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•

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 16. 1987·

'Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sunday

Children, as young as 9, favor wine coolers, stu·dy says
beverages, heavily advertised
since 1983.
Some health officials charged
the wine Industry with marketing
' their products as If they were soft
drinks with adver1lsements feat ·
urlng animals, celebrities and
cartoon characters.
"Many wine coolers are por·
trayed like fruit juice or soft
Friedman
drinks, " said Lora
.
spokeswoman for the Na1lonal
&lt;;oundl on Alcoholism. "They
are m the supermarkets rightnext to the soft drink section. For
kids, it becomes a fuzzy
di.s tlnc1lon."
A spokesman from the Wines
and Spirits Wholesalers Assocla·
lion, which represents the wine
cooler Industry, was not available for comment.
According to Metropolitan
Ufe, the children may be mirrorIng their parents. Another study
reported by the insurance company this year ~hawed that
despite an .overall decline In
alcohol consumption among
adults, the amount of wine
consumed by the average Amer!·
can has increased to 3. 7 gallqns
per year , a trend linked to the

By GAYLE \'OUNG .
UPI Science Writer
NEW YORK tUPI) - Many
children as young as 9 drink wine
coolers, according to a national
survey released today, while
almost half in grades four to six
fl'l'l pressured to try the bubbly
alcohollc beverages that some
health officials complain are
marketed like soda pop· or fruit
juice.
The Metropolitan Life Com·
pany released findings from two
studies that suggest most child·
ren have their first drink by ageS
and that almost one-third of 12 to
17-year-olds drink beer, wine or
hard liquor on a regular basis.
But health officials said they
were mosl startled by previously
. unreported figures suggesting a
significant number of children in
grades fou r through six either
drink wine coolers or feel pressure to do so.
A national survey of '500,000
children indicated one-third of 9
to 12-year-olds have · tried wine
coolers. Almost · half of those
,surveyed said they felt peer
pressure to try the bubbly

s ky -rocketing sale~ of wine
coolers.
"This is the first time wine

circulation of 9 million, said The
Weekly
Rea~er first surveyed
f
ourth through sixth graders
a.bout alcohol and drug use in
1983, but did not Include ques·
lions about the then relatively
unknown wine coolers.
!le said the children were not
spec If! ca 1ly asked If they had
~ri~d alcohol, but If their friends
a ·

coolers have been looked at
specifically In regard to child·
ren," said Margaret Mushlnskl,
an epidemiologist who prepared
today's report for the company's
q uanerly Statistical Bulletin.
"Op~~~~~-~ly, t hey are very

. po

DECATUR. Ala. (UPI ) - "Did
you have a friend on the good
Reuben James?" the Woody
Guthrie folk. song asks about the
German U-boat sinking of the
USS Reuben James before World
War II.
Of th~ 147 crew members
aboard, only 45 survived the
attack that occurred six weeks
before Pearl Harbor. Nowonly21
are alive and seven of them are
meeting this weekend in De·
catur, a city named after Barbary pirates hero, Commodore
Stephen Decatur.
Legend says that Decatur's life""
was saved in action against the
pirates in Tripoli In 1804 by his
boatswain's mate, Reuben
James -of Ohio.
' 'When we come to a reunion,
we are going back to old Navy
days and recalling the ties we
have." Reuben James survivor
George Giehrl, 67, of Buffalo.
N.Y., said Thursday. "There's
sort of a bond that ties you
together. As these guys arrive,
you see their faces and it takes
you a long way back."
It will be the third meeting of
the USS Reuben James DD-245

Reunion Group, the retired tool·
maker said.
·
"Some of the men were 35 and
37 years old and now they're
pushing 82 and 85 and they just
aren't able to travel." _Glehrl
said. "We have one man who was
on the ship in 1934."
The Reuben James was escortjog ships to England In the
darkness of Oct. 31, 1941, when
two torpedoes struck the 20-yearold destroyer.
Giehrl, a petty officer in the
engine room, was asleep in his
compartment when the attack
occurred. The ship quickly sunk
in the cold waters of the North
Atlantic.
"There would have been 80 or
so survivors," Giehrl said .- "We
had had two depth charges on the
stern in tl)e ready position and we
left them armed and when the
ship went doWn, the depth
charges went off.''
His ship was theflrstofth.reeln
the Navy named the Reuben
Jaf1leS. A second Reuben James
was launched in 1913• and last
year, the third Reuben James, a
guided missile frigate like the
USS Stark, was launched in Long

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
In The Mattar .Of

every day·
An estimated 26 perc~?nt of .

Foreclosure of liens
For Delinquent Land Taxes.

fourth graders and 31 percent of
fifth graders have tried the
bubbly drinks, which combine
wine with carbonated fruit
juices.
The survey of 500,000 .children
was conducted In January of this
year by The Weekly Reader, a
school magazine published by
Field Publications of Middletown, Conn .. in association with
The _National Council on Alcoho·
!ism, a private. non-profit group.
Lynell Johnson, executive edl·
tot of the magazine with a

George M. Collins. trea·
surer,
Meigs County, Ohio
PLAINTIFF

Beach, Calif.
Legend has it that boatswain's
mat.e- James took a sword blow
meant for Decatur in hand-tohand combat with pirates In
August 1804 during an Invasion of
Tripoli. Earlier that year, Decatur raided the Barbary pirates
and burned U.S.· ships that had
fallen Into their hands.
While some books say It was a
seaman named Richard Frazier
who actually saved Decatur's
life, the credit is given James.
who ' stayed with Decatur many
years in the Navy.
Decatur died from wounds
suffered in a .. duel in 1820 in
Maryland and James died 18
years later in t-he U.S. N'a val
Hospital in Washington .
Giehrl said the reunion is being
held in Decatur, which was
named for the commodorP when
it was incorporated six years
after his death, because of
residenl Jim Brice. Brice served
on the first Reuben James. but
was transferred before the fatal
\ "OyiJg(' .

Mar Subdivision as recorded
in Volume 4. Page 61, Meigs
County Plat Records.
Reference Deed: Vel. 268.
Page 979, Meigs County
Deed Records.
Judgment on lot #6 being

other out, " she said. "I bellevP a
· 1y
sample this large 1s . rail'
reliable."
The oiher study used ln. the
Statistical Bulletin report was a .
previously published national
survey of high . school seniors /
conducted In 1986 by Lloyd .
Johnston. a researcher at the '
University of Michigan in Ann
Arbor.

$103.06.

Whereas, such judgment
orders sUch real property to
vs
be sold by the undersigned
Ronald G. Davis• .New Lima to satisfy the total a mount Of
Rd., Rutland. Oh. 45775
such judgmont;
and
Now, therefore, public no~
Lady Dawn Davis, New lima tice i• hereby given that 1.
Rd., Rutland, Oh. 45775
Howatd E. Frank, Sheriff of
DEFENDANTS Meigs County, Ohio, will sell
CASE NO . 87· DLT·3
such real propefty at public
Notice of Sale Under
auction. for cash. to the
Judgment of Foreclosure
highest bidder of an amount
of Liens for Delinquent _ sufficient to SBtisfy the judg·
land Taxes
ment against each parcel at
Whereas, judgment has 10:00 a.m. 1 em the front
been rendered against cer- steps of the Meigs County
tain parcels ot real property Court House, " Pomeroy
for taxes, assessments. pe· Ohio. on the 30t.h day of
nalties, interest, cosls, and tober, 1987. If any parcel
charge!~ as follows:
does not receive a sufficient
Pacer ~11-0022' 000 of bid, it shall be offered for
the tu recorda of the Meigs sale. under the same terms
County Treasurer.
and conditions of the first
Commonty known as 1080 sale and at the same time of
New Lima Road, Rutland, day and at the same place.
Ohio.
on tha 13~h day of NovemLast known owners being ber, 1987 for an amount
Ronald G. and lady Oawn suffiCien·t to satisfy the judg·
Davis .
ment against the parcel.
The following described prePublic notice iS hereby gimises situated in the Township ven that all such real propof Rud111d. County of Meigs. erty to be sold at public auc·
and the State of Ohio and tion may be s.ubject to a fe·
bounded a~d described as fol- deral tax lien that may not be
lows: Being lots Nos. 5 and 6 extinguished by the sale,
of Clair-Mar Subdivision as re- and purchasers of any such
corded in Volume 4, Page 61, real property are urged to
Meigs County Plat Records.
search the federal tax; lien inReference Deed: Vol. 268, de~ that is kept by the
Page 979, Meigs County county recorder to deterDeed Records.
mine if notice of a federal tax
Judgment on lot #5 being lien has been filed with res$3,205.58.
pect to any such real propParcel n1 1·00225.000 of erty .
the tax racords of the Meigs
Howard E. Frank. Sheriff
County Troasurer.
Meigs County, Ohio
Commonly known as 1080 11 0) 9. 16, 23, 3tc
New Uma Road, Rutland,

oc:

Public Notice

Ohio.

Last known owners being
Rona'd G. and Lady 08wn
Davis.
The following deScribed
premises situated in the
Township of Rutland, County of Moigs, and State of
Ohio and bounded and de·
scribed as follows: Being
lots Nos. 5 and 6 of Clair-

'RESOLUTION 9·28-87

more Street, and on the
sou~h by Main Street, as a
blighted area in accordance
with the state of Ohio's
Community Development
Block Grant Program .
Whereas, 'the Central Business District between the
aforesaid boundaries. is a
blighted area where 69% of
buildings are designated
blighted and 1 DO% of the
sidewalks are in poor or da·
terlorated conditions existing in over 51% of the designated aroa such as
Swisher and Lohse Drug,
Chapman Shoes, Green
Lantern, Rite: Aid, Sundry.
Court Mini Park, all naeding
extensive repairs or total replacement (some elevation
differences of 2¥2".
Rosolved. by the Village
Council of Pomeroy, Ohio,
that the Mayor is authorired
to declare this ~rea blighted
due to the demonstrated
need for building rehabilita·
tlon and the eXistence of dB·
teriorated sidewalks within
the above captioned area.

PASSED: Sept. 28, 1987

Richard Saylet. Mayor

110)16, 23, 2tc
Public Notice

----------1
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF
LeGRAND GRIBBLE
aka L. G. GRIBBLE.
Oeceal8d
Case Number 15631
Docket B. Page 261
leonard Jewell, Administrator with the Will Annexed, of
the Estate of Legrand Grib·
ble aka L. G. Gribble, 4eceased.

and
'·

serve

Har"ey's confession because evi·
dence was too weak.
But Joseph Deters, assistant
Hamilton Count:v prosecutor who
worked . on Harvey's case, said
Harvey has little to fear from
federal prosecution.
"There is no federal death
penalty that applies. He already
is facing three life sentences.
What does hE' have lo lose by
talking?" Deters said.
·
Whalen said Harvey agreed lo
cooperate because he wants to
end the proceedings agains.t him
and begin serving the three
consecutive life sentences he
received for the Hamilton County
convi~tlons . Harvey won'! be
eligible for parole until he's 95.
Harvey, who has confessed to
killing at least 57 people, worked
at the VA facUlty from 1975 to
1985._ He was forced to resign
after he was caught with a gun,
and he was also suspected of
sabotaging equipment and stealing tissue samples.
He then became an orderly at
Drake Hospital, where he killed
21 patients. Harvey Is scheduled
to go to Kentucky Nov . 2 to enter
formal pleas to the charges
stemming from his claims that
he killed 13 patients al Mary mount Hospital in London In 1970
and 1971.

end

· 3. Verle.y Hauck aka Verlie
Hauck, deceaued, and
t
4 . Elizabeth H1uck, deceesiJd.
are hereby notified that on

some sentences

concurrently.
In both cases. prosecutors said
they needed to bargain for

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

•

.

Don'I Miss This Sale!
Best Values Ever!

.-

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

...

-

.- Vol. 22 No. 35

Mostly sunny. Highs in OOs.
Chance of rain is zero percent.

7 Sections., 52 Pages
A Mul1imedie Inc. Newspaper

Ferry missed Pomeroy,
but not Powhatan Point

ble aka L. G. Gribblol prop·

any by the laWs of intestate
succastion.
Each of the defendants
named herein may have
some claim or interest In the
estate of Legrand Gribble
aka l. G. Gribble. deceased. ·
You are required to file an
answer on or before twenty·

eight 128) dav• af1er the last

p.ublicati'o n of the Legal Notice on November 20. 1987.
The date of the hearing on ·
this complaint is scheduled ·
lor December 21. 1987 at

11 :00 AM It the Probate

. By NANC\' YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Wh at 's good for
the goose is good for the gander.
But what "was good for Pome·
roy" apparently " wasn't good
enough lor Powhatan Point."
In July 1~86 , the Ohio Depart·
men! _of Transportation denied
requests from Me igs County· -f or
financial assistance to place a
ferry in operation while the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge was
,--·
closed
for repairs. In a public
•.·'
meeting at the senior citizens
center In Pomeroy; George Dou·
gan, deputy director or ODOT' s
District 10 in Marleita, stated
tliat ODOT was not permitted to
secure or fund ferry services.
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard Jones remembers Dougan's reply as " ODOT is not in
the ferry business ."
• Yet. just :Jhls week, a ferry
the Syracuse went Into operation a1 Powhatan
Elemeqtary School gets a
from her Mom, Point wher~ Route 7 is closed due
Joyce Sisson, in loading up old newspapers to be to land slldP.s. The ferry service
is free of cl\t.rge to travelers and
taken to the recycling center In Athens.
ODOT Is reimbursing the ferry
operator every twu_weeks at a
rate of $65 per operating hour.
Powhatan Point Is located in

.

Court, Meigs County. Po·
meroy. Ohio. If you fail to
appear and defend yourself ...
judgment by default will
taken ageinst you for the rel ief demanded in the com·

tJ8

plaint.
Poroons knowing eny teosoo
why the complaint should not
be grantaf should appear and '
infomt the Coon. The Court Is •

PLAINTIFF located at MoiQo County
Courthouoe, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Robert E. Suck, Judge
Shepherd, whose

vs.

•Diamonds &amp; Co.lored Stones
·•Engagement Rings
•Necklaces
•Earrings
•Dinner Rings
•Birthstones
•Gents' Rings

lnsidf'

- Along the Riyer ........ B-1-8
' Buslness ...................... D·l
Comics-TV .. ........... . Jilsert
Classlfleds .... , .... ,..... D-%·1
Deaths .............. .. ........ A-5
Editorial .......... .'.......... A-2
Sports ....... ........... ,. .. C-1· 8

tmes -

has filad a Complaint in
Common Pleas Court. Probate Oiviaion. Meigs County, Ohio for the determine~
tion of the persons entitled
to decadent's !Legrand Grib-

of the Probate Court
-Meigs County, Ohio

A resolution authorizing
11 OJ 16. 23. 30;
that the mayor of the Vjllage
at.
1111 6, 13, 20. 6tc
of Pomeroy, Ohio may de·
DEF-ENDANTS
sign ate the Central Business
Elizabeth Shepherd whose
District on September 28,
lasl known addr811S or resi1987 with designated boun· dence was 6005 Boeing Hold lnflo!ion AI 8oy Wfth T/!os• G""l
daries on the east and west . Place. Los Angeles. California.
auys in lilt Clo$sl(ied Seclion.
by Butternut Ave. and Syca90046, otherwise unknown,

Page _C-1

•

aka L. G. Gribble, deceased,

ALL

'

High school .football results
Sports c ,. section

Leonard Jewell. Administra·
tor of the Will annexed of the •
estate of Legrand Gribble,

SUPPLIERS E:NJI·RE
INVENTORY

Law allows speedy
public record access
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) by a Fostoria newspaper to
Speedy access to public records
secur~. records of a local hospital
association.
seques ter ed by a government
agency has been restored for the
At the bill-signing ceremony,
the chief sponsor, Sen. Stanley J .
news media by a new state law .
Aronoff, R-C!nclnnatl, said the
The new law, signed Thursda,y
by· Gov. Richard F . Celeste,
Legislature '"never intended to
permits aggrie ved Individuals or
tie up an Individual or the news
media, if either asked for a public
or gan lz at ions to seek an emer·
gency cou r t order, known as a
record. In the courts for months
writ of mandamus, to secure and maybe years. "
blocked records ins tead of filing
"f think the action of the
a c ivil laws uit which be pro·
Legislature shows we can re·
longed for months.
. spond quickly when a basic right
"This bill will ass ist all people Is potentially threatened ," said
who need ·a ccess to public r e· Aronoff, adding that the new law
cords In a timely fas hion ," said does not change the ' nature of
Celes te at a blll-slgnlng cerem- private and publlc records.
ony In his Cabinet room . " I am
"This doesn't say that some·
proud to sign it .. . "
thing that was closed Is now open,
The legis lation wa s rushed or something that was open Is
through the General Assembly now closed," he said.
"Stale lnformauo·n Is no better
Immediately after the Ohio Su"
preme Court ruled las t month than no Information," said Rep .
Ihal a 1985 law provided ade· William Schuck, R-Upper Arlingquate redress for those seeking ton, another sponsor. "This will
access to publlc records, and that
help the public media serve Its
mandamus wa s not necessary.
role as public watchdog for th e
Tha t case involved an attempt
people of Ohio. "

Page B-1

Jessica McClure is rescued
Page- A-2

September 29, 1987 that

OFF

50 cents

College football results

4

Harvey cooperating
with fed prosecutors
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
attorney for Donald Harvey says
the convicted serial killer has
provided federal investigators
few details aboutl7 killings at the
local Veterans Administration
Medical Center.
Attorney William Whalen said
Harvey provided the names of
six victims. "He had some
names. For most of the murders
he had just some sort of description ," Whalen said Thursday.
Harvey might be able to
provide more detailed Information If he Is permitted to review
hospital records, Whalen said.
U.S. Attorney D. Michael·
Crites said he couldn' t comment
until the investigation was completed. Federal authorities Inter·
viewed Harvey for several hours
Wednesday.
Harvey is cooperating with
federal investigators without the
promise "a! a plea bargain. In
Hamilton County. where he ·was
convicted of 2o murders, and In
Laurel County, Ky., where he is
expecteil to plea( guilty to 13
murders , Harvey reaehed plea
bargain agreement s t~at allowed
him to avoid the death penalty

Mandolin
masters

and the unkhown heirs at law,
next of kin, legit.,., devisees,
distributeas. uacutors, administrators, and asligns, If .
any, of
1. Elizablitth Shepherd. de
ceased. and
2. Ursula Gribble aka Ursula H. Gribble, deceased,

Elizabeth
last known address was
6006 Boeing Place, Los Angelos. California, 90046, et

.

•

Ir:==ji~~~~~==-f==j;~~~~fe==-r=~~~~~~;==r=~~~~~~;==-.Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public

According
to the of
repor.t,
an
42 percent
esumated
children
have tried wine coolers by the
sixth grade and only 17 percent of
sixth graders believe It would be
harmful to drink the coolers

Reuben James sunrivors dwindling

"These were children and th~y
were h a ndlng, 1I i n to a teacher,"
he said.
.
Mushlnski, an expert 00 stallstics, said It was possible some
children eitherexaggeratedalco·
hoi use or under-reported It
because the f ed
··
· teachers.
Y ear
reac 1ton
from their
"But with a sample this large,
those factors tend to.cancel each .

·.

RECYCLING Collecting, collecting aluminum cans; glass. newspaper, unsthlng·
·. recylable. The October Meigs County recycling
drive Is In full swing In elementary schools. Here

Recycling pro~all) contest
involving elementary students
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.POMEROY - "Cash from
trash" Is the name of the game,
says .j{enny Wiggins, program
manager of !he Meigs County
Office of Litter Control, who is
promoting a recycling &lt;!'rive and
contest currently underway in
M'!'igs County elementary
schools.
While the main emphasis is to
make school children aware of
llttu and Its environmental
Impact, It offers the schools a
fund raising opportunily, not
ol!lY from the litter collected and
turned Into the recycling centers,
but to earn cash prizes.
· Prizes of $25 will be awarded
by !he Litter Conlrol office to the
school in ea.ch district -recycling
the most ma(erials during OcIober. The overall winner in the
county will be given a $50 prize.
Several elementary schools
have organized collection pro;
grams allowing the children to
take recyclable materials to
school where they are accumulated and then 1ransported to the
recycling centers: Other sc hools

encourage each child to collect
and take the materials to the
centers where they are given a
receipt and the money then
returned to the school through
Wiggins.
Aluminum cans, glass , and
newspapers are the materials
being collected. The cans and
glass collection ouUet is the
Tri-County Recycling Collection
outlet located at the corner of
State Route 143 and Route 7
by:pass near Pomeroy. News·
papers are to be taken lo the
Cartwright Recycling Center in
Athens.
'
As pointed out by Wiggins, 20
aluminum can~ can be made
from recycled material using the
.same energy It takes to produce
one new can from ore. He noted
that in 1984 enough energy was
saved by recycling aluminum
cans to supply the electricity
needs for 100.000 homes for an
entire year.
As for glass, he said that
recycled glass Is used to manu facture new contlners and that
any glass can be recycled. Glass,

however, he said, should be(
spparated by color and metal
rings, caps or lids removed.
Newspapers are to be stacked
In manageable bundles or put In
grocery bags before being ta·ken
to the Athens Center, Wigg(ns
said.
.
Wiggins stressed the impor·
lance of recycling to · environmental improvement noting that
Ohioans, including Meigs
County, generate a staggering
amount of waste material "nearly 7 million tons each year
with each of us contributing
nearly four pounds of waste each
day." He pointed out that at the
same time Ohio is producing
massive amounl s of waste It Is
facing a landfill crisis.
"Recycling can make a differ·
ence .. .. when you recycle you
galn at least three ways- with a
cleaner and healthier Meigs
County, _with e_xtra money. and
by helpmg relieve. the problem
which ' the county officials are
facing in maintaining a sanilary
landfill" , Wiggins concluded.

MIDDl--EPORT - Only six
an,lmals - all pitbulls - have
been regis terM with the Middleport Polic~ Department in accordance with a new vicious dog ·
ordinance pas~cd recently by
Middleport VIllage Council.
According to the ordinance
Thursday. Oct. 1~. was thr
. deadline for registering vicious
dogs. As of Friday, only s ix dogs
had been registered. Several
others had attempted to register
their .dogs but could not because
the ordinance . provides that
owners or keepers must show
procf of having a $.'&gt;0,000 liability
insurance policy at the time of
registration. These owners were
unaule to show proof that they
had the reculred Insurance.
Failure to regis ler these dogs
by the Oct. 15 deadline c 9.uld
result in a $1,000 fine or six
months imprisonment or both.
Other requirements of pitbull
or other vicious dog owners are:
When on the premises of the
owner, the 'dol( musl be in an
enclosed locked pen which has a
·
roof.

french 500 settled here 197 years ago
·By MARGAJtET CALDWELL
'
Times-Sentinel Staff
•· It was a bright fall afternoon
when the Frenchmen stepped on
the banks of the Ohio River in
their new hometown. They were
cheated, frustrated , arid tired,
but their hopes and ambition s
persevered through the long

months before and after "the·
landing of the French 500."
They were an upper-middle
class people, mostly - lawyers ,
doctors, wood carvers. gliders,
watch makers, 'rnllllners, hair
dressers, shopkeepers , dancing
masters. And they were looking
for a wilderness paradise.

The threat of revolution was
breaking out in France. Enthus l·
atic reports from travel writers
and an American land office In
Paris were the shots In the arm
fpr the Frenchmen to leave their
mother home.

They had purchased preemption rights to plots of the Scioto
land from t-he Sclotq Company.
Little did they know that this land
lay inside the Ohio Company
tract.
'
(See 500, A4)

\
ODOT's District ·II which is that the ferry operator Is to be
headed by Deputy Director Ro- paid.
Engstrom says that policy
bert Jenkins.
Members of ODOT's public prevents ODOT from using
bridge money for anything other
relations departments in District
10, District 11 and from the state than bridges. and therefore
office In Columbus, all explained bridge funds could not have been
that what might appear to be a spent on a fprry in Pomeroy.
Closure lime and length of
discrepancy in ODOT policy, is
·detour
also played a part In
actually "completely different"
ODOT's decision to fund the
sets of circumstances.
Ken Engstrom·, of District II , Powhatan Poirit ferry, said Engexplained that the project in strom. Route 7 between Powha·
tan Point and St. Clairsville is
Powhatan Point Is much larger
- a $22 million dollar hill expected to be closed at least six
stabilization - as compared to months, where as PomeroyPomeroy's S1.39 million bridge Mason bridge was closed only
lour months.
repair. , ....:
And although Meigs County
In ' addition, Engstrom ex plained, funding for the. two 'residents had to travel 20 miles
either way to reach the Gallipolis
projects came from different
ODOT accounts . Whereas con- or Ravenswood bridges, 40 miles
struction dollars will pay for the rounti trip, the detour around the
Route 7 construction at Powha·
Powhatan Point job, the
tan Point is 40 miles one way , or
Pomeroy-Mason bridge repair
was funded from ODOT' s bridge 80 miles round trip , Engstrom
pointed out .
repair account .·
By getting the contractor on
In addition, Engstrom said
the ·Powhatan Point joh to agree that ODOT also spent money to
to work extended hours to finish
"clean up and modify" an
the job In less time, ODOT existing landing in West Virginia
anticipates a savings In construe· so th.at the Powhatan ferry could
(See FERRY, A7)
t ion costs. 11 is from that savings

When off the premises of thP
owner. thedogmus lbponac~airi
link leash not to exceed six 'feet
and the dog must be muzzled and
under the control of an individual
who is capable of handling the
·
dog.
Ownership of the dog does not
haves to be proven as the state
law specifically states tha t a

p&lt;'rson ha\lin!ll)U~~ dog_ on the
property or in their lr f)osst'sslon
is evlcdence that the person is
responsible for the dog.
The local ordinance was
passed by council recent to bring
provis ions of the s late law which
defines vicious dogr. to automat!·
cally include pitbulls Into the
jurisdiction of local officials.

Cabl~ comin~nto

Meigs

By NANCY YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Staff
TUPPERS PLAINS- Tuppers Plains and Coolville residents
should have cable television available to them within three to
four week.s according to John Hogan. vice-president or H&amp;H
Cablevision, Ashland, Ky.
Hogan said Thursday that construction is already complete In
Tuppers Plains where the company 's base slation will be
located, and construction Is finished in half of Coolville, where a
local 'office will be located.
In addition to Tuppers Plains and Coolville, the company
plans to serve Chester and Olive Townships In Meigs County,
and Troy Township in Athens County . Workers, all of which are
local residents Hogan said, are on their way towards Chester
with the cable and are presently about one-and-one-half miles
south of Tuppers Plains on Route 7.
Hogan said he is not exactly sure when service will be
available In the Chester area and that the company Is waiting
for Columbus and Southern Electric Company to make room on
their poles lor the cable.
Basic cable will be $10, said Hogan, but will not yet include
any Columbus stations. "We' re able to get pictures from
Columbus but no color," he explained . Two pay-movie
channel's, HBO and Cinemax will also be available.
Construction of the entire system Is expected to take
one-year .

Rio nursing school
enrolls new ·students
RIO GRANDE - The eighth
freshman class of the Holzer
SChool of Nurs ing has a Iota! of 4l
students enrolled for the 1987-88
school vear, a 52 percent in crease over 1986.
" We were surprised and
plated, to say the least ," said
Janet M. Byers . R.N., M.S. , Dean
of the School of Nursing, noting
the recent decline In nursing
enrollment around the country.
The class includes 39 women
and two men. or those. 17
students are from Gallla County.
15 from Jackson County, lwo ..from Vinton County and three
from Meigs County .
Four of the students are from
out o! Rio Grande's commu-nit y
college dl slrict .
"We' re pleased that the lncom-

ing students view nursing as a
v iable career, not only in the
four-county area. but in th~s t ate
and nation, as well," Mrs. Byers
said.
'
The Holzer School of Nursing
accepled and enrolle d its first
class In the fall of 1980. To dale,
the sc hool ha s gt'aduated six
classes and a total of 157
graduates have entered the Work
force since 1982, Mrs . Byers said.
The school o!fers a two-year
Associate Degree program that
prepares students for regl~tcred
nursing, she explained. The
s chool ha s NLN Accreditation
s tatus and has approval status
from the Ohio Board of Nursing
Edu c ation and
Nurs e
·
R e gis tration.-

FRESIUIAN NURSING CLASS- The Holzer School of Nursing
al Rio Grande College and Community College has 41 students
enrolled for the 1987-88 school year. Members of the class seen
above are, first row ; from left, Lori Motz, Pickerington; Kelll
Brow-nell, Gallipolis; Trudl Franks, VInton; Ragena McGuire,
Pomeroy; Lee Ann Baker, Gallipolis; Sandra Bachtel, Jackson:
Terri Corbin, Cheshire; Shannon Prater, Jackson; Penny Syrus,
Oak Hill; Stacey Snow, Jackson; second row, from left, Anna
Bachtel, ,Jackson;· 'l'cresa Martini, Fairfield; Lorna Montgomery,
Gallipolis; Kelly Kisner, Gallipolis; Kristina Northup, Gallipolis;
Jayne Campbell, Vinton;- Mllagros Jordan· Bose, Patriot; Sherry

Skidmore, Gallipolis; VIcki Major, Mount Orab; Saundra
McGraw, Ewlnglon; Angela Krlmm, Mason, W.Va.; Johnett~
Huston, Jackson; Rhonda Chisholm, Jackson; . Trac~y Snow ,
Jackson; third row, from left, Brenda Causey , .Juckson; Beth
1-acharh•h, Jackson; Carleen Rapp, Jackson: Donna Potts,
Vinton; Rebeckah McGraw, Racine; Sandra Patrick, Patriot;
Mandy Hill, Racine; Jackie Williams, Oak Hill; Lauren Bentley,
Jackson; Daniel Sheets, Crown City; Mark Poetker, Jackson;
Phyllis Brown, Gallipolis; Unda Hobbs, Gallipolis; ·Brenda
Russell, Bidwell; Carol Hushes, Oak Hill; Julieannt• .Jenkins, Oak
IIIII. Absent lor photo was Kim Hill, Wellston.
---~-- -----------

�•

'
nation remembered Jessica with

Jessica has surgery on foot
MIDLAND. Texas (UP!) Jessica McClure underwent two
hours of surgery Saturday to
relieve swelling In her right foot,
trapped awkwardly duri!jg h~r
58-hour ordeal in an aban\:lo~';;J'r
well. Doctors said il could be a
week before they know if tlie
appendage will have . to be
amputated.
Jessica's beaming mother,
meanwhile, said she was glad to
have her child back from the
ordeal that drew well-wishes
from President Reagan a nd a '
possible hospital visit from VIce
Preside nt Bush.
"l'm so happy that she's safe
and she's back," said Reba
"Sissy'' McClure, 18, " Thew}loie.
world has her back.
"She said ·mama'_ She wants
her bottle. She said Pooh, Winnie
the Pooh, "-Reba McClure added.
The toddler underwent surgery
from 10 a.m. to slwrtly before
noon Saturday at Midland Memorial Hospital for a fasciotomy,
an operation to reliev e pressure
in her right foo t.
Dr. Sheldon Viney, an orthopedist , said doctors operated when
·fluids began returning to Jess ica's dehydrated foot, which was
:trapped perpendicular to her
·body in the well22 feet below the
:surface.
: "The right foot was very
·marginal. We did not kn ow if we
wo uld be able to salvage the foot
at all," Viney said. "Because of
·rehydration, the foot started to
swell and we decided we needed
·to open the foot up.
· " We are cautiously optimistic
. about the skin a nd the muscles. ·
We stili will not be able to tell for
: a number of days or a week
: whether we will be able to
• salvage the foot. It 's going to be a
: day-by-day process."
: He said Jessica " is sta ble.
· Children have great recupera: tive powers. "

October 18, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis. Ohi.o Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page-A-2 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Dr. Terry Tubb, a plastic
surgeon, said the child lost an
area of skin about the size of a
silver dollar above her right
eyebrow . She will require
surgery uslng plastic bubbles to
slowly inflate the skin and pull it
back together without scarring,
he added.
She also will continue u.ndergoing treatment at least two or
three times a day In a hyperbaric
oxygen chamber designed to
speed !)ealing o( tissues.
Dr. Debbie Reese, however.
said Jessica will suffer no .psychological damage, adding,

·. "She's so young, she wlli not
remember it a year from now."
Hospital spokeswoman Lori
Johnson said the president and
vice president may 'attempt to
call parents Ch ip and · Reba
McClure, both l B. Reagan
wa1ched the rescue on television
Friday, and Johnson saJd Bush, a
former resident of Midland, may
visit the hospital.
Jessica's ordeal was the second tragedy this year for Chip
Mc Clure, a painter. Family
members said the teenager's
brother died of AIDS in May.
Well-wishers from around Jhe

flowers. teddy bears and girts,
briefly knocking out the hospital
switchboard with hundreds of
inquiries.
'
Among the morethan300 teddy
bears expected to be delivered
was one from Keisha Knight
Pulliam · of television's "The
Cosby Show" and a 40-inch-lail
Winnie the Pooh bear donated by
Disneyland.
The 18-month-old grrl was
hoisted out of a rescue shaft at
7:55p.m. CDT Friday in the arms
of paramedic Steve Forbes, who
gently kissed her head after
emerging from the well.
She fell about 10 a.m. Wednesday through the 8-inch opening of
a dry water well sha(t while

playing a game called "mama.
daddy, baby" with several other
children in her aunt's backyard.
Workers spent two days digging
a rescue s haft parallel to the well
a nd then bore upwards to r eac h
her.
Jessica was pulled to safety to
the cheers of family, friends and
dozens of volunteers and In the
glare of lights from network
television crews broadcasting
her rescue live .
She weighed 17.5 pounds, down
fo ur pounds from her most recent
weighing six weeks ago, and
gobbled down her first meal, an
orange Popsicle.
"When we gave her the popsicle last night, you know , most
kids ilcj:( it. She a te it," Viney

October 18. 1 987

said. ·
Welder Willie Thames made a
metal cap reading "For Jessica
10-16-87 with love from all of us"
and welded it atop the narrow
well opening. Wooden planks
covered the rescue tunnel, which
Midla nd firefighters said would
be filled In and capped.
Donations to a fund for Jessica's medical care can be sent to
Texas Commerce Bank, P .O.
Box 3905, Midland, Texas 79702.

Ch~rches of the Addison community
By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
The Addison United Methodist
Church was organized In 'the
1860's with services held in the
Addison School
until the build·
ing of the present church
building in 1876.
Persons who
made up the Addison congregation had wors hipped a t Bethel
and Cheshi re.'
. The biggest difficulty is this
·chu rc h through its history has
peen water. The church has been
· flooded a numbe r of times. In
:add ition water baptism caused a
,big spli t in the churc h in the
·1890's. Some of the members
' 'Insisted that all ·dellevers mu st
: be~ baptized · by immersion and
· •orne believed th at the re were
•l hree appropriate ways to hap• tlz~ : . sprinkling, pouring and
'

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPII - Friday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:

Daily Number
432.
PICK-4
8530.

'

There's A Special Feeling in Store for You!

:;Municipal
:court hears
::Gallia cases
•
'

. GALLIPOLIS - In Gallipolis
-Municipal Court Friday, Troy D.
. Zinn. 22, of Jackson. was lined
•$25, give n 90 days in jail and
'ordered to pay restitution for
_criminal damaging. The convic'tlon stems from an incident
'Thursday night in which he was
•:alleged to have s tu lf~d Items
· down the toilet in the county ja il.
: Carley D. Robinette. 30, of Rt.
' 2, Vinton, was fined $300 a nd
-given 10 days in ja il for· OWl. He
,wa s also fined $25 a nd given a
s uspended six-month jail sent :e nc&lt;: lor driving without a
·
license.
·• Mark D. Clemen ts, 25, of Point
'· Pleasant, W.Va .. was fined $44
·:for speeding.
·: Ge rgory Bonecutter, 18, of
&gt; Mason, W.Va. , was fined $12 for
::ru nn ing a red light.
: Char les B. Berry, Jr. , 30. of
&gt; Patriot Star Route, Gall ipolis,
&lt; was ordered to pay court costs .
":ro r speeding.
:• Tammy L. Dyer, 21, of Oak
-,Hill, fo rfeit ed a $41 bond for
&gt; ass ured clear distance.
Jarrles-Brent Harreld, of Gar~- fie ld Extension, had his case
,· dismissed, as well as the charge

Prices in
effect from
10/18/87
thru
10/24/87

Pnone 446-4524

BACK 10 THEATRE DAYS I
· ·SPECIAL PRICE ADM ISSIONS •
ADULTS $3 .50 - CHILDREN $2.50
SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES
ALL SEATS $2.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY 12.00

The Sunday Times-Sentjnei- Page- A-3

.

lames Sands:

G.C.. Murphy
.

531 JAC~SON PIKE · RT.3!5 WEST

~TOBER 16 thru ~
FRIDAY thru

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

THURSDAY~

~:~against

,..'

immersion. The Jailer was the go to India. There she met her youngest son, sho was a student
official Methodist doctrine. As a husba nd who was a Methodist
at the University of California at
consequence a number of Metho· missionary from Wisconsin . In Berkeley. It was her intention to
dists a t Addison withdrew their lime they had 5 children and 4 of go back to India after his
membership and started, the them became missionaries to graduation. She wrote:
Addison Free Will Baptist India. Of her husband who died
"How far off it sounds to you,
Church .
.
afte r 30 years In India, Izetta
but to me India is home, and I am
And even though the m ember- wrote: "He lllcraliy laid down - beating my wings against the
ship has a lways been fairly small hi s life for India and he Jives in cage longing lobe free to return.
and the church has had its the hC'arts of thousands of people Ther,e .are so many to work over
·
dillicuilies. we are s ure that . there."
here in America and I am not
much good has been done. This
"I did missionary work every· needed . I long to be free to go
church along with the Bethel day a nd had wonderful health. I back home. In two more years
Methodist Church near Addison got it by ciimbing trees a nd
my dau ghter will be coming on
had a very profound influence on fences a nd living out of doors
her furlough and then I hope to go
one young girl by th e name of where everyone ought Jo live.
back with her. I wan t to go by
lze tta E llen Hoy,
Children in America ought ~olive way of Ohio and see the old
Miss Hoy was the daughter of as much as they · can In the friends once more , the few that
Mr and Mrs Charles Hoy who country and learn to milk ·a cow, ' are left. a nd to see the scenes of
lived about a' mile or two from
pitch hay , plow, an d r ide a horse my c hildhood. That part of Ohio
Addison on a farm. Izetta was bareback. Thls .kind oi work has
is a very beautiful sectio n, but I
born there and llv'ed In Addiso n helped to make me s trong and d id not kn ow it when I lived there.
township unt il age 10. By age 10 even in my 60's I can s till walk 10 When I returned on my first
s he had lost her mother, fa ther,
miles a nd day at a rapid pace."
furlough and visited the place I
and brother. It was alter age 10
When her letter was written to
thought It as pretty as a nyth ing I
that she moved firs t to Virginia to the Ga iila Times in 1921 she was
had seen aro und the world. We
live with an aunt and then to about 60 years old. Izetta was - learn to appreciate things by
Lebanon , Ohio , to live with
th e n living in California with her compari so n."
a nother relative.
·
In thi s time of sadness for her,
the Methodist ~ hurche s at Addison and Bethel had a profound
influence on her. "I was ca lled to
be a mi ssio nary when I was 9
years of age, but when I go t into
my teens the world began to pull
on me a nd I told God that I did not
want to bury myself In far away
India. For 6 years th e s truggle
went on, and at last I had to yeild
and go.) know now that 1 never
would have bee n happy if I had
not obeyed 'God's call. When we ·
have had the vision and refuse to
follow II th ere is "nothi ng but
failure left for us. "
At age 20 lzetia was a college
graduate and approved by the
Methodist Missionary Board to

a

IS

NOT WHEN ·
YOU ELECT

Satellite
Education

FRED
McNEAL

NO

Gallia County School Bo~rd
I believe YOUR children deserve the
best, a TEACHER in every classroom.
Paid for by Fr«&lt; M'Ntol, lt. 2, Patriot, Ollio 45651

Pre Christmas Sale!
Thi&lt; Christma~ wt•'rt• hringin!l: you tht· fint"st
st"lt"('lion of quality jt•wt•lry you'll find anywhere
for t"\'t•ryont: on your Christmas list.

••

him for receiving stolen

"proper ty.

THE ADDISON United Methodist Church buDding dates to 1876,
but Methodist meetings were held In the vlllage dating to the 1860's.
The meetings In Addison and Bethel influenced one young
nine-year old to become a missionary to India.

.

But as mud1 as you'll appr&lt;"('iatt" the varit"ty and
quality, you'll \'alut" tht" sa\ings_during this salt"

I • •

more ...

f~ven

ABOUT KIDNEY STONES
Includes 41arge grease po!nt sticks.
nose putty&amp;. two t o:Z. tubes cream
make-up. Easy removal with soap,
water&amp;. co ld cream
Reg ularly $6 .49 .

2.99

' ~nly3.99

.I

'

•'

INDIVIDUAL TRICM ·

OR· TRIAJ lAGS

PEANUT

2/$1
-

,•

..

LAKE VIEW AUTO SALES

~

MIRACLE MATCH YARN

2 MILES WEST OF OAK HIU
ON S.R. 279 AT LAKE JACKSON

No dye lot yarn , Color matc hes

:.';::~:!i~'e99 ¢

RAYMOND STRICKLAND- OWNER

skem. ·
Assorted .

682·6764

colors.

skein
' . .HMU 'S
FAMILY·PACMCANDT
11&amp;&amp;18'1 Peanutlklner

Cups or l(ltl(aiiJan.

JOcounl

l
~
'85 Cadillac Eldorado Blarrlu · .,,,

(: t

· ·_
=- ~

. \r;_

.--:' "':.- I

sramk!~

top. red inferior, BoiSe AM/FM CasSi!nr
plavrr, all power Super sharp!

.

Only2,77

.
'

.' "' ,,

•
•..

. I

$17,500.00·
'80 Cadtllac De•tlle · 4 dr.. sed,., ~own
wfrh tan. interim. All power · ~edt

'•

$3,395.00

TIMEX WATCHES

'83 CheVrolet Caprice Cla11lc - 4 do .

Wide selection ot styles.

blac~ / gray

ASSORTED MELLOCREMES
Plclc'lrom: Candy Corn , Harvest
Mix or Bunercreme Pumpkins.

inumor. cruise, 1~1 wheel. A/ C. sha~pt

$4,795.00

12 oz.

Your Choice 77~ ea.

'84 Metcury Marqul• Station Wagon wh""· 6 c~l , aiJto .. AC. nke fimlly ca~

IRREGULAR BED SHEET SETS
Assorted panerns. Great value.

Twin ........... 8.99
Full •...•...... 14.99
Queen .•...••. 18.99

$4,895.00
'80 Buick Rlrlerla • two-tone paint. leather in·
tell"or. a-uiw. lth wheel, re.v defro$1l!l, ail powrr
Gre111 sMpe 1

$4,195.00
'82 Chmolet Monte Carlo · 2-oont ,,ror.
lll~ne

player. sunroof rear defroster. nJcel

$4,695.00
OVER 30 USED CARS. TRUCMS
TO CHOOSE FROMr

'

Our I &gt;1m inlMI1on r~ to hAve tN!tr~ ad•erllud Item 111 stock
on o~r lhel•!tl ll1n ;~doa'l"llil!d Item os not a•arlable to r
pu rc ~ ue ro r anymasor~. we w 111 sell ~OQ uoon reQuesr a
simll~r I ten at r.o mparab!t ouelrt~ 111 a ~o mrarAbl!t
relluo:;Jron rn prrce OA ru\.re a l'li rnc h&amp;t ~ l or tne advgotrsed
Item to tHI purchased at t~e sate prrce whl!f\ •~attab 'e Non
replacubl~ rn e rchilfld iU ~ 110 ltl!ms wrtn qu ilf\rly mr nrmums

.,e eoctpt&amp;a al\0 No l'le r flche&lt;:~ Awa 11101e
11 r$10 Ultsly our t"U51omers

0111

~ ·II

be stateo

MURPHY- TODAY'SVARIETY STORE
348 2ND AYE- DOWNTOWN STORE ONLY .
HRS.: SUN. 1-6; MON. 9-8; TUES. 9-5:30; WED. 9-5:30; THURS. 9-5:30; FRI. 9-8; SAT. '9-5:30

caz=

il

R.H. ALONZO, M.D., F.A.C.S. recently completed lithotr ipsy (ES WL - extraco rpprea l shock-wave lithotripsy ) train·
lng-at the Ohio Kidney Stone Center in Co lumbus. The cen ter is
approved for train ing and treatment of kidney and ureteral
stones by the America n Urological Association a nd the Amerl·
can Lllhotripsy Society.
Any pa tie n t who is a cand i·
da te for ESWL may now be
trea ted by his own urol ogist
from the Holzer Clinic, at the
Kidney Stone Center. in mo st
instan'ces. The Stone Center
started operation In Febru- ·
ary. 1986 and has treated approxim a te ly 2400 cases inc luding 40 pius from lhe
Holzer Clini c.
The ESWL technology was invented by the Dornier pecple in
West Germa ny. It has been used
in that country lor a lew years
before being int roduced to the
United States. A new generation
of machines are forthcoming.
ESWL or extracorporeal shock -wave lithotripsy is a nonsurgica l treatment of stones which can be done in about 95 % of
cases. Other non -s urgical treatment s tha t are done lf necessary
inst ea d of, or in conjunCt ion wi th ESWL are percutaneous lithotripsy (through the flank) for kidney stones and cystoscop1c or
urcteroscopic lithotripsy for bladder a nd ureter stones. The energy source for thesC' procedures could be ultrasonic, elec trohydraulic or laser. In a few cases open surgery may·sti ll be necessary for stones no! successfully treat ed by lit~ot r lpsy .
.
Dr. Alonzo got his M.D. degree from the Umvers1ty of Santo
Tomas in Manila, P hilipp ines in 1~57. He came to this country to
specialize in surgery and urology. He served as Chief of Urol ogy for three ye~rs at the Vet,.-.ran_' s Hospitals In Texas a~d
West Virgi n! ~. He was in solo pract1ce m Bowirng Green, Ohw
for six years with faculty appoin tm ent at the Med1cal Co llege or.
Oh io in Toledo at th at time. Subsequently, he joined the Holzer
Clinic In 1973. He Is Cha irman of the Depar tm ent of Urology.
Dr. Alonzo is a Diplomate of the American Board d( Urology,
a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and Society of
Ph ilippine Surgeons In America. He is president of the Phil ippine America n Urological Soc iety. He 1s a memb('T ol a nrtmbcr
of medi ca l organiza tions Including the American Medica l Associat ion American Uro log ical Asi;ocia tlon, Oh io State Medical
Assoc i~tion, Qhlo UroiOJ(iCa! Society, Central Ohio Urological
Society and has served as past president, vice-president a nd se·
cretary for the Ga!ila County Medical Society.
He has hospital privileges at the Holzer Medical Ce nter and
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
Dr. Alonzo a nd hi s wife reside at 4 High Point Drive, Ga llipo lis. They have two daughters and two ~;randchlldren.
R.H . Alonzo, Holzer Clinic physician, brings to southeastern
Oh io the wave af th e future in medicine - the latest In treatment of kidney and ureter stones.

HOLZER CLINIC
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

Loose
Diamonds &amp; Colored
Stones
.,

All loose diamonds,
emeralds, s·a pphires,
rubies and birlhstones .

20%oFF
"

iilii: .

Colored
Ge'm stones
4 or 6 Prong
Rul.iPs,

Em..-rald~

Reg.
Sale
.25 ct ... .. ... .. $599.00 $ 399.00
.61 ct. ........ $1429.00 s 949.00
.74 ct. ........ $2150.00 11429.00
SAVE

Earrings
'Necklaces
S uJ)phirt'!'i and

All UirthslonO"s
Now On Sal .. !

REDUCED

20%

20% 33% .

&amp; MORE

TO

Remounts

Ladies
Diamond .

UPTO

33%
Men's Diamond
'Rings

Fashion Rings
.The Ia teo I in fashion as well as the
traditional olyles - All on Sole.

"'Reg.
Sale
.24 TW ....... s 295.00 $}99.00
.57 TW ........ S1095.00 $729.00

Entin·

A Grt•at
Giw• nt'"' lift·

20'7r

on

all

lt;J )'OUr

old jt•wt·h~· · San•

&lt;'U~Iom n·mounl!oi,

lnvt-ntor~·

ldt•a For llim.
l.ayeAway Nuw! '.

Tht·

, arra '"' largt"!oit ~lt"('tion .

VALUES TO

.~%OFF

SAVE

•Laya ways Invit ed
•La~e s l Sele("lion Evt"r
•Legiti mate Savings
•

Now Ht·clut•t•cl,,

C hri l'l lma ~'&gt;

20%

20%

J......

The Smart Christmas Shopping Store
OOWNTOWN GAI.LII'OLIS

�'
Page-A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

500

24 cases processed
in JY!eigs courtroom
POMEROY Twenty-lour
cases were processed In the court
of Meigs County Judge Patrick
O'Brien.
Forfeiting bonds In the court
were Cynthia Putney, Smithville, W. Va ., $52; Jerry St. Clair,
Long Boftom, $75; Thomas Wjlson, Athens, $50; Hlroskl Uehara , Gallipolis, $50, all posted onspeeding charges; Terry
McNickle, Racine, $40, no seat
belt, passenger.
Fined · on speeding, charges
were Larry LePage, New Concord. $20 and costs; Adwln
Parker, Lizella, Ga., $22 and
costs; James D . Hudson, Middleport, $25 and costs; Stanley
Duckett, Pomeroy, $22 and
costs; Kevin Eastman, Gallipolis, $28 and costs; James Peyton,
· Dexter, speeding, $25 and costs,
and no seat belt, driver, $20 and
costs.
Other hearings Included Eddie
R. Smith, Syracuse, no seat belt,
driver, $20 and costs; Marlon
Snider, Racine, driving while
Intoxicated, $250 and costs, three
days in jall and 60 day license
suspension; s uspended $100 of
fine if residential treatment
program attended; failure to
control. costs only; Terry Mul·

· Weather
Ohio Extended Forecast
Monday through Friday
Fair Monday through Wedne·
day . Highs will be In the mid 50s
to mid 60s Monday and in the 50s
Tuesday and Wednesday . Lows
wlll be In the _m id 30s to mid 40s.
So b C t aJ

ut

en r

!Ins, Dexter, driving while Intoxicated, $250 and costs, three days
In jail and 60 day license
suspension; failure to· control,
costs only; John Hess, Jr.,
Gallipolis, left of center, $20 a nd
costs; Oscar Wallace, Jr., Ri ·
pley, left of centet, costs only;
James Brite, G uysville, littering,
reimbursement to li tter control
of $274.32 and costs; Sharon
Hudnall, Nelsonville, passlh g
bad c hecks, $20 and costs, lil\e
suspended, • restitution to be
made; Kermit Buzzard, Middle·
port, litter ing, $500 fine, sus·
pended $450 upon approval of
court that lit ter Is cleaned up,
and costs·: Walter Haggy II,
Rutland, criminal damaging, 10
day jail sentence, costs; Kurtis
Lemley, Crown City, Improper
handling of a firearm In a motor
vehicle, $100, 30 days jail suspended; drug abu se, $75, 30 days
jail sentence s uspended, costs;
Terry Jarrell, Langsville, drivIng while intoxicated, 30 day jail
sentence s usj)ended to 10 days,
$200 fine, 120 day Ohio license
suspension, costs; Robert Ramsey, Gallipolis Fer ry , W. Va.,
failure to report a crime, 30 day
jail · sentence suspended, six
months probation, costs; Forest
Gangwe r, Pomeroy , no seat belt,
driver, $20 and costs.

(From FRENCH, Al)
"' ---~--------'-'----

The first ship left Le Harve,
France, in January 1790. When
they port In Alexandria, Va., in
May , they heard of their misfortune from the townspeople. It
was a terrific blow.
Weeks went by a nd some of
them exhausted their money.
The townspeople took pity and
gave them aid, hou sing some a.nd
giving jobs to others. Months
slipped away, and much of their
spirit was lost.
Some gave up their dreams for
the security of jobs In nearby
towns. Some even attempted to
find their dream on their own.
The French were scattering.
Meanwhile agents of the Scioto
Company were arranging , to
move the French to the Ohio
River. The co mpany took the
land along the Ohio a nd built a
rude town for the Frenchmen .
Four rows of log cabins paralleled the river with in tervals o!
open s pace for c ross streets.
BlockhouseOtood at each corner
of the ca blned area. Near by was
a log stoc kade enclosing company stores and so m~ larger,

finer log houses for the wealthier
members .
•
This small colony was built in
what is now the city park.
In September, the French once
agai n boarded their ships In
attempt to find their new American hometown . They traveled
down the Ohio for a month.
On Sunday, October 17, 1790,
the French 500 took their first
steps on the bank of their new
home, Gallipolis, "the city of the

Gauls."

·

The months to follow were
pet haps . the hardest for t hese
strong-willed colonists. Winter
came hard and they founl! the
"ways. of the wilderness" to stay
alive.
The next few years were to test
their strength. They experimented with crops and learned to
use the Ohio River for food, aid .
a nd Industry. Visits from neigh·
boring Indians were a consta n t
threat.
By 1805, not more than .20

VOTE FOR

For Gallia County Board of Education
My desire is

fa mill&lt; s remained In Gallipolis,
the third settlement In Ohio. But
they survived .
Now, after · 197 years, these
determined Frenchmen remain
In the heart of the town , and some
descendents remain In the new
native home of the French 500.

to bring integrity and

the best education I can for the
county schools.
Paid for by tht candidate, Jay Ray Berkley,
Rl. I, lox 1120, CheShire, Ohio 45620.

The three grand prize designs
wlll be used lor billboards, which
are to be displayed throughout
each of the th ree counties.
The contest is open to any
studen t attend ing an elementary
school in Gallia, Lawrence and
Scioto Counties. Posters are to be
jud ged on their originality, appropriateness of theme (recy ~
· cling), vis ibility, neatness and
ease of reproduction. E n tries will
close on Friday, October 23, and
judging will take place on Oc tober 27.
The three-county contest is the
first joint -co unty -sponsored pro·
ject of the Litt er Control
program s.

RE-ELECT

David W.
McKENZIE
GALLIPOLIS
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

Pig Pickin' Dinner schedule~

Paid For by Th; Candidate David
McKenzie , 33 Bu rkehart lane, GalliIPO!is , Ohio
.

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. The West Virginia State F arm
Museum will ho.ld its e ighth
annual So uthern "Pig P ickin"
dinner on November 7.
Serving will star t a t 12:30 p.m .
and co ntinu e until the meat Is all
served . The m eal wil l consist of a'
choce of barbeque pork or
barbeq ue beef, ba ked bea ns ,
slaw, app le sauce and a roll for
$3.50 per plat e.
"Pig Pick in " dinners orlgt-·
nated In the southe rn United

SUNDAY 12·6

States, where it was customary
for a family to bar beque a pig and
the n invite the neighbors in for
dinner. The guests would fil e by
the roasted pig a nd pick off t he
meat , hence the name " pig
pickin.l' Th ese are becoming
quit e popul ar in the South .
All proceeds from the dinner
will be used to upgrade the
Mu seum.
The Muse um Is located fou r
mil es north of Point P leasant,
just off State route 62.

SALE ENDS SAT., OCT. 31, 1987
(liSP 525-HOO)
Puhli~hNI f'&lt;l('h Suml:ty. ~2~ T hlnl A\1' ..

