist said.
Cook said It would be impossi ble to place a value on the Disney
archive.
"As long as we treat them as a

know how you can put a va lue on

it," he said.
The company has 26 animated
features In its film archive.
Some, like Dumbo, aren 't long
enough to be considered standalone features, Cook said.
Of those that are, 15 are
described as "evergreens" because of their staying power .
Besides Snow White, the Dis·
ney "evergreens" are Bambi,
Peter Pan, Fantasia, Plnocahlo,
Sleeping Beauty, Lady and The
Tramp, The Jungle Book, 101
Dalmalions, Cinderella, The Fox
and The Hound, The Rescuers,
The Black Cauldron. The Great
Mouse Detective and The
Arlstocats.
Disney releases three classic
rums a year. at the times when
families are most likely to s~ ·
movies - during the Thanksglv·
!ng and Christmas ~olldays,
spring break and In the summer.
Upcoming releases Include
Cinderella, The Fox and the
Hound and Bambi.
Disney also has begun to
explore the home video market
for its so-called "evergreens,"
Cook said. The company ha s
released video tapes of Plnocch!o
and Sleeping Beauty. In each
case, the release ·was for a
limited period of lime, Cook said.

What happened to other fertilizer?
Editor's note: The following Is - strongly absorbed nutrients and vatlon District, works with ian·
written by Robert Hendershot, pesticides leave a field by attach· downers to develop a conserva ·
Conservation Agronomist USDA
ing to a clay particle and moving · lion plan.
The co nservation plan Is the
Soli Conservation Service, and off !n the surface runoff water.
best
system of management,
Sieve Hawkins, program SpeThe nonabsorbed or soluble
structqral.
and vegetative con·
clallst for the ODNR Division of nutrients and. pesticides are the
servatlon
practices
for a field.
Soli Conservation Circleville, ones which leave through leach·
This
conservation
plan
is avalla·
Ohio.
lng or subsurface drainage.
ble
free
of
charge
to any
There are ways to reduce the
What happened to last year's
landowner.
fertilizer and pesticides? ' If 50 loss of theseexpens!vechemlcals
The 1985 Farm Blll or Food
percent were absorbed or broken through soli conservation practl·
Security
Act !s geared toward
down by plants, what happened ces such a gra&amp;s waterways and
Improving
water quality through
to the other 50 percent? Have you conservation tillage. Grasses
ever wondered about this?
and legumes In the- rotation help conservation plans developed
Nutrients and pesticides can be reduce soli erosion and filter locally. This act encourages the
delivered directly to streams and runoff water which carries the reduction j!edlment and runoff
through encouraging consls·
reservoirs through runoff from pollutants to the stream.
crop ftelds . Dissolved nutrients
The potential conta mination of tency among USDA programs.
and pesticides can reach surface · gro undwat er and subsurface To remain ellg!ble for certain
waters through subsurface drainage water can be reduced USDA program benefits, Jan·
drainage or make their way into by using management practices downers are asked to apply a
groundwaters, leaching through that ca!efully time and place conservation plan to their farm
so luble nutrients and pesticides by 1995, and have the plan in hand
the so!! and geologic layers.
Nutrients and pesticides vary when and where they are needed by 1990.
For more lnform;~tion , contact
In degrees of solubility and
with limited waste. The Soli
the
Meigs SoU and Water ConserConservation Service, through
absorption. attractio n to sol! clay
vation
District; phone number
particles. The less sol uble and
your loc al So!! and Water Conser992-6647.

Prices make buying fann .land good alternative
COLUMj3US Ohio (UP!) _
With farmla~d prices dropping,
·
,
one economlhstt says i!dt s ablmlost
cheap enoug o cons er uy ng
ur land Instead of renting it.
yoFarmers who bought land
during the high-priced 1970s
hn

co~I~n~~~~~~~s~~r~e~a~urno:;
. 1 ral econo·
ba~i ~~~ ~~~:~:~~e'uun!verslty

w e
m

tide Is turnln
approach In~ a point
bt w ld

sar,~~~e

wherese~~~::f.~as~d~~:..re~uF.
:'!em~~:ere's ;till~ slight cash

'
· ·
!n land
flow, advantage In rent g
'

but the cost per acre of buying !s
more attractive now thait during
the boom years "
In 1980 flnan~lng 80 percent of
'
land worth $2,000 an acre at 10
percent Interest made loan payments of $160 per acre. Cash rent
was $90-100
That sarn'e land Is worth about
$1,000 per acre today, Lee says.
At 10 ·percent Interest, the
payment Is $80 an acre. Rent has
also declined to an average of $65
an acre. Lee says that the $15
difference between buying and.
renting may be Worth consider- .
• lng because It Is so much
narrower than the $60- 70 differ·

