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,•

.---People in the news

•

..
December 1'1, 19BY

•

Sunday

. • 50 cents

Browns, Bengals battle

· By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International
BATMAN'S NO SCAB: Holy video flashback, Batman! It's
Adam West on British TV! Britain's Independent Television is
using the old "Batman" series to fill In for " Good Morning,
Britain" whlle techlcians ar e on strike and it's becoming a
craze. Viewership Is up as much as 100,000.
"We've gotten a lot of mail from people saying they prefer
'Batman' to the regular news and Interview programming,"
said "GMB" spokesman David Keighley. " We were hoping to
get Adam West over here for an Interview and contacted his
agent in America. But he told us that Mr , West found out about
the labor dispute and didn't want to he In the position of having
&lt; to cross a .picket line."
· West, 53, starred as th e caped crusader In 140 episodes before
"Batman" was canceled and is delighted by his ne~ -found
popularity abroad . . "It 's taken 15 years to shake off the
'Batman' image," he said, "and now It's taking off again. It's
runny that British people are waking up to me in the morning."
UNHAPrY CIOLDHOOD: Kathleen Sulllvan, co-anchor of
CBS's new morning show, reveals some candid aspects of her
childhood In an Interview with The Boston Globe. " When I was
an Infant, my father was hospitalized." she says. ';As a chlld, J
was told my father was mentally ill. I felt thai , as a child, I was
watched to see If I exhibited certain behavior patterns."
Sullivan says she grew up Insecure and alone --since her
mother worked. " My family life was not on !irm ground," she .
says. "I've created my own firm ground. In a situation like this
you could either crack under the pressure or go deep inside
yourself and define your strength. I decided to do the latter."
Sullivan, who recently left ABC for the starcrossed CBS ·
morning slot, says she intends to make the most of her
opportunity. "I'm committed to making this medium the
formidable Industry It once was," she says. "People are tired.
fed up or Insulted with some of the drivel on the air. I'm
speaking of all time periods."
LOCAL BOY MAKES GOOD: Exiled Russian poet Josef
Brodsky received his Nobel Prtze'for Literature Thursday even
· as he was gaining more recognition In his homeland. Four of
Brodsky's poems were published Thursday for the first time.
covering nine pages In the December Issue of the Navy Mir
journal. They arf\ titled "From Nowhere with Love;" "Letters
·to a Roman Friend," "The Letters of the Ming Dynasty" and

Christmas
countdown

.

~7

Bridge· disaster 20 years ago ...
~· ,

Bill Algeo, Business Mgr.

Middleport-Po~roy-Gallipolis-Point

· By MARGARET CALDWELL
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- The Christmas holiday season
Is usually met with much cheer and joy as families
join together , friends visit and presents are
exchanged. ·
Unfortunately, with this holiday cheer comes
holiday stress . More often than not, the season .
takes the joy out of us, which takes the joy out of
the season,
.
There Is the tree to put up, dinners to fix, guests
to prepare for, social events to attend, families to
shop for, a budget to maintain, and a house to keep
clean. With this comes a cry of " Humbug" and a
need to have the holidays over With.

"Stress is our reaction to , these outside
occurrences ·- how ,we choose to handle these
events In our Jives," said Dr. Edward R. Sofranko,
who Is a professor of psychology at Rio Grande
College and Community College. Sofranko Is also
director of the Center for Healthy Living.
"Inflexibility maglfles the stress."
According to information from Ohio State
University, the United States Department of
Agriculture and the Gallia County Cooperative
Extneslon Service, there are three baste teactlons
to .stress, anger, withdrawal and taking charge.
Aggr~sslon and anger may bring te.mporary
relief, but It usually does nothing to change the
'problem or make the stressful situation any

Commissioners Fred Simon
and Frank Beane sustained a n
earlier ruling by William Flaherty , director of the Ohio
Department of Liquor Control,
while commissioner J ohn Sweeney dissented.
"We' re glad the comm ission
upheld our order," said depart-

Ernie Algeo, Sales/Leasing

Dan Boone, Sales/Leasing

A HAPPY HOLIDAY- Twenty local children
received a Christmas gift from KMart In
Ga!Upolls Saturday morning. Here, one little girl

Christmas tree
Ralph Loll, Sales/Leasing

Mex Miller, Sales/Leasing

•

Unfold for any occasion:
Sott, earthy Harmony~ Series colors blend we ll with
any decor and create an inviting atmospt&gt;ere for
entertaining, relaxing , playing games, hobbies or any
occasion. Built with Samsoni te durability, Harmony 1
is ready when you are .
• Large 40" diameter table
• Comfortable pillow seat
• Warm earthtone
decorator coi0r vinyls
FURNITURE
or fabric
• Chip and scratch
resistant baked enamel

0

finish

12 Section•. 84 Paget
A Muttlmedia 11nc. Newap•per

Pleasant, December 13. 1987

better. In fact, It may even compound the
problem, according to the service.
When presented with a problem, time alone can
be helpful at first, but continual withdrawal can
be destructive. Support and understanding from
others is necessary for decision-making. Feelings
of being overwhelmed, trapped, unloved and
angry add to the problems.
"Such feelings are not that unusual, and they
may even be constructive If they help us to think
about the real meanings behind the feelings, what
causes them, and where they are taking us,".said
Rev:Les Shear of the First Un)ted Presbyterian
Church In Gallipolis.
Dr. "'{ayne Dwyer, author of the 1986 book,

"Happy Holidays" said there is a a ttitude during
this season that creates s tress. An example of the
attitude Is, "We have a history of traditions
surrounding the holidays. and I rriust make sure
that these are maintained."
His remedy fo r this attitude Is, ''This year I am
·going· to forget about tradition and simply
approach the holiday s. from a perspective of ·
spiritual fulfillment and enrichment for all of my
family and friends. I am not going to do things
simply because I've always done them. We can be
free to decide. "
Sofranko gives four "learning" relief suggestions to help during the holiday stress season;
(:See HOLIDAYS, A4)

RIO GRANDE, Ohio - "The
Christmas tree Is one of the
classic tradition's of the holiday
season," says Tim Snow, Reference Librarian at Rio Grande
College and Community College.
''However, an examination of the
available literature shows that
scholars are not always in
.agreement on Its historical
background."
"Some sources state that the
Christmas tree Is a fairly recent
de\/elopment, within the pas t
century and a half, that originated in Germany," Snow said.
In ''Every Day's a Holiday,"
he a,dded the author agrees that
the Christmas tree Is a German
Import, but claims that Its
origins are centuries older.
According to Snow, the book

picks out hers from the many many !hlngs
available In the store. See story on page A4.
(Times-Sentinel photo)

tradi~ion

relates the story of St. Boniface
(673-754) who came upon a group·
of Druids about to sacrifice a
child beneath a giant oak tree
deep In a forest In Germany.
"He turned the killing sword
aside with his cross and miraculously felled the. oak," Snow
explains. "Then, In telling 'the
simple story of Jesus,' he pointed
to a fir tree, saying that It was
'the living tree pointing to
heaven'."
In the "Encyclopedia of Superstition, " It Is argued that the
Christmas tree had Its beglnn logs -.ln...Egypt long before the
Christian era.
"The book claims that a spray
of palm tree with 12 shoots, one
for each month, was used at the
time of the winter solsllce as a

By CHARLES A. MASON
ovr News Staff
PT. PLEASANT - A siting
agreement signed by the Mason
County Commission in SeptemberwithPyroChem, Inc., has
been temporarily blocked by a
judge's order.
A hearing is !£heduled for Dec.
29, 9 a.m., In the courtrQOm of
Mason County Judge Clarence L.
Watt on the siting agreement
sl!l"ed Sept. IO between the Mason
Olunty Commission and PyroChem. Inc.
Jim Neel, president of PyroChern . In•(.. could not be reached
for comment on the judge's order.
• The judge on Thursday granted
a temporary wrtt of mandamus
against the county commission
and tndlvidually Paul Watkins,
president; Kenton Sheline and
Thomas "Tucker" Mayes; and
County Clerk Josephine T. Hanes.
The writ temporarUy blocks the
commission from carrying out the
terms of the siting agreement.

hazardous was(e Incinerator to be
The agreement, signed by rom·
missioners Watkins and Sheline, · buUt.
Both regulatory agencies are
but not Mayes, calls for Pyrocurrently
reviewing applications
Chem, Inc., to deposit In a county
by PyroChem, Inc., to bu~the
benefit furr:l one
hazardous waste Incinerator tn
half of I percent of the gross
Mason
County. The results of those
revenues derived from the hazardfindings
are expected to be made
ous waste Incinerator operation.
public within six months, accordThe county, according to the
Ing
to officials close to the project.
agreement, wUl JliiY ·out of that
The
judge's temporary wrtt to
county benefit furr:l the costs of
block the carrying out of the siting
training eounty , fire and safety
agreement was req~ted fran
personnel and costs for purchase
the court by Jan L. Haddox, a
or lease of emergency response
resident of Durst Road. Point
vehicles, equipment and supplies
Pleasant,
In Mason Cbunty. Irt a
and other expen!lt!S the county
petition lllect with the court earlier
may lnClir In meeting the terms r:i
this week, Haddox asked the judge
the 27-page contract.
to
weigh the authority of the
taken care of, the county may use
to enter Into such a
·commission
the rest of the funds remaining for
siting agreement and al~o the
any public purpose It wants.
of the commission to
authority
The agreement Is to run for 10
enter
into
a contract to "encouryears from the date the West
age,
foster,
aid, corr:lone or In any
VIrginia Department of Natural
tel'ty!S and con:lltlons"
way
accept
Resources and the West VIrginia
to butld a hazardous waste facility
Air Pollution Control Commission
(See JUDGE, A4)
both Issue permits alloWing the

a controversary for historiaris

s~mbol of the year completed,". established In America. "In the
he explained.
"International Dictionary of
In addition, Snow said, the
Thoughts," we discover a I660
edict from the Massachusetts
lights that are used on the
Christmas tree may represent
Bay Colony General Court which
many various customs and
banned the celebration of Christprecedents.
mas altogether and levied a fine
Many ancient civilizations
of five shillings against
used light and lights as a symbol
violators."
of winter solstice festivals, he
From other sources, there are
said. "They may also have
stories that the Hessian soldiers
originated from the Jewish Hafighting In the American Revoiu nukkah ' (Festival of Lights),
tlon were the first to set up
which occurs during this
Christmas trees, he says.
season."
"And , we can · probably thank
"Religious scholars believe
the Pennsylvania Dutch as the
that the lights are symbollcofthe
first Americans to regularly
homes of the people In the Holy
follow the Christmas tree tradiLand that were lit the night that
Jesus was borit."
According to Snow, Christmas · ·
trees had a difficult time getting

lion," Snow 'a dded. "But, as late
as IBlfjl, a Cleveland past())' \VhO
had a Christmas tree In his
church was censored for his
'Idiotic Ideas'."
There Is even significant disagreement among scholars as to
how to dispose of the Christmas
tree and evergreen decorations.
In the "Encyclopedia of Super-.
stltlons," Snow says. we are
given two contradictory pieces of
advice.
HOne citation warns," he said,
"that 'If Christmas evergreen
decorations are thrown out of
doors, a death will occur In the
house before next Christmas.

They would be burnt on Christmas Eye."
tn a separate citation, we are .
advised that " Holly andlvymust
not be burnt, but must be kept tut
next year to save the house from
lightning."
According to the National
Christmas Tree Association,
there will be 33.3 million trees
sold In the United States during
the 1987 season, an Increase of
about 600,000 over last year.
''So It Is obvious," Snow
concludes, "that the Christmas
tree is a strong symbol In our
country and that Is is here to
stay."

Drunk, drugged &lt;lriving awareness
week emphasizes holiday season .

S amson1•te·.

$99.00

mt

Judge halts agreement between
PryoChem, Mason Commissioners ,.

GLIMPSES: Bob Hope's eight-day Christmas trip to the
Gulf Is all set. He wjll entertain sailors on U.S. warships
staftlng Dec. 21, the USO said. Hope proposed the trip Monday
and Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci ordered that the
arrangements be made. Hope's last overseas foray was 1983-to
Beirut ... An International telephone operator In Pittsburgh will
appear on "Late Night with David Letterman" after putting
Letterman's call through to-a Leningrad hotel.

ment spokeswoman Vicky
Gelety .
"I believe we are not' In
violation," said James DeLeone,an attorney representing the St.
Louts-based brewing company,
adding lie does not view packagIng as advertising according to a
federal exemption.
In a statement Issued from
Anheuse r -Busch headquarters In
St. Louts, the company said It will
cooperate fully with state officials even .though It did not
believe at any time that Its
packaging was In violation of
Ohio laws that prohibit Santa
Claus from advertising liquor.
However. the cartons may
wind up on ·the consumers
shelves rather than back at
Anheuser-Busch warehouses.
Surveys have shown the Bud
Light holiday packs featuring
Sp'lds has been a hot item since
the original complaint was flied
Nov. 25. Since the company
agreed not to br ing any more
Spuds-Santa cartons into Ohio, It
has be en restocking shelves with
regular cartons .

•

Holidays a stressful time, hut can be managed

Per~an

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) . Spuds MacKenzie, the white bull
terrier depleted as Santa Claus
on I2·paCkS of Bud Light beer,
has .been ordered off Ohio beer
shelves.
The Ohio Liquor Control Comrplsslon .voted 2-1 Thursday to
ban the Spuds-Santa cartons on
grounds they violate a state
liquor rule against associating
Santa Claus with alcoholic
beverages.
.
The commission assessed no
penalty but ordered AnheuserBusch, Inc., to remove from all
Ohio outlets by 5 p.m. Dec IB any
Bud Light holiday packs bearing
the likeness of Spuds In a Santa
hat and shouldering a sack full of
beer.

Cloudy. Highs In mid 40s.

•

was made for " personal reasons. "

Santa Spuds banned

Along the R1 ver ... .... . B-t-8
Bu~lness .. .... ..... ...... .. ,,.E -1
Comles-TV ....... ....... Insert
Classlfleds .... , .. :.... .. .. D-3-7
Deaths ..... .. ... .............. A-4
Editorial ...... ............. .. A-2
Sports ........... .. ...... ... C-t-8·

tmts • ·
Vol. 22 No. 43
Cop)'righted 1987

Jerry Cunningham, Sales Mgr,

Im. id•·

•

Chuck Hupp, Gen. Mgr.

"The New Jules Verne. n

Brodsky, 47, who was kicked out of the Soviet Union in I972
and now lives In New York, picked up his Nobel Prize In
Stockholm, Sweden. Next month Navy Mir publishps the first
Installment of Boris Pasternak's "Doctor Zhlvago," which has
never appeared In the Soviet Uri ion.
,
MAIDS OF HONOR: Boston Mayor Raymond Flynn is the son
of a former cleaning woman and he apparently is still angry
about a hotel's plans to force maids to scrub floors by hand.
Flynn had planned to have hisJ~n. 41naugural ball In the Copley
Plaza Hotel but has moved It to the. World Trade Center.
The Copley had tried to elimlna te mops - meaning maids
would have to get down on their hands and knees- but a staff
revolt put an end to that policy. But Flynn was irked by the plan
and Is taking his party elsewhere. A Flynn aide said -the move

Beat of the Bend, by Bob Hoeflich

Sports C-

Bob Refold, Sales/Leasing

Reg. 5159.00

· • Padded table top

Stove Rittle, Sales/Leasing

STARTING DEC. 14 WE'Will BE OPEN ,
'TIL 8 P .M.I
HOURS:
9-6 Daily
Mon. &amp; Fri.
Free Parking

FREE
CHRISTMAS
EVE
DELIVERY
Jell Roth, Safos/Looalng

GALLIPOLIS - The week of
December 13 through 19 has been
proclaimed National Drunk and
Drugged Driving · Awarenes ~
Week. This effort l;&gt;y the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration is to generate awarenes s ,
education and action, in hopes of
eliminating drunk and drugged
drivers from the nation's roads .
"D-Day on Trafflcways" wlll
kick off the week. D-Day was
observed during the ·13 hours
b'e tween 6 p.m. F r iday , Dec . 11 ,
and 7 a.m . Saturday , Dec. I2.
During these 13 hours; po)lce
officers in the county wer ~ out In
force looking for drivers who are
under the influe nce of alcohol
and drugs.
This campaign is coordinated
by Operat)on C.A.R. E., the Combined Accident Reduc tion Effor t
program of the na tion 's state law
enforcement agencies .
This year's theme Is "F irst a
friend, then a host. " For unknown reasons, traffic accidehts
are on the Inc rease again a Iter

several years of steady decline.
Federal, state, and local authorities and public interest groups
are trying to attack the problem
where It begins during Dec ember, at holiday parties .
''If you host or at tend a home or
office party, · serve drinks In
moderation and make non alcoholic beverages available for
your guests," said Lieutenant
Dan Henderson; commander of
the Gallla -Meigs Post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol.
"Encourage those who do
drink to select a designated
driver Ia drive people home after
the party. If someone has had too ·
much to drink, help arrange
alternate means of transporta'·
!ion so they will not endanger
themselves or others by attempt·
lng to drive with their abilities
Impaired."
Still, too often, holiday party
host are unwllllng to stick their
necks out. A difficult sltuallon to
take, friends . must look at the
sttua lion as a risk - they risk
)osipg a friend, they risk the lives

•

•
of others and they risk living with
the knowledge that an accident
could have been prevented. First
a friend, then a host.
This year, there have been 75
alcohol related accidents In rural
Gallla and Meigs counties, ·according to Henderson . Five
persons.'were killed and another
56 people were Injured In these ·
accidents.
In Oh to, the alcohol · traffic
death toll in 1986 was 809 people
killed. Every day, two people are
killed '11nd 84 are Injured by
drinking drivers.
Each year, 23,000 persons lose
their lives In alcohol related
accidents. A11other 560,000people
are Injured and 43,000 of them are
seriously Injured.
Lt. Henderson asks Gallla and
Meigs county motorists to call
the Highway Patrol at 44624331992-2397 If a possible ,drunk
or other dangerous dr.lver Is
seen. The patrol also monitors
CB channel 9. Call letters are
KNN 3083.

CHRISTMAS PAGEANT- The cast of the Rio
Grande College and Community College produc·
tton "The Best Christmas Pageant F;ver," staged
a perfonnance for area elementary school

- ··

students on Friday, A part of the Little Buckeye ·
Theater Series, all public perfonnances of the
play are sold out, according to Dr. Greg Miller,
director of the college's Fine and Performing Arts
Center.

�•

Commentary and perspective
Whistleblower gets. his reward
A Division of

R'!.i Third 1\w., Gallipolis, Ohio Ill Court St .. Pomeroy , Ohio
(6U l 446· 2~42
(614&gt; 9a2-2t56

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBI\RT WILSON .JR.
ExN·utiw Editor

PI\T WHITEHEI\D
Assistant Puhlisher-fontroller

A MEMBER ot Th e l!nited Press Internationa l, Inla nd Da lly Press Association and t he Am erlean Newspaper PubUs.hers Assa:!lation.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shou ld be less than 300 words
long. AJlletters are subjec1 toedULng and must be-signed wltll name, address and

telephone number . No unsigned letters wil l be published. Lel1ers should be In
good taste, addres sing is sues, not personalities.
I

. WASHINGTON-Who says
State Department of!lcals are a
buneh of tea -sipping wimps?
When It comes to handling
whlstleblowers, they are regular
Charles Bronsons.
Most vengeful bureaucrats retaliate against underlings who
expose their shortcomings by
harassing them or getting them
fired on trumped-up charges. But'
the State Department transferred a persistent whlstleblower
to a post where he could get
killed: Baghdad, the war-torn
capital of'Iraq.
The career Foreign Service
officer, David S. Wick, was
abruptly recalled from the U.S.
embassy in Trinidad alter he
sent an anonymous tip to Washington op possible misuse ·of
funds by the ambassador, She!-

don Krys. After being rejected
for two other assignments, Wick
was offered Baghdad as a lasl
chance. He took up his duties
there on Oct. 1.
Krys told us he would never
violate department rules or
order anyone else to violate
them. And he said he did hot
know Wtpk was a whlstleblower
when he had him recalled to
Washington. Rather, he ordered
the move because he had lost
confidence In Wick.
But Wick contends he was
suspected of blowing the whistle
on the Trinidad embassy operations right from the start. On the
very day In December 1986 when
Investigators for the State Department's Inspector general arrived to check out the anonymous

charges, Wick's supervisor
asked him If he was the one who
had tipped them off, according to
an affidavit Wick sent to the
Inspector genera\. Presciently'
fearing reprisal, Wick denied it.
The supervisor then instructed
him not to be helpful to the I. G.'s
Investigators, according to the
affidavit.
A month before the ' LG. ar-'
rived, we had reported on ambassador Krys' elaborate refurbishing of the Trb)ldad embassy at a
time when the State Department
was closing down consulates to
save money and beggtng Congress for funds to beeL up
security. Wick's affidavit says a
department official made no
secret of her suspicion that Wick
was the source for our column-

Backstairs at
the White House
' By HELEN THOMI\S
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON - President Reagan · may not have mellowed
toward communism, but . ))e is finding Soviet leader . Mikhail
Gorbachev's "glasnost" a welcome relief In the cold war.
In the fast quip department, Reagan has .met his match In
Gorbachev, but the president can always hqld his own.
When Reagan repeated for the umpteenth time his favorite Russian
maxim at the arms treaty signing- "Iioverayai nopoverayai," trust
but verify - Gorbachev grinned and said, "You say that at every
meeting."

After a pause, Reagan said, "I like it.' '
And after Gorbachev and his wife, Ralsa, burst into an Impromptu
sing-along at the state dinner when pianist Van Cliburn played
"Moscow Nights," the president, a former actor, satd to the Kremlin
leader, "Maybe we can get some bookings ."
The president told television anchormen in a prelude to their
Interview In the Oval Office how deeply his wife, Nancy, was affected
by the death of her mother, Edith Davis.
"She had a wonderful relationship with her mother," Reagan said .
"She used to call her every night,"
Davis, who Reagan said had "little tolerance of people who put on
airs," died in Phoenix a couple of weeks after Mrs. Reagan
underwent breast cancer surger:,..
The president does not want to lose his conservative backing even
though he has alienated some of the more vocal leaders by his new
rapprochement .,to the Soviet Union. The signing of the arms accord
with Gorbache\1 caused some apoplexy in those circles.
But Reagan tried to make it up to them. He invited hardliner and
former Pentagon official Richard Perle to sit on Nancy Reagan's left
with Gorbachev on her right at the state dinner.
Perle said later that he and Gorbachev "defined" their differences.
Also Invited to the dinner was pioneer nuclear scientist Edward
Teller and columnist George Will, a close friend·of Mrs. Reagan who
often takes her ouLto lunch.
The next day, the president met with a group of mainly
conservative columnists to reassure them that he had not swallowed
the communist line on arms reduction hook, line and sinker.
But he is in the strange position of having most of the Democrats
supporting the new accord, while _members of his own party are
putting up arguments against it.
It appears the President and 'Mrs. Reagan will head for Moscow In

May or June, possibly to sign another treaty for deep cuts m
Intercontinental ballistic missiles.
If he does , Reagan wlll be on a roll just as his second term nears its
end . But his aides say that he will go to the Soviet capital even If.there
is not a resolution of differences about the heavier missiles and on
"Star Wars."
Both the Reaga ns would like to add that to their laurels before they
leave office.
Mrs. Reagan 's hairdresser . " Mr. Julius, " was present throughout
the summit to be on hand for the first lady's . many public
appearances. He has been on all of the majorsu!lJmlt trips around the
world with the Reagans and flies in from Los Angeles for other btg
occasions .

SORRv,MR,

B~KAW~~IN••

~~IN

IOWA

THIS week AND

N~MM\~IRe,

Ne&gt;!.T.

SlR~Y,MR.
BmKAW~~IN ...

He'SAT HIS
· ReT~AT,
CAMP DAVID.

Taking time pays dividends
A psychiatrist being Inter- ' teers one day a week answering
the phone at the Episcopal
viewed on TV after the big stock
market plunge had some advice
church. which is a 10-minute
for crash victims that might see walk away. When Bill comes in
and gives his order, Ray will put
them through the crisis and help
them make a new starL
It on the scale and,say, "How's
It was, In fact, good advice for
$4.79, Bill?"
Bill will look over the tip of his ·
anyone who has fOrgotten where
horn-rimmed glasses and growl,
life's rarest treasures are hidden: "Place more attention on
"Seems high to me.'' Ray will
personal relationships, stop to
Ignore this and wrap the !Ish.
smell the flowers, and take time
Bill knows that when he gets
to talk to the grocery man."
home he more than likely will
That last suggestion may have find . that Ray has put In a
lagniappe. That's an unprobeen a simple metaphor for
learning the joys of human
nounceable word meaning "a
interaction' 'with the people we little something extra for good
rub elbows wlth in the common
measure" that a storekeeper
round of every day. But.two bona
sometimes will give a favored
fide grocery men sprang to my customer.
mind when I heard that.
When Bill leaves and Ray says,
One runs a fish market in the "Wh'o•s next?·" people look
city where I live.
~round them and· say unusual
The fish Is good -fresh, never
things like, "I think she's ahead
frozen - but a lot of us shop at of me."
Ray Johnson's because of the
The most aggressive reply you
good-natured fellowship we find
are likely to hear Is a tentative,
there.
' 'I think I may be next."
Bill Hedges Is one such cusloSome places - and people mer. Bill Is retired and volun- seem to bring out the best In us.

The atmosphere used to be !Ike
that at Mr. Sinagra's grocery
store.
Mr. Sinagra has retired after
60 years in a grocery bu~iness his
father founded at the same
location. Until the day the stot·e
closed, he was always at one of'
the two checkout stations, ringing up our purchases and enjoyIng a leisurely chat with the
customer at the register.
His customers looked forward
to that. It provided a happy
surcease from life's mad rush to
nowhere. The people in line,
walling their turn, would often
join in the conversation.
For those who cane to Mr.
Sinagra's store,lt w&gt;;s a return to
the pa~ when life was slower and
people took more time .