Ohio

G:illipnlb, &lt;!»tin. h.v lht-Ohin\'ali i'V Pub

STANO WITH CONFIDENCE

Ml'mb('r: l ' nih •d Pn'·"~ l nlf'rn;..~ llnn,ll .
lnL1ntl Oath P rf'~s A ... sor!at\on !lnrlt hr
Ohln 1\t•wsPa pf'r Assof'l;t t i!1 n. N:tr tr~n:tl
Atlw• rti~lng Rf'pn'." l'nl :tl in·. Branh:1m
Nr•v:s p;1pr•r ~:ric'. 'i:U Thit'( l Aw' nur•

Mostly sunny Sunday . with
ll ~ h inJ! Cr.mp:•n:v Mu l!lmNII:J. In (". Sc-hlghs between 65 and 70.
c·ond rl:1~~ pru;ra,l!t' p:tirl .11 r.aJtipnJi.&lt;; ,
Ohl c• ~ :Jti.11. Entf'rf'd a ~ ~ l't1 •nd c · l : t~ l'
The probability of preclpitamaili np, m;~ttf'r "' Pn m1 •rn'. Ohin , Po!'t
lion is zero percent tod ay.
_.. ...0"'"'

!\'r'\.1 Ynrk : 1\;f'w Yor k 1001i .
SUNOA Y ONLY

St iBSfRIPTION RATE S
8)' C'arrlt'r or Mutor Routt•
Ont • Wf'f'k .·.......................... lit! \f'nt&lt;o
. . .o~;:n . 20
Ont• Y&lt;•:n·.
Sll\'Gi.'F. COP\'

PRICE

GALL IPO LIS- Memorial services for Leo W. Mossman, 87
Locust Street, Gallipolis, hu sband of Mary Mossman, were
conducted Saturday at 11 a.m.
from Willis Funeral Home. He
died Thursday a t Holzer Medical
Center.

Edna Edwards
MINERSVILLE - Edn a Edwards, 85, of Minersville, died
Friday at Veterans Me moria l
Hospital after an ex tended
ill ness.
Born April18, .1902 in Deavertown , she was a home maker and
the daughter of Rev. Thomas a nd
E dith A. Johnson Edwards. She
was a 1920 gra dua te of Pomeroy
Hig h Schoo l and Bliss' Business
Co llege a nd was a member of
Grace Ba p tist Church in Point
Pl easant, W.Va.
Survivors include one sister,
Ella E. Williams of Augusta,
Maine: three ne phews, William
E. Willi am s of Pomeroy, James
A. Williams of Rochester, N.Y.
a nd Thomas U. Williams of
Augu sta, Maine; · two nieces,
Na ncy W. White of Augus ta,
Maine and Ru th W. Allen of
Pomeroy.
She was preceded in deat h by
her parent s; two brothers , Ernes t and Thomas Edwards; and
one sister , Edith Edward s. '·
Ser vices will be Monday, 2:30

0

Sund.•.' ...
i~

;tn•,t."' v.hl•tt' rn ot m (';trr·it·t :-f't\ 1('£'
'-" ''' \l :t bl r .

Thl' Su ri d ,tl Timi•.. SPntin('l will not br ·
l'f'!Opnn~l hl;, tnr ,ul\·.rn • I'
m :Hir• tr • e ;J tTif't '"'

pa\

m r·nt!'&lt;

!\11\11. !'lll i\.~( ' RI~'I' ION S
~

OnP

For tho person who needs a
gradual, &lt;omfortablo way to mo·
bility. Fingertip &lt;antral to raise or
lower &lt;hair from sitting to standing position. Re&lt;lining position
for a nap. Medicare approved lor
qualified individuals. •

BOWMAN HOMECARE
63 Pine St.

LONG REACH
50-tt. hot water
supply hose
attaches to
any threaded
faucet.

VOTE........ FOR and SUPPORT

.....

Dally a nd

.\1~ II.

:.Ol!i

FOR

CLAY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
Your Vote &amp; Support Appreciated
Paid fo'r hy the Candidate, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, Oh . 45631.

AUTO TRIM CENTER

II BERGER AVE, GALllPOUS, .OHIO
(Gift Cerliff&lt;ales Available) .
INSTALLED
Tru&lt;k Bed (overs .............llO Off
Tru&lt;k Carpet ........,............ 165.00
Tru&lt;k Seal Covers ........... 185.00
(Many fabrics Available)
Jeep Tops Repaired .................Call
Baal Covers ............................Call
(Custom Made)
Auto Corpet ......................... l135
(50 samples to choose .from)
Hoodliners Re&lt;overed ....from 165.00

Vinyl Roofs .............................Call

(Add on or replacement)_
Convertible Tops ..................... Call
Dosh Covers ............................ Call
(Repair Cracked Dashes )
Dash Protedors ............... $25.00

Heaven

Match the faces
to the Hush Puppies~.
No one in Americ a matche s more faces to more shoes with more
comfon, style and affordability than Hush Puppies" shoesAmerica 's best- loved shoes.

..

#1630

~
. s:l:i. JO
............ Sti? .tifl

METAL WAND
For years of
dependable service.

Hush Pupp!~§·

Mon. &amp; Fri.

til 8 P.M.
lues., Wed., Thur .
&amp; lo1.

til 5

SALE

$129 95

WATERFALL
DIAMOND
REG.
1

SUPERPOWER
1. H.P. by-pass -type motor wtth
boll sleeve bearings.

Price

300.00 SALE

$17900
DIAMOND
EARRINGS

$1995
UPHOLSTERY
CLEANING HEAD

LARGE DISCOUNT
ON ALL' DIAMONDS

For "whole room" cleaning.
Ideal tool for s lairways.

WE WILL NOT BE
UNDERSOLD.

$3 79.

Agenerous helping of delicious, fried oysters. Served with
french fries1 cole slaw, hush
puppies, cocktail sauce. Enough to
.
please even a giant-size appetite.
· •

All-You-Can-Eat
Country-Style Fish Dinner S3.99

HANNAN HOMECOMING QUEEN - Tina Richardson was
crowned Miss Wildcat at halltbne on Hanmn Homecoming night. She
was escorted by Carlos Campbell. IDIS went on to win the ~:arne 14-6.

STURDY CONSTRUCTION
Made of a high impact
polystyrene that will never
rust or dent.

HOLDS OVER 7 GAUONS
Big 7'h Gallon for wet pick up
and ·121gallons for dry
'

~'

...

~USH

EASY TO MANEUVER
Designed with 5 Iorge
easy rolling casters to
move around your rooms.

I

'

ON HEAD
' Scrubs stubborn dirt away.

Dining Room Service Only

MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY

WeHonor · ·

1\vo 2-Piece Fish Dinners $4.69

,_

-•·'

SATURDAY 4PM m CWSE
Ga,jun Fish·&amp; Bite-Size Shrimp Feast
4, 99

CaptairiDS

OHIO

RING or PENDANT

~~~9.95

. ...... ".... : ~··· ·\lA.:W

low

$

GALli~ULIS

BIRTHSTONE &amp; OIAMONO

Everyday

W•th french fries. cole slaw, fried okra and

3"8 '[CONI: /,VI

I 'I\

14K GOLQ

POINT PLEi\SANT HOMECOMING .:_ Marla Oendenln,
daughter of Buster and Pam Clendenin, was crowned Homecoming
Queen by Point Pleasant fHgh School Principal Ralph Say11'! during
halltbne ceremonies. Clendenin was escorted by Pat Evick.

Sundu~·

ln "idc&gt; Cou nt~·
1:1 Wf'f 'b ..
.. .... . ~l7 .!~
2~ WPI'k " ....
. ....... ~:\.J.Otl
52 \\'( 1 1'k~ ....................... "" .. $1ili .5'l
Halt•!&lt;! Ont !oi ldt• Comll\' f

21i Wf'f'b ........
!)2 Wl'f'l.C"

(url'g
snoe s1u1'e

~~~~

SlJBS('HJPTIONS

~:l \\'l'f'k ~.. ...

~

JAMES E. BALDWIN

446-1968

§~ 1 ......................
:-ol.: 1~
.. ......

s;, m th!- ... .... .....

· . Includes choice of drink.

GALLIPOLIS Nellie B.
Tawney, 71, of Route :l Gallipo lis,
died Saturday a t Holzer Medica l
Ce nter'. She was born May 28,
1~ 16 in G lasgow, W.Va., daught er
of the late James and Mary Boyd
Pel!.
She w,as preceded in death by
her hu sband, William L. Tawney ·
in 19SO. and o ne son, Don, a
grandson. three brothers and two
sis ters.
Surviving are four sons, Law·
renee Tawney , Oakey Tawney
and William (Billl Ta wney all of
Gallipolis, and Leo Tawney of
Newark, Ohio; 10 grandchildren,
four step-gr a ndchildren and one
great grandchild; one sis ter ,
Tressie Wood of Clarksburg.
Ohio; four brothers, Joe and

MON .·FRI. 9 TIL 5

Sunda~ Onl,\'

II,~i~t=:;~ , Available
At Our

hush

Nellie B. Tawney

Luggage Ra&lt;ks ....... ~ .......... 15 2.50
Sunroafs .......................... l17 S.OO
(No leak Guarant..d)
Stripes &amp; Mouldings ...............Call
(Lg. Selection)
ALL WORK BY APPOINTMENT

' 446-7283

'

deaths-.- - - - - - -

(protect from Sun)

r\rJ ~ utJM · t·ip rinn ., · h.Y m.r ll pr•rmttiPd If]

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page A-5

p.m..

LEO W. MOSSMAN

Your Support
Will Be Appreciated

Th~

She wa s a member of Oak Hill
p.m. , at Ewing Funeral Horne Earley Pell of Gla sgow , W.Va .,
Pr Psbyterian C hurch and a char·
with Rev. Kenneth Colema11 · Cloyd Pell of London, W.Va .. and
ter membPr of th e Welsh Ca r d iff
offiCiating . Burial will be in Lukp Pell of DeSoto, Kan sa s.
Club.
Beech Grove Cemetery . Friends
She was a member- of the
She is survived by one daughmay call at the funeral home Gallipolis Christian Church.
ter,
Mary M. Evans of Jack son,
from 7 tq 9 on Sunday eveni ng.
wnere fun eral services will be
two
grandsons,
nine great gr·andconducted Tue&lt;Jday, 2
Cora I.S. Lee
c
hildren
a
nd
one
great g reat
BIRMINGHAM, ALA . - Cora Denny Coburn officiating. Burial
grandchild.
Ioma Self Lee, 92, · of Bir- follows In Mound Hill Cemetery .
· Services will be Tues day at l
mingham, Ala., died Friday at a Friends may call at McCoy p. rn . al the Kuhner-Lewi s Fun WetherhoJt , Moore Funeral
Birmingham hospital, following
era
l HomE•. Rev . Gomer Jenkins
Home, Gallipolis, Monday from !i
a long illnes s.
·
a
nd
Rev . James Hanna wiil
She is survived locally by a to 9 p.m.
officiate the servic e.
Margaret M. Davis
son-In- law, Rev. Fred Shockley,
Burial will be at the C.M .
an d a granddaughter. Denise
Cemetery in Oak Hill. Frier.ds
Margaret M. Davis, 89, of Oak
Shockley of Gallipolis.
ma y visit on Monday 2 to 4--p .rn.
Hill, died Thursday at the Four
Funeral services wil l be Sun- Winds Nu•·sing Home in Jackson .
a nd 7 to 9 p.m.
·day at 2 p.m . in Birmingham.

GALLIPOLIS- Gov. Richard
F. Celeste has proclaimed the
month of October to be Recvcle
Month. Communities in Ohio.will
be holding special events to
.encourage people to conserve our
valuable resources by recycling.
As part of the Recycle Month
activities, the Gallia. La:wrence
-and Scioto County LitJer Control
Programs will sponsor ·a
"Design-A-Billboard Contest"
for ele m entary st ude nts. The
cont est will offer f irst -, seco nd·a nd third -place prizes for winning student s In each school
district and a grand prizewinner,
to be c hosen from each county.

Leo W. ·Mossman

America's Favorite Store

OPEN MON.-FRI.
10·9, SAT. 10·9

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W.Va.

School billboard contest slated -------Area

FOR

JOY RAY BERKLEY

Pomeroy- Middleport~Gallipolis.

October 18, 1987

October 18, 1 987

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

A great little seafood place. e

Sale Price

~
I

Dependable Bissell~·· Carpet ·Machine Plus

Spra'(s hot Cl_ea~ing solution deep into carpet, upholstery. Powerful suction immediately pulls
out dtrt and 1tqu1d. lfs one. of the most effective methods you can use to extract deep-down dirt
and restore color and bnghtness to your carpets. Keep your carpets clean ... all the time.' --

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
424 SECOND AVENUE
· GALLIPOLIS

Litter laws
have new teeth
COLUMBUS - A new law
takes effect Tuesda y. October 20,
tha t will- increase penalties for
litl ering in Oh io.
In addi tion to &lt;'Xisting pena lties oi up to six month s in ja il and
a flnr of up to S500. the new law,
part of Ohio's traffi c co de.
provides for a fine of up to$100 for
llt ter in g from' a motor vehicle .
Drivers now become responsible
for Iiller thrown by their
passengers.
.
,
"The Jitter la ws in Ohio have
• new tee th ." said Jos eph
",.. Sommer. directo r of the Ohio
Department of Natura l Resou ~·
ces. " WP want to IJ1akc littering
hurl litterers, not Ohio. The new
law makes it eas ter fdr law
E'nforcement officers in OhiO' to
tag lit terers and make them pay
for the d amage they cause." he
sai d.
"Ohio law enforcement officer-s take Iill er seriously," said
(;o t. J ack Wa lsh, superint e ndent
of the State Highway Patrol.
•!a nd the new law law provides
them with new muscle to help
· k eep Ohi~clean ," he added.

CALLAHAN

Wise and lasting inves,tment
/tPIII

LOGAN MONUMENT

:-Jo m,hcr trtbu tc 1~ a~ Ia !'! In {! o.; , t, pt·rsonalized monument of ~cl t• fl [larre Gramtc It 1S
a wonhy e:Mprcs!'ton of lo~c anrl rcsp4CrL for a

person's !tfc ~t't' our rlr s pla~ of pt!rmancn lil
r.:uar'a mccd Aarrc Gutld .l\ l o nu m cnt o;;.

BARRE
GUILD
·Monuments

LOGAN MONUMENT COMPANY, INC. .
POMEROY, OH.

VINTON, OH.

Leo L. Vaughan , Mgr .

James 0 . Bush , Mgr.

Ph". 992 -2588

Ph . 38 8 -8603

CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE OCT. 17-25
Come enjoy the aiabll and aounda of
Cbrialm01 at SJabl'a. Tbia year, there are
aver 30 fully decorated trees, ea~b
fealuriJI8 a diflerent and unique theme.
There will allo be a 50% off ule on
aelecJed item a tbrougbo~JJbe week .

Choose from a variety of Christmu
itemt:
* Fontanini nativities
• Steinbach smokers, nutcracken &amp;
omameata.
• CoUectibel dolls aiid toya
• Tree ornament and U,bll
* Ceramic lirbted vUlaaea
* Gordon Frazer paper aooda
* Mu1ic Boxes
.* Gifll for t~'e entire family
Whlle al Stahl'a, be sure to re,Uter for the
door pri101 to be drawn on October 25. ,
• 7 V. ft. Americoa Fir Tree
• SSO.OO,Gilt·certificale
.
* A Blennerbauell Maaaion 1800 print
* Pea and Ink Hutorical Drawi111•
• 24" Decoraled Wreath

Hours:

Mouday-Friday 9 am-6 pm
Saturday 9 am-5 pm
Sunday 2 pm-{i pm

Directions: Follow

Ohio Routes NO.
50 &amp; 7, then turn !!&amp;!!.! at the in·
tersection of Ohio Route NO. 55 5

(614) 989·2271

~

�r

October 18, 1987
Page A-6

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

MiddlepOrt- Gallipolis. Ohio

•

Center
Unlversity,
saidattheGeorgetown
tumor described
by
. White House officials "represent s. obviously, a very early
ca ncer" with a very good
prognosis.
White House spokesman Marlin Fit zwater estimated the first
Jadv would stay in the hospital in
suburban Maryland for five days
to a week after the operation.
The president told White House
· chief of staff Howard Baker to
. make sure that his schedu le next
week allows for a lot of time for
- hospital visits, Fitzwater said.
The spokesman told reporters
· tha t initial indications are th~ t '"
Mrs. Reagan will not have to
have follow-up chemotherapy or
radiation treatment.
"There are no plans for further
surgery" and no plans for reconstructive surgery on the breast.
• he said
Mrs. Reagan wa s wheel~d into
the operating room at i: 30 a.m.
EDT for a biopsy to determine if
a suspicious lump found by
earlier X-rays was m alignan t.
When doctors determined It was.
they proceedPd with the mastectomy shortly after 9:30 a.m.
EDT. It ended 50 minutes later.
Mrs. Reagan was given a local
anesthetic ~uring the initial
stage of the biopsy and then a
general anesrhet ic for removal of
the breast and underarm lymph
nodes - lymph system filters
where anv spreading cancer
cells would be expected to show
up
.
The president was informed a
half hour earlier that Mrs.
Reagan had a common form of
breast cancer and her surgeons
were proceeding w1th the modified radical mastectomy she had
agreed to earlier if the biopsy
found cancer.
.
" Take good ca re of her,"
Reagan told doctors.
Following the surgery, Crispen
""'!!'3ld the firs I lady was awake but
groggy.
" It 's over , and it's gQod news,"
Cnspen sa id, adding that Mrs.
Reagan "looked fine "
In br iefing report ers on the
operation, co nducted by Dr.
Donald Mcilrath of the Mayo
Cli nic and a team of surgeons.
Fitzwater said "this is a very
positive report." He also said
there wer e no complication s.
":-&lt;o special treatment is
planned at this time since there is
no evidence of a malignancy"
spread. he sa id.
Fitzwat er said the biopsy r evealed a 7 millimeter rumor of
non·invas1ve, intraductal adenocarci noma - a form of cancer
He said the tumor was found in
tho' fatt y glandular ttss ue and
added that non-Invas ive cancer
" means it has not s prea d .~'
Potter said the report indicates
the can cer cells were growing in
rheybreast's milk ducts and had

•

IBaby'snew heart beciting strongly

Nancy has cancer surgery
. WASHINGTON iUPil -Surgeons removed Nancy Reagan's
ca ncerous left breast in a suecessful 50-minute operation at
Bet hesda Naval Hospital Saturday an d doctors said there was no
evidence the quarter-inch tumor
had spread.
Dr. John Hutton, the White
House physician, said the 66jlear-old first lady was "st rong
and s,table " following the
surgery .
When it was over, President
Reagan visi ted his wife in the
recovery room and told her :
"Honey, I know you don't !eel
like dancing. so let's hold
hands."
Hutton sai d a preliminary
laboratory examination of frozen
sections Qf breast tiss ue removed
!n the first step of the operation
"shows no ~vidence of malignancy in the lymph nodes or
surrounding tissue."
A final evaluation will be
com pleted tomorrow. he said.
Dr John Potter, director of the
Vmcent T . Lombardi Cancer

Point Pleasant. W. Va .

October 18. 1987

·
, LOMA LINDA, Calif. 1UP!) ~
not started to grow into the foster grandparents program
With the tissue rejection threat
surrounding connective tissue and to campaign against drug
51 Ill days away doctors Saturday
that supports and holds the ducts. abuse. -• said Baby Pa ~ t'was in critical but
" The prognosis is much better
Sl1e was on the road when the
stable condition after receiving a
for the cancers that just grow White House announced she
wa lnut-sized heart in unpreceinside - the Intraductal - as would undergo surgery.
, dented 1ransplant surgery just
contrasted with the Infiltrating
Crispen said Mrs. Reagan did
hours following birth.
(type)," he said in an lrttervlew. not tell her children abou t the
Paul' s heart was taken from a
Although doctors planned to operation until Thursday, \Jot
baby girl Identified only as
examine lymph nodes taken wanting them to worry . She also
"Gabr ielle" who was born withfrom the underarm area to look told her ailing mother, Mrs.
out much of her bra in to "very
for any evidence that the tumor Edit~ Davl~ of Scottsdale. Art~ . .
courageous" parents who chose
had spread, Potter said it is who IS cnnfmed to a wheel cha lr.
10 carry her to full term ·so her
·~uite uncommon" for intraducNone of the children apparorgans could be used 10 save
tal cancer to have spread to the • ently had plans to fly to Washinganot her baby' s life.
lymph nodes .
ton. All were in ~allfornla except
the tra nsplant replaced Baby
Reagan was by his wife 's ,;ide for the Reagans son Ron , who IS Paul 's malformed heart during a
when she was wheeled out of the
In Moscow:
·
.
4 'f.,· hour operation at Lama
presidential suite to undergo the
In addition to the presid ent,
Linda Friday night -three hours
biopsy. She was smiling and they
Mrs. Reagan was accompanied
after he was delivered by Caesahad a few minutes priva tely
to the J)ospital Friday by her
rean section , hospital spokesman
together before the operation,
ream of doctors and her broth er,
Dick Schaefer said.
aides said.
Dr. Richard Davis. a. Phlladel Dr. Leonard Bailey, chlel of
The president arrived at the
phla neurosurgeon.
pediatric cardiology and head of
hospital some 20 minutes before
The president and Davis
the 20-member surgical team.
the surgery, carrying dozens of stayed with her for about 1 'h
said after surgery that he Is a
pink roses He wa s .so anxious to
hou_rs before returning to I he
"perpetual optimist" in any case
see his wife that he left the White White House to sleep. Mrs.
and even more so when it comes
House by motorcade. leaving Reagan was given the hospital 's
10 Paul.
staff assistant s and a "pool" of presidential suite
"t Paul) docs look cxtraordi -

reporters
and camerame n gained
The problem
breast cancer
liehind.
nationalofattention
after
Asked on his arrival whether - first lady Betty Ford underwent
he was "praying for his wife,"
a radical mastectomy of her
the president replied: "I always
right breast Sept. 28. 1974, Jess
do."
than two months after she moved
Breast cancer is the leading
into the White House
cause of death for women nex t to
Mrs. Ford spoke to the first
lung cancer. An estimated 41,000 lady 's secretary early Friday "to
women nationwide will die from express their ... support. and best
it this year.
wishes for Mrs . Reagan ,··
If caught early, the five-year Crispen said .
survival rate for breast cancer is
Margaretta " Happy" Rocke90 percent, and if the cancer is
feller - wife of Nelson Rockenot inva sive it approaches 100 feller, President Ford's choice to
be vice prPsident- underwent a
percent. the American Cancer
Society said . But if the cancer
radical mastectomy of her left
has spread. the rareis60percent.
breast Oct 17,1974, and a second
Fitzwater reported that Mrs . mastectomy Nov. 25, 1974.
Reagan awakened at 6 a.m.
Saturday and was "alert and
ready for the procedure . ..
According to Fitzwater, the
·~&lt;
Fish Day
firs t lady sighed."! guess it"s my
~ · ., ·. 11 :. Tunc For Slockmg
turn.·· when told ~ he m ight have
CHANNEL CATFISH, HYBRID BLUE
to undergo a cancer operation
GILL. Fathead Minnows, Large
She was referring to her hu sMouth Bass. Black Crappie and Tri·
band's bouts with cancer that
plaid
(Grass Carp).
included his major July 1985
' Delivery
colon operation at the naval
h o s pI r a I
in s u bur ban
TUESDAY, OCTOBER "27
Washington.
At
Both Reagans have had skin
cancers removed since they- have
been In the White House.
Point Pleasant, WY
Assured that her condition wa
(3041 675 -2780
" not life threatening," Mrs .
Time: 12:00-1 :00 PM
Reagan delayed enterin g the
hospital for l1 days to keep
Call your local store to
previou's commitments . lnclud order or call
ing a stop Fnday in · SomeToll Free 1-800-643-8439
rsworth. N .H ., to support the

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wor ked diligent ly in thP dforl to
secure a f err0 for Pomeroy. said
si mply. " I 'm surppsetl I was
told the state cou ldn' t come up
with rM mon.::y for such a

. t:o:it:h:
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COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) State officials have dropped
plans to build a $39 million {!rison
at an abandoned General Motors
Corp. plant on the city's east side,
citing intens e community
opposition.
Richard Seiter, director of the
state Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections , said the
department would now Invite
. other communities In northeast
' Ohio to bid on the 650-bed facility.
; • Members of a group opposing
; the prison were jubilant over the
stat e's decision.
"This has reaffirmed my belief
' In the American justice system,"
• said Richard Taylor, a spokes, man for Citizens Opposing the
· Prison Site. "It has been a long.
· hard fight. All of us in our group
; feel we did a good job in helping
: to save our comrT)u nlty."
• Mayor George Volnovich, who
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he was disappointed.
" In the final analysts, you can't
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I truly desire the position as a trustee for the community of Addison Township. I have many years of ex.perience in road and building construction for the past
17 years, since hanor.ably discharged from the U.S.
Army. I have been married for the past 13 years and
have two children, Sandy, age 11 and Crystal, age two.
I have lived on an Addison Township road most of my
life, and am concerned about our community.! sincerely
desire to work and to listen to everyone's ideas and
also be fair and truthful to use your tax dollars as
rreeded. So make your Vote count on Tuesday, Nov. 3rd.

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ATTENTION!!!

And I ho se residen ts of M elg&gt;
Count y who were Involved in
bringing th e ferry to Pom er oy
remember that It rook hours of
meetings. hundreds· of ph one
ralls and the cuttin g of m i i&lt;'S ol
red tape to secure 1he much·
needed servic&lt;;

{.?

By Reahsttc

•

I

The Sunday Times~ Sentinei - Page -A-7

Gallipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va .

Circleville. wen! to bat in ColumMason. W.Va. du e t o possible
bus. it was arranged through the
damages to tfie Corps owned
Ohio Departm ent of DevelopMason land)ng. The Corps rement that an additional $100.000
quested a $100,000 performance
be placed into service.
totally different," Plelech said.
in Communit y · Development
bond lo guarantee repairs.
In the July 1986 meeting In
Pielech also noted that "a
Block
Grant funds would be
And although puttin g the ferry
Pomeroy , former State Senator
major aluminum company,
m
ade
available
to Meigs County
In between M iddleport and ClifOakley Collin s reported that he three or four coal mines and two
if
necessary
,
i
n
case
of damages
ton. W.Va . wa s considered,
had been -told tliat OUOT could
power plants" are on one side of which would have eliminated ·
to theno
Mason
Ia nd ing.
As itt
urned
the Powhatan Point landslide, lnvolvment by the Corps , the Idea
not help with Improvements to
out,
damages
to the
landing
landings either In Meigs County
while many employees from both
occurred and the $100,000 has
was given up because funds to
or acn)~S .the river In West
Belmont County and across the • repair the Middleport and Clifton
since been returned ro the state.
Virginia .
•
river In West Virginia are on the landings were not available
In the end. Pomeroy did get a
Stated Commissioner Jones
other side.
ferry
service. but it was not fr ee
locally.
In January of this year, In a
when he heard of ODOT' s deal in
to travel er s as Is the one In
Eventually, after State Sena Powhatan Point, " This Is just' plea to Governor Richard Celeste
Powhatan Point.
tor Jan , Michael Long, Danother typical example of the
for financial assistance for a
ferry, Commissioner Jones estltreatment that small counties
llke Meigs has received from
mated that app.t;oximately 50
state admlnistratlorrs throughout
percent of Meigs (Jaunty's buslthe years, regardless of whether
ness comes from Wesl VIrginia.
He also asked for consideration
those administrations are Democrat or Republican."
of the hundreds of Ohio residents
Meigs County has a population
who work at plants In West
of 23,64) while Belmont County 's
VIrginia, including two power
529 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPirLIS
plants and an aluminum compopulat ton is 82.568.
pany, and for the people of West
Jones 'pointed out that ODOT
Virginia employed by Southern
was as much responsible for the
malntanence and repair of the
Ohio Coal Company In western
Pomeroy -Mason Bridge as they
Meigs Counfy .
are for the maintenance of Route
Jones' letter was referred io
1 ) Real Estate Principles and Practices
7 at Powhatan Point.
Director Smith of ODOT, who
2) Real Estate Law
Dwayne Plelech, of ODOT's
responded by saying that ODOT
central office In Columbus, re- had found auto ferries to be
3) Real Estate Finance
ported that as ODOT Dlreetor ineffective ·for moving large
4) Real Estate Appraisal
Warren Smith signed the author!numbers of vehicles. For this
zallon for the Powhatan Point
reason, "a tight schedule comRegistration Deadline is October 19, 1987
ferry , "he thought of the Pome- pletlon date" with a temporary
1
roy sltuat Ion ."
detour was recommended as th e
• But, ra("~bldlng to Pielech, • best alternative during the
·. assessd.ent of such situations as
bridge closure.
As Meigs County faced the
the bridge closure and the hill
· stabilization must be decided "on bridge closure, local leaders
: a case by case basts." It was
were up against the Army Corps
• decided that the Powhatan~r~ng!neers whleh protested a
project was "more severe auu
...
be.tween Pomeroy and

r~n:_::a~r: :ily~g:::o:::od::_:a:_t~Ih,::i:s_::h:ou:r:.:_'' _'_:B::a:.:.:il:::e:_y=~a~w~h;il;e~,t;h~e:_y,:s=a=ld=,=fo=r=t=h=e=bo=d~y=t=o=-=Wi=e=d=n=es=d=a=y=·=t":'o:d:a:y: s:a:ft:e:r:b;;;lr;;;th;:..

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Middleport

Derry SerV;Ce
(From
AI)___..:..,_
r'
"" ... _ _
_FERRY,
__

mobilize ~ts rmmune system . ec The cntical period for rej
tlon , Bailey said. would be
between three and seven dahs .
Paul's parents , Allee and orh
don Holt of Surrey. Britts
Columbia, got a brief look_at him
as he .yas wheeled mto a
recovery room after surgery late
Friday.
Mrs. Holt"s fetu s was dlagnosed in August with the heart
defect at GracE&gt; Hospital In
Vancouver, Canada.
The condition. hypoplastic left
heart syndrome, occur~ In one
out of every 12,000 births. It
usually results man· early death.
The new hea~t came from a,
6-pound Canadian Infant declared brain,dead after birth'
Monday. said Lergh-Anne Stra·,
desk!, spokeswoman for Unlver-.
slty Hospital in London, O?.tano.
The unnamed parents knew
that she wa s goi ng t~ ~ born
brain-dead; " Stradeski said. but
decided to continue t he pregnancy to term so therr doomed
baby could donate organ s. The
child was declare bra in dead

sa id . "It has been an eventful day
for thls .family and for thi s baby
In particular."
Without the surgery to replac e
his underdeveloped heart, Paul
would have died within a day ,
Bailey said
Th e previous youngest infant
to receive a new heart had been
Baby Moses in November 1985-at
theage of4days. Th echildisstlll
living. Bailey also performed
that surgery.
Anita Rockwell, spokeswoman.
forLomaLlnda UniversityMedi·
cal Center, said Baby Paul was in
"cr ltlcal-bu t-stable" condition
Saturday.
.
Critical but stable condition is
considered routine among heart transplant patients of any age- ,
even when it Is measured in
hours !Ike Paul Holt 's was when
he was surgically removed from
his mother's womb Friday for
the pioneering surgery.
Medical experts said it would
be several days before any signs
that the 6-pound, 6 %-ounce
Infant was rejecting the new
heart cou ld be expected. It takes

Pomeroy

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.q..q.Q&gt;«:&gt;o~

A Message From The Bible...
THE NEW BIRTH, ITS BEGETTING AND CONCEPTION
William B. Kughn
"Beget" signifies "to produce as !in effect.:• "Conceive"
denotes "a beginniniJ process causmg a cham of events.
The "heart" is the spmtual being of man where the seed Is
begotten (planted) and conceived (received), The heart IS
the soul of man, embracing his Intellect (mind), w_lll (desrres). and emotions (attitude), and the place In WhiCh the
spirit ts housed. The spiritual begetting produces an effect
within the hearl, affecltng the intellect, will, and emotions .
The be9etting and conception are Inseparable! The
conception proves there has been a begettmg!
No birth at the begetting or conception:
The honest heart, dunng the begettlniJ and conception,
is inlluenced by the "one faith." The faith, received from
the Spirit through the seed, or word, is stimulating to. the
fertile heart, Influencing and produ?inQ wrthln It vanous
changes that will affect the entrre tndlvldual. It believes
unto righteousness (Rm. 10:10); It is motivated by god!Y
sorrow to repent (2 Cor . 7:10); and It leads to the mouths
confession that is made unto salvation (Rm . 10:10). Beli&amp;V·
lng repenting and confessing are the varlou~ changes
that have turned the believer from error to truth, and from
evil to righteousness . But, the individ~al has not been born
at this point no more than the mtant rs born at his begetting or conception . If the new birth takes place the mo",',ent
one bei 1eves. then the devils have.~een born again, to.~ the
de~fts also believe and tremble (Jas. 2.19). The chief
rulers ," who "believed on him," that is, Ch~ls\ 1 "but
because of the Pharisees . . . did. not confess hrm (Jno.
·
•
14:42). would have been born agam I
.
The begetting prepares tor the new birth.
The brrth does not give lite. It brings the body In which Is
lite out ot the darkened confined state Into a larger and enriching state . The I1fe In the seed began Its stimulating
1nltuence at the begetting and co~ceptlon, 9,!vlng the
begotten one the nght to become a child ol God, He came
unto his own and his own rece1ved him not. But, as ma~y
as received him, to them gave he_power to ·beco'[!e t e
sons of God even to them that believe on hiS name (Jno.
1 :t1. t2) . When the hearer receives faith in Christ, he has
the power or privilege, to become a son of God by bering
born agarn . His believing does not make him a son, ut
qualities him tor the sonsh1p!
.
.
The begetting does not guarantee the new birth :
There is the possibility of the begotten one to be aborted
b nature over which he has no control. It rs at thiS pomt
t~e spiritual birth differs from the fleshly birth . After the ,
hearer ·receives the seed in his heart, believes, or even ,
re ents and confesses, and then chooses to not c~mplete·
hi~ birth In baptism, he aborts himself. He has n~! obeyed
el" ot our Lord tha1 plainly declares, Except a
1h
e gg;~orn of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter mto
man in dom of God" (Jno. t3 :65). -He has "befteved m
' ~~n~(1 9Car. 15 2) . His "faith witho~t works. (otl~dlence) IS
d d" (Jas 2·26) In rejecting bapl1sm, he rs retectmg the
s~~d and ·isaborted!-Next week, "The New Birth And
The Delivery.
· For Free Bible Correspondence_Course, Wrlle • • •

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Off

Check Your Phone Book tor the ltadle lllaek Store or Dealer Nearest You

Refrigerators, freezers

• f

40%895 Reg.
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tPRt'lGAAf..1MA8L[ lOUCH rON'EIPULSE phnnes M rkon tmlll lone and pulSe l111es l.herefore . 1n ~rea s hav1nQ only pulse (r otary d1al) IMs yOIJ c~n ST1II
use sel~~ ,e s r eq~mmg tones, ~ ~e me new 1ono Cl1 st a n~ s~stems and.£omputent~d ser"ttces PULSE ·StGNAUNG Phoni!S work on brl1h rotarr·tlul and t an ~
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•

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t

Sunday E¥eninlt
Wonldp 6100

Pnee~

·

Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised
connectors not 1ncluoed m p11ce shown • A!k about Sears cred1t plsns

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GALLIPOLIS

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Satisfacrion guaranteed or your money bacll:

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October 18, 1987

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

Page- A-S-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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,..--___,;,_--Local B r i e f s : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
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CHESHIRE - Ga Ilia-Meigs Community Action Agency will
hold its regular meeting on Thursday at 5: 30p.m. in the Guiding
Hand School at Ches hire.
During the meeting, the CAA board will establish board
officer membership for 1988. The public is Invited and
encouraged to attend the 111eeting to offer opinions, comments
;lnd recommendations on CAA functions and activities.

accident Involving a schoof bus Friday, at 3: IS p.m. , at the·
intersection of Third'Avenue and Cedar Street, according to the
Gal llp.l)lis Pollee Department .
John D. Simpkins, 18, of Rt . 4, Gallipolis, was cited for running
a red light after causing a Galllpolls City School District bus,
driven by Laura L. Roberts, 30, of Rio Gran&lt;le, to hit hls car.
Simpkins was driving north on Third Avenue and passed the
traffic light at the Intersection, which for hlm was red. The bus,
which had the green light, entered the Intersection· wh en
Simpkins passed through.

Four injured in accident

Man arrested on DWI charge

GALLIPOLIS - Fou r people were inju red in an accident
Saturday. a t 12: J7, a.m., in Galiia Count y,'s Perry Township on
Ohio 141, according to the Galiia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
Sherry M. Smith. 18, of Eureka Star ROute, Gallipolis, and her .
passengers, Keili D. King, 16, of Oak Hlll, Michelle R. Pelfrey,
of Rt. 2, Gallipolis, and Brett A. Saxo11, 16, of Rt. 2, Galllpolls,
were taken from the scene by the Gallia EMS to HolZer Medical
Center.
At last report, King was listed in guarded condlt.ion in
intensive care .. Smith, Pelfrey and Saxon were treated and
re leased.
·
According to the report, Smith was driving east when she lost
control and went off the right side of the road, stopping when the
car wnet into a ditch. Everyone except Saxon was thrown from
the car.
Smit h was charged with DWI .and cited for failure to control.

Clal.lde Ray Carter, 40, of Rt. 1, "Northup, was arrested by the ·
sheriff's department Friday night. He was charged by
Gallipolis Municipal Court with bWL

CAA slates its regular ·m eeting

GALLIPOLIS - A word of dure when using the third lane.
."It is for left turns only. It is not
caution goes to all mororists
for
passing," Drummond said.'
' traveling Ohio 7 from Pizza Hut
"It
will
take getting use to, but
to the · Ga llipolis Auto Auction
untll
people
learn how to use il
until the third lane has been open
lhere
might
still be some
tong enough fo r motOJ;ists to get
trouble."
·
use to using the lane.
Karen Drummond, Ohio DeHow do motorists use this third
partment of Transportation pub- lane?
lic relations in Dist ric t 10, said
Drummond said that motorists
motorists should be especially should turn on their left turn
cau tious of their turning proce- ··signal and pull in the center lane
no more than 150 feet before
approaching the turn-in. Entering the lane too soo n could cause
·problems with oncoming vehicles turning the other direction.
"Once people get use to using
CLEVE LAND (UPI) - Mayo r it, l think traffic will move easier
George Voinovich ha s reached in that area," Drummond said.
an agreement with City Council
Because that stlp of Ohio 7 is
over who will act as mayor when heavily commercial, it is heavily
Voinovich is campaigning for the traveled . That kind of traffic
Sena te.
congt;stlon was the cause of
Last month, council passed a many rear end collisions , Drumreso lution requiring Voinovich . mond said.
designate an acting mayor. VoiInstead of adding fiv e lane
novich vetoed the measure Oct. channelization, ODOT decided
7, saying the city chart er spells on the third turning lane because
out ma)IOral successiop.
the sect_ion is within city limits
Council l"as to vote on . an a nd under . the city speed limit,
override Monday, but Council Drummond said.
.·
President George Forbes drew
"Drivers should be cautious of
up a compromise Thursday, their speed, " Drummond said.
changing the resolution to urge, " Once they become aware of how
rather than require. Voinovich to to use the lane, there should be
name an act ing mayor._
less problems.''

EMS reports five calls

-- -..,......'

POMEROY ·- Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
reports five calls Friday; Middleport at 8: 06 a.m. to South
Second Ave. for Barty Pearson to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 2:47 p.m. to Hlll St. for Maxine Robinson to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Columbia Township Fire
Department at 2: ~1 p.m . to a brush fire on the Jesse Knight
property on Township Road 3; Middleport at 6:38p.m. to a car
fire on Route 7~ Tuppers Plains at 10: 29 p.m. to Eastern High
School for Jeremy Barber to Camden- Clark Memorial
Hospital.

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ssoooo CASH BACK

Caution urged us...·.....
third lane on SR 7

HANDWORK - Hours and
hours of handwork are required In constructing a man·
do lin. Bob White, wlthhlsOhlo
Arts Council apprentice, Pete
Hart, are now working on on
an experimental model. This
new mandolin will be put
together with light glue so that
It pan be taken apart, altered,
parts changed or repositioned, and then realjsembled,
as the two work toward an
improved or enhanced tone
quality. While's goal In the
apprenticeship project with
Hart is to build a better
mandolin, one which perhaps
he can mass produce and sell
country-wide•.

POMEROY. - Friday admissions at Veteran's Memorial
Hospltlll were Leland Saxton, Pomeroy; Evelyn Schuler,
Middleport; Bessie Creme~Ins, Middleport.
- · Friday discharges were Bessie Hendricks, Mary Little,
James Houdashelt.

GALLIPOLIS -Three couples recently applied for rparrlage
licenses In Gailla County Probate Court. ·
·
App!yl~are Keith Lee Wllllams, 23, Rt . 2, Vh;llon, and Lea Jo
Ferrell, 17, Rt. 2, Vinton; Thurman E. 0J,Ier, 46, Rt. 2, VInton, •

A Gallipolis area man was cited in an

October 18. 1987

Hospital makes daily report

Couples apply for licenses

One cited in bus accident ·
GALLIPOLIS -

r1ve~

and Juanita 00. Oiler, 39, Rt. 2. Vinton; and Sherman Michael
Edward Kirby, 19, Rt. 2. Bidwell, and Mary EliZabeth Nelson,
19, Rt. 2, Bidwell.

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PAT HILL
FORD
\

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RANGER 4X2 or 4X4

,'

BRONCO 11 .

Who 'll be mayor?

Mandolin master crafter hangs onto drea~
1987 or 1988

·1987 or 1988

OHIO THEME - The head
of lhi~ flrsl mandolin made by
Bob White and Rick Boring
carried out the Ohio tht\Jt\e,
The mother-of-pearl inlays
came from the White family
cotiectlon, the scarlet carnations were drawn hy White'S
sister, Esther Faulkner and
the script, "Beautiful Ohio"
was written by White's teen·
age son.

a

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SELECTION,
OF
1988
·cARS
TRUCKS

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GREAT
1987 or 1988
4X2 or 4X4

,_

SELECTION

'

OF
1988

CARS
AND

AND

DON'T FORGET
YOUR
MOTHER-IN-LAW
ON HER DAY,
SUNDAY
OCT. 25, 1987

••

F-150, F-2 50, F-350

GREAT

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TRUCKS

''fE$'' COME AND MAKE YOUR BEST DE~L AND GET $500.00
CASH BACK ON 1987 AND 1988 RANGER, 'RONCO II AND
F-150, F-250 ANd F-350. f·SERIES 1't1UST HAVE MANUAL
TRANSMISSION.
Don't forget your 'mot·herin·law on Sunday, October
25th. Give her a special arrangement of flowers.

Columbus and he and a couple of
" his music al cousins began playing and singing together.
POMEROY - Every man has
White alsa got interested in
his dream but It's not eve ry man
instrument repair when the band
who has the dedication to '-'hang .' ~cided they- needed a bass.
in there", the fortitude to plug
Since they didn 't hav e money to
ahead despite setbacks, even the
buy one, they picked up one
ability to see a light at the end of which was brok~n and had been
the tunnel.
"junked ", and White repaired it .
But Bob White, Me igs County's
He knew then that repairing
master craftsman in • the conand building stringed inst rustruction of mandolins, while ments was what he really wanted
admittedly getting discouraged
to do.
a t times , says he never loses hi s
That was 30 years ago but
enthusiam , hls love for the craft . White has never set aside his
or the expectation of someday · "dream" of building a better
mandolin.
producing a mandolin of a
quality in demand by top
After working in Columbus for
musici ans.
'
many.
years, always pursuing his
Whit e, who lives In the old
family farm house in Orange music and his craftwork on the
side. White came to Athens
Township, ha s been playing.
repairing, and building ins tru - wh ere he worked for StewartMcDonald Corp. as a wood ment s for many years. He took
up the fiddle at the insistence of worker in their banjo building
his " tone-deaf daddy" when he business . He was there for six
year3 doing the head shaping,
was about seven.
Once Whit e learned to play the putting in frets, some of the
fiddle, there was no stopping inlays, and getting the invaluable
him. He went on to play in the experience-which wa s lat er to put
orchestra at the Tuppers Plains him in good stead when he
School. After that he went to started building mandolins.
His work there was another in a
series
of exposure to instrument
OHIO SEAL - An Athens
buildin g.
artist engraved the Ohio seal
A break came to White in the
on the tailpiece for the man·
early
1970's whPn the Ohio Arts
dolin to further carry out the
Council
which is doing it s best to
Ohio theme. Whit~ had It gold
ensure
th at fo lk art in Ohio
electro-plated before putting
doesn't
die
, co ntacted White and
It on the instrument.
asked him to do a display at the
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
--Times-Sentinel Staff

•

Star Fair.
He was later invi ted to partlpate in the OAC's Art in Education program and he dld a series
of programs for Athens fifth
graders about instrument
building.
And then in 1985 he was
accepted into the Traditional
l\rt s Apprenticeship Program,
which pays ma ster craftsmen to
take on apprentices. White was
the first recipi ent of a special
apprenticeship award in memory of Elijah Pierce, a nationally recognized Columbus wood worker. His first apprentice was
Rick Boring of Reedsville.
The two spent about 125 hours
of painstaking work in a small
workshop behind White's house
building a 'custom, " really one of
a kind" ml!Jldolin .
It a Gibson style with an Ohio
theme. Th e top is mad e of
80-year-oid sitka spruce that
Whit e got from a v iolin mak er in
Columbu s. The back and sides
are from 40-year old maple wood
obtained fr om a gunm aker in
Lowell.
The mother-of-pearl inlays in
the neck had been in the White
fa mily. Th e scarlet car nalions
were drawn by White's sister,
Esther Faulkner of Circleville,
and the "Beautiful Ohio" script
was by hi s son. The card inal is
in corporated into the des ign and
the tailpiece Is a gold electroplated seal of Ohio designed by
an Athens anist .
White now has another apprentice under the Ohio Arts
Council, "Pete·· Hart , who is a
musician, plays regularly in a
band, and had had some instrument building experience under
the master craftsma n in earlier
years.
Int ent on building a "better
mandolin", White and Hart are
into some experimental things.
The emphasis is on building a
mandolin which can be as sembled with light glu e so that it
can be taken apart. altered and
then rassembied to determine
change in tone quality, with the
goal being to create a better
sound.
White explained that there are
several new ideas he is working
on including the tilt of the neck
a nd adjustment of the sound bar,
even experi mentin g with types of
wood to see just what,changes get
the best tone.
"By this experimentation proCUSTOM-DESIGNED
Traditionally the skllls of a
folk artist have been handed
down from master to apprent·
Ice with the master's meticulous skill being lnstllled In the
apprentice. Here Doli White, a
master Instrument maker,
displays a mandolin whl~h
was built in an apprenticeship
program lor Rick Boring
through the Ohio Arts Council.

r

cess , I'll be able to learn things·
that it takes much longer · o t~:arn
otherwise. Experimenting on
ways tc. Improve the bulldlng of a
mandolin is what this new
apprenticeship Is all about,"
White commented.
" I might build 50 Instruments
doing the same process but the
quality would be the 'same, and .
what I'm looking for Is something
more, a better sound.
"And this Is where the money
from the state (Arts Council) has
come in ; it's given me help tn
conductlng some of these experiments and really learning some
things that I haven 't had the time
or the money to do otherwise. So
this is pretty exciting for me." ~
White credit s his unemploy-:;
ment (he's a carpenter by trade! ~
with getting him seriously Into
mandolin building and trying to
get that business off the ground.
He admits that lle' s got "a way to
go", but feels hls vision Is clear
and says he and his family are
willing to make the sacrifices
now.
One break which came hls way
this summer was a sizable state
grant which gives him the money
to enlarge his workshop to twice
its present siZe and also gtve hlm
so me for buying add it tonal equip,- ·:
men! and supplies.
Building mandolins Is a very
slow process. White says It takes ·
hours and hours of painstaking _,
handwork. He builds three different types, but the most popular ts "
the Gibson style which Is what all
the blg stars in country western"
play. One of White's Instruments,
was sold to a cousin of the
popular western-country star ,
Ricky Skaggs, and the Meigs .
craftsman hopes Ihat might lead
to other sales .
White says hls mandolins have
to sell for a minimum of $1,500 ·
and he knows the price pretty :
well restricts sales to serious
musicians. He also knows that he ·
has . to have a better product, a
mandolin with a great tone, and
it's through this current experiment that he hopes to attain that .
Then he is hopeful of being able
to advertise nationally and get onhis way to some financial 'as well·
as aesthetic awards of being a ~
creative artist .
" What I really want to do, my '
ultimate atm." White stresses
"Is to get to the place where lea~~
manufacture mandolins."
Yes, Bob White is a man with a
dream. He loves the mandolin, he
loves the cr·aft. And he's got the
patience to continue the slow
experim~ntal process required.
for creating a better Instrument,
always with an eye toward that
time when hls dream comes true.·

Photn.r by
Charlene Hoeflich
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Page-B-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

SUNDAY
LECTA - Rev. Earl Hinkle
W!ll be at Walnut Ridge church,
Sunday. 7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Rev . Bill
Cannode of Rodney UM Church.
will speak at Grace United
Methodist Church, Sunday, 7
p.m.. concerning his trip to
R~ssla.
..

JHDWEJ.,.L - The Sunday
Sehool B.T.U. Institute will meet
Suitday, 2 p.m., at Mt. Carmel
Church, BidwelL Fruits of the
S[ilrit spea ker, the Rev. Melvin
F(eeman.
EVERGREEN- Revival beg·
InS Sunday continuing through
'OCt. 24' at Westerman Methodist
Cliurch, with Kenny Baker as
SP!"aker. Spt&gt;clal music by GlorylaRd Grass, Porter Women's
Qyartet, Westerman Choir a nd
W~sterman Youth Choir.

.

.

. ~ALLIPOLIS- Gallla County
Hi~torical Society meets Sunday,
bOard at 1 p.m .. public meeting at
2:~0 p.m. Speaker Beth H_
ager on
Ohio River Odyssey. She is
cu)'ator of the Ohio River Odyssey ex hibit at the Huntington
M'u se um of Art. Slide
presen tation.
·

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October 1B. 1 987

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

CalendarI happenings

.

•

Black and Kay Skwara, will
d lscuss the IssuE&gt; of " The Adu lt
Child of Alcoholics" following the
business meeting. All women of
the parish are invited.
GALLIPOLIS G~lllpolls
Business &amp; Professional Women
meet (l,;londay at 6:30 p.m. at
Grace United Methodist for Boss
Night, Woman of the Year.
--~

GALLIPOL IS - Episcopal
Ch urchwomen meet Monday at
noon, St. Peter's Episcopal
Ch urch.

•

POMEROY - Mothers of
Twins Clubs will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the United Methodist
Churc h.
RACINE - Recessed meeting
of Racine Village Counc!l. 7 p.m.
Monday at Shrine Park building.
-r--

MIDDLEPORT - Meeting of
Middleport P.T.O. 7 p.m . Monday; works hop style program

will ,educate ~;Jarents on child
assault prevention program
which will later be presented to
school children; child care will
be provided during meeting.

ADDISON - Addavillc School
PTO meets Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
for Meet the Ca ndid ates for
School Board night.
'

V)NTON - Vinton Friendship
Garden Cl ub meets Tuesday, 1
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Ro· · p.m., home of Thelma Barnes;
tary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m., ,l?rogram by Evelyn Davis on
Down Under.
pressed flowers .

TUESDAY

·

GAI..LIPOLIS G~llipolis
Uons meet Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.,
Oscar's; steak and beans dinner.
GALLIPOLIS - The newly
formed ,Federated Woman's
Club meets Tuesday, 7p.m .. OVP
Jackson Pike branch.

JACKSON - Cardiff Club
meets Tuesday, 7:30p.m., Jackson Library . Program by Dand
and Ruth Evans, and Bob and
Vicki Powell on their trip to
Wales.

GALLIPOL IS - Organlza·
tiona! meeting of Women Aglow,
PORTER Porter UMW Tuesday; J9an Waddington,
meets Tuesday, 2 p.m., at the pres ident of Central Ohio Area
church.
Board w!II speak. For lnforma--lion call (614)826-4232.
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia Count)(,.,. '
--District Ubrary Board of TrusMIDDLEPORT- Group II of
tees meet Tuesday, 5 p.m., the Middleport· Presbyterian
Bossard Memorial Library.
Churc!l w!ll meet at the home of
--Mrs. William Morris on Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS I..afaytte at 7:30 p.m.
White Shrine meets Tuesday,
7:30p.m., for ceremonial.
.CHESTER - Chester Counc!l

' '¥!

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323, Daughters of America. will

meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
hall. lnspectlon will be held and
members are asked to wear
white. There will be potlu~k
refres hments. ·
MIDDLEPORT - Reservations must be made by Tuesday
"for Jaymar Golf Club' s dinner
and dance to be held Sunday, Oct.
25, at the Middleport Legion Hall.
Music will be by George Hall and
the public Is Invited. For details
or to make reservations call Bob
Freed at 992-2044.

Ohio-Point

1987

MIDDLEPORT- Meigs Chapter Order of DeMolay and the
Mothers' Club will·meet Monday,
7:30p.m., at the masonic temple.
Mothers, please bring a covered
dish. ·

G D SUNDAY
. OCT. 18 ONLY

-- ----·-----~----

ROYAL CROWN,
1
• DIET RITE COLA

RACINE- Southern Board of
Educallon will meet 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the high school.

.---

POMEROY - XI Gamma
Eps!lon Sorority will meet 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Cen ter. Hostesses will
be Connie Dodson, Pat ty Cir·cle
and Susan Well.

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

0

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Monday thru Sunday

lingerir To finer Dmws ·
for .\'prciul Occasio11s.
Infant flotiling

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4·/ $1
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Sausage .......... ~~ ... $129
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GALLIPOLIS - Fellow Chris·
tians Seminar on I Cor. 15 at
Faith Comm unity Chapel Hannan Trace Rd., starti ng Monday
&lt;tt 7:_30 p.m. Densil Roberts,
Pastor.
·

HORMEL SLICED

$ 1
Chuck Roast ... ~~.. -1 9
Sl 89

· GALLIPOLIS - The Cat holic
Women's Club of Sl. Louis
Church will meet on Monday .
/\iter the 6 p.m. Mass. there will
tie a covered dish dinner in the
\,hurcn HaiL The speakers. Ed

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.
(
Drumsticks .••..••.. ~•. 39

:·New 'Fat Magnet' Diet Pill

:=Guarantees Fast Weight Loss

2J$1

! 4,:~~L

I

----

'·

HUNT'S

~
Good Sunday, O&lt;t. 18, Only
I
I Good Only AI Powell's Suptrmorktl I

286-2559

GA LLIPOLIS - St. Peter's
Episcopal Churchwoma n (ECW 1
will hold their monthly luncheonbusi ness meeting a t noon on
Monday in tit~ Parish HaiL Guest
speaker will be Dr. Paul Hayes,
President of Rio Gra nde College
a~d Community College.

MasterCard and American Express
OK . (Send card number, expire date,
and signarure.) For fastest service for
credit card orders ONLY call anytime
14 hours, toll free l(8()())527-9'ma,
exr . W705.
")
&lt;OFJt Magocl 1911'7

·l

ITOMATO SAUCE I

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., OCT. 24, 1987

CHESHIRE - Kyger ···Creek
Band Boosters meet Monday,
7·:;!0 p.m.