~''

.. :,....: {

••
ence of 1980~
Still, th~ key is finding out If
you can afford to buy. Financing
Is usually the first problem·. If
h dl h t Le
you can an e t a ,
e says,
now could be the time to look for
land.
Before buying, study your
situation thoroughly. Analyze
your current cash flow and
co'!lpare It to potential cash flow
If land Is purchased.
Look at the alternatives to
buying land - renting, share
cropping, Oflls!delnvestors and
staylngthesam_e.Andmakesure
the land you re buying will
benefit your business,

·-------- --·

--~

-

It Is a general knowledge In the church Ieday that. man Is cons! ructed
of body, soul and spirit. It Is, at thesametlme, a matter well hidden. The
enemy of our Father and His Christ has been successful in his ef!o.~ts to
camouflage the truth within the context of familiar terms and rellglous knowledge." Most of the hidden llle' · within the very thhllngedls
missed, and we settle tor a shallow undersandlng. The. old·fas on
principle of humbling ourselves, receiving a love tor the truth, and
trusting the character of our Father Is still t.he way to turn spiritual
knowledge, as distinguished from mere mental apprehonslon.
In Job 7 ,17.18 He requires of God: :'What Is man that thou dost set your
heart upon him?" David declares 1n Psalm 139:14 that he Is fearfully and
wonderllllly mad,..... meaning that this man God created Is both _frightening
and unique (distinctive~ !rom all creation. He Is so constituted that to lakeac·
copnt of man Is to make us aware of the creative genius of our Father, rerognlzlng that we wUt never completely understand man In this life; but know
also that He doe'l noneaveus void olthe knowledge necessary to become the
Hvtng expression of Hlmseli that He Intended for man !rom the hegtnnlng.
In keeping with the matter o! hand {the latter rain, which Is the res·
torlng of the spiritual man In the earth\ , It Is necessary for us to see the
distlnctton between body, soul and spir it . But no matter how much we
know of man, there Is always more to see. There are certal_n aspects of
inan we can put our attention to In order to establish an understanding
of this matter. Let us go back to slmpllcltl.s as much as possible: then
as we meditate on these things , the Lord will enlarge them toourunderstandtng, as we see progressively the many lmpllcat\ons,
ood ·
Body, soul and spirit are comprised oft hrt&gt;e general aspects: Body : 8 I ;
bones; flesh (phy!llcal), Soul: Man (reason): wlll (ability to choose); emotion (feelings, etc.) . Spirit: Worship (outreach toward our Creator In res· .
ponse to Him\ : Conscience (Inward knowing of what we reduct' to right and
wrong J' Institution of revelation (faculty of seeing and hearing) .
I1 ls Important to have enough understanding of man to enable constant

and progressive growth; but through perversion of this area of truth, our
enemy has brought many of the.Lord's people Into bondage and limitation.
Although there is a distinction between soul and spirit, and It Is necessary,
absolutely necessary, to see that distinction. Il ls equally Imperative that
wp

see our soul as our Father sees us: not as an object of hatred a nddlsgust t

but as the great object of His love a nd constant a1te11t1on, He would. win our

soul to Himself, and bring us under His au thority. As Christ Ls reprod.uced

In our spirit· through Intuitive seelng. our .soul looks upon t he scene. and
through the constant faithfUlness of the FatMr ln our lives Is won by Hls

presence and love, and brought Into submission to the higher life of th~spl:,
rlt. As the soul Is yielded to the spirit , It Is r&lt;'COnstltuted Into the kind of hlf·
manltv the Lord Jesus perfected In Himself on eart h. He then went to the
Father and sent the Holy Spirit Into the church for the purpose of reproduc·
lng His life In us. This reproduCtion constitutes us through the procesS of
change, sultaqlr to exhibit His life as His body . His tulness !Ephesians .1 : 22,
23\ . This process Is solidly luld down In Rom11ns 12: 1. 2 and Scc&lt;lnd Corln·
thlans. chapters three. rour and five-~ .
A master strat£101 Satan has achieved In t)lr church Is thl' constnnt ha·