December 13. 1987

something we will, of course, not
reveaL
.
Our associate Stewart Harris
has obtained a copy of Wick's
allegauons that the ambassador
ordered others to misuse funds to
redecorate his official residence
In Trinidad. Although the inspector general has found no evld~nce
of criminal violations, tnvestlga·
tors are stlll studying the evidence to determine If depart·
ment regulations were broken. .
In hts affidavit, Wick aeknowl- . .
edged he was the Inspector ,
general's tipster and accused the
ambassador of ordering the
purchase of an Ice maker, a .
stereo, two rofrlgerators and a
freezer for the chancery even
though the furnishings account ·.
was exhausted. Wick swore that '
the applicances were pald for _:_
Improperly -out of the salaries
and expenses account.
Wick's case has been taken up
by Rep . Patricia Schroeder,
D-Colo. In a letterr on June 25,
after Wick had been summarily ·
recalled from Trinidad,
Schroeder wrote to Inspector
General Sherman Funk · about
him, noting that "members of the
Foreign Service wlll be loath to
disclose any Information" to the
!.G .' s office tf lhey risk
retaliation.
Funk promised Schroeder he
would Investigate quickly, and
cited his record as inspector
gerieral at the Commerce Department, where he "went to
extraordinary lengths to support
employees who were penalized '
because they assisted us. " Funk ·
also referred the case to the
government's Office ' of Special ; ·
Counsel, which is charged with
enforcing federal laws that forbid reprisals against employees .
who report what they "reasonably believe" to be violations by
government officials.
Footnote: Ambassador Krys
was awarded a $4,800 bonus for
his performance In 1986.

George Plagenz
Nobody really wants to retuh
to the old days .if It means going
back to the days before Indoor
plumbing and central heating . . · .
But the past, when the old and
rella ble served us betterr than 1
the new and Improved, holds ·
some secrets we need to redls· '
cover In the 1980s - secrets like
slowing down and passing the
time of day with those who are ·
standing with us In life's long ·
line.
Mr. Sinagra did that for us. He
slowed us down and showed us
how pleasant It is tor people who
enjoy each other's company to · ·
laugh and kibitz for a few
minutes before going back out ·
into a world where nobody seems
to care about things like that
anymore.

Today in history
By United Press International
On this date In history: In 1642. Dutch navigator Abel Tasman
discovered New Zealand and named it for a group of Islands of! the
coast of the Netherlands .

'

EMS makes runs

Ashtabula teacher will vote
on latest board proposal
ASHTABULA, Ohio IUPI ) - A
by striking members of the
Ashtabula Area Teachers Association was scheduled Sunday on
the Ashtabula school board's
latest contract proposaL
The proposal was made during
an 11-hour negothiting session
· that ended about 4 a .m. Saturday, said AATA spokesman Bill
Richards.
Although they failed to reach
an agreement on a new contract
during the session, union officials
agreed to present the board's
offer to the teachers at general
membership meeting of the
AATA set for 7 p.m. Sunday.
Richards said.
vot~

Detailsofthecontract o!!erare
being withheld pending the
meeting.
Previously, the unton had been
asking for a 10 percent increase
each year of a two-year contract,
while the board had offered 2
percent each year. The base
annual salary m the district is
$16,000.
,
The 293-member teachers union has been on strike slnceDec .1
when Its old contract expired.
Schools in the 5,200-student district have been open with substitutes handling classroom duties ,
but attendance has been well
below normal.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
reports four calls Friday; Mid·
dleport at 2:42 a.m. to South
Second for Roy Priddy to Holzer
Medical Center; Syracuse at 4:33
a.m . to Morning Star Road for
William Downie to Holzer Medl·
cal Center; Middleport at 11:31
a.m . to Broadway for Jack
·· Bechtle to the doctor's office;
Middleport at 6:04 p.m. transported Martin Cltapman from an
auto accident on Route 7 to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL

11 charged in cocaine ring
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - Federal and local authorities have
charged 11 area residents in what
officials said was . a major
Florida-to-Ohio cocaine supply
operation,
The arrests Friday were the
result of an eight-month Invest!·
gatlon conducted by the FBI,
Akron pollee detectives, and
Summit County sheriff's depu ties. Stark County authorities
also assisted in making the
arrests.
•
Ten of the arrests were made
at a Green Township apartment
near Akron. The suspects are
sc::lleduled to appear Monday
before U.S. Magistrate Charles
Laurie on a variety of felony drug
charges.
FBI agent s said they seized
nearly two kilograms of cocaine,
a : pound of marijuana, five
automobiles , and more than
$3;500 In money. Two weapons
were al so confiscated, Charles
Colitre, an FBI spokesman ln
Akron. said Saturday .

HOSptial news
POMEROY - Friday admis sions to Veteran's Memorial
Hospital were Opal Willison,
Reedsville; Laura Fowler, Middleport; Martin Chapman,
Middleport.
Friday discharges were Walter King, . Ray Hanning, Shirley
Appleby. Amber Lohn, Garth
Smith.

One man was arrested late
Friday in Key Largo, Fla., in
connection . with the Investigation . Paul Edgecomb, 34, of
Portage Lakes, located south of
Akron, Is expected to be transported to Akron next week to face
felony drug-charges, Co litre said .
"The arrests break up a major
cocaine trafficking ring which
has been bringing cocaine Into
the Akron area from Florida on a
regular basis for some time,'•'
Colitre said.
The Investigation is continuing
and more arrests ma y be made,
Colltre said.
•
20 or
Akron residents charged were:
Thomas Garner, 39; Tho!llas
Culbertson, 35; Charles Edge•
comb, 28; Richard Wiley, 30;
1 OZ. PURE SILVER
Donald Harpster, 33; Andrew
6 o·ff
Guzzo, 28; James Seese, 34 ; and
I trent
Ronald Scofield, 24.
141 GOLD (HAINS
Gordon Edgecomb, 36. of
Green Township, and Lori Jen OFF
kins, 24, of Franklin Township , 1~·-=-~;...--;...;;,;....;.;..;___1
also were charged.

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' 'attempling to hold children a nd the requested increase ha s been ing team '· and accusPd the Board
their educatlonaJ ·programs for es timated at ·s1 million . The and Morris of "excha ngin g prop-.
r ansom , while attempting to Board mainta ins it ca nnot be osals in thP new spaper."
.
::
force school distr icts and Sta te sure the $1 mil lio n wi ll be
Morris said the Board was told '•
legis lators to meet their financial affordable in th ree years and by the mediator that th e ele- ::
derl)ands. There are means by mediation sessions betwee n · ment s of the co ntract offer had ::
which to lobhy legislators for MLTA and th e Boar d have fa iled ·been disc ussed with the MLTA '•
more money, other than using to resolve th e deadlock.
nego tiators.
':
our children as pawns ," he
The most recent mediation
Mediation sessions' are sc he' ::
added. " The union should not session wa s Dec. 7. Morris said. duled at the discretio n of the · •
attempt to get economic gain at the Board Is sta nding by a media tor , and as yet, no new ::
the expense of the children of the statement. printed earli er this session has been scheduled.
:•
State."
week In "The Daily Sentinel"
Mea nwhile, the date is nea ring . ·:
Although for the most part, that a contract offer was made at when th e app roxima tely 2,500 ::
union leaders, educators and · that meeting.
stud ents of the Meigs District ·'
.
administrators agree that Ohio's
However, MLTA says the offer 'V iii be unable to complete. the .,
schools need more money to " was never prese nted to a ny req uired number of da ys for the ''
operate, teachers' salary sche- member of the MLTA negotia t-. current school year.
·:
dules already contain buiit-in
'
annual increments, or raises.
rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;
I:
:: ...
For example, based on the
current State minimum salary '
' ':
':
Index, a teacher with a bache:l
lor's degree gets a raise of $566 a
year for the first 11 years of
' ''
teaching. A teacher with a
'
master's degree gets a $715
'•
annual raise, over the first 11
'' '
years.
Because Meigs operates on an ·
index above the State minimum,
In addition to being above the
State mandated base salary, a
Meigs' teacher with a bachelor's
now gets a $643 annual raise for
the first 12 years --a year beyond
the State required 11 year index .
A Mejgf teacher with a master's
gets a $785 annual increase for
INTEREST
the 12·years. Meigs ' teachers al so
TERM
YIELD
get raises at 15 and 20 years.
Although OEA's goalls 1for " a
continuing of base salary increases in the six-to-seven per'
DAY
cent range," as stated in Wllson:S
article, Meigs Local Teachers'
MO.
Association is demanding a
three-year contract with a third
.,
year base salary increase of
$3,000, taking the base figure
. from the current $15,700 to
$18,700.
"That is approximately a 19
percent increase," said Morris,
"and does not Include bonuses
which are helng requested, or
INTERESI PAYABLE AT MATURITY COMPOUNDED DAILY,
'·'
fringe benefits."
$1,000.00
MINIMUM
DEPOSIT,
SUBSTANTIAL
PENALTY
FOR
',
Cost to the Meigs'' District fo r
EARLY WITHDRAWAL.

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By NANCY YOACHAM
money becomes available fr om
Also In his October message to
the State."
·
Times-Sentinel Stall
, OEA 's membership, President
POMEROY - Meigs Lo cal
Currently th ere are 23 Ohio . Wilson focused on the following
Teachers' Association, on strike school di stricts participating In OEA 1987-88 bargaining goal:
sjnce Nov. 6, Is just one of 11 Ohio the State Loan Fund. Although 23
"To bargain aggressively to
Education Association collective seems a large number, Wilson achieve a continuing of base
liargalnlng units which has felt said it is not · a large enough salary increases In the range of
cqmpelled to inarch the picket number to cause the State to six-to-seven percent on a unl ·
lines in recent months.
increase school funplrrg. "The formly Indexed ~alary schedule
Don Wilson, State president of crisis Is going to have to get without reduction in staff, reducOEA, which hasaniembershipof worse," he said, and "based upon tion in program, or other concesaboul 95.000, said the strikes, our IDEA 's) research, \)y spring · sions and, if necessary: ·to Ioree
coupled with participation by an 1989, the figure will be pushing school districts into the State
increased number of school dis- 100."
Loan Fund to accomplish this
tricts in the State Loan·Fund, are
It ts this participation by Ohio's goaL"
symptomatic of Ohio's current schools in the Loan Fund that
"The strong message in that
"crisis in school funding." Wil- Wilson believes will eventually goal should be clear to schoel,
son attributes the ··crisis" lar- be "the only way to draw enough employers and legislators," Wll·
gely due to the "folly of State attention from State legislators son continued. "You 're not going
political leadership" and . wrote and Ohio's citizens" to address to balance the State budget otthe
the same in October's issue of growing financial problems and s~hool district budget at tjle
"Ohio Schools," OEA's member- increase State funding to schools. expense of school emloyees' jolls,
ship publication.
Meigs Local School District salaries or working conditions . It
In a telephone interview, Wil- Superintendent Dan Morris said will take a sustained, forceful
son told "The Daily Sentinel" the Meigs' a(lmlnisltratlon is in and collective action to make the
that the .Slate js not providing agreement with OEA beliefs, to a message heard," he concluded.
adequate operating moneys to point . " We're all saying we need
When asked by "The Daily
schools and that OEA predicted additional revenue at both the
Sentinel" if the State OEA ever
to legislators that more and more local and State levels, and we . directs local bargaining units to
districts would need Loan Fund (the administration) will at - strike in order to create the
assistance.
tempt to increase the district 's
"sustained, forceful and collecAbout 15 years ago during .the revenue by placing a tax levy
tive action" mentioned, Wilson
adminis tra tlon of Governor before the voters ."
said the State OEA has "never
Morris said it is his under - directed a ·local to strike." The
James A. Rhodes, Ohio became
known as the ···school closing 'standing that only school dis- decision to strike is always made
capital of the country," Wilson tricts involved in " financial
by the individual bargaining
said, and over 10,000 school emergencies " may qualify for unit, he explained, although the
personnel lost jobs because of the State Loan Fund. Morris .State OEA always maintains
closings. According to Wilson, It defines financial emergencies as contact during such crisis situawas "after that debacle" that the "those situations which occur tions , through local OEA leaders.
legislature created the State when expenditures are expected
At Meigs, David Bowen is a
Loan Fund to offer temporary to exceed revenues through no local leader and also a member
assistance to financially troubled fault of the school system."
of OEA 's State executive
· In Meigs Local, Morris said, committee.
schools.
Wilson believes financially ail- "we have a siluatfon where
However, Superintendent MorIng school districts should bor- ML TA Is asking the board to ris sees the situation differently
row from the Loan Fund when create a financial emergency by and charges that OEA is indeed
necessary, ''until a local tax levy negoliatlng itself into the Loan
can be passed or additional Fund."

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MeigS Local Teachers' Association strike ,contmuing
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December 13. 1987

and Dale Van Atta

Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page A-3

•

·Page-A-2

By Jack Anderson

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

.,
OPEN SUNDAYS
Jew stela

1-5 P.M. ·

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Page--A-4- Sunday Jimes-Sentinel

I

I.happy for children

· . KMart ~akes holiday .

Area deaths

Hattie Borden
GALLIPOLIS - Cora Hattie
Borden, 74, of 33 Lincol n Ave.,
Gallipolis, died Saturday at
Holzer Medical Cent~r. She was
employed by the Holzer family
for 20 years.
Born Ju ly 10, 1913 In Pt.
Pleasant, W.Va . . she was a
daughter of the late John and
May Striellng Craig• .
She married Forr~st F . Borden
Sr.. on May 26, 193lln Gallipolis.
He preceded her in death on Dec.
30, 1986.
Surviving are one son, Forrest
F. {Brock) Borden Jr., Los
Angeles, Calif.; one grandson,
Char les Borden, also of Los
Angeles. She was also preceded
In death by five sisters and three
brothers.
She was a member of Paint
Creek Baptist Church and sang in
the church choir. She was also a
member of the Gallla. County
Senior Citizens .
Arrangements will be announced by Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home.

Opal V. Bumene
GALLIPOLIS - Opal {Aunt
Peg) Varney Burnette, 81, of 324
Third Ave., died Friday at Holzer
Medical Center after a long
lllness.
She was born on March 22,1906,
In Waterloo to the late Varney L.
and Myrtle ( Hanskins ) Burnette.
She was a teacher for 47 years,
teaching In school districts In
Charleston, W.Va., Washington.
D.C. , and Alexandria, Va., before returning to Galiia County in
1970 as a substitute teacher for
the Gallipolis City, the Gallla
Cpunty Local School Districts
and Ohio Valley Christian
School.
She was a member of the First
Presbyterian Church in
Gallipolis.
She was preceded In death by a
brother and a sister.
Survivors include a sister,
Mrs. Pearl Jones of Des ton, Fla .,
a nd several nieces and nephew s.
The -g raveside service .will be
conducted on Thursday at 11
a.m .. at Mound Hili Cemetery.
The Rev . Leslie Shear will
officia te .
Memorial contributions m ay
be made to the Bossard Memor·
)al Library and the 0.0. MC!n~re Park Dis trict .
• There will be .no calling hours.
Arrangements are by .Waughijalley-Wopd Funeral Home.

))oris F. Cremeans
COOLVILLE - Doris Francis
d remeans. 60, of Route 2. Cool~lle. died Friday at he r home
followin g an extended illness .
, A homem aker , she was born

Och 17, 1927 In Washington
County, a daughter of the late
Thomas and Goldie Pullins Buch- .
a nl;ln. She attended the Allegheny
Wesleyan Methodist Church at
Coolville.
Survivors Include her hu sband.
Roy D. Cremeans, Coo lville; one
sister, Audrey Cremeans. Coo!v!lle; a nd sevetal nieces and
nephews, among them. David
Cremeans. who was raised in
Mrs. Cremeans' home.
Besides her parents, Mrs.
Cremeans was preceded In death
by one infant brother.
Services w!ll be Monday, 1 ·
p.m., at White Funeral Home
with Rev. John Childers officiat Ing. Buria l w!!l be at Rockland
Cemetery In Belpre. Friends
may ca l! a t tlte funeral home
fro m 2 to 4 and 1 to 9 on Sunday.

Martha Eva Price
GALLIPOLiS - Martha Eva
Price, 88, a r esident of Scenic
Hills Nursing Ce nter. died
Sat urday .
She was born on September 1,
1899, in Dickerson County. Va .. a
daughter of the late Pleasant and
Mary Vires.
She was a lso preceded In death
by her husband , William W.
Price. whom she married on July
12, 1924 ; alscr, she was preceded
by three sisters and a brother.
Survivors include a daughter ,
Mrs. Carroll (Bonnie) Burnette
of Gallipolis; five sons. Lloyd W.
Price of Gallipolis, Don Price of
Rio Grande, Eddie Price of
VInton, and Bill and Gene Price
of Columbus; one sister, Myrtle"
George of Baltimore. Md .: four
half-brothers and four halfsisters; 14 grandchildren and
nine great-grandchildren.
Services will be Monday at 1
p.m. at the Willis Funeral Home.
The Rev. W.E . Curfman and the
Rev. Leland Allman will officiate: Burial will be in Gallia
Baptist Cemetery.
Friends may call the W1llis
Funeral Home Sunday from 2 to 4
p.m . and from 7 to 9 p.m.

Wahama concert
scheduled ,today
MASON- The Wahama High
Sc hool Department of Music will
present "A Celebration of Chri st·
mas" at 2 p.m . Sunday in the high
school gymnasium.
The concert will feature performances by the eighth . grade
music students, the junior band.
junior-senior chorus a nd senior
band .
The chorus will be giving away
24 poinsettias as door prizes and
the band will sponsor a reception
following the concert.
The concert is free and open to
the public.

GALLIPOL IS - Twenty local
tng and carryi ng the toys the
children received a special
children chose. Dale !man, Galli·
Chr istma s gift Saturday morn polls c ity manager, also was
ing from KMart . tn Gallipolis .
present at the spree.
These children were treated with
·" KMart recognizes the fact
breakJast, a gilt and visit from
that there are children In our
Santa Claus, and a free shopping
community who are una~le to
spree.
participate In seasonal activi · KMart's Good News Committies," said ~oger Buck, s tore
tee, In cooperation with the
manager. "If KMart can
welfare departments In the MabrigMen these children's Christson and Gailia counties, armas, it makes-4\ brighter holiday
ranged for the children to come
for ail."
to the store before it opened.
Debbie Skinner. chairperson
Each child received $20 worth of
for the Good News Committee,
merchandise of their choice.
said 'She thought it was exciting to
Santa Claus joined the children
see the children get presents and
after their McDonald's break· · gifts for themselves and the ir
fa st, provided by McDonald's In
famllles.
Henderson, W.Va. Each child
This was KMart's third shoprecieved a present from Santa
ping spree. Buck said. However.
and a picture of themselves with
this was the first year area
Santa.
officials were present.
Members of the Gallipolis
"KMart wants to reach as
pollee and fire departments , the
many chlldren as possible,"
Vinton fire department and the
Buck said. "By initiating the
Gallia County Sheriff's ·Depart- program and soliciting other
ment were on hand to assist the
businesses, more chlldren will be
children with se lecting, calculatprovided a Merry Christmas."

Holiday Postal schedule set
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Post Office wlll
operate on a holiday main schedule on December
25 and January 1, 1988.
Mari-lyn Partee, offlc!!r in charge, said that
regular residential and business deliveries and
pickups from collection boxes will not be made on
the holidays.
Retail service hours of opetation on December
24 and December 31 will closely follow a Saturday
operating schedule, with hours of 8:15 a.m. to
noon. Normal delivery and collection hours will be
maintained. ·
Normal Sat'urday hours will be' maintained
following the holidays .

Music center planned
TOLEDO. Ohio tUPI) - A
Toledo developer plans to form a
downtown thea ter district that
will Include a cabaret and
various mu sic clubs in a twoblock area near the new convention center.
'Guy -Mi chael Davis said the
first occupant in the district wiil

Killed in mishap
BRIMFIELD, Ohio (UP!)- A
two-car accident kilied one man
F r iday and seriously inju red two
others.
Cory Wingard, 19, Kent, who
was driving of one of the cars,
died in the Portage County
accident. David Brandon. 47,
Stow, and his passenger . Timothy Ja ckson, 19 . Kent, we re
flown to Akron City Hospita l
where they were in serious
conUition Friday night. ,

Jlolidays ___________&lt;~.!~r·~~~~~o_Lm__Av_s_.A_t_l________________~_
•

learn to relax , learn to )a ugh, learn to let go, and
learn to ask for hel p.
: "Our bodies' response to stress is a marvelous
!Jlechanism that gears us up to meet dangero~ s
~tuatio n s. Unfortunately, m any of us turn on th1s
r;hechanism during tM holidays, leav ing us with
unresolved mu sc le tension, elevated blOod pres·
sure, increased heart beat. and a headache,"
Sofra nko said. "Cigarettes. alcohol. tranqullizers
"nd ea ting are ail atte mpt s to induce relaxa tion .
You can' t be tense a nd relax a t the sa me time."
: La ughter is the best medicine . It's like jogging
ins ide, Sofranko said. The muscles of the face ,
nec k. ches t. belly a nd diaprram get a good
work-out with a good laugh.
"T he more intense the la ughter. the more
te laxing and longer are the positive effects,''
§olranko said. " This is one reason why people like
l&lt;l be around others who have a good sense of
Humor ."
. Learn to let go a nd flow . Sofrimlio said.· :Le t go
of all the small stuff. a!Jer a li it is sma ll stuff.
· "Ali too often, one member of the fa mily takes
on the burden of doing ail the work so th e rest of
fhe family can enjoy the holiday. An'd because
Stress red uces our abili ty to fight off Illness. that
p.erson spends the following week In bed with a
cold or the flu. " Sofranko said .
Sofranko a nd Emilie Barnes. author of " Keep
Your Holidays Stress-Free" In the December
ed ition of " Virtue ," suggested as king fo r hel p.

1

Barnes said eve n sma ll children can help bake
and decorate. Hu sbands and other relatives can
run •erra nds .
" I know of no other method of child guidan ce
that contributes to a sense of belongingness in the
fa mlly then letting children pa r ticipate in the fun
and work acitivilies in the home." Sofra nko said .
Remembering and concentra ting on what
Christmas is. is one way to maint ain an att itude.
Barnes said .
Family matters should be settled before the
season and guests ' arrive. Disput es a m ong
families who.are separated should be set tl ed and
time ·should be spent equally and fa irly . Barnes
said.
"Make it a goal not to ga in weight. Overea ting
.c an make you feel a bsolu tel.v awful. " Barnes said .
·'Becau se there will be extra goodies around, try
to be selective about what you eat. If you struggle
with wanting to nibble, place yourself next to th e
food table where the fruit an d vegetable platter

be Friar Tucks, a ca baret that
will move downtown from Mau mee. The core will be the Esquire
Theater, a former movie and
burl esque theater.
Davis said Wednesday hi s
company , Daco Development
Inc .. eit her owns or holds options
on the properties bordering Su·
perior, Jefferson. Huron, and
Madison s treets.
· Davis said he has invested
$750,000 Jn the effort and plans to
start the fir st phase with the
Esquire Immediately.
The developer said other plans
include clubs for blues , jazz.
comedy and rock . The Esquire
will be used for other purposes,
he said.

(USP !Z!I-8001
P ublished each Sund~y. 825 Third Ave .,
Gallipolis, Ohio, by th e Ohi o Valley Publishing Company/Multirricdla. Inc. Se·
cond class postage paid at Galllpolls,

Ohio ~5631 . Ente red as second class
mailing m aller at Pomeroy, Oh io, Post
Office.

MembN : United Press lnterna11onal.
Inland Daily Press Association and t he
Ohi o Newspaper Ass ocfat lon. National
Advertising Representa l lve. Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

By Carrier or Motor Route

•

No subsc rip tions by mall permi11ed In
areas w h ~r e m otor carrier st~ rv l ce is
8\•a il abl e.
T he Sund ay Times-Sent inel wil l not be
r espons ible for advance pa yments
m~d e&gt; t o c arr iers.

Loc:tred ar Holzer Clinic
on R r. 35 In Gall ipo lis

446-5287.
\fond..~ ~ · F ri fla ~
5: 00 P.\1. "' 9": ()0 1'.·\1.

\1 t'4'kt&gt;nd JO' &amp; t-l ol'i4 1tt ~"

J,

Divorce granted by court
Water interruption Monday
.
.
.
~

GALLIPOLIS - ThE&gt;re will bean interruption of
the water service in Gallipolis on Monday,
according to city manager Dale Iman. !man sa id
service will be shu t off from 10 a.m. to
approximately noon, on Seco nd , Third a nd Fourth
avenues, from Sycamore to Pine streets, so
residents should pian accordingly. !man added
customers should watc h there water service for a
short period after service Is restored, as water
may be discolored.
•

..

One injured in accident
.GALLIPOLIS-' A Middleport man was Injured
when his car rear-ended a tractor-trailer Friday.
at 5:52 p.m ., in Meigs County's Sails bury
Township, on S,R. 7, at the Intersection of
Township Road 376, according to the Gallla-Meigs
Post of the Sta te Highway Patrol.
Martin S. Chapman , 42, was taken by the
Middleport EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
where he was admitted for observation. At las t
report he was listed in s table condition.
Chapman was following a trac tor -trailer driven
by James E. Roush, 33, of Rt. 1, Cheshire, when
Roush s topped to make a left turn to Township
Road 376. Chapm an did not stop In time to avoid
hitting the tractor-trailer.
Chapm an was cite&lt;;! for not maintaining the
assured clear distance.
A Langsville man was cited in an accident
Friday, at 11 a. m .. in Salisbury Township on S.R.
7. at the Intersection of Count y Road 3.
Ernest E . Davis, 75, was cited for not wearing a
seat belt after his car hit a guardrail on S.R. 7.
The report sa id that Davis had reac hed the
intersection afler drivin g west on County Road 3
and had stopped. He reached down to pull up the
floor m at when he ra n across the road and hit the
guardra il.
•

. RACINE - Racine VIllage
Co uncil will mee t 6:15 p.m .
Monday at the Shrine Park
building to tak e action on a truck
purchase.