(UncondiJional money-back guarnn·
lee if noi 100% satisfied.) Visa,

1·-------------

Mmuhs

230 Broadway Sl., Jackson
Monday &amp; Friday 9,30 ·,;f S.OO p.m.
Tues., Wtd., lhur. &amp; Sat. '1:30 ~~ 5,30 p.m.

l--------.,.. ...---·-·4

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

The Mother-To-Be

. 6 PK.

Good Sun ay, &lt;1. 18, Only ·
Good Only AI Powell's Supermarket

f
I

8 AM-10 PM

29. (
•

oz. .
I.12
CANS
f

STO~E

A Shop To Meet
The Needs Of .
Matemil!' fashionJ from

•

MONDAY

·:fat -magnet" has recently been
developed and perfected by two prominent doctors at a v.orld fu.mous hospital
in l,.os Angeles that reportedly
:·guarantees" that you will easily lose
fat by simply tak:ing their tested and
proven new pill .
· No Dieting-Eat Normally
Best of all . "you can continue to eat
all of your favorite foods and you don't
have to ch~nge your nonnal eating .
habits. You will start losing fat from
the very first day, until you achieve the
)deal weight and figure you desire."
:. There has never been anyt hing like
ir before. It i' a totally new major
medical breakthrough for weight loss
(worldwide patent pending) .
Flushes Fat Out of Body
The new pill is appropriately called
the "fat-magnet" pill because it breaks
mto thousands of particles, each act·
ing like a tiny magnet, "attracting" and
trapping many times its size in fat panicles. Then. all that trapped fat is
· naturally "flushed" right out of your
body because it cannot be digested.
· Within 2 days you will not ice a
change in the color of your stool as
the fat part ides are being eliminated .
"Pills Do All the Work "
According to the doctors. the fat·
magnet pilb do all the work while you
quickly lose fat wi1h no starvation diet
menus to follow, no calorie countin·g.
no exercising. and no hunger pangs.
It is 100 % safe. You simply take the
piUs with a glass of water before meals.
The fa t-magnet pills have just been
offered to the American public and are
already sweeping the country with
record sales and reports of dramatic
...ieight loss. It's the "lazy way" to lose
--:eight for people who enjoy eating.
Now 'Available to Public
If you need to lose 20, 50, 100 pounds
or more, you can order your supply
of these new highly successful fat·
magnet pills (now available from the
doctor's exclusive manufdcturer by
f!F.!il or phone order only) by sending
$20 for a 90 pill supply (+$2 handling), or $35 for a ISO pill supply (+$3
h~ndling), cash, check or money order
(1:1: Fat-Magnet, 9016 Wilshire Blvd ..
Dept W705, Beverly Hills. CA 90211 .

•

GOOD TUESDAY
OCT. 20 ONLY

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

I

HUNT'S MANWICH

TOTAL LIQUIDATION...

i

WE'RE SELLING OUT TO THE
BARE WALLS!

I

Yams .....•.. ~ .•.•... ~!: •••
•

$1
scr
~illc ••...••.....•...• ::~ ..

FLAVORITE HOMOGENIZED
years of quality
selection, service &amp;
price, Harris Furniture,is
going-out-of-business. We
are closing our doors forever and
ev~rything must be sold. Remember, thi~
is your sale!!! - First come, first sold.

HOURS:
Daily 9-5:30 ·
_Monday 'til 7 PM
. Saturday 9-5

Recliners,
upholstered furniture,
db\e~. bedrooms, lamps,
Cal-pelts,
and much more.

KRAFT AMER. SINGLES .
1 !~!·.

Cheese ••. ~ ...•.•.....

$2
99
lnst. Coffee .....~~;.
.

TV Dinners ······· ~~!·••

SWISS MISS

LLOYD HARRIS FROZEN

MAXWELL HOUSE
.

tuse so&lt;

.

Coupon)

Hot Chocolate •••••• 99&lt;
12 ENV.

t

-·d-

FURNITURE
CARPn
61-70 N. Caurt St., Athens

• All Sliles Final
•Everything Sold As Is.

•No Rett.u't'IS

•No Allowances
•No 1-lolds, No Layaways
•There Is A Delivery CMrge

FREE PARKING
Acrou The Street In Our
Lot.

••

59( !

Good Tuesday, O&lt;t. 20, Only

I

,-------------...I
I .
.
I GOOD SENSE \ I
I TRASH BAGS !

~--------------"

MUST GO
Huge Savings Throughout
The Store At Factory
Cost And "Even Below.

I

oz. CAN

I Good Only At Powell's Supermarket I
I
I

EVERYTHING

HELD BACK

15th

I

WHITE SWEET POTATOES or

NO'JHING

I

BANQUET
1

oz.
Pumpkin Pie ••••••••
211

·····couPON·······•

~ •

•• ••

• •••••

•

MAXWELL HOUSE

:•

COFFEE

•

•• 3 LB.

: &lt;AN

•

SLB,
BAG

$569

Limit I 'Per Customer
Goad Only a! Powell's Supermarket
• . Offer Good Thru Sal.. 0&lt;1. 24. 1987

DOMINO SUGAR

•••

•

·~··· ·················

$149 .

Limit 1 Per Customer
Goad Only At Powell's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru Sat., Od. 24, 1987

21

THANK YOU CHERRY

WHITE CLOUD

PIE FILLING

TOILET TISSUE

z.

89&lt; '

Limit I Per Cu1lomer
Good Only At Powell'• Supermark!l
Offer Good Thru Sal., O&lt;t. 24, 1987

•••••• •

4 ROLL
PKG.

89&lt; .

llOCT.
I PKG.

2·/$11

I

I Good Tuesday, Od. 20, Only I
I Good Only At Powell's Supermarketl
I
I

'---------.-----./
r-------------,

I GOVT. TESTED 81% LEAN I
JGROUND CHUCK!

: $1 09
11

LB.

Good Tu01day, Oct. 20, Only
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket

I

�.

'

Page-8-4· The Sunday Times-Sentinel

October 18. 1987

Pleasant, W. Va.

•BUdget Prices
•Qilalitv.

: :.: • : : :. :_: :•:·~· :•:•:•:········••&lt;{:)tt~=.

85 VINE STREET
GAWPOUS, OHIO
735 SEC. AVE.

••• '

..

IFO.....J PIC PACI

GAWPOUS, OHIO
JACKSON AVE.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
MON.-SAT.
8 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
. SUNDAY
9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

.Meats

OUPONS ALL WEEK!

• • • • • • • • • • • • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • •

ERE
ClUALI'rY
IS.
GUA
--- --."..!I

,

••

~

BROUGHTON'S

·Cottage .
~~ Cheese
'

KRAFT FUDGIES OR

EASTERN ROY 1\LTY - Larissa Long, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Long, Rt .3, Pomeroy , was crowned as the 19S7 Eastern
High School Homecomin g Queen durin g a festive ceremony during
halftime of the EHS-Hann:~n Trace game. She is pictured with
escort Chad Cook,

Caramels •••••••••••••• ~o,.

KRAFT WHITE MINIATURE
or JEFF PUFF

--In the service---

Selby

HUNT'S ASSORTED

·

Salad Dress1ng .....VN.

~

KRAFT

~

KRAFT SOFT PARKA'/

Snack Pack .....uv.u1..

KRAFT REG. 0~ LIGHT __, · ·

Bread

9 ~

KRAFT REG. OR LIG~T- MIRACLE WHI'$149

9
9
,
,frrut Che11s ..........u1.
·
9.9

--

(FORMERLY PIC PAC)

KRAFT ASSORTED

.
2/$1

M&amp;M ~TARBURST

'SHURFRESH
KING SIZE

8
Dressing .............u,. ••

$119

Marshmallows ... ~Qt~. ·

Infantry Division, South Korea.
A,LEX B. SOMMER
McCarley, an Infan try man . is
Marine Pfc. Alex B. Sommer,
a 1986 graduate of Gailia
son of Ruth B. and Arvtlle E.
Academy, Gallipolis.
Sommer Jr. of 100 Pond Branch,
Southside, W.Va., has completed
recruit traini ng a t Marine Corps ;_
· -----------1
Recruit Depot Parr is Island, S.C.
Dring the 11-week training
cycle, Som mer was taught t he
basics of battlefield survivaL He
was introduced to the typica l
· daily routine that he will experience during his enlistment and
studied the persona l and profes sional standards traditionally
1\ UUIA/\
exhibited by Marines.
He 'participated in an active
physical conditioning program
and gained proficiency in a
variety of military skil ls, including !lr~t aid, rifle marksmanship
and close order drill. Teamwork
and self-discipline were emphas BLACK • TAUPE • NAVY ,
ized throughout the training
cycle.
A 1987 graduate of Pt. Pleasant
Hif'h School, Pt. Pleasant, he
, 300 5ECON D AVE
joined the Marine Corps in Ma y

,-------·

.

85 VINE STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
735 SEC. AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
· lACKSON AVE.
PT. PlEASANT, ·W. VA.
MON.-SAT.
8 A.M. TO 10 P.~
SUNDAY
9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

24 oz.

·

·

.

. $169

Grape Jelly .........M..

·

8
+
Margarine ., ..........,.,..

·

9.

KRAFT MILD COLBY. MILD MEDIUM
or SHARP ~EDDAR
$

• $14 9

Mayonna1se ..........lu~-

,.EEDI

20 oz.
Loattes

KRAFT LIGH~ PHIL'I NEUF. OR PHILA.9 9 ~

Cream Cheese ....... .w.

9
lJegetables ••••••• ~ar.a'i~.
GREEN GIANT AS~T.

PILLSBURY MICROWAVE
CHEESE, COMBO, PEPP. OR

• ...... w.s..
Sausage P1zza

ORE-IDA SHREDDEP

$12 9

ASST.

.

·

Hash Browns ....... ;\~ •.

1

99J.

CINCH SAl&lt; 33 GAL.

Cheese ................\~ ..

59

·$ 1

EGG NUTRI-GRAIN

49

9~

. .

$119

Waffles ............... 'JJll...

..

THE SHOE CAFE

1987.

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

RONALD E. BONECUTTE R JR.
Airman 1st Class· Rona ld E .
Bonecutter Jr., son o f Ronald E.
and Linda S. Bonecutter of
Ga lli polis Ferry, W.Va. , has

A SPECIAL GIFT ..
for the special
penon in your life.

been decorated with

the Air

MINUTE MAID REG. or
. COUNTRY STYLE

Orange Juice ••••••• nP~e

Force Achievement Medal in
italy.
The Achieveme nt Medal is

HUNT'S REO. or
MEXICAN STYLE

awa rded to ai.rrncn for meritor-

ious service:.. aci s of courage, or
other accomplishments.
Bonecutter is a den tal assist ant wit h the U.S. Air Force
Clinic.
He is a 1981 graduate of Pt.
Pl easant High School. W.Va:

,JAMES B. MCCARLEY
Army Pvt. James B. McC ar ley, so n of .James W, McCarl ey of
460 Lariat Drive and Sue Priest of
Rural Rout e 4, bGth of Gallipoli s .
has arr-ived for dut y with the 2nd

.

SHURFRESH REG. or THICK

participated in exercise Ocean

Safari 87 a board the destroyer
USS Hayler , homeported in Norfo lk , \'a.
The exercise conducted, primarily in the North Allan ti c Ocean
is designed to improve ·and
demons trat e the readiness and
e ffcclivenes&lt; of all participating
national and NATO Headquar ters and fo rces to conduct ma ritim eoperat ions related to co ntin ·
gency and genera l defense plans .
A 1984 g radu ate of Wahama
High School, Mason. W.Va .. he
joined the Navy in Sep tember
1986.

$119
Franks ............,•••
$13 9.
Bologna ..........,.. $13 9
Salami ............,••
$13 9

SHURFRESH

RICHARD A. REITI\1IRE
Navy Seaman Apprentice Ri chard A. Reitmire, son of Ri ·
chard A. Reitmire of 802 Sixth
St., New H aven, W.Va., rece ntly

SHURFRESH
Call now to schedule your sei·
sion. Ask about our special
prices. Must be taken by Ne)l. 7
for Christmas delivery.

.

SHURFRESH

Pickle Loaf ••• aa.

(614) 446-7494

RED OR
COLDEN

LEAR,

Delicious

PHOIOGRRPHY
SPRING VALLEY PlAZA•GALUPOUS
CLOSED MONDAYS

GALLIA MEDICAL SUPPLIES
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

53 COURT ST.

' 614-4 46-6949

(LOCATED BETWEEN OSCAR'S &amp; MACK'S AUTO)

•OSTOMY SUPPLIES- Convatec, Squibb, Hollister, etc.
•SKIN CARE PRODUCTS-Carrington, Sween, Core-Tech, Bard .
•SURGICAL DRESSINGS and TAPES
•DIABETIC EQUIPMENT and SUPPLIES
•ADULT DIAPERS and CHUX and UROLOGICAl SUPPLIES
•TNS SUPPLIES
•BACK, KNEE, NECK SUPPORTS and OBUS BACK FORMS
•MASTECTOMY BRAS and BREAST FORMS
•SIGV4RIS SUPPORT HOSE and AEROS HOSE
•MEDICAL ID BRACELETS and NECKLACES
•WALKERS, CANES, CRUTCHES, LIFT CHAIRS
•ENSURE, ENSURE PLUS, PULMOCARE
•CERVICAl PillOWS and SLANT PILLOWS
•BLOOD PRESSURE KITS
CERTIFIED FITTER
PRIVATE FITTING ROOM
NO PAPERWORK SUSAN ELLIOTT. RN , CF
MANAGER '
,

FAST SERVICE
FREE DELIVERY
COMPUTERIZED BILLING
BILL TILLIS
SAJ.,ES REP.

. .

3 LB. 'BAG

$119

IDAHO
.

Instant
16 oz.
Potatoes ••••••••.• r,lnlf.

Spiced Luncheon ...,. .

Man111ch ...........\s~nJI.z, 99~

GENERAL MILLS

KRAFT

VAN CAMP BEANEE WEENEE or

SHIJRFRESH SLICED

Marshmallow
Cream .................. zAA

SHIJRFRESH

.

:

$ 39

$13
9
Picnac Pak ••••••••11.rv.
$1 59
Bacon ..............t,.,,
B~MD
$13 9
Turkey Breast •• H... ·
$149
_Pork Steak ......H...
·
SHIJRFR~SH

GOLD

4-·6 LB.

.FRESH

.

CRISPV CRUIICHV
'

Carrots

Jumbo

Onions
Apples .
~

31bs.