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Pari II Thfl Thr~lold CDnltllutlun of Man

19-2~33

34-35-37

•

at y

Vol.37, No.50
Copyrightad 1987

By DANA WALKER
and JOSEPH MIANOWANY
WASHINGTON (UP!) -EX· national security
adviser John Poindexter, called today for ~ ·fourth
rpund of tesumony at the lran-Coil!ra hearings,
has convinced at least some congressional
Investigators he did not tell President Reagan of
the crucial diVersion scheme - but they have
different reasons for believing him.
·
Lawmakers such as Sen. Warren Rudman ,
R·N.H., have concluded the 50-year·old Navy rear
admiral d!d not grasp the significa nce of what he
was doing when, In his own words. he hid from the
pres ident a decision to approve the diversion of
money to Nicaraguan Con tra rebels from secret
U.S. arms sales to Iran.
Other investigators, Including Rep. Thomas
Foley, 0 -Wash .• say they believe Poindexte r 's
assertion that " the buck s tops here with m e"
beCaUSe the lOW · key O!f!cer knew jUSt how much it
could hurt Reagan politically if ever exposed.

Rudman , Foley and other members of the
congressional committees lnvesHgatlng the scandal discussed the growing debate over Polnde:&lt;·
. ter' s credibility on.theeveofwhat \\'as expected t_o .
be more tough questioning of the witness today.
" I f!nd Poindexter astonishing and yet I believe
him because I think he did not realize the
enormity of what he was doing," said Rudinan ,
vice chairman of the Senate committee, on ABC's
"This Week With David Brinkley" Sunday.
" He just decided that this particular decision
was so dangerous and such a special decision In
terms of political vulnerab!l!ty that he was going
to take unto himself to make the decision and not
tell the president ," Fpley argued.
Either way, most Democrats and Republicans
agreed Poindexter's sell-described action was
dangerous and disturbing. Partisan fighting was
reserved mostly for the question of whether his
claim of sole responsibility fizzled the hearings.

tho pl ;~ceof tho soul: and those who

see th~ Importance of thP sOul cannot aHgn the spiritual sldf' with their rom·
prehension. One tends to ull ra ·grace: thr. other to ultra ·humanlsm , A grt•&lt;Jt
need In the church today is to see our humanuy n C od .sees lt . Our hum;tn·
tty lour soul) ls a " 'ondPrful creat ion or God. deoslgned t o('xpr~s to the re-st
of creation 1he person of the Creator. In the rail wt• becamP ro nslltutlo nally

unfit for this purpose, thus

th~

nc&lt;'d for ··n...,

bl rt~ ".

or birth from above.

and growth a whole n&lt;'W m.i n. ThiS r,I"()C("SS w\11 tv' cOmplf'!f'd wht·n our
bocly .IN cholngPd through T'(•d(•mp(lon nt o th nM\·· rca uon body tha t \~ de·
signed to exhibit th~ Christ, .,.lng rptJroduced Wit hin U&gt; now. as "·o fJx our
1

~"'"

up&lt;&gt;n Him. the perf&lt;'!'tod hamlnlty.

Th(" ~rf'ater the balanN' tx--eom es In us. lh m ore wt• will uppr lUI£'
our humanltv . because It Is beco mln~ ,.omrthln{!: 1&lt;) tx&gt; admirrd und r
the hand of Cod. AS we walt on the Lord, He wUJ makr real "''l thln us
•th eS(\ thlnas. and we will s~ as wr l')C ercls(' thr spiritua l f:Jcult les g lvPn

u&lt; by birth , or birth fr om nbo•·e.

PRAI~E

i H~brews ~:K

1416: 1·31.

lilliAN RHI, PAS!OR
SUNDAY q,JQ A.M. -7:00 P.M. .

TABERNACLE

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A1TORNEY - Fonner
national security advisor John Poindexter (lefO
confers with hbt attorney, Richll!'d Beckler, as the

Iran-Contra hearings reaumed In Washington Ibis
morning. ( UPI)
·

Claims posse poisoned drugs

.