Christmas program
LETART FALLS - Letart
· Fails EleJnentary School students wjlf present a Christmas
progtili:Q. on Tuesday, 7 p.m., at
the schodl. Everyone Is invited .

Morning fire destroys house
:

Building evacuated
CINCINNATI tUP!) - The
Federal Building In downtown
Cinc innati was evacuated for two
hours Friday in the wake of a
bomb threat hoax.
Five fake bombs were found in
a firs t floor restroom of the
building which houses a ·post
office branch, federal offices and
feder a l courts. Several hundred
people work in the building.
Inves tigators sa id the fake
bombs were made from equip·
ment stolen from a tel ephone
repairman who was working at a
nearby church.
No" motive for the hoax was
disclosed by investigators. who
sa id they were following several
lea ds in trying to apprehend th e
culprit .

GALLIPOLIS - A fire Saturday, at 3:39 a.m.,
on Eva ns Roa d. just east of Shoestring Ridge
Road, destroyed the house. ca using a $52,000 loss.
according to the Gallipolis Fire Department.
The hou se. owned by Paul J. a nd Ruth A. Goody
of Rt . 2, Pat riot. was destroyed when a fir e
starting on the first floor burned out of control.
The cause of the blaze was not determined a t the
time . ·
.
Three trucks and 23 men responded to the ca ll.

1987 MODEL

GALLIPOL IS Michael E . Corbin and Michelle
Corbin, both of 644 Fourth Ave., received a decree
of divorce on December 4 in Calha County
Common Pleas Court.

•

Mental health board change
GALLIPOLIS - The monthly meeting of the
Gallia·Jackson-Melgs Mental Health Board !\as
been changed from December 21 to Monday.
December 14.
·
The meeting will stili take place at 7 p.m., at the
board office at 414 Second Avenue in Gallipolis .

Two arrested by police
•

GALLI POLIS- Jeffrey Brett Hersman. 29, of
Nell Ave., was arrested Friday afternoon by
the Gallipolis Pollee Department. He was sent to
the county jail, where 'he Is being he ld for the
Marion County Sheriff's Department. He faces a
charge of grand tlieft.
Lacy Michael Wolford, 21, of Rt. 2, Vinton, was
arrested on a warrant by the pollee Friday
afternoon. She was c~arged with breaking and
entering.

29~

On£' Year ......... ......... ... ............ $32.24
Dally and Sunday
MJ\IL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside County
13 Weeks ................................ $17 .29' ·
26 Wee ks
................... $34 .06
52 We eks.......
.. .. , .... $66. 56
Rat es Out side County
13 Wf' cks ............................ $18.20
26 Week s ..... ............... .... ......... $35. 10
52 Week s ..... ... ...... ... ....... ......... $67 .60

After Christmas Prices
.
Now. Store Wide Sale.

PIANOS-ORGANS-DRUMS
GUITARS-AMPLIFIERS.

GALLIPOLIS - In Gallipolis
Municipal Cour t Friday, Charles
F. Hudson, 26, of Vinton. was
fined $300 and se ntenced to three
days in jail. He was also required
to pay court costs for . no
headlights .
El izabeth Jacques . 22, of R L 4,

Ohio man will go on trial

Couples apply for licenses
GALLIPOLIS - Six couples recently appli ed
for marriage licenses in Ga llia County Probate
Court.
Applying were Thomas Gregory Harper, 24, Rt.
1, Ewlngton, a nd Lenora Lyn Murray , 16, R.t. 1.
Ewington; Elmer 0. Holt, 25. Lucasville, and
Tonda Renee McWho rter. 2, Eureka Star Route .
Gaaliipolls; Richard Thomas Kern, 29, Cheshire.
and Vicki Lynn Rickard, 30, Rt. 3, Gallipolis;
Curtis D. Swick. 19. Rt. 1, Bidwell, and Christina
L. Manley , 17, Bidwell; Danny Paul Wears, 24,
West Co lumbia, W.Va., and Laura Mae Jones, 48,
Point Pleasant. W.Va.: and William Keith Wolfe,
26, Rt. 3, Bidwell, and Cyn thia Ann Lookado. 25,
Rt. 3, Bidwell.

DELTA 88

David G. Rhodes , 35, of Rt. 1,
Northup, wa s fined $13 for
•
speeding.
Michael R. Copmer,41, of Rt.l.
Vinton, was fined $15 fo r
speeding.
Various bond were forfeited by
J ohn P . Barry , 31, Rt. I, Thurman , $129, failing to attach a ·
temporary tag to his killed deer .
at the place where It fell; Zelma
K. Patterson. 31, Point Pleasant,
W.Va ., $41, not maintaining the
assured clear distance: and
Michelle Co lbin . 37. 644 Fourth
Ave., $41; running a stop sign.
Speeding bonds were .forfeited .
by George C . . Hughart, 18,
Rupert, W.Va., $44; Wendy S.'
Smith. 18. 619. Second Ave., $44;.
Thomas L. Budnick, 37; Romu lus. Mich .. $40; and Rayford A.
Minnis , 29, Rt. 3, Bidwell. $41.

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - An Authorities said Morelli smashed
Ohio man ' who alleged ly went on through a chain fence, narrowly
a driving rampage through missed hitting several emThree Rivers Stadi um will stand ployees and knocked over 80
trial on charges of criminal gallons of nacho clje~se dip.
mi schief. crim inal trespassing
Damages to the stadium were
and reckless endangerment.
estimated at $1,345 and $685 for
Tony Morelli Jr., ·30, of Win- the cheese dip, stadium officia ls
(ersville. Ohio, was held for co urt said .
Pollee who a rres ted Morelli
. Thursday during a hearing before Chief City Magistrate Joan said he told them he was unhappy
Melvin.
with Steelers quarterback Mark
More lli is accused of driving Malone's passing.
his station wagon through the
.
·
. •
s tadium and up its r amps Dec. 3. 1 IJB'o~:m::o:~ ~llllllllf:S::::~ f:S::::~~BI!~~BI!BI!~I'&lt;= ~~'!O::&lt;i!:i!l&lt;::&lt;l

.

-~

.

Your w
Photos w
w
By

Arrested by patrol ·
GALLIPOLIS- Charles Nelson Palmer, 26, of
Columbus, was. ar res ted by the State Highway
Patrol and sent to the co unt y jail. accord ing to the
sheriff's department. He was charged with DWI
and possession of marijuana a nd cited for driving
under suspension and not wear ing a seat belt.

Gallipolis, was fined $50 and
sentenced to 10 days In jail for
thefi .
Jeffrey D. Wetherholt. 19, of
Rio Grande, was fined $12 for
driving left of center and SIZ for
driving without a license.

SANTA CLAUS AT

w
w
w

!u

David
Tawney
SPECIAL GIFT
looking for a thoughtful ond sophislicatod holiday gift for that
dedicated photography enthusiast?
Selecting a specialind gift may re·
quire that ·you know tht (Dmera
mah and model. These ideas aresure
to please the recipient.
A motor winder thai will lot him
or her concentrate on shOoting, not
on advancing the film;
Spe&lt;ial-effe&lt;ts filter set with filter holder and several filtii'S;
A new 1oom lens - 11pensiwe but
the but "se&lt;ond" ions for an SIR;
A 300 to 500 MM supll' tolt·lens
also expensive, but the most wanted
"next" acctssory;
Slide duplicator altachmenl for
turning slides into prints or more
slides at home;
A good, heavy tripod to steady o
camtra for sharpest photos;
A deluxe camll'a bag;
A double-headed, ·auto flash with
zoom and tilt.
This monih's spO&lt;iat is $1 -$2-$3
off devoloping and printing only by

Kodak.

For the best pricts ancl selection,
s• us soon at Tawney's 424 St&lt;ond
Ave., 614·446-1615.

..Visit with Santa... Bring Your Camera or for
S3.00 We Will Take Your Picture Fo,r You.
..; GALLIPOLIS
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER

STOR~

,

10 ........................... ............ 7:00 TO B:30
12 ................. ........ .. .. c......... 2:00 T0 .4:00
15 .................... ................... 7 :00 TO B:30
18 ...................................... , 7:00 TO 8:30
20 ....................... .. ~ ............. 2:00 TO 4 :00

POINT PLEASANT STORE
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER

9 .................. ................ ....... 7 :00 TO B:OO
14 ....... .... .... ... .... .......... ....... 7 :00 TO 8:30
17 ...................... , ......... .. .. ... 7:00 TO B:30
19 ... .............. ....................... 2:00 TO 4:00
22 ....................................... 7:00 TO 8:00

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DECEMBER B .......................................... 7:00 TO
DECEMBER 11 ... .. ........... ........... ............ 7:00 TO
DECEMBER1 13 ................. : .. ................ ... 2:00 TO
DECEMBER 16 ............................. .......... 7:00 TO
DECEMBER 21 ................... : ................... 7 :00 TO

8:30
8:30
4:00
8 :30
B:30

•

0.0. Mcintyre Park District
Offers A New
Recreation Information
Service

$3000 DISCOUNT
'

ONLY 6 IN STOCK

JIM COBB · .
CHEVROLET•OLDSMOBILE•CADILLAC

Call 446-000 7
For
Announcements on Countrywide
Winter Recreation Programs and
· Activities

Introducing the "All New~'
Wall paper and Blind Shop
Showroom

WALLPAPER AND BLIND SKOP

Sund&lt;\y Only

Corner 3rd &amp; Court St., Gallipolis, Ohio

NO APPO INTMENT NECESSARY

.------Area news briefs:· -----, ------Municipal court

Council meetint

Brunicardi Music Inc.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

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

URGENT '
CARE CENTER

law to be located upon or adver sely
affecting wetlands.
.
Additionally, Haddox alleges·
that the commiSsion doesn't have
the legal authority to enter Into an
agreement to foster such a sltua ·
lion and therefore, the sUing
agreement entered into with Pyro
Chem, Inc., "Is null. void and of no
legal effect." .
,
The petition luJtl!er alleges that
the " no" vote cast against the
siting · agreement by CommlssiQner Mayes Is the only lawful
vote that could be ·taken. The
petition requests that the vote be
recorded In that manner ·a nd the
minutes of the county commission
"a motion to adopt failed or was
out of order."
Haddox, In other contentions of
the nine-page petltldn, alleges that
the siting agreement Is null and
void because the count.y commls·
stan failed to post and hold
hearings prior to entering into that
agreement, and failed to follow the
state of West Virginia's open
meetings law.

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 8:00 PM
CLOSED SUNDAY

Overspending can cause tension and depression. Barnes suggested to . wa tc h financ es
carefully and work out a budget. Handmade gift s
and ba ked ite m s ca n m ean so much, and spec ial
phone calls or' 'after Chr.lstmas lunch'' t.reats are
just as nice to a friend .
With so little time and so many th ings to do a nd
places to go, saying " no" is OK. Barnes said .

•

on the Donald C. Kingery tract.
The fudge has asked the county .
.commission and county clerk to
show cause why the Kingery tract
- ott County Road 11, two and a
half mlles east of State Route 621n
Mason County '- is suitable for a
hazardous waste management site
despte Its "wetland status."
Haddox alleges In the petition to
the court that the Kingery tract Is
locaied In the headwaters of a
wetland, as defined by law, and
that . the tract of land f~
"wUd!He ponds, refuge areas, and
waters such as rivers, streams.
creeks, branches, brooks, springs,
wells. watercourses, lakes, lm·
pounding reservoirs and other
such 'state waters' on or beneath
the surface of the ground."
Haddox also alleges In the
petition that the Kingery tract
feeds the Teays Valley water
source, a supplier atwater to more
than 15' entitles. The petition
alleges that there are more than
one million users of that water·
source, a territory stretching west
to about Chillicothe then south to
Cincinnati.
Haddox .a)leges that hazardous
waste fac~itles are prohibited by

308 EAST MAIN

992-6614

POMEROY

COME IN AND CHECK ·ouT .
THE AREA'S LARGEST
SELECTION OF

Sunday ... . ............ ............ ... . 50 Cents

Six mo nths .......... ..................... Sl 6. 90

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

(From JUDGE, AI)

When You Walk Into the Newly Opened WALLPAPER
AND BLIND SHOP, Be Prepared for an Exciting Experience
In Interior Oecoration. You Will Find the Largest Selection of
Imperial Wallcoverings In the State, Featuring the Newest
and Most Current Patterns That Have Just Come Off The
Press, along With A Large Selection of Compatible Borders
At Great Savings.
.We Have Made It Easy For You to Color Coordinate
Because For Every Wallpaper Sample, You Will Find A
Levolor Blind That Matches Perfectly. We Offer The Largest
ln·Stock Levoior lllind Selection in the State, and Because
We Buy Directly From the Factory, Our Cost Is Less, and We
Pass the Savings on to You, Our Valued Customers. All
Special and Custom Orders are 60% OFF,' and Along with Our
· Beautiful Selection of Metal and Fabric Levolor Blinds, We
Also Offer AComplete Line Of JoAnna Vinyl Blinds.
We Have Over 500 Wallpaper Books For Custom and
Special Orders Also At Considerable Savings .
Come and Browse Through Our Elegant Collection and
Statt Picturing Your Home,ln Beautiful Wallpaper Designs
With Matching and/or Coordinating Beautiful Vertical or
Horizontal Blinds.
We Are Easy To Find At The Memorial Bridge Approach
Near Garfield Avenue, And Are Anxiously Wai~ing to Assist
You In Transferring Our Beautiful Colors. and Patterns From
Our Books and From Our Stock Into Your Homes and
Businesses To Help You Create ALook You Will Love For A
Long, Long Time.

is.''

HOLZER C ,LINIC

Judge

Sunday nmes-Senti_nei- Page-A-5:

Pomer()y- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

December t3, 1987

One Week ..... :... ... ... .... ...... ... 60 Cents
On e Year ............. :.. ....... ... ...... $31.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE

•

'

December 13•. 1987

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

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signed at the summit may be
dramatic, emotional and historic
but probably wlli not rival, In
length or vitriol, the tumultuous
debates on the Treaty of Versallles and the Panama Canal
treatieS.
.Projected Senate approval of
the Intermediate Nuclear Forces
treaty to eliminate all U:S. and
Soviet mMium- and short-range
missiles based in Europe may
l!Ot mute the fiery rhetoric
e~pected from the treaty 's hard nne foes, who number roughly
t_wo dozen, according to an early
count by Assltant Senate Democratic leader Alan Cranston,
DeCalii.
· But the prospect of passage by
me constitutionally required
two-thinds Senale vote may reduce the letter-writing, lobbying,
lpdependent group advertising
and other outside pressures that
overwhelmed senators in 1978
when the Panama Canal treaties
passed with just one vote to spare
after a near-record 10-week
debate.
. As emotional as treaty debates
can be, the Senate rarely kills
treaties on the floor . Usually.
lreaties in trouble are either
withdrawn. defeated In committee or never brought to the floor
by the Senate leadership.
; In the last 200 years, the full
Senate has voted. down only 21
treaties while approving 1,524
pacls as of last March 30,
accoridng to congressional researchers, and about 180 treaties
ttlat were submitted to the Senate
for approval never wertt into
force due to the Senate's actions.
' In some cases, the Senate has
approved treaties only after
16ilding them down with amendnients that change the text of the
trf,aty and require renegotiation
Ii :they are unacceptable to one
more of the pact's parties.
The Senate also can . add
re-servations, understandings
a.hd other restrictive language
that, while they don't change the
treaty text, can make the agreements unpalatable politically.
Senate treaty debates - especially those involving the Soviets
or: other U.S. current or former
adversaries - often are among
the stormiest, most emotional
and most memorable. And the

100!S OF
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I

citizens.

Fr uit said such studies are
essenti al to preventing problems
. age g roups
' as the
between the
population becomes older.
" If there are not enough funds
fo r . everyone who should get
them. and if young people don't
und ersta nd the elderly, or if
seniors don't sense the needs of
the young, both groups will be
less will ing to share, " she sa id.

On Friday, he said the langua ge of the communique re·
sol ved the superpower dispute
over SDI and that the ··star ·
Wars" space defense system
would not be an impediment to
talks on cutting the most destructive nuclear a~ senals in half.
Reagan offered no new insights
on his three days of talks with
Gorbachev but explained, in the
manher of an elementary school
teacher, " the alphabet soup" of
the nuclear age. '
" Now, wlth all the reports of
INF, ICBMs and SDiyou've been
hearing In the las t lew days, I
wouldn' t be surprised if some ·
people were a little blt confused

by all those letters ," he said. " It
·sounds like alphabet soup."
Trying " to put all thls ,i~to
English that everybody can
understand," Reaga n reviewed
the 8-year history of mediumrange missile Installation ln
Europe, weapons known as Inter·
mediate Nuclear Forces.
He said the first-tim e ever
abolition of an entire class of
weapons that he and Gorbachev
signed should mean that "arms
control has been replaced by
arms reduction- well, actually I
should say arms elimination ."
Reagan said he was confident
the Senate will move quickly to
ratify the treaty so that "INF Is

one par t of the alphabet soup you
won't have to remember."
The president also held · out
hope for an' agreement next yea r
on START - strategic arms
reduction talks - th11t would ·cut
long-range ICBMs (intercontinental ballistic missiles) and
bombers in half " provided the
Soviets don' t try and hold it
hostage to restricttons on SDI. "
SDI, the Strategic Defense
Intiative known as "Star Wars, "
ls a space- based system that
would knock down Incoming•
missiles bul whose deployment ls
prohibited by the ABM (antiballlstlc-missile) treaty of 1972.
"Building a defense against

INF treaty not as controversial ~s some

trio's initial ' research , ·

The children also occasionally
visi t nursing homes wh ere they
sing, play games, share stories
and have snacks with residents.
Volunteer grandpa rents visit the
children at their nursery school.
It is impor tant to begin such
interaction at an early age, the
researc hers said.
" You do find consistenily in the
litthat young children and adoles cen ts tend to have more negative
attitudes than positive toward
the elderly ," said neumannJenkins . " If you look at attitudinal formation, you find that It's
much easier to a lte r children' s
att itud es than a do lescents'

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treaty- prohibiting deployment
bu t allowing all steps leading up
to it .
Nevertheless, Reagan said Friday, when asked if the Washington su mmit resolved or (l'lerely
postponed a day of reckoning on
SDI, "It resolves it."
Reaga n told his ra dio listeners
Saturday. "I'm afraid most of us
in this country aren't fully aware
of this fact - the United States
" presently has to rely on a policy
in which our natiops hold each
other hostage to nuclear terror
and ·destr uction. This is an
intolerable situation. We will
move forward with SOT - it ls
our moral du ty."
The policy he refer red to is,
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The ABM trea ty prohibits
space-based defenses, and the
Soviets have argued that it also
bans research 11nd tes ting. The
U.S. Interpretation would allow
research, testing a nd
development.
In the joint communique, Reagan and Gorbachev sidestepped
lhe issue, saying, In ef(~t . the
two sides will later establish a
period of either seven or 10 more
years of compliance with the

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nuclear weapons is is a moral
as well as a s trategic
imperative, and we will never
give lt up," Reagan said.
"Our bottom line on SD! ls
simple," he said. " We will
research It , we will test lt, and
when It 's ready, we will deploy

INF debate will nave no snortage to Panama would be a good :Massachusetts, the leading oppoof anti -Soviet bombast from signal of America's intentions in nent and chairman of the Senate
treaty opponents .
Latin America.
Foreign Relations Committee.
·The most recent treaty reThe Panama Canal Treaties
The treaty, which set terms for
jected by the Senate ;.vas theS0-42 probabll:' ~ere the most bitterly dealing with Germany and other
vote, well short of the two-thirds fought treaties of the modern era countries on the losing end of
required, on March 8, 1983, and, in this century, may have World War I, also established the
Involving aviation protocols . The been second in length and inten- Le'ague of Nations- a predecesSALT 2 treaty, setting cellings on Sity only to the Treaty of sor to the United Nations formed
superpower strategic weapons,
Versailles at the end of World after World War II.
was signed ln 1979 by President
War I.
Creating the League - a new
Carter and Soviet leader Leonid
'
The Versailles Treaty, re- world body to help
arbitrate ·
Brezhnev.
. jected by the Senate in 1919 and disputes - was Wilson's dream.
It was later approved by the · again in 1920, became the object The U.S. refusal to join contribSenate Foreign Relations Com - of -a personal feud between uted to Wilson's loss of health and
mittee on a 9-6 vote but the
Democratic President Woodrow spirit. He left the presidency in
subsequent Soviet Invas ion of
Wilson and Senate Republican 1920 a broken man.
· Afghanistan ended chances for
leader Henry Cabot Lodge of
Senate approval . and President
Carter withdrew the pact in the
face of certain defeat.
The two Panama Canal !reaties, which turned over control of
the American-built canal to Panama by the year 2000, passed on
identical 68-32 votes in 1978,
despite polis showing tremendous public opposition . At least
some of the treaty supporters lost
subsequent elections as a result.
Opponents , led by former California Gov. Ronald Reagan,
argued that the United States
should retain control of the vital
waterway i!nklng the Atlantic
and Pacific oceans. Reagan and
others declared that America
built the canal, paid for it and
ought to keep it.
(Behind Sh~e World)
But proponents said that unless
the treaty was approved, · the
canal might easily be sabotaged,
making it unusable, And giving it

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Building SDI _'moral hnperative' Reagan says in address
WASHINGTON (UP!) -PresIdent Reagan , giving the ABCs of
arms control', said Saturday
building a Strategic Defense
Initiative is a "moral Imperative" he will never give up ln
future negotiations with the
SOviet Union. ·
,The remarks ln hls weekly
radio address from Camp David ,
Md., added to the ambiguit y of
the joint communique he and
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
Issued last week at the conclusion
of their summit. Reagan told
radio listeners the long-range
missile talks would succeed if the
Kremlin does not raise SDI as a
roadblock. •

KENT. Ohio !UP!) - Childre n's altitudes and beha vior
toward older adults will become
increasing importa nt as a larger
percent ageo!.t he U.S. populati on
reac hes age 65, say th ree Kent
State University resea rchers.
Census .Bureau sta tistics show
the number of peo ple age 65 or
older wi ll more than double to
almost 65 million by the year
2030, when older Americans will
comprise more tha n 21 percent of
the population.
The researchers are conducting a study in which they hope /O
ilffect the way younger generations deal with an increasingly
older society and to improve
interaction between children and
senior ci tlzens.
• "We are specifi cally looking at
three pro-social behaviors: shariVg, cooperating a nd helping,"
Qonna Lambert , an assistant
professor at t'h e university's
' School of _family a nd Consumer
Studies, said in a news release.
Lamber t, Mary DellmannJ enkins and Dorothy Fruit are
conducti ng a year-long project
tha t resulted from an earlier
study on children's attitudes
toward senior citizens..
which was published la.st year in
the Journal of Childhood Education, ind icated that young childre n's a ttitudes about older adults
ca n be modified positively
through an intervention pro·
gram . The program involved
nursery school activ ities and
interaction with senior citizens.
Using the same program, the
researchers are taking the study
one step further 'to · see if
children's behavior, as well as
attitudes, can be affected.
Fift een preschoolers from the
Human Development Center
Nursery Program at the un iver sit y are participating in the
program . The children' s curricu lum deals with aging and older
generations and they interact on
a reiutar basis with "'s enior

December 13, 1987

RESE TS....

Interaction
of seniors,
kids, studied

. The

December 13, 1987

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page- A -6- Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Pega A-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

iuru.~ ~mtes- icntind

.Bowling G~een draws composers,
recording artists to its campus

CHRISTMAS CHORUS - The Rio Grande
College and Community College Chorus and
Grande Chorale presented a concert of Christmas

music at a public perfonnance on Friday. The
program featured traditional carols as well as a
·
selection of classie~il works.

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UPI) - A campus recording
studio can be a popular plac.e for
musicians and help draw attention to the school 's music depart·
ment. a classical pianist says.
Bowling Green State Universi·
ty's studio · is frequented by
artists as diverse as classical
pianist Jerome Rose to new age
Toronto composer Peter Ware.
Rose, whose recordings have
won international acclaim, said
the importance of the studio at
the College of Musical Arts
should not be underestimated.
"Recording is an absolute
nece·s sily In the function of musi c
schools today," he said. "The
electronic age is upon us and
there is no escaping the record ed
sound as a representation of what
the institution represents ."
"What makes Bowling Green's
studio so outstanding is that we

have excellent equipment and
good music halls." said Mark .
Bunce. director of recording
,
serv\ces.
Rose, an artist -In-residence at
Bowling Green, has recorded
albums on campus for the Vox
label for 10 years. His "Liszt
Favorites" won the 1976 Grand
Prix du Dlscue given by the
Franz Liszt Society of Hungary.
Rose's latest album, "Chopin
Balla des," will be released
shortly on the Newport Classics
label. He plans to record Chopin's complete works in Bowling
Green, a project Rose said will
take several years.
"We haVe an excellent studio
and excellent people working
there," Rose said.
"I'm pleased that the professionals that come here to record
are happy with the results," he
said.