99+

•

15 OR

69~

MARTHA WHITE C/PICKIN; 8/MILK, YELLOW

~~~n.~.~~~~ .. A:~. 3/9 9~

;:~E~~~E~""""""~~~.. 69~ .

Cereal ................v-o~ ..

.............
I

·N,C~. 79~

99~
99
*2

Premium
Syrup .................,~".~~.-

ALL Liquid .........I'N.

$100

t

::;·~~~

.Lut Liquid ........... w..

lbs.
JUICV RIPE

-*1''

ASST. OR PRINT

BOB WHITERS·

5'9tlh.

10 ~.

-

IIAA ..

Bleach.a

Potatoes

$17 9

Northern
Tissue ...............•~~~•••

:;:!;'.~~~~~.... $99~

~~

U.S. MO. t

WHITE, ASST .. SOFT PRINT

808 WHITE

Pears

LB.-

Trash
Bags .................. ~~'·

$219

Chili Weenee .•••••H~AZ-

·Fresh Yams

3

,

't

�.
Page-B-6-The Sunday Ti.:nes-Sentinel

October 18. 1987

-··

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

Craft day slated
have a craft ""d fellowship day .
Wednesday, 10 a. m. to 2 p.m .;
bring lunch and craft s.

Helath fair planned by Rio Grande College
Gathering as many knowl edge·
able health pr olcssional !j/for the
fair will be "a great benefit to t he
community and school system s," Willey added .
"It will provide an oppo r tunit~·
to SN' what good health is. and
provide in formation on how to
stay in good health. " h&lt;' sal d.

RIO GRANDE - Good health. Planned Parenthood, the Gallla
and how to maintain it, will b~ the County Emergency Medical Serfocus of a health fair sponsored vice, the Gallia Count y Heaith
Depa rtment , the Rio Grande
by the Community Health class
at Rio Grande College and Volunteer Fire Department, the
Communit y College on Frida y, American ra ncer Society , the
American Heart Association and
Oct . 23.
·
The fair will be held in L yne the Ohio Department of Dental
'
Center from l):30 a.m. untn :J: 30 }jealth . ·
Presentations will be made on
p.m.
various
topics including nutriCommu nit y Hea lth I nstructor
tion,
fitness,
cardiopulmonary
Bob Willey said the fair Is open to
ion
,
dental health .
res
uscitat
the commu nity as well as Rio
drug
ed
ucation
and
'lifesaving. A
Grande faculty, staff and stu film
on
AI
DS
will
al
so be shown.
dents. Several area high schools
"
In
year!t
past,
we
had stuhave been invited to attend.
dents tn tervlew heal th officials,"
Slated to give information at . Willey explained. "But this year
the fair will be Holzer Medical we thought we' d bring th em all
renter. Alcoholics Anon~· mous, together ."

More Information on the fair
ca n be obtained by ca lling Willey
at 24fl-5353 or t·in Ohio) 1-800-282-.
7201. extension 296.

·-

.

~

POMEROY ...., The Pomeroy
United MethOdist Church was the ·
setting for the July 18 wedding of
Loree Jane Sisson and Larry
Wayne Banks. The Rev. Kandy
Burch perfor med the double-ri ng
ceremony.
The bride is the daught er of
Edith Sisson , 120 Multierry Ave.,
Pomeroy, and Ralph Sisson.
Pomeroy Pike. The groom Is the
son of Thelma Banks, Gold Ridge
Road, Pomeroy, and the lat e
Homer Banks .
Bouquets of pink and white
carnations and candelabra decorated the altar for the wedding. '
Becky Cotterill was pianist for
the wedding.
The bride ·wore a gown of
orgar.za and Venlse lace. The
victorian neckline was enhanced
with Schiffli embroidery, seed
pearls and sequins 'and the fitted
sleeves had lace appliques with
seed pearls and sequins. The
bouffant skirt had tiered ruffles
and lace appliques and flowed
Into a semi-cathedral train.
The bride carried a cascade
arrangement of pink and white
carnations. Her fingertip veil
and blusher featuring a pouf at
the back and fell from a bandeau
of floreis decorated with seed
pearls and sequins.
Paige Cleek, Smyrna, Ga ., was
matron of honor and bridesmaids
were Ann Sisson. Pomeroy, and
Jamie Blaettnar, Pomeroy . Junior bridesmaid was Stephanie
Banks, Rutland, and Brenna

wy, witll deli.: ate
!act dttall and Sllimmtr·
ifle$1\ado•ntripes And
with ~e.vnltu. streWI
'll~t, !:0 k I afw~yfo (0111•
lofublt. ;W;ayS a
perfeCt Ill. For "m
supi)Ofl. .flllt11rll Sl1al)int: JYallablt In !Oft (up

il ANIRICA

ZEN/\
dUIS

Banks-Sisson

RUSSELL AND ,JUANI'fA. SPENCER

or~nderwilt.

MOI)I)iytromY.!nlt~hlr.

Spencers to note anniversary
POMEROY Russell and·
Juanit a Spencer of 37660 West
Shade Road, Pomeroy , will celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary on Saturday, Oct. 24, from 2
to 4 p.m. with an open reception
in the fellowship hall of the Mt.
Hermon U.B. Church.
Mrs. Spencer is th e daughter of
Mrs. Edna Life. Re~dsvlllc, and
· the l&lt;ite Rev . Edmond Life. Her
husband · is the son of Dwight
Spencer, .Pameroy, and the late
Ell a Spencer . ·

DENIM JACKETS
MALIBU SLIMS
NEW FROSTED SHIRTS
BLACK FROSTED DENIM

..•
....

COATS

25°/o
OFF

CUT FROM
FED UTilE
~U.),,U.A. CHOICE

d ·stea

Oct. 24

$199

STEAK

$399

$259

REEl lOOT

BACON END

PRE-SLICED

$159

$199

38

oz.

14.5

~

•
•
•

•

KRAFT 1

•

•
•

Parkay
rganne
F
0
R

8

MARLIN

•
•

RI.FLE

VALLEY BELL

WITH 4 POWER SCOPE

MILK 2°/o Milk

S8995
SKINNER THIN

SPAGHETTI

'69&lt;

COKE
2 LITER

Sl09

45". Compare at $4.99-$7.99 yd.

~99.~24
~ I
~~YD.

OUr
low prices

~

Allovers, panels. 100% cotton, 45".
. Compare at $2.49-$4.99 yd.

I

45 STATE ST.

YD. ·

towprlce

,.t.Mi~ke~ Chris~as Fleece

Muslin
Unbleached tOO% cotton, 45" wide.
Compare at 52 _99 yd.
our
~49
tow price ~
\'0.

~ Ktds

$ 499

ONE Of THE FRENCH CITY'S OLDEST SHOPS

...L Entire 'stock Fur

..L Crepe de Chine Prints

UMDER NEW MA-NAGEMENT

~ Acrylic and acrylic blends, 58"-60".
Compare at $8.49 yd.

~ Faille, Jacquards, pretty prints. 100%
polyester, 45". Compare al $9.99 yd.

Our
low price

446-3703

favorrte pnnts. 70 Yo poly/30% cotton,
58"-60". Compare at $9.99 yd.
Our
low prk:e
YD.

I

$499
YD.

Our
low prjce

WELCOME TO OUR RE-OPENING OCT. ·19
"VIE WANT YOU TO TRY US"

$424
· YD~

3&lt; OFF lABEl

"We.Offer"

·•

~LL p~TTERNS

Pe-psi o
Seven-Up
8- 16 OZ. BTLS.

15

Charm
BEAUTY SHOPPE

.
Soft to brilliant hues. tOO% polyester.
45". Compare at $8.99 ~~-r
$449

Our
~24.~49
low prices ~
~~YD .

POnED MEAT

"'49.~99
~~
~~YD.

•

...fl. Jacquard Solids

4untie Eni Collection

~~- 3199&lt;

22 CAL.

KRAFT

MAYONNAISE
32 oz.

Sewing mactuNH h '&amp;llaOie"'

~~-"$159

•

stoct or b~ spec•al order
•S.vingl re preatnl c,omp•rlsons witn re;ul•r
prlcu lyp!cally ch;.rged by cuw r llOf•• ·

. WHERE SEWING. KEEPS GETIING~;'"
._.,;.

.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAIA

'

CHESTER •

Our
low prices

-·

18.

oz.

~ Charmeuse, Faille, Palace. 100% polyester.

100% cotton, 45" wide.
compare at $3.99-$4.49 yd.

Stylist

•

We .Are Waiting to
Serve You At.

...L Crepe de Chine Solids

Fall Calico Prints

99(

ork.&amp;Beans.

DONNA FRANK

YVONNE WILFER
Owner &amp; Stylist

lB.

~$1 09s'ANioR'N

985-3301

.; THIS WEEK ONL\1,at Jo-Ann Fabrics

-··"

BOLOGNA

HANOVER

Sa. Old 160

--..-·

PRE-SLICED

$1 _09

POilU, OHIO -

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Ham or
Chicken Salad
PORK
SAUSAGE

PRAiSE TABERNACtE

Closed
Also: Jackson·, Chesapeake. Athe11s, C.hillicothe, logan

HOMEMADE

FARMSTEAD

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LilliAN REC£, PA£TOR
SUNDAY 9:30 A.M.·7:00 P.M.
lU-81192

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3 lB. BOX

Rinso
.,______J Detergent

441&gt;-01 1111 Man.-Sat.
ClOSED THURSDAY

Except Wednesday

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&amp; PIECES

BAUM LUMBER

Monday-Friday

LB.

Slab
Baton

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Open 8:30 to 5:00

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1~

BAR-S

GALLIPOLIS
414 Second Ave., 2nd floar

236 E. Main St.

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Steak
COOKED
HAM

lB.

Hunter safety

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t:.::l~lPork Shoulder

ubed Steak

BONE-IN

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OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

POMEROY:

2SO 2nd Ave., Gallipolis - 446-3300
110 Mechanic St., Pomeroy - 992-3279

U.S. GOVERNMENT
NSPECTED .

We still need to "t hrust men ." In other words, no one sh~uld
come between us and the Lord . M any time s we have heard thi s
excuse , " I won't become a Christian becau se they're all hypocrites," or "I won't go to church because they're pypocrltes ."
Here is an example of how the sinner ha s let the hypocritical be havior of some who name the name of Chris t get In the way bet ween ltlm and the Lord . Those " hy pocri tes" are between hln;t
and the Lord and he's content to let them stay ther e. He won't
thrust them out of the way .
Christians also suffer from falling to thrust men in a number
of ways: some will Idolize a partiuclar minister because they
are so pleased with him that he (in their th inki ng at least)
comes to stand between them and the Lord . Others, through error, are made to feel the mini ster should stand between them
and the Lord and they let it happen out of a sense of duty. Then
disillusionment may come in either of these two examples when
the minister falls In some way and even.that failure can stand
between Ihem and the Lord. Ministerial failure can also sta nd
between Christians and the Lord even if neither of the first two
examples held true for them . How many people have walked
away from the Lord because spmeone offended th em ? They let
the offences of others crowd them away from the Lord. In all of
these cases, Chri stians failed to thrust mPn and failed to takl'
the kingdom .
(To Be Continued )

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PLANNED PARENTHOOD

TWO OFFICES FOR CONVENIENCE

Good thru

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Your privacy is respected
Your questions answerer'

Evening Hour By Appointment

a

ALL USED GUNS 10°/o OFF
.10°/o OFF ALL AMMUNITION

sus.
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OPEN SATURDAYS- CLOSED MONDAYS

CUT FROM
GRAIN FED CATTLE
USDA CHICE
TENDER &amp; JUicy

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OBSERVED 50TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY- Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Searles observed their 50th wedding anniversary on
Oct. 16. They are the parentsottwochlldren, Kenneth of Columbus and Joan Fife, Cheshire and have four grandchildren.
There was a
reception held for the couple at the Silver
Run

-•Sliding fee scale: No one refused services because
of inability to pay.

Visual Examinations - Glasses
Children's/Pediatric Vision
Low/Geriatric Vision
Contact Lenses - All Types

O·•palia

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•services include:
llirth Control; v.D•.Screening;
Cancer_ Scritening; ll''lilancy
tests: education and counselitig·
for individugls and COU(IIes •

DR. T. JAY BRADSHAW

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POMEROY .. - The Pomeroy
Church of Christ is starting new
youth program ca lled J.A.M.
(Jesus and Me l . The program
will be co-d.irected by Mary Lash
and Pat Thoma. Toddlers
thr c ~ gh high school age are
welcome to at tend every Wednesday night , starting this Wednesday, from 7:15 to 8:30. A 21-foot
banana split will be featured at
Wednesday's k ickoff.

'

M r. and Mrs. Spencer . we.re
married on Oct . 26. 1947 ~t Big
Bend, W. Va. by the Rev. W. C.
McKibben . Th ey are the paren ts
of two daughters, Regina
Spencer Cooper, Morgantown.
W.Va., and Julia Spencer Willi·
ams, Car thage, N.C .. ·and have
three grandchildren.
Mr. and Mrs. Spencer are
members oftheMt. Hermon U.B .
Church, Pomeroy. H e Is retired
fro,rfl Elkem Metals, )V!arietta .

OPTOMETRISTS

300 &amp;llnltd Aw..

RIBEYE

POMEROY - A hunter safety
course in Meigs County will be
held at the Scipio Tow nship Fire
Department quarters begi nning
Monday. Classes will be from 6 to
9 p.m . on Monday , Wednesda y,
Thursday and Frida y. th is week.
No pre-registration is required.

""":&lt;~::&gt;&lt;'~

DR. A. JACKSON BAILES

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WINTER

New youth program

ONLY

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ALL NEW STYLES

Sisson, Pomeroy , All of the
attenda~ts . wore
floor-le ngth
gowns in pin!&gt; taffeta fashioned
with sweetheart necklines, short
puff sleeves, and flared skirts .
The attendants carr ied hand
bouquet s of pink and white
carnations.
Abe Grueser, Rutland, was
bes I man. Ushers were Albert
Banks, Pomeroy, and Jeff Morris, Middleport. David Banks ~ nd
Nate Sisson were ri ng bearers.
All wore gray tuxedoes.
The bride's mot her was in a
street length rose colored dress
and wore . ~ pink rose and white
carna tion corsage. The groom's
mother wore a turqu dise street
length dress and also had a rose
and carna tion co rsage.
Guests were regis tered bv
Peggy Davis and Cathy Johnson.
Assisting with the serving we re
Keith Ann Sisson, Na ncy Russell
and Mrs. Johnson.
A reception was held in the
church fellowship hall. A threetiered center eake was flanked
by two tiered side cakes all with
live floral arrang~ments on top
"With ribbons extending one from
the other.
Following the reception at th e
chur&lt;:'h, the couple hos ted a
dinner pariy and dance at the
Eagles Club.
They now reside "t lo2 Butt er·
nut Ave., Pomeroy . The groom
operated Banks Contruction Co.
The bride is employed in thl'
Meil'(s Count y Auditor 's Office.

"And from th&lt;&gt; day.• of Jo hn 1 h e Baptjst until now. the king·
dn'm of h eaven .sufferelh vio l enc&lt;&gt; and th&lt;· vio l ent lake it by
[&lt;uce" Malt. 11 :12.
Thus Jesus describes the awakened hopes and the eager
thron ging of I he multitudes after John' s clear cry In the wilder' ness cut through the religious. poli!Ical and social tog of that
time . John direct s men's attention to the approaching kingdom
of God and especialy the King of that kingdom. The excit ement
of those early days, full of the promise ot all that Israel had
longed for drove men to meet and hear the Man from Galilee .
The pushing and shoving·, the jostling of one another , the eagerness and excitement all motivated by consuming spirit ual hunger and heartbreaking human need are brought out more
cl early by another rendering Of the same verse of scri pture.
"And from the days of John the Baptl~t until now, the kingdom of heaven Is gotten by f orce and they that thrust men take it
by fo rce" Matt. l.l: 12 Margin.
The phrase, " they that thrust men ," is an apt description.
One can readily picture the crowds and th ose Individuals In the
crowds who would not be hindered In their effort to get to Jesus.
· Toe wom;3n with the Issue of blood is an example. She thrust her
way th ro ugh the crowd untll she touc hed the hem of Christ's
·garment ani! was made whole.
·
How about tod ay's situ ation ? Do we sti ll need to thrust men?
Wh at sort of "violence" Is It th at takes the kingdom of heaven?
Certilinly God has not called us to be religious bullies, rude, insensitive, sel fish, etc. We alf have unpleasant memories of be ing shOved aside by someone who had little care for us. Yet
there is a "violence that wins the kingdom of heaven in our day,
and like those.hungry hearts In the gospels, It is lou rid In those
who simply will not let anyone hinder th em from coming to Je-

pres~nts_

Sottl~

LARRY AND LOREE (SISSON ) BANKS

THE)' THAT THRUST MEN

The name of the English royal
house of"Piantagenet came from the
French word meaning 'broom stalk.'

l'hl!8rehtUnu"'&amp;a

MAiUFACT~iE~

)...

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

CHARM
Latest Cuts &amp; Styles
Perms
OPENING SPECIAL
Facials
OFF PERMS
Artificial
Nails
'
•
With Coupon
Eyebrow ShapingOffer Expires No11. 25
Ear Piercing ··
Hair Color
Crimping Perms
Frosting &amp; Tipping
Manicure - (complete with hand and qrm massage)
Pedicure - (complete with foot and leg massage)
..
Friendly Service
WE WELCOME CHILDREN OF ALL AGES

20°/o

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Beat of the Bend_

Senior Citizen Centers schedule activities

Third annual ·senior
citizens bazaar Nov. 6-7
POMEROY - H yo u like
bazaars you might want to make
a note that the Meig$ County
Senior Center's
third annual
arts and crafts
bazaar ha s been
set for the weekend of Nov. 6
and 7.
Alrelc!y there
are H area cra ftpersons registered fQr ,the s how with a variety
of handmad e crafts, crochet and
knit ilems. woodworking il e m s,
and ceramics to be available for
purchase.
·
If you would lik·e lobe a part of
the bazaar - like ha ving your·
wares available a?so - cont act
the cent er at 992-2161 for in form ation and registration.
Dr. Frank Porter III . a former
resident who is aga in li ving in
Meigs Count y, will be lhe fea tured speaker for th e annua l
meeting of lhe Meigs r:ounty
Pioneer and Historical Sociely
which has been set for Oct. 25 at
Ihe Meigs Museum.
Dr. Porter will spea k on " The
Survival of American India ns in
· lhe Eas1ern United States. A
potluck dinne r all p.m. will kick
off the a nnu a l meeting and of
course, there will be election of
truslees and officers. Pres ident ·
Margaret Parker would like to
see you there.
I know many old friends of
Rodney Downing will wa nt to be
with him on Salrurday, Oct. 24.
An open house is being pl anned
for that day by his daughte r.
Martha Downing Johnson of
Layfa yet le, La ., at the Downing
home on North Second Avenue in
Middleport.
The lam ily Is hoping t ha 1 the
event will be a complele s urprise
to Rodney who will be marking
his 90th birthd ay. All of Rodney's
friends are Inv ited to stop by ihe
home bel ween 2 and 4 p.m. a nd
are being asked lo help keep Ihe
secrer.

ters · - from Oklahoma \ity ,
Allanta and JacksQn, Mississippi
plan' 10 be on hand as well as some
of Mrs. Downing's family.
So - .next Salu rd ay, you're
inviled lo drop by and say hello to
Rodney, a long-time Middleport
resident.
AI and Dorothv Smith of.l he
Racine area have returned home
fr om a two week vis it in Morrislawn. Tenn. a~cr enjoyed their
trip _t horoughly si nce it gave
them an opporlu ni ly to see Al's
sister and brother-i n-law, Mr.
and Mrs. El mer Lowe of Ashville, S. C.
The· Sm iths visited the new
Dolly Parton am usement park
and recommend it as a good
family spot. They were impressed by the use of pumpki ns ,
corn stalks a nd fall' callers used
In the decorating theme for this
lime of year. Th e Sm ilhs were
amazed at Ihe foliage and law n
mow ing sci appa rently tha t· part
of the country had a bit more rain
lhat we did in Meigs CQunt y 01·er
the summer.
A rea der who halls fr om New
E ngland. loves corn chowder and
se nds along thiS recipe which he
high ly recommends. You know
me. I believe in writ ing somelhing lor eve)'vone
.
. - so here
goes.
If yo u give il a try, do let me
know -we haven' ! had lime to
gel to il yet, a lthough it sound s
prelt y easy.
The ingredienls include lwo
pota toes. one average onion , lwo
small cans of cream corn. a nd
one cup of mil k. Cu i up the onion
and )1eat unt il tender; a do one
cup of water, one pin ch of sail
and Ihe potaloes, cut in bile s izes.
Cook until rhc potatoes are
tender, a dd a hunk of bu tter, a
teaspoon of suga r. the corn and
the m ilk, Hea l bu t don't boil.
Quit e rasty, I unders ta nd .

GALLIPOLIS- Activities and ·
menus for the week of October 19
through October 23, at the Senior
Ci tizens Center, 220 Jackson
Pike, are:
Monday - Ceramics. 9:30noon: chorus, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday - S.'r.O.P.tPhysical
Filness, 10:30 a.m.; 55 Alive
Matur.e Driving Course, 12:304:30 p.m .
Wednes&lt;Jay - Ca rd games, l -3
p.m.; 55 Allvc Mature Driving
Course , 12:30-4: 30 p.f\1.
Thursday - Bible stud)!&gt; 11noon p.m.; he rb a lists, 12: 30.p.m.
Friday - Art Class, 1-3 p.m .;
craft mini-cours e, 1-3 p.tn.
Menus cons ist of:
Monday - Hamburger on bun
with cheese/ slice dlll pickle,
oven fries, green beans, bun,
fruit cup with orange slice.
Tuesday -Chilli, 'c heese cube,
tossed sa lad with carrots (Oil &amp; '
vi negar), cracker , pear halves.
Wednesday - Macaroni and

Sorority meeting
POMEROY Xi Gamma
Epsilon Sorority will meet 7 p.m .
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Senior
Cilizens Center. Hostesses will
be ronnte Dodso n, Patty Circle
and Susa n Well.

CDuncil on .Aging
will meet Tuesday
POMEROY - The a nnua l
mcel lng of !he Meigs Count y
Council on Aging will be held 1
p.m. Tuesday at lhc Meigs
Counly Senior Citizens Cen ter.

Job Bank seeking applicants
Especially needed are peopl e
to live in with older 1 or on a part
ti me ba sis. Also brush cutt ing,
cleani ng and Baby Sitt ing are
avai lable.
For ,more informat ion call
446-7000 and ask lo speak Ia one of
Ihe J ob Cou nselors.

...

IS HERE
GET A ROOM OF
CARPET CLEANED

Cheese. stewed tomatoes, butlered broccoli, YLhole grain
bread, cherr·y crisp.
Thursday - Baked chicken,
mashed pota toes with vitamin C
added, be~ts, biscuits, chocolate
pudding with coconut.
Friday - Pork chops, oven
baked , sweet potatoe s with
marshmallows , brussel sprouts,
whole grain bread, ginger bread
wlth topping. ·
Choice of coffee, tea, lemonade, milk, or buttermilk with
each meal.

plates, Bingo 1-2. Exercise Class
3:30
Friday - Round and squa re
dance 8-11 with music by True
Country, • ad mission $1 .50 per
·
person
An ''Over 50'' exercise class
will be conducted on Monday and
Wednesday at 3:30 through December 16. This class consisted
of stretc hing and bending exercises· and mild cardilvascular·
movements, the cost is $.fi0 per
sess ion.
The Senior Nutrition Program

S299S

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ASIIBOUT ~at~hn~·~
L.-_!~~!S-~~3_2~87 ___!

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fr~

98

Sot 9;

HEIRWOM PORTRAI'ffl

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Umit one special per lamtly.

BUCKS LEAD EARLY - Ohio State built up a
11-0 lead over hoo . Purdue In llrst half play In West
Lal.;.yeite Saturday afternoon. The Boilermakers
rallied to knot the count at 11-.tll with I 3: 09 left to

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1(8xl0), 2(5x7s),
and 10 wallets for only.
'appro•lm•l• sin

Sining Fee. $2.00 - Not included in p&lt;ice of advenisad special.
Advertised spectal is only in blue and brown backgrounds.
Advertised special is in two (2) poses • our selection.
Additional advertised packages are 'available at regular price.

Help ~a:ve energy dollars wilh in stal led low mainlenance replace-

Addilional charge for groups and

ment windows . Fit to your stze

fl

seen~ _
backgrounds.

and slyle specif,c al10ns.
In s lallation IS provi ded by
a Sears authorized installer

,,.

STATE ROUTE 7-POMEROY
PHOTOGRAPHY DAYS
FRI., OCT. 23 &amp; SAT., OCT. 24
. HOURS:
FRI. 10-2, 3-8; SAT. 10-2, 3-6

SILVER BRIDGE •
PLAZA

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YOUR EXCUSE
GWEIGHI?"

.

FORNOf

SPECIALIZING· IN INTERNAL MEDICINE

HAS OPENED HIS PRACTICE IN THE
MEIGS MEDICAL BUILDING
MULBERRY HEIGHTS, POMEROY
HOURS: MONDAY, TUESDAY &amp; THURSDAY 9-5
WEDNESDAY 1-7
FRIDAY 9-12
AVAILABLE FOR HOME VISITS
APPOINTMENTS MAY"BE MADE BY CALLING 992-6404

Excuse# 3:
"I can't lose
enough weight
in time for the
holidays.''

Excuse#40:
"It costs too much."

Duke tied th e score 10-10 with
5:58 left In the t hird period when
Roger Boone slipped into the end
zo ne from the 1-yard line. Th e
touchdown, set up by an 11-yard
pass fro m Dilweg to Clarkston
Hines, climaxed a 74-yard drive
In eight pla ys.
Johnson, who had 93 yards
rushing in the ga me, had 60 yards ,
in lhe winning drive, including
runs of 22, 11 and 10 yards . The
Tigers began from the ir own
3-yard line after a 64-yard ;
third-down quick kick by Dllweg.
Refer ees had to stop pl ay six
times to quiet the 72,000 screaming fans in Cle mson' s "Death
Valley" stadium While Duke had
lhe ball in the third quarter .
Florida 34 Temple 3
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UP! ) Tailback Emmitt Smith became
the first freshman in NCAA
his tory to top 1,000 yards rushing
in his first seven games, gaining
175 yards Saturday 10 prope) No.
H Florida 'to a 34-3 rout of
Temple.
Missouri 42, ISU 17
AMES , Iowa (UP!) - Robert
Delpino ra11 86 yards for a
touchdown and Erik McMillan
scored on a 39-yard interception
return Saturday to highlight a

28-point fourth qua.rter that sent
Missouri to a 42-17 Big Eight
victory over Iowa State.
Princeton 16 Lehigh 15
PRINCETON, N.J . (UP!)
Rob Goodwin's 38-yard field goal
as time expired capped a 77-yard
hurry-up scoring drive Saturday
and gave Princetoh a 16-15
victory over Lehigh .•
· Harvard 42 Dartmouth 3
CAMBRIDGE', Mass. (UP!)Tom Yohe passed for 237 yards
and three rouchdowns Saturday
to lead Harvard to a 42-3 romp
over Dar tmouth in Ivy League
action.
Nebraska 35 OSU 0
STILLWATER, Okla . (UP!)Keith Jones ran for 98 yards and
two touchdowns and Nebraska 's
defense held the nation's leading
rusher Thurman Thomas to 7
yards Saturday to spark the
second-ranked Cornhuskers to a
35-0 blowout of No. 12 Oklahoma
State.
Jones scored on runs of 5 yards
In the second quarter and 17
ya rds in the third period as the
Cornhuskers went to 6-0 on the
season and 2- 0 in the Big Eight.
Oklahoma State, which was of! to
ils best start sirice 1945, slipped to
5-1 and 1-I.

Join Weight Watchers
Now for Only.;. __..• .......,._
Registralion Fee ...... .
FiN Mcetin ~ Fee ~
Regu lur Price .
'
. $20.1Hl

YOU SAVE .......... $10.00
Offer Ends November 1987.

Flonne Mark, Area Otrector

Come to the Weight Watchers meeting nearest you.
NEW MEMBERS: PLEASE ARRIVE ONE HOUR EARLY FOR REGISTRATION ANO WEIGH-IN.- · t

GALLIPOLIS

POMEROY

EPISCOPAL CHURCH

SENiOR CITIZENS' CENTER
Mulberry Heights
Wed: 6 p.m

ST. PETER'S

541 Second Avenue
Tue: 7 p.m. , Wed: 9:30a .m.
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NOTHING-WORKSLIKEWEIGHTWATCIIERs!
o-t11 .,114 O.:ICIIMII! l!\fOI,Igii!IDfttl'llltl I

191! / Oil" ~IH iiiOC.II()fl k$!llill~rm 10 In 10 ~1 ~I 120
1 3~)001'1' Ol'ltr ollr~IOI ~to1'1nd ftMWtng mt!r!1!Hin Ol'lli i)l'lrrllll.,l~ *''~
lllll!r ~~~" ijl ;~CIIIPIII
MiOIII Wllchl!rund OoiC' 5tan1Je '''""""'~ ol 'NUGHI W~lCHfRS tNlf~Hif t O~A~ til~

CIM_IGH f 'NioTCif.~S IHIIRM~I IOIU.l INC: 191! 7

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three other key passes tha t set up
WEST LAFAYETTE . Ind .
the rest of Ohio State' s point s.
(UP!) - Matt Frantz kicked a
"Ohio State, coming off a
50-yard field goal wllh 3:10
surprise
loss to Indiana. rose to
remaining and No. 16 Ohio Slate
4-1-1
overall
and 2-1 In the Big
survived · a fierce second-half
Ten.
Purdue
fell
to 1-4-1 and 1-2 in
rally Saturday to beat Purdue
Fred
Akers
'
first
season as
20-17 in a Big Ten game.
coach.
The Buckeyes struggled offen sively throuF:houl the seco nd · Purdue' s Doug Downing threw
half, bullate in 'the final quar ter , louchdown passes of 10 and 30
yards to Calvin Williams in the
Tom Tupa completed a 30-yard
pass 10 running back Vince second half andthe"'BollermakWorkman to· the Purdue .16-ya rd ers tied Ohio Slate at 17-17 with
Une. Fourplliys later, the kick by 13:09 to pla y .
Downing suffered an injured
Frantz barely clea red Ihe crossright
ankle late In the game and
bar to give Ohio Stale the
was
replaced b y _ Shawn
go-ahead score.
McCarthy,
who Jos t 3 yards in
Purdue fres hman cornerback
four
plays
on Purdue's final
Sieve Jackson was beaten on
possession.
Tupa' s pass to Workm an and

Williams caught the 30•yard
TD pass down the rlghl sideline
with 13:0~ Ia play . Anthony
Hardy sel up the score with a
43-yard return of a 63-yard Tupa
punt .
Downing threw a 10-ya rd
louchdown pass to Williams wilh
one minute remaining in the
third period , closing a sevenpl ay, 74 -yard drive to pull Purdu e
wilhin 17-10.
·. bowning completed 6 of 7for 72
yards on Purdue's first drive of
Ihe second half, which ended with
a John Briggs field goal that cu t
Ihe .deficit · to 17-3 with 6:33
remaining In the third per iod .
Purdue scored all ils po int s
within a span of 8:22 .

Miami edges OU; Falcons,
;Kent State ·post MA·c wins

LSU a 21-~ lead. LSU seemed to
this season, tied the score 7-7
ATLANTA ·(UP!)
Jeff
be stopped on t.hlrd down at the
Burger capped a 91 -yard dri;:e early in the third quarle r when
Wildca t 6, but Ken tucky . wa s
with a 4-yard touchdown pass to Strom threw a 9-yard louchdown
flagged for pass interference to
Lawyer Tillman with 24 seconds pass to Richard Hills after Ivery
give the Tigers fir ~ I down at the
left Saturday and Aundray Bruce Lee recovered an Auburn fumble
play.
2. On the next play, Williams
on
the
previous
scored on an interception on the
Georgia
Tech
took
the
lead
five
burst up Ihe middle for the score.
final play to give No. 4 Auburn a
minutes
later
on
a
30-yard
field
The Tigers, 6-0-1 overall and 3-0
20-10 victory over Georgia Tech.
goal
by
Thomas
Palmer·
followin
the SEC, also added a
The Tigers, 5-0-1 , were down
ing
a
drive
started
with
a
fumble
touchdown
in the lhird quarter
10-7 and backed up at their own
recovery
by
Sean
Smith.
when
backup
tailback Eddie
9-yard line with 4:01 to play . But
·
TheclosesttheTigersgottothe
Fuller
burst
over
right end and
Burger, who completed 30 of 46
the
first
half
sprinted
4!i
yards
for
the score.
Georgia
Tech
goal
in
passes for 265 yards, hi I 10 of 17
occurred
in
the
closing
seconds
David
Browndyke
added
field
for 96 yards during the go-ahead
when
Bruce
Intercepted
a
Strom
goals
of
47
and
27
yards
in
me
drive , finding Tillman in the
pass
at
lhe
Auburn
43
and
fou
r
th
qua
rter
to
round
out
the
right corner of the end zone for
returned to the Yellow Jacket s
scoring for LSU. II
·
the winning score.
, Kentucky, ~-2 and 1-1, · wa s
Georgia Tech, which scored all 25.
Four
plays
la
ter,
with
I
he
limited to field goals of 45, 29 and
of its points in a five-minute span
Tigers
backed
up
lo
the
Georgia
41
yards by Joey Worley.
of the third quarter, wa s lrying to
Tech
34,
Win
Lyle
hit
the
right
Kentucky
moved 1he ball well
battle back when Bruce, a
·while
attempting
a
51most
·of
the
game,
but could not
upright
lineoacker who had . three intercrack
the
LSU
goal
lin e. The
yard
field
goaL
ceptions and a fumble recovery
The
Tigers
had
two
scoring
Wlldca
ts
twice
failed
to
convert
in the game, picked off a lipped
opportunities
before
their
winon
fou
rl
h-down
tries
In
the
final
pass and raced unimpeded into
n!ng
drive,
but
Lyle,
trying
to
tie
period
and
had
three
passes
the end zone a s time expl"red.
Georgia Tech, 2-4, turned a the score, missed a 32-yard . inte rcepted In the final period.
The Tigers scored on their
pair of third-quarter fumble field-goal all em pi with 1:42 left ..
in
the
third
qu,ilrter
and
a
opening
possess ion, a nine-play,
recoveries into scores, then ap42-yarder
with
6:58
to
play.
.69-ya
rd
march engineered by
peared to be withstanding
quarteback Tommy Hod son. WilBurger's air raid untillhose final
LSU 34 Kentucky 9
liams got the touchdown from 12
four minutes.
BATON ROUGE, La . !UPI I yards.
Auburn got the only points in a
Kentucky answered with Worfirst -half defensive d;Jel when Harvey Williams rushed for two
louchdowns
and
No.
5
Loui
s
iana
ley's
fi-rst field goal , from 45
Kurt Crain recovered a fumble in
Stale
limited
Kentucky
to
three
yar
ds.
Bul LSU answered with its
the Georgia Tech end zone wi th
first
-half
field
goals
Saturday
en
second
touchdown after Ken3:19 left In the second quarter
34-9
Southeastern
route
to
a
tucky
tailback
Mark Higgs
alter Yellow Jackets quarterConference
viclory.
fumbled at the Wildcat s 2 and
back Rick Strom was sacked for
Williams' second sco re, a 2LSU's Ron Sancho recovered at
a 13-yard loss.
the 4.
The Yellow Jacket s. who hav e ya rd run to culminat e a 58-yard
not beaten a Division 1-A team drive in lhe third quarte r, gave

Toledo's Allen Smiley was the
OXFORD , Ohio (UP II - Gary . 20-yard er .
ga me's leading rusher with 100
Gussman kicked a n 18-yard fi eld
yar ds on 1:1 a tte mpt s.
Falcons 20 Rockets 6
goal with 4:55 left Salurday to
BOWLING "GREEN, Ohio
send Miam i tOhiol to a 10-9
Kent 27, WMU 13 )
1
UP
II - Ri ch Dackln passed for
Mid-American Conference vic·
KENT
, Ohio (UP!) - Eric
-.one touchdown and set up
tory over Ohio Universfty .
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) Wilkerson·
rushed for three touch Th e key pl ay of the winning another Saturday in leading
Demetrius
Brown followed a
downs
and
passed
for
another
to
drive was a 39-yard run by Bowling Green to a 20-6 Mid- lead Ken t Stat e to a 27- 13 victory
ception
performance
seve
n-inler
freshman tailback Mondo Cos- American Conference triumph
last
week
by
packin
g three
over Wes tern Michi gan in a
tello on second-anfi-7 from the over Toledo.
touchdown
pas
ses
Into
the
second
Mid-America n Conference game
The Falcons,' 3-4 overa ll and 3-l
' Ohio . 44-yard line. Ohio ha d a
quarter Saturday and leading
Saturday.
chance fo r a v ictory, but Mike In the MAC , brok e a 6-6 tie with
Mlchlgan l)ci a 37-10 Big Ten
Th
e
win
evened
Kent
's
MAC
7:40 left in the game on a 1-yard
Fultz mi ssed a 52-ya rd field-goal
victory over Iowa.
record
at
2-2
and
improved
the
run by Shawn Danie ls. The score
a I tempt with 10 seconds left.
The third -yea r sophom ore
Golden
Flashes'
overall
record
to
capped an 80-yard drive in six
The only touchdown was
quarterback
, who suffered a Big
4-2.
Wes
tern
Michigan
dropped
to
plays , keyed by a 42-yard com·
scored by Ml ami'·s John Stofa, on
Ten
-record
for
inlerceptlons In ·
2-2
in
the
MAC
and
4-2
over
all
.
plet ion from Dackln to Ron
a 49-yard ~ass from Mike Bates.
las
t
week!s
17-llloss
to Mi chigan
Western
Michigan
opened
the
Heard to the Rockets )-yard line.
Ohio, J-5 overa ll and 0-3 In the
State,
threw
scoring
passes of 35
scorin
g
in
the
first
quarter
on
a
Dackin's 37-yard touchdown
MAC , produced the only points of
yards
to
John
Kolesar,
and 12 and
pass to Heard with 1:46 10 play· ! -yard run by Rober t Davis . .
lhe -nrs l half on a 37-yard field
50
yards
to
Greg
McMurtry.
He
Kent State tied the score in the
goal by Fultz midway throug h gave th e F a lcon s a 20-6 second per iod when Wilkerson
also
scored
Michigan's
.
first
advantage.
the first qu art er.
touchdown on a 1-yard sneak In
Toledo' s Bruce Nichols kicked • fi red a 10-yard scoring pass to
· After an exchange of punt!!- tO .
the
first quart er.
quart
erback
Tim
Phillips.
start the third quarter, Miam i, " ·a 37-yard fie ld goal alter Bowling
Brow'lt
completed 11 of 13
Wilkerson,
who
had
134
yard
s
Green fumbled on the opening
4 -~ and 4-1, put togelher a
passes
in
the firs t half and
26
carries,
gave
Kent
a
14-7
on
five-play, 64-yard touchdowq · · kickoff and the Rockets' Rick
14
of 19 lor 190 yards
finished
early
in
the
tt\lrd
quarter
lead
Harrah recovered at Ihe Falcons
drive to lake a 7-3 lead . Bates's
against
an
Iowa
defense that was
with
a
28-yard
run
.
After
Western
10.
scoring pass to Stoia, which
leading
the
nation
In pass defense
Michigan
cut
the
lead
to
14-10
on
a
Nichols gave Toledo, 2-J and
came with 4:08lelt In the third
·
(99.3
yards
per
game), The
39-yard
fi
eld
goal
by
John
Creek,
2-2, a 6-0 lead with a 20-yard fi eld
period, was on a th ird-and-10
Hawkeyes
had
yielded
only two
Wilkerson scooted 27 yards for
goal early In the second quar ter.
play
followin g
t wo
~asslng
touchdowns
In
six
games
his third score to glve.Kent a 20-10
The Falconst got 25- and 42-yard
lncompletlons.
coming ln .
lead .
field goals from Jason Zeller In
Ohio closed to 7-6 when Fultz
Brown's 50-yard pass to
Creek
added
a
45-y,.rd
field
the second period. ,
Kicked a 37-yard field goal with 10
McMurtry came on the final play
goal at the end . of the third
Da ckln completed· 18 o! 33
seconds lefl in the third quarter. ·
of
the first hall after Michigan
quarter
,
but
Wilkerson
gave
passes for 234 yar,ds. Daniels
The Bobcats took a 9-7lead when
!'~covered
an onsldc kickoff wllh
Kcnl
It
s
final
margin
with
a
ru shed for 77 yar ds on 23 ca,rrles . .
Fultz hit his third field goa l, a
two seconds. Ia pl ay. Jamie
13-ya rd r un In the fourth period.

Michigan humbles Iowa

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play. The Bucks led 2D-11 with 3:10 left to play.
Above, OSU QB Tom Tupa (19) gets a !Ill from
teammates alter second OSU touchdown. I UPl)

Frantz kicks 50-yard field
goal · t o give Bucks 20-17 WID

,

,, Sears, Roebuck and Co., 1987

.D.

CLEMSON , S.C. (U P!) Tracy Johnson scored on a 4-yard
run with 6:46 to play Saturday to
snap a tie and give No. 6 Clemson
a 17-10Atlantic Coast Conference
victory over Duke.
Clemson, 6-0 overall and 3-0 In
the ACC, marched 97 yards lor
the winning touchdown. The Blue 1
Devfls, 3·3 and 0·2, were a
three-touchdown underdog .
After Johnson' s touchdown ,
Duke had its last chance ended
when Donnell Woolford intercepted an Anthony D!lweg pass
at midfield .
Dave Demore recovered a
Clemson fumble at midfield to
set up a 47-yard Doug Peterson
field goal, giving Duke a 3-0 lead .
The Clemson defense later broke
up a 41 -yard fieldOgoal attempt
by Peterson after a bad snap.
Clemson answered midway
through the second quarter on a
43-yard field goal by David
Treadwell.
Clemson took the lead 10-3 on a
5-yard touchdown pass from
Rodney Williams to James Coley
with 18 seconds left in the first
half. Williams connected with
Coley on a 32-yard pass earlier in
the drive, which began when ·
James Earle blocked a Peterson
field-goal attempt at the Clemson
19.

'

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MARK 0. BRO-WN,

Gators _rout Temple, 34 ·- 3

f u~s Wed Thur

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th e second half and backup
quarterba ck Charles Thompson
went 32 yards for a nother touchdown as the Sooners led 44-10.
wl!h 8:29 left in the third period.
Mitchel sco red in the · fourth
period whe n he took a pitch
around left end and rambled 82
yards. Rotnel Anderson com,
pleted the rout With a 1-yard dive
with five minutes to go for the
Sooners' eighth touc hdown .

Cle~son edges l)uke, 17-10;

332 Second Ave.
Gattlpolit, Ohio

nOIJRS

Mon . '

Gary Swim lo .John William s on
and add ed a 1-yard scoring run
the next play from scrimmage to
early In the second period fo r a
cut the lead to 28-10. It was the
21-3 lead.
first touc hdown the Sooners have
Mark Porter kicked a 22-yard
allowed since the first week oft he
field goal for Kansas State's first
points. Oklahoma's Lydell Carr
season.
Oklahoma added an R.D. La -.
added a 2-yard scorin g run to put -i
shar
31-yard field goal with 26
the Sooners ahead 28-3 with 7: 19
seconds remaining in th e half to
to go In the half.
Kansas State struck back with , go up 31-10. .
Patrick Collins raced 20 yards
a n 81-yard scoring pass from
for a touchdown seven plays into

Auburn, LSU roll over foes·

446-2770

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

presence of Holieway. He finIshed wi th 149 yards on the
ground.
Holieway, playing · appHlXimately hall the game, gainea 34
yards on his first three plays but
the first points of the game were
scored by Anthony Stafford on a
20-yard run, Holleway threw 28
yards to Car l Cabblness lor
Oklahoma's second tou chdown

HASKINS· TANNER

Trust Sears to get
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CHESH TR!';- Chcs hirP-K)·ger
Eleme ntary PTO is sponsoring a
craft sa le on Sa turd ay. Dec . 5. a~
the sc hool. For more In format ion
or to reserve a tab le. call.
367-0211 or :!67-0193. All resC'r\'alions mu st be made by Nov. 16.

beat Kansas State for the 171h
· MANHATTAN , Kan. (U P!) Quarterback Jamelle Holleway consecutive time. Th e Wildcats'
•and halfback Eric Mitchel each losing streak was stretc hed to 11,
Including siX games this season.
rushed for more· than 100 yards
Kansas
State fell to 0-3 In the Big
Saturday and top-rated Okla•
homa amassed 518 yard s on the Eight.
Holleway rushed for 102 yards ,
ground en route to a 59-10 'Big
running for one touchdown an&lt;;!
Eight thrashing of Kansas State.
passlng
for another. Mitchel wa s
· Eight different players scored
a
quarterback
but switched to
touchdowns for the Sooners, 6-0 ·
overall and 2-0 in the league, who running back because of the

'

Groom's tux FREE with 6 or more . '·,

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"Great Rooms are Extra" I
I

MASON, W.Va . -The Mason
Fire Depar tmen t Ladies Auxil
ia rv wil l be s ponsor ing a so up
sal~ and bazaar on Sa tu rday,.
Nov . H . 9 a .m. to 6 p.m .. at the
fire depart ment. Any person or
group wishing lo ren t a tabl e for
rhelr crafls or goods -may do so
for $5 per table. For m ore
· informa l ion ~all 773-5437 or 77:!5414.

October 18, 1987

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

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Bazaar

Section
•
Oklahoma totals 518 yards m 59-10 victory

·Let Uc'H~Ip Yoq 1
Plan Your Wedding
.,

SENIOR CITIZENS
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Senior Clflzens Center.
Mulberry'Helghts, Pomeroy, has
the following activities scheduled for the week of October
19-23:
Monday - Blood Pressure
Clinic 9:30-11: 30. Round and
squ are dance 1-3 Exercise Class
3:30
Tuesday - Chorus _11, Bridge
1-3, the annual meeting of the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
Inc. , will be held at I wilh election
of officers
and board
· members
.
I
.
for 1988. This meeting is open to
all persons holding memberships, President James Diehl
will be pres iding.
Wednesday - Knitting Circle
10-12, Bingo 11 , Bowling 1:30,
Blookmobile 1: 30·5
Thursday - Ceramics 10-12,
Craft Class 10-12 , a Chrlslmas
tre e made from stryofoam

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menu for Ihe week is:
Monday - Cheeseburger, tomato soup, - toss~d sa lad ,
applecrlsp
Tuesday - Cook's choice
Wednesday - Spanish rice,
buttered corn , three bean sa lad,
gelatin and fruil
Thursday - Chili, peanutbutter sandwich, pear halves , cake
Friday- Roast beef sandwich,
mashed pota toes and grav}.
green beans, apricots "
Chdlce of beverage available
with meal.

Sports

FOR
A FREE
ESTIMATE

-------------SAVE THIS COUPOI

Take a s lro llthrough Ihe Court
Sl. mi ni par ks in Pomeroy. The.
flowers in both parks arc fa nt asRodney knows so many people
tic making for really a tt ractive
and he thoroughly enjoys visit in g accents on the st rPcl. 1 declarP,
with friends of a ll ages.
they' re almost pre lty enough to
Mrs. J ohnson's three da ugh- . help you keep smiling.

GALLIPOLIS- The Job Bank
located a t lhe Senior Cilizen's
Cenler is in great . need of
applicants 50 years of age or
older.
The Job Bank invites both the
applicant a nd the employer to
discuss a ny of their e mploym ent
. problem s · wilh J ob Counselors.
Interviews are arranged at your
convenience and the service is
free.

October 18, 1987

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

Page-B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

~::~ (800) 582-1399
•

Morris scored the Wo lverines'
last touchdown on a 3-yard run In
the fin al minut e of the game.
Michigan, the defending Big
Ten champ. improve&lt;l to 4-2
overall and 2-1 In the league.
lowa fe ll to 4-3 and J-2.

Iowa ' s Chu ck Hartlie b .\•a s l7
of 43 lor 361 yard s with one
tDuchdown, a 6-yard throw to
Ch ris Clark, and set up a 46-vard
field goal by_Rob Houghllin :
Brown comp leted three thirddown passes 'for first downs on
Michigan's first possess ion .

Saturday's scores
Ohio College Football Scores '
By United Press International
Ohio State 20. Purdue 17
Ken I State 27, Weste rn Mi chigan 13
Bowling-Green 20, Toledo 6
(vtrami 10, Ohio Universit y 9
West Virginia 45, Cincinnati 17
Delaware State 52, Akron 26
Baldwin-Walla ce 38, Heidelberg 20
Wittenberg 27, Capit al 3
Marietta 9, Otlerbein 3
Waynesburg (Pa .) 1~ . Muskingum 6
Allegheny 30. Case Reserve '16
Denison 21, Wooster 20
Ohio Wesleya n 24, Kenyon 21
Dayton 24 , Mercyhu rst (Pail4
Hanover (lnd ) 44, Deiiance 20
Hira m 26, John Carroll 3

.......

.. ..

�Page-C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

October 18, 1987

Pomeroy Middi!Jport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W . lla.

Bengals, _Browns. meet 34th time

NEW ATHLETIC FACILITY- Hannan Trace HighSchool has a
new athletic facility that was completed earlier this fall. The new
building houses a large weight room, dressing rooms, storage and
equipment rooms, oUices for coac hes and outside rest rooms.

scores

fory· R~'A:.on 29. \-' aniiJl' 12
C'!mhol'l[1n :!"/ , Loudonville 11
(~!&gt;ill nl' 38. Gallon Northmor 12
D&gt;tllun 20,

W~Q&gt;nt•dale

DHnhury l..akeslde

it

011)' Nor1hrldJ;e S, lUI.)· Oaliwood 3 .1
011)' " ayn1~ 33. F'alrtwlrn ~
Dl'll'hu~ ·ll:!ffl'rl'on ~. Lima Pcrr)' 0
Della II, Montpt'lif'r 0
DO~'I'r 3K, Can lon Suuth 6
Dr.-!!den Tri-Val U. (rook.-; villi· 7
DuiJIJn U, M.u ,)·svllll• Li •

6

1\~h ('rJl .. tvit-w 0

Dunbar 211. Day BPimonl :1
l)ll)' ·lelfer!Hin H, WaHrly U
D~y

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
34th edltion ol the Cleveland
Browns -Cincinnati Bengals rl·
valry figures to be one of the
strangest matchups in the 18·
year history of the "Battle of
Ohio. "
It's difficult to pick a favorlte
in Sunday's game at Cincinnati
because, although the players·
strike Is over, both the Browns
and Bengals squads will s till ~e
dominated by replacement
players.
Most regular players ended
their strike too late to be Included
on Sunday's rosters, leaving the
Browns with nine regulars avail·
able and the Bengals -w!!h onl~
two. But just because the Brown~
have a 9-2 edge In regulars
doesn't necessarily make Cleve·
land a favorite. Two weeks ago,
the St. Louis Cardinals fielded a
dozen regular players to the
Washinglon Redskins' none and
the Cardinals lost.
With the replacements
Browns' coach Marty Scholten:
helmer says the worst player on
the field is more critical than the
best player.

" You function at the lever of
the player who Is least familiar
with what you're doing, rather
than the one who has the most
experience and understanding·."
says Schotl!inhelmer.
Still, the Browns will enjoy an
edge In experience Sunday, with
quarterback Gary Danielson.
tight end Ozzie Newsome and
wide receiver Brian Brennan
among the nine regulars availa ble. Schottenhelmer says he
expects Danielson to start and
anticipates "ample playing
lime" for the others. Cincinnati's
only two regulars are linebacker
Reggie Williams and defensive
end Eddie Edwards.
"Our (replacement) players

Says Wyche, "Our guys who
haven't had the experience of a
Cleveland-Cincinnati game are
wrapped up in the ex~ltement of
this week. This team has a lot of
civic pride all of a sudden.
"They're still the Browns.
They're In Browns uniforms .
They have the same coaching
stall. We know their style, we
just don't know the personalities
of their players."

FALL SPECIAL

Gets first TD
DELAWARE - Ohio Wesleyan freshman running back
Kirk Jackson scored his first
touchdown as a Bishop on a
·two-yard run in the first quarter
to Ially the only points his
teammates picked up In a 44-6
loss to Allegheny on October 10.

Eastern nips Hannan Trace
14-7 in overtime tilt Friday

nat! Bengals players. Anytime
ihat takes place, It's always a
pretty good football game."

are looking forward to the
challenge of going up again st
some of the llrowns' veterans,"
says Cincinnati coach Sam
Wyche.
With most of-Sunday's players
only three-week veterans playing In what ligures to be their
final NFL game, does that mean
the traditiona l ly ' heated
Clevetand-Cincinna1i rivalry wjll
be out the window?
·
" I don't think so.' ' says Schottenheimer. "Anyway you look at
it, you're talking about Cleveland
Browns players p1aying Cincin·

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EAGLE GOES DOWN - An Eagle player
: comes to a rest with the ball safely in his hands as
:; Wildcats Mark Jenkins (59) and Grady John~qn

(7) make sure he stays . there in Friday night's
overtime match at Eastern. The Eagles beat the
Wildcats 14-7. (Times-Sentinel photo)

:. North Gallia edges SW for
:third grid victory · of season
MODEL330

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By GEOFF OSBORNE
Tlmc'!l·Sentinel Staff
PATRIOT- There was a time
early. in Friday night's cont est
between the North Gallla Pirates
and the Southwestern Highland, ers when it appeared as if the two
tea m s would keep the Christmastree combination of Vinton and
Patriot faithful , dressed in green
and red, at the edge of their scats
from start to finish.
,
When all was said and done, the
, Pirates beat the Highlanders
. much more handily than the 17-12
verd ict indicated. Severa l electrifying plays in the seco nd
quarter which' set up two touchdowns. one each via the pass and
the rush, seemed (o take some of
• the fight out of the Highlanders .
In the beginning, there was
• plenty of fight on both sides.
' North Gallia won the toss and
began the game with a 40-ya rd
kickoff return by junior Felipe
Beach. His return gave the
• Pirates the ball c-. the Highla nder 45-yard line. The initial
·.: drive was characterized by a run
• play on fou r th·and-12 by senior
• fullback David Roush, which
-. took the Bucs from the Southw estern 40 to the Highlander 14.
The dr ive ended with a 27-yard
" field goa l by junior Don Mays.
which put the Vinton eleven
.- ahead 3-0. with 9:03 left in the
first period.
The Highlanders took the kickoff with 8: 25 left in the first
quarter and began their first

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40-yard line. The· Highla nders
used a mix of passing and
running by quarterback· Josh
Ruff to gel to the Pirale 14-yard
line before Ruff's fourth -and-six
e nd-zone pass to junior Mike
Walker fell s hort. The Pirates
took over on downs at their own
l4-yard line.
In s pit e of moments when the
Highland-er deCense · stuff&lt;'d
Roush, D.L. -Glassburn, _J::ravid
Russell. Keith Vanover; David
Belville. Jason Marcum. to name
a few on ·the. Pirates offensive
front. smothered the Southwest ·
ern defensive front and made
enough room for Roush to pick up
a total of 155 yards for the night.
The Highlanders took the ball
at their own 36-yard line with two
minutes left in act one. They held
th e ball as the seco nd quarter

'·

Beach was back in

busine~s

again. He got his hand s on the
ball on his own 15-yard line a nd
picked up his blockers as he
darted past the r!'dshirts t o the
HighlandN 45-yard line.
After a two-yard run by Roush.
Pirate junior quarterback Greg
Glassburn drop[lcd back and
threw a 19-yard pass to Beach,
who took the ball to the Highlander 24-yard line. That set up
an 18-yard run by Roush, who
from the Highlander. six-yard
line ra n it in for the touchdown
with R: 04 left in the half. Mays·
extra-point kick was good, put ting the Pirates back on top 10-6.
With 7:01 left in the half, the
Pirates recovered a Southwestern fumbl e ln. a crowd at the
Highlander 48: That s tarted the
ser ies that gave the Bucs their
winning points. '

The Pirates seemed to have
control of the game a t this point,
though on several occasio ns
Haislop and a few eit her Hi ghlanders put some solid tack les on
Pirate ballcarriers . From time
to time, Glassburn was chased
out of the pocket, such as on one
occasion when with 4:04 left in
the half Glassburn was chased by
Highlander line.backer Tim Wisniewski. Wisniew~ki, ...;4 sen ior,
shot through a wide hole that was
missing a Pirate lineman and
threw Glassburn for an 11-yard
loss, pullin g the Bucs at the

Highlander 39-yard line. This set.
the stage for what turned out to
be the winning touchdown.
With 3:26 remaining in the half,
Glassburn and his teammates
faced thlrd-and-29. Glassburn
sprinted to his right, and after
seeing several redshlrts In _his
face, he fired a pass to Kevin
Smith, who was apporaching the
goal line. Smith left his feet and
dove for the ball, which almost
got away from him . Smith's
hands and the ball became one.
as the Pirates went up 16-6 on the
play. Mays' extra-point kick put
North Gallia's ahead 17-6 at the
half.
The third quarter was quiet, as
both teams drove up and down
the field without looking so much
as to thceaten to score. The
fourth quarter saw the Highland·
ers try to get back into the game
with the same formula they have
used all year - senior fullback
Joe Bryant. Joe Bryant. who
finished the game with 77 yards
on 22 carries, was more lnstru·
mental in the seconirhalf, as the
game settled down. However, the
Highlanders did not give up
mixing the run with the pass. as
they had done earlier in the
game.
Time was now the Highlanders
big@;est enemy, but with 2:08 left
in the contest, Ruff, . from the
Pirate 24, found senior wingback
Ch ris Bryant at the Bucs' sixyard line. Bryotnt @;Ot beyond a
Pirate defender and leaped back·
wards to make the catch.
In spite of an oflsldes penalty
against the Highlanders that put
Southwestern back to the PI·
rates' 10-yard line from the
Pirate five-yard line. Ruff found
Glen Arrowood In the end zone
with 1:37 remaining. That cut the
Pirate lead to 17-12. On the
two-point conv&lt;'rsion attempt.
Ruff took the ball and tried to run
a sweep to the left. The Bucs'
Mike Lemley gra bbed Ruffs
jersey and put him down at the
three-yard line, denying the
Continued on C-4

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TRYING TO GET AWAY- North Gallia's: Steve George (20)
tries to get past Southwestern defender Brad Hively liS he turns the
corner to pick up some of the Pirates' 131 yards rushing in·Friday
night's conteslln Patriot. Pirate quarterback Greg Glassburn is In
the background watching the ~clion. Tlw Pirat• ·~ won 17·12.
(Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

\

"

scrimmage.
Horner caught 5 passes for· 83
Continued on C-4

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

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yard pass in the flat from Gr;ady
Johnson to put his club on the
board. tying the score on a boot by
Shad Johnson, 7· 7 with 3:30 left.
That TDwas set upbya50yard
" Flea Flicker" reverse pass
from Chris Petro to QB Grady
Johnson .
In the waning minutes EHS
initiated a comeback drive, but
fumbled away the ball to HTWith
:50 left. HT went deep for the win
from their own 40 yard line, but
both times the play was broken
up,once on a great play by Tony
Hendrix.
On third and long Griffin .
grabbed an interceptlon,but it
was c~lled back and the momentum thrust back to fiT on a pass
interference call. A sack by Steve
Welch and Allen Tripp put HT
back in the whole, then after a two
yard gain by Cremeens Tripp
wrestled QB Johnson to the
ground for a 17 yard loss to put
the game in overtime.
EHS won the toss and Johnson
was sunk dead in his tracks . Kyle
Davis then posted a leaping lsi
down grab at the two, but It was
. called back on an illegal block
below the waist, setting up the
dramatic 37 yarder to Horner.
Weber nailed another EP kick for
a 14-7 EHS lead.
HT retaliated when on fourth
down it pushed toward the
endzone on a 19 yard completion
to Rankin.Two Incomplete
passes, an offensive pass Interference, and a Tripp sack pushed
HT behind the 30 with one down
left. Johnson had the ball
knocked loose where it went
forward 10 yards to 285 J?OUnd
Ross McPherson, who was
downed to end the game.
Eastern's Jeff Johnson rushed
15 times for 50 yards, Davis 6-19,
Doug Miller 8-30, and Griffin 6-8.
Mark Wells was 10·11, and Grady
Johnson, showing much poise
and talent a!-· QB, despite _the
sacks was 9··19. The agile bl!Ck
netted nearly 60 yards on the
ground,bul was caught numerous times deep behind the llne·of

Lll ESI CROP IS IN.

r:

•'.,.
I
••

•

and Derek Yonker were among
By SCOTT WOLFE
Tlmes-Sentlnel Staff
the down linemen-linebackers
that kept the potent HT assault
EAST MEIGS -II coach Arch
Rose could put his "secret" in a
Intact.
Mark Griffin led the EHS
bottle and sell it he'd make a
fortune, but for now he'll be
"crunch bunch" with 11 tackles
satisfied with winning football
both assisted and unassisted,
Johnson and big Allen Tripp had
games as for the second time in
two weeks the winning combo of
10 apiece, Weber 9, Cleland and
Mark Griffin-to-Steve Horner
Jeremy Barber 8, Maxson 8, and
sealed a dramatic 14-7 overtime
Davis 7.
homecoming victory for the
The closest thing to a score i.n
the seco nd frame came just right
Eagles over Hannan Trace.
On Oct. 9, that duo teamed up to
before halftime when Eastern
win the game with under 20
took over from the HT 42 alter an
ele\ en yard HT punt. After a five
seconds 1~11. but this week went
one step further with no tlme on
yard running gain and incomthe clock In overtime, capping a
plete pass. Griffin threaded the
great team effort by the Eaglesneedle to Horner on the six yard
,who danced to victory before ·a
line as time ran out. Earlier
capacity homecoming crowd
Eastern moved to within the
here Friday evening.
twenty,but two successive 15yard penalties took th e hosts out
Eastern now owns a winning
4-3 record and 3·2 league slate·
of position.
,while HT Is now 5-3 and 3·2 in the
The score stood 7-0 at the half.
SVAC .
.
During a super halftime show
Initially , Eastern sputtered
and homecoming ceremony con·
dueled by the EHS student
offensively, but put the first
council, senior candidate Larissa
points . on the board as Mark
Griffin gunned an eight yard' Long, es&lt;;prted by Chad Cook was
touCI1down pass to senior ful·
crowned as the 1987 EHS home·
!back Kyle Davis. Under pressu~omlng queen. Long is the
re, the sure handed. Davis came
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Long, Route 3, Pomeroy.
down with the ball and the score
as Mike Weber drilled the extra · Besides a hard-nose battle in
point kick, the· score 7-0.
·
the trenches by .b oth clubs, the
momentum was swayed only by
The Hannan Trace offense
the many penalties that plagued
limped through the entire evening as Eastern's defense put
either club during different portions of the contest .HT sustained
forth a super effort to contain the
quick Wildcat backs.Eastern li - an eight play drive fnthe third
frame,but saw that opportunity
mited the 'Cats to virtuallY no
running game, as EHS ham - fizzle with a six yard loss lhr own
mered the middle and had great · by Charles Cleland ..
Having another good ground
outside pursuit to contain the
game,
Jeff Johnson sparked a
ends. HT netted just one total
yard in the first half. Many
nine play drive with runs of 15
and 31 yards. but EHS saw that
hard-earned gainers by Todd
too slip by the wayside with good
Saunders. Brad Cremeens, and
Grady Johnson were either nullidefensive play by Hannan Trace.
HT began a 13 yard drive in the
fied by penalties or negated by an
3rd frame, that convluded with a
outburst of defensive sacks.
fumble recovered by Ron MaxII any one thing proved to be a
son on the forty yard llne.EHS
key or major factor in the game,
much in control and time on·their
Its was E;astern's superior defen·
side saw their 'c hances fizzle in
slve effort. The "Green Wave"
line swarmed its prey and "gang lour downs .HT took over and
tackled" Its foe most every play . · quickly went to work,as Coach
Larry Cremeens used every play
Mark Griffin, Mike Weber , Ron
In
the book to get his team on top.
Maxson, Kyle Davis, Allen TrippHT'
s Scott Rankin hauled in a 5
,Charles Cleland, Jeff Johnson,

River Front Honda

'

;.'

.

began, until o·n fourth-and-goal,
sophomore running back Josh
Haislop was stopped by the
Pirate defense at the Pirate
one-yard line with 9:32 left in the
half. However. on the next play,
t11e Pirates, slatting a t their ow n
one-yard line, fumbled . thE' ball.
Highlander defensive back D.J.
Harden scooped up the ball and
crossed the goal line forSouthw·
estern , putting the home team
ahead 6-3. "That play ct'~ated an
anxious moment !or us, " said
North Gallia head coach Dave
Angles.
The Pirates were fuming and
snarling at eac h other after
Harden's touchdown. Apparently It did some good. because
on the extra-point kick attempt,
t-he kick was blocked.
The Har den fumble r&lt;'covery
and touchdown seemed to be
what the Pirates needed. be·
cause on the following kickoff,

•

• Eflortleu cleaning,
transmluion drives
whrel&amp; back 5 lorlh over Cilrpetl

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-3

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

.October 18, 1987 .

GUN RACKS
GUN SCABBARDS
RACKS-Front &amp; Rear
BUMPERS
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Winter Riding Suits

l11 rtJl&amp;t.el'Yd Hond&amp; tn.d~mtrk.

LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS NOW ~DETAILS IN STORE •

•

�.,
1 .

'
Page-C-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport Gallipolis. Ohio-Point

Plea~nt,

..

VV. Va.

Oak Hill, Kyger Creek· post SVAC foot_ball
WILLOW WOOD - The Oaks
seemed to be letting some oft heir
less fortunate brethren in the
SV AC take bigger and ' bigger
chunks of bark each week.
The Oaks beat Symmes Valley
38-21. and while the victory Is no
surprise, the facl that each team
since t·he Oaks' 35·11 win over
Kyger Creek on October 2 has
·~cored more points than the other
could be cause to wonder abou.t
the Oaks' competitiveness.
Southern scored14 in their Joss 10
the Oaks on October 9.
The Vikings were ahead 13-0 In
the first quarter, on the strength
of two touchdown runs by senior
quaterback Dallas Tibbs in that
quarter. He ended the night with
a total of three lrips to the end

zone.
Tibbs ' first touchdown, a 74·
yard run, came with 10:47 in the
first quarter. His successive
extra-point kick was good. His
second came on a seven-ya rd run
with 5:24 left in the first period.
His following kick failed.
The sap started to run in the
second quarter, as ·I he Oaks' Bob

Ward scored the first of his five
touchdowns from two ya rds out
with 10:06 to go in the half. The
following kick was no good. Ward
returned about five minutes
later, crosslngthe goal line from
one yard away. Mark Lyle ran in
the two-point conversion. Ward
scored again, this time with four
minutes Jell in the half, from
three yards out. Lyle ran in the
following two-point conversion,
putting the Oaks ahead 22·13 at
halftime.
The Oaks added an insurance
touchdown in the lhlrd .quarter,
when Ward scored from four
yards but with at the 7:35 mjlrk.
Lyle scored the two-pointconversion after that touchdown.
However ,. the Vikings weren't
done, as Tibbs ret,urned a kick 85
yards for a touchdown with 7:21
left In the third quarter. Kenny
Daniels scored the following
two-point conversion run.
However. exciting as Tibbs'
scoring ret urn was , it was just
not enough, as the Oaks stayed in
charge long enough to win. Ward
made the last of his live trips to
the end zone with four minUtes

remaining in the game, when he
went across from 'three yards
out, finalizing the score at 38-21
wll_h Lyle's two-point conversion
run .

The Oaks, now 7·0 overall and
perfect after five conference
matches, can clinch the SVAC
crown with a win at North Gallia
next Friday. The clincher will
also require a Hannan Trace
loss. The Vikings, now 4-3 overall
and2-3 in the league, will play ai
Southwestern next Friday.
CHESHIRE - The Kyger
Creek Bobcats exploded for a 21·0
win over I he Southern Tornadoes
Friday night.
The win puts the Bobcats at 3-5
overall and 2·3 in the conference.
The verdict drops the Tornadoes
to 1-7 overall and gives them
their fifth straight league loss.
The Bobcats put their (irs!
points on the board at the 4:45
mark in the first quarter. Senior .
quarterback . Mike Bradbury
crossed the goal line at tlie end of
a seven.-yard

run.

Freshman

Joey Edwards added the extrapoint kick to put the 'Cats up 7-0.

The at tempt at the PAT failed
when a spectator on the Point
side of the field blew a whis tie
just as I he play was starting, the
Huntington kicker assumed the
play was over for some reason,
and did little more thari knock the
ball out of the hands of I he holder
and onto the ground.
The Big Blacks opened up their
scoring on a drive tha1 started

with John Smith, 5' 8'' 170 pound
sophomore, returning the kickoff
to the 36-yard-llne. On the next
play, .David Faber, 6' 155 pound
senior, playing for Foglesong.
con nected with Casey Hill, 6' 185
pound junior. a! .t he 49-yard·line
for a firs I down .
Josef Clendenin, 5' 10" 140
pound junior, ran the ball down to
the 46-yard-line for second and
eight. Faber next connected with
John Beaver, 6' 171 pound senior,
at the 32-yard·line lor a first
down.

Billy Coltrill. 5' 11" 195 pound
junior, ran the . ball down to the
21-yard·line, setting up another
Faber to Beaver connection, this
one in the endzone to put Polnt on
the board half way through the
third quarter. Brett Leach added
the PAT to leave Point off by 20· 7.
Point ' put togeather several

drives late in the third quarter
and early. in the fourth quarter.
but all ended in penalties or
fumbles, none of which the Pony
Express was able to capitalize
on.
The next scoring oppertunily
for the Big Blacks came with: 51
remaining in the game, on a
drive that had started four plays
t earlier.
After the Huntington 's quarter·
back was sacked by James
Higginbotham, 5' 10" 215 pound
junior, and Dusty Carr. 5' 11"175
pound sophomore, caught a Hun·
... tington ball carrier behind ttie
lin e ol scrimmage. the Pony
Express punted on a fourth and
20 situation. Point ret urned the
ball Big Black 28-yard-line and
started first and 10.
Faber , never deviating from
the air, completed a pass to
David Supple, 5' 10" 120 pound
junior, at tlie44·yard·line: a pass
to Beaver at the 47-ya rd-line : a
pass agai n to Beaver at the
22-yard-line; a pass to Jeremy
Putney , 5' 7" 120 pound sopho·
more. al the 10-yard·line and
scored the touchdown on a pass to
Beaver in the endzone.
After missing the PAT, Point
Continu ed on C-5

Eastern nips HTHS..:ontinued from c 3
yards, Johnson 3·28, a nd Davis
· 3-37 for the winners , while
· Rankin was 2·21 and Johnson
1· 50.

.

Clela nd ,Tripp,a nd Steve
Welch were in on three sacks
each. while Maxson had one solo
, sack. Fumbles were recovered
by Tripp, Maxson, and Billy
: Wells.Brad Cremeens had fum ·
ble recovery ' for HT.
EHS rus hed for 107 yards and
. had 148 in the air for a 255 lotal;
.' HT had 23 net on the ground and
· 62 total in the air for 85 total.
Eastern had 9 first downs to HT

·North Gallia...
•continued from C-3
: Highlanders the 1wo points. .
The Highlanders had 15 f1rst
' downs: the Pirales picked up 12.
The Highlanders had 45 rusbools
· for 190 yards, and had e ight pass
• completions in 19 attempts. for
· 125 yards. Ruff threw a pa1r of
. interceptions. one in the second
quarter to Keith Eleam and the
other to Sieve George in the third
quarter. The Pirates' Glassburn
was 5 ofl3 for 82 yards, and threw
an interception to the Highland·
ers' Wisniewski.
The Pirales, now 3-4 overall
and 3·2 in the SVAC, will hostlhe
; Oaks next Friday. The Highland·
; ers, now 2·5 overall and 2-3 in the
league, will host Symmes Valley
Friday.

•

BANKRUPTCY
614-221-0888

5, while EHS had 14 penalties for
156 yards. HT had 15 pen allies for
170 yards for a total of 326.
Griffin completed ll -18 passes
for two TD's a nd one lntercepti·
on.HT was 6-12.
EHS had 4 punts for 2i yard
avg. and HT 5·1:i. 5.
Eastern hosts Kyger Creek
next week at home.

L. W. CENNAMO
AnORNEY-AT-LAW

3311 S. Hi!#! St., Columbus, OH.
LOCAL CONSULTATION in
Pomeroy 992-11417, in Gallio
County 24S-9S91.
In Pomerov, with ATTORNEY D.
MICHAEL MULLINS.

Announcing money-saving
news for State Farm drivers
50 and over.

Identified al press time. Ed·
wards' extra-point kick was
good.
'
Kyger Creek had . 13 firs I
downs, while Southern had live.
The Bobcats rushed for 185 yards
and passed for 114 yards on seven
completions in 1Q · attempts.
Bradbury was 6 of9 for 108 yards
for the night. The Tornadoes
rushed for 23 yards, while fresh·

man quarterback Richard
Deaver completed one pass out of
seven attempts for 17 yards.
Deaver threw two interceptions.
one to Vinson in the second
quarter, and the other to Brad·
bury in. the third quarter .
The Bobcats will play at
Eastern next Friday. The Tornadoes will play at Hannan Trace
next Friday.

I wouldn't sell a
that I wouldn't
let my wife drive
• • Now that you hnou; about the condition of our usrd cars, you probably want
to hear about thr prier.
.
\Veil, u:e have to be competitive or u:e wouldn't be in businr.'is, -'iimple or othPw.:tse.
And, as for selection, we've got plent,v of cars on our lot right now.
[I would /Jefair to say that our dealership is a good place to buy a used car.
lf it wasn't, we sur~ wouldn"t say it. ~~

1985 Celebrity, 4 dr., CL. ...... . ...... $7800
1986 Camara Z-28 .. : , . . . . . . . . . . . $13,000
1980 Chevy Conversion Van ........... SliiOO
1985 Pontiac Sunbird, 4 dr... ...... , .. $11110
1984 Dodge Diplomat, 4 dr............ 11•
1982 New Yorker, 4 dr. . ............. 11•
1986 Ford Tempo, 4 dr...............
1983 Buick Century Limited, 4 dr•...... 11•
1984Ford Escort L, 4 dr....... .. ..... $4400
1985 T-Bird, 2 dr.................... $1100

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1985 EaKle, 4 Wheel Drive, 4 dr. . ... .... $. . .
1982 Pontiac, 12000, 2 dr•............ $1111
1981 Dodge Aries, 4 dr.. ............. $1 . .
1984 Ford 4 Wheel Drive Pickup ..... : .. 11101
1985 Caprice Station Wagon .. ......... 1.111
1984 Cutlass Supreme, 2 dr. . ......... $1111
1982 Cutlass, 4 dr•......... .. ....... SliM
1983 Dodge 600, 4 dr... .. ~ : .. ....... SUIG
1983 Buick Rega14 dr. . . . . . . . . . . .
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MANY GOOO USEO CARS FOR UNDER $2000

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e

•

LOGAN - Down 7-0 with 7:23
remaining in the second period
and visiting Gallipolis driving for
what appeared to be another
touchdown, Logan 's all-purpose
athlete, Jose Medina, 180-pound ·
senior safety, picked off a firstdown GAHS aerial on Chieftain
36 and returned it to the Blue
Devils 41.
From that point on, it was all
: Logan rrlday night as · the
; Chieftains went on to hand
Gallipolis a 30·15 Southeastern
Ohio League setback.
The victory, sixth in seven
· starts overall for Coach Clarence
. Perry's lads, left LHS tied for
: first. place in the conference
standings with Athens with a
· perfect 3·0 mark.
Logan continued lo march
toward its first conference crown
in 10 years, It was the Chief!~ins
first win over Gallipolis since the
1983 campaign.
• Coac h Brent Saunders' Blue
' Devils dropped to 1·3 overall and
. 1-2 inside the SEOAL.
"We're disappointed, " Saund·
ers said following the GAHS loss.
but he was quick to point out,
"You must praise the scram·
_ bling efforts of Breining (LHS
quarterback Jimmer Breining)
and Medina. They are fine
· athletes."
Saund ers was referrin~ 10 at
least three Logan scoring plays
. in which GAHS defenders ap. pea red to have stopped I he
· Chieftains, but lhe elusive Brein' lng turned what most'would call
broken plays into louchdowns.
Saunders concluded, "We just
missed too many tackles
tonight."
Gallipolis took lhe opening
' kickoff and marched 56 yards to
; the L,HS six, bul cou ldn 't score.
Randy Amsbary missed a 23·
: yard field goal attempt (7:21).
Tim Neville picked off Breining's first pass of the night and

MARIETTA- Jackson's Todd
Bachtel carried the ball49times
for 236 yards and Marietta's
offense committed seven lurnov -

'ers Friday night, enabli ng the
:1ronmen to post a 24·15 .SEOAL
. victory, ending a Three-year.
· 23-game Losi ng Slreak.
: Marietta 12·6, 0-:ll lost five of
'seven fumbles a nd threw two
: pass interceptions in dropping
: their sixth consecutive Joss.
• The Ironmen recorded their
: nrst tri~mph ot the season as
: Bachtel scored from the six yard
line in the firs! quarter and Chad
Ward toed the extra point.
' In the second quarter Ward
•connected on a 34 yard field goal
· to boost the lronmcn in lo a 10·0
halftime lead.
Ward's field goa l was one of
three kicked in league ptay
. Friday, and raises the SEOAL
total for th e season to 12 o! the
three-pointers by league teams.
The Tigers got on the board 1n
the third quarter when Matt
Warden .te amed with Doug
Evans on a 20 yard pass and Matt
Heidorn kicked I he extra point.

AND

.-

.

PRESENT AN

ATV SAFETY CLINIC

an 0 er a (' lfl t e season tO
become manager of the Kan sas
C.ity Roval
,s, was one of three
;T

I.l.

:

EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT

RIVERFRONT HONDA

Hal M cRae, who turned do\()n
ff
J t
'
h

r&lt;&gt;n;rned It to the GAHS 46. This
time, in eight plays, the Gallians
scored. Neville raced around
right end on a keeper (2: 32)
Amsbary's kick made it 7-0.
Fine defensive play by Scott
Marchi , Shawn Grant, Brett
Finley and David Walters
stopped the next LHS series.
· GallipoHs moved for a first
down on the Logan 44 when
Medina' s pa's'!; in!E!rceptio'n
came.
It took only five plays for LHS
to score. On a fourth and five
situation, Breining was trapped
for what appeared to·be a 20yard
Joss by at least three Blue Devils.
He broke free and found wing·
back Nick Maniskas all· alone
downfield. Maniskas was pulled
down on the GAHS one. Tailback
Paul Clark rammed it over
(7: 27). Jim Redd's kick from
placement was true. It was 7· 7.
Dave Walters recovered a
Breining fumble (3: 25) on the
GAHS 31 to halt a Logan drive,
but the Chelfs held .
LHS then marched 69 yards in
just four plays with Breining
hitting Medina a ll alone in the
endzone (0: 40). Redd' s kick
made it 14 -7.
On the ensuing series. Ryan
Wilson picked off a Neville pass
and returned it to the GAHS 27.
Redd kicked a 35 yard field goal
With eight seconds left in the half
to make it 17·7.
LHS took the third period
kickoff and marched 60 yards in
eight plays. Clark bulled over
from the one (9: 06). Redd's kick
made it 24·7 Clark had returned
Amsbary's kickoff from his own
five to the Logan 40 to set up the
score.
Al'ler an exchange of punts,
Gallipolis marched to Logan's
three where GAHS coughed it up
Maniskas recovered (2:11). That
proved to be the Chiefs biggest
defensive play of the night.

coaches let go by th e club
Gallipolis sco red with 11: 23left
tn the ·1iJt. Neville hit Mark
Thursday . ln addition to McRae,
Berkich with an 18-y ard TD . the C}Ub aJSO released pitching
coach Gary Blalock and first
strike, then ran the two-point
base coach Jose Martinez. Joe
conversion to make it 24·15.
Logan came righl back with a
Jones, also a first base coach,
68-ya rd drive in 10 plays.. the
will return to his previous pos t"
final 43 coming on a third and six
lion with the team as coordinator
siluation wtien Breining again
of Instruction in I he minor league
squirmed free a nd found Rod
system. The coaches were re·
Kranniz racing goa lward un placed by Frank Funk, Adrian
touched. With 6:27 left, Logan's
Garrett, Mike Rum and Bob
Redd kick the point after. It was1 , Schaefer. '
30-15.
scores
The Gallians marched to Lo·
gan's 25. but J ohn Godfrey
( '(•nlenllli• :1!1 , Kl'lt f11irmonl 0
C••n-do· Kl•nova (W\'a' 2!1. ( 'hl'!o:tpl'ali v
scooped up a Blue Devil fumble
(3: 35) Jo end Gallla's hopes of a
Champion 3~. LttM&gt;rly II
( 'hanlon 11. 'l'wln~hur~:o. ~
comeback victory .
Logan ra n out the c lock.
The Gallians had 14 first
downs :.159 yards rushing and 109
pa ssing (Nevflie was 13 of 17 with
two Intercepted) for 268 total
yards in 52 plays from scdm,
mage. GARS fumbled three
limes and lost it twice. The
Gallians were penalized five
times for 45 yards and Shawn
Grant punted three times for 89
yards. Chris Tawney led Gallia '
runners with 70 yards in 16 trips:
Neville added 63' in eight and
Grant had 29 In seven.
Logan picked up 18 firs I downs ,
had 156 yards rushing and 171
pas~lng (Breining was eight of 11
with one intercepted) for 327 tot at
yards in 57 plays.
The Chiefs fumbled six times
and lost it only once. LHS was
penalized twice for 20 yards. Eric
Dress punted three times for 62
yards.
Berkich led GAHS receivers
with four catches good for 36
yards. Grant bad two for 31.
Rod Kranniz had three catches
for 83 yards for Logan and
Medina 43 yards with three
catches.
Gallipolis plays al Marietta
Friday. Loga n is at Warren
Local.
·

"

:~~::~~~'.";.:·';.:::;~~~iday's sc~;~;~:;~j~:~·,~~·::!~.~~·:.~~·
F..a~twoodt'l. Sorlll~ ood 19
t::..tun :U, .\ t lddleruwn .Mndl,. on!'l
F.lld11 20, Dt&gt;llancc ~
F.lyr.l u ('pth '!!\. Ur lluhan 2'7
t: ul'lld :1.5 , ..,,av. Je lltl'l fi
t':drhank.~ 'l/1, Ot&gt;Graff Riv,·r.. ldo.· ~··
f'•lrland U , South Point 6
t-' r11nldurt Ad••na u, ltuntlnrtun 7
t 'ranklln :u, th:lurd Talawotndu l :i
Frrrnont St ·hH• 3~. N Baltinwrt• u
Gahanna J;l, \\ t»o h·rviiiP'N 1ft Ini l
C.llllon 13. Rj•Jh'VIl(' 0

.... n111,u. F:lm'A ood!:l
Girard!!, Pula11dO
Go!&lt;oh•·n ;,li, Kin~;!&lt; ti
C.rund \'all ey $11, \'ltona

,

,\1u.th~ .,.,. u

:nt ,J (Jhn~lo ... n II
Gri•f'n!ohurg Gn•e n ; , lhld!otlll 0
(Jri' t'll&gt; UIE' U, \' a nd•lht i
Grow·por1 ;t-1. Galloway Mt"' lland 6
lh11niltun Batlln 46, Ha;, Wbllr II
llumlllun R&lt;l'&gt;!o ~J, :-.lj•¥,' ~11lUlli JK
llurrl'ion 1~ , Gn·~nhill" li
lllll ..d tl li' t9 , ."ior.,., ta)'Ol' II
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. COMPLETE HEARING SERVICES
HEARING EVALUATIONS. HEARING AID SALES
and RECOMMENDATION~ BY LICENSED AUDIOLOGIST

Woodland Centers, Inc.
412 Vinton Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

..

AND

P. 0. Box 228
Mulberr Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

ARMSTRONG CEILING SALE

Continued from C-4

ends 23-game losing
:streak; tops Tigers, 24 to 15 _

HOLZER CLINIC/
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Jackson came back·with Bach·
tel's four yard run in the tbir(i
and quarierback Chris Ervin
scored from the four in I he fourth
quarter lor a 24· 7 lead.
Late in the contest Lonnie
Lewis threw a 76yard TD pass to
Keith Tornes and Warden ran !he
two point convers ion to reduce
the fina l scone to 24-15.
Jackson 's offense rushed 64
times for 293 yards and added
another ~5 yards by compleling
three of 12 passes. to offset 13
penalties for 125 yards whistled
agai nst the Ironmen.
Chris Coler led the Tigers with
61 yards on 18 carries as MHS
nelt ed 101 rushing yards and
completed seven of 17 passes for
162 yards. ·

Friday's scores
(' hllllc•Ht ho• :11, \\1111\•h;all II
(' In ,\ iloi~n 1'!, \U lh'atl ,~· li
no ( "o\PE 11. \ul Northland II
{'In ( uh•r;aht :c;. (' In \\'c·.,Jt•rn IIIII ~ "i

nn ( "nunlu Da .v ·;H.Mlldrlru H
nn ..~ or~'!'ll';ark '!7, :\uwlla;

assist: Higginbotham had three
tackles and an assist; Carr h·ad
three tackles; Charlie Kinnaird
had two la ckles; Cottrill had a
tackle and Jerry Coe had a
tackle.
Point will be back in action
Friday at 7:30 p.m. as It hosts
Ripley for · th e- "Old 'Oaken
Bucket Game." The wi n brings
Huntin gton High's record to 4-3
and drops Point 's record to 2·6.

TURN ON TO A GREAT OFFER
*Purchase 192 square feet or more of selected Armstrong
Ceilings to qualify for FREE Ski! Twist Cordless ~crewdriver.
Ask for details! Offer available 10/ 11 /87-11 /21 /87
*Limit one screwdriver per family.

·-

Friday's scores
·Cin O;tl.:

IIIII~

945 Roclmtl•

:15. On \\ondw11rd G

t"in Si Xav~r 5:!, fin 1\Ul'O D J:J
ftn S)'t amor(' :e~. ( ' In 1\nder~on U
fh1 Turpin '!1. Mlllurd ) .J
( 'In Walnut HILl;; 21, Cln N" U
C'ln \\'l•llruw :t'!, Glen Estf' '! I
r ·trdc-\·iiJo• ~ . Gret•nfll'ld 0
( '\ark N\r i, ~ prlnlt' Gr~·j•nnn it
('hark SE '! I. fllnlon !'lla..;!'oit• 1~'
fl•· Ea:;t II. ( ' II• (ilf'nvlllr n
l 'wt (;ruw

r:. Wuynt•

l 'ol .;\l 'lldo• m~·

2t5 Willow Square

225 Glenwood

• Fife-retardant
• Acoustical
• Two-tone lintSI:l
• Deep te•tured

ftn l'rlnt•Non 1:1. llamlllun 0

• lJulabte llmsh
• Te)(!Ufed

• Acoustical
• WasMbJe
• Textureo
• Betge·tone

t2'x l2"

tile

• Scrubbable

• V1nyl-coateO

49&lt;
tO ' t2 ' $58 110
ntom
•

$3 • 22
tO' 12' $48 30
room
•
2'x
l'
puel

tilt

X

tO '

X

grid
Not Included

t'nl RruvkJnn o•n '!i, f ' ul l.lndl'n 0
l 'nl lJo•Sn.ll'!l :m. Day ( ' ham··h•l II
fot f:a.-; t II!, l '&lt;ll lndi'Pf'ndenc•• 1:1
{ 'ol t:;o~tmuur 21. {'ul South K
fol Fra11klln 1\h :!i. U1•lmmro• I'!
Cui Mar· ... r:mk '!li. Cui Brllii:Wi~ tl
l'ol ,\flfflln :!'~. fol lto•f'c·hc•rnfl 1:1
Col Kt•adJ u, ful \' ••hrh• "i
('ol \\'ainut Ridgt• "n. ( 'ol """\ a
fo1 Wh t•ht iiOI' :1~. f ul f'I' OII'n nlal i
C'ohhhl••r ~'II, Park'll'll.\' I!
{ 'nlnr~o~•l fruw ftlrd 2!1. R111·k•·.v•• t o•n i
('otumhlll '!I, 8rnnkl~'" l"i

•

t3 Constitution

12 Colonial Samplor

• Ftre-retardant

• Acoustical
• Seam-hidt ng
• Wa.shable

•
•
•
•

• Fire-retardant

84&lt;
tl' xt2' $100 110
room
•
t2"xt2"

tile

'

X

100m

I W\' ;1 ) II!

:\1, .lo nalhan ,\lilu i

.55&lt;
t2 ' $66 110

12"x t2'

•

Acoustica l
Seam·htdmg
Washable
Olmenstonalty stable

t2"x l2"

•

!lie

IO'xt2 '

room

•

97&lt;

$JJ6 • 40

l 'uh•mhus Gru\'t' 1 '~. 1\da ()

C11r1land l.:tkl'\ lt•w '!a. Rrooklll•ld li

CAROLINA LUMBER

ELECT

AND

THOMAS PASQUALE

SUPPLY COMPANY

FOR

GREEN TOWNSHIP CLERK
Your Support Will Be
Appreciated
Poid for by the Candidate, Tham111 Pasquale,
If. 2, Hilltop Dr., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

312 6th Street
-- Store Hours: Monday-Fri

675-1160

Point Pleasant, WV.
8 a.m. to 12 noon ·

8:00 a.m. to 5:00

('In llu J;hi&gt;:o lA , ('In Taft II
no I ndian Hil l IK, W)'umlnll. 1!1
(' h1 L1ndmark 1~ . f"ln Summit 1:1
( ' In \hHI('nwnl 1!1, Flnnt',~· to,.,· n i
( 'In , ld\"IC'IHIIas :n, ,..,;orwnod ll

( ' In ,\ltwllc•r !lj, C'in t:ldN

I~

FEATURING:
-Safe Riding. Demonstrations
-Safety Representatives from
Honda International
-Paramedics Displays

au-.

•

By United Press International

~ Jackson

Gallipolis

. Medium red with matchin1 leather,· 50-SO seats, everything is
tomatic, only 1 O,OS7 miles. SAVE THOUSANDS HEIE.
.
WE MAICE DEALS NOT CON~ERSATION

Logan d_efeats Gallipolis 30-15 McRae is released
d
f
I
t
to remam
t le Or .. •s p a.c e
.

trailed 13-20, went for th e onsides ass ists; Joey Raw son had one
kick. Hunlingtqn was ready for tackle and five assists; Leach
it, caught the ball and sat on il for had four tackles and l hree
· the rest of the game.
assists; Sam Hall had s ix tackles
Point Pleasant Coach Steve and two assists; Beaver had five
· Safford said that the Big Blacks • tackles. and two assists; Oliver
were just out played by th e Pony had a tackle and an assist :
: Express, but added that at limes, Clendenin. had a tackle and two
! the team Just played poorly.
assists ; David Lovejoy h"d an
Defensively for the Big Blacks, assist: Scott Vickers had four
Casey Hill had six 1ackles and tackles and an assist; Rob
•.four assists; Kent Price had two Jarrelll had two tackles and an

Phone: 446·4290
Home: ~;!!!!."'"'

H'pme Office : Bloomington, lllinQi§

~ :O:c;to=~=·~1=8=·=1=9=8=7==~==~========~~==~===P=o=m=e~r~oy===M=id;d~le=p~o~rt===G~a=lli§po~l=is=.=O=h=io~-==P=o=in~t=P=Ie=a=~=n=t~.VV==.~V~a=.==========T=he==S=u=n=da=y~TI=·m=e=s=-S=e=n=tl=·ne==I~P=a~g~e~C=-=;5

.Big Blacks lose ...

(or. Third &amp; Stole

Fn Mulull Au~ble tneu111.- Company

.

Friday

WIDS

State Farm Mutual policyholders 50
and over who have no unmarried
drivers under 25 in their household
wi II now be getting a break on the ·"
cost of their car insurance.
If you're 50 or over, call and see if Coli:
CAROLL SNOWDEN
you quali~ .
.

1987 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

-ATV Displays from
Riverfront .Honda
-Refreshments
-Free Admission

TWENTY DEATHS AND 7,000 INJURIES OCCUR IN ALL
TERRAIN VEHICLE ACCIDENTS EACH MONTH. BUT ATVs
...
DON'T HAVE TO BE DANGEROUS TO BE FUN. FIND OUT
HOW TO SAFELY OPERATE AN ATV FOR MAXIMUM FUN,
MINIMUM RISK. IF YOU'RE A PARENT, COME AND LEARN
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW TO PROTECT YOUR CHILD.

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PAT'S MUFFLER
SHOP
.

AU. UNITS SHOWN FEATURE
ELECTRONIC IGNITION
FOR INSTANT STARTS AND
EXTRA POWER.

'

YOUR COMPLETE EXHAUST
SERVICE CENTER. .
CALL TODAY AND ASK FOR: .
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•

With Qulckttop'" Inertia
aafety chain bnke.
Antl-¥1bratloo feature

CLEAN UP Wtm STIHL'S DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN I• ,
Pun:hase any Stlbl chain saw,
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JanWtry 15, 1988 ... and~ay no
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monthly pllymeDIIIt low U $25. - STIHL CREOITG.4AO-

5TJHL=

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1987 .·
11 :00 A.M.-1 :00 P.M.
GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR FAIRGROUNDS
HOLZ&amp;R CLtNIC
GALU'OUS,O"G .

•

e

18, 1987

•

Big Blacks lose heartbreaker
POINT PLEASANT- The Big
Blacks staged a spectacular
second half comeback ior homecoming, but could not overcome
a 20·0 defecit after halftime and
los! to the Huntington High Pony
.Express, 20·13.
The Pony Exprss defense
found every hole In the Point
offensive line, sacking Point
quarterback Shawn Foglesong
twice•in the first quarter, injuring him on the second hit,
keeping him from returning for
the second half.
Huntington High scored once in
the firs! half on a two yard run by
LeRon Chapman and with the
kick by John Dennison good, the.
Pony Express lead 7·0 with 6:09
remaining in the half.
The Pony Express scored
again with on the kickoff for the
second half, Shannon King mak·
ing an 86 yard and with the kick
by Dennison g 0 od, Huntington
lead 14· 0.
Huntington's fina l score of the
evening c'lt.me with 5:50 remain·
ing In the third quarter when
Michael Collin~ . 5' 11" 175 pound
junior. ran through tbe Big Black
defense for a 21 yard touchdown
run to give Huntington a 20·0
lead.

The second Bobcat tally came
with 2:53 remaining in the second
quarter, when sophomore run·
ning back Brian Vinson scored a
touchdown from 11 yards Ollt.
Bradbury successfully kicked
·
the extra point.
The final Bobcat score came
fro(fl Bradbury 's 42-yard pass to'
a player wearing the number 5,
with 8:30 remaining. He was not

Octo~

*NO ADMISSION

CHARG~

HC!!!!!!.•

....

CARTER

2204 EASTERN AVE.

SALES
GALLIPOLIS OH. 451131

p
bOO E. MAIN ST.

,~

HOME &amp; AU

POMEROY, OH. 45769

'

'

�..

..
Pa~-C-6-The

.. .

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Oc1ober 18, 1 987 , ·

October 18, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis. Ohio Point Pleasant. w. Va.

Burngarner gave WHS a first and
goat · at the Buffalo seven before
Any doubts as IOtheabilltYofthe Robbie Grimm went In from four
yards out With 2:&lt;E remaining in
Waham~ White Falcoi)S playing
the opening quarter. Dave Sigman
lour lull quarters of football were
laid to rest Friday night as the' split the uprights on the point alter
to give Wahama a 7-0 advantage
unbeaten &amp;nd Area team exAnother short punt by Buffalo
ploded for 27 second half points to-gave the White Falcons good field
destroy the host Buffalo of Putnam
position once again to set up the
Blsons a surprising 41-6 margin.
The White Falcons In six pre- &amp;nd Area teams second touchvious Outings this season. built down With the locals gaining
possession· on the Bison 47 yard
sizeable first half leads before
coasting In the final tWo quarters to line. A 15 yard penalty and the
relatively easv victories which ground game o!Grimm and Jewell
raised some · questiom as to produced a nine play47 yard dr.ive. ,
which was capjled by another four
whether the local gridders could
yard run by Grimm. Sigman again
generate scoring drives following
the halftime intermlslson. These booted the PAT to make 1114-0wlth
questions were quickly laid to rest 9: 42 to play in the hall.
Buffalo refUsed to roll owr and
Friday night in Buffalo as Waplay
dead despite spotting the
flama totaled 21 third period points
visitors an early 14-0 edge as the
and added six more in the !Ina!
canto to turn what was a close 1&lt;1-6 Blsons took the ensuing kickoff and
marched 55 yards in seven plays to
halftime lead into a'g1-6 rout.
cut
Into the deficit. JodyMooreand
The win was the Falcom seventh
Jlmoo
Mallett were the work- ·
In a row In the 1987 regular season
and was a major hurdle in the horses for Buffalo in the series with
Mallett running over one Falcon
locals post season playoff chances.
defender a nd carrying two more
The sixth ranked Class A team
with him Into the end zone on a 14
received a pair or 100 yard
performances from Robbie yard touchdown run. The two point
Grimm and Chris Jewell and some conversion attempt was stopped
stellar defensive heroics from J'l.'i_ short by Jay Roush and Dave
Roush and Chris Noble to keep Sigman to preserve a 14-6Wa hama
their unbeaten string intact on the lead with 6: 57 remaining In the
quarter .
season.
Buffalo, on their final possession
Wahama took the opening kickoff a nd quickly marched inside the of the half, lost what appeared to
Bison five yard line before the be a chance to tie t he scorewtth : 13
Buffalo defense stiffened to turn seconds left when Adam Null hit
the locals away at the two. Three · J ustin McMJilon for an apparent 20
plays later an inadvertant officials yard touc hdown pass bu t a holding
whistle nullified a nine yard gain penalty nullllled the play and
bY the hosts which helped contrib- Wahama was able to keep the'
ute to the Falcon first touchdown.. Blsons out of the end zone and