87 Buick Park Avenue

PHOENIX (UPII - A man
claiming to be a rnember of the
Posse Comitatus says the ultra •
conservative group has lnfll·
trated a local drug ring and Is
selllng narcot ics laced with
deadly chemicals In a vigilante
effort to clean up Phoenix's
growing drug problem .
The man , who ldenllfled him·
sell only as "Max," called United
Pres's Int ernational and other
news organizations Sunday night
and said members of the group
were selling cocaine. inethamphetamlnes and marijuana laced
with unspecified polson.
" We've decided to tak.;o the law
Into our own hands with respect
to the drug problem In rhe
Ph-oenix metropolitan area," the
man said. "We'd like to let the
publ!c know that if they are going
to use these drugs, they're
probably taking their life into

th&lt;?lr own hands.
" ! can' 1 Imagine how many
deaths a re going to result ," (he
caller said. "Let the bu yer
beware.''
The caller would not say what
chemicals the group allegedly
used to polson the drugs, but said
more than 4 pounds of cocai ne
was laced with the substance.
The caller S(l!d he represented
the Phoenix chapter of Posse
Comitatus, a loosely knit group
rooted mainly In the West and
Midwest that questions the au·
thority of all fo rms of govern·
ment above the level of county
sheriff.
The caller said the poisoning Is
aimed at cleaning I!P the drug
problem in Phoenix .
"Maybe our program w!ll work
where the pollee have failed," he
said.
·
Pollee spokesma n Sgt. Andy

Anderson said lhe depart ment
was iook!ng Into the reports, qut
said It could be a hoax .
··There's not a lot our pollee
department can do," Anderson
said. "We' re kind of in a walt and-see situation. The drug
world is a buyer·beware world.
It's always been thai way. Any
time you buy a drug off the street
you're taking a big risk."
Should the alleged plot prove
fatal Io a drug user, Anderson
said those responsible could be
c harged with murder. ,
Anderson said ·u is possible the
alleged plot Is connected to the
theft Saturday of 50 bottles of
embalming fluid from a P~oenix
mortuary .
Phoenix Is one or several
Western cities that has see n an
Influx of "crack" cocai ne dealers
from Los Angeles·area s treet
gangs.

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Se.e Harland Wood,
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or Greg Smith

26 Cents ·

Henry Hyde, R-Ill. , complained that Democrats
are finding fault. unfairly .
"They've shifted the question," Hyde said. "It
used to be, 'Old - the pre~&gt;ident know of the
diversion? ' Now that that has sputtered out and no
smoking gun, not even a holster, has been found,
they'vemoved the Issue around that the president
ought to have known. I think the presldentlon of
what Reagan knew had been painted unfairly by
the White House as the chief question the
committees were seeking to answer. Larger
overall Issues remain to be addressed, these
lawmakers said.
"There's a myth that this committee was set up
to decide whether the president was Involved !n
the diversion knowledge," Foley remarked.
"Now that !t has been established that he Isn't
guilty of knowledge, I'm glad because I think It
does give the pres!deJII an opportunity to function
In the last 18 months of his administration."

roles In the Iran-Contra scandaL
Interviewed on the CBS "Morn·
ing Program," Buchanan , an
arch-conservative, called North,
Poindexter and the late CIA
director, WilHam Casey, heroes
for keeping suppl!es flowing to
the Nicaraguan rebels during the
two years that ended October
1986 when Congress prohibited
IJ .S . •iit.

"If ever there Is a free
Nicaragua in the future, it is
because they (·the three men }
kept the lifeline going, " Bucha·

nan said.
Calling suggestions that North
and Poindexter be Indicted out·
rageous, Buchanan said, "If
anyone belongs In Leavenworth,
It's the Sandlnlsta ·Democrats".
who voted the aid ban.
Buchanan urged Reagan ·to
·defy Congress if need be and send
the required supplies to the
Contras. He said It would commit
the 15,000 Nicaraguan rebels to
death If they were abandoned

now.