December 13, 1987

investments in new equipment
ment. and sometimes the liquid,
and buildings, Boas said.
is forced out by the pressure.
"Everybody takes a bath On
Champagne. wine that is fer mented twice, was accidentally
wine) when we do this," Boas
said.
discovered in 1668 in France.
A mixture of sugar, brandy,
Boas said Flrelands makes Its
sparkling wine the old way by
and wine is added to amplify the
flavor and bring the wine level to
allowing a second fermentation
the fill point. A machine inserts
to occur in the bottle instead of a
the cork. and the fall and wire cap
vat.
"ThiS method is the traditional are added several weeks later.
process," he said.
,
"It's a lot of hand labor," Boas
That means each bottle, rest· said.
The sparkling wine now In the
ing in a special rack with Its neck
pointed downward, is turned by cellar was pressed from ·grapes
hand one-quarter of a revolution in 1986 and added to bottles In
at least once a day so the March, he ~aid.
" The process can be fully
sediment can fall toward the
automated,
but few champagne
neck.
Bob Ruth. the chief bottle, pro(luclng houses in the world
turner, rhythmically works his are big enough to justify pur·
way through the rows of bottles, chases of that much machinery,"
turning each one. ,He said the Boas said.
Boas said he's not certain how '
activity relaxes him .
"You can develop great hand much the initia l production of
muscles." said production man- sparkling wine will sell for when
ager Jim Grachek, who some· it reaches stores this Sljmmer.
It's a lot of work but the
times help with the tur ning.
When the sediment has settled, pleas ure of the final product is
the wine Is chilled and the neck is hard to explain," Grachek said.
"When you see the bottles
placed in a freezing solution. then
sitting
in a carryout, it makes
turned upright. The frozen sedi·

TOLEDO. Ohio \UP1 ) -The
Coalltion for Economic Ju s tice
and the Seven Up-Canada Dry
Bot~Ung Co. have announced an
agreement committing the soft
drink company to hire more
minority workers.
The Rev. Floyd Rose. a spokesman for the coalit ion, said
Friday the agreement with the
drink

in a pledge to develop more
business with minority-owned
companies.
Tlie agreement, which is sim·
liar to one negotiated with a
snack food company in October.
resulted from three-months of
talks with the coalition. Rose
said.
The agreef11ent does not con·
fain hiring quotas, but It details

Bunce said Bowling Green's
lower costs, compared with studios In New York, help make a
difference In attracting top
artists.
Other composers at Bowling
Green include Ware, who re·
corded his "Takhlnl," and Brian
Beve!ander, a Heidelberg Col·
lege composer ' on the Opus I
label. Mar ia Rose of Holland
recorded her first album In
Bowling Green.

•

....

..'

By MATT ROBERTSON
OVP STAFF
: GALLIPOLIS - Bill McCor; 'mick remembers the night of
:&lt;Dec.15, 1967, the nigl)t the Silver
: Bridge, a brld'ge spanning the
· •' Ohio River between Point Plea•sant. W.V a.,, and Gallipolis, Ohio,
.• fell into the Ohio River, taking
with it 46 people to their deaths.
; · McCormick was sitting in a
. building on the City Ic e and Fuel
'landing. down river from the
•bridge, when the bridge started
to collapse. "! was sitting down ,
•' anq a man waiting for a boat
came to the window arid said the
· (.bridge was collapsing," he said.
. , "It was the noise that drew our
attention to it," McCormick said.
; • :'It started on the Ohio side and
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: • (EDITOR'S NOTE: Twenty
•. ·years ago, Dick Wheeler was a
' •: rookie reporter or UPI. He now
~ • publl•bes newsletters In Mad!·
· • son, Wis. Time has erased most ·
·- .of the names, but the memories
: • ofCoverlng his first major story
-:· for UPI remain vivid . The
. : ~· following Is Wheeler's recollec·
; • lions of the night the Silver
•.: • Bridge crashed Into the Ohio
&gt; . River, killing 4G and leaving
.7 two cities In the throes of grief.)

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By DICK WHEELER
United Press International
One of the most vivid memo·
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Bridge collapsed was how cold
it was.
Frost had formed on the
telephones sitting near the .
shore of the Ohio River a nd my
fln!(ers were shaking (not en·
'tirely from the cold ) as l called
the news desk in Pittsburgh.
Just three hours . earlier,
when the bridge was loaded
with rush hour traffic and a link
snapped sending 46 people to
their death·s, I was In Colum·
bus. picking out a· Christmas
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worked its way over , collapsing," he said. " It was really hard
to believe, after it started to
collapse it was only a matter of
seconds."
"I said we ought to tak~ the
boat out and look for survivors,"
he said.
They took the motor boat out
onto the river and pulled from the
water four men who survived the
fall.
"People were hanging on to
floatsom from the _ tractor·
trailers that had been on the
bridge, " he said. "The last
person we rescued. a captain
from the Ohio River Company,
said he couldn't have held on
much longer." '
"After we came back in. they

went out to see if they could find
more survivors." he sa id. The
fuel boat went out as well, he
said. and rescued one person
from the water.
"A lot of people came down to
the landing after the collapse,"
he sa id. ''The Corps of Engineers
had people staying at our land·
ing, the Red Cross. Coast Guard
and the divers kept their gear at
our landing." he said. "It was a
real mad house. "
The accident, however, is not
something that has always been
easy for McCormick to talk
about. " I had to talk to so many
people afterwards. it got to the
point where I didn't want to talk
about it anymore, I had talked
about it so much. It's not
something I '11 eve r forget."

'
By MATT ROBERTSON
desperate feelings con nected
Depression, he said, is thE&gt;sixtf:l
OVP STAFF
with death, " Sofranko said.
step. "Individuals and the com·
GALLIPOLIS- "Although
"In some Instances it can munity itself feels a sadness, that.
we would never ask for a
.. create shock and uncertlanty , often causes people to withdraw
disaster to happen, It Is an
draw people out of their regular into themselves," he said, adding
routine." Chezik said. "It sud·
" This withdraw! may last weeks.
opportunity for community
growth," Dr. Edward R.
denly causes people to ask 'what
months or even years."
.
Sofranko. professor of phyehol- is Important.' to re-evaluate
Hope Is the seventh stage,
ogy at Rio Grande College and
values, especially if they lost
' 'When the human spirit is
re·born and hope sneaks through
director of the Center for
loved ones," Chezik added.
Heal(hy Living, Gallipolis,
·After the Initial shock of the
the cracks, it can root and grow,''
Ohio.
disaster disappears, the .process
he said.
"As a result of the shared pain, of healing starts: "Grief is the
Affirmation is the final step In
people discover new strengths ," Important process of healing that
the grieving process : he said .
he sa id . .
wound, and whether It is an
''W hen t.he human will to want to
"The positive effect of a Individual's loss or the entire
grow Is.affirmed, a new commul)disaster is the creation .of a community's loss, the health
ity will be constructed from the
unlfyil)g force In the community, restoring process is the same,"
remains of the former, " he said,
'we've all shared tragedy and Sofranko said.
·
addlng,"Death gives way to .
resurrection."
have a deep significant event in
Sofranko said there are eight
common. ' People become closer stages of grief the community
"P11ople experience the stages
after a horrifying experience, " goes through , the first being · of grief In different degrees a"nd
Dr. Donald Chezik, professor of shock and denial. " People In the
different sequences, and the
depth of the grief corresponds to
psychology at Marshall Univer - community simply won't accept
sity and director of the Psycho!- that the disaster actually· hap·
the depth of the catastrophe,"
ogy Clinic at Mars!Jall'. said. "It's pened," he said.
Sofranko $aid .
the . kind of thing" when people
The second stage, he said, is
Problems may occur in the
make contact with the same type emotional expression. "People in
grieving process thOugh . he said.
of feelings : It creates closer · the community exhibit a variety
" Problems occur when people
bonds," he added.
of feelings, from gentle tears to stop the healing .process or get
Twenty years later, though. wrenching sobs."
stuck in one slage.ll is necessary
most of the acute pain should be
Anger is the third stage. he
for the community to grieve if it
blunted, according toChezlk. He said. ''Many people feel anger,
is going to heal," Sofranko said.
"A community faced with
added, though. that this doesn't and look for someone or some·
disaster is confronted with lile'-s
mean that people have forgotten . thing to blame for the disaster,"
" I think people find meaning In Sofranko sa id.
Impermanence and we are all
remembering and honoring vicThe fourth stage is panic, he
reminded of our own mortality,"
tims of tragedies. We prolong the said . "When a disaster happens.
he said.
"Faith helps people deal with a
memory because we don't want it people feel threatened and inseto happen again," Chezlk said.
cure. Where will the next acci·
catastrophe. as each member, of
"Whether it was the directloss dent occur?" he said.
the community is given the
of a loved one or a friend, when a
Guilt constitutes the fifth opportunity to renew themselves
community Is faced with a stage, he said .. adding "Maoy with tfie mysteries of life and tQ
catastrophic event, such as the people feel personally responsi· • reaffirm our values. attitudes
Silver B~idge disaster, every ble for the loss. 'If only I had and beliefs in line with what we
person eJI:perien~s the empty behaved differently, he or she have experienced," Sofranke
woulrl hP ~~ive today.'"
concluded.

of a disaster: the cold; the shock, the grief
Now. I was standing on the
frozen shore of the Ohio River ,
shaking from the cold and
trembling from the immediate
shock of the disaster on which I
was about to report. I had no
Idea what the nexi few hours or
days would bring, but right
then. II was important to
appear in control.
Pittsburgh's orders to me
were simole: Find out what
happened,' how inany were
missing, and call back - in 15
,
minutes.
Just as l was hanging up from
that phone call, the sheriff
walked by, somewhat dazed by
the size of the disaster that wa s
unfolding around us. A quick
Interview took care of ·
Pittsburgh.
The Silver Bridge, described
at its dedication in 1928 as a
marvel of man's engineering
ablllty because of its !-bar link
construction. had come tum·
bling down under the weight of
traffic, taking with it an undetermined, at that time, number
of hometown folks, maybe as
many as 75 or 100, the sheriff
said.

Pittsburgh wasn't quite sa tis·
ifled. Editors in New York were
on editors in Pittsburgh de·
ma nding more.
Next assignment: · Find Bob
Cornall, UPI's Charleston bureau chief, and get some more
information.
I had never met Gornall. but
the guy qn the phone next to me
looked like a good suspect. It
was Gornall a nd we agreed to
divide up the workload. He
would stay on the shore, I would
gq to the · local paper, the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. and
see what was in their files.
The ediior, Hobe Wilson.
welcomed me with open arms.
He even gave up his desk and
phone and found some coffee.
The next coup!~ of hours were
spe nt reading files and calling
local au thorities to get more
information.
Hebe swea rs I was asleep at
the typewriter, but actually my
eyes were closed only to better
absorb the warmth of being
'Inside.
After searching out Gornall
and feeding more words to

-

Plttsburgh, r It was well past
midnight. so we decided to look
for a place to eat.
Gornall had. met the Corps of
Engineers officer In charge and
we look him to dinner, since he
appeared less In charge than
petrified. The officer had no
place to stay for the night , so
Gornall and I let him share our
room at the motel.
That was a mistako&gt;. I was the
only one with foresight e nough
to pack a suitcase and, since all
three of us were about the same
size, there are some articles of
clothing I haven't seen since.
While Friday night was a
blur, 'wit h the morning light
Saturday came the full impact
of what had happened. Twisted
metal lay on the shore and
empty footings stood as testim·
ony to the tragedy only hours
earlier.
The frigid Ohio River flowed
quietly between Gallipolis and
Point Pleasant, oblivious to the
death and destruction only feet
beneath its surface.
Smail groups of family ,
friends a nd the curious began

gathering. 1t was going to be a
long, cold day . The losses were
just beginning to be fully
realized. Gornall and I began
seeking more background .
A bartender in Point Pleasant remembered the town
drunk coming ln a few days
earlier and announcing to all
who would listen: "That rickety old bridge is going to. fall
down one of these days."
Engineers began describing
the bridge's construction, not·
ing (hat it was only as strong as
· ll5 weakest link. And if that link
went. the entire bridge would
fall - no questiOns asked.
A sister bridge up toe river
was closed - no questions
asked. More bridges were
checked or closed.
But it was too late for the
Silver Bridge.
·By Sunday, the big boys from
the TV networks and the major
newspapers were in town. New
York UPI sent in Fred Tresh.
an Ohio University grad, who
took charge. Cornall and I no
longer had the story to

,. '

ourselves.
:
We scattered, each taking ~
different church for Sunday
services. Eulogies for the missing and praise for the surviving
were the hastily prepared services for the day .
By the time stories were
written, 48 hours had passed.
The depth of the two cities'
grief ·was becoming more
evident.
Only the details of the suffer·
ing remained to be catalogued :
Gornall ·and I shook hands
and headed home. We've never
met since. Tresh stayed a day
or so and then went back to New
York • He was killed a few.year s
later in an auto atc!dent,
Back home, the Christmas
Tree had been decorated . Yuletide cheer was still the prevatl·
ing mood in Columbus.
It was time to return to the
routine work of a wire service.
On the time sheet .. it was just
another story. In the historyof
the world, just another blip.
In Gallipolis and Point Pleasa nt, tragedy beyond measure.

on area news, newsmen
World
focused
'

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The Trendsetters'" Pacer
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VAN WERT, Ohio (UP!) -A
Paulding man was killed Friday
In a one-car accident in Van Wert
Court, the State Highway Patrol
said.
Investigators found the body of
Terry Wolford, 26, Haviland, in
about four feel of water in the
Raglin Creek. They said Wol·
ford's car left Ohio 127, went
through a guard rail and into the
creek.

the companies plans to hire
qualified minorities.
General Manager Mike Strall
said the company, which has 68
workers, has hired three black
people since negotiations began.
A similar agreement was
struck with Cains Potato Chips
and· Snack Foods after Rose
threatened a boycott in the black
community.

Shared tragedy unifies community
and strengthens. bonds: professors
;
-

service."

Sitting on top of~ world!

Paulding man killed

Bottler says it 'will hire minorities

••

'

•

you feel good to know you've had
a hand in it, to know each
employee has had a hand on that
bottle," he said.

$9 • 75

20 years ago: IIi seconds, tragedy gripped ar~.

Bunce said the recording studio has been used since the 1960s
by faculty members. More recently, s tudents and outside
professionals and the publle have
discovered the facility .
"The biggest thing is that
we're cost effective," he said.
"The world is becoming more
technically aware and more and
more people are using this

.Sandusky winery to uncork sparkling
SANDUSKY, Ohio (UP!l The Firelands Wine Cooperati\'e.
looking for growth in the premium wine market , is aging a
sparkling wine it will sell under
Its own name next summer.
''The only real growth in wines
served is in premium and spar·
kUng wines," said Ed Boas,
general manager of Flreiands .
"We're trying to compete with
!4e best of them."
The winery presses grapes for
three other wineries, bu t it will
market its own sparkling wine or
champagne next summer, begin·
ning with a limited release. Boas
said Friday.
Flrelands can handle 5.000
cases of sparkling wine, although
'its first release will be less than
that, he said. The winery's 15
employees already produce nine
types of varietal wines and
presses grapes for three other
wineries.
The Sandusky winery was
known as Mantey's Vineyard
UJitll about a year ago. Para·
mount Distillers of Clevela nd ,
which has owned the operation
since 1980, has made large

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'

Collapse.
By LEE ANN WELCH
"People were exceedingly nice
Dick
Wheeler
publishes
legis·
Tlmes·Sentlnel Staff
to
us (stra ngers). " Wheeler said,
lative
newsletters
in
Wisconsin
GALLIPOLIS - For a few
now,
but
was
a
fresh
face
a
t
"
but
they were protective of their
days in December 1967. the eyes
United
Press
In
ternationa
l
in
own,
and you have to respect
of the world were focused on
Columbus
on
Dec.
15,
1967.
or
you (as a newsman ) run
that.
· Gallipolis and Point Pleasant
"I
was
23
years
old
and
had
the
risk
of seeming insensitive."
when the 1. 750-foot Silver Bridge
plunged into the Oh lo River been with UPI for six months ,"
Executive editor Hobart W!l.'
below. taking with it 46 lives, Wheeler said in a telephone
interview.
"It
was
my
first
big
son
,J r., who was ·editor of the
mostly members of this close·
story for UP!.'' ·
Gallipolis
Daily Tribune at the
knit Southeast Ohio community .
Arriving
In
Gallipolis
at
a
boutS
of
the
bridge collapse,
time
Disbelief was the first reaction
p.m.,
the
town
was
shrouded
In
the
night
like it was
recalls
of the townspeople during the
darkness
and
Wheeler
said
)le
yesterday.
·
hours following the collapse on
could
n't
see
anything
but
a
pile'of
The
day
's
office
work
was
done
·
Dec. 15. 1967. which included
and he had gone home to get
news r_£.porters who would cover rubble on the ground.
"People
still
had
no
realizationf
ready for the annual Evans
every ·aspect of the story in the
of the proportion of what had' Packing Co., Ch ristmas party,
comi ng days and months.
slated for the Washington School
Bob Wingett. who was a happened."
Then
came
dawn
's
first
light,
cafeteria . The phone rang about 5
reporter and photographer for
that
stunned
Wheeler.
and
view
p.m:, and Tribune reporter Dick
the Daily Sentlnel . on that cold
mahy
others.
along
with
Thomas
was on the line, telling
December ni!(ht, is now pub·
"I
thought.
'Good
Lord,
that
's
a
Wilson
to
bring the camera. the
Usher of the Sentinel and . its
big
bridge!
"
and
realized
the
bridge
had
fallen .
sister publications. the Gallipolis
·
entire
span
was
In
the
water
or
on
"!
asked
him 'what part?' not
. Daily Tribune and the Point
the
ground,
not
just
a
small.
thinking
the
entire bridge was
Pleasa nt Register.
•
isolated
section.
gon.e ," Wilson said.
On Dec. 15, 1967, Wingett .was
"The
hardest
part
was
sifting
What Impressed Wilson at the
assigned to cover a basketball
fact
from
rumor."
Wheeler
said
time
was ·the quietness along the
game between .O:'thens a nd Meigs
of
his
job
over
the
next
few
days.
The Ohio River
riverbank.
high schOols . .After the bridge
flowed
over
tons debris, which
.
He
recalled
Interviewing
peo,
collapse. Wingett was kept on the
pie
who
had
gathered
along
the
was
underneath.
Along the shore
basketball ga me. and was not
shoreline
to
a
walt
word
of
family
line,
debris
was
spread
from the
part of lhe news crew who put out
members
who
had
not
come
entrance
to
thl!
river's
bridge
an extra edition of the Tribune
home
or
been
heard
from
since
edge.
Everythlngelsewas
under- ·
and Sentinel.
the
night
before.
water
with
only
the
support
"When I told people in Athens
You didn't know If the next
piers jutting upwards toward the
about the bridge, they though It
piece
of
debris
would
contain
the
darkened
sky.
was~ seciion (of the spa n) ."
loved
one
of
someone
standing
on
And
stunned
silence.
Grasping the magnitude of the
the
shore,
watching
the
rescue
Most people think of disaster
event was difficult, even for
operation,
Wheeler
recalled.
scences
as filled with screams,
reporters at the scene, whose job
said
h~ remembers
Wheeler
crys for help. But it
moans
and
was to gather and disseminate
the
people
and
the
grief
sur·
was
quiet,
silent
ltke the dark of
Information of (he collapse of the
rounding
the
·
Silver
Bridge
the
night.
Sliver Bridge.

"People were stunned." Wilson said of the night . . The task
then was to put the printed word ·
on the street with an Extra·
edition of the Tribune and Sen·
tlnel. A small staff went into ihe
offices to begin wqrk. "then
everyone just showed up to
help." Wilson said.

WYPC-WJEH news director
Dick Thomas was a reporter for
the Tribune on Dec. 15, 1967. and
Thomas said he's erase&lt;:! memo· ·
ries of that night from his mind.
What remains was printed ln the
Extra edition of the papers in the
early morning hours of the next
day.
The greatest recollections of
the night were the temperature,
around 27 degrees. and disbelief.
"All the way up there (to the
bridge site) I kept looking for the
two towers ," Thomas said, ad·
ding he tried to Imagine how the
collapse could have happened.
'Reporters sometimes ·Show
emotions, after all they're just
human. Wheeler said you have tb
remove yourself In a disaster
sitbation to !I• your job. "If you
don '~ you get too involved ."
Yet. local repoqers were In·
valved emotionally
they
couldn't help It, there were
friends lost to that cold river on
Dec.. i 5, 1967. But the news staff
remained detached enough to do
their job.
Some recall the night easily ,
others choose to block it out just !Ike everyone else In town.

ROOKIE REPORTER- Dick Wheeler had been wlth ·Unlted
Press International for six months at the time of the Silver Bridge ·
collapse. Here, poised behind an old Royal, typewriter, Wheeler
hammered out copy at the Tribune office. (Tribune file photo)

•

�l

Page- B-2 - Sunday Times-Sentinel

Dec~mber

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

GALLIPOLIS - Instrumental
·l)'luslc department Christmas
c;:'onccrt of Galli a Academy High
School will be presented Sunday.
.~: 30 p.m. in the sc hool audiiO·
oium. Concert·a naholiday music
will be presented. The concert is
Cree and open to the public .

GALLIPOLIS - Rlverby writers meet Monday, 7 p.m ..
French Ar t Co lony. Meetings
open to anyone who is interested
tn writing.
ALFRED -The Orange Town.
ship Trustees will meet in special
session Monday . 7 p.m. at the
home of Dorothy Calaway, clerk.
· REEDSV ILLE -The Eastern
Local Board of Ed ucatio n will
meet in specia l session Monday,
7 p.m at the high school.

PLATFORM - Guyan Valley
BEDFORD - The Bedford
Missionary Baptist Churc h at Township Trustees will meet in
Platform wll ha v ethe Pa thfind · · regular session. 7 p.m. Monday
~rs Quartet in services, Sunday. 7
at the town hal!.
e.m .'
I
RACINE - The Board of
c GALLPOLlS - Ga llia County Public Altars will meet Monday
Riding Clu b Christmas dinner at 7 p.m. a1 the Shri ne Park
and mont hly meeting, Sunday. 1 building in Racine.
p.m ., Clay Townshlp building.
Bring covered dish . If children
MIDDLEPORT - Heath \!nl·
will be attendi ng, contact Kenny ted Methodist Women will meet
4t 256-6608 before Saturday.
Monday at the home of Pauline
•'
Horton, 7:30p. m .
.
:- CROWN CITY - The Grubb
I&gt; am ily Sl ngers will be a t Bi~
TUESDAY
F!.&gt;ur Churc h. Sunday. 7:30p.m.
RAC INE - Regular meeting
of the Southern Loca l School
• GALLJPOLlS - AAUW holi - Bard · will be held Tuesday at 7
day tasting party, Sunday , 7 p.m. at the high sc hool ca feteria .
p.m ., at the French Art Colony.
Th e Grande Cho rale will
POMERO Y - Xi Gamma Mu
perform. ·
Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will meet Tuesday at the
. RIO GRA!\DE - . Si mpson home of Anne Chapman , High
Cl'hapel United Methodist Church St .. 7i p:m. Members are to take
\fill present the ca ntata, A Song gifts wra pped in white paper and
~as Born. Sunday, 10;30 a. m.
a red bow.

.

-

• POMEROY - Annual open
ljouse of the Meigs Mu seum will
P" held this weekend, 1 to 4:30
1,1.m. each day. Theme Is a
Victorian Ch ristmas .
:·' RACiNE - A dance recital by
Barbara's Sc hool of Dance enWiled "Tis the Season" will be
presen ted at 4: 30 Sunday a t the
Southern Junior High School.

MIDDLEPORT - A special
meeting of Middle port Lodge363,
F'&amp;AM will be held Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the hail . Work in the
fellowcraft degree wiJJ be exe m plified. Refreshme nts will be
served.

RACIN E - Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM will mee t in special
session Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. for
the purpose of installi ng new
i
.
.· CHESTER - T he Chester officers. A fis h-fr y will follow . All
Sow hunters awards banquet and · masons are invited .
Ol:lris tm as part y will be .held
Sunday !tod ay) a t 1:30 a t the
MIDDLEPORT - Group II of
fndoor range. Mem bers a nd the ir the Middleport Prsesbyterian
Camilics t ake a covered dish Church will meet Tuesday at the
di nner.
churc h, 7:30 p.m . Mrs. Harry
Moore will have the Chri stmas
MONDAY
program a nd the tha nk offering
MERCERVILLE - Ha nnan
will be taken. In lieu of a gift
Trace PTi\ meets Mond ay, 6:30 exc hange, mcmbet·s wiH coin p.m .. Chris tma s program at 7 tribute to a needy family . Mrs.
Moore , Kathryn Hysell , and Mrs .
P:1n
'&gt;
Eddie Burkett will be ho stesses .
Gi\ LLIPOLJS - St. Peter's
Concert
Episcopal Churc hwome n meet
RAC INE - Sou thern Hi gh
Monday, noon . Speaker Ja mi e
Choi r and Ba nd will
School
Burnell of the Gallia County
present a comb ined concert on
SlJeriff's Department.
Su nday at 2 p.m . at the sc hool.

"

13, 1987

Behrent .
Caldwell

U.S. Capitol
program on Thursday at 7

The U.S. Capitol was designed
by Dr. William Thornton, an
amateur architecl. According to
the World Almanac. he s ubmitted his plan In 1773, receivJng $500
and a ci ty Jot as compensation.
The present Senate and House
wings and the iron dome were
designed and constructed ln 1807
under the dlrectlo~ of Benjamin
H. Latrobe,

Photo, fund raiser
Student art projects will also be
mas
SALISBURY - Salisbury Eleon display. The public ls welcome
p.m. at the Racine First Baptist
mentary
students may pick .up
to attend.
. Church. Everyone Is welcome to
their
pictures
and fund raiser gift
attend.
items at the school on· Monday
Shoo I
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. If you are
POMEROY - The Ke n Ams- Bloodmobile
bary.Chapter of the Izaak Walton
POMEROY -The Red Cross unable to pick up the items on
Lteague Is spons6ring muzzleBloodmobile will be at the Senior Monday you may pick them up at
loading shoots on Sundays start· ·Citizens Ce.n ter In Pomeroy on the school any daY. untii2.Pleas
Ing Dec. 13 and continuing
Wednesday from l to 5: 30 p.m. ca ll the school at 992-3404 If you
have any questions. All. oa ck·
·through Jan . 3. All shoots,
Blood is urgently needed.
orders ha ve arrived.
consisting of free hand and bench
rest events at various dista nces,
begin at 1 p.m . Open sites and ,--'~--------------------1----------­
scopes will not be shot in the
same category. Various prizes of
0
meats and money will be
Unfold for any occasion:
awarded.
Soft. earthy Harmony~ Series colors blend well with
Planned parenthood
any decor and create an inviting atmosphere for
POMEROY - Planned Par·
entertaining. relaxing, playing games. hobbies or any
w .
e nthood of Southeast Ohio patient
occasion. Built with Samsonite durability . Harmony
services offices will close Dec. 23
is ready when you are.
at 5 p.m. in observance of the
• Large 40" diameter table
holidays. Offices will reopen on
FOR
•
Comfortable pillow seat
Jan. 4 at 8:30a.m.
• Warm earthtone
decorator color vinyls
Sorority meetingFURNITuRE ·
or fabric
MIDDLEPORT - Xi Gamma
• Chip and scratch
Epsilon Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi
resistant baked enamel
Sorority, wll meet at the home of
Reg, 5187.00
finish
P hyll is Hackett , sponsor, at 6:30
• Padded table top
p.m. on Tuesday for a Christmas
party. Membe rs are reminded to
take a gift as well as an ornament
for the exchange.

r··----·-·""·1
• Leather II
~

0 'te.'
S amsom

Forecast.