Instead of a second and one preserve a 14·6 halftime lead.
Buffalo gambled on a fourth and
· situation at their own 23 the Blsons
two at the WHS 34 and cam&lt;:&gt; up
were forced to replay tbe down and
shot! with Wahama taking over on
failed · In their attempt to gain a
their own 33 yard line following the
first down which forced a punt
from deep in their own territory. A second half kickoff. Nine plays a nd
strong Falcon rush caused the 67 yards later Sean Gibbs ci&gt;nnect.ed with Brad Bumgarner on
Bison kicker to hurry his attempt
an 11 yard scoring pass with
with the ball goingoff thesldeol his
Sigman's
kick . increasing the
foot for a 14 yard punt to gtve
Falrom lead to 21-6 with 5: 48 to
Wahama excellent field position at
play In the quarter.
the Buffalo 34 yard line.
Wahama received a 2i .v ard run
A 27 yard pass play from
by
Jewell and a 22 yard pass play
quarterback Sean Gibbs to Brad
from Gibbs lo Rick Kearns .to set

Bulldogs crush WL
to stay tied for first

up a lour yard touchdown run by
Grimm at the 1: 26 mark. The drive
covered 65 yards and took nine
plays to complete with Sigman
booting the point alter for a 2S.6
WHS lead.
Billy Zuspan pi eked off an Adam
Null pass att:peBulfalo22yard line
with Wahama Adding to their
scoring total three plays-later on a
20 yard Gibbs to Bumgarner
connection on the final play of the
third period. Sigman's kick was
good lor the fifth time of the night
as the locals advantage Improved
to 35-6 with 12:00 rninutes
remaining.
The final scoring play ~f the
night came midway through the
final quarter when WHS tackle Jay
Roush hit Buffalo quarterack
Adam Null. jarring the ball loo~.
Chris Noble caught the fumbl e in
mid-air and raced 70 yards down
the sideline for the touchdown: The
PAT conversion pass failed to.
bring t he final score to 41-6.
g!!_me wit h a team hi gh nine
tackles followed bY Chris Noble
with 8; Chris Jewell and Bill
Zuspan with six each and Tom
Willoughby with five. Zuspan and
BobbY Ash recorded Interceptions
while Noble had an enemy fumble
recovery.
The White Falcons will now
travel to Spencer next week to take
on the fifth ranked Class AA
.Yellow Jackets. A wiri over
Spencer could possibly put the
&amp;nd Area team into the playoffs
no m atter what the outcome or
their final two regular sea&gt;on
contests against Ritchie County
and Williamstown. Game time
next Week at Spencer Is scheduled
for 8: 00 p.m.
Team statistics for the game
were fairly even except lor a
decided edge going to Wahama in
passing yardage. The White Ratcons totaled 15 first downs while
rushing for 219 yards a nd passing
for 95 more for a net total of 314
yards. Buffalo accounted 13 first
downs on 177 yards rushing and
only 16 passing for 193 total yards.
WHs committed two turnovers
with Buffalo losing the ball on
three occasions.

Individually senior running back
Robbie Grimm led a ll 'ground
gainers with 109 yards. in 20carries
while Chris Jewell a lso broke the
100 yard barrier with 102 yards in
13 tries. Sean Gibbs , despite
having no less than seven passes
dropped by Falcon receivers finIshed with five completions In 16
· attempts for 95 yards and two
touchdowns. ·Brad Bumgarner
caught four (lerlals for 73 yru;ds
and had both TD receptions for the
White Falcom.
Buffalo was led In rushing, by
Jlmbo Mallett with 52 yards in
seven carries while Adam Null
completed three ol16 passes. for16
yards. Barry Clendenin was the
Blsons leading receiver with two
catches for 14 yards.
Defensively lor Wahama Jay
Roush had a notlier outstanding

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35082 ROCK SPRINGS ROAD, POMEROY
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EVANGELIST FRED FUDGE
OCT. 18-

R
E

Tawney

R

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Nielsen has lead

NFL standings

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Do you lovr football or SC!l'eJ? Take
along your longest lens and
mediumlength zoom. A mooopod wil give support '
fOJ yOIII' long lem and not bother fellow
lam. Fast udian calls for 400-soeed film for
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weather. These will allow for a fast, adion·
stopping U!utter speed at o rtoSOnable
aperture under the kind of light you Ul1 exptd to have.
The major action happens near. the
ends of the fie ld, from about 20 yards to
the goal line. The teams change sides at
half time, so you will get good action
shots of both offense and defense t¥en 1f
you sit near one end. Be wary of funs
stondmg up at tht height of action. They
con block your best shols.
Use very high lhUtttr speech to frette
the oction. Pan with thf ochon at medium
shutter speeds to blur the ground and give
m impression of speed whrn you shoot.
A 1oom lens wiO give you good shots at
fQ(kles, catches, and the great movn of the
ball corrfer. Toke thots of the cheerleaders
and the mascots. Look for interesting people
int he crowd. Some of the fam pot on a better shoW thon the tltOnK!
This month's special is a lree Nodak
Book " How to Tab Winning Picture"
$5 .95 retail value.
We have long len1e and fnsh fast film
at Tawney's Studio, 424 Suond Ave.,

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St•w Orkans at fhll'III: U, I p. m .
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Playoffs
I"II,.I·St• 11»1111 St lwdu 1&lt;t.\ll .,t•r lf'S l'll'sl·oi· M'\' t•n'
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relat cd acttvtttes . For up i&lt;l two weeks . C.\HEC 1\ ' Ei~ I'LL'S

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PHONE
446-0699

360 SECOND AVE., GALL~POLIS

~{J1 M ~·~·J. ~~ \r!j} ® ~~~
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For more i nfurma liun. call or visi t Pleasc~n l Va lle-y :\ u ,., 11 g
Care Cen ler and talk wit h our Soc iai1Vorkc1. Call tii:i - S ~ . Ih

and make sure that nohody ever has to -.tJv homl.' alont: .

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. , NURSING CARE CENTER
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(304 ) 675-5236

19, Huhhurd ll
Hu ron HI. :-lundusk) 81 Mar }'!I i
Jndt•p•·ndt•nu• 7, f u:vu hu~;tu 111 ~ n
lndiUfl J.uk•· ~1&gt;. ll••njoun ln Lo,::un ll
lrunton ~9. Grt•t•nup ( n (Kyl D
.Ttu· k~on21. Ma r ltottu 17,
.lt'fh'TI'I IIA Unkm 1:1, 0~111 O h•n tW\Ial j
·II'W('It·St In '!!i, lndllln \'Ill N 1
.Juhn,.town NorlhrldKt' 35, Oan ,•llh• 1
Nt•ni UII .t!, \\' akpako!'M't.t 1
Kl'l I :\lin :11 , Col Sl fh a.o; II
Lant':A.'i h'f 33. NI'¥1 Urk II
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l..h· kln~~: Val~. Wlllkln~ M€'m I"
I.tm a Bul h '!ti. ( 't'llna 0
l.lmll .lo\r lti. •·atrflt•ld H
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I JtUt• Mi am i 21, Dhlnt·hto.s tt·r 0
t.udl ( 'lo\t•rlf'llf 1'1. N IWyulhm 7
LOjtlln 31), (iall lpoll" •l 5
LOI:lUI E lm :1~ . l.un•~~&gt;~tf'r f'l sht•r 0
t.onlin Kin ~~: ~0. E l) ria Sr 18
l..oruln Sr 211, l.oraln SO uth,• l• ·~ ti
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Lo''''land :1~. D1•rr l'11 rk 14
lo.twrlh·Uit• 26, ( 'ul umbhuHtll
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l'illn. Oct Ill- Sl. l.oUI!o {Cnl: IHJ) Il l

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Transactions
Hy t:nlu•d Prt&gt;s,.;lnlrrnatinmtl
Ba,;f'f)all
Rul\lmort• ..:. rh&gt;~lgnl'd p'ttth('r .IJu ·k
O'funnur 111 Ro~hf'S il'r nf lht• lnt f'r na·
tmmd Lt.•aJI:Ut•ll\i\ .\ 1
f'hlut)l;O (SL I - T radt&gt;d oulllt&gt;ldl'r
l ' hlt~l Wu.lkt•r w f'u llfornl•• lor pltr hN
Tudd Fbwlwr .
lluu ~ln n Ht•h•a...t•d lnllo•ldl'r 1Jal1 •
R1•rra and t•aidtt•r Rnnn Rt•y nold ~: M"nl
1alt·bt•r Troy 1\fenlr and pltl ht"l' Anthon;,.
K1• 1t~· 10 l'IH·~tm of Purlllc ( llll.'i l Ll•ajtut•
CAAA ); nddl•d pltrh er •hl~l' (;~nu , uui ·
llt•ldl&gt;r Lout.• llcadow1s and •·llldll'r ll11.n
Maltt• r,.. to ~11-man rll ~ l t• r.
\''I 'funkt ·t·~- l"iamt:d (i, •nt• o\1hbm•l
1hlf'l maj ur- lt•ugt~ l' sc•o ul.
Phlladf'lphht - Kt•acht•d ~~~-rl•l'llW nl
with l'lty 111 Clrarwlllt' r. Fla .. t o kt•t•p
~ prln.~~: t ralnln11 upt•r utiu"" tht•rt• until
l.uul~ -

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po~t · ~t·a~on

MAIL-IN FIEIATE . . . . . , .. 25t

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REBATE

RESISTOR

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M~IL-IN REMTE . 25'

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for lnjun•d first

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t\nnount••· d Wllul d not
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opllon on uutfl t•ldl'r lut•l
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Ho,.lun - Tr.ldt•d lur wanl Scull \\t•tlnmn und guard Sam \'lnt t&gt;nt lttSt" ut tl•• for
a ~l't•o nd round draft pli'k and t•tL&lt;;h.
llo lden Slalt• - C'u uJL' tu tt•rm~ with
fnr~'ll rd Purvis !'ihllrt on ~· yt • ar wntnut.
1,,\ f llp))l'rs - Rt•lf'a~t· d ftlrwa rds
Da\· ld Thlrdklll, .Jim Luuplt'l and lltJ-;try
(•orr
1,.\ Lakrrs - Walwd guard,. Krnny
Tra\ ,,.. and Fr11nk t 'ord .
St•"' \'ork - SIII:Jl€'d guard !\lark
.Jac k!ion.
Pbll!idt-lphla \\'ant•d Jorward"
- Ciuud•• Grt&gt;J:'Or)', Brlun lLtlll ll ,\ .md Kt•n
f:rrt•n.
Kttt•kford !C'BA f :'&lt;illnwd l&gt;a~ld
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IMruli - Slgrwd lilhit•nd /U;&amp;rk Lt.•wl!i
u.nd l(ua rd l 'au I K l~ •·r, wal ,•t&gt;d llnt•hackt•r
'l .trk Hh· k~. dl'lc&gt;nslH' haek J)t•:till• r
Clllrlt, pu nu•r i\lall Klnzt•r. uu•kk• Ma r k
·h·nklo,.- and runnlnR b;u·k Tim !\lartln
lndlan u p ull~- "ah·f'd running hat ·k ~
Orlandu Bro"''" a nd .Jt•H 1\lkln ~ and
drl•· n~tn• llm•mt• n Man·u~ ·lilt k.o;un and

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Hotltt')'
Toronto - lt••mo\rd drfrn"""n1o1n Rurj..:
Salmi nil: from It• am lndl'flnltt•ly

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Friday's scores
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losing 5 and Rock Hill fumbled :J
times turning t he bait ovN each
time. The game wa s virtua lly
penalt y fr ee wit h Meigs being
fl agged .&gt; t1mes for 2f\ yards and
Rock Hi ll twice for 20 yard .
Senior Mi ke Roush was out ·
·standi ng defensively with seven
solo tackles a nd lour a5'ists
while Bryan Durst racked up 5
solos, Steve Tracy had 4, Bill
Brothers and Chris Smith 3 each
and Wes Young had two. Other
Mara uders contributed great ly
to the defense a nd kep t the Rock
Hill offense effectively &amp;ott led up
all evening.
Friday the Marauders return
to TVC act ion at Meigs stadium
and with wins over Alexan der
and Federal Hocking could gain
at least a s ha re of the conference

MFG. BY

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Nursing Care Center

mack gained 51 on 8 carries and
Dillard had 24 in 7 attempts"
In lhe passing departme nt ,
Bartrum completed 10 of 16lor92
yards and two touchdowns while
Cox, usuallY. a good passer, hit 6
oll7 for just 24 yards and had one
picked off by Chris Smith. Smith
snagged 4 Bartrum losses for 48
ya rds, Bill Brothers had 2 recep
lions lor 18 yards and .a touchdown, Bissell caught 2 for 15 and
a score, Durst grabbed one for 7
ya rds and five loot. 100 pound
Freshman end Eric Heck nailed
one for a four yard gain.
'
Bissell punted three times for
the Marauders for a net 81 yards
and Rock Hill's McCormack was
forced to kick seven times for 158
yards. Meigs picked up 19 lirs t
downs to th e Redmen 's 7. The
Marauders committed 6 fumb les

MONROE

H o ~· l;uad

©HECKS. 1987

gained good field position at
midfield as Keith McCormack,
under a heavy rush, managed ·
only a 22 yard punt. Five plays
later, "Cheez" McElroy ripped
through the Red men &lt;)efense on a
20 yard sprint for the louchdown.
Mike Bartrum's kic k fo r the
poin t after again wa's true a nd the
Marauders were in complet e
command, 35 to 7.
At the erght minute mark of the
fi nal quarter, Coac h Bob Ashley
put all fresh troops on the field
giving the star te" a well deserved rest. With just 1:45
s howing on the scoreboard clock
Redman Quarterback Dan Cox,
who had lived a miserable life all ·
evening at the hands of the
Marauder defense, broke up t he
middle and outran the defense
for a 77 yard touchdown, giving
the few remaining Rock Hill fans
a linal opportunity to exercise
'their lungs. The conversion try
fell short.
Statistically, the Marauders
held a big edge on Rock Hill
gaining a net 224 yards on the
ground as opposed to 137 for the
Redmen (77 on Cox's run) a nd 92
yards through the air compared
to Rock Hill's 24. Bissell was the
leading ground gainer for the
Marauders with 117 yards in 21
carriest McElroy added 72 in 10
tries, Bartrum 20 in 6, Bryan
Durst picked up 12 in 2 carries
and Jamie Warner had 3 at tempts for 9 yards. Dan Cox
netted 54 yards in 16 tries for the
Redmen wh ile Keith McCor-

~Ill .

sa.

( h ln~~~:o at ~ 1. ~~~~~~. 1: l:i p .m
Roston at f'.dm unlon. 11.115 p m
rlltJJlurgh .11 Mnntrt•u.l, l'I;Ui pIll

SMITH
I BUICK-PONTIAC I

1\lt•. Oct
Franl'lsc·n It
Wed. Ot·t

'"'

"''W .lt•rst&gt;;v 111 Hart lord ,~ : l:i p.m
ftuJialtllll QurtH•t.
13Jo.m .

series at the Marauder 42 yard
line. Using nine plays on the
drive, Bissell plunged over from
the one for his seco nd six pointer
of I he night at the 8: 15 mark of
t he second frame. All but six
yards (a Bartrum to Smith
aeria l) came on the ground with
Bissell grinding out 30 yards,
McElroy picking up 14 and
Bartrum running for eight. Bissell ran for the two poin1
conversion lor a 14-7 Meigs
·
lead.
Five and one half mlnules
la ter, the Marauders added
another sco re after the sticky,
stingy defense held the Red men
to a minu s five yards in t hree
plays. T his time Meigs moved
the ball 57 yards in ten plays as
once more Brent Bissell had six
carries for 33 yards, scoring his
third touchdown of t he night on a
nine yard run. Mike Bartrum
tacked on the extra point a nd the
Marauders were up 21-7.
Fumbleltls hit both sq uads In
the remaining three minutes of
the fir st half as eac h tur ned_the
ball over without mounting
another serious offensive thrust.
0n their seco nd possession of
the second half, the Meigs eleven
hit paydirt again on a five play, 39
yard drive w ith the touchdown
comi ng on a 13 yard pass from
Bartrum to Senior Tight End Bill
Brot hers. Bartrum's kick s plit
the upright s a nd the Marauder s
were well on their way to the win .
Holding lhe Redmen for two
yards in three plays , Meigs again

Louis :1

to

i', r,d ...v',.ftlos ult,.
" '~"htnJrlon ' · llartlurd ~
1)\a•hl.•t• 2. HuUalo !
NPW .r.•r ... •y 1. 1\lontn•a.J .I
Dtotruit :1. Toronto!
F..dmunton :S. ('u)J:ar.) 2
Sal urda..y',. Gaml's
Wlnni!M' Il at Mlnrw'SOta. 1: 30 p .m .
l' h lllldt•lphlll at N\' ls landl' r ... 7 IIi p n1

N\' R a n~:t•r s ~ ~ \\mo hl n ~to n .

StU Ott . 10 - Ikotroll 1. Mlnne!'iota6
Sun. Ot•l II - Minnt"llot a5.Dtoirult :i
Mon . Oct . I% - l\llnneHotll I , £Hoi roll ii
Natlumll INIIKUI:'
(SI. l..oul~ wln11 ~rl eoo &amp;-3)
1'Lu·. &lt;k't . 6 - SL Lou is 5. San
Funcl..to 3
" 't•d. 01'1 . i - !-ian Fr;anciM'~' ~. St.
Lou I~ II
Frt. 0•:1 . 9 - St. Luul!o 6, s~n
fl'll ncl,.to $
Sat. Oct. 10 - san Fr.tnl'lsl'o t M.
Loul11 2
Su n. Oct II - San F'ranl'l~u 6. St

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NHL results

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Offer good until 11-30-87

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NU RSERY PROVIDED - SPECIAL SINGING
JIM lUSHER - PASTOR - PHONE 446-2607

SAVINGS

'.! II

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.5110

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DLlllw;
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4 Miles West of Holzer Medital Center
On U. S. Rt. 35 at Rodney

~p-WIN._.

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ft• ntral
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W I. 1'

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l. Drain and flush radiator
2. Test pressure
I~~
3. Inspect for leaks
-T'
4. Check all hoses and clamps
5. Check fan belts
~.A
6. Refill with GM coolant
~
7. Replace thermostat and gasket~

'l

~5'!

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Ctlhft•rrm·t•
Eas1

- Native of Huntington. W. Va.

PR£.WDrrER

:! II

~lll]unul

Oklahoma to the Islands of The Phillipines

I
I
I

'!2 0500

'!

Pltt&gt;ihur.:h

St•Uillt•
Ka n..as { lty

- 10 Trips to Israel ·

P~M.

" ' L T Pt•l . PF P,\

\\lOS I

- 30 Years Pastor. Evangelist, Conference ·s~teaker
- Over 200 Crusades from the Indian Churches of

7:00

slons and Bissell's pun! was
downed at the Rock Hill 24 yard
line. From that point. the Red·
men moved the ball on the
ground to the Meigs 12 where a
half the distance penalty against
the Marauders was assessed and
Rock Hill had a first and goal at
the six. On this drive, Cox,
fut'lback Greg Dillard and halfback·Keith McCormack handled
the carrying duties . It took the
Redmen four plays to score
agai ns t Hte Meigs defense with
Di llard just managing to break.
the plane of the goalllne. Dil·
lard's conversion attempt was
good and t he Redmen owned a
7-6 lead. This put both the ,
Marauders and Rock Hill in an
unfamiliar s itu atio n as it marked
on ly the second time that Meigs
had trailed this season a nd the
first time that t he Redmen had
led In any contest.
. The Rock Hill celebration was
short- lived, however, as Chris
Smith returned the e ns uing kickol! 32 yards to start the ne~t

Scoreboard ...

c

446-t61S.

· LA QUINT!\, Calif. tUPT)
Lonnie Nielsen fired an eagle3 on
the final hole Friday to take the
lead entering the third round of
ATHENS- Ryan Adams tallied Biddinger midwey of the second the $335.000 PGA Clu b P rofesth.ree tou chdowns Friday night in period.
s ional Championship~
leading· the Athens Bulldogs to a•
With j unJOr quarterback Jason
Nielsen, of East Aurora. N.Y.,
" 30-7 SEOAL victory over the Neptune at the helm, the Warrol.led in a 25-foot --pu tt alter
visi ting Warren Local Warr iors.
r iors took t ~e second ha lf kickoff -· reaching the par-5 hole wi th a
The surprising Bulldogs now a nd drove to the AHS 18. before
240-yard, 3-wood approach for a
own a 6-1 overa ll mark and Adams took of! with the fumble .
1-under-pa r 71 on the La Quin ta
remain tied with Logan for the
Later in the third stanza
Hotel Mountain Course. Hi s
Logan for the league leaders hip Neptune aga in g u ided th e Wartwo-day total of 6-undcr 138 was
with a 3-0 record. Warren Local
riors on _ the long drive th at
one stroke better t han fir st-round
slips to 3·4 overall and 1·2 In evaporated at the AHS 11 yard
leader Gibby Gilbert of Chattaleague play.
line on another fumb le.
nooga , Tenn .. who scramb led to a
Adams scored fro m the 10 in
. Athe ns finished with 11 first
7o aftPr a record -setting 64 over
the fi rst period. added a one yard downs, rushed 39 times for 225
the PGA West Stadidfn Course on
blast in the second quarter. a nd yards, a nd completed five of
Thursday.
got his th ird TDon a fi ve yard run
seven passes for 70 yards.
" I was lucky to keep my score
in t he fourth quarter . .
Warre n also netted 11 first
respectable th e way I played
Kicker Fred Harn er connected downs. ran38timesforl39yards.
today ," said Nielsen. the 1986
on a 23 yard fi eld goal in the and hit four of 10 aerials for 29
PGA'Club Professio nal PI aver of
second period and added three yards.
·
the Year.
l?x lra points.
Ryan Adams paced th e BulThe ot her Athens TD was a ldogs with 88 yards on 17 tries
dramatic third quarter fumbl e · while fullback Adam West fin WESTERN
recovery by Tim Adams. who is hed with 93 yards on 15 carries
scooped up the loose ball and
for War ren.
.
SQUARE DANCE
raced 80 yards to the Warr ior e nd
The lone Warrior TD came
LESSONS .
zone.'
with just 51 seco nds remaining in
Ta Begin
Athens dominated the fi rst half the contest when Neptune fired a
of play as they netted 198 yards
SUNDAY, OCT. 18, 1 P.M.
nine yard pass to split end Chris
rus hing while the Warriors fin- Guinther a nd Eric Schaad kicked
lnstrvdor-lohn Waugh
ished with a m inus six ya rds , ana~~ Jhe extra points.
FOI MORE INFOIMITION CAll
los t seni or quarterback Doug ·

st Church

By
- · David

FOOTBALL lOTOS

By JIM SOUL'lBY
Times-Sentinel Staff
PEDRO- A loyal, but sparse,
lollowmg of Marauder fans
trekked to Rock Hill stadium and
watched as the Meigs eleven
posted their sevent h win of the
season by downing Coach Lou
Mains' Redll)en 35 to 13.
After taking the opening kickoff, the Redmen's signal caller
Sophomore Dan Cox, fumbled
the pigskin at his 25 yard line and
Marauder Steve Tracy fell on the
loose ball. Consecutive carries
by Brent Bissell and Jeff McElroy gained eight yards . On third
down a Mike Bartrum to Chris
Smith aerial fell Inco mplete after
which Bissell picked up· a Ma rauder first down at the Rock Hill
ten. Following another Incomplete pass. Bartrum found Bissell in the endzone with a 10 yard
scoring strike. The ex tra point
try was wide of the mark and at
the 8:45 mark of the first stanza
Meigs led 6-0.
"· Each team swapped possess-

Sunday, Oct. 18, 2 P.M. til S P.M.

Your
Photos

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page- C-7

Rock Hill · Redmen no match for Meigs Marauders, 35-13

Wahama still perfect; destroys Buffalo of Putnam, 4}.·. 6
GRAND OPENING
AND OPEN HOUSE
By Gai-y Clark

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

U, Sylvania Northvlrw V
Nt&gt;l!141•vlllr .. Alh!Uiy Alexand~ r 0
Nl"w Albany I'!, ('e ntrrhur~~: M
~New Br€'men 12. Wa.ynt'fllleld 6
NPW Phllll 211, \.lhr lch!! VI (' l~~tymont 8
Nf'whury 26, AurorM 15

e.

Nt•\OI!ln Full" 1:.!, GarrNIS\'Iilf' II
I&gt;Ourdonla ~ 1 . Akr Sprln~lt'ld II
N Bend Tuy~•r 2!1, N f'ollf'K•' Hill ;
N l '11n Gl~·nOak U . l'llas!'i .lllt·kson 1:1
N CJallhtli. Patriot ~o uth w~lt· rn 12
Nurth Olm,.lt•d :13, Falrvh•w U
North Rld~~:rvillr 17, Sandusk)' i
North Union I t Ol !!nl.aniQ' 9
J'liorlon 211, Me dina Hi~;thland li (ot)
Oak IIIII !J.II, Symm&lt;-.,. Vall l'y t l
IJrt•,;on Cl u)' ,li, Rt•dlord ( !'ith'hl 14
Orr villi' .. !f. Navurr1• F;tlrlt.'ll~ t
Ot!!t'i(O :H, Kan,.;a~ l .a kota 0
Paint'~ Hurvt•y 2'2, C'nnnt&gt;aut £
PlltiiN'S Ril'l'rsldr 'lt. 1\bdlson II
Pauldln~t :!9.1.imn C'ath 11
Prrrv :li, Uc&gt;llt' hW OOd 16
Pt'rr).shurl{ II. Bowlin I!: G r t•t•P II
Plt•k:t•rlngton ~. !Ut Vernon 15
l"lqtaa 21i. ( lay tnn Northmonl fl
Port f linton 19. Oak Harhur t:l
Purt ~ t :wot 2'!, Frank Fur Gn•l'n U
Port ~mouth ND :!!!, Lu l:as,•lllr Vut 0
l'ort .~ moulh \\ 'li. 1\llnfort:.l ll

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40 MONTH WARRANTY
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MONROE

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KldK&lt;"dJllot' Ill, Murton Elgtn IJ
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ROl-IN ~outhrw;tt•rn :1-1. P~~tlnt Val 0
Sandusky r e rkl011 '!'/, 1\1111111 Edl!illn I
~rlt'f:'.ll. t: II, Titlln C11h•t•rt 13 toll
~hady~dt· IO. &amp;rnt' j; \•llle II
l'hPi hy '!II, Rut') ruM2i
Shenandouh 21.1, Fort Fryt• D
Shcr.ldwt til, Philo 0
.~hcorwoo d F~~olrvWw t7, HII'IIN\Itlll' 6
Smlthv lllt' 3,, DoyteMtown 6
So ut h Rlln~ Ill. MeDonuld £
Sp.,.w Hla;hhand J.l, Fredt'rlcktown i
Sprln« C11tlh 21, Sidn ey Lot'hm~~tn 0
Sclrln« N ~~ Bcavcorneelt 0
Par i~

380

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Sprln11 ShaWntJI" 5... St

to

to 440 CCA

50 MONTH

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GrahlLm 0

8p rtn~~:hnro

1.!7, Ab11on l4
81 Clalrsvl13. Canal Fulton NW 1 (.:loti
, St Henry 16. Oillphl.ls Sl .John 0
Sl Mll1')'11 321 Ltma Shawnee 61
St~~onton Lot 6. Co lumblanM'C'rNitvlf&gt;w ll
,.."'teuhenvUle 3~. Ea11t Llvtorptlol 0
Stref'l:aboro H, Woodrld ae II
Sy~IU nnre Mohawk I Z. Rlvrr Val i1
Tel\)'!1 Vall~ ~2. ~rnl' Unkln Ul
T1111n Columhln.n ~ 1 . Uppt!n ~a ndu MkY
12
Tlnora ll. Edat&gt;rl un 12
T1pp flty 13, llrad lord 6 ,
Tol Bol!iher '!1, Flndlll)' ;~
To I MIII.'Omh(•r 38, Tol Wotldward 0
Tot flol{t'f!l 2'l, Or"!:ton Strltch i
Tal St ,Jahn 1-t , Tot'St Func111 0
" Tot Sta rt 35, To l De VIl his~; U
Tot Whitmer ~ . f 'ostorla U
Trrntna F..dl(ewood !14, Day far roll 0
TruCwood·Mildlson 3.f, Sidney ll

HOURS
.Mon. thru "Fri. 8 to 8
Saturday 8 tci-.6
Sunday 9 to. S

SILVER B.RIDGE PLAZA
. PH. 446-9335 DAvE MICHAEL -

MANAGER.

We rHINe thl right to limit ~ulntltle;a on 11le m•rchlndl. . , tddltlonll quanlllill 11 ~ulu prlcl. Aeb1tad lttml llrTtlltd to' manuf~tttutlrl ~llrlotlont .

10-18·C

I

�•

October 18. 1987

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

Page-C, S- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Boys golf toomey· underway
COLUMB!JS, Ohio (UPil .:...
Kent Moore of West Liberty
Salem and Matt Holtsberry of
Allen East posted Friday's besl
rounds In the llrst day of the Ohio
High School boys state golf
tournament.
Moore and Holts berry both had
a three-over' par 73s on the Gray
Course at Ohio State University.
The Class A teams and top
qualifying Individuals played the
par· 70 Gray Course while Class
AA and Class AAA golfers played
the par-72 Scarlet Course.
Eighteen holes were played
Friday. Another 18 were set for

Section
Stock market losses
spur pan;~ · selling

Business

stroke ahead of Steve Ailderson
Saturday.
Zanesville Rosecrans was the of Circleville, followed by Jim •
team leader In Class A at the Meissner of Columbiana at 77,
halfway point, while Circleville and Brian Gesme of Dayton
had the lead In Class AA and Oakwood, Jeff Junk of Washing·
ton Court House and Jim Carson
Toledo St. Johni in Class AAA.
Todd Thomas of Ttpp City of St.. Clairsville at 78.
In Class AAA, Crewse had a
carded a 75 to lead the AA golfers
one-stroke
lead over Jerry Hou·
and Aaron Crewse of Uniontown
chell of Troy and Charles K~ ·
Lake led AAA golfers'wtth a 76.
minsky of Cincinnati Roger
Moor~ and Holtsberry had a
one-stroke lead over Chris Myers Bacon. In at 78 were Robb
of Clark Southeastern who show Cleaver of Wilmington and Mike
a 74. Tom Long of Bellaire .St .' . Spencer of Toledo St. Johns.
Johns and Scott Mizer of Rose·
crans each carded rounds of 75.
In Class AA , Thomas was one

October 18, 1 987

.•.

I

MOBILITY

Friday's high school scores
VInton Couni.Y 'll, Trimble 0

Troy IK, "l"eannsel IOC

WadllworHI n, Field I

Unll•d Lot·al U, Selwlncll

Utica 1•. llehnn Lak~woo4 12

\' .-~ey \ 'le•· Sl, Prellie Shawaee HI
Van a.,.. It, Hardla Norttln-n 1:1

Van Wt&gt;rt 1!. ouawa Gladorf 7
"VermiUoa 'Ze, Grafton Mlfttew 1-1
Ver11111lm U, Millon UnNa 0

"'

Warren Ke..,edy 20, Salfm 17 loO
Waruw Rlvf"r VIew 'll, " ' Mu~&gt;kln~m

•j

"Walerloo
.ft. " 'lndham Ill_
Waultiln 23.
H

•

Ev~reen

~

•

Wayne Tracf' II, Edon 0

~

I•

4 WHEEL DRIVE MU.OBOG

· ! !!!!~!~~=~=::::~~

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18TH, 2:00 P.M.

GENERAL ADMISSION 53.00-KIDS UNDER 12 FREE
SS.OO ENTRY FEE

I

A whtolchair can givt you tho noelil·
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tasks. It can also allow yeu to visit
friends and go shopplnf. Thoy comt
in a variety of styles ....t colorL Thty
oro ofso Modicort/Modicaid ,..
proved. for mort information call or

CLASS A STREET lEGAL TIRES UP TO AND INCLUDING 38'S
CLASS I STREET LEGAL TIRES 40'S AND 44'S
PRIZES WILl IE AWARDED IY AMOUNT OF ENTRY FEE
PLUS - TROPHIES AND DOOR PRIZES
GATES OPEN AT 12:00 NOON-ENTRIES 12 TO 2

I

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~

wisit our ltort.

I

BOWMAN'S HOME CARE

LOCATED IN RAIIIIOW PUll, 1'12 MILES EAST OF BISHAN
STORE OFF CO. RD. 28 ON RAINBOW RIDGE.

63 Pint St.
GalliPolis

WATCII FOR SIOMS

I

CONSTRUCTION CONTINUES - Construction
the new hangars at the Gallia-Meigs
: Airport appears to be well on Its way to
' completion by the scheduled deadline of Nu·
vember 7. The larger han~ar is nearly coniplete,

446-7213

on

and the roof Is already in place on the smaUer
hangar. Construction on the larger hangar began
In September. (Tillles·Sentinel photo by G.
Spcnc"r Osborne)

.

BIGGS KNOCKED OUT -Tyrell Biggs lies In
co rner after bel\tg knocked out by Mike Tyson In

DOES YOUR .
Mll'I'tJALFUND
DO ALL THIS?

the seventh round of Friday's championship light
in Atlantic City . (UPI)

·Tyson knocks out Biggs in
seventh round; . H~Imes ·next
ATLANTIC CITY; N.J. (UPI)
- Sensing challenges more for·
midable than Tyrell Biggs In his
near future. Mike Tyson Friday
night raised his performance to a
new level of devastation.
'
In knocking out . Biggs in the .
'seventh round of Friday night's
heavyweight .championship bout,
Tyson enacted a list ie tour de
force. With former champio n
Larry Holmes as his next oppo·
nent Jan . 23, and an inevilable
confrontation against Michael
Spinks looming, Tyson proved
his skills are more than hype.
The International Boxing Federation , Wor ld Boxing Association
and World Boxing Counci l c ham pion proved .it at Biggs' expense,
and the cost was high .
" 1 refused to tel him get in the ·
flght ," Tyson sa id after improv ing to 32-0wilh 28 knockouts . "He
took his beating like a man. In the
third round 1 knew I had him, i
knew i1 would be
definite
knockout. When 1 was hitting him
with punc hes to the bcdy he was .
mak ing funny sounds - some·

a

whar like a woman screami ng.' '

Beginning in the second round ,
1')-son, 21. began to toy with the
challenger. After letting Biggs
squ irm for s hort periods of time.
he las hed out to inflict punish·
ment a t will. Th e display a lm ost
surely was for the benefit o!
Holmes and Spinks, both a t

referee Tony Orlando stopped
the bcut with one second left in
the· round.
"1 could 've knocked him out in
the third round but I wanted to do
it slowly," Tyson said, "so he
could remember this a Icing
time."
Spinks, stripped of his IBF title
for falling to make a mandatory
dPfense, mu st wait until Holmes,
whom he twice defeated, comes
out of retirement to ta ke a shot at
Tyson. After witnessing the des·
true lion of Biggs, the undefeated
_Spinks briefly let down his guard.
"I'm sta r ting to believe," he
said of Tysons' abillty. With
promotor Butch Lewis at his
side, however, Spinks quickly
reasserted his conifidence in his
abil ity to stop Tyson's seemingly
invincible march to legendary
s ta tu s.
" He' s got to hit you. though,"
Spink s said. ''1' 11 do everything I
can. I'm go nna be throwing
punches all nigh t. Whatever he
gives me. I'll take. I'm not afraid
of him.
"1 never could take punches
too well. I can sure dish them out,
though. If he acts like he
tonight , I'll dish ' th e m out a ll
njght. I'll do whatever it takes to

r ings id e,

Aft er bas hing Biggs to the bcdy
and head . drawing blood from
th e eyes and mouth , the champion from Cat s kill. N,Y. finally
provided the inevitable end .
When he knocked down Biggs for
the seco nd time in the seventh,

• Tax-deferred investment.

trying to become the fifth
member of the 1984 U.S. Olympic
tea m to win a professional world
title .
"Physically, I knew he was
go ing to be strong," Biggs said.
" He didn' t hit as hard as I
thOught."
' Tyso~·· galn~d a measure of
revenge with the victory. He
failed to make the 1984 Olympic
team at 201 pounds, while Biggs ·
went on to win a gold medal as a
s uper heavyweight at the Los
Angeles Games.
Holmes and . Spinks should
choose to llsten to George Benton, Biggs' co-trainer.
"I don't care what people say,"
Benton said. " He (Tyson) came
around at the right time. 1 Knock
this guy put and I'm a (retir~)
middleweight. "
In pre· fight . hype, however,
future challengers would do well
to heed the lesson Tyson taught
Biggs: insults often are repaid
with injury.
"He didn't show any class as a
professional fighter," Tyson said
of Bigg's prefight behavior, "so 1
m a de him pay with his heal th ."

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Holmes struck a more conven·
tiona! pose, choosing to discredit
the young champion.
" Mike Tyson was dirtier than
I've ever seen him," Holmes
said. " He used his head (lor
buqingl and his e lbows were
r ight there. If he does that to me,
I'll do the same thing."
Biggs, a 26-year-o ld Philadel·
phla native, fell to 15·1. He was

lnte2rated

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ALL 1988 MODEL CHEVROLET.' S- 1·0 EL's ·

Wrd .. Ort. 21-6-S p.m. Co\l f'ge R('c.

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6-8 p.m .; Coll ep;e Swtm
Thurs .. Oc-1. 22-'i"~8:30 p m . Co ll egr Rr c., .......... ,........ l2 : Jf). l: 30 p.m .IRi o Ell.'m . Kid s

7-8: 30 p.m. ' Co \l eg£' Swim
Fri .. Oct. 2.1-fi-1\ p.m . 0 J&gt;('n Rt-c .................. _,, ............................ 6-8 p.m .!Open Swim
SJt .. Orl. 2~ -1 -.1 p.m . Open Ree .... ,_,....
.. ..................... .... .. 1-3 p .m . Open Swim
su n.. Ot"l. 2:i- 1·3 p.m. Qp('n Rec ............................................... t -3 p .m . Oprn S1.1:lm
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~--

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-·-----

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intereSt rates . They wCre introduced in the 1960s to make
!,e nders liquid and stimulate
homE' buying .
The process begins when prospeel ive homeowners app ly for
mortgages to banks , savings and
Joan as sociations and mortgage
bank~rs. The loan paper is solei to
intermed iaries . such as Freddie
Mac or priva te o r ~an i z ations
who repa ckage it in units repres -

SAYS

Mon .. Oc1. 18-7.!.-1: 30 p.m. , Cellegr Rt'c ............... ,....... .. 12: 30-l : :lO p.m ., Fitness Swim
·
7-R: 30 p.m ,I COllege Swim
Tu&lt;'s .. OCl. 'l 0-7 R: :lOp.m. CQll f&gt;J'! €' Rec ............ .......... ....... 7-8: 30 p.m ./College Swim

(

By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS - A Morlga
backed · t pass -through)
offers one of the
: bcsi risk/ return
dea ls available
to inves1ors,
plus excellent
·liquidity. Two
drawbacks.
' though . are )hal
. ·monthly income
tuate 'and the term of the
investment cannot be predicted
with certai nty .
P ~t ss·throug h
securiti es re pruenl shares in pools of home
m ortgages having approx i·
mateiy the same terms a nd

Call 446-1986 to reserve your seat.

win."

O.:\TE -GYI\1N t\SIU~1
POOL
~un .. 0c1 IR- 1 :\ p.m . •Opl'O Rec....
.. , .......................... ~ ...... 1·3 p.m .!QpPn Sw~m
ll-8 p.m. Coll egf' Rf'c. ...... ,. .............. ......... .. . 6-8 p.m.! Co i\C"g(' Sw1m

~-·--

Mortgage backed (
through) security

Integrated Resources Equity Corporation
530~ Second Ave., Gallipolis

t&amp;...,..cA_•s_•_•~6.....·3-67_2___

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

-~~--·· -~

~- ·

... '"

~ · -~----..-

., .

."':""~: -',f

Chevrolet-Olds· Inc.

,6_1_6_E
_A_s_TE_R_N_A
_v_E_.,_G
_A_L_LI_P_
o_
u_
s _ _ _r_•.:...
uc_
.Ks_•_4_6--2o_o_o--J

...
.

..

..........

.

., ..

'
·-1 ....

pas~

Treasury and Justice Depart·
mentsl brings the full faith' a nd
credil of the U.S. gover nmen t
behind these securities. They are
as safe as Tr Pasury bonds but
typically yield one to lwo percent
higher (C urre ntly 10 percent) .
Federal Home Loan Mortgagt•
Cor(&gt;oration (FHLMC): Freddie
Mac PCs (Participation Certifi·
cates) are backed by both FHA
a nd VA mo rtgages a nd priva tely
Insured conventional mortgages.
plus the general guara nt ee of
F HLMC. a p; !va te ly m anaged
public instituti on owned by lhc
Federal H'ome Loa n Bank Board
System members. With less
safety. P Cs yie ld 15 to 40 basis
points more th a n GNMAs .
Federal National Mortgag e
Association (FNMA) : Fannie
Mae MBSs (Mortgage-Bac ked
Securities) are Issued a nd gua ·
ranteed , by FNMA. a
govt&gt;r nm t'nt - spo n sored.
publicly-held
(NYSJ;: -Iraded l
company. and backed by both .
conven tion al and FHA and VA
mortgages. They are essen tially
si mila r to Freddie Macs.and tend
10 have similar y ields.
Collateralized mortgage obli·
!(&amp;lions (CMOs), a var iat ion
issued bv ·Freddie Mac and
private issuers. are paid off at
diffNenl speeds. Ail CMOs re·
ceive month ly interest, but prin·
cipal repayment s now first to
flost -paying CMOS. the n to
monthly intermediate CMOs,
then long- term CMOs. For a
slight sacrifice of yield , CMOs
lessen the anxiety that pass·
throu gh holders might have
about the uncertain life of th eir

ented by certificates. \vh ich a rc
marketed to investors. 1ntercsl
and principal , including prepayments. pass from the homeowner
through (he intermediary to the
inveslor . When the mort gages
mature or are prepaid. th'e
inves rrrient expires.
Pass·throu ghs also enjoy an
active seco ndary m arket. where
securities trade either at di s·
counts or premiums, depending
on prevailing interest rates.
fn tercsfingly. pass -throughs re,
presenting pools of tow -rate
mortgages , when they ca n be investm ent-s.
bought favorably to resu lt in
The Tax Reform Act of 1986
attractive yields. arc the most • created a new tax en tity, termed
desirabl e holdi'ngs becau se 1he rhe real estat e mortgage Invest·
prepayment risk is low .
rnent conduit t REM IC) . a pass·
The following arc principal
through veh 1cle designed for
mortgage-backed securities:
mul1iclass mortgage. pools.
REMICs offe r flexibilit y a nd
protection from double taxation,
Government National Mort·
a problem &lt; MOs have avoided
gage Association (GNMA): Gin·
nie Maes are !he most widely - with tegaltrochnicalitles, a nd are
expected Ia breed a prolifer.atfon
held pa ss-throughs and are
of mo rtgage-backed securities
·b acked by Federal Housing Ad·
with widel y varying risk / return
ministration (FHAI · ln~ured and
characteris tics.
Veterans Adnl!nlstration (VAl ·
'( Mr. E vans is an Investment
guaranteed mortgages plus the
broker
for The Ohio Company In
general guarantee of GNMA.
its Galllpulls oftice)
wl•iclr thy virtu e of •·ullngs of lite

.

ented a plaque comemmoratin g
her years wl!h the college.
The plaque carried a quotation
from Prowrbs 31 : 31- ··Give her
of )he fruit of her hands: and-let
hel· own work praise her in the
gates."
·
A native of Logan· Count y,
W.Va .. Mrs. Lowe fi rs t moved Ia
Gallia County following he r mar riage to her fir s I husband , Ralph
Thompson, in 1950. He died in
1963, and she remar ried to
Homer D, Lowe in 1967. They
reside in Point Pleasant. W.Va. A
member ofTl'inity United Metho·
dist Church in Point Pleasant.
Mr s. Lowe is a member of ·iJ"'
administrative board. financ e
co mmit tee and Bible st'u dy
group.
Mrs. Lowe' s three childrch
have all graduated from Rio
Grande: Millie. with a degree In
communications: Kathy. whose
degree was in biology and
chemistry: and Rocky, with a
rlcgeree in mar keting and com·
puler science.

Money Ideas

did~==-=~::-==~~:::_::_::::._~=====================================~~~

LYNE CENTER SCHED ULE
. Week of October 18, 19S1

'25 Couple

RIO GRANDE - A vetera n every minut e of it."
administrator at Rio Grande
Mrs. Lowe recalled a professor
Co llege and Community ('allege . at the college who once adman·
has ret ired.
lshed her for acting as if Rio
" I' ve !(raduated a lot of stu·
Grande "was th e only cbllege in
dents a nd been i "mom to a lot of the world."
kids ." said Loredilh Lowe. Direc·
"' Well, il is.· I told him ," shr
tor of Records. arter ~ompiel ing said. "And il still is."
22 years of service with the
"She real ly is an institution in
cOile!(e.
herself." commented Dea n S.
Mrs. Lowe was first cmp loyf'd
Brown, Vice Preside nt of Student
at the college on Sept. I, 1965 as
Services. " Loredith is Ihe person
A:;sistant Director of Admi ssions
most graduat es feel gol them
and Records. and si nce 1986 has
th ro ugh their degree programs
been Director of Records.
witliout ~ hit c h. She i~ a n
Durin!( that time, Mrs . Lowe
inspiring woman, und she should
watched the co llege literally
be an inspiration to ail of us.'
, grow up around her. as suc h new
Brown sai d/ he felt Mrs. Lowe
' st ructures as Davis Library,
"won't retire from Rio Grande in
' Boyd HaiL L1{ne Cent e r , Davis
!hE' g r an dest sense.
Career Ce nter. the Fine and
·'There are people who arr flnr
Performing Arts Cent er and
profess ionals. but Lo redith is a
Rhodes Student Center were a il good person and a fi ne profes·
built du r ing her tenu re w1th the s ional," he add e d .
. college.
.., .
Tl!e college sta ff honored Mrs .
.. !.,.-"It's · like . ,watching a child Low&lt;' at a recent retirement
grmv." shP said . " I've loved party. in which she was pres-

• Switch portfolios every 30 days
while your money accumulates
without charge or brokerag~
' .
commtssiOns.
•

• Multiple payout options- you
select
and how you will
. when
.
rece1ve payments.

joing&lt;\ the rout. . The American
Sto¢k Exchange index plum·
mfted 23.26 to 323.55 while the
Na tional Association- of Securl·
ties Dealers index ' of over-the·
counter stocks fell32. 0l to406.33.
The catalyst for the week's
worst losses was the govern·
ment' s report Wednesday that
the nation ' s trade deficit had
narrowed in August , but not as
much
the fi nancial markets
had hoped for.
A $15.7 billion deficit in interna·
tiona! trade ra ised to a fever
pitch Wall Street's t ears of
inflation and ris ing interest
ra·les.
The Dow plunged a record 95.46
points Wednesday, 57.61 points
Thursday but broke it Friday
with a plunge of 108.35 points.
Shortly before the close Friday.
the Dow was off about 130 points.
"The emotional extremes the
market can go lo were never
better .exemplified than by Fri·
day's action," said Trude Lati·
mer.
a nal ys t at JosejJhthal &amp; Co.
.
Last week's selling reflect ed
Wall Street's gatherin g pess im ·
ism about rising interest rates, ·
inflation and the possibility that

as

economic growth . will prove
slower than originally projected.
said A. · Marshall Acuff Jr:
portfolio strategist at Smtih
Barney, Harris Upham &amp; Co.
Heightening Investors' fears
was a 95.23-polnt sharp drop In
the Dow transportation average.'
For Investors who ' follow the
so-called Dow Theory, a conflr,
mation of a decline ln the Dow
industrials by the Dow trans·
ports means a stronger down·
trend might be in place. than
previously thought.
Acuff said· his firm does noj
believe that the long-term bull
market Is over, but rather that
the declines since late August
have turned out to be "a very
su bstantial correction" In line
with what has occurred In past
bull markets.
.
" We will continue to see
v iolence and volatility both on
the upside and the downside and
it will probably take a while to
see if the market can sort things
out before renewing Itself," said
Acuff. He said such a renewal
will require ihe Federal .Reserve .
to adopt a more expansionary
monetary policy.

·Veteran Rio administrator retires
'•

• Choice of 10 investment
portfolios.

• Income guaranteed for life.

By ELLEN FREILICH
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK - Stocks plum·
· meted la st week as invt'stors'
anxieties at&gt;out Inflation and
rising inter est r ates spurred :
panic sellin g and ' gave the
market some of it s wo rst tosses
ever. .
In its biggest weekly point-loss
ever, the Dow plunged 235.47
points, or abcut 9.5 percent. to
2246.74. The loss surpassed la st
week's previous record drop of
158.78 point s .
Since lhe Dow hit a hi~h of
. 2722.42 August 25 , it has l o~t 17.5
percent of lls ·\lalue.
j
Losers ol;erwheimed gaine rs
1,942-138 among the 2.183 issues
traded bn. the New York Siock
Exchange, where volume tota led
1.124 billion shares . compared
with 878.7 million a week earlier
and 597 million the year belore.
Broad -market indi;:,ators
plunged. The New York 1Stock
Exchange Composite Ind ex
d ropped 1"....."1 t o 1"9
·' · .13 w h'1le
Standard · &amp; Poor' s 500-slock
index plunged 28. :17 to 282.70.
Secondary and tertiary issues

"I feel Rio Grande has served
them very well." Mrs. Lowe said .
" I leave wilh good thoughts
and wishes for th e college.· · she
co mmente d. "The people I' ve
mPf here have been great
friends. and people arc what
make Hio Grande.".

AEP's J(atlic
champions
electricity
PITTSBURGH. PA.- " Ame r·
le ans are tired of roller-coaster
rides of e nergy. With e lectric ity .
ther e a re no surprises- no craz y
fuel-cost curves," sa id J .E .
"Jack" Kat lie, senior vice presi ·
dent of fuel supply for Amer ican
Elect r ic Power.
Katlic, speaking at a recent
gat hering of architects and engi·
neers, cha mpio ned the . use of
e lectric it y to keep homes and
bulldings from becoming idle. He
said thai AEP. which is 90
percent coal-fired, wili offer
adeq uat e power. "reasonably
priced and reliably delivered."
to other power systems, offerin g
stability of supply .
"Our electrici ty is coal -fired.
'purely American, near a t hand.
s table and predictable. Gas. oil
or buffalo chips offe r a volatile
future , They are in the hands of
forelgner.s ." he added.

MOVING AHEAD - II all goes well Racine's
new medical and dental clinic will · be ready In
open on Jan. I. Construction on the facility, a
project of Veterans Memorial Hospital with 'the
cooperation of Horn e National Bank, Racine, is·
righi on ,schedulc, with mid-December being set

as completion date. The building located at the
corner of Fifth and Pearl wilf be occupied by Dr.
Douglas Hunter, currently practicing at the
Meigs Medical Building on Mulberry Heights and
on ~tall at Veterans, and Dr. Margie Lawson,
Racme dentist.

Firtn introduces referral program
for older residel)ts in community
GALLIPOLIS
Co lum bus
So uthern Power ('ompa n&gt;· an ·
nounccd recently thai a referral
program would · be instituted to
assist older citizens in need of
commu~ity support.
Under the Gatekeeper pro·
gra m , Co lumbus Southern employees who normally work di·
rect lv with customers. such a s
meter read0r. customf'r service
represE-ntatives and over head
line worker s. will watch for
signals indica! ing th at a custo·
mer is exper iencing diffi culties.
These emp loyees will recPive
special training to help them
identify potential problems.
Concerned gatekcC"pers can
make a referra .l by contacting

the local area agency on aging.
Once the gatekeeper ha s m ade
the referral, representatives
from the agency will contacl the
indi~dual, assess th e sit ual ion
a nd co nnec t them with the'
appropriate social and1or healt h
serv ices .
"We are proud to participate in
the Gatekeeper program, which
helps us achieve our goalof being

a communi ty- and custom er
ser vice-orient ed company," sa id
Ron McDade, Gallipolis area
manager. "Thi s program gives
em ployees th e tool s tq Identify
signs indic atin g a n el derly pe rson needs help and the resources
to lend tha t assistance."

According to McDade, the
utllity 's involvement is a symbci
of its co mmitment to the com·
munities it serves. "Our Held
workers - meter readers, customer accounts .-representatives
and line workers - are In the
community each day . They often
have direct access to customers'
homes. Th~y have an opportunity
to spot physical and emotional
changes that might otherwise go
unnoticed," McDade said.
"We are pleased to play an
important role ln this new
community service," be added.
" This program will help Identify
problems before they become
unmanageable.

Ohio University
program gets grant
ATHENS- Ohio University's
Coopera tive Work Relation s Pro·
gram iCWRPl recently received
a •$150,000 grant from the Ohio
Department of Development's
Office of. Labcr/ Management .
Coopera tion. The CWRP is Ia·
cated within thE' College of
Busin ess Administration .
The CWRP Is one of six
regional cent ers for labor/ man·
agem en t cooperation to received
contin ued suppo r t from th e state.
The program is designed to
strengthen the ao:ea's eco non:Jjf
vita lit y by Improving percep·
.tlons of ihe labor cl im ate In
southeaste•·n Ohio: The CWRP
provides 22 counties in this area
with services Includ ing assist ·
ance to area ano In-plant labor·
/ management commit tees,
workshops, conferences , publl·
catio ns and research.

PLAN NEW SERVICE- O.W. and Randy
Adkins, car dealers with about 45 years of auto
sales ex perience, plan to add \1 new van
cunver.ion franchise to Adkins Auto Sales, a110\0

Flrot Ave., Gallipolis. Adkins Auto sales will
continue to offer used automobiles and trucks of
various types .

t

�Page

D -2

The Sunday Ttmes-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Meig.s soil suroey

Plant roots do
not extend deeply
Gordon Gilmore
Soil Scientist
Plant root~ fort~ most part do
no&gt; extend very deeply into the
soil Except for plants with tap
roots rootmg often docsn t ex
tend more than a couple feet
beneat h the surface and tor
many grasses the rooting depth
may only be inches Yet these
plants are able to survive and
cOntinue to grow during those hot
dry months when evaporation
and transpiration of water from
the soil is much greater than the
precipitation During this tune of
\\ater deflctts plants are draw
mg on water or ground water
may be 10 feet or more belo" the
sotl surface well below the
effective rootmg depth of most
plants Thts stored moisture ts
brought up through soil to the
plant roots by the capillary
action of the sot!
Capillary action can best be
demonstrated by a can of soda
a nd a straw When a dnnktng
stray (small diameter tube) ts
put Into an open can of soda
(large diameter tube) soda rises
m the straw because 1) the
pressure m the smaller tube
(straw) is less than the pressure
m the can (large tube) 2)
cohesion
the attraction or
bondmg of matenals to them
selves pulls the !luld up m a
continuous unbroken flow and
3) adhesion
the alii action
between the surface of the straw
and the surface of the soda
reduces the effective pull of
gravity on the fluid column
These forces ail mleract to
overcome the pull of gravity and
ca use the fluid to nse m the
straw T he smaller the tube the
greater the capillary act10n The
soil is full of many pores which
are of varymg stze The amount
and stze of these pores are
determmed mainly by the tex
ture and structure of the sml
Sa ndy soils are dominated by
Iat ge pores whtch are very
ef!ectlve m movmg water mto
and down through the SOil but
these macropores are so large
that their capillary force ts less
than the Ioree of gravity These
pores can not conduct the Mored
ground wa ter to the surface but
act as natural drain for downw
ard water movement and also
store alr whtch ts v!la l to plant
growth
The smaller pores or mtcro
pores are the ones which hold the
water and move It to the soil
surface As I stated earlier the
sma ller the pores the greater the
capillary act10n Thus clay tex
tured so t!s which hav e ex
trPmely small a mounts of macro

pores and large amounts of
mtcropores are best ab le to move
ground "ater from greater
depths up the to plants roots
There IS a catch though JUSt as a
larger door" ay can allow people
mto a room more quickly than a
smaller one the same holds for
pores The pores in clay are so
small and ""ate1 moveme nt so
slowed that plantS often will
before adequate motsture can
reach the roots Also the lack of
larger pores grea tly slows water
mO\ ement mto the soil

compe fiiJOn

undermme

1es1

hency and compromise a com
pan} s standmg 1n soctetv sa d
P&amp;G chairman John Smale
Smale devoted his ent u e
speech at last week s ann ual
company shareholders meet mg
to an attack on hostile takeovers
ap Issue he sa td shou ld be of
mcreasmg Importance to our
SOCiety
Widespread hostile takeover
act!\ tty has made maxtmiZmg
Immediate share holder va lue
appear to be the baste purpose of
a business ent erpriSe
satd
Stnal&lt;&gt; In some ctrcles this IS
defended as adherence to free
enterpnse as reliance on market
fOrces to srructur&lt;;&gt; and resrruc
rure our economy I thmk thi s
emphasiS v. Ill If not approp
riately CUI bed have just the
oppostle Pffect
1 believe that by focusmg on
tbe short rerm and constdermg
onl', the tmmedlate rewards to
shareholders our publlcly held
business enterprises will see
their compettltve position deca~
thetr resiliency In difftcult times

hay or pasture v1a rotattons and

using minimum or no tillage
methods wtll enhance the forma
han of granul ar structure Thts

structure provides the best blend
of macropot es for wat~ mhltra
tmn and a1r storage

htle also

providing a high a ount of
m tciOpores for holdin available
water for plant use This gra nu
Jar structure Is especially tmpor
tan! on the clay sotls of thts
county Wllhout 11 th&lt;' Jack of
macropores m the sml grea!ly
mcreases run off and eros ion and
decreases the effectiveness of
any ramfall on the soil

undermmed and thetr standmg ln
our soc tety comprom tsed
Smale satd a hostile takeover
produces nothmg mot e than a
speculator
or
tempora ry
owner who ts mereil lookmg
for the fast buck
It IS clear that host tie takeov
ers do not do what the specula
tors sa} the~ w!JI do con tended
Smale Available ev td ence sug
gests thel do not usua lly bn ng
bettet management to poorly
run compames do not crea te
additional wealth In our economy
and do not even over !he long
term necessan ly pt 01 tde a good
mechamsm for shat eho ld ers ro
realize full value for thetr
shales

The P&amp;G chair man satd mak
mg qutck money through host tie
takeovers

ca n

damagE"

soc tell
Corpmaf!ons are clttzcnspaper citizens to be sure - but
Citizens nonetheless A cot pora
tton cxhtbt tmg little concern for
rhe rest of soc tetv or for tts o"n
future nsks the dtsfavor of our
c!ttzens
Smale pratsed the advan
tages of stabl llt ) and contmulty
In fundamenta l pohctes say mg
such a long term approach bene!
Its not only shareholders of a
company
but also tis em
pio)ecs the commu nllles tn
whtch 11 operates and tndeed out
soctety as a whole

Pererso n beginning his career
wtlh So~ta l Security m Chicago
Ill In 1966 will be cited for his
mnovatlve management In ac
compllshlng an increasmgly
complex workload system In the
face of decreasmg resources
Beca use of this the Athens
office ,. hlch serves more than
13 000 beneficiaries In Athens
and Meigs coqnlles has been
recognized by the Social Security
publlcat IOn Oasts as one of the
most productive fie ld offices In
the M i dw~ st

18, 1987

Apple tree owners have new alternatives
WOOSTER OhiO tUPI! -A
plant pathologist says apple tree
owners have new alternatives for
ftghtlng apple scab- a common
and persistent fungus thai de
forms apples and causes them to
drop from the tree before
rtpentng
Michael A Ellis of the OhiO
\gricultural Research and De
velopment Center says new
systemic fungictdes are the big
news m chemtcal control of apple
scab C::ommerctal growers a!
ready use them
Ellis says the new systemic
fungicides called ergosterol b!o
synthesis mhlbltors are valua
ble because they have curat tve
powers up to 96 hou rs after the
tree or fruit Is Infected Some
common EBI fu ngicides are
effective only up to 72 hours after
mfectton
Less of these new fungicides Is
needed per acre than th e usual

around~J uuu tscurrentiyatmed
at commerctal apple growers
but cheaper models for small
orchat ds may become available
m the future Eilts says
Fung tc!des are not ne cessar~
on scab resistant vanettes such
as Redfree Jonafree Ltberfy
and Sn Prize Two other scab
resistant vanettes Prima and
Pnscllla have long been av~lla
ble but a11; less desirable tot
eating
Exampleji of scab teststant
crabapples Include Cenlurtan
Cot a!burst Inglis Liset Red
Jade Sargent and White Angel

weekly spray program to keep
the fungus from germmatlng on
the surface of susceptlble 11ssue
Trees may be sprayed as often
as 15 umes itt a wet season
However ltmmg the spraying IS
crlltcal since convent tonal fungi
ctdes are not able to stop
Infection from spreadtng once II
has begun
They only prevent the fungus
from germmaltng on leaf or frutl
surfaces A Cleveland companv
has developed an apple scab
predictor that combm es elec ~
tromc w~ath er momtorlng sen
sors wlf!t a microcomputer to
provtde stmple and rapid pred!c
uon of upcommg app le scab
toflctlon penods
In the past g1 owers had to rely
on the Mtlls
c hart
a
temperat m e mmsture ratio dta
gra m to calculate when mfec
lion might occur
The umt wtth a pt tce rag of

protectant fu ngicides But wtfh
prices around $70 a gallon in
farm suppl&gt; stores EBI fungi
ctdes are not yet pract real for
most home growers
So far systemrc funglctdes are
not packaged m small enough
quanlltres for horn e gardeners
Until they are E llis recommends
that small orchards contmue
usmg standard spray programs
Ellts also advtses home gar
deners to rake and destro&gt;
diseased apples and leaves on the
ground smce the scab fungus
survives the" mter on debris
Thls wtll reduce the number of
spores produced m the spnng
when wmd and ram help begin
the cycle again on young leaves
and apples Dark leswns o~
foliage and frutl show up several
days to weeks after tnfectton has

James Jacoby

NORTH

• K J 94
• QJ 8 2
+ AS

Tax Refonn
Act topic
RIO GRAN DE - An oven te"
of the Tax Reform Act was
present ed to members of !he
Ohto ValleyManagemenr Associ
af ton when the orgamzatton met
fm Its recent meet tng at Rto
Grande College and Commumty
College
Robert Clary chtef fmanctal
officer of Holzer Clime Inc
dtstnbuted a revtew of changes
In the tax law
He also dtscussed changes m
taxable mcome standard dedu c
!IOns personal exemptiOns 111 o
earner deduction s mco me aver
ag mg deductiOns of personal
expenditures busmess or mvest
ment expenses busi ness tra vel
expenses ItemiZed dedu ctiOn s
home offtce expense rapttal
gams and mletcst expense
Attenoees at the breaktast
Included Charles i\dk tns and
Tom Chtlds Holzer Medtcal
Center V Patrick Bell Center
for Developmen t at Ohto Umver
sll) Mtke Berrtdge and Mtke
Da\ ts Ohto Valley Bank Carl
Dahlberg Wellston Greg Ga
trell Taco Grande Phyllis
Handley Jackson Chamber of
Commerce Michael Harford
Comm untl} Improvement Cor
poratwn of Gallla Count&gt; Susan
Jennmgs Holzer Clinic Bob
Lambert and John Lambert
Jackson Aiummum Co Dwtght
Leedy Ohio Techntcal Tt ansfer
Organization at Rio Grande
College and Community College
Ronald McDade and Dana Waldo
of Columbus Southern Power
Co Robert Muller and Charlie
Lu nd of Ft ench City Tool
Charlie Powell Appalachian
Power Co Deborah Shew brooks
of OSCO A G Shoemaker Galli
polis Joh n Shump Buckeye
Hills Career Cen ter Harold
Thompson of Central Trust ro
A J Trawick J t of Ohio Power
Co and Pat Whitehead of the
Galilpoiis Daily Tribune
In attendance from Rlo Grande
College and Community College
were Paula Dobbins Larry Ew
lng Kevin Kelly Herman Koby
Sanford Lane Richa rd Owens
DonS Plymale Cynthia Rice P
Evan Stephens Margaret Tho
,. mas and Harold Walker

EAST

WEST

.A

+97 52

.108 53

t9S

+to

+t0743
+Q '3 2

9 74

SOUTH

Farm bill important to landowners
Soil Conservation Service
Michael Duhl
District Conservationist
By now you are most likely
becoming tired of hearin g about
the Farm Bill aka the Food
Security Act aka Swampbuster
Sodbu ster and Consenatwn
Complla'nce Well be you as tired
as you may be thts Bill is so
vitally Important to all ian

II 17 87

+K 8 4

• to 6 3

other mcome up 9 5 percent
compared to a year ago
Total assets at Sept 30 were
$4 5 billi on an mc rease of $l21
mtillon over the com par able 1986
date 1 otal depostls 1eac hed $3 4
btl lion up Sl"J mtlhon ovet 1986
Capllai !unds rose 17 percent or
$44 mtlilon to reach a record $301
mtlhon
Durmg the thtrd quarter the
Central Bancorporatton agreed
'" pnnclple to metge wtth
Pittsburgh based PNr Flnancta l
Corp thP nat tons 18th largest
bank holdmg compan; wtth
assets of$28 btlhon 1 hat merger
ts expected to be completed m the
flrsr half of 1988
The Central rru s! Co of
Southeasrer n Ohto N A Is a n
affiliate of Centra l Ba nrorpora
tton headquartered m Cmcln
natt Locall; there are ntnc
Central Trust offices m Martella
Ga llt pohs Mtddleport a nd one
com tn!! soo n !o Belpre

+AQJ
.Q7 6 2
+AK 6

+ KJ 6
Vulnerable North South
Dealer South
West

North

Pass
Pass
Pass

East

South

Pass

a•
Pass

Pass

Opemng lead

c

2 NT

+ 10

Done in
by a 4-4 fit
By James Jacoby

South s two no trump opemng
showed 20 21 high card pomts North
was lookmg at 14 so the combmed total was 34 35 plenty for a small slam
North btd three clubs iStayman) to see
If South had a four card maJor suit It
dtdn ttake long for North South to ar
nve m sot hearts

Declarer won the club lead with hts
Jack and led a heart toward tile dum
my Wtlhout a break 111 tempo West
played the etght and dummy s Jack
We at th e Soti and Wa fer was taken by East s ace Back came a
Consel\alton District tSWCD) club to dummy s ace and declarer
here m Meigs County are the was at the crossroads The play of the
he lpmg ~ge n cy that wtll enable etght m front of K J 9 4 and stmtlar
you to cbmpiy wtth this Federal holdmgs IS always suspect smce tlts a
Mandate We will at no charge textbook sttualiOn for falsecardmg
work with all landowners to Sl!ll tl!ere ts a sound reason for pay
mg off to such a deeepllve play If
ens ure that yo u \\Ill have a valid
W
est has a smgleton etghl he must
workable Conservf!t ton Plan m
play
tl tf he has to 8 5 3 he mtght
your possession by 1990 This wtll
well play etlher the five or the three
be yo ur
ticket
to rem a m Declarer dtd go through the exerctse
ehgtble for th e governmen t pro of commg to hts hand wtth a spade to
grams after the 1990 date
lead up to the K 9 of hearts m dummy
Keep m mmd that we have only When the heart three appeared from
27 short months to Write Conser West he went rtghl up wtth dummy s
vatwn Plans fm all of you 1 fully kmg and down he went
expect that tf you are anyfhlng
Maybe we can find a moral here
ltke me most of you wtll walt When your stde has 34 or more bal
un til December of19B9 to come In anced htgh card pomts don t look for
for your conservauon plan It you a 4 4 Itt Instead play no-trump
do plellse expect a sorry there where you may be able to survtve hav
mg two losers m a parllcuiar sutl If
are many ahead of yo u
declarer
were m no-trump he could
answer ' You need ro get started
survrve
mtsguessmg
the heart dtstn
tmmediately on your Conserva
button because of the favorable loca
!ton Plan Your ftrst step? Call tton of the club queen and would make
your SWCD at 992 6647 We are 12 tricks
starting dete rmmatwns now a nd
will be begmmng our pla nnm g
A new bock by James Jacoby and
verv soon Remem ber we II do his father the late Oswald Jacoby IS
all we can to render ass tstance now available at bookstores It ts "Ja
and enable you to comply wtlh coby on Card Games • published by
Pharos Books
the Farm Bill ramifications

downers wtth hJghly erodtbl e
crop land that it deserves yet
anot her draini ng of the old tnk
pen
I sense thai at least m Metgs
County that the mformatwn we
have been trying to dtssemmate
through newsletters personal
co nt acts new s papers etc
about the farm btll IS just flying
through most people s heads m
one ear and out the other The
meat and potatoes of the
matter IS th at were taikmg
about a very senous Act
mandated by federal law that
requires (11ail landowners ln the
Unit ed States to bnng so t! losses
on cropland to a mm lmum and
i2l a il landowners to have a
conserva tion plan done for their
cropla nd by 1990
What happens tf you do not
have these two requirement s
done by 1990? Very simply and
please 1.1?1 this soak m !an
downers wtll become meligtble to
par!tctpate In any of the govern
ment crop progra ms That s as
stmpl y sa td as 11 really ts You
eit her do or you don t' There a 1e
no alternatives'

October
11

18. 1987

Help Wanted

Tour Gu qes Male &amp; Female
Our top people earn SBOO
51200 per week Pleasant work
ng cond t10n s Salary to stan
w th bon ses A rea v fu 1 place
to work Fncndly neat depen
dable ara the requirements Ca l
614 286 6421 Bsk for Sue
WANTED Energet c people or
anted te am memher/ dantal as
s slant to Jo n our pract1ce part
t me You II want to have all the
necessary quallt1es of a top
notch dental ass sta nt (expe
r ence h elp ful but not neces
sarvl W lhng to work hard? Send
us your resume and salary
history to Box Cia 108 Galllpo
hs Oa•ly Tnbune 825 Jrd Ave
Galhpol s Oh o 45631

iunlllll 'limet • jentintl

WANTED PROGRAM DEVEl
OPMEN T SPECIAliST t or Par
tml Hosp1tal zat on Prog am at
Woodl11nd Centers Masters De
gree and o~~:penencce w •t h se

Announcemenls

and to Rawhngs
Coats Blower Funer
al Home for thetr ftne
servtces Our thanks
to anyone who help
ed tn any way dunng
our loss
The Ruth
Hendncks Famtly

2

In Memonam
In Memory of

STANLEY RUPE
who passed away

year ago
October 19 1986

1

3 Announcements

6 pretty kittens part Maltese
wants new hom e 304 675
6720

lc-

Hunung rtghts to p,qpert es n
WashrngJon Gall a and Me ga
Counties available for ease Cal
(304)4!8 4739 weekdays
8 00 5 00
No Huntmg or Trespassmg of
any kind on Reymond or M ar y
Smth Lower5M I&amp; Rd Galhpo
Is Ferry W Va

4

Gtveaway

Queen sLZe mattress only Needs

cover Call

61~

246 9546

6 Lost and Found
LOST Male Beagl e lnv1cmityof
Lower Ave Rd Maybedraggmg
11: chan
I 614 446 2660

fia

LOST Wh1to male eat ,., the
VIC nrtv of 76Locust St on O(:t
9 Was to rec we m6lhcal attn
f(lr a serous 1llness If ilnyone
has seen or knowt the whe e
abou t s of this cat Please call

Free pupp es to good home
Mot her reg•stered En glish Set
ter Very good Bird hun1er Ca ll
614 245 6497 or 245 523~
K tten1 to g1vt1way 8 9 wks
old All d ff•etn colors Cell
614 388 8276

Giveaway Female dog ~co l he
Call 814 742 3143

FOUND lemaltJ Dobermah
owner .,tease ca ll 304 675
7710 must descr be

7

Yard Sale

Cute kittens weaned need good
home 304 676 6204

Wanted To Buy

cttnsod n Ohm and West Vng

nta Elit&amp;1e an l ~que farm

9

tqul

Ca I A
2328

T omm fll M 4 742

5785

QUILTS
H gh 1 r ces pa d fo pre 1950
qu s Appl q e p eced any

Wanted To Buy

conrJ to 1 Call 614 992 2101
or 614 992 5667

nJ

We pay cash for late model clean
usod c1us
J m Mink Chev Old s l nc
BUI Gene John son

Cash for stRnd n g t mber We
buy veneer wh t~ ouk and
wan t Call AI T romm 614
742 2328

6 14 446 3672
TOP CA SH pa1d for 83 model
and nfl\o\ler uSfld cars Sm th
B~o~ ck Pont1ac.
1911 Eastern
A-..e Galhpohs Call 614 446

2282

Buy g daly gold Silver coms
r ngs JfJwelry stetl ng ware uld
cons lnrge cu rrency Top pr
ces Ed fl u keH Barber Shop
2nd Ave M ddtepon Oh 614
992 3476

WANTED TO BUY Used wood
&amp; coal hea1en Swans Furn
ture 3r d &amp; 01 ve St Galhpol1s
Ca I 614 446 3159

L11tle tJwrgs
rrr WorN Alol

Wanlod to buy Long wood Call
anyt me- C &amp; R F~rewood Call
614 367 0669

Ill

lh

ClllsSI{Jtd 5fCI on

Pt Pleasant

Employment
Services

&amp; Vtctntty
Large Yard Sale 131 leWIS St
New Haven Oct 20 and 21
9 00 am Annque1 Home In
te or 0 shes wmter clothmg
and coats blue Jeans muse

bo•

Tan pupp•• to good homes
304 676 7896

9

Pearson Auct oneer

dat on sa as 304

614 446 4866

Sears Kenmore el ectnc dryer
0&amp;11614 446 0516

Fu ll ab:e manreu and
springs 162 Park On\le

Sheep manure You load and
haul 304 773 5696

Public Sale
&amp; Aucbon

W anted o buy s1and1.,gt mbcr
R ck

HUNTERS

Four fam1ly yard sate 8oys
cl othes sizes 12 up to &amp;duh 1
Couch chan odd1 and ends 6
m•let from Po nt Pleasant Rt 2
f rst brlch houee on r ght past
H1ckory Chapel CflUrch 9 00 t t
7 Monday and T• esday

~

8

lllte model truck 4 wheel drn~e
Low mileage Call 614 446

3850

Wanted to buy
Manger
Scene Chustmaa decorat on
Call 614 446 3339 or 446
4931 after 5 PM

11

Help Wanted

A\/On Sell Avon for Chr ~tmas
Mak e 40 pe cent Call614 448

3358
Old furn ture t oys qu Ita dl~
hw&amp;re etc One p ecfl or whole
houSflhold cas h pa1d 304 675
7a,16 nr 675 6899

EXCELLENT WAGES f o spa e
t m e auemb ly work e ectron
cs cra1ts Others Info (50 41
641 0091 Ex t 2987 Opell 7
dayli CALL NOWI
I

Federal State and c v serv ce
JObs $14 707 t Q S66 819 vear
now h r ngl Call JOb lfne 1 618
459 3!111 e.~~t F1622 1or nfo
24 hrs

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctton

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1987
10:00 A.M

"When I started dating Lola, I
threw away my httle black
book but I kept my little
whtteI computer. "

Telev son Advert 1 ng n eeds
h gh energy persons for th e
Galllpol s area Poss ble funher
management opp ortun ty Part
t m e full t1me base and co m
m ss on Ca ll 9 5 304 757
7881
AVON All areas Call M arlyn
Weaver 304 882 2645
AVON all areas cal
Spears 304 675 14 29

S h~r

ey

Rad1olog c Technolog st
I mmed ate open ng for reg s
tered rad1ol og1c technolog st
Even ng shrft 2 30 11 00 pm
Mondaya thru Fr dav
Send
resume to Pleasant Valley Hosp
tal Director of Pe sonnet Valley
Onve Po1nt Pleasant W Va
26660 304 675 4340 ut
307 AA EOE

HIRING II
Govurnm ent tobs
your area
$ 15 000
S6B 000
{602)838 8885 eJC t 120 3

B 00 AM

400P M

SOCIAL WORK POSITION Pro
gram Coordmator for two res•
dent•al pr ograms [5 bed / 8 bed)
for people: w th mental retard a
t10 n and de\lelopment d1sab1h
lies n Gafha Cou nty Oh o
IGalhiJO s/ B dw el 1 Res pons1
biht es mclude the day to day
super v son of the prgrems
Must have one year e11:per ence
and a degree from an ac:cradrted
progr am n one of t he f o llow ng
ar eas Educat on Soc•al Work
Therapuet c Recreat on Reha
bllltatlon Counsel ng
OR a
d egree '" • r eld other than
Socral Work and at least 3 years
Soc1al Work e11:per ence under a
MSW Expcnence with Med1ca1d
regulat1ons and prev ous eKper ence w t h personnel superv1
son .praferr&amp;d Valid Ohio Dnv
e r s L1c ense and good dnv ng
record requited Salary $1 6
19 000 / &gt;,E~ar
L b&amp;ral benefit
package AI apphear1ons must
be post marked by 10 2 6 87
Send reliume to Robin Eby
auckeye Co mrnun ty Services
P 0 Box 604 Ja ckson Oh
45640
Equal opportun•ty
em ployer
Go\lernment Jobs $16 040
S 59 230 yr Now h r~ng Call
805 68 7 6000 E11:t A 9805 for
current fed eral list
E~~:cel

ent wages for spa re 1 me
assemb y work electron cs
crafts ot hers Info (604) 641
0091 EXT 3026 open 7 davs

W V&amp; 304 529 6031

H r ng Governmenl JObs you
ar ea S15 000 S68 000 Call
1602)838 8885 EXT 1449

3 Announcements

5

Happy Ads

6t4 384 3060
1 800 282 2167
Qp e n 1111 Oc1ober 30

HAUNTED HOUSE

Who Qassed away one
year ago today
The angels are soHiy •uard- 1
tng
A qutet and stlenl grave
Form 11 lies a prec10us
We loved but could
save
The th ngs you always 1
for us
I thm k of every day
They keep you near and
dear to us
Though God called you
away
I often Sit and thmk of you
And speak of how you d ed
To thtn k you could not say
goodbye
Before you closed your
eyes
Your weary hours and days
of pam
Your troubled ntghts are
past
And tn my ach tn g heart I
know
You have sweet rest at last
But some sweet day we II
meet agam
Beyond thts loti and stnte
We II clasp each others
hand once more
And have eternal hie
Sadly mtssed and loved
more than you could ever
know by Husband
( Chtldren Grandchildren
and
that knew her

614 992 3751

PUBLIC AUCTION

Route 32 East
Ja ckson Oh10

FLOSSIE JOHNSON

Someone to sell 1ewelry and a
t ne of :otHer products 1n Me gs
Co area Go od eornm ss ons
poss ble 614 992 3703 or

I

NOAH'S ARK
ANIMAL PARK

IN LOVING MEMORY
OF

Help Wanted

I

RN Supervsor
One full t me nursmg super111Sor
pos 11on eva table 1 1 00 to 7 00
sh ft wth our h gh medicar e
ce nsus wo n eed an AN su perv
so r w t h ex per ence n sk lied
long term care and reh ab•ht on
nun ng Contact H1llvrew Nurs
ng and Rehab I ta110n ce nter
1720 17th St
Huntington

Tnbune - 446-2342
Senttnel - 992-2156

8

l

verely
mentally
d s:~~bledor adults
preferred
Coursework
e11:pe t~~:;;:;:::;:;:;:=::;==~":;:~:;;:;:::;:;:;:::::;:=:::-1
r enee ngroupprocesswouldbe 11
Help Wanted
11 Help Wanted
helpf u For more nformat on - - - - - - - - - ' - contact Sandra McFa land Per
sonnel Department Woodland
GET PAID for read ng books! L.oca company has mmed ate
Cenler s Inc: 412 V m on P ke
S100 00 per title Wr rte ACE
open1ng 1or profess1onal recep
Gall pohs Oh o An equal oppor
.33C 161 S Lmcolnwey N
donal Must possess cler cal &amp;
tun tyemp oyer Wood land Cen
A ur o ra II 60542
typm g sk1ll1 Opportun tv f or
ters does not d sc r m nate on the
advancement n areas of promo
bass of age
color creed
We need a cons truct on tore
bon &amp; adverts 119 40 hr e week
nat onal o gm race sex or type
m .'ln Needs to beeJtper enced n
Can 614 682 772B weekdays
of d sabllty
commercu11 &amp; ndustnal heatmg
afte r 5 00 PM
&amp; air msula110n &amp; p p ng We
offer good pay vacation h o liday
Wanted
I ve
n Nanny
1 Card of Thanks
pay un form allowance &amp; msu
housekeeper to relocate to Cha
ranee allowance W II move the
rleston n ce 11ome 2 beout ful
fight man Wnte to Rhod es
childr en ages 4 and 1 Mu st be
Heatmg &amp; A11 Cond t1on ng
ovur 21 lov ng and respons1ble
We would hke to ex
lncorp P 0 Bo• 548 M oron
non smoker have dr ve r I cense
press our thanks to
OhiO 43302
Good salary R6ply Dr and Mr s
Bet esh 1968 Parkwo od Ro ad
our many fnends and
Someone 10 hve 1n &amp; care for
Charleston W
Ve 25314
elderly lady Not bed fast L ght
netghbors for thetr
304 343 3550
housework non s.moker L ves
food flowers cards
n Ga ll po s Cal 614 446
RN POSITIONS AVAILABlE
2386 or 4 4 6 0322 or 446
and phone calls Our
Full ttme Med Surg Spe c a
36 17
Care Unit or Emergency Room
thanks to Perkvtew
Mu st have current Oh o license
Del \ler v &amp; Prep Per&amp;on Must
Health Care Center
Excellent pay wrth sh ft d1fferen
ha'lle own car &amp; nsurance
t1al and s gn on bonu5 Please
and thetr staff to
Abo\le ave age startmg wage
co nta ct the Oak Hill Commun•ty
Apply n per son Donelh s
Rev Paul Taylor for
Med ca Center Inc Personna
Spnng Valley Plaza
Off ce- Monday thr u Fr1day
hts comforttng words

R81Pster - 67S-1333

Gtveaway

LPN or EMT to perform
nsurance e~~:amlnat ons m M d
dlepon Pomeroy and New
Haven area.s: Send resume to
PMI P 0 Box 2267 Huntmg
ton W Va 26723

446 8621

Rel1able babys tter n my home
one k ndargarten ag.e ch ld fi ef
requ~red
Call 614 446 4B34
attar 5 00 PM

11

Help Wanted

AN

Stylist needed w1th managers
l1censP. Cat 614 446 3703 or

@ lil7 NEWSPAI ER ENTERPRISE ASSN

4

11

LAFF-A-DAY

Gallta County
Fatrgrounds
Acttvtttes Butldtng
Fnday October 23
6 10 PM
Saturday Oct 24
3 ~ &amp; 6 10 PM
Admtssron $1 00 for stu
dents &amp; $1 50 lor adults
Sponsored by The
Hannan Trace French Club
let Us Scare You to
Death"
MEIGS CO FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL
MEETING
TUES OCT 20 1987
Eastern Htgh School
Audttonum
7 11 PM
Steak Dtnner
Entertatnment
For Re servatiOns

992 2181

Adults 14 00
Chldren ' I 50

located on St Rt 124 al the late Swartz prop
erty next to Masomc lodge at Racme Ohto
HOUSEHOLD
Sears Coldspot frost ess relngerator Fng da e elect lt
range chrome breaklast set w/4 chars couc h mtsc chars
oval rugs lamps hamper oval stand sma Igas heaters lawn
cha s double nnse tubs msc pols pans &amp; ltnens
MISC
Se f propelled awn mower wheelbarrow steel door
w/closer wood ladder step ladder &amp; stool v ce &amp; msc
tool s

OWNER MARJORIE CROW

Eats
Postttve I D
DAN SMITH AUCTIONEER
Ohto ltcense No 57 68 1344-W Va 515 88
614 992 7301 or 614 949 2033
Not responstbl e for acc1dents or loss ol property

Cash

NANCY ANN'S
CRAFT &amp; GIFT SHOP
Georges Creek Road at Bulavtlle Ptke
Gall1polts Oh1o 45631

NANCY JANEY &amp; ANNA STROTMAN

"Crafts &amp; Specialy Cakes
made with Love and Pride"
Reg1ser now for basket weavmg classes
for Wednesday October 28 at 6 30 P m
Regtstratton fee mcludes all matertals

For mformat1on call
446-6296 dr 446-0426

12

RESIDENT MOVING TO FlORIDA
HOUSEHOLD
GE mcrowave oven Ph leo d shwasher wooden desks
B&amp;W TV AM/FM radtos GE reh gerator ktchen table &amp;
cha rs canopy bed chest &amp; dresser loveseal bookcase h1
deabed rocker piCture• Eureka sweeper fold ngt#t f11e
place set bar stools card table drapes TV sta nd oden
ca bmets clock curtams bed spreads slereo Tupperware
mattress &amp; box spr ngs htgh char d shes sk ilets gun rack
cold packer sewng basket books whatnots Wh rlpool re
It geralor fr ost tree wtth automat Cite maker &amp; much muc h
more

MISCELLANEOUS

1972 Yamaha 100 Jnternallon a Cub Low Bov wtlh 60
Wood s beHv mower &amp; snow blade 5 hp t ller three gasol ne

push mowers ut 1tv Ira ler flymo mower hme spreade r 10
speed btcycle cannmg 1ars k1ds pool table mtlk bottles
Su nbeam kerosene heater I ght I &gt;lures 4 case cet!mg ttle
speake s golf ba~ ~oil cart cast 11on kettle buckets ol black
top seat sythe 12 gal crock pat o table umbrella au ta nk
sphtt ng wedges mtlk cans roll hberglass msula on sleep
mg bag Samsontte luggage 3 pc m croscope tram outltl
elec!nc heaters drum set playpen draw ng tab e car mr
rots hand too s wheelbarr ow anllque oak chaus ca meras
P A system &amp; much much more
Eats

OWNER. JIM ISAACS

Cash
Postttve I 0
MARLIN WEDEMEYER AUCTIONEER

614 245 5152

Uc and Bonded tn Ohto
Not responstble for acctdents or loss ol property

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1987
10.00 A.M.
located on St Rt 124 next to lodge tn Ractne
thts ts the personal property of the late Esther
Prtce who moved to Ractne
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS
Poster beds dressers chest of dr,wers k1tchen cab net
w/ tlour bm (n eeds repa r) library table lern stands plank
bottom cha rs p ano rolls &amp; cab nels hall tree carmval dog
110n bed shav1ng mrror copper wash bo ler corn 10bber
w/ feet all std eboard w/ muror otl lamp day bed wash
stand rocktng chau trun k t n pte safe panels m sc stone
1ars &amp; crocks popcorn popper uon tea kelt e barn ltmber
dnll old school doub le desks ron pots lanterns &amp; globe
ra lroad hgh! Durn an! C8 spoil ght miSC old d sl es 81 nd
George wooden spoon and lots ots more
HOUSEHOLD
Couch eleclr c whtte sewtng machme color &amp; B&amp;W TVs me
tal bed qu It p1eces &amp; matenal new bedspread elecll c he a
let &amp; fans 2 pc ltv ng 10om su te end tables co rd organ
lazy Boy rocke Warm Morn ng healer w/ fan &amp; thermostat
Chnstmas decorat on and etc
MISC
m1s c

DAN SMITH AUCTIONEER
Ohto ltcense No 57 68 1344-W Va 515 88
614 992 7301 or 614 949 2033
Not responstble for acctdents or loss ol property ,

18 Wanted to Do

31

s t n my hon e
non smoke
between Ordnance a1 d Jr H1gh
set ools references 304 675
3616

Home for Sale bv Owner
Greenbr er Eat 38R
bll8\lel
on 2 4 acres AC W B F P wet
b81' 2 car g•aga. Ph Before
4 OOPM 614 446 4009 After
4PM Ph 304 675 3816

Baby sitter close to schoo
ro om fo another ch d
hOUJ$ 304 675 2784

W H help tmance or land con
tract 10 yr old hou.a 3 Br

W II

baby

e xpe enced

has
any

Financial

Homes for Sale

Patr ot Village Call 614 ,f46
1 340 446 3870
Repoueued homes from Go\1 t
from $1 00 plua repau1 taxas
Throughou1 OH Nat onw1del
Alao tall propert es Call 216
453 3000
ncludmg Sundev
ht H1278

3 br house tn Crown Crty Mam

st

21

Busmess
Opportumty

Srtuattons
Wanted

$25 ooo cau
1511 or446 1622

Have room n pnvate home for
elder pe son Good ca e Reaso
nt~b e Call 614 266 6509
Have opomng n my home for
elderly Reasonable rates ca r
TlC 614--992 7044 o 614
992 6817

1 B Wanted to Do

THE OH 0 VAlLEY PlJBUSH
lNG CO recommends that you
do bus ness with people you
know and NOT to send money
through tho ma I u t I you have
nvest gated the o ffer ng

Real Eslale
31

2 story home on 2 acr•
overlook ng c1ty 2 bedrooms 1
bath basement g•age Oak
woodwork. atone walkways
new furnace Perfect for lhose
who appreCiate the quahty •nd
beauty of older homes
S46 000 Call 614-446 86~
SALE RENT Ranch uyle l.aige
kltctlen ut hty rm S•ngle g•
ag"' L1ke new Carpet thru out
Call 614 446 1358

Homes for Sale

54 Mtsc Merchandtse-'
Sept c tank pump ng es dent a
&amp; commer cal !180 per IQad
Ron E\lans Enterpr se!l Jackson
Oh o Call 614 286 5930

4 BR fireplace full basement 3
m so -Of .GalJ pols.. S~4 900
Ca I Days 614 446 1615 after
5 00 446 1244

11

11

Help Wanted

PHARMACIST
A Progresstve 128 Bed
Acute Care Factlity seeks
a Regtstered Staff Phar
mactsl Thts mdtvtdual
wtll work four 10 hour
days per week Salary Ne
gotrable Call the Director
of Personnel at Pleasant
Valley Hospttal Pomt
Pleasant W Va

(304) 675 4340
AA/ EOE

Help Wanted

SEll OUT 1500 tobacco
sltcks anltques dress
ers bed frames dtntng
rm sutte cha1rs &amp; mtsc
1tems Freezer heattng
stove 2 gas ranges Rt
288 tn Rodney
SAT 12 to 6
SUN 10 to 2

TOMMY'S
ENTERPRISES
Used Car /Truck
Parts

446-0745

REGISTERED NURSES
lmmedtate opentng for full ttme and
part ttme R N 's to work m areas of
•Spectal Care
•Emergency Room
•Sktlled Nursmg Facthty
•Medtcal Surgtcal Umts
Salary comparable wtth expe nence
Excellent Frmge Beneftts
SEND RESUME TO
RHONDA DAILEY, R N
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 457119

OR CALL 992-2104, EXT. 213

St. Rt. 218
Gallipolis

ASHLEY WOOD-COAL
CABINETS &amp; FURNACES

5100 OFF
USED STOVES
From

APPALACHIAN
WOOD STOVE
Rt 143, Carpent..-, Oh

Ph. 698-612T

EOE

LABORATORY
SUPERVISOR

IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR A CAREER ORIENTED MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST TO WORK
FULL TIME IN SUPERVISION
REQUIREMENTS MT (ASCP or EqUivalent
CURRENT CERTIFICATION Prefer 3
Years General Laboratory Expenence
SALARY NEGOTIABLE
Interested Applicants my call

Sl 00

FARMAll Mw/ front end
'1395
loader
Ford 300
'4500
Massey Ferguson 205
dtesel wtlh FT 3 blade
mower
'3995
Ford LGT
165 16 hp Kohler 48
12195
mower
Gravely
COM 10 40 2blade mower
11295
&amp; sulkey
MANY MANY MORE TO
CHOOSE FROM

614-992-2104 Ext 201
Or Sent Resume To
VETERANS MEMORIAl HOSPITAL
11 5 East Memonal Dnve
Pomeroy, Ohto 457 69
ATTENTION W S lucas Admlnt5lrotor

BAUM
L~~~~R
985 3301

Real Estate General

THIS OPEN HOUSE
GOULD BE YOUR
AMERICAN DREAM
TRUE

REAL ESTATE

THURS • OCT 29, 1987, 5 00 P M

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY OCT 25 1987
2 00 TO 4 00 PM

May also be mspected by calltng (614) 446 0552
Hou se tnclude s Iv ng room w/ wbfp dm ng room 3 bed
rooms equtpped eat n ktchen 2 ceram c llied bathrooms
utthty room lg covered patto 2 car garage w/ opener cen
tral fan system gas heat carpet drapes &amp;storage burldtng
TERMS OF SALE $5 000 00 cash or acceptable check day
of sale Closmg on or before November 28 I987 Taxes to
be pro rate d to day of d osmg To be sold wtth the conf11
malton oi the owne r
BUD Mc GHEE REALTY and the
McGH EE AUCTION SERVICE
Phone (614) 446 0552
Auctmeers
Stave McGhee &amp; Myron l Bud McGhee
ltc and bonded Ohto &amp; W Va
NOW BOOKING AUCTIONS FOR NOVEMBER - REAL ES
TATE AND PERSONAL PROP!RTY

,f46

1 or 2 houses Mam St Crown
Crty 2 br rental house $8 500
3 br n~ce $25 000 Call 6144461511 or4461622

PUBLIC AUCTION
Owners are movtng out of state and need to sell now1
Owners Calvm and Lputse Michell
Localton 511 Oak Dnve (Sprtng Valley Subdtvtston)
From Galltpolts Oh to take St Route 160 to US
Route 35 go appro x 2 mtles west (Jackson Prke)to
Super Amenca Statton turn nght on Oak Dr Walch
for stgns

a14

NOTICE

Saturday, October 24, 1987 at 7 00 PM

OWNER CLARENCE V PRICE

3 Announcements

EXTRA INCOME
W th the Hohdaoy Season JU St
around the corner vou I be
neednge~~:tracasll Wecanhep
Earn week y comm ss1ons show
ng out lme of Calendars Pens
and G fts to local fums Full t me
potent a No in)l8stment No
Col ect ons Our 78th year of
prompt fnondty ser.wtce For
more miormat10n wnte Kev n
Peska NEWTON MFG COM
PANY Dept E486 1 Newton
Iowa 50208 (515)792 4121

From Gallipohs take Rt 141 turn left onto Rt 775
turn nght onto Cadmus Patnot Road Watch for
stgns

garden push plow Bole n garden tractor pump jack push

want a
framing shop
on Second
and Court."

Suburban Pro feet on Serv ce s
takmg appl cat ons for secur ty
off elf s Qual ficat ons Pr v ate
secunty trammg or bas c pollee
school or pror secu ty e;~~pe
r ence 614 ~92 7144

Have room for elde ly lady n mv
home Call 614 388 8193

lawn mower and other

I'm 40, I

Help Wanted

House Clean ng o office clean
mg b'f' day Can g ve referencp
Immaculate cleaner call 614
446 8 106

Surge pa11 m lkers vac pump m1 compr esso1 cross cut saw

"And when

11

3

The Sunday T1mes-Senttnei-Page-D

Pomeroy- Mtddleport-Galhpohs Ohto - Potnt Pleasant W Va

BRlDG£

Central Bancorporation lists
record 3rd quarter earnings

Peterson captures top award
ATHENS Ed Peterson
manager of the Athens Social
Secunty office slnce lis openmg
m late 1973 will be honored with
t~e Commissioners Clta!Ion in
ccremomes ar the Social Security
Admfntstratlon headquarters In
Baltimore Md
Peterson will be one of 50
honorees receiving rhe Commls
stoner s Citation the highest
award the agency confers to Its
em~Joyees The award wtll be
presented on November 5 by
Soctal Security C~mmt s stoner
Dorcas Hardy

October

Pomt Pleasant, W Va

Sltt learns learns sa ndv clay
learns stlty clay loams are soil
textures which because of thelr
blends of sand silt a nd clay
occurred
particles have a good balance of
Both hOme and commercta I
macropores to mtcropores This
growet s have long r elied on a
enables the soil to move water
m!o down through and back up
the soil to the rooting zone while
also supplymg needed air to the
roots Also Sill particles are
sligh tly larger than clay part!
cles makmg the mlcropores
generallv larger allowing for
morE&gt; raptd water movement m
CINCINNAT I - Cen tral Ban
carn mgs ot $41 105 mtlhon a
the SOil tThts ts because the
corporatiOn
Inc
reported
record
record for this penod of the year
adhesive force ts somewhat
quarter
earnmgs
of
$13
504
lhtrd
up
20 2 percent compared ro
reduced )
mtillon
for
the
three
month
pe
$34
200
mtl!ion for the first nme
This captllary actiOn in the sOli
nod
!ha
t
ended
Sept
30
up
20
4
of 1986 The 1987 earn mgs
months
thus enables plants (o continue to
$11
213
million
for
percent
versus
Include
an
after tax gam of$2 222
grow dunng the hot dry months
the
third
quarter
of
1986
million
resulilng
from reversiOn
of summer when there Is gener
Net
mcome
per
sha
re
for
the
of
the
corporation
s retirement
ally a watet deficit But without
quart
er
of
1987
was
91
cents
thtrd
plan
Excludmg
lhts
gam earn
the win ter 1echarge of !hts stored
compared
!o
76
cents
for
same
mgs
were
$JB
883
m
tlllon
a 13 7
gro und water this magmftcent
period
in
1986
a
19
7
percent
mcrease
over
the
first
percent
process wtil not occur and plants
mcrease
nme
months
ofl986
Net
income
wtll go mto water stress early In
The 1986 res ults have been
per share for rhe first nine
the summer red ucmg ytelds
restated
to
mclude
The
Cent
ral
months
of 1987 was $? 77 ($2 62
markedly The last 2 years have
Trust
Co
of
Kenton
Countv
Ky
excludmg
the after tax gam I
not suppiled adequate amounts
and
Oberlin
Banes
hares
Inc
compared
ro
$2 31 for the sa me
of recharge therefore we should
OhiO
whtch
were
ac
Oberlin
penod
m
1986
a 19 9 percent
all hope and pray for a wet fall
qutred
ln
1986
and
accoun
ted
for
mcrease
and wm ter
as
pool
ngs
of
mterests
In
Central Bancorporatwn s cu
One fmal note I sa td earlier
addl!lon
per
share
data
has
been
mulall\
e 198" earmn gs benefit
that textur and structure deter
retroactively
adjusted
to
refl
ect
ted
from
mcreascd
earning
mme the relative amount of the
appropna
If.
stock
splits
and
assets
prmctpall\
loans
and
different pores Sol! Is not some
dlvtdends
Including
the
spectal
5
leases
whtch
"
ere
up
ll
8
thmg whtch one ca n readily alter
percent
stock
dlVldend
patd
July
percent
ovet
yea
r
ago
levels
In
basically the texture you have
additiOn non mteres t mcomC"
no\\ ca nnot be changed But sot! 8 1987
sho,.ed
a significant mcrease
Cumulative figures for the ftrst
structure parltcularl} tn the top
wll
h
tru
st
fee s up 12 5 percent
nm e months of 1987 show ner
so tl IS somet hmg that can be
and
sen
1ce
charges fees and
grca!ly mfl ucnced Addmg or
ga nlc matter puttmg fields mto

Proctor-Gamble boss
rips fast buck artists
CINCINNAT I (UP!i - The
chairman of Procter &amp; Gamble
Co m a bhstermg attack on
fas t buck company takeover
artists says nostt le takeovers
undermme not on I} Amcnca s
baste busmess system but so
ctet) as \\ell
Hostile takeovers "til weaken

Middleport-~alhpohs, Ohto

¢

•2260 sq. ft.
•4 bedrooms
•1 t/2 baths

•fireplace in living room
•3/4 finished basement
•formal dining

$72,000
LOCATION: 632 Lmwood Drive, Rto Grande
(South on Rt 325 from Rt 35, turn rtght on Loke Dnve
Ltnwood Dnve to the ftrst left, 2nd house on left l

TIME: 1-S

DATE: Saturday, October 24, 1987

Welcome Home!!

A blf ptBmaliJfe, but that 't how eonlldent '' ate/

�•

.,

-Page- D-4- The

Times-Sentinel

·Homes

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wrighl

41

New Haven. 3 br, $275. month,

Handi Man Sp ec•al- 5 room and

plus security dap os i,. 304-273·
247 1
'

'foU CAN'T Bt
sa&lt;~ OJS! Y6U

MEAN \bU WERE
6oNNI'&lt; lHROW

2 b&amp;droo m ho mo m Pomeroy 2
bat hs. landscap ed pooL satilil e.
tclose to sc hools, Call 614- 992325 4.
~

A~~ ifltS t{EA\

Sfu!T ~Ay ~

8 rooms . s un porch an'd ear port,
2 out buildings, 2 lg lot s
61 4· 742-2770 .

2 br new wall• to wall c arpet a1r
cond. Parked 1n J o hnson 's Mo·
bile Home Park Wtll sell on lan(f
co ntrac t. Call 614 446 4110 or
446- 1409
1970 Rttrcreft 12"70 3 br
lraiiM $5500 Call 614· 256 1613.
1Ox36 Mo b1 le hom e Gas heat
Good cond S3 200 Call 614446- 8690
1973 mo del Camoron 12x 60
Cen tral arr fuel o1 l furnace &amp;
wood burner Partly fu rmshed.
Good co nd S6,000 Call 614·
245-5 240 or 245-9219
1977 Fas t1val 14x70 Allelec .
air, 2 br. 2 baths.
Part lc&amp;lly furnished Many eK
tras Appointment only Call
atter 7 30 we ekdays 614 -2 56·
6708
centn~ l