President Reagan plans to
meet CIA director regularly

311 -IU2

FACTORY OFFKIAL CARS HAVE BEEN DRIVEN BY
G.M. EXECUTIVES FOR APPROXIMATELY 3,000 TO
6 000 MILES•.MOST CARS ARE FULLY EQUIPPED
AND CAN BE PURCHASED WITH A SAVINGS OF
UP TO S3500 OVER A SIMILAR NEW CAR WITH
NO MILES. ALL CARRY THE BALANCE OF THE
FACTORY NEW• CAR WARRANTY.

1 Sect ion, 10 P~ges

A Multimedia l~c. NewspapiM'

"The evidence shows that the president d!d not
know of the diversion and that takes some· of the
air out of the balloon," declared GOP Sen . Orrin
Hatch of Utah, a steadfast Reagan defender in the
case, on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Hatch and other conservatives also took up the
political cudgel against those who would agree to
a criminal prosecution of Poindexter andor his exNational Security Counc!l deputy, L~. Co!. Oliver
North. Both men admitted destroying potential
evidence in the case and North acknowledged
lying to Congress.
"I think In all honesty it's time to end the
persecution of those people. There's no corruption
here," Hatch Insisted .
"I think , frankly the notion of criminal
prosecution of North or Poindexter is absurd. I
think the outrage has been overdone," added Rep.
Dick Cheney, R-Wyo ., the House committee vice
chairman, on CBS's "Face the Nation."
On a related point. Reagan defenders like Rep.

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Former White House communications director Patrick Eucha·
nan said today !f anyone should
go to prison over the U.S. Contra
policy, it Is the congressional
Dell)ocrats who cut of! aid to the
Nicaruguan rebels.
Buchanan's comments followed his opinion column in the
Sunday Washington Post . that
urged President Reagan to pardon Lt . Col. Oliver North and
Rear Adm . John Poindexter
should they be Indi cted for their

Throufilh new birth "'e tx&gt;com~ a n£W rrea llon. constitutionally s1.1ttrd to
contain dlvlnt" llff?'. Thii prOC'£1SS of splriiUal growth l!rt thPenl argrmrnt of ttw
splrh (the new C'reat lon) , brlngln ~ the soul (nto submtsslon to It , tt nd c h a n~~
In~ thr soul throu ~h transfiguration {samr word use or Christ on the
Mount\ constitutionally lrito the !maR~ Of Christ. thus proqudn~ by birth

Although Cook said It _Is too
soon to tel! what lmpa(t those
releases will have on the movies '
appea l, he predicted home vld('()S
eventually will sap the movies'
box office strength.
Wometco's Neal disagrees.
Children will always co me to
movie houses to see the Disney
classics, he sa id.
"You can' t grow up without
seeing Snow White ."

tion near zero throup;h Tues·
day.

Buchanan blames Congress

maUD&lt;.Olsoul and spirit . Thetrkk has been to get people to think they must
hav~ dlfllcultv acceptln~

Clear tonight. Low near
70. Sunny and humid Tues·
day. ffighs between 1M) and
95. Probability of precipita-

John Poindexter returns to witness table today

choose one aspect at the expensf' of the othf&gt;r. TiloSf' who see th~ splrUual

side of things

entine

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday. July 20, 1987

rasslng feeling that we must always choose l)fltwet"n twoas~tsoftru th . ln
this present mrttter, It is rC"vealed in the sharp divls\on In th saints ovC"r this

Dems complete two-day Ohio forum
CLEVELAND (UP I) - There
were no s urprises at a two,day
forum for Democratic preslden·
tial candidates, ,attended by
nearly 100 delegates to the
party's 1988 convention, but
party officials generally agreed
each candidate performed well.
Delegates of the Association of
the St Gov. Bruce Babbitt, Sen.
Albert Gore of Tennessee and
Sen. Joseph Blden of Delaware.
Two presldenttal hopefuls who
have not yet declared their
candidacies - Jesse Jackson
and Rep. Patricia Schroeder of
Colorado - also spoke at t~e
fo_rum.
.
-~n anecdote Gore told Saturday seemed to capsullze the
results of the weekend.
Gore said he encountered a
sign In an airport during his
campaign travels that ·read:
"Advance men, check your bag·
gage • . many candidates look
alike. " .
'T he candidates were generally
grac'lolis toward one another.
Although .each speech was