1

I

$139

Eagles meeting
POMEROY Fraternal
Order of the Eagles Ladit's
Auxiliary 2171 will met Tuesday
at 7 p.m at the hall . There wiJI be
election of a vice president.
Members are reminded to take
items for th e Christmas baskets.
Dance program
RACINE - Barbara's School
of Da nce, Syracuse, will present
a Christmas recital this Sunday,
starting a t 4:30p.m., at Southern
,Junior High School in Racine. A
variety of tap and novelty
numbers will be featured . The
public is welcome to attend. . ·

1

?

Plunce into this Winter's fashions in our

pion&amp;• loathor boots. In uotle eolors,
with suptrb dotoilin&amp;. And !01thor11 soft
as a'pony's nose.

1
'
u·
,
Fr~=;~::t. 1 es :\T.•e:Z
~
t

CHRISTMAS
EVE
DELIVERY .

~

FURNITURE SHOWCASE

GALLIA COUNTY
MONDAY: Geiger, 10.10: 15;
Ewlngton, 10:20-10: 30; Vinton,
11 -11:30; Dyer (Vinton), 11:3511: 45; Gallia Christian School,
1-2: 30; Kerr (P.O.), Bidwell,
4:15·4:35; Old School , 4:45-4:35;
Nolans, 5: 15-5: 35; Carl Phillips,
5:45·6:00; W!Uiam Henry, 6:02·
6: 15; Cochrans (Adamsv!Ue),
6: 20-6: 45; Deer Creek, 6: (15-7: 10;
Dear Creek Church, 7:15-7: 30;
Rio Grande Estates, 7: 45-8:30
TUESDAY: Porter, 1:30-1: 50;
Eno, 2:00-2:20; Africa Road,
2: 25-2: 40; Kyger (Sisson), 2: 45·
2:55; Kyger (Rope). 2:57-3:07;
Roush Lane I, 3:15-3: 30; Roush
Lane IJ, 3: 35-4:00; supper, 4:004:30: Cheshire (old school),
4:40-5 : 35; Addison (townshouse). 5:45-6: 00; Georges Creek
(Kelly Dr. ), 6: 10-6: 40; Kanauga
5th Ave., 6:50-7: 10; Foster's
Mobile Home Park, Rt. 7, 7:157: 40; K&amp;K Trailer Park, Rt . 7,
7: 45-8; 05
THURSDAY: Valley View
Monnonite Fellowship, 2:303: 00; Mudsock . 3: 15-4: 00; Patriot Post Office, 4: 15-4 :40; Cad·
mus (old school). 5:00-5:30;
Gallia (old school), 5:45-6: 10;

•

Corner of Third &amp; Olive- 446-3046 -

Sehoul program
RACINE - Racine Elementary School will presen t a Christ-

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Let Civic Savings turn you
into a cheerful giver
this holiday season with our

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Mr. &amp; Mrs. Peler H. Behrent
Groomsmen were Bas II Duncan,
Eric Weigandt, a nd Tom Cald·
well and David Caldwell, broth·
ers of the bride.
A reception follow ~ d .the ce·
remony at the Columbus Ath letic

Ce nierpoint, 6: 25-6: 50; Center·
ville. 7:00-7: 45; Hatchers (Harrisburg), 8:00-8: 15
FRIDAY: Fast Stop, 1:00-1: 15;
Banes, ·1: 20-1: 30; Youngs, 1: 35·
1:45; Franklin (Clay Ch. ). 1:552: 1tr, Myers-2 18, 2: 20·2 : 35;
Church's Store (218 ), 2:45-3: 15;
Mercerville (Church), 3:20-3: 45;
Swain's Store. 4:00-4: 15; s upper,
4: 30-5: 00; Crown City, 5: 05-6: 05;
Grace Shafer ( HT RD) , 6: 206:35; Ohio Townhouse, 6: 45-7: 10;
Kenny's Carryout, ' 7: 25-7: 50;
Teen's Run, 8:00-88:25.
SATURDAY: Crous e beck,
10:00-10: 30; Gallla Metro Estates: Office, 10: 45-Jl: 15; tHIII,
11: 20-12: 00; lunch, 12:00-12: 30;
Allee, 1:00-1: 30; Vinton, 1: 452: 15; Morgan Center Road, 2:20- ·
2: 50; Morgan Center, 3:00-4: 00
MEIGS COUNTY
MONDAY: Carpenter, Laura's Store. 2:55-3: 40; Dexter,
4: 10-4: 40; Danville Church, 5: 15·
6; Rutland Civic Center, 6:457:45.
TUESDAY: Portland Post Of·
!ice, .2: 13-3; Letart Falls, Effie's
Restaurant. 3:30-4: 30; Racine
Bank, 5: 15·6: 15; Syracuse across
from ball field, 6: 30-7; 30.

· NOW

Cl ub.
The bride graduated from
Miami University with a degree
in education. She is a second .
grade teacher in the Worthington
City Schools.
The groom graduated from
Indiana University with a degree
in business. He Is a Commercial
Loan officer fo r the Huntington
Bank.
The coup ! ~ is residing in Upper
Ar lington.

SJ9 9
1/2 Carat
S399
1 Carat • S799
YELLOW 01 WHITl GOLD
STYLE
lOK

•

•

••

.•

-1

l

Includes All
"

f*Sweaters' *Blouses
.
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!

. BUY ANY SWEATER, BlOUS,Ef'~~Q,~E/ i'ii];
· SLIP OR GOWN AT REGULAR .PRICE~ yk. ;
THEN CHOOSE ANY SECbNO l1'EM'i~TH~iti!
SAME CATEGORY OF EQOALVALUEAND s!t

''•
••
'

. Save

1/2 Ott~i~k:~~~icl~~,ii~i~;l~[:
.

·~··

.... ''

:·:-:: '·"·"·"~·=·· '··-~:-':-:-

Hurry{ Sale Ends Sunday, Dec. 13th
POINT PLEASANT
2407 Jackson Ave.

_., .. 1;.6.JS5

CARPET CLEANING

With Purchase Through
Sunday, Dec. 13th qnly!

Uail,t JO-IJ p.m., Sun. 1-6 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS
330 Second Ave .

4J6-H707

l&gt;ail.\ •J.H, Sun. f 2· .\O.:; \II

S17.'-,~.
·· Doc. 25. 1987

•$7795

Pll lOOM • TWO lOOMS 01 MOll"

I

...---F,URNITURE CLEANING---,

Includes· ~II preconditioning,
Prespot,ting &amp; Furniture
Moving, if ne•dtd. · .

SAfE, FOR ALL CARPETS
Only the professional·
......
I tr eng th t ru~a-mount
· syn• can dean them so
tiMtlf t ..y STAY CLEAN!

-;~==~,
Our y«&lt;l ..,..

Living Roo m. Dining
Ro o m, 3 B•drooml
•nd Hall

Sofa &amp; Chair ...................... '64.95
Sofa &amp; Love Seat ........ .... ... '7.4 .95 '
Sofa, Love Seat &amp; Chair ...... ' 84 .95

Dries faster than
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•

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SPECIAL

DOWI wild..., ,

bot"' """

ott. ........._

"anr
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••"" jolo,lt wil bo trtght.-,
- 111&lt;1 "••..,"" 1m •

::0,'"!::

"""••r

SERVING ALL OF
GALLIA-MASON-MEIG S

ADVANCED
CARPET CLEANING SERVICE
446-3915

.-:..,
VIC..'. ·
a •

.•

•
•'
•

Sapphire
YOUR CHOICE

$119 95

NOW

$12995

J 0

-A

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•RINGS
•EARRINGS
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•.!

'

Ruby

342 2ND
GALLIPOLIS
446-2691
FREE GIFT WlrllU

· To The Clinic Staff
.

PRICED

$629 95

EVERY.
DIAMOND

General, Thoracic and
Vascular Surgeon

off

~ALE

COIN
JEWELRY
· REPLICA

ANTIQUE

2QOfo TO 300fo ON DIAMONDS

ARD BERKICH, M.D.

01

DINNER RING

1/4Carat

13:111&lt;::! !6::&lt;

Is Pleased
To Welcome

~

1f2 CARAT DIAMOND

7 DIAMOND CLUSTERS

HOLZER CLINIC

Merry Christmas Sale

$29500

WE'LL MOUNT YOUR DIAMOND IN EITHER A
NECKLACE OR RING IN YELLOW OR WHITE GOLD.

K

Thanks to all of you for making our THANKSGIVING SPEc.:IAL so fantastic.
THEREFORE, we have decided to continue ·our special until CHRISTMAS for those who
didn't get scheduled in on time for this special savings. AGAIN, MANY THANKS FOR
YOUR CONTINUING CONFIDENCE IN ADVANCED CLEANING.
.
.

until the fifth centuri AD. Rome
ru led most of Western Europe,
the Balkans, the Near East aild ·
North Africa.

Clark ·~.l~~!.z..,StQre· ~

§A.VllN&lt;GS
B

Times-Sentin~I- Page- 8-3

dominating the more civilized
Etruscans In the North and the
Greeks to the South. Under the
Roman Empire. which lasted

Rome emerged as a major
power in 1\aly after 500 B"c.

Bookmobile routes set
for Gallia, Meigs area

STARTING DEC . 14 WE WILL BE OPEN
'TIL B P.M.!

HOURS:
9-6 Oaily

GALLIPOLIS - Gwynn J.
Caldwell, granddaughter of Mrs.
Mildred Thomas of Gallipolis,
and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Cald·
well of Gallipolis, was married to
Peter H. Behrent of Columbus.
The bride Is also the daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Caldwell.
The bride Is the daughter of Dr.
and Mrs. Richard Caldwell.
The wedding took place on
October 17, at First Community
Church. The ceremony was performed · by Pastor Ronald C.
Smith and Rev. William Hensley.
Given In marrlagf by her
father the bride WOf!'! a gown of
white taffeta, designed with a
sweetheart neckline and basque
waist accented with beaded and
sequined alencon lace. The gown
also featured Ren aissa nce
sleeves and scalloped cathedral
train adorned with alencon lace
trim and taffeta rosebuds. Completing the bride's goWn was a
traditional headpiece, accented
with beaded alencon lace and
scalloped edge !Uusion veiling.
The bride carried a bouquet of
gardenias, white roses and
greens.
Maid of honor was Marcia
Blair of Troy, Ohio. Bridesmaids
were Cathleen Pugh, Elizabeth
Shaman, and Jennifer Flowers,
cousin of the bride.
·Best man was Christopher
Bacola ,of Grand Island, N.Y.

Sunday

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

December 13, 1987

'

Co.mmunity calendar
SUNDA\'
CENTENARY - Sisson ram·
lly sings at Centenary United
Christian Church, Sunday, 7
p.m., Rev . Charlie Johnson
preaches .

'·

.

Edward Berkich, M.D., Board Certified General~ Thoracic
and Vascular Surgeon will rejoin the Clinic staff on January 1, 1988, following 14 years in private practice. ~e
has been an integral part of the medical community on ·
the state and local .level for many years. Dr. Berkich re- .
ceived his medical degree from the St.louis Universtty
School of Medicine in 1961. He served an internship at
Cincinnati General Hospital in 1961 and . 1962,
complete,d his surgical residency at the University of
Cincinnati" in 1970. Since that time, Dr. Berkich has been
practicing in the Gallipolis, Pt. Pleasant and surrounding
.areas.
Patients who have an appointment with Dr. 'Berkich at his
Hillcrest location after January 1, '1988, should keep their
appolntment .dat• and time at his n•w office·in the Surgery
Department of Holler· Clinic. For more information, call the ·
Holzer Clinic Surgery Department at 446·5225 •

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pnc'" typlully charged by Other stores

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...

�'

.

Page-B-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

SaundersClark

LISA M. SAUNDERS
BRYAN D. CLARK

LookadoWolfe
BIDWELL - Cynthia

·

GALLIPOLIS - Announce·
ment is being made of the
engagement of Lisa Michele
Saunders, dl)ughter of Dan and
Karen Beam , and Dale H.
Saunders, Gallipolis, and Bryan
Dale Clark, son of Dale and Joyce
Clark, Ironton. Miss Saunders Is
the granddaughter of James B.
and Eleanor Thomas, Pomeroy,
and Ruth Burrows, Sarasota,
Fla:
Miss Saunders is a graduate of
Gallla Academy High School,
and attends Ohio University.
Clark graduated from Ironton
High School, and also attends
Ohio University. ·
Wedding plans are Incomplete.

Ebersbach- Grate
CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs.
Wlllard Ebersbach of Chester
. are announcing the engagement
· and appr~chlng marriage of
: their daughter, Rebecca Lynn
Ebersbach, to Ron Grate, son of
• Mf. and Mrs. George Grate,
.J
. Rutland.
.• Miss Ebers bach Is employed at
K-Mart In Gallipolis. Grate
works at Krogers In Pomeroy.
The open church wedding will

December ·13, 1987

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

be held on Dec. 27 at 7 p.m. at the
Living Word Church of God at
Chester .. A reception will follow
In the church basement.

Smith-Mayo

and Communit y Co llege with a
bachelor's degree in education.
She Is em ployed at Vinton
Elementary School.
Wolfe is a graduate from

CDx anniversary to be noted .

Eastern High School. He gradu ated from Hocking Technical
College In recreational w!!dl!fe.
He is employed at Mountaineer
Pow.i!r Plant, New Haven. W.Va.

CROWN CITY Ranford
(Pete) and Ella Mae (Slone ) Cox
of Rt. 2, Box 245-B, Crown City,
will be observing their 40th
wedding anniversary. They were
married by the Rev . . Charles
Lusher at his home In Merce rville, Ohio, December 17, 1947.
· · They are the parents of six ·
• children, Mrs. Gearld (Wanda)
Cox of Northup, Ohio, Mrs.
• Ronald (Donna) W&lt;;~ugh, RandY. .
' and Lorer Cox, all of Rt . 1, Crown
• City, Mrs. Marvin (Marsha)

Ann
Roberts Lookado, of Rt. 3 ·Box
155, Bid we II , a nd WII II am Ke 1th I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
· Wolfe, of 36573 Texas Rd , Pome- I
roy, announce their engagement
and upcoming wedding.
Lookad~ Is the daughter of Ray
Roberts , of Wellston, and Joanne
Roberts, or Bidwell. Wolfe Is the
son o.f Hubert and Judy Wolle.
•services include:
Texas Road, Pomeroy.
Birth Control; V.D. Scr.. ning;
The wedding will take place on.
Cancer Scr•ning; pregnancy
Dec. 20, at the bride's home In
tests; education and counseling
Bidwell, presided over by Rev.
Chet Lemley.
for individuals and couples.
Lookado Is a graduate of North
Ga)Ua High School . She gradu•Sliding fee scale. No one refused services because of .
ated from Rio .Grande College

Your privacy is respected
Your questions answered

CYNTHIA A. LOOKADO
WILLIAM K. WOLFE

PT. PLEASANT - Mr. and
Mrs . Wa!iace A. Smith .Jr., of Pt.
Pleasant, W.Va., announce the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter Venitta Mar ie Smith, to Herman
Alexander Ma yo, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Mayo Sr. of Bidwell.
Miss Smith graduated from Pt.
P leasant High School and is
employed by Ohio Va lley E lectric Corporation at the Kyger
Creek Plant.
Mayo gra dua1ed from Rio
Grande Co!iege and is employed
by Community Action Agency.
The open church wedding will
take place Jan. I. at 2:30p.m., at
Trinity Unit ed Methodis t
Church. A reception will follow in
the church social r.oom.

Cooks note anniversary

Wickline Jr. of Eureka· Star
Route, Gallipolis, and Mrs . Da·
nlel I Linda) Srn!tho!Milton, Fla.
Hanford is the son of the late
James Earl and Almira (Lay ne)
Cox. Ella Mae Is the daughter of
Shelly 0. and the late Narle
(Q ueen) Slone.
They are the grandparents of
16 grandchildren and one great
grandson. A great granddaugh·
ter Is deceased. There will be no
formal celebra.tion of the
anniversary.

NORTH MANCHESTER, Ohio Faith Baptist Church. He Is an
- Randall and Betty Cook employee of the North Manchesobserved their 25th wedding ter Post Otrlce.
anniversary on Oct. 27.
The couple married on Oct. 27.
1962 at Community Center ·
Church in Newberry, Calif., by
The Soviet Union covers 11
the Rev . E., B. Claud Jr.
time zones. Its standard time Is
The are the parents of Jeff and one hour ahead of the ususal zone
Greg Cook and are members or designation.
·
ft!llOSli!Oil!Oil =&gt;I !Oill:S""'' lOll M M&gt;=O'll:S""''S:Sl=:lil""'' l:SM lOlllOll_,

Studio
39

take place at 2:30p.m. on Dec. 27
at the First Baptist Church in
Slstersv!lle, W.Va.
Ms. Berkh!mer a !tends East·
ern High School where she Is
active In ihe National Honor
Society, Varsity E Club, and the
Student CounciL
Bissell, an Eastern graduate,
Is serving in the U.S. Army,
stationed at Fort Hood, Texas.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

•

OF' SOUTHEAST OHIO

POMEROY
236· E. Main St.
Open 8:30 to 5:00

f

...

sTATE sT.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
(Next to Brift!lny's)

2 1

RANDALL and BETTY COOK

GAlliPOliS
414 St&lt;onl Ave. 2nd floor

FOR

OPEN TODAY 12-5

Monday-Friday

Except · Wednesday
Closed

446-0166 Mon.-Sat.
ClOSED THURSDAY

SIGN UP SUNDAY AFTERNOON TO
WIN A MYSTERY PRIZE

Also: Jackson, Chesapeake, Athens, Chillicothe, Logan

BOYS &amp; GIRLS WINTER
JACKETS &amp; COATS SALE PRICED

A special holiday offer from Hallmark!

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

SALE

FREE!!
Studio
OPEN 9:30-8:00
EVERY DAY
TIL CHRISTMAS
CLOSED SUNDAY

and...

39
STATE ST.
OHIO

Robes by
Christian Dior
Miss Elaine
.Gilligan O'malley
Vanity Fair

VENITTA M. SMITH
HERMAN A. MAYO

StoverMaynard

~

,

.

•

'

s~~'

j

•.

Bull's eye?
A common misconception,
"The Second Kids' World AI·
manac," reports Is that bulls see.
red . Bulls are color blind, as are .
most animals. A bull charges
when he sees a moving object.
such as a toreador's cape.

All tortlses and terrapins can
also be called turtles, reports
"The Second Kids' World Almanac." Tortoises 11\le on land
all the time, while terrapins are
edible freshwater turtles . Ail
other fresh:vater and saltwater
species are called turtles.

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Mercury
Mercury, the nearest to the
sun, is the seecond smallest of the
nine planets in the sola r system .
Its diameter. acco rding to the
World Almanac, is 3,000 miles.
Its mean distance from the sun Is
36 million miles.

1 ~11
=--=-~

Blood pressure

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$79.95

It's a one-of-a·k'ind, Ginger Bear design cookie tin. You can
pack it up with home-baKed goodies or any appropriate gift.
This ·colorful tin measures 8"x6"x3Va" deep. Quantities are
limited. Our Christmas Cookie Tin is available only at the
Hallmark stores listed in this ad.

.

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___

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$269. 95

•

Heart In San
Torl;' Bennett.
Award as Best

.__

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~ONTH

Bette and Lily too .
HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) - The •
plot or the new Disney comedy
"Big Business" makes It easy for
the studio to give both stars top
billing, si nce comedians Bette
Midler and L!lyTomlln each play
twin sisters .
\

--

BOOKCASE

Headboard

High blood pressure Increases
the r isk of heart attack. kidney
failu re, and congestive hea rt
failure.
" I Left My
Francisco," by
won a Grammy
Record in 1962.

=

~·~--

When yqu care enough to send the very best

90 DAYS·
SAME AS CASH .,..,,,..,
'FINANCING
AVAILAB Lfi!

OHIO
Gallipolis
Full House of Cards

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
RUTLAND
742·2211

Silver Bridge Plaza
446-7330 ;,

APPALCHIAN
WATERBEDS . . ,.,. .
FACTORY OUTLET

. 2416 Jackson Ave ·• Point Pleasant,WV.

Home of the Grate Boys, Whtn You Get Great Buys

{11987 Hallmark Cards, Inc.

I·
l

SALE GOOD TODAY THRU SAT., DEC. 19

Beautiful
Lingerie

Turtles

1
1

BUY 1 PR. OF LANA CREATIONS
FASHION EARRINGS AT REG. PRICE
GET 2ND PR. OF EQUAL .VALUE

BEGINNING 14 OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 8
PETE and ELLA MAE COX

LETART - Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Stover. Letart, are
announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Melissa June Stover,
to Sammy Maynard, Jr., son of
Mr. an(} Ms. Sammy Maynard,
Wilkesville.
Miss Stover Is a graduate of
Southern High School.
Maynard graduated from Vinton County High School.
A private wedding ceremony
will be held on Dec. 22. The
couple will reside in Letart.

""'''I

LANA CREATIONS

inability to pay.

Berkhimer- Bissell

REEDSVILLE -Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Jackson are announcing
the engagement and approach·
ing marriage of their daughter,
Amy Jo Berkhimer, to Royce
Alan Bissell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas B!sse!i, Tuppers Plains.
The
church wedding w!l!

"
Ohio-Point
Pleasant, W. Va.

December 13, 1987

304-675-4500

OPEN MON. • FRI.
10·8P.M.
SAT. 10·6 P.M.
SUN. 1·5 P.M.