~~~§§~:;:~~~~~r;~~::~~~~~~~~ R1
o Grandebedroom
mobile
home
No pots2 Adults
preferred
32 Mobo'le Homes
for Sale
1984, 2 bedroom tra•ler 14x60,
large living roo m. large kitchen
targe lot and new g arag e
614-742-2770

55~~:10 Troy mob•le home Hand·
er so n. c ompletely furnished
ready to move into. $3 295.00
or best off er, open house Sunday
11 00 am to 6 00 pm call after
4 00 for more inforfT!Iti!On 304·
675 -156 1

I Is I I I

35 l 0 t s &amp; A creage
Two lot s. 2 acres or more. phone
30 4· 676- 4208 .
•

Rentals

4BR . hou se forr ent 3 m1 so of
Galhp ohs $300 a m o nt h plus
dBp Re f required Call 614446 1615 Aft er 5 00 PM , call
445 1244

bedro o m, co mpletely fur n!S h fld pnva le lot. washer.
drye r, AC No , Pets Adults
Preferred. Mason 304 -773·
6761 or 773 5174

33

Unfu rms hod hous e. 3 br Rodney VJIIage 11 3250 Call 614446-4416 after 7 00 PM

44

Farms for Sale

71 acre:s · House barn. outbu1td
mgs locared 1n Glenwood area.
Includes aU mtneral r1ghts, Posn
ble owner fmancing Colt for an
appo10tment Dave O ' Neal Real
Estate Broker 304 675 1580
Jim St&amp;ets304 · 67S-3313. J o'
Staau304-676· 6898.
135 acres-approx 20 acres o f
bottom land. 2400 lb tobacco
base. large barn. 3 outbu1ld1ngs
Mob1le Home hook up . Nice
house s•te. Located on Swa nn
Creek Cs ll614-266- 1774
18 a cre farm w1th mob1l e hom e
Good barn 6m1 from town Call
614-446-1158 .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
94 acres 1n Mo1 gs Cou nty, Ohio·
Grtmm Ad off cou nty rd 3 5:
Penland ma lt route Minerals
w•th free gas 6 miles fro m
Ritch1e br~d g e Hunters paradiS&amp; $400 per acr e. Call 614
843-5 185
2 Buildmg lot s- 1 V2 a cres ea ch
wrth countv wnter Jorrys Run
Rd Apple Grove W Va Call
304-576-2383.

2 Br f10 mefo' rent Kyger Creek
Sch Oisl Se c. dep requ1red
5250 a mo Call 614- 446 0648
4 br house m downt o wn Galltpohs $300 per mo Ca ll 6 14·
446 0644 or 446 7602
2 br hou se near Was hmgton
El em School Covered deck,
catpetmg 62 2 5 per mo Call
614 446 0644 or 446- 7602
3 Sr. w 1t h garag e Optmn to buy .
C1ty schools $260 a m o. Dep
reqUired Cell aft er 4 00 PM
614 388 8624
N1 cely furnished small hou!le
Adults o nly Re feren ces re·
qu1red Off street par kmg Ph
614- 446· 0 338
4 6' Spruce 3 Br , equ ipped
kitchen. wa sher dryer. CA No
pets Oep &amp; Ref. requited. $ 300
a mo Call 614-446-2 158
3 br . CA , basement, garag e,
t cu t stone
pat1o, c arp et
fu eplace &amp; 1 brick fn epl ece
•n groulld pool Ret A-1 Re al
Es tat e, Ca ro l Yeag er- bro ker
304-675-5-104

Apartment
for Rent

!Helii:J

Fu rn1shed Eff1 c1ency $145 UtllttiOS paid. s hare bath 607
Second Ave.. Gall1pohs Ph
446· 4416 ah er 7PM
Upstalts unfurnished apartment
Ut iht les pa1d Carpeted. no child·
re n o r pets Call 614- 446- 1637
2 BR apts 6 closets. kitchen·
appl lurn1shed, Washer-Dryer
hoo k-up, ww c arpet. newly
Regency Inc
pa1nted deck
Apts Call 304- 675 "7738 or
675-5104
Furn1s hed apt next to hbrary
One profession al adult only
Parking Call 614- 446· 0338
2 br ap artment Adults ·only
lnqune Sheppard' s, First It
Ohv t1 St Galhpol1s. Oh1o

7 room ]Jouse m Middleport
Opt1on to buy Ca ll 614-99 2
2353 or '614-992-7521
2 3 , or 4 bedroo m houses and
apt in Pom eroy area Pay own
ullht •es. de pos•t required Call
6 14· 992· 5 1 13. 614- 992 6723
or 614-9 9 2-2509' Call after
5 0 0, pleas e

Newly-red ecorated apartments
fo r rent One bedroom , un1urnl shed. second floor. From
$ 175 to $ 225 per month Call
evemn gs 614- 446· 4425 or
446-23 25

3 bedroom in Middleport D ~:~ p ­
os•t requited Call 614 992260 6

La rge two bedroom unfurnished
apa rtment wnh sto ve refrigerato r. wa s her end dryer. 0\/erlook·
1ng C1ty Par k .S225 per month
Cal l eve nm gs 614-446 4425or
446-2325

..I.SOI:JOM

9~1

J9QW9W9J I.UBO
no~ &amp;Je~M &amp;SB&amp;S!P IBli!IO 8WBU 9~!
S,!B~M.. 'es.onu 81~ pelf&amp;&amp; pue UOf!BI
·:JIP 81~ jO &amp;IPPIW 9~1 Ul peddOI&amp;InQ
'9f8W8l PiD-J88~ilL e 10 SISOUBB!P
9~1 6U!18101P ueBeq JOIOOP 9~!

1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
rent. Baste rent for 1 bdr.,
S183 00, 2bdr , S219 00 Also
requ 1red a S200 00 securrty
deposn CONTACT· Jackson
Esta tes Dept Ph 446-3997
Equal Housmg Opportunity

Furnis hed apt. 2 br 1 1 36 2nd
Ave Galhpohs $195 Water
pa1d Call 614 446 4416 aher
7 .00 PM

Hwse for ren t 304-6 7 5-6720

The docior began dictating
the diagnosis of a 76-year-o)d
female, but stopped in the
middle of his dictation and
asked his nurse, "What's the
name of that disease where
you can't remember the -

Apartment
for Rent

Tara Townhouse apartmentsFurnished or unfurnished 2 br ,
1 liz baths Prwate &amp;ntrance
Enclosed pat1o. Call 614- 367·
7850
1 br. apt near HMC . Stove.
ref rig , drapes furrushed $225 a
mo. Dep -Ref required Call
614-446- 4782
11 Court . 2 br , 1 'I~ bath. kitchen
furnished, carpeted Rear parkIng S350· mo &amp; ut1ht1es Oep . It
Ref Call 614-446-4926.
Rio Grande- Nice 2 br apt
Stove &amp;,refrig. Furmshed 8225
No pets Call 614-446-8038
Grac1ous liv1ng 1 and 2 bedroom apartments It V•ll•ge
Manor and R1veflkte Apartments 1n Middleport From
$215 mclud•ng ut1h11es Call
614 992- 7787, EOH
N1ce one bedroom apartment
Newly carpeted. upsltllrs 402'1t
28th St , Pomt Pleasant Call
614-992- 5858
2 bedroom apt N1ce aenmg.
conven1ent to shopp1ng Appliances furnished. carpeted
Call 61~ · 992 - 6025 EHO .