heav!ly punctuated with the
pronoun "I ," ' 'we" was also used
a number of rimes In reference to
what the Democratic Party must
do as
whole to defeat the
Republicans In 1988.
"There are some awful good
Democrats running and you've
heard from them all," said
Blden. "But as you look us over,
ask yourself. one question: 'Ca n
we win?' "Do not pick among us,
no matier hOw much you like us,
someone who cannot w!n."
Collectively, the candidates
struck a harmonious chord re·
gardlng basic Issues.
All agreed that the Reagan
Administration breached consti·
tutlonal laws and the allegiance
of the , American people In the
Iran-Contra affair.
Gephardt accused Marine Lt.
Col. Oliver North of shredding
the U.S. Constitution and said it
was an outrage that the allmlniS.
tratlon wants an additional $140
million for the Nicaraguan Con- ·
tras at a time when American
farmers are losing their land.

a

'

Aside from blasting the admln·
lstration for Its foreign policies,
including Its poor relationship
with the Soviet Union, the Democrats criticized Reagan for cutting funds In education, lncreasln~ the trade deficit and Ignoring
the plight of America's farmers.
Jackson, who will decide by the
end of the summer whether to
run, said the Democratic Party
must fight for [letter housing,
health care, education, jobs, day
care centers and cures for cancer
and AIDS'.
After his speech, Jackson led a
march with · striking NBC
workers. On Friday, party offl·
clals said they opposed letting
non-union NBC crews covering
the meetings. But a u .s. Plstr!ct
Court judge Issued a r)lllng just
before the start of the meeting
saying NBC employees should be
allowed to enter.
Dukakls said the party must
win ·respect on the economic
Issues If lt·expects to take control
of . the executive branch for the
second tb;ne since 1968.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Aides
say President Reagan. starting
today, will meet regularly with
new CIA Director William Webster following revelations about
the role of his predecessor,
William Casey, in the Iran·
Contra scandal.
White House meetings with
Webster are planned every two
weeks, accordi ng to presidential
Spokesman 13en Jarrett, along
the same Jines as Reagan's
meetings once a week with
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and twice a week with
Secretary of State George Shulfz.
Jarrett reported the plan on the
eve of today's Reagan- Webster
meeting, at which the president
was expected perhaps to sound
ou 1 the former FBI director on
the fruitless search for a successor lo the post he left just this
spring.
,.
Attorney General Edwin
Meese has Interview several
possible contenders for the FBI's
top spot, but none apparently has
_shown much enthusiasm for the
job that carries a 10-year tenure.

Webster, the former federal
judge President Carter appointed to lead the FBI in 1978,
took over at the CIA alter Ca~ey
resigned Feb. 2 In h!s struggle
against brain cancer. Casey died
May 6.
Webster is reportedly shaking
up the CIA, which had a slgnlfl·
cant role in secret U.S. arms
sales to Iran and assistance to the
Nicaraguan Contras at a time
when official American military
aid to the rebels was Illegal.
Reagan, meanwhile, has been
stepping up, his off!cial activities
and raising his profile, apparently .in an attempt to s how he is
in charge and not a lame duck
despite the effects of h!s worst
political scandal.
Casey, the president's 1980
campaign manager, had no problems with access to the White
House and often was seen there
- but his appointments were
rarely, !! ever, on the pu bile
record.
The plan for meetings with
Webster appears to be an effort

to keep closer tabs on the agency
l!nked to many aspects of the
Iran-Contra scandal - mostly
through· Casey , said by fired ·
White House aide Oliver North to
have been his mentor and closest
adviser In running those clandestine operations .
Ex·national security adviser
John Poindexter, testifying at
the Iran-Contra hearings after
North as the other key figure In
the scandal, Indicated he was not
aware of the shots reportedly
being called by Casey.
In his testimony, Poindexter
appeared to help Reagan by
assuming the blame and responslbillty for the diversion. Yet the
Navy rear admiral also revealed
a picture of a president not
making his own foreign policy
decisions. ' ,
~cent polls show Reagan still
has a cred!bllity problem, w!th
the majority of Americans sur·
veyed saying they think he Is
lying by asserting he had no hand
in bankrolling the Contras at a
time during the ban on a!d from
October 1984 to October 1986.