•

�Page-B-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

~mber

Thompson-McDaniel
POINT PLEASANT - Kat hleen Ann McDaniel a11d Thorpas
Dale Thompson exchanged wedding vows in a double-ring
ceremony at the Sacred Heart
Church, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
on Sept. 19. The Rev . John
McGinnity ortlclated.
. The bride Is the daughter of
Morgan and Carol McDaniel,
Point Pleasant, and the groom Is
the son of Kenneth and Donna
Thompsen, Letart, W.Va.
Music was by Elizabeth
Simms, organist, and Mark
Thompson, brother of the groom,
soloist. .
Boston fern and white baby's
breath In fireside baskets decorated the altar area of the
church. Teal colored candles
surrounded by baby's breath
were used in the windows.
Given in marriage by her
.father, the bride was wore a
white taffeta gown fashioned
with a sabrlna neckllne of scalHANSEN and PAMELA (RIEBEL) BUCKLEY
loped, beaded alencon lace in a
floral motif. Long tapered
sleeves, sheer at the shoulder,
were also made of taffeta and
POMEROY - Pamela Dawn of pink and burgundy silk roses alencoh with pearl strands outlining the Intricate detall ofthe lace.
Riebel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. and tri-gold bracelets, gifts of the
Beaded alencon lace inlays were
John Riebel, Sr., and Hansen bride.
Flower girls were Jessica on the skirt front. At the back, a
Bryce Buckley, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Buckley, Pomeroy, Watson, Little Hocking, brlde's - double candy box bow at the
were united in marriage on Ocl. cousln, and Juli Bailey, Pome- waist topped the chapel length
10 at the Mullen-Memorial Bap- roy, groom's cousin, in pink satin taffeta train which had beaded
tist Church in Belpre.
long dresses featuring back bows alencon Inlays and hemmed In a
The Rev. Mark McClung, and ruffles in burgundy and pink scalloped alencon borde.r.
Her headpiece, a V shaped
former pastor of the Middleport and halos of miniature roses.
band,
featured pearl sprays and
First Baptist Church, performed They carried white · wicker
crystal loops. An illusion pout
the double-ring candlelight ce- baskets of pink rose J?etals.
remony. Music was by Sharon
Chris Ball, Pomeroy, nephew rose above the crown and layers
surrounded the bride's head. She
Hawley , organist and vocalist, of the . groom, was ring bearer;
and Chris Rouse, pia!I!St.
Kevin Buckley, Pomeroy, was carried a cascade of roses,
An archway decorated with best man for his brother, and the
pink and burgundy roses with ivy groomsmen were Scott Robinett,
flanked by two seven branch Lancaster, the groom's cousin;
candelabra, a kneeling bench, John Riebel, Jr .. brother of the
palms 11nd two large fern deco- bride and Charles Massar. The
rated the a)tar. Ughted aisle groom wore a charcoal tuxedo.
candelabra with bows marked His attendants wore dauphin
the family pews.
gray accessorized in the wedding
Escorted to the altar by her colors. All wore pink rose
father, the bride wore a taffeta boutonnieres.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Kagown fashioned with a high
Mrs. r'Riebel wore a pink floor thryn ElizabE!th Krause · and
beaded lace collar, illusion yoke, length gown, and Mrs. Buckley,a David Gerard Marcinko were
fitted sweetheart bodice and mauve tea length dress. Both married in a private ceremony at
basque waist styled with reem- wore pink and' burgundy silk rose MarysvUJe on Nov. 27.
broldered alencon lace accents corsages. Jo Ann Watson, Belwith seed pearls and sequins. pre, aunt of the bride, registered
p;;;:~o~~:b~~ ~~~gJ:;:edm~h~~
Double puff tops crowned the guests.
sheer fitted sleeves and a scalA reception followed In the Parrott.
loped edge of aleccon lace church fellowship room. Jocelyn
The bride is the daughter of
enclrclerd the full skirt and the Bailey, groom's aunt, baked the
Mr.
and Mrs. Charles H. Krause,
chapel lengt)l train which was three-tiered fountain cake with
Marysville,
and the groom is the
adorned with beaded lace.
stairways holding replicas of the
son
of
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert S.
The bride's tiered flngertrip bridal party extending to four
Marcinko,
Tuppers
Plains.
veil and blusher of Illusion fell side cakes and inscribed heart. from a lace tiara crown, a gift of shaped cakes . Mrs. Bailey,
They reside at 133A Greenwood
her maternal grandmothers. She Tammy Boyer, Charlotte ·Han- Blvd. , Marysville.
carried a cascade arrangement ning, Vicki Morton and Melissa
. The bride, a graduate of
of pink and burgundy sllk roses , McElfresh, cousins, served.
Eve Watson, Amber Watson, Marysville High School, is a data
stephanotis, baby's breath and
ivy attached to a mother-of-pearl Michelle Buckley and ·Kelli Bai- processor with Honda of AmerBible which her parents brought ley, all relatives, passed out pink ica, Inc. at Marysville.
from the Holy Land. The 11i'lde and burgundy rose flowers made
Marcinko graduated from
wore diamond earrings, a gift of by the Busy Bees 4-H Club.
Eastern High School and is an
The couple Is residing at 36767 automobile painter, also emthe groom; pearl earrings, a gift
from her parents, and an eme- Texas Road, Pomeroy.
ployed with Honda at Marysville.
rald ring borrowed from her
aunt.
Robin Pitzer, Long Bottom,
A Shop To Mcc1
was maid of honor. She wore a
floor-length gown of burgundy
The Need, Of
satin with a sweetheart neckline,
The Mother-To-Be
puffed sleeves and a contrasting
train of pink and burgundy. In
Mattmitr ftJJiliom /'rom
pink satin of identical style were
l.irtgtrit Tc' fintr OrrncJ
the bridesmaids, Tammy Morfi1r .\"pfciul Urco!liom.
ton, Belpre, cousin of the bride;
ltt/•nt Oothing 0-U Mtmrhs
Lori Louks of Long Bottom, and
Melissa Scarbrough, Tuppers
230 Bro~dway St .. Jackson 286-2559
Plains. They wore flower combs
Mondor l Fridar 9&lt;30 til loOO p.m.
In their hair and carried lighted
lues.,
Wed., lhur. I lat. 9o30 ,;J SolO p.m.
hurricane lamps featuring rings

Buckley-Riebel

baby's breath, llllles, Ivy al)d
pearls.
·
Peggy McDaniel of Ft. :rhomas, Ky. was the matron of
honor, and the bridesmaids were
Lori Powell, Racine, Kathy
Poore, Knoxville, Tenn., and
Patty McDaniel, Point Pleasant,
. W.Va. Mindy McDaniel of West
Columbia was !be flower girl.
They wore tea length gown~ of
taffeta lace In teal blue fashlohed
wth bateau necklines and long
sleeves and carried floral bouquets In teal and sliver.
Mark Thompson, . Galllpolls "
Ferry, brother of the groom, was
best man, and the ushers were
Tim Thompson, Middleport,
Matthew Thompson; Letart,
W.Va., Joe Thompson, Appie
Grove, W.Va., all brothers of the
groom were the ushers, and the
rlngbearerswereJoshua Thompson, Middleport, nephew of the
groom, and Matthew McDaniel,
Cincinnati, nephew of the bride.
The bride's mother wore a
silver grey ensemble while the
groom's mother was in a rose
colored two piece dress. Both
wore rose corsages. Jon! Latlff
registered the guests.
A reception honoring the couple was served at the American
Legion Post Home In Point
Pleasant. The tiered wedding
cake featured bouquets of silk
teal and white roses with baby's
breath.
They now reside In Point
Pleasant.
The bride Is a Tegts.tered
nursing at Holzer Medical Ceo. ter.- :rhe groom Is self-employed
with Buck Stoves of Barboursville, W.Va.

• By BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY- It's beginning to
]ook a lot like Christmas in the
Big Bend area
there are some
nice decorations
aro und this
year.
I do .want to
remind -.Middleport residents
that judging of the annual home
decorating contest in thai community will take place this
Wed!1esday beginning at 6 p.m.
The contest is sponsored by the
Middleport Garden Club and the
Middleport Amateur Gardeners.
There is no registration required but, of course,.you'll have
to light up Wednesday in order to
be considered.
Out of town judges wlll select
tM best overall; . the best religious theme, and the best decorated door or window. There will
be a first place award in each
category and winners will get
large blue ribbons which can be
displayed on t~e winning homes.
Up Racine way. the deadline
for entering the home decorating
contest there - and Within a
radfus of three mlles - is
Tue~day. There will be first,
second and third place winners
seleeted in both the religious and
non-religious categories.
The contest is sponsored by the
Racine Merchants Association
and you ca n register at the
Racine Department Store and
the VIllage Cut Rate ' Store.
Judging will start al 6:30p .m. on
Dec. 19.

THOMAS and KATHLEEN (MCDANIEL) THOMPSON

Marion Ebersbach who takes
' uch an active role in the
operation of the American Red
. Cross Bloodmobile visits to
Meigs County reports that blood
is urgently needed.
The next vJslt of a unit will be
from 1 to 5:30p.m. Wednesday at
the Meigs Senior Citizens Center
in Pomeroy . Besides the satisfaction of knowing they've helped
someone, donors at this visit will
be given certificates for · two
Chi~ken Little sandwiches at
Craw's Famlly Restaurant..

.... :

.

oilers !rom Cabtev1sion

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But the best thing about Shoney's Shrimp Dinners is the littl e ,;urprise that
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PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.

Ollcr valid 1n areas ser\led ·by Ca b leYJ!IOn bffer e xp 1res December 23 : 1987

'

•
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-

S. L. Meredith, Pomeroy Pike.
is the winner of the TimesSentinel Dec . 6 mystery farm
contest. There were six correct
entries - all identifying the
farm of the late Pe.i-ry Riggs on
the Flatwoods Road. Meredith
was selected by lottery to receive
the $5 prize since all six entries '
w€-re correc1.
·
Arter many years of being In
Meigs Counly, The Athens Messe nger closed its Pomeroy office
at the end of last week. The office

·Boiled. Fried. Bite-size. Just $499.
FREE CONNECTlONS

The nationa l headquarters of
the Democratic Party is 430
South Capitol St reet SE , Washington . DC, 20003. . \

It's beginning to look
a lot like Christmas

Share your
holiday
with a
needy
child.

Donate a new toy (worth ssm or more)
and rece•ve one ol the lollow1 nQ FREE

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page 8-7

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

Beat of the Bend

MarcinkoKrause

Toys
for
Tots

13. 1987

'

was located in the Ewing building on West Secopd St. for abOut
the past 25 years or so. The
Messenger staff member, Barb
Chapman, has accepted employ ment with the Department of•
Human Services In Middleport. Ruth Powers, librarian, reports that a story hour Is being
held at 6:30 p.m . each Tuesday
evening at the Pomeroy Library.
On hand to present crafts.as well
as stories Is Norma Hawthorne.
Delores Aeiker of 1669 Lincoln
Heights just continues to keep
busy hi helping others -despite
the fact that she has had personal
health problems, such an open
heart surgery. Delores refuses to
give in to the aches and pains and
keeps busy giving others a
helping hand. It may come as a
big surprise, Delores, but your
friend s do appreciate and love
you.
And a couple of notes of thanks
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Orange Fire Department Jove
the support you gave them for
their annual turkey dinner held
on Nov. 14. The turnout was
tremendous and the donations
you gave are greatly
appreciated.
And Elizabeth and Coonie
Ohlinger, long-time residents of
Pomeroy, appreciated so much
the girts, cards and flowers you
sent for their golden wedding
anniversary.
Thank you! I keep tellin' 'em
down at the office- you are nice!

Aljl'fnOttJetl 1967 &amp;- t9B8

SEIKO
QUARTZ QUALITY WATCHES

200/o Off

.

.

SINCE 1933

Tawney Jewelers
422 Setond Ave., Gallipolis

Hemdale Is resolved.

r--------~---......l-------''------

Make This The Year
That You Wrap Her
Up In Something
Special.

Since I recently mentioned tlie
big boom that takes place between 4 and 4: 30 each day around
the business section of Middleport, I'm informed that the
,underground jolts are also being
-felt in Pomeroy and in other
parts of Middleport. One MiddleJ?Ort resident reports that major
plaster cracks have developed In
his home and others say that
their homes and business build·
lngs are really shaking during
the blasts. It can't be a· good
situation.
Several residents allege that
· the Incidents are the result of
strip mining operations in the
area of Clifton, W. Va. If that be
the· case, then, I repeat , .In this
marvelous age of government
bureaus and agencies, there
must be one somewhere that
should be looking into the com-

For the Best Quality
and Belt Buy for
1our Fur 'Need•

INGELS

Shop ...

,

Furniture and Jewelry .