44

ad
Anttque wood or coal burn lllg
range Needa some repa1r Cell
814-742-2767.

APARTMENTS. mobile homes,
houses Pt PleasantandGallipo
Us 614-446-8221
2 bedroom furnised apt. ref and
deposit. New Haven W. Va ,
304· 882- 3267 Or 304· 7735024
Apt 1n Middleport, 2 br furnished apt also two room
eft1ciency aRt. 304-882- 2666
One bedroom 1umtshed apt
Extra clean and mce Adults
Only. No Pau 304-675- 1386

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent. day week
month Gall11 Hotel Ca ll 614446 9680 Rent a.s low a s $120
month

---------------,
Furmshed room $100 Util ities
pa1d Share bath Smgle mal e
919 S&amp;cond Gathpohs. Ca!l
446-4416 a1ter 7pm .

Plastic ctstern state approved,
platlic aapt1c tanks. piuttc
culverts, metal culve"' RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jackson, Oh 614· 288 6930
Quality firewood, all hardwood.
tor .. le S26 a PICk:,up load Call
614-367· 0669
~ length m1nk coat Worn about
5 t•mes Call after 5 ·00 PM
614-246 6046

Warm Mom•ng coal heater. used
2 wmteu Bed w1tfl brass head
board, mattress &amp; bOx springs·
new 'Old 1lme table: with 4 oak
chairs Call614 266-6898
60.000 BTU c~rculat1ng heater
wltfl 3 spd fan Used onew1nter
Call after 4 :00 614-446· 1164

Off•ce Space for rent Exc&amp;l
downtown Gallipolis locat io n
inqu1ries call 614-446 4222.
Mob1le Home iot, 60ft or len
920 4th • Gallipolis S75 Water
pa•d Call614-446 4416 atter7
PM .
Gro u nd floor level- Approx 560
s q ft Commerctal space. Lo ..
catcd at 417 2nd Ave. Call
614- 446- 3432

140.000 BTU Lennox low boy
forced a1r furnace $160 Call
61 4· 446· 7627

38.83 Acres wooded,
good hunting place and
you can di&amp;Jour own
coal. Sec. 2 Rutlltld
Twp., 2'h miles from
Rutland. $12,000.00 or
highest offer.

Inn has a two room
available. no City
pay. an mdustr1at
304-675-6276

For lease

Hu~ te r s

Hun11ng nghts to properti es 1n Washmgton, Galila &amp;
Mc 1gs co unties ava1lable for
leas e Call 304 - 428 · 4739
weekdays 8 5

14x70 Mobile Home for storage.
15 ft . Sh•ta tr~~vol tnuhtr. Edko
wood splitter. Sears water
softner. diahwashfJ:I', one &amp; two
horae htgh wheel wagons, 1978
Ford f•eata , van ladder rack .
81 •16' alum p111t10 cover Cell
814-446-2642
Ammunition Sole: .38 Speaal
1i8 Gram Semi-Wedcuuer.
$5.60 357 Magnum 125 Gram
Jadteted Hollow Potnt, S9. 75.
158 Gra1n Semi· Wadcutter,
sa 75 44 Magnum 240 Gra1n
Jadtetltd Hollow Po1nt, $14 75
240 Grain lead Som• WIIdcutter. S12 76 . . 45 Auto
230 Gram Lead Round nose.
$8 00. 22 long nfle case 500,
612 00. Ammun1t1on 1s 50 per
box and fre1gt'tl pllld Add 6 per
cant sales tax Mull be 21 for
pistol ammunrtion and send
copy of drivers l1cenae Sond
money order to. 8oggs Bullets.
Rt 2 Box 198, Wh eeJerllburg,
Ohio 46694 1· 614-574-4349

Carpet. $6 60 &amp; up Uving room
suites, S326 &amp; up . Mollohan
Furniture, Upper R1111er Rd . 44674.4

Space for small t ra•len All
flook· ups , Cable Also eff•clency
rooms, air and cabl~ . Mason,
W Va Call 304 ·773·Ji651
Saddlebraok
offictl space
BS. 0 tax to
growth area,

Movmg· Must tell. !Ike new Roper 911 range Bl•~;k glau
door S260 Call614- 367·0171
or 367-7667 ,

V•lley Furmture
New and uaed h.!rmture and
eppllcances Call 614-446 ·
7672 Hours 9 -5

Real Estate General

Con sew upholstery machin e tor
sa le He ad only Call 6 14-949 220 2
Woodch1ef-wood &amp; coa l bu rner,
S 126 You ng c hickens, roady to
lay . &amp;2 each Call 614-742·
2280
Beautiful ex-ce llent co ndit ion
China cabinet. 2 piece. Oak fi ni sh
With l1 ght in top . Pl enty o f
storag e space m bas e 4 \1: tt ,
Wide 6% fl tall Call after 5 .00
P m.. weekends anytim e 614985 - ~17~

54 Misc. Merchandise 54 Misc. Merchandise
2 5 inch Zen ith color TV con sole.
cab le reedy , good c ond,
S155 00 Ph o ne 3 04- 676 ·
2580

SURPLUS ARMY. DENIM ,
RENTAL CLOTHING, ICarharts
10 per cent over t;ost) Orig1nal
Army Ca mouflage. 1-L 0 " Sam •
Somerville's, Old At 21. East
Ravenswood. Fr1, Sat, Sun,
Noon · 8 00 pm Other day s
appointments 304-273 -6655
Insulated e amouflagn co ve ralls
S25 00

Dun k beds, sheets. bed spreeds,
6 months old, S200 00 for all
Call 304-675-2019 or 6762193

Cathedral Cactua 4ft tall 7 3 7
Beech St Middleport. Oh.o

Sm1th Co rona XE6000 electric
typewriter S200. 304- 6754464.

Remtngt:on model 742, 30-06,
3K9 Weaver Widefield Shng.
case. Extra clip and 3 'h bor:es of
factory ammumtion Excell ent
conditiOn $360. Ph . 614-992·
2683 or 614-675-2395

For saiD by owner Royal Oak
coast to co ast membership,
84.795. 304-n3- 5965

Electrolux 1s having a Fall Sal e.
Super d1scoun1 Call 30,4-768 3 213 fo r further mformatton
Monroe c_op1er Mod el RL-612,
under 15.000 cop•es 304-675·
4067.

Cheap s urplu s rental used
cl othes, back trailer 58 Burdette
Addn. Point Pleasant Anytim e
all year
Car wash eqwpment tor 2 bays,
w1tl'l wash. r~nse . foam1ng
brushes Used ve ry little 304458-1848

Holiday Baking Time Is Near
HALLOWEEN CANDY MOLDS
HALLOWEEN CUPCAKE STICK-INS
HALLOWEEN COOKIE CUTTER
THANKSGIVING CAKE PICKS
SEASONAL COOKIE CUTTERS
FRUIT FOR FRUIT CAKES

DATES •.••••••••••••••••••IJl.•••••••••

S2 25

FOR SALE

••
•••
••
••
••
••
••
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surrou ndmgs

RODNEY CORA RD. - Beautolul hom e on
12 acres m/1, lhos lovely hou se os
surrounaea ~Y trees and offers a unoque
lloor plan Lrvrng rm features woodburner,
open ceolong desogn, k rtch ~n . formal donon g
3 BR 211 baths, tg patro of! donong area '
26•40 barn and 15x24 garage Ca ll lor an
appowlment
THIS HOME OFFERS A VIEW OF THE OHIO
RIVER THAT JUST DOESN'T QUill! - The
lronl olihrs home laces lhe rrver and the
owneos have used glass to ols lull
advantage Beau111ul hvong room woth
mrr1ooed wall rellectrng lhe rrver voew .
beamed ceohngs, stone lrreplace donette,
equrpped kotchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms. famo ly
room , rec room, 3 bal hs, 2 car garage,
central a1r
YOU ARE GOING TO lOVE THIS HOME! Located on Jay Drove thos br- level home
elfers eveoylhrng you want lor you r
lamoly's comlort Kolchen w/ DW dosp l .
1ange. refr1g , l1vmg roo rn , fam1ly rm ,
drnong rm , ca rpet, gas heat. cenl arr and
wood and coal burnon g stove. 2 car garage,
12&gt;16 slorage buoldm &amp; coty schools Call
lnday and make an appoonlment to seethos
n1ce home

EXCELLENT STARTER HOME - $39,900
- Ranch style home 1usl 5 mmules lrom
town, 9llers 2 BRs, bath, kolch en w/stove
and sode- by-side relrog., LR, carpet and
hardwood . car port and covered patm
Traoteopad on lol next to house Cot yschool
dost roct Call today

Call
Ella Mae Grant
Real Estate

RIO GRANDE AREA - 20 acres mil very
mce home has been re modeled and oilers
3 BRs, 11n bat hs kotchen wolh oven , range,
woodburneo, lamoly room / don ong combo
LR, heal pu mp/cent aor. 30x30 garage
laundry rm. 12x65 mob il e home o~
property SW ;chool dostroct Call lor
appoonl menl.
GRAHAM SCHOOL ~OAD - Veoy nr ce
ranch oilers kotchen w/ range, relrog .. OW
d1Spl mocrowave. LR. FR, dwelle, 3 BRs. 1
bath. cent aor, car pelon g, 2 metal ulohty
bldgs Sho wn by appoontme nl
OHIO RIVER LOT FOR SALE - 1 59 acre
mil, 1usl al edge of town Great place lor a
cam peo and boallau nch $5,900,
PRICE REDUCED TO $39.900! - GREAT
BEGINNER HOME - Th1 s hom e oilers a
laoge lR wolh lrrPplace. krlchen dmong
aoea. 3 BRs. bath, full basemen!, I car
garage, deck. lenced yard JUSI.monules to
town on Rt. 141 Call loran appoonlmen t
HOME AND ONE HALF ACRE FOR SALE 1050 SQ It ol hvong space LR, kotchen,
dr nong rm , bath $10,900 Ca ll for more
mfo rmahon

ATTENTION HOME SHOPPERS!!!- Very
noce ran ch slyle home on a good
neoghboohood oflered at a pnce you· can
allord ,3 BRs. LR, k1lchen, balh, cedar
closels~ Cily school dostrrct $29,900.

••

.INVESTMENT. or resodentoal prope rty Slluated along
• 2nd Ave , Ga llrpolos Federal brock home Apt rn rear
• Pro ced foo qurck sale $32,000
•

e

PICK UP FREE
tREAL ESTATE LISTING IN OUR OFFICE.
••
OR 'lOUR BANK OR GROCER'/

e
e
e

•

•

SE LLING YOUR REAl ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS...
WOOD
.

C,1ll Wood R t&gt;,llt'r lnr
·

Ci,tllirHJ!I~
44b 1 Ofiii

12 L&lt;H IJ .t sr

••

THE FAMILY WILL LOVE THIS ONE! Ranch style nome on 5 acres m/ 1,olfers 3
BRs. bath, kolchen. famoly room , LR, caopet,
heatalator flfeplace, WB slave, 2 car
attached gara ge 16x32 m·ground pool
Charn link tence Call lor an appoonlment

RACCOON TWP. - 6 ACRES . M/ L- Plu s
a nrce home 4 BRs, balh, kotchen, LR,
drnmg 1m, caopet, cou nty waler an d well,
cellar house, garage, tobacco shed Ca ll lor
an appointment
HOUSE AND 29.4 ACRES, MI L. OHIO
TWP. - Thrs nome oilers 3 BR s bath, LR,
kotcnen, lao ge laundry rm w/ washer and
dryeo. There os atobacco base and a 36x36
tobacco barn

OWNER liVES OUT OF STATE AND WANh
JO SELL IMMEDIATELY- Very noce and
roomy home on Sprong Valley. Thos home
oilers LR equopped . kotchen Ieat-on)
dm elle, 3 BRs, 2 bat hs, lam1iy room wolh
lu eplace. lwo car attached garage, gas
heat, cent au Come look at lhos one and
make us an olleo
AFFORDABLY PRICED AT JUST $29.900
-Close to crty on Ri 141 thos home oilers
kolchen, LR, lam rly room. dmrng room and
lull basement lao ge unallached block
garage Ca ll lor an appoon tment
29.8 ACRES MI L VACANT LAND_ Fronls
on Rt 160 Buold or put a mobole home
here $16.900
MAKE THIS YOUR NEW 'HOME _ Brock
ra nch. 3 BRs 1' balhs. kotchen woth
range, dpuble oven. ow. hvon g om , donette.
lamrly rm.. flrepl&lt;ee, lull basemenl
screen ed porch, 2 cao allac hed garage KC
school dostroct
LOTS OF POTENTIAL HERE - 2 000 sq h
bu old mg wilh frontage on St ' Rt 160
12&lt;20 walk-on cooler L21t darry case. Call
lor more detaol s

GREEN TOWNS HlP - $38,000- R;n ch
style homeoflers 3 BRs balh kitchen LR
ca rpet. 1 car attached garage
· ·

GREEN ACRES IS THE PLACE TO BE _
Noce ranch slyle home sotualed on a
70xl48 II. lot oNeos 3 BRs. ] '~ baths lR
FR w/t~replace, eat m k1tchen, gas he.ol
Green schools. Call today.

eau 614-966· 414 3 oh o' 6.o o
p.m.

61 Farm Equipment

AKC Blissett pups. 8 weeks old
Vet cheeked and s hots, healt h
guaranteed. 8 U5 Cell 614
667-6957.

U S. 35 W•t. Ja ckson, Ohi o

2 year old Pekmase Reasonable

•o

55 Building Supplies

price good hom e. Fa mal e Call
614-992· 3088 dav • and 614985· 4397 evfm•ngs

8u!ldmg M ~ter1ats
Block, br~ck , sewer pipet, w•n·
dow s. lintels. etc Claud&amp; Winters , R io GPande. 0 Call 614246-6121

AKC regllt&amp;red Beagle pup!i
$66 304-372-470 2
Beagle pups tor sa le. &amp;20 00
each. 304-1575· 7187

Concrete blocks all sizes yard or
dehvery Mason sand. Gallipolis
Block Co , 123!6 P1ne St ,
Gelhpohs, Oh1o Call 614-44~.
2783

2 registered lemon spott ed
Beagles. male or fem ale. 1 ye ar
old. can bfeed 61 50 00 eac h
304- 576· 222 3

Ready mix concrete and all
concrete supplies. Call us Vallev
8took Cement •nd Supplies,
304-773-6234

58

56

Pets for Sale

Groom end Suppty Shop-Pet
Gtooming . All breeds .. All
styles Julie Webb Ph 614· 446·
02 31
Oregonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA Himaloyan, Pers1an and
Siamese kittens AKC Chow
puppun. New kittens. Parsians.
Call 614· 446·3844 after 7PM .
2 male AKC Reg Pekmgese 6
mos old. S75 eac:h. Call 61425&amp;-9391

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables
Ounrovin Fruit Farm Appl es
$6 - 10 per bu shel. c1dar ,
sol'ghum, apple butter Num e r·
ous food items 9 -6 weekday s,
9· 6 week ends Sr 681 S E of
Albany . 614-698-629fl
Ouahty Fru1ts and Vegetables
retail and wholesal e 8 &amp; S
Produce across from P1zza Hu t,
GltllipoiJs. Oh10
Freezer Beef. 304-675-4182
Carl Kinmlird
B1g apples all var~et1 es AH fresn
truits and produc a Open 9 00·
6 00 dally Jacks Market, Route
36, Hendeuon W Va

CROSS tlo SONS
614-286· 6451 .
Mas sey Fergu son, New Ho lland.
Bush Hog Sales &amp; Service Over
40 used tractors to chool8 lrom
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
eq uipmvn t. La rgest selechon 1n •
S E Ohio

FOR SALE BY OWNER
Beside Meigs High. School
PHONE 992 -3508 or 992-2389

1978- 1070 Cas e tractor w•th
ac. no till, 4 row corn planter
$5960 Coli 614-286-6622
Bidwe ll C.. h Fe ed Store Oct.
Spec1al OnSalanow - 5ft.- 6ft
&amp; 6'1i ft steel poat. Galcho barb
wire Call tor th e latest prices
614--388 9688.
JIVID EN' S FARM EQUIP
MENT: Come in &amp; chack-outour
fall sale prices on long tractors,
noh tractors. wheel horse lawn
S. garden tract0t'5, Vermeer hay
equ1pmen1, Husgvarna chain
saws. woodburn1ng stoves &amp;
furnaces, &amp; energy free waterers
&amp; much morel Complete line of
Bale handling 8r feechn~:~ acces ,
gr inder m•xers, wagons, manure
spread&amp;! , rotary t1Uars. rotary
cutters, blades. diSC cultivators,
plows seeders, post auger &amp;
dovers, wood splitter, tqiler,
sprayer squeeze shoot, head·
gates, gates, feed bunks, truck
beds, plastiC tanks, battenes,
c ement m111er, Dower wash8rs.
truck racks
USED EQUIP Traclon. round
balers. square bales. corn p+c~er
elevator, drum mowen. plows,
disc cuhMitors, grinder mnler,
gravity wagons, lawn mowers
haybine, chainsaws. tobacco
setter . Call 614 446 1676

"

208 FIRST AVE·.

FOR SALE BY OWNER

lnclulles 4 bedroom home and 2 ' unit

apartment building .
446 -8221 AFTER

P.M

Real Estate General

514 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

We Auept
Food Stamps

Real Estate General
OWNER WILL CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT - 3
bedroom alummum s1d ed ranch 2 car unanached
garage. 2 baths. n1ce fam1ly room and front porch
Handy to Rto Grande and Galhpohs City schools
#2416

REAL ESTATE

NEW LISTING - FAIRFIELD ACRES- Is your place
to be.-Good locat1on off Fa •rf1eld·Centenary Rd m
Green School Oislnct Attlitcttve 3 bedroom bnck and
alum ranch, la rge fa m1ly room w1th fi replace. wood
b ur ne~~ plus 2 mce lots at end ol development lor added

p11vacy The ~est P"t 15 the p11ce $42,500.00. Call today'
#2494,

462 2ND AVE. REAR 'BONNIE &amp; JIM STUTES- REALTOR

446-4206

lB.
Q(AliO R

THIS LOVElY 3 BEDROOM Bl ·lEVEl teatuoes I ~ baths.
fam 11y room , hvmg room, electri Chea1 pump/cent a1r,
fneplace, 2 car attach ed ~arage, above ground pool and
excellent landscaped lawn Make your appomtment 1a
see th1s home today .

12476

KYGER cREEK AREA - Ver 11ce 3bedroom home ,lot~
of cabmets 1n kitchen , lar ge palto tead•ng from 18 x36
mground pool OutbuMdmg and more Only 7 m il e~ from
town apprO&gt;
#2482
0

'

NEW LISTING! THIS HDME WANTS A FAMILY - 8rg
kitchen with pl enl~ ol cabmets b1g hvmg room. rec
room/ family room combmahon extra s1ze mce woqded
lot Owner IS movmg away, doesn't want to leave th iS
#2485
home empty Be the f1rst to see 1

tlass boat" 16 1t. 75 Mercury
1-ft ft . boat· 85 HP Johnson
Su1uk1- 660 All $2200 Call
814-256-6216

614-887-4793

PRICE REDUCED BY '$5.000!!! ASKING
$54,900- Thos home ossoluated on a very
noce neoghborhood at the ed ge ol1own and
offers approx 2,000 SQ It 4 BRs, 1~
balhs, kotchen. dmette. LR. FR, wood·
burneo, gas heal, cent au. aUached
garage Coty sc hools Make ·us an otfer.

AKC Baagl•· ,0 we eks old,
MaiBI and females $60 eacl:!

Farm Supplies
· &amp; Liveslock

LIGHT KARO ...........U••QJ,.... $159
Now Carrying Cake Decorating Supplies

Copper kettle W1tt1 stand also
sweet p(Jtatoes . Call 614· 2456413 or see Howard Hatcher

133 ACRES MORE OR lESS- 2storyolder home w1th 3

Ruger Red Hawk 44 magnum
Ste1nlus Motsburg 12 ga
O.,ers...,er It 30 tnch full choke
b•...t King su:e watttrbed ex
c at cond. Call 614- 256-9315

2 STORY, partral basement, 7 rooms and

l~

ba1h s,

newer Siding, roof, furna~ e and lron1 porch B~au11ful
tree s m yard In -ground sw1mmmg pool, satelhte d1sh
and appro11. 3 acres fenced fm FFA or 4-H projects
Green Towns hip, s1x m1les from Galhpohs $56,900 Can
for show1ng

Catalytic converters . ontv
889 96 Most models lnstalfalfOn also available Muffler Man
9 S\impson Ave , Athens. Oh• o
1 -800-843 3767

beau lilul log addotoon has been added lo
lhos home and il os lovely 3 BRs, bath.
lormal donrng, kotchen , lamoly room w/loft.
wood burner, stone ch rmney Thrs home os
sotualed on 10 acres m/ 1. wolh quoet

Pets for Sale

Honda XR 80 R Pro-link good
cond 1898 Rossevelt campa1qn
button Very old :soap box w1re
hmges Complete &amp;et McGuHev
Re_,.,, Cell614-367-7519

.'

•
YOU'll LOVE COMING HOME TO THIS -A

56

-----~

Complettr kitch en cabmet s 1n·
elu des rang_ e. sink &amp; microwave
SoJQ as IS 304- n J -5706 after
5pm

G E Retuger•tor. side by stde
&amp;275 Call614 446-7513

New wood &amp; pc Hvtng wood
suttes. t399 96. ch•t of dr•w·
en, 4 drawer- $48, 5 drh\ler·
S59 95. matt,..s 6 bolt aprtngiJ·
full size, 312 eo1l, 8149 96 set,
twin m81tresaes, 196
181
THE WORKING
MAN'S FRIEND

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 3 3 , N(Jrth of Pomeroy
Re ntal tl'atlors Call 614-9927479

64 Misc . Merchandise

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- D-5

Early Am.-lcan couch &amp; cl'lelr
$150 Call 614-446-0123.

PARSON'S FURNITURE

46 Space for Rent

49

Callahen's Used T~re Shop Over
, ,000drea, SIZ~s12 , 13. 14, 15,
16 16 5 8 m1les out At 218
Call 614-266· 6261

90 Days .ame1 as ceah - with
approved ctMit
3 M1la1 out
Bulavllle Rd . Open 91m to 6pm
Men thru S•t Ph e14-446 0322.

1!'/:J:JO:JI:i
AN/I!VOH
JJ.tnO:J
SH1·1!Vlfl:iOS

Apartment
for Rent

54 Misc. Merchandise

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

snoAor

Antiques

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

Cl•s~tfied

Sofas and ch .. ra priced from
1395 to 8996 Tabl• 160 and
up to 8125 H•de-•·beds e390
to &amp;695 Reclln8rs 8225 to
$375 lamps 128 to 1126
Dmettea $109 and up to U96
Wood table w -6 chairt t285 1o
5795 Desk 8100 up to '376
Hutches $400 and up Bunk
beds complete w· matt,..tes
1295 and up to 8395 Baby beds
S 110. Mattre•ses orboaspr1ngs
full or rwin $68. firm $78 and
$88. Queen sets t225. King
$360 4 dr IWer ch81t $69. Gun
cab1081S 6 gun Gas or electriC
range 1375 Qabv mattreues
$35 &amp;: $45. 86d frames 820,
tJO It King frame 160 Good
selectibn of bedroom aurtes.
metal cabmets, headboards e30
and up to 566

SOI:iOM lHfJ/1:1
MOI:il:iOI!V
:J181:ilff)

2 bedroom apartment tn Sy ra
cuse $1 50 per month plus
ut1llties Deposit Call614-9g2
6687 ., 614· 992-6732.

45

53

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

0! SlliMSNY

44

pig tail tor t650 00 304-6766760

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Wahltfs, dryers, relrtg•atora.
ranges Ska~ga Appliances,
Upper Rilr'er Ad b"ide Stone
Crest Mot&amp;l 614-445- 7398

Two bed ro om mobile home
Middl eport. Oh1o References
and dep os it requ•u•d 304 8823267 or 394· 773-5024

1979 Governor, 3 bedro om s,
1'h baths central a~r , can moire
o r leave on rented lot, 304-7739126

New 16 lb. Hot Point Wash et
and elac. dryer w;tfl vent kit and

County Appliance. Inc Good
used apphanctl llf'ld TV ... , .
Open BAM to &amp;PM Mon lhru
Sat 614-446-1699, 627 3rd.
Ave Gallipolia. OH

··-?"

2 bedroom mob1le home m
Syracuse $150 per month,
$50 depos rt plus urllitlas Call
614- 992- 6 5 87 or 614- 992 5732

41

Homes for Rent

BR AL E G

Re fere n ces an d deposit requ lred . Cali 614-446-9430

1 !:182 Vent ure Villa 14' x6B'. 3
br, small bu•ldmg (ni col 3 04
676· 3431 Of 675· 3030.

•

19084 Nasha mobile home
furnished. 1 acre ground With 2
drilled wells. city water &amp; large
sept•c tank. 304· 882-2684

SWAIN

AUCTION &amp; ,FURNITURE 62
Ohve St , Galhpalit
NEW- 6 pc , wood group- $399
'liVInG room SUit81· *199- *699
Bunk bed• with bedding- '199
Fulratze m ..tre.. &amp; found .. ion
1tart1ng- 899 Recliners
startmg- 199
USED - Beds dtauers, bedroom
suites. *199 - •219 . Desks.
wringBI" w..ller, a compll"te line
of used furniture
NEW- Western boots· UO
Workboats 118 S. up. {Steel &amp;
sofl toe) Call614-«6-3159

D E ME E R

I II

6 lingle beds for Mle wrtfl steel

tram• - 1100 each 2 dmette
lltl. 304-882· 2996.
'

I I I' I I
0 J u0 y

51 Household Goods

51 Household Goods

M0 N I H Y

I·

Merchanrltsc

Navy sofa bed like new $300
C•ll !!14· 446 7892 after 6

QE T I UY

Very n1ce 14'1 70 unfurmshed 3
br • 2 betfls. Heat &amp; wat&amp;r
furn l!l hed 2 car garage Adults
only No pets 6275 a mo Call
614-446- 1642

,...,,

S PECIAL SALE B1g savings on
all sect•onals and s1ngles by
Clay ton and Schult Buy now
Business
and take advantage of g•gant ,c 34
SB\11ngs on all diSplays and
Buildings
c u stom o rdered homes
FRENCH CITY MOBilE
HOMES . INC Gallipolis. 614Commarc!al bu•ld1ngs for lease
446· !1340
Downtown Pt Pleasant Stores.
oH1ces A·One Real Es tat e
. Immaculate condit ion 1981 Vic- Carol Yeager, Bro ker Ca ll 304to rian 14'x70 ', 2 bedroom, 675-5104
gard en, tub, central an , fir epl ace, den, $13.900 304-675- 749 lh•rd Ave Presently Th e
1.r 7
G•f1 Shop 1600 sq . ft . Commetet al Or warehouse Parking on
12x55 Mob1le hom e, good con
s1de AdJacent to Th11 d &amp; P•ne St
d1tion. gOo d pnce 304-675- Call 614 · 446 · 2362 for
5546
appmntment
Ho lly Park U-•70 central air,
porch , s he d. unde rpennmg
$8 000. o r best offer 304· 6755417 after 4 p m

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

doubl e w1de (needs some
repa11s) located in Southwestern Sc hool D1st Call 614- 2455588

For sale or rent. 3 bedrooms, 2
fu ll batt'!s, buih· m kitchen. cental
a1r, barn. pond, 8 1!2 acres. 3
mil es from town, Rt 2 North
Will cons 1der land contract,

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

pets

October 18, 1987

GAM I

words below to Ffi C~e 6
s• mple word$
Pr1nt letters of
e och m •b l•ne of squares

1ra1ler for rent In Che&amp;hlre
a m o nth Call 614· 367-

For Sal e Land Contra ct . 3 br
house, 2· s tory w•th basement
N1 ce '-'2 a cre lot . 2 -car garage.
n•ce vrew In New Haven. Terms
S300 down ; 6300 month Call
30 4-- 882- 2339 after 5 p m

304--6762885
G.:_'•.:.":..:.:_
"' :"
::.
·-- Butch
- -and
--Pat
I
New Haven,.3 br, 2 batlls. one
fi replace. garag e $ 31, 000
304-273 2471

-----..:::.~ Edil•d by CLAY R POLLAN

WORD

O R:eorronge the 6 sc;ambl ed

Two bed roo m, -K fr am a, fur-

ms hed. one child. no
304 882-291 5,

':~~:~:~' S©RJJ~-~£trs ~

2 \l&amp; ry goo d mobile homes
fo r rent De p and ref requ1red.
Ca ll 6 14-446- 0527 after 2 00
PM
'

Post Off1ce an d st ores 37000,
Pho ne 6 14 - 74 ~ · 2 460 , except
Sun da-y s

Jacks on Ave Older 2 story A-1
co nd1t10n. fo rmal dmmg. 4 bed·
roo ms. 1 'll bath. n•ce Call
304 675 3030 or 676- 3431

.

2 br

6 room house m RuUandd«Hie to

•

Ji ouses for Rent

House at 6 0 Chill icoth e Rd Very
Cheap Ca ll 614- 4-46 2404
bath att ic. basement 110 State
St Pnc• negotiable Call 614992· 3725

-

w. Va.

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

October 18. 1987

12460

bedroo ms and more. 2 barns. pond tobacco base. 2
storage bUJf dmgs On ly approx 7 miles from !own

#2263

REDUCED and you can pocket the sa wm gs 1B11tk and

Jraon e brlevel only $49.500 3bedrooms. 2baths ta m
lly room, formal dmmg area, 2\11 car garage, elec heal
pump/ cen tr al a1r Lot s1ze aoprox 21.!&gt; acres

n2432

REDUCED TO S2S.OOO - WISH WE HAD MORE AT
THIS PRICE! - l ovely 2 bed1oom, two story home w1th
h•n g room, \ 17 ba1hs. form al d1mng. full basement. l
car garage, gas hea t cen tral au (Metgs County-Mid
dleporl)
White oak tirewood for sale
826. per load Call 614 247
4024.
For tale Dog house tor large
dog Well made. 614· 9925583
F•rwood-split &amp; delivered 640 a
load., Hrckory, locus t. oak , sassa
tras, S. cherry. Call 614-992
6336 S,

#2470

REDUCED! REDUCED! REDUCED!
Roo Goande Area - A-lrame settong on 12 acres + ol wood
land lots ol prne loees Home features l rv rn~ room wl wood
buonmg foreptace and lois of book shelves Formal donon g
2 baths. exira tg laundo y room Sporat
100 m, modern ,
staors leadmg to
Masler bedroom fe atures a
deck 3 ca o
sc hools Shown by appoontm e. ! _

• ..., --sJ

#245 3

HOMEAND APPROX. II y, ACRES - Ranchs1yte w1th 3
bedrooms, lg k1tchen , 2 ha th ~. 11vmg room. fu ll basement. mce cou ntry surrou nd1n gs la nd lays welt w1lh
n1c e garden area. Approx 1 752 sq. It on mam level

#2387

NEW HOME &amp; IB.7 ACRES - l h15 15 an attoaC1rve and
spactous ranGh 1n a secluded locat1on near V•n ton It oli
ers 3 larse bedrooms, 3 baths, fu ll basement. wrap-aroun d deck and much, much more $60,900
#2461
FARM - 147 5 acres more or less 2 s tar ~ frame home
w1th 4 bedrooms ii ~J ing room. lam1ly room, l1replace 3
la rge barns, mmeral r1ghls and tobacco base mcluded
Ha mson TownshtP
··'

NEW liSTING .PASTURE FARM WITH 2S ACRES Barn and lovely ranch style home Home has 3
bedrooms I lar"-e bath. k1tchen Oreakfast room formal
d1mng room. formal hv1ng room w1lh fireplace, lamtly
room. fu rnace room and ut11ily rm Ad dtson Twp Pnced

SYRACUSE -Modern 3 BR
msulaled home Fa m1ly rm
m. the lull basemenl, gas &amp;
wood he al. noce krtchen
oahge, 2 porches near lhe
school. Only $35,000
TRAILER ONLY- 2 BR lob·
erly 12x60 Central aor &amp;
heat oa nge &amp; reln gerator
Only $7,000
ACRES - Wesl ol Rul·
land, youn g lomber &amp; all mo·

m the $605

house near college and grade school la 1ge hvmg room,
format dmmg room. eat-m k1lchen w1th lots ol cabmets,
newer floor covenng, the rest IS ca rpeted Insulated and
shows lots of care Large storage build1ng, beaul1lul
trees and sh1ubbery on a corner lot Pnced m the low

$30's

#2497

12496

14'd0' plus 7',:,20' e~ pando N1ce k1lchen ·mlh range,
m1crowave and relngerat01 3 bedrooms. 2 lull baths

ll6,000

6'

rural wa tPI Walnut and pme trees

room Owner will help w1lh hnanctng

stand1ng 4 bedroom 2 story home m Centenary wrth 2',
balhs.liw1ng room fa m1ty room lormal d1 mng. 2 car ga1
age. full basemen! and much more Call 101 more mlor·
mal•on

··

124S!

PRIC-E REDUCED' THREE BEDROOM RANCH on Bladen
Road. 10'x20' storage burldong woodburner. Need'

•
Busmess and Home -

NEW LISTING an
INCOME' Tho$ os a carry out grocery and bOil busmess Well
establ iShed A dnve -throu gh slorage and slack ooom. has
been recently added Also a home only 1'" year sold Modern
nome w/ hvon g room and hreplace, 3 bedrooms 2 baths,
!am oly ooom an d modern kotchen wrt h all apploances Buoll rn
m1crowave oven Steoeo system. GIVe us a call lor appt
toBay .
•

some work but pnced accordmgly l oan assumable.

$27 500 lmmedmte possessiOn

1241S

#2440

tF THIS DOESN 'T MDVE YOU NOTHING WILLI - Ou1

OWNERS HAVE lOWERED PRICE $5.000 on lh1squalrtj

#2484

~2477

1972 MOBilE HOME AND S ACRES - located 2'
miles lrom town. Hom e hi!!&gt; 1 bed1ooms. kitchen w1th
1ange and relngerator Jl baths N•c em ground pool

32'xl6 Prrced m the $20s

#2468

EXCELLENT BUILDING SIT£1 - 3-4 acres, wooded
ac rea ge, frontage along SR 588 Rural water and cable
TV dYa tl able W1thm 2 miles approx hom c1ty Call today
for more mlormahon

n24S8

AFFORDABLE RANCH - 3 bedroom home on the edge
of town Wll fl over 1acre lawn Format d1mng area, liv1ng
room. 2 ca• garage Blacktop dme~ay f!ty sc hools.
Pnced rn the $30s
·

#2 459

brick and !rame bl ·level With lot~ ot charm and lovtng
care 2 baths, famtly room hymp, room electnc kleat
pump, 2 car ga rage, storage burld1ng 2 ' a(; re lawn Call
todayl
,,

SUPER BUILDING lOT - $7.700 - Appro• 20'x t 79'
NICE LARGER COUNTRY HOME IMeigs County! - 2
story frame home s1 tuated on 31, acres gently rothng
land Pond for your ftshmg pleasure 2 baths, lam~y

#2469

MOBILE HOME - Excellent condrtron !984 Schull

._ HOUSING YOU CAN AFFORO!- Rio Grande -7 room

Phono
1-16141-992-3925

Hr•.tdqtoilrlcro.

12~9S

ROCKSPRINGS RD tN MEtGSCOUNTY- !977 sec·
tiOna! w1th thr ee bedrooms, hvm g room, 2 bath s, fam1ly
IOO m, lormal d1mng room . cen tr al a11 Approx 720 sq, It
Covered pat•o-carport combmed Over 1 acre lots of
extras

#2483

216 E. 2nd St.

Housinq

beautiful br1ck lu eplace, fu ll basement w1th lm1shed
lam. room and 4th bedroom, ut1ilty room , and cellar 2
car garage n1ce ~J ieY( of mer Pnced m the $50s

bedrooms Ll vmg room and d1nmg room furmture
mcluded plus all underpmmng and 2 porches

Real Estate ~
RLILIOR

992·332~

NEW LISTING .. BRICK RANCH WITH 4 BEDROOMS.
l 'h bath s kitChen. dmmg area, hvmg room With

1980 BAYVIEW OELUXE MOBilE HOME - Lrilngroom.
bath, eat m kttchen w1th range and refl1 gera1or, 2

TEAFORDm

100 ACRES - Monerats, 2
or! / gas wells. lree gas. 2 wa
ler laps. good gravel Rd
n ~ar Rl 33 &amp; Rock Sprmgs
DA ly $40,000.
6' YR. OLD BRICK - On
Peach Foo k 3 BRs. 2 balhs,
b41!1-rn ran ge, ov en, carpe l
rn g, lull basement. porch,
Plt1Q. gao age &amp; 5 acres
RANCH - N1Ce lg sundec k
8j38, lg lol. 3 BRs. centra l
heat &amp; carpehng near the
school Askmg $32,000
REEDSVILLE - 6 Rm s,
bath, gas Circulator. TP wa·
ter, dnled well and lot fo r
lr.,ler. 2 septrc tanks Only
$18,000. Want to hear an ol·
ler
YOU ARE IMPORTANT
TO US

#2429

'

Real Estate General

n~oa ls

PRICE REDUCED' OWNER WANTS TO SEll'- 3 bed

rQ.om ran ch w1th ove1 1.500 sq It tamtly room. 1';
baths. new carpet, il vmg room and dm'lng area Call for
1
more •nlormat•on today

HOME AND l ACRE. llS 000- AttractiVe 2or 4 bodroom home near JUnctiOn 775 and 141 Has lam1ly worn
llreplace. basement 2 car garage tmmed1ate possl!s
SIOn

#1449

WANT A BIG YARD1 - To bUild tt,at newhome' II so

call us about these 3 acres more or less Rural water and
ut11ihes on sa me stde ot road Land IS level Very mce
bu11dm g s1te.

12422

lARGE FAMI LV ROOM- 3 bedr nom two slatj hom ern
Ad dav1lle sc hool area. full basement etec heat m
• th
woodburn er hooked to lurnace duct Pnced at $36 ~00

#2401

446-6610

SOUTHER~

HILLS

R.E~ INC.

REALTOR®

JUDY DEWITT
BROKER
38S-81 55
J. Merrill Carter ....................... ........ J7q-2184
Phyllis Loveday ................................ 446 -2230
Becky Lane ....................................... 446-0458
Patrick Cochran ........................... ,... 446. 8655
Jim Cochr.an ..................................... 446-7881

'.

�..

'

61 Parm Equipment
8 h . &amp; 10ft whe.el disks. $350.
Pickup disk. $275. One row
Oliwr corn pick&amp;r, $750. Two
row New . Ideal corn picker.
$1700. • Gravity bed wagon,
1360 Fertillze spreader. &amp;275.
Oli\lar wheat drill. $27 5. Other
fi.!d relldy equip. Howe's Farm
Machintt.tY. Rt . 124 &amp; Mayhew
Rd . Jackson , Ohio. 614-286·
5944.

62 Wanted to Buy

71 Auto's For Sale

71 Auto 's For Sale

1986 Ford Tempo Gl low
miles. E*:el . cond. Call 614266-9393

80 Plymou th Volare, 4 dr, 6 cyl .,
$850. or best after 30 4 - 895·

1966 Chevy 283. Auto, new
Radials, dual exhaust. new
paint, brakes. Sharp. 52500
Firm. Call 614-446· 4462 ..
1982 Chuveue. Great gas mi ·
lea{Je 4 dr . hatchback 4 spd.
Good cond . Call 614 · 446 ·
3383.

1976 Camero.
614-26 6- 1235.

$1200.

Call

Now buying shell corn or ear

c::om. Cot I for lotest quotes. River
City Farm Supply, 614· 4462985.

63

livestock

Guineas fot sale. Call 614-4464410.

Ouar1..- Horse. Jyr. old Mare, 16
hands . 1350. Call 614-256 1556.
Club calf. ChianinaAngus. Make
good 4-H steer. Call 614-4461168.

Stallion for sale. 4. year, black .
Reg. Tenn. Walker, 15.3 hands .
Info. 614- 992-5 611 after 4 :00
614-742-2077.
Quarter Horse gelding. Very well
trained and gentle with children.
Call 614-949 -2682 after 7 :00

p.m.

64

Stainleu steel exhaus1 systems.
Now custom maO. for your
truck, motor home or classic car
With life-time war.ranty. Muffler
Man, 9 $timpson Ave ., Athens,
Ohio. 1- 800- 843-3767.

' 81 Datsun 510 Wftgon . 4 sp.
Good mechanical conditton. Call
after 5:00p.m ., 614-992-50 41
1981 Olds 98 Regency . Good
condiHon. PS, PB , PS, au to.
AM -FM rad10, a1r. naw tires . Call

614-992-6870.

1978 Camaro Rally Sport. auto.
AC . tilt, AM -FM stereo. air
shcx:ks. 350 four barrel I, 304·
675- 1139.

1981 Otds De lta BB Brougham,..
one owner. witt sell or trade for
plckup. equal value, 304 - 773 -

5631 .

Hay &amp; Grain

Mixed · he~. s1 25. Hay for
blltdding SOc. 304-675- 5579 .

3534
1985 Cougar 3 8 V-6 , take owr

payments

Must sell . 1 -614·

446-4109 botwe en 8 and 5.

' 79 Plymouth Champ, good
body , will run, $400.00 as ls,

Must sell garage kept 1985
Dodge Daytona, turbo, 5 speed,
37.000 miles, still' under warranry, price negotiable, 3046 75· 1311 .
~

\fans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

74

rts

Auto Parts
, &amp; Accessories

8_1

&amp; Accessories

&amp; Campers

cond Good tires. 57,000 m1les
Call 614-256 -6228 or 256-

$800,00. good cond. 304-676-

1417

2495.

1.978 J -10 4x4 Jeep truck
Heavy duty, special steel bed.
low m1les &amp;&gt;2400. -call 614·
256· 6434.

1985 RX200R Honda trail bike.

1980 Silver Honda Civic, 2 door
hat ch back, good cond, 304675 -4139 or 675 -6690.

1 5 ft . SeaStar with walk tl'vu

windthield. 70 Horsepower
Mercury motor. Call 614-4466691 .
35 HP Johnson Motor. self start
with gas tank. $200. Runs good,
good condition . Also 15 ft
fibet"glass boat with trailer. 90
HP motor ju11t rebuilt w ith power
trim. $8&amp;0. Cull614- 247-4122,

8udge1 Transmissions; Used and
n~b uill ,

all types . Guarantee 30

days. Galt

614 - 379 -2220 or

304-676 4230.

Chavy engines: 350· 231 V -6,
Otds . Pontiac, Buick. 400 F:.ord
engine. Call 614 - '245~6067 .

197 1 pop .up camp er. $600. or
bes1 offer 30~- 675- 61 18.

-lc-

77

Auto Repair

Insulated 8 fl truck topp er. new
porta potty, Citmper size refrigor·
atur. 5300.00 for all. 304 -675 5299.
-·

Du.!l exhaust kits, !;i99 .96 In·
stalled . Mo st Fords, Chevy
trucks, Van s, " 4x4 's. Muffler
Man. 9 St1mpson Ave ., Athens,
Oh io. 1-800· 843 -3767.

Struts, $119.95 pair, installed.
Most models. Muffler Man. 9
Stimpson Ave . Athens. Ohio.
1-800-843- 3767.

1981 Chevy 4x4 l)o ton pickup.
ps, pb, 360. 4 spd . Call
614 -446-1527

1977 Bronco 302. duel exhaust.
Good sha~e . $2500 Call 614·
379- 2152 after 7 :00PM .

pickup with
wheels . Call

614-446-9664.
1980 Ford 150 truck . 4 wheel
drive. Call614- 367- 7533 .
1977 Chevrolet picli: up truck.
exc cond, $2,000.00. 35 to 40
locust posts. S25 00 for all

81

ISE

REAL ESTAll

446-3644

tee. local references turnis hed ,
Free estimates. Call collect
1 614-237-0488. day or night .
RogersBasem e nt

Waterproofing .

c·LV.DE ~ •.WALKER. 245 -,~.F~·
L()RETTA McDADE. 446-rr29

BHEVELIN THE WOODSL Attractive home with
lots of potential. 3 bedrooms, I bath. ltving room .
eat-In kitchen. full ba se ment. Large wooded lot
Kyger Creek Schools. $49,900

ff222

Pickup truck bads.
Ford, Chevrolet, Dodge. Ab·
solutely no rust , Long and short
beds. 70 to 86 models. 304·

..

675-2265
1987 S10 truck, 5,900 mlles.
Air cond. AM - FM cassatt.
$6, 800.00. 304-675-6606 or
304-895-3427

MIIAI.IIH. . .

1983 4 dr. Celebrity. Black with
red interior. Auto ., ps. pb.
am-fm, air,luggagerack. Sharp.
$3596. Call614 -286-6522.

~ESIDENTlA L

· INVESTMENTS COMMERCIAL

m
""&gt;•

FARMS

446-6806

1'981 Turbo Trans-Am . New
tires . Sharp. Call 614 -3792820.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

VIRGINIA .SMITH. BROKER , 388-8 826
. R.UTH GOODY, REALTOR , 379 -2628
'DIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR , 256-6251
«iNNY GOODY. R.EAL
256-9334

1977 Ford Thunderbird Excel
cond. Call 614-245- 9657.

1'·---·' ~

...
FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER! :.._ The location, the
view and the neighborhood are the outstanding
features of this •2 bedroom home. Just l 1'1 m1l es
south on Lowe~ R1ver Road Th elot con tams about
an acre and has frontage on the river Perfect for
boaters, lish_
ermen or bathers. Thts IS a I l'l story
frame wtth an unf inished u p sta~r s {could be large
3rd bedroom). There IS a garage, storage bu1ldmg
and carport. Pnce $66.000.
#106

N_EW HOUSE AND 2ACRES for only $37,500. Very
mce and well mam[amed home tncludes 4 bedrooms, 21ull baths, comfortable IJVmg room. large
eat-1n kttchen lull~ equipped, n1ce deck off back.
Properly Includes outbutldmgs. small pond,
!ratter pad with separate water and sewer system.
Additional acreage avatl'ble ,f des11ed.

,940 Dodge- Business Coupe,
motor overhauled. Good cond.

$2000. Call 614-388-8620.
1979 Cadillac Fleetwood, Fully
kJaded. 58.000 miles. $3800.
Call 614-379-2730.

-

'

1 •...
•

NEW LISTING - At the
edge of Pomeroy. Appx 31h
acres with a H~ story home
4 bedrooms, fam1ly room, TV
room. equipped kitchen.
satellite d1sh and a cam per
2 car garage and more.
. . .... .. . JUST $29,900
IN THE COUNTRY - Over
70 acres, farm w1th older
home, garage and other
bwldmgs. Close to Pomeroy . .... ASKING $42,500
RIGGS CREST SUHDIVI·
SION - Split foyer home
with 4-5 bedrooms all tn
excellent cond1t1on Garage.
mce lot, WB. Hookups Much
more! ....... . . $54.900
T!1PPERS PLAINS - 3
beilroom 2 story home w1th
a large kitchen , firepla ce
and wrap-around porch.
Storage buildin g, large lot.
. ' . ' ' ' ' ' .. ' ' ' ' $23.400.
LETART AREA- Mini Farm
- 2 ac res w1th .a 1978
modular umf 3 bedrooms,
satellite diSh, fencmg to
sheds, small barn Drilled
water well . . . $24,DDO.

run

RlFH£ .............. 949-Joa.,

AW·

BREATHTAKING VIEW of Ga ll1pol ts and Oh10 River full
length windows lor maximum vtew . Secluded lor total
,pnvacy. City school d tstr~ c t. located HI miles from
downtown GallipoliS Only 8 mtles from Locks and
Dam .
EXCELLENT home and ground s lor family and / or en tertaming, Mu ~l see to apprecta\e quality

I

PLUM81NG DOCTOR . 1-682 ·
6663- 24 HOUR SERVICES .
APPAlACHIAN WOOD STOVE .
Wood and coal stows. furnaces,
and inserts, Brunco, Ashley.
Consolid ated Dulchwest. Buy,
sell. trada. 10 yrs. experience.
At 143 , Carpenter. Ohio. 614·
698 -6 121 .

..

-I
....
TOP CLASS NEIGHBORHOOD - locailon 1s as
1mportant as the house. You won 't make amtsta ke
w1th e1ther m thts 3 bedroom, t ~ batH ra nch tust
off Fa Hfleld -Centenary Road. Features mcludelivtng room. family room . dinmg roorn , 2 car garage
and equ1pped kitchen . Lar ge, flat professiOnally
landsca ped ,lot close to Spnng Valley area.
$72.900.
#101

"Sud" McGHEE REALTY
414 2nd Ave ., Suite 200
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-0S52 Anytime
RACCOON RD. - On e acre m/llot, clean and read y to build
baths. carpet, basement, Insulated. one acre, priced cheap.
ROUTE 7- Older hom e w•th one bedroom , 1deal for one or
two peop le. pattl31 ba sement.
$14,000
GARFIELD EXT. - 3 bedrooms. gmge, nver frontage,
needs some repa1r but pnced cheap Immediate possesSion.
$21.000
SOUTHWESTERN SCHOOLS- 3 bedrooms. large k1tchen. 2
bath s, carpet . basement. msufated, one acre, pnced cheatp.
$23,000
ROUTE 7- 3 bed room s, f~rep l ace , garage, 'h acre, consider
trade for mob1le home
$29.900
TYCOON LAKE - Modern 3 or 4 bed room hom e. basement.
over one acre lot, just mtnutes walk to lake. Pr iced right.
$41 ,000

SCOTTOWN - Bnck home, 4 car block garage with work
area. 9 acres, frwt trees, cJose to Miller.
$65,000
KYGER CREEK - 3 bedrooms, 23x22 garage, 2.3 acres,
vmyl Si ding, brick fro nt, close to power plants. $S 1,900 ...
CLOSE TO CENTErtARY
On State H1ghway 14l , niCe Sroom cotta ge,3 bedrooms,
large eat -•n k1tchen. rural water. n1ce block garage and
wm kshop Approx. 20 h. by 30 ft. 2 more storage bmld·
1ngs. Fenced on 3 s1des One (l) n1ce. la1 ge gard en spa ce
See 1t now'
HOUSE , TWO LOTS
In city. 40'x r2D' &gt;1:1!ver -All utJirt1es Priced at only
$14,900.00.
#664

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PHONE 446-7699 01 446-9539

RACCOON ROAD - 3 bedrooms, garage, outbuildmgs, creek
frontage, boaldock. 4 acres, pr~vate . 5'h mtles to town Sell
all or part. '
$69.500
ADDISON PIKE - 3 bedr oom bnck, leve l ll acr e. garage.
156,500
extra 24130 ,garage &amp; storage, appliances.
SPRING VALLEY - 3 bedroom s. !~replace , 2 bath s. 2 car
garage, covered patio. city utJittJes.
$68,000
Cl"V(,.,..~sJ.Qr:y,l;OioOJi!LiirJcfi,..2AQO SQ. ~~~

rooms. g~ m e room, 14''' 1nch walls. 2 acres.

•
.,.

•

$12.00()

OARVIN BLOOMER, Broker ........... 446-6764
DONA McGHEE ....................... ..... 446·0552
BETH NULL.. .... .......... .. ............... .. .245-9507
Real Estate General

Canaday Realty

•.

446-3636c.A~~

....

#338

152.000

•

11 182 NEW LI ST ING - 3 bedrrn , I bath, full bsmt,..targewlndowowerlookllli the beautifu l Ohio R1wer. Range. refng.. 2 cifr garage. Pr1ced to sell
$27,000. Clos" to Ga11Lpol 15.
'
"152. MOOE~N LIVING down on the farm Co mpl etely remodeled Owner
n&amp;eds to relocate bEcau se of health . 29 ac. 3 BR . ~baths . ~rtchen that you
I be proud of. torma l OR. new heal pump, outb uildings , 25 m1n . !rom

I . 8 mi. to Oak Hill .
M-E AN OFFER.

N~e ds

.
QUL[k sale RED UCED

, -~~·-~~""" · stucco ranch Off 218 aboul 15 m111 from
USTI NG - Located on SR7 1n Crown C1tY 30' x40' steel bu ltdbe used for rental . storage or ~usiness . 2 1ols $15,000.
PAY RENT: 1968 New Moon. 2 be drm.. mobile home and lot.

$31,900 WILL BUY THIS CLEAN. NEAT HOME
w1th 3 bed rooms. alu mmum Siding, central au
and carpet1ng thr oughout. Located in town. Grea1
mvestment or starter home.
#418
WHY RENT WHEN YOU CAN OWN? - Just as
cheaply we m1 ght add. 3 bedroom home tn good
neighborhood oilers re mod eled kttchen and bath,
lull basement. Perfe ct fur starters. Vinyl siding,
carport. central heat. $33. 900 ·
#110
• TWICE REDU CED! SELLER RETIRING'!- Mod e~n 3 bed room home Situa ted on a 1.27 acre lot
land sca~ed by Mother Natute. You'll entOY the
peace and qutel of the countryllke atmosphere.
Home otters formal dtnlng. hardwood floors. full
basement and 3 c81 carport. Plus a 16x32 mgiOu nd pool. Scandalously pnced at $4 9,900. See
11 today!

#113

#144.-HOME w/ INCOME POSS IBLE Charmi ng 2 bedrm . home , la rge LR . kit
, sunporch , bsmt and
Just alittle bit of heaven here. btra good build1ng was used to rep~ir Vs. Green,house, garden and fru1t. Plus • garden on
I lot across the road. Al so hookup fm mobtlehome. Rodne~ 8 Rd .
#174 CO_
UNTRY LIVING tust 3 m1. from city lrm1ts. Nr ce 2 story home has
commercral garaa:e (4 cars). st 11t plenty of work area. 4 BR. Ph baths. kit
w/ ran,e. d1shwuher, dLspdsil, plenty ol cabmets. lg LR w1th usuble FP
fue l o1ltank and line in basement No tuel freue up Has t&amp;. nment palla

lar.

.

Cit) schools .

1t193 VACANT lANO. 50 ac . off SR 150. Wooded
.
GRAOEO lOT. On good road JUSt out of Porter. $8.000.

_,!~_94
~

'

OLDER HOME WITH MODERN FEATURES - l 1?
bath, fu el 011 forced "' furnace. newe1 k1tchen
cabmets. Excellent gar den area 4qx45 barn.
22x 24 garage Extra lot lot second home. All for
$,36,500.

#329
SPACIOUS CEDAR RANCH neslled tn tall pme
trees offers mote than must Outstandmg k1tchen
loaded w1th beauttful oak cabmets and large
breakfa st nook. Cozy famtly room wtth hardwood
floor_s and warm fireplace formal dtnmg, study,
partial basem ent w1th rec room EntOY the peace
and QUiet on the multi-level deck wh1ch contams.
hot tub, 1accuw ott mastet bedroom also. 2 car
garage. Ctty schools $1 29,900.
#204
STARTIN G? RETIRING? -You will want to see
tin&gt; "sparklmg" brick ranch 10 the City with 2
bedroom s, bath, gas heat. central air, full basement, range, refngerator, lenced yard {garden
space). garage and new storage building. Quiet
neighborhood . $49.900

CONVENIENT LOCATION - If you are lookmg for
a good qual1ty mod ern home tust 4 blocks from
downtown, see thts medtum prtce ranch Include s
3 bedrooms, very nt ce kit chen. family room. 2
baths and full basement w1th f1 n1shed rec. room ,
woodburn1ng firepla ce. large enclosed back
porch lor storage. l ocated on alarge tot w1th room
for ga rden . l oo k at \h1s before you buy' $56,900.