Celeste behind other candidates
ADEL, Iowa (UP!) - Ad·
mltting he is at least 80 days .
behind t he declared candidates, Ohio Gov. Richard F.
· · Celeste met with Democratic
activists in Iowa this weekend
lo see whether it is too late for
-him to enter the presidential
race.
"From the standpoint of
decided voters, It's not too
late. From the standpoint of
being able to build an effective
·organization, It's getting to be
a close call," Celeste said
during a stop at Nlzzl's Cuccina, a cafe visited by four
Democratic candidates this
year.
"Whether II is the right time
for me to pursue a presidential
candidacy Is the real QlleS·
lion," he sa! d.
Celeste's· Iowa trip, which
Included jlrlvate mee tings
with Democratic leaders Frl·
day and Saturday was his first
to Iowa, which hosts the
nation's flrst.presldential caucuseo; Feb. 8.
"Presidential politics beg·
Ins ,In Iowa. That's a reality
facing anybody who looks at
the presidency,'' Celeste sal&lt;!.
"But It's a long time betWeen

.spending two days in low a and
becomming a presidential
candidat e.
"If I don' t feel the time is
right for me, I won't run, " he
.said.
Celeste, who served . two
years as director of the Peace
Corps under preside nt J[mmy
Carter before he was elected
governor in 1982, said he offers
a "unique background of
experience."
,
"The governor's office may
-be an appropriate schoolroom
for somebody who aspires to
national leadership," he said.
Celeste, 49, said he will
spend "probably a· few
weeks" qecldlng whether he
can spend enough lime cam·
palgnlng and still tend to his
gubernatorial dulles In Ohio.
Shortly after Gary Hart
dropped out of the presidential
race, several Ohto newspapers published articles alleging
the secopd-term governor has
been Involved !nat least tl!ree
extramarital affairs.
Celeste acknowledged the
Issue of his personal character
was raised at one of h!s
meetings In Iowa, but said he

believes Iowa voters would
judge him on h!s record of
public service.
•:People arc entitled to know
as much as It' s possible to
know about presidential aspirants. My own view is that
personal life issues really
ought to be for an Individual
and h!s family and how he
handles !I," Celeste said.
"I'm prepared for folks to
judge me based on my experience as a public .official,
based on what they see in me
and my family and how we
live and work together.
"All I ask !s that people get
to know Dick Celeste," he
sa! d.
· Several Democratic act!· '
vlsts who m'et with Celeste
Saturday said they were !m·
pressed with him, but said he
may be unable to catch up
with the other candidates.
"I think he' s got a certain
genuineness about him. He
had an appeal that's going to
go over well in Iowa," said Art
Seamans, a Dallas County
activist who met \\'lth Celeste
In Adel. "But it's not easy to •
pu\together a campaign."

'

;'

--- -----

.

'

r.~;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
THE LATTER RAIN A REVELATION

record quarter

new picture every time they
come out, I don 't know that there
is a stopp ing ·point. So I don 't

Mason
County

expecled to be ~5 bushels an acre,
the Ohio Agricultural Statistics •
Service. reports.
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio t UPI) The Ohio wheat yield for 1987,
based on July 1 conditions, Is

Disney classics are being released sooner
By DON FINEFROCK
UPI Business Writer
MIAMI- Quick. When was the
last time The Walt Disney Co.
released the a nimated film,
Snow White and the Seven
Dwarfs?
"Generally, we re-release our
classics every , oh, five years,"
said Richard Cook, senior vice
president for J:luena Vista Distrl·
bution Co., a Disney subsidiary.
But Snow White, last seen !n
1983, is making an ear ly return
this month, in honor of its 50th
anniversary .
"It Is getting a shorter rest
than most," Coo k· said.
In fact , all the Disney classics
are getting shorter rests these
days.
Once upon a t ime, America ns
could count on seeing Dis ney
films like Snow White , Bambi
and Pinocc h!o every seven
years.
But the rotation has quickened
in recent years because Disney
believes children are growing up
faster and because the company
has rmore f!lms !n its archive,
Cook said.
Kenneth Neal, vice president
and genera l manager of the
Wometco Inc. cinema chain In
Florida. said the change hasn't
affected box offlce appeal. Worn·
etco has booked Snow White at
four of Its movie houses In
Miami.
"Snow White !s almost like an

July 19. 1987

Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

- --· -·--·----

.

-· --~;)~

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