106 N. 2ND
992·2635

MIDDlEPORT
TOLL FREE 1·800-426-5511

~~~~thiq~thin~lawfii~~-i-i•i•~~~-~-~-~-~-~-i~~-~-i•i•i•i-~-~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~iii~iiiiiiiiii~ii~

shoulrl be causing this much
dismay to sb many people .
Don't tell me how organized
you are for Christmas - I can't
deal with it. No wonder you can
keep smiling.

Galllpolls-Actlvities. and menus for the week of Dec. 14
through 18, at the Senior Citizens
Center, 220 Jackson Pike are as
·
follows:
Monday - Ceramics, 9:30-12
noon; Chorus, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday - S.T.O.P .!Physical
Fitness, 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday - Card Games, 1-3
p.m.
Thursday - Bible Study, 11
a.m.; Herbalists, 12:30 p.m.;
Board of Trustees, 1: 30 p.m.
Friday - Art Class, 1-3 p.m.;
Craft Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday - Chicken Tetrazzini,
seasoned green beans, tossed
salad with red cabbage (oil &amp;
vinegar), whole grain bread,
coconut pudding.
Tuesday - Pinto beans with
Ham, 1h bard boiled egg, cornbread, fruit cup with orange
slice.
Wednesday - Pepper steak,
butter noodles, dilled carrots,
whole grain bread, jello cubes
with topping. ·
· Thursday - Baked chicken,
mashed potatoes with vitamin C
a dded, cauliflower with
shredded cheese, whOle grain
bread, chocolate pudding .
Friday - Tuna with Cheese
Sauce, parsley buttered pota,ioes , cole slaw with green
·pepper. whole grain bread, dump
cake.
Choice of coffee, tea, lemonade, milk. or buttermilk with
each meal.

Chaplin's hat, cane sold
LONDON (UP!) - Enter tainer Charlle Chaplin's trademark hat and cane sold at
. auc tion for $148,500 to a Danish
buyer, and an anonymous telephone bidder paid $69,300 for his
boots. .
.,
Dane Jorgen Strecker said
Friday he and two business
partners plan to dlspl~y the hat
and cane . behind glass at the
" Scala" enter tainment cenler,
whic h is now under construction

tape------~-

NEW YORK (UP!) - A · Academy Award-winning fJlm,
Connecticut company says So- Hemdale Films Inc.
viet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
Gene Nichols, aspokesman for
better mail back his video of the Vest ron, said Fr!dly the Connec·
movie "Platoon" or face the tlcut firm contends it has the
conseque nce of entanglement in distribution rights to the produca good.a-otd-fa shioned capitalist lion ·and that Hemdale should
squabble.
never have sold Time Inc.'s
It seems the video of . the Ho_m e Box Office unit the rights
Vietnam war movie that Gorba- _ to market the tapes.
In November, a federal district
chev and his entourage took with
them when they left Washington court in California issued a
after the Washington summit prellmlnary injunction against
meeting is part of a legal dispute HBO prohibiting It from dlstribetween Vestron Inc. and the Los· butlng the tapes until the legal
A
les producer of the dispute between Vestron and

Pre-Christmas

Senior schedule planned
Pomeroy-The Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, has the fol lowing activit les scheduled lor
the week of December 14-18:
Monday - Round and square
dance 1-3. Exercise Class 3:30
p.m.
Tuesday - Ceramics 10-noon,
Chorus to Amerlcare for Christmas Program 1:15
Wednesday - Visit to Christmas
dec;orated house 10:15, Bridge
1-3, bowling 1:30, Bloodmobile
visit 1-5: 30
Thursday - Blood Pressure
clinic 9:30,11:30, visit to Christmas deco~ated home 10:15,
Dance Class 1 p.m .. Exercise
Class 3:30
Th.e annual Christmas dinner
and program -will be Tuesday,
Dec. 22, at noon. Call the Center
at.99~·2161 to make a reservation
for this dinner by Thursday, Dec.
17 at 3:30.
The Senior Nutrition Program
menu for the week is:
Monday - sliced ham, creamed
potatoes, spinach, peach halves
Tuesday - Beef and noodles,
Harvard beets, cole slaw, pudding
·
Wednesday - Liver and onions,
mashed potatoes, carrots, applecrisp
Thursday - Chicken pattie on
bun, baked bea ns, macar oni
salad, fruit
Friday - Chill, cheese sticks,
crackers, pineapple slices, cookie
Choice of beverage available
with each meal.

blood donated. More than 217 .area residents,
including more than 40 Gallla Academy High
School students, came to give "the gift of life."

BLOOD MOBU..E - The Red Cross Blood
Mobile exceeded their quota Thursday, at the
Grace United Methodist Church, with 201 units of

.Gorbachev has the

20% on our entire selection
I new ladies &amp; genls' styles.
week only! We guarantee you
best buys in Gallipolis. 3 years
lin--sto,re warranty.

in the Danish &lt;;apltal.
An anonymous phone bidder
who lost out on the hat and cane
paid $69,300 for Chaplin's boots at
Christie's auction house , whiCh
held I he specialty sale involving
'~o rne 240 items. The buyer was
identified as a Swiss museum but
no other information was
available.
une of the world's greatest
enter talne(s, Chaplin was knigh:'
ted in 1974 and died on Christmas
Day 1977 at the age of 88.

AT

MASON FURNITURE CO.

Prices In Effect Now·Thru Thursday, December 24th
Happy Holiday Savings

ON LA·Z·BOY
RECLINA·ROCKER
Many Styles &amp; Sizes
SALE PRICES!
Come In ~oonl

CURIO
CABINETS
SELECTION OF STYLES AND. FINISHES IS
&gt;iCIJMPI.ETE. BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS!

A t.UNIIIJM DEPOSIT WILL
PUT YOUR FAVORITE

STYlE LAY-AW"'Y FOR
PRE-CHAISTMAS DELIVERY

Desk's At Sale Prices!
NEED A
DESK!·

AI! Living Room Suites Priced To Go!
'11;'1

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COME IN ANO SEE OUR NEwtY
EXPANOEO DESKLINE, ROLL
TOP ANO STUDENT DESKS IH
STOCK . THEY ARE GOING
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At

Super Sat,ings! Priced From

Save Up To 50°/o
On Selected Suites

$99.

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AA.UIIW..

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D8cember 1

W.Va.

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

Sports

MERRY
CHRISTMAS
Extra ~alae•
Extra Sa~lngt
Extri Coupon•

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday

Section
Top-ranked Wildcats
nip Cards at .buzzer
. ~un~an 1!:imcs - j'cntind

December 13, 1987

.-

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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., DEC. 19, 1987

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39(
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·whole niC en •• ~!·••

GRADE A
CHICKEN

Leg Quarters ••••••••
BUCKET
Cube Steak .... ~•.... $199

EYES BALL- Southern defender eyes ball just
throw11 lby Oak HID's Brian Howell (22) In
Friday's SVAC headliner at Racine. The unde·
feated-Tornadoes made It ll•e straight wins witll a

Tom. Turkey ......!•••• 79(
WILSON'S CORN KING $
Bone·less Hams •• !•••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
Chuck Roast •••••••• $129

oz.

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2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
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GAL. .

PARKAY JUMBO SPREAD

Bread ••••••••••••••••• 4/S1
16 OZ. LOAF

4/S1
COUPON

PRICE

CAMPBELL'S

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP

10.::nOz.

3I $1

BLEACH
GAL.

Limit 3 Per Customer
Good Only At Powoll's Svpermorktt
Offer Goool Thru Sat, Dt&lt;. 19,11917

•••

69(

Ice Cream •••••• :~~!L•·· 99 (

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COLE'S

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BATON ROUG.E, La. (UPI) ' Fess Irvin sank a 16-foot jumper
with one second left Saturday to
· lift Louisiana State to a 55-54
-victory over Maryland.
Center Jose Vargas scored a
game-high 16 points for the
Tigers, who improved to 3-0.
Irvin, a sophomore guard, scored
only 6 points In the game.
Senior center Brian Williams
and forward Derrick Lewis
chipped in 10 points each to pace
the Terrapins, who fell to 5-2.
Maryland dominated the first
half-, racing to a 30-19 lead with
1:00 left on a 3-polnt shot by
guard Rudy · Archer, but the
Tigers closed the gap at the half
to 30,24 on two free throws by
forwjjrd Ricky Blanton and a
3-polnt shot by Kyle McKenzie.
LSU slowly cut Into the Terps'
advantage in the second half.
taking the lead 51-50 on a dunk by
Vargas with 2:13 left. Maryland
countered with a 3-polnt basket
by guard Teyon McCoy and a free
throw 10 go ahead 54-51 with less
than a minute remaining.
The Tigers set the stage for
Irvin's game-winning bucket
when McKenzie hit two free
throws with 41 seconds left to
close the margin to 54-53.

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oz.

$4 99

Limit 1 Per Customer

Good Only At Pow Ill's Sup•marktt
Offer Good Thru Sat., Dtc. 19, 1917

COFFEE
3 LB.

CAN •

$599

•

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•
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Back ,
Promotion
Paid
*6521·00

Cash to Our
Customers.

Maryland's John Johnson had
an opportunity to Ice the game
but missed the front end of a
one-and-one at the free -throw
line with 25 seconds left.
Blanton was the only other
Tiger In double figures with 10 ·
points.
,
Vargas grabbed 10 reboul),ds
for the Tigers, who outrebouided
Maryland 30-23. .
·- The smaller Terrapins played
a tenacious defense that limited
the Tigers to 19 field goals in 44
attempts. Maryland converted 23
of 45 attempts from the field .
Loyola (Chicago) 78
Wisconsin 75
MADISON, Wis. (UPI)
Loyola, led by Gerald Hayward's
15 second·half points, held off
several Wisconsin comebacks
Saturday for a 78-75 victory over
the Badgers.
Boston U 89, Ohio U 81
. ATHENS, Ohio (UP!} - Larry
Jones and Drederlck Irving each
scored 28 points to lead Boston
University to an 89·81 victory
over Ohio University Saturday
afternoon.
Trailing 56-53 midway through
the second half. the Terriers, now
5-2, scored 11 unanswered points

ta pull out to a 64-56 lead. then
used near perfect free throw
shOoting down the stretch to
maintain it. BU hit 19 of 20 free
the line during that petlod and 30
of 37 for the game. OU was 20 of
30.
Seton Hall 92
Rutgers 72
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(·UPI) - Mark Bryant scored 27
points and a game-high 13
rebounds and Joyhn Morton
added 25 points Saturday to pace
S~ton Hall to a 92·72 vlqtory over
Rutgers.
•
Bryant scored 18 of his points
and Morton 17 to help Selon Hall
to a 48-34 halftime lead, and the
Pirates led by as much as 70-43
midway through the second half
to Improve to S.l.
Rutgers, 2-3, led 9--4 before
Bryant scored seven ·points durIng a 9-0 burst by Seton Hall.
Rutgers drew within 15·14
before Bryant's 3-point play
ignited an 11-2 run that gave the
Pirates a 26-16 leado The Scarlet
Knights never got closer than
five the rest of the way.
Darren Campbell led the Scarlet Knights with 20 points, Steve
Watson added 11, and Lee Percy
and Anthony Duckett 10 apiece.

GAME WINNER - North Gallla's Keith
Burnette, shooting at right, puts up a three·polnt
shot from the corner 11nd sinks It with nine seconds
remaining to give the Pirates a 77-76 victory over

"visiting Symmes Valley Friday night. Burnette's
three-point basket was one of the two that the Bucs
had for the night. (Times-Sentinel photo by G.
Spencer Os bome}

-&lt;

Tony's Pizza •• ..1~~!·. S1 59 Our Money
SURF DETERGENT

surrendered only 3polnts 10 their
two earlier playoff games.
Appalachian Stale took a 3-0
lead In the firs! quarter on a
31:yard field goal by BJorn
N1ttmo. Moments earlier Nittmo
had missed a 50-yard attempt,
but the Mountaineers got a. first
down on a roughing-the· kicker
penalty. Three plays later Nlttmo gave Appalachian State the
lead.
The Herd. ranked seventh
nationally in scorinl}' with 33.2
points a game, got its offense
moving in the second quarter.
But Its defense was equally
effective. allowing Mar.shall only
33 yards rushing and mtercepting three Fuller passes.

Cleveland, Cincinnati square off in Cleveland

"'
L----------1

FROZEN-Cheese, Pep., Supreme ·

MAXWELL HOUSE

..

yards and one touchdown. His
pass to Mike Barber early In the
second period gave Marshall a
7-3 advantage and started Marshall on a 17-pointquarter. Brian
Mitchell added a field ·goal and
Darby's touchdown run gave tl\e
Herd a 17-3 halftime lead.
Appalachian State, which man·
aged ;only 154 total yards, rebounded In the third period with a
16-yard scoring pass from Bobby
Fuller to Wardell Jefferson . But
Darby scored on a 6-yard run in
the fourth quarter to seal the
victory for Marshall.
The Mountaineers came info
the game ranked first among
I,AA in scoring defense allowing
9.9 points a g~me. They had

LSU edges Maryland, 55-54

l
1-----------;-----~----

.

---

I

:0

IQ

0

.

Herd gains shot at
national .grid crawn .

Notre Dame had a chance to outrebounded lhe Monarchs and
BOONE, N.C. (UP I) - Ron
ROSEMONT, Ill. (UPI) -Rod
win
in regulation after blowing forced them Into repeated turDarby ran for two touchdowns
Strickland scored 22 points and
novers as they improved to 5-1.
Saturday to IEiad Marshall to a
Kevin Edwards scored seven of an eight-point lead In the final
St.
Leo,
a
Dlv.
II
school,
fell
to
3-3.
two
free
5:21.
Robinson
missed
24-10
victory olier Appalachian
his 15 points In overtime Satur--.
throws
with
three
seconds
left.
State
and a berth in the NCAA
day to rally DePaul to a 73-69
Fiorlda
71
allo,wing
DePaul
to
send
the
Div. I-AA championship game.
victory over No . 18 Notre Dame.
Florida Slat~ 48
The Thundering Herd, which
DePaul etased a six-point game into overtime.
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI) Tralllng 59-51 after Robinson's
finished second to the Mountaideficit in the final 79 seconds of
neers in the Southern Conferregulation and took control in jumper with 5:42, DePaul used a Freshman Livingston Chatman
overtime . Strickland, whose lull-court pressure defense to scored 14 points and keyed a 13-4 . ence, improved to 10-4. Appallayup with 26 seconds left in work its way back into the game. run that brake open a close game achlan State closed 11-3.
Marshall plays the winner of ·
regulation tied the score. 63-63. The Demons scored the final stx Saturday. leading 12th-ranked
Florida to a 71-48 victory over
Saturday's semifinal game behit a basket to make it 65·63. points of regulatlon time.
Notre Dame led 36-30 at half· Florida State.
tween Northern Iowa 10-3 and
Edwards added a layup to give
In posting their 24th triumph In
time
and scored seven straight
Northeast Louisiana.' 11-2.' The
the Demons a 67-631ead with 3: 16
points
midway
through
the
sethe
last
25
home
games,
the
championship
Is set for .Idaho
left.
Gators used a strong first-half State's Mlnidome In Pocatello
cond
halt
to
take
a
57-49
lead
But the Fighting Irish came
performance by sophomore cen- Idaho.
'
back to tie the score on a jumpers · behind Rivers and Robinson.
ter
Dwayne
Schintzius
to
grab
a
Marshall's
Tony
Petersen
.
by Keith Robinson, who had 14,
Geo.,Ptowa 78
3S:22
hillftlme
advantage.
After
completed
25
of
36
passes
for
259
and David Rivers, who led all
St. Leo 40
the Seminoles closed to within
scorers with 26.
·
47-41
midway through the second
LANDOVER, Md. (UP I)
Edwards hit a layup and a free
throw with 1: 12left to putDePaul Jaren Jackson scored 16 points - half, Chatman and Vernon Maxahead to stay 70-67 annd added a and helped No. 11 Georgetown to well took control as Florida
jump shot with 15 seconds left to an early 15-polnt burst Soturday, improved to 5-1.
Maxwell scored 11 of his 16
and the Hoyas cruised to a 78-40
push t~e Demons' record to 4·1.
points
In the second half, lnc'ludrout
of
St.
Leo.
Notre Dame, which led by eight
)
ng
a
3-polnter
at the final buzzer.
The
Hoyas
started
slow
but
with 5:21 left , fell to 3-2.

I .... o-.J= ·~

Pepper~ni · •••••••••••••
3.5

94-62 victory. In background are Southern's
Shawn Cunningham ·(32} Oak HIU's Bobby Ward
( 25}. See details on C·2 tod11y.

DePaul rallies to edge Irish

r------~--:-t
I
ar:
::!
I
~
"I
1~·

g
...,v

HORMEL SLICED
16-22 LB. AVG.

Louisville, which hit 64.3 per- each turnover. A 3-polnter by
Payne put Louisville up 72-70
cent from the' fleld in the second
half, was led by Herbert Crook's with 2: 2llelt.
Kentucky hit 4·0f-6 · from the
24 points, followed by Ellison
line
and Ellison made one free
with 20 and Kenny Payne's iO.
throw
In the next minute before
Kentucky improved to 4-0 on
the
6-9
junior hit his final baseline
the season and preserved its
jumper.
perfect mark (4-0) against LouisBowling Green 66
ville in Rupp Arena. Louisville
Wrlght St 65} ·
dropped to 0-2 .
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
Kentucky took control with a
(UP!} -Freshman Derek Kizer
12-0 tear, fueled by back-to-back
hit a short jumper with 15
17-footers by Manuel, for a 29·19
seconds to play, his only points of
lead with 6: 44 left In the first half.
Back-to· back baskets by Chap- the game, to lift Bowling Green to
a 66-65 victory over Wright State
man - a steal and dunk and a
driving layup off the glass - · Saturday afternoon.
Michigan 11~
gave Kentucky Its biggest lead_of
Eastern Michigan 63
the gall)e. 45-29, with 55 seconds
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) left.
Gary
Grant scored 33 points anci
A .3-pointer by Kenny Payne
passed
out 12 assi.§.ts SAJ,urday to
with eight seconds left shaved the
lead
No
. 15 Michigan to· a 115-63
Wildcat~'
lead to 45-32 at
victory
over
Eastern Michigan .
halftime. ,
.
Grant
had
24 points and 11
Louisville opened the second
assists
in·
the
first half, helping
half strong, running off eight
Michigan. 7-1, build a 66-27
stralgh~ to pull within 47-44 with
halftime lead. He hit 8 of 11 field
15: 28 remaining. The Cardinals
goal attempts, Including a pair of
recaptured the lead when they
3-point shots. Eastern Michigan
Intercepted three straight Wild·
fell to4-2.
cats' passes and converted on
'

LB.

Ll -

'

LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPI) Cedric Jenkins ' only basket of
the game, a tip·in with one
second left, gave No.1 Kentucky ..
a 76-75 victory over Louisville
after the Wildcats had blown a
16-point lead to their cross-state
rival.
Loulsvilte center Pervls Elli·
son, whose 5-for-8 second half
shooting fueled the Cardinals'
rally from a 13·polnt halftime
deficit, hit a 12-footer from the
base lin~ with ·40 seconds remainIng to give Louisville a 75· 74 lead.
The Wildcats came downcourt
and called a timeout with 11
seconds remaining to set up the
· final - play. Senior guard Ed
Davender dribbled to the basenne and fired a 10-foot jumper ,
which bounced up off the rim .
Wildcats center Rob Lock missed
his tip-In trybutJenklns batted in
the rebound.
· Jenkins, a 6-foot -9 forward, led
Kentucky with 11 rebounds . Rex
Chapman led the Wildcats with
21 points, while Davender added
· 20 and Winston Bennett scored 14
before fouling out with 1:51 left.

8 AM-10 PM

l98 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

·'

.

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND - Statistically, the Cincinnati
Bengals are a contradiction.
The Bengals rank fifth In the NFL in offense and
sixth on defense. Th~ result, though, Is a 4-8 rec'?rd
and last place In the AFC Central Division.
"It's the result of Injuries " aays Cincinnati
Coach Sam Wyche. "We ha · had guys like
(center} Dave Rlmlngton bu. t and now Its
(guard} Max Montoya and (wide receivers) Crls
Collinsworth and Eddie Brown. But we still have
pride, and we want to who"
,
Cleveland Coach Marty Schottenhelmer expects the Bengals to have a hea lthy attitude when
they visit the Browns Sunday in a matchup of
Intrastate rivals before a sellout crowd at
Cleveland Stadium . Cleveland routed Cincinnati
· 34·0 In a replace/Rnt game Oct. 18.
"(The Bengats are) like the scene from the

movie ("Network"). They're mad as hell and
they're not going to take It anymore,". says
Schottenhelmer. " Add the rivalry factor, and you
know the Intensity level is going to be way up."
The Browns boast the NFL's top·r'lnked
defense, allowing just 277.3 yards and a
league-low 185 points, but have a two-game losing
streak for the"flrst time In two years. Cleveland's
offense Is rated lOth overall, and fifth In"passing.
"We haven't played very well the past two
weeks, and we will have to execute better against
Cincinnati," says Browns quarterback Be~nie
Kosar, who has thrown a touchdown In 14 straight
games . "The Bengals will be ready for us, and
thia sort of rivalry Is good for both teams."
Cincinnati's offense Is hampered without
Collinsworth, who ,Is doubtful with a sore foot.
Quarterback Boomer Eslason ( 182 for 386, 2, 520
yard~. 12 touchdowns. 13 Interceptions) will look
to Brown (35 for 476, two touchdowns). Brown,

however, is questionable with a sore thumb.
The ground game is spurred by running back
Larry Kinnebrew ( 119 for 491 yards and five
touchdowns) and Stanford Jennings Is likely to
see action as well.
''The next three games are our playoffs , and we
owe It to ourselves and to the fans to won," said
Eslason. ' 'Our fans haven't given up. I honestly
think only one out of 300 have been negative."
The Browns now feature a "Bear" defense, but
recent opponents have used audibles when faced
with the run·orlented !ormatloil. Veteran defen·slve end Carl Hairston ha ~ played consistently
and is the team leader with 6 1-2 sacks.
Linebackers Mike Johnson and David Grayson
are strong against the run, and cornerbacks
Hanford Dixon and Frank Minnifield are a_potent
tandem.
· On offense, the Browns were held 100 yards
below their .a~erage In las t .Sunday's loss to

Indianapolis. Kosar Is the top-rated passer In the
AFC (182 for 295, 2,257 yards, 15 touchdowns,
seven interceptions) but his pass protection has
been spotty.
Wldeouts Brian Brennan (34 for 504 , six TDs)
and Webster Slaughter (31 for 507, 4 TDs) are
prime targets but running backs Kevin Mack (139
for 510, 4 TDs) and Earnest Byner (79 for 290, 6
TDs) remain.lnconslstent. Ki cker Jeff Jaeger has
missed four of his last field -goal attempt&amp;.
The Bengals defense has a llnebacklng corps led
by Reggie Williams (six sacks) a nd a n improving
Joe Kelly. -Defensive, end Eddie Edwards has
given the Browns problems, but the Bengal
defensive backs are considered vulnerable to the
long pass .
Clevelahd strong safety Chris Rocklns (ba ck) Is
listed as questionable.
The overall series between the two teams. is tied
17-17 .

- ..

,.

•

·•

---..-.....

---

�Page--C- 2 -Sumlay Times-Sentinel

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

w. Va.

=~::::=:§.~~~~~~~~~~~===~~~--December 13. 1987

Oaks· no match for powet;ful Tornadoes.~:

By SCOTT WOLFE ·
Tlmet1-8entlnel Staff
RACINE- Havlngplacedfour
people at-or-near the 20-po!nt
mark. the Southern Tornadoes
used a gruel!ng, but wellbalanced full court game to ·
tumble the Oak HUI Oaks,94·62,
here Friday evening In a key
SVAC boys basketball match-up
In Charles W. Hayman
G ymnaslum.
.
•.
So h
but ern now leads the SVAC
a 11 Y itself wlth a perfect 4-0
mark and 5-0 slate overall. Oak
H!l! drops to 3-1 and 3-2 overall.
Pl ay l ng with much Intensity,
the new look David McMillin
again led the way with a dazzllng
21 point offensive· performance
and game-high 13 rebounds.
D ave Am b urgey and southpaw
Kenny Turley rolled a pair of
20's, while Jeff Caldwell ended
with 18.
Irnolcally, Amburgey cann~5
three-pointers from the tw!llght
zone,whlle Jesse Caldwell added
two and Shawn Cunningham one.
Southern was a warm 57 percent
from that range, 8-14.

')
RAWLINS PUTS IN TWO- Oak HID's Jedd Ralllnsdropsln two
of his 16 points by driving around Southern's Ken Turley (34) In
Friday's SVAC contest at · Racine. the Tomad0et1 remained
unbeaten, 94-62.
·

Wildcats defeat
Eastern Eagles;
set for Southern
MERCERVILLE - The Hannan Trace Wildcats overcame a
cold shooting streak In the third
quarter to ground the Eastern
Eagles 83-64 Friday night.
"We missed a Jots of shots In
the third quarter," said Wlldcat
mentor Mike Jenkins, who added
that "we shot the ball more
respectably ln the fourth quarrer" to secure the victory.
Apparently, the missed Wild·
cat . shots didn't seem to make
much difference to the struggling
Eagles, who with only eight
minutes left in the contest were
behind 60-45.'
Wildcat senjor forwa rd Scott
Rankin led all scorers with 23
points. - Junior forward Tim
Brumfield. making his first starr
of. the season, and senior forward
Chris Petrco, each had nine
rebounds to lead the Wildcats.
:rony Hendrix was the top
Eagle scorer, with 21 points.
'H annan Trace. now 3-1 In the
conference and 5-1 overall, will
take thelr three-game SVAC
winning strl?ak into next Friday

night's contest against visltlng
Southern. The Eagles, 2-3 overall
and having lost their third
consecutlve league contest, will
take on Parkersburg Catholic
Tuesday night ln Parkersburg,
WlVa.
· HANNAN TRACE · (83) Rankin 10-0-3-1-23; R Swain
4-0-5-2 -12; Petro 5-0-1-5-11; G.
Johnson 5-0-0-3-10; Brumfield
2-0-3-3-9; Stitt 2-0-2-1-6; Jenkins
2-0-1-2-5; Cremeens 0-0+0-4; T.
Johnson 1-0-0-1-2; J. Swain 0-0-03-0. TOTALS- 32-0-19-21-83
EASTERN (64) - Hendrix
1-4-7-2-2 1; Martln 8-0-0-2-16; Savoy 4-0-1-3-9; Horner• 3-0-2-3-8·
Sinclair 2-0-0-1-4; Fitch 0-0-2-2-2:
Reynolds 1-0-0 -2·2: Tripp 1-0-0-32; McQueen 0-0-0-5-0. ,_OTALS20-4-12-23-64
Score by quarters
Eastern ....... , ..... 11 18 16 19-64
H. Trace ............ 25 25 10 23-83
Reserve game Hannan
Trace 72, Eastern 23.'
Top scorers . - Bill Bailey
(Hannan Trace). 16 points.
Hager (Eastern). 9 points.

9ncinnati Reds assign three prospects
:CINCINNATI (UPI) - The -American Association and Jones
Cincinnati Reds have assigned w~s assigned to Chattanooga of
three prospects, catcher Mark the Southern League.
Berry , right -handed pitcher
The Reds had protected the
Mike Smith and outfielder Chris players from being claimed by
Jones, to farm team rosters for other teams by keeping them on
next season.
the 40-player· major league winBerry and Smith were as- ter roster until this week's winter
signed Friday to Nashville of the · baseball meetings ended .

H.v

Unlt~&gt;d

Pri'!IPi lnlt&gt;rMtluiUII
Frld•y, Det:. II

Altr ('o•nt•Howrr Ill , Akr Kt•nmorf'

~0

JUtr F.aslltll, Alo:r Garllpld 711
tU!r 1'1ri:'Sit11M' &amp;G. Allr Ellet -1:1
Altr N(lorth U, ,'U,r Bucnt('l J.l

i\h•.u.11dt&gt;r 13, Nt&gt;hoon,·llk' 6ti
Alllllnt'l' 6'!, fanion Tlmltl'n 511
, \mllnd~t il. IWrOf' t 'niun 3'
1\nNoniu 112, N1111urur.1 Trail it
Anthuny K' II,Ynl' ';;, s.vlvunla S' \llt&gt;w li6
Anlw••rp 66, F'urt ·h• nnln~~;~ 8.1

A.rchbuld ft. Ubt&gt;rty Cen~n G3
A.rllnl(lon 48, Pandora ·GIIboa tfi (oil
Alihland Crcowt~ u:s Central M
Barherlon II, Akron Sprtnr .J&amp;
Bll.rnenlllf' 611, HI Chd.,.\'tiiP 6ol
Bay \'lllar;e 11. Aven La~~#- -111

Bnctrwuod li. A\lronll

8~

CHESHIRE - "Good guard
play, _ especially when (Chad)
Leach started hltl!ng, proved to
be the key for us tonight," said
Kyger Creek mentor Scott Stemple after his Bobcats outpaced
Southwestern 78-52 Friday night.
Kyger Creek, which picked up 1
its first conference win after
losing three stralgjlt league contests out of the gale, saw Leach
pick up 16 points, good for second
on the team, and contribute in the
'Cats' extended man-to-man defense, which forced 21 High- ·
lander turnovers. Southwestern,
which is alone ln the conference
basement. could only collect 14
Bobcat turnovers .
The other guard, Mike Reese,
lied frontman·MJke Bradbury for
team honor,s wlth 17 markers.
Bradbury also had 14 of the
Bobcats' 43 rebounds.
Southwestern's Mike Walker
led all scorers with 20 points.
Teammate Dave Mershon followed
with 12 .points,
. . ' all coming

Df&gt;llefontlll~~e

.n, Sprtnr NE n

C'tol l

Plan Yo•r W..dlng

43, Kyger Creek 38.
Top scorers - Justin Fallon
(Soutwestern). 14 points. John
Sipple (Kyger Creek), 25 points.

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Friday's results:
Gallipolis 69 Athens 54 I
Logan 61 Marietta 54
Warren Local 67 Jackson 63
(SEOAL Reserves)
TEAM
W L
P
OP
Logan ..... ............. 2 0 108 97
Warren ................ 2 0 108 82
Marietta ............. .1 I 110 111
Gallipolis ............ .! 1 91 91
Athens ................. O 2 95 99
Jackson ............... 0 2 77 109
TOTALS
6 6 589 589
Friday's results:
· Gallipolis 46 Athens 44
Warren 61 Jackson 37
Logan 60 Meigs 57
Tuesday's games:
Parkersburg South at Point
Pleasant
Boyd County at South Point
West at Peebles
Athens at Nelsonville-York
Marietta at Cambridge

.

·HASKINS· TANNER

percent average overall , but
Belpre lead by only a slx poilit
By JIM SOULSBY
(
their
three
top
guns,
Stukey
,
margin
through tout the flrst half
Times-Sentinel Stall
Scott
McConkey
and
White
hit
a
as
the
Marauders
kept pace with
BELPRE Tlje Belpre
sizzling
sixty
four
j)&lt;'rcent
as
they
the
Eagles.
At
the
s rart of the
Golden Eagle five completely
hit
on
25
of
39
attempts
between
third
frame,
however,
Meigs hit
d?mlnated play here Friday
cold
spell
and
the
Eagles
built a
them.
a
mght as they continued their hold
II
seemed
as
though
the
Eagleten
point
lead.
In
the
fourth
on first place in the Trl Valley
eyed Eagles couldn't miss from quarter, Meigs got their offense
Conference with a 94-71 drubbing
the charity stri pe either as they rolling again as they outscored
of the Meigs Marauders.
burned the ne!!rfor anelghryfour the Eagles 17 to 1l and ra llied to
The Marauder offense never
percent average. hitting on 26 of within slx points with 54 seconds