#110
SPRAWLING COUNTRY SPLIT·LEVEL- Got a b1g
lam1ly that needs a little room? ThiS 4 bedroom
hom e w1tl sUit your needs Everythm g lor the ac tiVe lamtly mcluding lamily room. rec. room . large
livin g room . eat-1n kitchen . 2 baths. large 2 cat
garage plu s stUi dy outbwld1 ng 1.3 acres of flat
yard Green Townsh1p . Only 3-4 mtles lrom town
Owner doesn't want to fool arou nd - pnced at
$69,900.
AFFORDABLE PEACE &amp; QU lET' ! - Only $39,500 '
buys this 3 bedroom. 2 bath home located w1thm
one mile ol c1ty. In cludes fam1ly room, ltvmg room
and d1 nin garea. Large lot. Dead-end street. Better
hurry'
#106
FREE MOBILE HOME - Buy lh1s 2 acre tot and
we'll g1ve you a 12x60 2 bedroom . l 'h bath mob1le
home. Th1s 1969 Elcona home is 10 good condt·
tion Th e land has a f1n e hdm e Site. lots ol trees, a
small stream . IS close to th ~ rfver and only 3m1les
from town. Pnced at $12,000. AGood Investment
For Someo ne!
#230
THREE BLOCKS FROM TOWN -But surroun ded
by 5 acres of woods. Fam ily on ented ne~ghb o t
hood. 4-5 bed rooms, 31ull baths. large liVIng roorn
with f~replace, formal d1n1n g, eat-1n k1tchen w1th.
lots of w10dows. lamtly room w1lh firepla ce. large
deck overfookmg yard . lar ~e 2 car ga~a ge . Much.
more more. $72,900. DON T HESITATE"
'
. #200
EXCELLENT BUILDING LOTS!- Well loca ted bet
ween Rodney and Btdwell. Good layi ng land. Ap proximately 1.40 acre eac h lot 2 lots available.
$6,500 each.

#337

85

OUTSTANDING NEW LISTING
Brand New Rustic Contemporary
T~red of th e regular ranch ? Th ts 3 bedroom, I ~
story cedar home w1ll please you . Vaulted ce~lings ,
skyl1ghts, open oak sta11case, customb u1lt oak
cabinets in kitchen and baths give thiS home lots
of appeal. 3 bedrooms, 2',1 baths. li vm groom, din ·
1ng room and family 100m, large 2 car garage. En ergy savmg gas/ heat pum p furnace. Green TownShip, 3 m11es from town. Nice neighborhood.

#233
LOVE ACHALLENGE? -Lead the ctusade to save
lh1ShiStOfi C3 bedroom home. lnclu1es beauilful
pt ne paneled lamily!dtnmg room combmat1on ,
ea t-m kitchen, uttlily room, gas Ioree(! atr furnace . ·
I 'c• car gar age Pflced lo ·renovate. $23. 000.

Ull9

.....

AUDREY f . CANADAY. REI\LTOR
ROH£RT'GOROON . REI\LTOR. 446 -671&amp;
MARY flOYD. REALTOR.• 446-ll83
2~ LOCUST SIR HI . GALLIPOLIS. OllfO

..
..-·..
':..'

J &amp; J Water Sefvice. Swimming
pools, cisterns. welts. Ph. 614·
245- 9286;

~

Real Estate General

FOR SALE
Nice for a hunting
place, firewood, or
dig your own coal.
38.83 acres. Rutland Twp: Sect.

24. $12.000.
Call:
Ella Mae Grant
Real Estate

614-887-4793.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
90 Public storehouse
92 Equals' 100

ACROSS

1 Business

6 Muffles the
sound of
1 t Angry
16 Throng

11More unusual
22 Think
23 Essential
24 Cowboy

competition
25 River island

26 Got up
28 Entirety
I'""'~ . Oeserl dweller
At home
34 Morsel
35 Anger
36 P1erce
37 Metric measure

38 "-fOr Two"
40 S1andard of
perfec11on
42 Swelling
43 Foo1prin1
44 Conceal
45 Young boy
47 Visions
49 While with age
50 Cover
51 Outcome
54 Bind
55 Suspend
56 March
59 Fuss
60 Oine
62, Merchan1s

••
•

85 He):&gt;rew measure

••

86 Cut ol meat
88 Chair
89 Float in

'

FOR THE ACTIVE FAMILY- 4 BDROOMS, 2 BATHS, FAMILY ROOM, GAME ROOM WITH
BILLIARD TABL E, FORMAL LIVING ROOM COMPLETE WITH GRAND PIANO, 20X 40 INGROUND POOL. 30X40 GARAGE, WORKSHOP HAS 1200 SQ. FT. LOFT AREA SUITABLE FOR
fU TU RE APARTM ENT. 10 PARKLIKE ACR ES. $125,000.

U326

STONE FIREPLACE IN HUGE FAMILY ROOM WILL KEEPYOU
AND YOUR FAMILY WARM AND COZY ALL WINTER 3 BED·
ROOM BRICK AND fRAME'RANCH LOCATED ON LE GRANDE
BLVD JUS T UEW MINUTES FROM CITY. $55,000

.·•

SIX ACRE ESTATE - JUST MINUTES fROM HOLZER
HOSPI TAL. VERY NICE 4 BEDROOM , 3 B~lf,/ B.RICK ANO
FRAME HOME HAS SIDE DECK, COVERED PATIO IN REAR,
HOME HAS 2 KIT CHENS, ONE IS CONVENIENTLY LOCAl ED
Off fAMI LY ROO M, PLU S FULLY EQUIPPED KITCHEN ON
MAIN LEVEL. $79,900.

••

FIRST TIME ON MARKETI fiVE ACRES, CHARMING 3 BED·
ROOM 2 STORYHOME OPEN STAIRWAY. FORMAL DINING
ROOM : STUDY W! FIREPLACE, INGROUND POOL YOU'LL
LOVE THE SURROUNDINGS. $60,000.
.

COMMERCIAL SITE .....: RID GRANDE - 21ots on
corner of E. College Stt eet I block oil Rt 35. 2
bl oc ks from college campu s Excellent for rnosl
any kmd_ol busmess. $26,500

NOW IS THE TIMF TO BRIGHTEN YOUR LIFE WITH !Hi';;
"CHERRY 3 BR MODULAR HOME CENT AIR COND .. LEVEL
LOT, CARPORT. THE PRICE IS RIGHT AT $30,000 ..

#147

HURRY ... HURRY .. . HURRY - 87 ACRES, $20,000 CALL
WE WILL TELL YOU WHERE1

YOUR OPPORTUNITY lo become a homeowner
$·18,000 buys lh1s cozy 2 bedroom home Good location on the edge of town. I bath , k1tchen w1th
lot s uf cabmets. full basement, forced au gas fur. nate.

.'
,.

,

R &amp; M Custom Couches and
Reuphotstery, St. R, . 7, Crown
CitY, Dh. 614- 256 -1470. Eve.
614· 446 -3438 . Open daily 9 to
4 '30, Sat . 9 :30 to 1 .30. Old&amp;:
new Uphostared.

We love our home and know you Will , too. 1nts twostory house was built prior to tbe Civil War and ret·
Ia ins much of the uniqueness of that era . There are 3
BR's (the smallest of which is I~ ft . x 15 ft.) .-The
downslairs has a beautiful entryway with a winding
cherry slaircase, L.R .. D.R .. eat-iii kitchen, andfam·
ily room. Other fealures include 3 WBFPS . 2 full
baths , back stairway, laundry room , 30ft. of kitchen
cabinets, replacement windows, aluminum siding, a
large basement, atlached 2'12 car garage, air cond\· "
tioning, And over an acre of land thai is appropria·
tely landscaped. We live at 149 Woodland Drive. jusI
outside of the city limits.
Call Tom 9r.$ue Moulton at
446-1479 or 446 -9655 .

lsas Easy as ...

72 Possessive
pronoun

U416

Upholstery

FOR SALE BY OWNER
. ONE MONTH ONLY

Usitrg the Classi[itds

74 S1rop
76 Jnd1an welgh1
77 Jog
78 Quarrel
79 Evalua1ion
82 "Sesame -"
84 Ex1ra

: t

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - 5 1oom remodeled
home m Thurman Move-m co nd1t1on. Ntce bath
K1t chen w1th retn geralor and range mclud ed
L1sted to sell at $20,000
•

' WA~T SOMETHING PEACEFUL TO COME HOME
T017 - Try thts 12x60 mobtle home o·n Kempet
Hollow Road. Serene wooded lot. t6•14 ·addlllo n
w1th new carpet 2 bedroom s 2 a1r cond1!1oners
woodbu rner. 10xl0 outbuilrl1n g W1tl1 con crete
!loot and electnc. Con crete pat1o Wl!h privacy
len ce Huge covered sandbox. Relaxed charm
$t8,900.

Dump truck delivery. Coal,
stone, nnd, gravel and dlrt.
304-675- 319Q.

R S. R Water Service ~ Home
cisl&amp;rs. \WIIa. pools filled . For·
marly Jamet Boys Waters.Ca tl
304·675-6370.

•

~
••
·!

n314

nus

2919.

'

Dillard Water Service: Pools,
· Cisterns, Wells . Delivery Any timtl. Call 614· 446 - 7404-No
Sunday calls .

66 Mile: abbr .
67 Informer
69 Fear
70 Corn cake
·71 Ocean

• •

Watterson 's Water Hauling,
reasonable rates, immedia1e
2, 000.gellon deli~.tery , cisterns.
pools. well. etc. call 304- 576·

87

64 Passage
65 Hosp. asst .

GIVE 'ME LAND' - 40 acres ol crop and pasture.
Good water supply. And a t2x60 mob1le h ~me m
good conditiOn . Barn , tobacco base. $25,000.
Awa1ts your dts,overy.

BEST BUILD! NG LOT- Bu &gt;id th ehousevuu have
been dreammg abou: on lh1s excelle ni iDD'xl75 '
lot, 2 block sfrom H.M.C C1ly water sewer. natural
gas $13,500. No mobile homes

Real Estate General

General Hauling

General Hauling

33 Exists

Real Estate General

•
•

between i'Fo1 Sale" and
SOLD

85

RUTLAND- 38 acr es on Rt 124, house, garage, build tngs,
pond , c1ty water. free gas
$75,000

'

We're the difference

#171. WILL LAND CONTRACT. 3 BR. 2 baths. OR, k1t. . ut1l1ty rm.. CIStern
and r water . New ro of, over vi ac. lot Red uced to sell
#172. WANT HIDEAWAY HllLS1 Th1s cute lille A·frame and a little work
could make a nice hortlt with wood e~ se!Ung. 2 bedrm. up, down l lli baths ,
1'' bsmt .. lt. ut1lity rm ., washer dr:,T er. ru ra l water pd.. elec. heat ano wood -

Residanttal or commmc11J! Wll ·
ing. Naw service or repairs.
Ucensed electrician. -Estimate
free. Ridenour Elect]icat. 304676 -17A6.

KYGER CREEK- 24'h acres. 3 bedrooms. added apartment
lor on e person w1th all ut1hhes.
$49,500

'

MAKE US AN OFFER
COMMERCIAL OFFICE BUILDING - Opposite
courthouse. Ideal for alt orney , accountant loan
office. Nicely lim shed 1nS1de Outside and roof
pamted last year. Holdtng at $37,000.
#306

41 ACRES OF BARE LAND - Mostly wood ed w1th
some sa w t1mbk 4 acres m/ 1of bottom land
Good place to bwld. Wate,r tap paid for. located 10
V1nlon or Glenn Summ1t Road ,'~ mile so uth of Vin ton. Asking $20,000.

MIDDLEPORT - Ntce gar·
age apartment 1n town 3.,
bed rooms, lull basement,
AC, all on a level lot close to
shoppmg. . ... . . $21,900.

Offi(E.............. . .. 991-2159 i

2454.

Electric sewer cleaning. gas.
water , &amp; sewer' services. For all
your plumbing needs c:all the

. •

Clay schools. Sl5.500.
1085 NEW: J bedrm., 24'd0' rec . rm w/ 10 ft . WBfP. \JIIhty rm 1n bsmt
has LR . DA. kit .. I bath . 10 min hom town, Brick &amp; vmyl ranc}l A~mg

Electrical

The Sunday Times-Sentinei - Page- D-7

llo Refrigeration

446-4477

..

I

JEAN TRUSSEll .......... 949-1660
OOTTif TURNER ........... 99'2 · S6?2

RON ' S Tetev1sion Ser vice .
House calls on RCA, Ouazar ,
GE . Specialing in Zen ith . Call
304· 576 - 2398 or 614 - 446 -

HEATING

..
.., _r"

RUTLAND - 3 bedroom
ranch style home with huge
fam 1ly room. 4 lots, d1mng
room. ASSUME LOAN . ASK
FOR DETAILS . ... $31 ,900.

PRICE REDUCED - MIDDLEPORT Two un1 t
apartment bwldm g. 3 bed room umts should rent lor
$200 /mo
plus
each ...... . ... $16.900.
NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT 2 un1t bnck
apartmen t bu1ldmg 1n town.
Good rental mcome. WANT
$28,900
'
NEW LISTING - RIVerfront
property w1th a ntce cabm
w1th full basement Plu s a
far ge bu1ld1ng WANT
$27,900.
tt(NRY E. ClflANO, IR .... 1)1)1-6 tcn

FOR SALE BY OWNERS : Large s pl it~ level and tennis
court.
4-5 BEDROOMS: 3 baths, forma l lt vmg and dmmg
rooms, gou rm et kitchen, family room , game room .
study , mud/laundry room , mdoor stora ge room with
addiltonaf laundry fac1liltes. 2 car ga rage , 2 fireplaces.
cetllhg fan s, woode n deck. full length of house. Many
extras.
·

#662

We've got what if fakes fo
lind more bugm. So lisf with us.l

I will do houllt painting and
trailllf roots\ rmd odds and end
Carpenter W~;~rk Call 614· 9927337.

AND

Co r Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Ph one 614 -446 · 3888 or 614-

~ .: ·

burnel. Will consider land con tract. Make otter Askmg $24.500
#189. KAJ'N MOBIL£ HOM£: 12~65 2 BR . 1 bath. pat 1o (h-er 111 am wrth
good carden spot. hha well built storate bid&amp;. Ow ner wanls QUICK SAlE

84

w.·Va.

Real Estate General

..
..
....
.,.-·.
.•

#201

601
E. Main
#187. CASTLE MOBilE HOME. 14'165' w1th 4 bed1m s. 2 full baths. wood·.
burner in living rm. and cable lV. EXTRA BONUS ot 2ad d-onrms One stor
age building ot wood, ;mother of metal. On n~ntal lot
#117 COWBOYS TAKE NOTICE Staie Rt. 160 - Smal l farm 4 ac. m/ 1.
frame home wilh front and bacck porch, cell ar, new rool and hot water
tank. Range and refrig .. cement dme, 2 bldgs , large barn F•el d lenceCI
w1th small pond lor horses. fronts on 3 roads $40s.
#192. NEW LISTING - MERCERVILLE AREA - Cedar 5Ldlnll:, ~ bedrm .. l
bath. remodeled ome In beautiful co untr~ setting. Incl udes cellar house.
t1e house, la rge barn. tobacco base 30 ac.. huit trees. yJa lnut trees and
good hunting. $40s.
1117. COM MERCIAl FRONTAGE ON SR 160. ANXIOUS OWN ER RWUCEO
PRICE: 4 acres m/1. Country hom~ with new roof. hot water heater range
and refrig., cement drive . 1(. barn . 2 bl dts . Field fenced w/ small pond .

388-9918.

CARTER "S PLUMBING

Ca rpet mstatled, work guar•n·
teed, free estimates. 304- 6751020 or aher 5;00 676 -2288 .

'

LOCATION - 1st Avenue View!- Ex·
ceplionally good cond1t10n. Owner has spent aton
of money and a. lot of hi St1me makmg Improvements. I was really surprised at how mce it is and
1! 1s much larger than I expected. To ap_prec1ate
the des~rablllty of th1s home, you must VIew the in·
Side. Thts professionally decorated home includes
a very pretty living room, formal dining, nice
k1tchen w1th appl~ances, fam1ly room , den and 3
or 4 bed rooms. Ma.ter bedroom has con necting
stud y. Scree ned porch wtth river view. P11ce has
been .educed to $109,900. Dm1ng by w1ll not do,
you must see the ins1de.
#103

Etectrolux Sates and Service- all
mach1nes teduc ed, OJ - S649
now on sale 9499. New Di scov·
ery upright 1429 now on sale
S349 B -9 Sharnpooer 9399
now on sele $299 Easy plly·
ment ptan \ availabl a. Call 614·

67~ · 2903 .

~

~- '
.'(
_, .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Starks Tr ee And lawn Service.
lawn c are, landscap i ng, stump
r&amp;movel , 304 - 576 - 2842 or

'

Real Estate· General

82

VINTON - 43 acre far m, 3 bedroom home, family room, 2
full baths. 9 bUild ings, pond. fenced. blacktop road. tots of
tarm equrpment mcluded 1n pr1 ce.
$90,000

#325

1972 Duster. 8300. Call 614·
446· 6423.

992·2259

Rotary or cable t ool drilling.
Mq_st welts ~ompleted same day.
Pump sates and ser\rice. 304-

Real Estate General

Gallipolia,

POMEROY, 0.

V1nyl Siding, over hang ood
gutters. Call 614- 44~ - 6634 .
Free Estimate.

HOUSE, TENNIS COURT and 2~ ACRES- $173.000
Will consider house,-court and 5 acres for $155,000
Call for Appointment - 614-446 -3386
Serious Buyers Only Please

REDUCED TO $38,0001 - Mod ern 3 bedroom
home tn good co&lt;)dition. Gas heat, central atr. Well
buill garage witQ.24x30 room above, swtable for
apartment, part~a l util1t1es 1n place.
#309

1980 Chev. Citation. V ·6. auto,
ps, pb, ac. new tires . S 1450 or
b•t offer.·See · 1710 Chatham.

1977 Pontiac Sunbird. Run s.
Uttle surface rust. Needs bat·
tery, upper &amp; toWP.r bushings on
drivers side. $400 or best offer.
c.u 614 -367-7559.

Home
Improvements

81

Real Estate General

•.

E M WISEMAN. BROKER
DAViD WISEMAN. 446 -9555
B J HAIRSTON. 446-4240

TERRI
ofhomem1n11rm•n
jacent buildings and extra lot.
remo~
deled 5 room home. Forced atr furnace, bath,
vinyl sidmg, storm Windows, tnsulated. Old 2story
store bwldmg w1th basement. Good forced a~r
heating system. restroom. All pamted, m good
condition. V1nyl siding, asphalt sh mgle roof.
Newer 40x48x l3 bwldmg, concrete floor, kitchen
area. restroom . well msulated, attractiVe unit.
Dwelling, 2 qual1ty bu1ldmgs and extra lot. All for
$82,000.

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional IUetime gvaran·

::-:---:-----·

q{~?lia 91 '!J/m,t{ @r
~~ '6.u:z«
"""''""'

1984 Dodge Colt. Nice economy car. No rurl Stereo cass
plaver. $2500. Call 614-286·
8622.

446-0294.

e95~ 3802

304-675-1239 .

Real Estate General

SWEEP ER at)d sewing machme
repair, parts. and supplies . Pick
up ,and del iw r~ . Davis Vacuum
Cl eaner , one half mile llP
Georges Creek Rd . Call 614 -

Fetty Tree Tr imming, stump
remova l. Call 304-675-1331 .

Tra nsporlation
71 Auto's For Sale

Home
Improvements

Services

Sale

1982 Fwd F100. 6 cyl., excel.
cond. , low mileage $4300 Call
614- 446-0644 or 446- 7602.

Nissan
topper S. alum

76

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant,

October 16, 1987

1977 Jeep CJ7, 4WD . Good

1985Cougar, 3 BV-6, takeover
payme nts. must sell, 614 - 4464109 between 8 .00 and 5 :00.

72 Trucks for

October 18. 1987

and
Motors for Sale

Motorcycles

304· 4.58-1844.

1986'h

1976 ChiNy Monza Runs good,
low mileage. $400. Call 614·
992 - 5396.

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Pomeroy-

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

~OBILE HOME - l4x70 WITH EXPANDO ON APPROX. ONE
ACRE $13 ,000.
.
•

l

SPRING VALLEY AREA - SPACIOUS BR ICK RANCH, COZY
FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE OFF FULLY EQUIPPED
KITCHEN. 3 BEDROOMS, I 'l BATHS, EXTRA LARGE MASTER
BEDROOM HAS TELEVISION VIEWING AREA . CALL NOW 1 ·
•
$9.500 PRICE REDUCTION' - HARD 10 BELIEVE OWNER
IS WIL LI NG TO SELL THIS 4 BEDROOM, 2 STORY COUNTRY
HOME WITH 3l ACRES fOR $60.000 OR WILL SELL HOME
AND APPROX 5 ACRES FOR $45,000. IF Y8U NEED ACREAGE
BETTER HURRY, THIS IS A ONCE IN A LIF~TIME BUY'
CUSTOM DESIGNED - 4 LEVEL HOMF.. HAS CATHEDR .•
OPEN BEAMED CEILING. FIREPlACES IN LIVINGAND FAM Il Y ROOMS. DECK, 4 BEDROOMS. 2 AND •, BATHS. DECK A
BARGAI N AT $55.000.
THE " SINGLE" SOLUTION! RENTING' WHY' WHEN YOU C~N
OWN THIS NICE 3 ROOM PLUS BATH HOME IN CITY.
$12,500
YOU CAN'T BEAT THE PRICE! 4 BEDROOM BRICK RAJ~, H ·
HAS 2'1 BATHS. FULL BASEMENT WITH R~CREATI (m
ROOM ATTACHED 2 CAR GARAGE PLU S 2DX40 WORKSHO t
GARAGE. NICE COVERED DECK. ONE ACRE LAWN. NEAR
CITY. $65,000.
DOUBLE WIDE - 3 BRS, 2 BATHS. DECKS.,EQUIPPED
KIT CHEN, CATHEDRAL CEILING LR PLUS 2 BR MOBILE
HOME ON S EPA~ATE LOT - BOTH FOR $43. 000.

arr

pennies

94 Encroaches
98 Teachers·
favorites

99
100
102
103

Defaces
Footllke pan
- preview
Guido's high
note
104 Inches: abbr.
105 L.A. team
io6 Repasts
108 Lair
100 ~u--symbc l-110 Preflx: wi1h
111 Deposits
112 Woodchucks
~

14 The firmament

116
117
119
120
122

Washington bill
Marsh birds
DiversiFy
Bard
Caesar and
Waldorf
124 Youngs1er
125 Take one's part
126 Condimen1
128 Prefix: wrong
129 Prophet
13 1 Toward shel1er
132 - Angeles
133 Abounds
135 Hindu cymbals
138 " - and Peace"
139 Talon
140 The sun
141 Sesame
142 " Magnum.- "
143 Actor Marshall
144 Groan
145 Small brooks
14 7 Former Israeli
prime minister

149 Male
150 Lei
152 Fish from moving
boat
154 Decorate
156 Worship
t 58 Harvests
159 Closes securely
160 Turf
161 Drinking vessel

DOWN
1 Mannerism

2 Lift

3 Sketching

4 Rio - Janeiro
5 Period of time
6 Anchored
7 Parvenu
8 Asco1
9 La vie ._ rose

10 Stl1ch
11 Creamy-whi1e
12 trrlta1e
13 ConSIJrned
14 Tenlatum
symbol
15 Click beeUe
16 Shellfish
17 Lowe or Reiner

18 Overdose: abbr.
19 "-Science"
20 Recipient of
gift
27 He hos1ed "The
Twilight Zone" .
29 S1rlkes
31 Type of music
36 Han
37 Verdi opera
39 In addition
40 Unemployed
41 Conduct
42 Besmirches

43 " My Three - "
44 Lease
46 Gold symbol
48 Imitated
49 Dljficut1
50 " Superman "
character

51
52
53
55
56
57
58
61
63

Fiber ptanl
Redacts
- sauce
Suit of cards:
pt.
Liquid measure
Gloomy
GrO~VIng out of
Fruit cake
Aclor Majors,
etat.
Debatable

64
68 Clolhesmak~rs
70 Sham
71 Thinly scat1ered
73 European
ermines

74 Pintail duck
75 Bodies of water

77 " The - of a
Clown "

78 Heal1h resons
80 Demons
81 No1hlng
83 Soak, as flax
84 Saturate
87 Household linen
89 Whips
90 Heroic even1s
91 Piece CUI to
fit Into mortise

92 Obstructs
93 Paper measure

, 95 Observes
96 African
antelope
97 Wise persons
99 Small rugs
101 tncttnes
105 Musical
instrument

106 Mo1her: Fr.
107 Cease
111 Mas1
t 12 Manufactured
113 Follows Aug.
115 Swee1 pota1oes
116 Kilo
t t 8 Floman road
119 Opinion
121 Seesaws
123 Floman 51
125 Inclines
126 Take a vote
127 Flutes
129 Vow under oa1h
130 King of birds
131-- carte
132 Lounges about
t34 Floman 1,05 t
136 Armadillos
137 Boundaries
139 Farm animals
140 Per1 of window
frame

144 Cleaning
lmplemen1
t45 Brown kiwi
146 Actors' org.
147 Neck piece
148 Scotd
149 Ex1inct
flightless bird
151 Oscar de Rent a
153 Again: prolix
155 "- No"
157 Deciliter: abbr.

�-. .

Farm

Ohio Lottery

·world
Series

Page-D-B
October 18, 1987

Daily Number
226
Pick 4
6591

.

Weather network available
to farmers with computers
WOOST~R. · Ohio (UPI) . --:
Far~ers tn Ohio ~an now refine
the ttmlng of ~ertam agricultural
proced~res , by telephoning a
sta tewtde automat!~ weather
net~ork, says . Davtd Elwell,
agn cultural engmeer at the Ohio
Agricultural Research and De·
velopment Center .
Th e network has weather and
env tr?nmental Information for
use m . on"!arm computers to
det~r~me _thm!'s like crop rnatunt y, _1rnga11?n needs , pest
1nfestat 10n penods, and .rung!Ctde appllcattons.
Although a~rlcultural re·
sea rchers cunentl) form the
bulk of the network' s customers.
t he serv1ce 1S ready for anyone
wt.t.h a compute~ system.
Agriculture ts moving In this

direction," Elwell says. "Co m - stations around the state.
puterlzed information system s
Max imum an d minimum
aid manage ment a nd cost
values from each source are
controL
recorded ev ery day, as well as
"However, the a utoweather hOUfiJI totals. The data , s tored In
station Is no t a weather predicto r
the OARDC Statistics La bora·
nor a rep laccmen: for the morn- tory co mput er, is on-line for 1986
ing weather report," he adds. and 1987. Wea ther information
" We cannot help the fa rmer tor 1982 through 1985 is ava ilable
decide whether he should plow on request.
his field this af1ernoon because
The autoweather network has
our data do not indicate whether been operating In Ohio for six
It may rain tonight."
yea r ~. but only in the la s t year
The autoweat her s tation, a . has data been mad e available to
small instrument the size of a of!-campus computers. The
shoebox , receives m inute -b y - woos ter Statistics Laboratory Is
minute information on solar the proces.slng and administra·
radiat ion. air and so il tempera· tivc center for the entire Ohio
ture, wind direction and velocity. au toweather network.
relativehumidily,rainfail, s now Anyone can set up a free
fall and evaporation rates col· .account through the OARDC
lected ·from nine a utoweather Statistics Lab. Once you have an
account and know the procedures
and files to access, simply dial
the HP 3000 system through a
tele phone, modem.
The only cost of this pertinen t
Information is the phone call. If
you outline your needs in ad·
va
nce , OARDC per sonnel can
MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery·
cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
give
you more s pecific advice on
· farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and . Water
Leave your name, address and telephone number
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP)) - . 10.45 million mil k cows in the
using
the sys tem ,
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
with your card or Jetter. No telephone calls will be
Th e effect of the federal govern· United Stat es, compared with
No
actual
training is offered,
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to participate
accepted. All contest entries should be turneil'in to
men t's dairy buyout program 1l.l million in 198:!.
bu
I
Elwell
says
the system is
in the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.
has slowed and milk production
.
The
difference,
Jacobson
says,
easy
to
Jearn
.
For
more inform a· ·
farm's owner. Jus t mail, or drop of! your guess to . In case of a lie, lhc winner will be chost•il 11.1'
is up again , an Ohio dairy is that the average cow produces
tiqn
,
Elwell
can
be
reached at
the the Daily Sentinel, Ill Court Si., Pomeroy.
lottery . Next week, a Meigs County farm will be
economist says.
1.015
pou
nds
more
a
year
tod
ay
216-263-3862.
Ohio, 15769 or the Gailipolb Tribune, H25 Third
ft•aturcd by lht• Meigs Soil and Water Const•rva·
August milk production. in· than she did rout• yea rs ago.
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 1563t , and you may win a $5
lion Distric t.
crea sed lor the fir st time in 14 Between 1986 and 1987 alone
months and September s howed a there was a 2.3-percent inc rease
similar jump as the dairy termi· in production per cow .
nation progra m ended.
Ohio ranked sixth in mllk
Rober t E Ja cobson, d a iry production a t 4.94 billion pounds .
policy specialist at Ohi o State in 1986, but will drop below 4.8
By Edward M: Vollhorn
featut•ed some 1,779 head of pigs
pou"d s in 196 days a t a cos t-of·
Univer sit y, ex pec ts the rrend to billion pounds in 1987. There arc
County ExtensiOn Agent,
wei g hing an average 55 .22 gai n o! 40 cents per pound ,
continue thr ough 1988.
a bout 12,000 fewer cows in Ohio
Agriculture
pounds. Average price was $88.21 showed break!?Ve n price a t $65
"The effect oft hose producers th is year but production-per -cow
COLUMBUS Joseph F .
GALLIPOLIS - The !ail harvper hu ndfed or $4~)0 pe r head.
per hundred-for the finished steer that moved out of the Indus try
in the state shoul~ be s teady .
Cook, president of the 19,000est pace races ~ h eao wt th 52
Top was on a group weighing 35
that has a current feeder va lue of
through the buyout is pretty
Federa l l aw dropped dairy
member Ohio State Bar Associapercent of !he Oh1 o .c orn and 72
pound s and sell ing for $112 per $80 per h~ndred .
much t)ehlnd us," Jacobson says. support prices 25 cents on Oc·
tiqn. wili address area lawyers
percent Of the Ohio soybea n
hundred. The 40-60 pound pigs
Fa il soil testing allows time Io
''We' re at the end of the termina- Iober L Jacobson says projecte d
on the l!roposed Merit Selection
crops harvested as of this past
sold in the $89-$103 per hundred
get recommended lime applied
l Ion period and those that are Ie l't surpluses of more !han 5 billio n
amendment
tot he state constltuMonda y. Several good days t his
range .
wel l ahead o'r the next years'
seem to be cranking up produc- pounds, in 1988 wlll probably cut ' 1ion at the annual meeting of
week should have pushed much
Feeder c att le p rices are
crop. Soil samples submitted to
tion. We' ll go into 1988 on the supports anot her 50 cenls on
OSBA District 8 on Thursday at
closer to completion. ThP harv mostly mixed to slighty tower a t the Cou nt y Extension Office take
upswing, and I don 't see anything J a nuary 1.
the Chillicothe Country Club.
esting pace nationally, was more
some locations .· The 500 lb. a bou t two weeks for the results .
that will· hold production down
Lower
s
upport
pric
e~
·
will
Dis tr ict Eight includes about
than 20 percentage point s ahead
m edium frame steer cal ves arc If you would like help with so il · a n~· time soon."
pressure
some
dairy
farmers
to
275
lawyers in Adams. Brown,
of the l~n g-t erm a~erage . Cash
selling in the low to mld ·$80 per sa mples, plmse ca ll the Extenproduce
more
as
they
try
to
Gallia,
Highland, Jackson , Lawcorn prtces remam stable as
hundred range . The 13-State sion Office (614·446·7007 1.
The
key
is
th
a
t
more
mllk
is
maintain
their
income
lev
el.
And
rence, Pickaway, Pike, Ross, ·
selling pressure remai ns lighter
Ca ttle On Feed Report tor
The co nc lusion of a Michigan
Scioto and. Vinto11 Cpunties.
than norm a l.
Octobe r 1, will be released on State Un ive rsity Forage Re· coming from fewer cows. Prell· low reed prices mak e it easier to
P .I.K .-a nd -roll and been ha m·
Oct ober23. Most economist think• search Project is that s plitting m ina ry reports for 1987 snow do that.
pered by failure o! I.R.S. lo make
the October 1 ca ttle on feed Potash a pplicat ion on Alfalfa
a quick c~ange in the tax ru lin g
numbers are probabl y 5-7 per- us ua ll y doesn't pay. Equally splil
tha t has dtscouraged C.C.C . loan
cent above a ye ar ago .
annual topdressing ra tes of 200
redem~tions with .certifica tes.
A very simple computer pro· 300 a nd 400 pound s or K20
Accordmg to a Wa s hmgton l.R .S.
gram is avai lable fo r local !ePdPr between fa ll a nd s pring showed
news re lease on October 13,
c al f producers making "S~ ll or no yeild adva nta ge over a sin g le
I.R.S. wiH a~end a tax ru lmg
Keep·· decision s. This program appli cation of the sa m e total
that has l1mt!ed P .I. K.-and-roll
was developed by t\g Econo- n ile. The only exce ption is where
FACTORY REBATE ON ALL REMAINING '87 PONTIAC 6000's
of new cro p corn.
mis t , Bryson Cart e r . and a llows the ra te migMI exceed 400 pounds
The Octotlf'r 13 ruli ng essen ·
e ach person to usr their ow n ol ·K20 per acre.
tially states that any · p rofit
fi gures. The big unknown is the
"AgriTrends" a satellit e TV
, resuili_ng from P .I.K.·a nd ·roll
va lue of the animals next year at program wi!l be broadcast Oc·
(the dtf!erence between the loa n
the end of the backg1·ounding or tobcr 22 from i : 30-8:00 p.m. The
ra!e ~nd the pos ted , cou ntry
feedin g per iod . Call or stop in at program wi ll be on Westar 5
prwej ts taxableatt hct,lm eofthe
t he Extension Offi ce to usc this Cha nnel 1 and Westar4, Cha nnel
maneuver. a nd mcom e fr om the
free prog ra m .
21. The prograrn will fea ture
ftn al sale of the gram redeemed
A recen t " DroVPr'., Journal " Oh io State Ag Economist. Dr.
1S not taxable until thai sale is
a rt ic le with ba s ic assumptions of Dennis Henderson, Dr. Scott
completed .
feeding a 550 lb. stc&lt;' r ca lf to 1. 100 Irw in, a nd Dr. Norman Ra sk.
When the controversia l r uling
is changed. corn prices ma y dip
sever al ce nt s. Gal li a County
livestock producers who need to
'86 PONTIAC SUNBIRD HATCHBACK
'84 BUICK RIVIERA
Aut omolic , A / C , low m•les . c ustom dl!: lull e trlm 1 Q litiBt
purchase gra in shou ld watC h the
local on a owner. arct1c wh1te. c limel e control AI C. Loade·d
Onl! engine
with opti ons. BlUe velour inttuior .
m arket In th e next few days for
" LOCAl EXECUTIVE CAR"
local conserva tion d istr ict before
By
, possible weakness. Most econ o·
WAS '8,49S
•
plowing. Als o. certain c ro p
mist see continued s trength into
Patty Dyer
acreage bases may now be
the la te fall with possible hea vy
District Conservationis t
exc ha nged for high residue
selli ng after the first of the year.
USDA·SCS
crops if ca Jled for in a n approved
There are some ve ry imporGALLIPOLI S The U.S.
tant c hanges on t he 1987 ~chedul e
Dppartment of Agriculture has soil conserva ti on pl~n. High
F Tax Form. Dr. P a ulL. Wrtght , issued fin al rules c la r ifyi ng Jhe res idue c rops include corn ,
O.S.U. Agricu ltur al Law Expert.
requi remen ts of the co nservation wheat, a nd ot her small grain
says to capit il ize ex pen ses in·
provisions of the F ood Sec urity crops grown in Ohio.
·
To rem a in e ligible for USDA
curred on· a n item before it is a n . Act of 1985
income producer or be loc ked
Under l hC' consf'rvaf ion provi - program benefit s, farmers must
into the slowest method of si ons of the a ~ t . fa rmers ca n have a co nserva tion plan for
stra ight -lin e deprec iation on a ll
retain eligibil ity for USDA pro· high ly erodible cropland by J an ·
farm ite m s. The new tax Ia w says gra m benefit s b.v ins tal ling a uary 1, 1990. It must be fully
implemented by Janu a ry l . 1995.
taxpayers must kee p trac k of con servation pla n on high ly
· '84 FORD HI-TOP VAN
'8 7 ·BUICK PARK AVENUES
Myers sa id that farm er s who
expenses a nd dep reci ate them erodi bl e cropland and by not
SAVE THOUSANDS OVER NEW! Local one owner. New
CHOO SE FROM 4 COLORS . Loaded with climate control
van trade ·in. AM · FM-Cessette. power door locks, t ilt .
A/ C, power windows , power door loc ks , rear defosser.
have ques ti ons about lheC'ffcct or
when the anima l or pla nt s ta rt s converll ng wetl a nds.
cruise, 4 captain chairs, sofa and more .
wire wheel coYert. pawer see1S. AM I FM· Cassa tte , and
the
rule
cha
nges
should
con
tact
generati ng income . The m ost
DC'puty Secretary of Ag r icul·
more
common example wil l be beef turc Peter C. My ers said the
their local Soil Conserva tion
LET US SA VI YOU MONEY
WAS '12,900
SP r vice or Agricul t ural Stabiliza·
a nd dairy heifer s. Stud y th is
rules. whic h were publi shed in
"Factor Offic:iol'5 (or"
tion and Conservation Serv ice
c hange before the end of the
the Fede ra l Regis ter Sep tember
office as soo n as posslb lP.
year. ·
16, cl ar ify def initions of highly
'81PONTIAC TRANS AM "TURBO"
"We will do our best to help
The Southern Ohio G ra dPcl
'83 AMC ALLIANCE 4 DOOR
erod ible la nd . wetla nd a nd con·
HER! IT IS - THE HOT ONI!
" A good smell car well wonh the pr ice:." Auto ., AI C. ,
farmers develop conse rva ti on
Feeder Pig Sa le on October R · vcrt e d wet! a nd . They a lso said
Featu as 4 wheel disc brakes. hetchroof, AM · FM -Cesse ne ,
52.000 low miles. &amp;Ktra clean , lt. b lue W1lh gray inteno r
tilt, cruiSI3 . rear defogger Bnd only S49 ,500 miles . Sky blue .
pla ns and systems · that arp
tha t althoug h plowing a lfalfa.
reaiistic a nd practica l," SCS
l('gu mes or other gr a sses in crop
ONLY
NOW
WAS '6,995
District Conservationist Pa tty
rota tion is con&amp;ldered sodbust ·
Dyer said. "The sooner t hey ask
in g. the rotation m ay be an
'83 BUICK PARK AVENUE
tor help, the sooner we'll be able
accepta ble conserva tion syslem ,
'
. '84 DODGE CHARGER 2 DOOR
GALLIPOLIS The 4:ird
"BARGAIN HUNTER'S REWARD"
to assure t ha t they will remain
However , farmer s need to have
Th1s loca l one ow ner shows the signs of TLC I L d
.
ltert
's
a
car
that
looks
..
od,
runs
good
and
h
loodecl
wi1h
op·
Annual Meeting a nd Ba nquet of
eligible for program benefits. "
spee d, A/ C , AM-FM -Casseua. rear defogger :a:u~;;v~r,k 5
the rotation approved by the
tions. lt -uld ••I for $l,DOO mort if tht miln w.,.t11't aliult
bl ue, Absolutely immaculate .
'
u 5 V
the Gallla Soli and Wa ter Co nser·
_.,,
varlo n District will bP he ld
PRICED RIGHT AT
Novem ber 5, .1987 a t the Gr een
Elementary Schoo l. Th e Ba nque t
will begin at 7:00p .m.
OVER
MORE USED CARS
This year two posi tlon·s are to
ON THE SPOT FIN~NCING
be rtlled on the board of s upc rvl .
TO QUALIFIED BUYEI3S
IN STOCK - ALL PRICE RANGES
•
sors . The ca ndid ates are J Prry
Dee!, Paul Duncan , Mike Hug hes
ani:! Donnie Shupe. The progra m
wlll lea lure award s honor ing the
GM QUALITY
Goodyear Outstanding Farmer,
SERV,ICE PARTS
the Outstanding Far m F a mily,
Afflllate Members a nd a s lide
presentation of the di st r ict's
ac helvments.
SEE HARLAND WOOD, TOM KES SEL, JI~T COCHRAN or GREG S~11Tit
.
Tickets a re a vailable a t the
district office a t 529 J a ck son
Pike, the Ext ension office a 11502
Eastern Ave. and board supervl ·
sors Jim Baughm a n. Mik e
1900 EASTERN AVE.
·
.
. G L
·Hughes , Noel Mas sie, Lawrence
34 YEARS OF RELIABLE DEALS
A LIPOLIS, OHIO
Burdell a nd Buz 'Mills.

Page 3

Superlotto

14-19-27-38-43-44 .

...

-e

(

Vol. 37. No. t13
Copyrighted 1987

•

•

at ·y

•

*500

USDA publishes final rules
for provisions for farm bill

S7,6'95

S11,900 .

$3,288

$6,400

Annual soil meet
Nov. 5 at Green

....

$4,995

$4,995

0

~.

SMITH Buick-Pontiac .

25 Cent s

A Multimedta Inc. N ewspaper

•
orces retaliate ID
Attack I ran ian oil
drilling platform;
warning is· issued

OSBA president at
District 8 meeting

Just Announeed·

1 Section. 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday. October 19. 1987 '

Farm flashes

'

•

enttne

Milk production
shows increase

Fall harvest pace is running ahead of average

Scattered 'howers tonight.
Low in mid 40s. Occa•ional
rain Tuesday. Chance of rain
90 Tue5dai:
'

WHERE U 1 ~. PLANES HIT -

Secretary of Defen~e Caspar

Weinberger points to the location on the map of the Iranian oil
platforms that U.S. s hips destroyed. fUPI)

Reagan defends today's
action
.

WASHINGTO N !UP[)- Pres·
ident Reagan de fe nded the U.S.
reprisalagainst Iran todpy as "a
lawful exercise of the r ight of
self-defe nse" that serves notice
on ,Te hr a n the United States will
not tolerate "u nprovoked at ·
tacks" in the P~r sian G~ lf.
Hoping to send a s trong mes·
Rage of Ameri can resolve, Reagan dE'scribed the des truction of
an Ira n ian oil plat fo rm by U.S.
warships · as "a prudent yet
restrained response to the unlawful usc of force" in the gul f.

In a s ta tem e nt read to reporte rs by Whil e Hou se s pokes man
Ma rlin Fitzwater; Reagan said
the U.S. action was aimed at
.interference with s hipping in the
gulf th a t " have come In spite of
numerous m essages" to Iran.
"warning of the co nsequences."
"The United States has no
desire for a military confronta·
lion wlt.h Iran," he said, "but the
gove rnment of Iran s hould be
under no illusions about our
determination and ability to
protect our s hips a nd our interes t

.
. restrained na ture" of the action
aga mst unprovo ked attacks ."
Des pite Iranian warnings that
after a weekend of s peculati on
that the Unit ed States might go so
the measured reprisal for the
far as to sta ge an all-out air strik e
miss ll&lt;' attack Friday on a
agalnsl the Sil kwo r m miss ile sit e
U.S.·flagged Kuwa iti tanker will
blamed for the attack Friday o n
only escalate tensions in th e gulf,
the U.S. -!Iagged Sea Isle Cit y.
the adminis tration tri ed to play
Reagan m et with Saudi Ara·
down its ramifications.
bian Crown Prince Abdullah ben
" It is a lawfu l exercise of the
Abdelaziz for about 10 minu tes in
right of sell-defense e nshrined in
the Ova l Office a nd later with
Artic le 51 of the U.N. Charter,"
Reagan said, "and is being so
Vi ce Pres ident George Bus h.
notified to ' the pres ident of the
Fo!owlng the m ee ting, Bush
sai d of the U.S. a t tack:
U.N. Security Council."
Fit zwat er emphasiz'l!l " the
Con tinu ed on page 5

MANAMA. Bahrain tUP1) U.S . warships a tt at'ked an Iran·
ian oil platform in the P ersian
Gulf today as 1ran warned a ny
aggression b y th e United States .
would lead to a n "extensive
cla sh" In th e Persian Gulf.
Secretary of Defense Caspar ·
Weinberger said in Was hin gton
there were no American casual·
ties in the a t tack. He also said
there were about 20 Ir a ni a ns on
the pl a tform and they were
war ned in advance of the at ta ck
and some were seen leavin g the
platform.
The official isla mic Republic
News Agency acknowledged the
attacks had taken place, sayi ng
two platforms in the Resa)at and
Reshad at fields were struck.
Ju s t before Weinberger con·
firmed the attack, Iran war.ned
'any military aggression would
mark the beginning of an "ext en·
sive" dash in the gulf .
Te hran radio quoted a Foreign
Ministry spokes man as sayin g
Iran would respond decisively to
a n "Jlggressive measure" by
Was hington.
"Any U.S. milit a ry aggression
aga in st Ira n will certa inly be the
beginning of a n- exte nsiv e cla s h
in the P er s ia n Gulf a nd amidst
this ou r ,principled poli cy is to
confront a ny act which escala tes
tension," the radio sai d, quo tin g
the F oreign Minis try s ta tement.
"Because this region belon gs
to our qat ion a nd ot her nation s of
the region .. . we s ha ll decisive ly
answer

a ny

new

aggressi ve

measure of the U.S.A. ' '
But !RNA, aft er acknowled g·
ing the at.tack, ha d no other
immediat e comm ent .
A s hipping source said cloud s
of s m oke were ris ing ih . the
south ern gulf a nd ta t Ir anian s

aboard a n oil platform nad
radioed they were under at tack
by U.S. forces .
Th e U.S.· action wa s in re·
sponse to the a tt ack F riday on
tne Kuwaiti vessel Sea I sle Ci ty ,
p ne o! 11 U.S. -fl agged ships
plying th e gu lf under U.S. naval
protect ion.
Th e Sea Isle City was attacked
by a missile believe d to be a
Sil kworm fired by the 1ranians a t
the ship a nchored off Kuwai t.
ThP a t tac k injured 16 sailors.
includ ing the American master .
Tehran radio radio d enied Iran
was involved in the at tack.
" We hav e not a ccepted any
r esponsibil ity lo r the attack on
.that ship," Te hran ra dio quoted a
War In formation Headquarters
spokesman as say ing.
"But ,. whatever ha s happened
is the nat ural conseque nces of
America's actions in the Persian
Gu lf."
The Ir an ian Foreign Ministry
also said, "The coun tries of this
region should no-te 11\at th e n a me
rising from any host il e measure
or the U.S.A. will not be limited
a nd s hall e ngulf the entire
region ."
Weinberger backed away from
further confr·ontation over the
Sea I s le Ci ty in cide nt, telllng
reporte rs , " We consider this
matter closed. We do no! seek
furth e r confrontation with Iran. "
But he also warned, " We will
be full y prepared to meet any
escala)ion of mil ita ry actions by
Iran
with
stro n ger
countermeasures .: ·
Several s ug gestions were put
on Preside nt Rea ga n's ·desk
Frid ay after a ser ies of m eetings
by nat ion a! security a dvisers to
cqns ider a response to the attack
Co nt inued on page 5

U.S. forces attack
Iranian oil latform

Dow off more than 200 points in panic selling
Traders said adding fuel to the
NEW YORK 1UP It - Th e Dow
Jones industr ia l plunged more m arke t' s s lide wa s a front -page
art icle in Sunday·s New York
than 200 points in ea rly today as
Times
quoting Reaga n adminis·
pa nic selling swe pt Wa ll St reet.
!rat
io
n
officials sayin g the U.S.
The Dow , which fe ll 235.48
would
be
willin g to let the dollar
points. or 9.!\ pe rcent,l ast week.
decl
ine
against
the West Ger ma n
was just over 207 point s to 2,039
mark.
just before ll : 00 a . m . EDT.
A decline against the m ark
Losers were w ip ing out gainers
would
likely inv olve similar
by a 32·1 ratio on the Big Board
where vo lume topped 140 m illion dc~lines against other major
cu rrencies. such as the ye n.
s hares .
T he U.S. assertio n represents a
"There 's full -scale pa nic."
sa id Robert Kahan. m a nager of s udden change in a policy to keep
eq uil y, tradi ng at Montgom ery . the dollar in a targeted trading
range, a goa l thai h,.s been in
Securities in Sa n Francisco.
ef!ect
for eight month s.
Fea r that lh&lt;' United St at es will
·'We'
re in a panic stage," sa id .
let the dollar fall heightened
To
m
Gallagher,
trader at Oppe ninfl at ion a nd int e rest tears that
he
imer
&amp;
Co.
"
The European
la st week were a lready at fever
m
ar
ket
s
got
annihilated
and t h ~
pit c h and fed the panic. tra ders
psyc
hology
here
is
to
sell
'em."
sa id. More th an 100 million
Gallagher said the pa nic stage
s hares changed hands in I he firs t
is usually th e last stage of a
hour of t r ad ing.

Issu~

IRAN

Perstiln · ··'-....-..,

. Gull
SAUOIA RA~

i

Rostam ·

. ..!...:....:;..

0

100

i Sassa n

. ...
UNITED ARAB
E~,I I RA TES

MAP PINPOINTS ATTACK -The map locates th e Iranian ~il
drilling platform that Navy ships attacked Monday morning in
retaliation lor last Friday's attack on a U.S.-flagged oil tanker.
The oil platform, named Rostam, with 20 Iranians 'a board, was
warn ed in ad~ance of the attack. Secretary of ))efense Caspar
Weinberger satd there wer e no .American casualtiPs in the attack:
(UP()

1 won't increas~ lottery allocation ·to Ohio's schools

(First of a series )
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS iUP il - "Whatever happened to the lottery
money? I though t il was goi ng to
take care of the sc hools."
·That 12-year-old qu es tion a nd
.s ta tement cu t sharply Into every
schoo l adm inist rator in the s ta te
of Ohio. including the s ta te
s uper in tendent of public in st t·uc·
· tion, who hea rd It as recently as
· two weeks ago.
Franklin B. Walter, the state
s.uperin.tende nt. hopes the ques·
tion will be laid to rest for good
Nov . 3 wh en Oh io voters pass
Sta te Issue 1, a constitutional
amendm ent establ is hing a dep·

,,

lost 17.5 percent of its val ue as of
declin e.
" Th e people with big poc kets thf' close Friday.
will make a lo t of money off this
The ca ta lyst for the week 's
decline," Gallagher said. " It's a . worst losses was th.e govern·
real oppor tunity to buy StOcks bu t m enl 's r eport Wednesday tha t
th e na tion 's trade deficit had
you have to sit he r e and swallow.
Sometimes it's very hard ."
nar rowed in August; but not as
Selling re!lects Wall Street's much as the fihancial markets
gathering pessimi s m about ri s- had hoped for . A $15 .7 billion
ing in terest rates, Inflation and deficit in int ernat iona l trad e
the possibilit y tha t econom ic raised to a fever pitc-q WaJJ
growth will prove slower than Street's fears of inflation a nd
originally proj ected. sa id A.
rising int erest ra tes.
Marshall Acu!f Jr . , portfolio
He ight e ning Investors ' fears
strategist a t Smith Barney. Har· was a 95.23-point s harp drop in
the Dow tra nspo rta tio n average.
ris Upham &amp; Co.
Stocks dropped la st week as For · investors who follow the
investor s' anxieties about in!la· so-ca lled Dow Theory, 11 con!ir·
tion a nd ris ing interes t rates m13 tlon of a decline in th e Dow
s pu rred pani c selling a nd gave indu str ia ls by the Dow trans ·
the marke t som e of it s worst ports m eant a stronger down·
losses ever. Since il hit a hi gh o.f !rend was in place than pre2722.42 August 25. the Dow had viously thought. ·
.

ository fund for lottery profit s
earmarked entirely for primary
a nd seco ndary schools.
But Walter also wants voters to
understand that Issue 1 will not
increase the amount of lott er y
funds goi ng to edu ca tion , and
that th e Ohio lott e ry profits
provide less than 6 pe rcent of the
budgetary requirements of the
schoo ls. .
When the Idea of a s ta le lott ery
fi rst su r!aced in ihe General
Ass,. mlily in 1972 , the proceeds
wcr(' supposed to go for educa ·
lion , But lawmake r s decided
aga inst earma rkin g, and when
they put the proposal on the
ballot in 1973, t he p rofit s were to
go in to the GeneraL Revenu e

Fund with tax collections.
Ohio voters a pproved the state
lotter y, a nd the profits were sen t
to the General Revenue Fund .
Schools got their normal share of
the General Revenue Fund ,
which was far greater than the
lottery alone could have provided, But technically, the Jot ·
ter y pot was divided, like a pie,
fo r all state services.
People apparently th ough t the
lottery would fund the sc hools
e ntirely, eliminating the need for
local school taxes . However , for
example. In 1981 the sc hools
receiv ed $1.68 billion and the
lottery profits totaled only $110
million.

In 1982, the Legislature passed
a blll setting up a ba s ic educa tion
fund to receive a ll lotte ry profits .
Ho":ever, no money was ever put
into that fund because of budget
cut~.

In • 1983, the state budget
included la nguage making it
clear that the "In tent" of the
G~eral Assembly was lor lottery m oney to go to schools .
When the lottery produced $257
mlllion m ore than expected in
1984 a nd 1985, the excess was
di stributed for specified educa·
tiona! programs .
The state budget stil l intends
fo r a II lottery mon ey to go to
prim ary a nd secondary ed\tCa ·

'y

tion , but It s till goes into the
Genera l Revenue F un d and
makes up on ly 11.5 pe r cent o! all
s tate assistance for the school s.
Iss ue 1 wo uld not increase that
amount , but would establi sh the
depository for lottery funds and
earmark them fo r t.he schoo ls.
just as voters ap paren tly th ough t
they had do ne In 1973 .
"While th e money does go to
the sc hoo ls, i1 does not solve the
financial problem s of the
schools," said Wa lt er.
State Rep . C.J . McLin , D·
Dayton, said he plans to vote
against Issue 1 because " it's an
lllusion. lt doesn ' t mean any ·
thing. It does not give edu cation

one more p0nny , People will
think they're getting s ome thing ,
a nd ttle y' rc nut . They ' ll think the
lottery 's goin g to be produ ci ng
more and it 's not. "
Rep. Donald C'zarcinski. DToledo, also is against I ssue 1.
saying people ma .v vote .for it a nd
t h~ n oppose th0ir local school tax
levies.
"We want to make sun• th a t
people in no way, s hape or form
believe thai th is is goin g 10 sol\' e
the problem of th f' schoo ls .. and
then make a choice bet ween
Issue l and their local !&lt;'v ies, "
said Ron ald Na ba kowski, execu live dirPctor o f th e Ohio Lottery
Comm ission.
·
(Nt' x l : Issue 2)

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