got Into gear as the Eagles raced
31 attempts. The Marauders had remainlpg on the clock. The
out to a 23-3lead at the 1: 47 mark
only twelve chances at the foul Marauder scoring was pretty
of the first quarter. The local five
line and made four .
well balanced with Eddie Crooks
missed on eight attempts during
It
had
to
be
a
very
dlssappolnt
canning
12, Including two th ree
that time span and committed
the
Meigs
contlngpointers,
Scott Barton and Chris
ing
night
for
four turnovers. Belpre, on the
ent
as
they
dropped
to
2
and
3
ln
,
Stewart
adding
ten each, Cary
other hand, was red-hot at they
TVC
play.
Some
of
the
lack
of
'
Betzlng
contributing
eight, Doug
hit on eleven of !!!teen att4;!mpts
success
surely
fllUSt
stem
from
Stewart
slx
and
Randy
Humphin the six minute span
the
fact
that,
In
spite
of
the
fact
reys
thre~.
In the last paced action, the
the Marauders get their practice
For the Eagles, Scott ConEagles moved the ball well up the
sessions
each
day,
they
are
not
In
gleton
had s ixteen a nd Mike
court, hitting the open man with
the
classrooms
and
lhls
must
Swackhammer
fifteen to lead the
good bounce passes underneath.
have an adverese effect on them. Belpre fi~e .
When the Marauders used the
Too, they have never, thus far,
Varslty box score;
full court press, the Eagles had
played a game before a
MEIGS (71) - Bartrum 9-0-3little trouble in breaking it lor
"friendly" crowd and this must 21; Burdette 4-0.0-8; Bisseli2-0-0some easy shots.
play an Important part on their 4; ·Brothers 1-0-1-3; Smith G-O-OFrom the field, Meigs hit on 50
performance.
12; Snyder 1·-0-0-2; Powell
· J?"rcent of itS trles, canning 32 of
Mike
Bartrum
was
high
scorer
1-Q-0-2; Durst 1,0!0-2: Sisson 1-0-063. Belpre had a filly three
for the Marauders canning· 21 2; Baker 2-0-0-4; Oiler 3-0-0-6;
points. Brian White hit for 35 to Nelgler 1·1-0-5.
lead the Golden Eagles in thai
BELPRE
(94) - Stukey
department. ·
8-0-5-21; S. McConkey 3·0·9-15;
SEO, OPPONENTS
Reserves Lose
White 14-0-7-35; R. McConkey
(All Games)
Coach Cliff Kennedy's reserve 3-0-0-6: Swackhammer 3-0-0-6;
OP
TEAM
W L P
charges made a valiant effort but Roller 2-0-1-5; Davis 1-0-0-2;
Southern .............. 5 0 450 272
came up short ln the night's Baker 0-0-2-2; Haynes 0-0-2-2.
Portsmouth ........ .4 1 388 305
opener as they dropped a 53 . 49
Score by quarters:
.Logan .................. 3 0 220 175
decision to the little Golden Meigs
. 11 15 18 27-71
Wheelersburg ...... 3 0 252 162
Eagles.
Belpre
27'14 24 29-94
South Polnt. ......... 1 0 79 71
G&lt;illlpolls .... .. ...... .4 1 313 267
Waverly .............. 3 1 267 242
Chesapeake .......·.. 2 1 222 187
West.. .................. 2 3 358 377
Greenfield .......... .! 2 139 172
Athens ................ .l 2 183 191
W~rren ............... J 3 215 265
.I ackson ............... 1 4 300 365
Marletta .............. O 4 236 266
0
Pr, Pleasant .. ......0 0
0
Friday's non-loop results:
Russell 95 Portsmouth 73
Wheelersburg 70 Minford 58
Waverly 70 Portsmouth West 59
W!lmington 68 Greenfield 56
Southern 94 Oak Hlll62 ·
(SEOAL VARSITY)
Team
wL p
Logan .................. 2 0 131
Gallipolis .. .. ....... .. 2 0 130
Athens ............ , ... .1 1 132
Warren .... ... ........ .! 1 115
Marietta ..............0 2 124
Jackson .. ............. 0 2 118
6 6 750
TOTALS

for aqy busineS5
S3.46

Marauders mauled by Eagles .

Pleasant, W.Va.

Jim Mink Chev.-Olds Has
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.

'

••

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OHIO VALLEY TIRE OUTLET

1

PWS TAX

Ohio-~oint

SEO standings

r----------------------'---

t Ut Help You

»&gt;

CHRISTMAS
SALE
AT

rrom tnree-pomt snots.
Score by quarters
''We were close early, but we ·Southwestern ..... 19 15 8 10-52
handled their pressure," Stem- Kyger Creek ...... l9 27 16 16-78
Reserve game-Southwe•tern
pie said. "We also cut our
turnovers down, Which helped
US," he added .
.
Kyger &lt;;reek,, now 1-3 In the
SVAC, will travel south to face
Symmes Valley. Southwestern,
now 0-4 In the league and 0-5
overall, wlll host Eastern on
Friday, December 18.
KYGER CREEK (78) - Bradbury 7-0-3-3-17; Reese 6-0-5-3·17·
Leach 8-0-0-2-16; Loveday 2-0-5-l· ·
9; Hodge 4-0.0-1-8; Denney 2-0-01-4; Johnson 1-0-0-I -2; Nibert
1-0-0-1-2; Sipple 1-0-0-1-2; Perry
0-0-1-1-1. TOTALS- 32-0-14-17-78
SOUTHWESTERN (52) Walker 6-I-5-5-20; Mershon 0-4-01-12; McNeal 4-0-1-5-9; Darnell
1-0-2-3-4; Hively 0-0-2-0-2; Ruff
1~0-0-2-2; White 1-0-0-1-2; McDaniel 0.0-1-0-1; Branham 0-0-0-1·0·
Bryant 0-0-0-1-0. TOTALS ..:_
13-S-10-19·52

KAANAPALI, Hawaii (UP!) set by Arnold Palmer and Jack
- Orville Moody's putter helped Nicklaus In 1964 when ·they
carry him ro a two-stroke lead teamed up to represent the
going Into Saturday!s second United States In the Canada Cup.
With the sun beatlng down and
round of the $300,000 Kaanapali
barely
a trace of wind, Moody
Seniors Classic.
made
his
way around the course
Moody displayed a· masterful
·
with
"consistency."
touch around the green Friday as
"I played well all the way
he raced to a course- tying
7-under-par 65 to move ahead of through the round," he said. "I
Bobby Nichols and Charles didn't hlt any bad shots."
Moody, whose only regular
Coody .
Moody, who is sixth· on the PGA Tour victory was at the 1969
Senior PGA Tour this year with U.S. Open. said he could have
$310,000 In winnings, had an eagle done better.
and seven birdies to go with two
He sald he missed an earlier
bogeys over the 6.704-yard Royal eagle on the par-5, 502-yard third
Kaanapali North Course ori the hole when his 30-foot putt from
the front ·edge of the green
island of Maui.
His 7-under equalled the record stopped two Inches short of the
hole.

Btlpre 11. MIWon 55
BenJamin Loll'. . I$, Falrbanb 54i
lk'lllt&gt;y 7$., Jonathan Al•r

.

Moody leads seniors by two

Bf.llnr 13, Yo•r Chr 61 (oO .

lk-dford (MicbJ"'f, Sylwn .. N'o,rltw -Ill
lk'lklre 60, .Jfffer110n tlnktn 4!

'In the reserve contest Chad · .
Taylor led the little Whirlwinds
with 11, Jason Qu!llen and Roy
Johnson each had 7, and Brad
Maynard had 6 as Southern won
48-36 In a well-played game. c.
Wtuts had 10 for Oak Hill.
Southern plays next at Hannan
Trace next Friday.
OAK HILL (82) - T. Thomas,
""0:
u-u- , J • B rown. 0"0
..,. ; M. HI
a e.
',.
T
c
317
R
Cl
'"" ": . opas, - · ; . agy,
0-0-ll; ..:. 1V(Uier, 0-0-0; B. CQon,
0-0-0; B. h' well, 3-1-4-13; E.
Faye, 3-1-7; E. Morgan, 1-u-2, B.
war d , 1..,.n2; , . R awlins, 8-"16
u- ;
TOTALS 26-1-1-62.
SOUTHER!~. (94) - C. Stout,
0-0-0; D. Amburgey, 2-5-1-20; S.
Riffle, 2-0-4; J.Caldweii.6-2-0-18;
s. Mc Ph a11 , 1-2-4; M. Amas,
1-0-2; D. McMillan, 9-3-21, s .
cunningham, 1-1-5; K. Turley,
7-6-20; s. SIJllpson, 0-0-0; s.
Diddle, 0-0-0, B. Shuler, 0-0-0;
TOTALS 29·8-12-94.
Score by quartel'8:
southern 20 24 25 25-94
Oak H!l! 19 10 13 25-62
, · Reserve Score _ Southern 94,
Oak H!l! 62.

Kyger ·Creek ·tops Southwestern, 78-52

Friday's scores
&amp;)'~ Ohlu High Sd,ool RIU&amp;r..ethall

Southern shotoutofthecannon
At the halt SHS led 44-29.
like a bolt of lightening, but then
Coach HowieCaldwell'sTornafizzled late in the flrstframe,.onl)' does again poured it on in the
te recover and restore Its lead. third frame d~spite a determined
David 'The Burg' Amburgey effort from OH. SHS turned up
opened the game with a bon!fled the afterburners for a 25-13
three pointer from the 25-foot
lashing In the round for a 69-42 ·
range to put Southern on top 3-0. offensive boost.
Oak HID then retaliated to 3-2
· Good benctie fforts filtered Into
on an Inside drive by 6-foot-8 the Southern line-up where ShanJarod Rawlins.
nonRI!fle,ShawnCunnlngham,SFrom
this
point
on
Southern's
cott
McPhal!,and Mike Amos
.
Intensity- and sharp shooting broke into the scoring column
pushed the score to 17-8 with 3:·50 and Shawn Dlddledldwel!inslde.
left In the frame.Oak H!l! called
Both clubs scored 251n -the last
time, then regrouped behind the
round, resulting In the . 94-62
efforts of Its big three Rawlins- finale.
,Brian Howell, and Mike Hale,
Southern hlt 29-65 for ·44.6
taking a 19-17 lead from the percent and 12-20 at the line for a.
Tornadoes on a Hale jumper.
cool 60. OH hit 25-52 for 48
On a strange hot-and-cold percent, was 1-3 from outside the
night. SHS again cllmbed Into perimeter·, and 9-21 at the llne. .
net-scorchlg groove as Jeff CaldThe Oaks won the battle of the
well canned a three-pointer at the boards with their dominate sizebuzzer to give SHS a 20-19 first
,however, SHS was close at hand
period lead.
43-39. McM!l!ln controlled with 13
Southern turned up the wick In and Turley added ll.Todd Copas,
the second canto to cast the mold
Mike Hale and Rawlins each had
for the rest of the game:South- 10 apiece for OH.
ern's grueling attack tired the
,. SHS had 6 steals, 8 turnovergiant Oaks, standing 6-8, 6-4, and
s~and 19 personals. OH had 2,29,
6-3.
, and 21 respectively.
.

December 13, 1987

'

SV AC standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L
P
OP
Southern .......... .... 5 0 450 290
Hannan Trace ..... 5 J 388 293
- North Gal!ia ....... .4 I 341 333
Oak Hill ...... ........ 3 2 359 320
Eastern ............... 2 3 305 371
Kyger Creek ....... .I 3 295 245
Symmes Valley .. .l 3 253 .&gt;45
Southwestern ...... . 0 5· 289 402
SVAC ONLY
(Varsity)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Southern ............. .4 0 382 222
Hannan Trace ..... 3 J 302 293
North Gallia ........ 3 1 277 284
Oa,1&lt; Hill .............. 3 · l 309 320
Eastern .............. .1 3 245 317
Kyger Creek ........ 1 3 236 245
Symmes Va !ley ... 1 3 253 345
Southwestern .. : .... O 4 247 328
TOTALS
16 16 2251 2251
SVAC
(Reserves)
T~AM
W J.,
P OP
Southern ... .... ....... 4 0 230 148
Hannan Trace ..... 4 0 226 113
Southwestern .. ..... 2 1 167 183
North Gallia ........ 2 2 2ll 21l
Oak Hill .............. 2 2 156 175
Symmes Valley .. .l 3 169 240
Eastern .. \ ...... , ... .. ! 3 148 224
Ky.ger Creek ........ 0 4. 151 197
TOTALS ·
16 16 1458 1491
Friday's ret~ulls
:
(Varsity)
Southern 94, Oak Hlll 62
Ha-nnan .Trace 83, Eastern 64
No)'th Gallia 77. Symmes Valley
76 .
Ky:ger Creek 78, Southwestern 52
(Reserves)
Hannan Trace 72, Eastern 23
No&gt;-th Gallla 64, Symmes Valley
54 .
So~thern 48, Oak Hlll 36
Southwestern 43, Kyger Creek 38
Next Friday's games:
Sohthern' at "Hannan Trace
North Gall Ia at Oak Hill
Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley
El\stern at So~thwestern
·

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•

�Page...,.C-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 13, 1987

December 13, 1987

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

Pomeroy- Middlepqrt- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant.

.

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
struck from both afa r and
underneath the hoops . Friday
night a nd this, coupled with a
flashy passing attack and air·
light de fense, carried the Blue
Devils to a 69·54 Southeastern
Ohio League hardwood victory
over visiting Athens.
"It was one of the finest
passing exhibitions I've seen
since I've been coaching here.''
remarked Dean of SEOAL men·
tors Jim Osborne. "We were able
to hit som e long ones and that
opened things up on the Inside.
Overall, It was a team effort," he
added.
AHS Coach Fred Gibson concurred on the Galllans' sizzling
shooting performance . He
added, " They handled our pressure welL That's the best I've
seen them play. We sco'ute d them
earlier, and they didn't play that
well," he added .. Gibson concluded, "They will be hard to
beat if they play like that
everytlme out, but I think It
might be a little different at our
place (Jan . 29). Gallipolis
doesn't play too well on our floor
CORRIGAN GETS TWO - Athens' Cory
Corrigan (20) eluded four GABS defenders on this
. play for two of his seven points against the Blue
'

Devils Friday night. Defenders are David Todd
(30) ; BID Evans (30) Mark Berklch (31) and Tim
Neville (21) . GAHS won, 69-54 .

Logan
.defeats
Marietta

Scoreboard ...
NFL ~ults

Da.lli.li 1011, PhMnlx 104 [OT)

Mll-ukee

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
i\mericu Cunlen!nce
·

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W L T Pet PF PA

lndlanapoll!i

7

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l'ltt.olhursh
Cinci nnati

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Denver

R 3 I

Sa n DleJO
Seattle
LA Raiders
Kan!IIVI City

8• 4 I

. 16~

7

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$

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1

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.583 sot 1S5

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.183 2M !12
.183 U8 MO

WHI

•"'U8 S14 %4S
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't 10 1 .167 ltB 338
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II 3 fl .110 ' 311 %Ul

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St. Louis
NY GlariiM

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Sunday , Ore. 13

: ·..
•

•.
.• ,

"' ,

Atlanta al LA Rams, I p.m .
Bulfllolo allndhuulpullr!., I p .m .
Clndnnall at Cleveland , I p.m .
Dallas at Washlnaton, I p.m.
Decrolt at Tam .. Bay , 4 p.m .
Hoaton at New Orkant, JZ p.m .
LA Rallkrs a1 KanMI City, 3 p .m .
Miami at Philadelphia, 1 p.m .
Ml.neaota n. Gr. Bay (MIIw.), U:p.m .
NV Gianta a1 St. ~ult1, J p.m .
NV Jet!! at New Ea,tand, I p .m .
PIHtllurJr;h at San DleKQ, I pm .
Denwr at ~aitle, 5 p.m .
Moaday. Dec. It
OJica,;o alS!ln Francl.co, I p.m .

._

--Dlvlalon I

Cln Princeton 14, Beardman 7
Dlv!Aioall
Akron Buc hllcl '!fl. Steubenville It
D ivision Ill
foiiiiK Mooney 30, Sheridan 1
Dll'lllon IV
• Col Academy 21, Galea Mllb HawhnO
l&gt;lviMiOR V
Newark C11tho llc 16, Mocadore 13

NBA results
NATIOSAL BA."iKF.TBI\LL ASSOf .

E;r,,.t&lt;•rn c·.. rar~r"nc"
AI !anti!' Oivl"lo n
WLPct.
&amp; s l~&gt;n

II

Phlladl•lphla
Nt&gt;W \'t~rk

GB

II .51?1 -

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7 .5:tl

I

6 I% .3XJ •I'Jr
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2 II . 1 ~ 7%
("••ntnal ()J vts lon
DPir~tll
12 5 .106 -

w a.~hln,.;ton

fhltu~~:u

13

0 .61U -

1t
At lanla
I'! ' .667
lndi110U
II 1 .till
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Mllw;tu lwr
II 1 .fil l 1' .1
fli'Wiind
7 10 .·112 5
1
W1•"h•rn ( '(IRfl'I"C'JK' I'
Mldw e~&lt;~ l Oil'hdon
W L Pt:l . G8
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II .5 .61111 Ot' n~•· r
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Ul11h 9 lJ .~ 00 3
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Pudlk lllvhlion
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I'! i .&amp;67 Porl.lanrl
II II .579 I Itt
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LAC 'Iippt''"-"
7 lit ,•11'! ~~ ~
IOt,.ld• •nSI.
3 II . 116 11 1. ~

'.

Sacril.mf'nto 113

Atlanta lt9. Goklen Stille 93
Sund..y'"' G!lme!l
DaiW a1 Milwaukee. nl(bt
AtiBniM ai Sat.'n&amp;me.to, nlgha
Clewhtnd iU LA Laller11, nlaht

NATIONi\L HOf' Kii:Y LF.i\GlJE
WaAM. ConfPI'f'nce
Patrkk l)ll'l~iun
W L "'' Phi. GF GA
NY hilander~ • l i 9 I 35 I Ii 1111
N- ,Jel'l!l'y
t:i 10 I l -1
9ti 113
PlllWirJr;h
12 II .5 29 liS lit':
Philadelphia
II IS .5
13 loti
" ' II.!OhlnKfon
12 I I 2 ~~ 100 ,.
NY Ranjl:f'ri&gt;o
!I U . ~ '!'l
103 •• •

t.,.

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F'rld a.y'!l H1•" uiU1
Oo•t ntil 11-1, W:Wll11111tun 1011
1..\ I ,H IIt•r!&lt;i 11 5, oo ~to n I H

Adum; Dh· l.~lun
IK 7 i 13
IK II ~ 311

Mo .. real

Bo!ilon
Hllrlfunl

II 12

~

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Cam ph e ll
Nu rTili
Detro it
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Ill 10 ~ :Ill
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12 13 ~ \!6
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l'l% i113
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100 1111
100 1111
109 110

10 16 3 \!3
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Frid11J'11 Rr!i\llll;

Losl\nl"t'lt'S

.. 1110
100 131

1:111 111-1
1-1!1 111

!IK IDII
!li Ill&amp;
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Pltl'ibii'Kh ll, Nl' lslllnder!'i ·l

PhllaCiii'Jphh&amp; 3, Dl•1roll-3 i tic' I
Calr~try 5, N..... , J e r ~~ey I
Qbl'tw!t 3, WinnlptJ3 (tic•)
Edmonton 2, VWJCouvrr I
~
SundllY'-" Gault!,;
C&amp;IK ary at Ruffalo, nl,.;ht
Phlbt.dl'lphla at " ' lmlpt&gt;K, niJ:ht
Toroftlo at Chk:II(O, ni,;hl

Transactions
Batie hall
Clnclflllall -

All"ill'lll' d f'alt:her Mark
pltchPr Ml kl' !smith ht
NaNIYIIM• uf lhto American AsHOCIIIIIon
IAAA ): llltlilgMd oullleldt&gt;r Chrlli •IOnt'S
to ChalCilnooKa uf lhr- Southrrn IA.'IIKUP

1uwl

( AA).
J.os 1\ngeii'A - 'l'radtd pitch e r ~ Boh
Wt•h:h , M11tt l'owa~~; ILftd Jad.: Sa\·a~;r ttl
Oakland fur pltctK-rs ·II'N:ott' Or~o and
.J ay llo~rll a nd "hort!OtupAitn&gt;duGrUIIn.
Nl'w \'ortl: (NI.] - Tnuled rllt'- her
,JeJoll&lt;il' OrO!ICO to Oakland for pUchrrs
.laclc Saw._.-, " 'llltf'r WhiW.hun~t ud
Krvtn Tapanl : 1r:ad1•d !ChortMta p RaJIU'I
S antlln.v. and ·pHcher Vlclor Gllrcla to
Nt'w \ 'urk (ALJ lor c llk:her Phil Lomhardl , outlleldll!' r Ollrn&gt;n Reed 11nrl
pltt'lw•r fitf'¥l' t ·rf'y; outrl1hted pltdwrM
~JKII' Duhlt' aad Da \ 'f'
WrMI 11nd
uutfil'lder .\ bn·u11 Lllwton lu 'l'rlpif'-A
rolill'r .
&amp;skethllll
[h&gt;trolt - Plat·ed 1·e nc .. r Barry! llllw·
klns on hU8pl'nd ed ll!it: acth·ated l!t'nU~ r
Ron Mtlurt" from thr Injured 11 ~&lt;~1 .
Mllwaukf'l' - i\t·llvatil'd I{UQ.rd Sidrwoy
Monr.- rll' f: pla cf'd !tWinl(mun Pact• Man·
n lun .... lnjun•d
1\o't"w Vorl! Sip d gwr.rd Billy
()onown : walwd J:Wrd Tony M'hiLI'.
&lt;.:ulll'll!"
: Fair11rld - Sl!fnt'd haslu~ thllll coac h
Milch Buunaruro to u 4· )'ellr t•unlnwt .
fo"oothllll
('1 Pvc•Jan• - nalmed punlll'f J.t' e
,JohMiln oil ,wllh't' rs; walwd tl,;hl t'nd
Cbrlll Drt&gt;81itll.
Miami - Si ~ed' frPf'-aJtl'nt ll icker Van
nffln: plilre d kk:ker Fuad Re\'t":iz u n
lnJun•d re~~t•rw-.
PhUa6elphlll- Rei#IL'Ied runnln~~: hack
Kohrrt L1n-t•l &amp;li'.
1

u..-.

llo('~y

Kept Battling Back
Osborne concluded, ''Athens
wouldn'tqult. We had them down
10 or 12 points several limes, but
they kept battling back."
Alter spQtting AHS a 4-0
a dvantage on early goals by
Scott Decamlnada, promising
sophomore, and Doug Skinner,
Mark Kimble's goal (5: 01) tied It
at 4-all . After an exchange of
buckets, Mark Berkich's tap -In
(3: 44) put GAHS ahead 8-7. The
Gallians were never headed.
Jason Thdmas, with two threepoint goals and Billy Evans with
one, gave Gallla a 19-9 first
,
period lead.
With Berkich, Thomas, Evans
and Big David Todd sharing
hOnors, along with Tim Neville,
lhfl Gallians led anywhere from
eight to 14 points throughout the
• second quarter. It wa s 34-21 at
halftime.
GAHS was on top 40-24 (5: 46 in
third) when AHS made its las t
r un ' by blanking the Devils 9-0
over the next three minutes ,
After a Devil timeout (40-33 with
2:27 le ft) !he Devils regained
their composure and gradually
built their lead back to 13 points,
51-38. on Thomas' last . second
goal.

'

'
apoece.
Continued on C-5

TIBBS LOOKING TO DRIVE- Symmes Valley's Dallas Tibbs
looks to drive Inside while a North Gallla defender Steve
George (30) seeks to impede his progress during fourth-quarter
action Friday night on the Pirates' home court. l'lbhs finished the
night wilh 22 points. The Pirates won 77-76. (Times-Sentinel photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)
( 11)

Warriors
•

THOMAS SCORES - Gallla's Jason Thomas ( 12) drives around
Cory Corrigan (28) lor two of his game-high 22 markers against
vlsillng Athens Friday. GAHS won, 69.54.

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T}1e Gallians hit 31 of 54 field
goal a tte mpts for :i7.4 pe rcent.
From the line. the Gallians aga in
had an off night sinking on ly ·
three of ll for 27 percent. The
winners picked of 34 rebounds
a nd had 14 turnovers .
Decaminada led Athens ' a ttack with 18 points. Scott Sl rick lin added nin e and Cory Corriga n

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EAST MEIGS - The young
and improving Easter n Ea·glett es bas ketba ll team pos ted
their first win of the season
'
Thursday as they
rolled to ·a
narrow 34-.10 win over league foe
Hannan Trace.
·
.
Hannan Trace jumped to a 7-6
first period lead behind ba skets
by Michelle Unroe. while E HS
was c lose behind
freshma n
Suza nne Clay 's four .
AI the half Eastern grabbed a
14-11 lead as fre shman 1Cdna
Driggs tossed in six markers to
pave the way.
The foul shooting of Amy'
Ha ger a nd Jenny Cowdery
helped seal the victory In the
latter portions of the ga me as ·
E HS led 30-25 and 34-30 at the
!lnitl buzzer.
,
Coac h Ralph Wigal's tro up's
were lfd by Edqa Driggs with 10,
Suza nn e Clay and J e nn y
Cowdery with 8 each, Amy Ha r
with 7,and Stepha nie Gard._ r
wllh one.
Unroe Jed HT wi th 13,Swain
had 4,Swaln ,3,Davah 3,Marshall
2, and Jenkin s one.
EHS was 12-25 from the line ,
Cowdery led will\ ten rebounds
and Ma ry Par.ker, although silent In . scoring gra bbed 7
rebounds. Amy Hager had four
. assists .

•

By GEOFF OSBORNE
Times-sentinel Stall
VINTON - North Gallla's
Keith Burnette sank a threepoint shot from the right corner
with 11 · seconds left In Friday
night's contest against Symmes
Valley to give the Pirates a 77-76
win over the Vikings.
. " What ca n you do? We.had him
defensed. but he shot over
{Viking forward Dua ne)
McCarty," said Symmes Valley
coach Terry Saund ers of
Burnette's game-winner,
Burnette, a 6·4 se nior forward
whO led all scorers with 30 points
and collected eigh t of the Bucs ' 23
rebounds, ended the Pirates'
scoring effort the same way il
began -with a three'- point shot.
Teammate Steve George broke
the opening Viking ra mpage, In
which the visitors reeled off 13
s traight points at the start of the
game, with a long-range sho t tha t
fell with 3:50 left in the first
quarter.
The Pirates' tall tandem of
Burnelle and 6·5 junior center
Rusty Denney had no trouble
getting . Inside against th e
smaller Viking frontcourt of 6-1
seniors Joe While a nd Duane
McCarty (who had seven of the
Vikings' 24 rebounds) and 5-11
junior Scott Miller, but could not
gel their shots to fa ll In the ea rly
going. Denney did not score until
he went to the line and s hot one of

first loop victory

Rauch co llec ted n points a na
pulled down 12 rebounds to lead
the winners In both departments
with Full adding 17 markers and
nine rebounds.
Jackson placed four players In
double figures, paced by Greg
Harris' 13 while Chris Ervin
added 11, and Steve Walburn and
Mike Abrams chipped In 10.
Warren hit 25 of 51 fielders,
co nverted 17 of 21 at the t!ne, and
pulled down 31 rebounds.
The Ironmen made only 26 of 69

Gallipolis downs ...

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VIN CENT - Brett Rauch and
Ben] I Full combined for 39 points
Friday night In leading Warren
Local to a co me from behind 67-63
SEOAL victory over th e vis iting
Jackson Ironmen.
TheWa rr lors (1-3, 1-1) jumped
to a 17-9flrst quarter lead but saw
the Ironmen lake a 30-25 halflime
lead. War ren' s 19-10 third quar·
ter surge spell ed the difference
as both teams swi shed 23 points
In the fi nal period.
·

st . IAJulll -

Bowman's

'

captor~

The Bulldogs connected on 21
of 53 field goal attempts for 39.6
percent. AHS was 10 of 19 at the
lin e for 52 percent. The Bulldogs
had 22 re bounds, seve n be
Thaden Brlent. and committed ll
· turn overs.
Ga ll ipolis will host South Point
Dec. 1~ a ft er the Dec. 18 journey
·to Loga n. Athens played Al,exa nder at home Saturday nig ht.
Tuesday, the Bulldogs play a t
Nelso nville-York. Friday, AHS
will host Warren LocaL
Blue Imps Triumph
In F rid ay 's pre liminary contest, Coach Curt· Heady's Bul·
!pups jumped off to a 9-0 lead, and
was on top4 2-29withonly2 : 58 left
to play when the roof caved in as
Coach Barry Sea lock's .Blue
Imps staged a sensational rally
to win, 46-44, on a goal by Bill
Unroe with just five seconds left.
Josh Williams hit a pair of
three-pointers in the final halfminute to knot th e count at 44 ·a ll.
It was the Imps first win In fiv e
outin gs a nd le ft the m 1-1 in loop
play .
Rob Skidmore, a long with
Williams. tossed in 11 each to

Friday's scores
Rlan t: ht'Ster 83, Mason ~5
Bluom Ca rrvll '711, Tl'IIJS Valley 7.!
Rotklns .5,11, Hu s!illl H
Huwllng -.rrt&gt;n 53, Milthury t ake -IIi
1\rt•t•khvlllt• 6t, Brl•r ea. Midpllrk 60
Bristol lit. ,Jllmt'!lluwn (I'll) n
Bu clw.vc· ft'n lrull'i3. Car t&gt;y 56
8ud«•yt• 1\:n rlh ,6, Brlda;i'purtl:lll
Rt.u·kf.y" Trail79, F'r&lt;'ept~rl La kt&gt;land 3.11
Btwkeye Weru 7·1. Co notion \' al 52
C..'a ml fo' ulton NW .5!), 1\kr Cuwntry ·10
f'antDn Mt•Kinlf'y i-1 , Voung~ S fill
C11nton South 56. Loubnillf- 39
( 'ardln,;tun 70. Mount GlleRd 56
( 'arrotllon 8'l, Dov.. r i'J.I
Ct• nU'rhurx- U, Imnvlllt&gt; ·15
nuunplon IJ, \' ciWI]It"S Wilson u
Ci n 1\ndt'r!IOn ~~ . Milford l!
('In Counlry Day 61, Jill Rf'r1t11rd 111

.

for some reason." ,

MARIETTA - Despite five
three-point goals by the host
Marietta Tigers the Logan Chieftains won their second SEOAL
outing by a 61-54 score Friday
night.
The Chiefs, who led In reboundIng 35-25, fell behind the Tigers
18-15 after one quarter of play,
but bounced back In the final
three periods to remain unbe aten
In th ree outings .
Doug Stiverson topped the
Chiefs with 19 points and Sam .
Eggleston added 10 for the
winners. Randy Kuhn's 10 rebounds led the Chieftains.
Logan finished with 23 of 52
from the field, 14 of 19 at the line,
and commit ted 10 turnovers.
Marietta {0·4, 0-2) got 16 points
from Brent McKenna and 10
fro m Justin Herb.
MHS garnered only. 18 of 46
The Osbornemen put It out of
field goals, 13 of23 charily tosses,
reach midway in the final perJod
and had 10 turnovers.
after building up a 20-point
The box score:
spread , 65-45. With 4:01 remain·
LOGAN (61) - J erry Gabriel
lng, Osborne began clearing his
4-1-9; Jos e Medina J.0-2; Doug
bench. AHS outscored the second
Stiverson 6-7-19; Sam Eggleston
unit 9-4 the remainder of the
4-2-10; J,an Tompkins 0·4-4;
eve ning.
Randy · Kuhn 3-0-6; Sean Spa tar
Logan Next
2-0-4; Tim Moore 2-1-().7; TOGallipolis, now 4-1 overall and
TALS 22-1-14-61.
2-o inside the SEOAL, remained
MARIETTA (5.f) Doug
Bentz3-2-8; Eric Erb0·1·0·3; Rob
season
Logan,with
Friday's
tied for(avorlte
fi rst place
pre- .
Hadley 2-0-4; Ju stin Herb 1-2-2·
GAHS opponent. Logan edged
10; Brent McKenna 4-8-16; Don- Marietta 61 ·54 Friday night.
nie Mu rray 1-2-0-8; Mike Wharff
Athens dropped to 1-2 overa ll
H -5; TOTALS 13-5-13-54.
.: a nd 1-1 Inside the league. .
Score by quarters:
GAHS placed three men In
15 21 11 14-61
Logan
double figures , led by Thomas'
Marietta 18 15 9 12-54
22. Berkich chipped In with 10
Reserve score: Logan 60, Ma- while Todd added 10 points and
r ietta 57 OT
led GAHS on the boards with 10

NHL results

~rry

P r e p pl11yulti
At Oblo stadium, Columbut

'

_II~.

t'lel'el6lnd

Por1land II!

.IlK! Itt !80

8 II
6 • •
1 7 •
Ce nlral

Miami
Nl'.lel5
' New EnJI!'nd

1~.

rebounds . Evans and Neville
finished with eight ma rkers

Sunday Times-Sentir,ei-Page-C-5

Burnette's 3-pointer tops SV

.Gallipolis hands Athens
69-54
.
defeat; play at ~gan Friday
'

W. Va.,

Co ntinued from C-4

pace the Galllans . Unroe and
Doug Wilkins eac h had 10.
Matt Creer's 12 point s IEid the
Bullpups .
Athens led 15-8, 27-22 and 38·27
at the quartermarks before being
outscored 19-6 in the final stanza.
Varsity box:
ATHENS (54)- Doug Skinner,
2·-1-5; Scott Stri cklin, 3-1-0-9;
Cory •Corriga n. 3-1-7; Thaden
Brien!., 2-1-5; Scott Decaminada,
5-1-5·18; Dave Calveth, 2-0-4;
Brian Walsh, 1-l -3; Jerry Jones,
0-1-1 ; Shad Patterson, 1-0-2.
TOTALS 19·2·10·54.
GALLIPOLiS (69) - Mark
Be rkic h, 5-0-10; Jason Thomas,
7-2-2-22; David Todd. 5-0-10; Bill
Evans, 1-2,0-8; Mark Kimble,
2-1-5; Tim Nevllle,4-0-8; William
Strait, 0-0-0; Dennis McGuire,
1-0-2; Todd Casey, 1-0-2; Pete
Ande rson, 0-0-0; Joe Owen. l -0-2 ;
Tom Cornet t, 0-0-0. TOTALS
27-4-3-69.
Score by quarters:
Athens ............. .. 9 12 17-16-54
Ga llipolis ........... 19 15 17 18-69
Reserves
Ga llipolis 46
A,t he ns 44.

from the floor, eight of12 char it y
tosses , and s nagged 22 rebound s.
The box score:
JACKSON (63) -Chris Ervin
4-3-11; Steve Walburn 2-1-3-10;
Chuck Oliver 3·1-0-9; Greg Harris 4-1-2-13; Doug Kidd 2-0-4;
Mike Abrams 5-0-10; Tim James
3-Q-6; TOTALS 23-3-8-63.
WARREN (67) -Brett Rauch
6-10-22; Bob Hughey 2' 0-4; Doug
Biddinger 1+6; Kevin Clem
2-0-4; Benj i Full 7-3-17; Tyler
Barnes 5-0-10; Curt Plummer
2-0-4; TOTALS 2iH 7-67.
Score by quarters:
Jackson 9 21 10 23-63
Warren 17 8 19 23-67
Reserve score: Warren Local
61 Jackson 37

two free throws with 3:06 to go1n
the first frame. 'B urnette made
hi s f irst bucket shortly
I hereafter.
The Vikings led 25-12 at the end
of the fl~s l period, ·-an eight·
minute stretch marked by hard
dri~es into the paint by VIking
senior polnt·guard Dallas Tibbs,
who scored eight of his team-high
22 points In the initia l quarter.
The Pirate big men could only
manage seven points In that
time, six of those coming from

fiv~,

Bur nette. " We came out flat
ear ly," sa id Pirate coach Bruce
Wilson .
The seco nd quarter showed
signs of the Pirate ·shooting
f'Omlng to llfe, as 'the Pirates
pulled to wtlhin four when
Burnette drove inside f,ar a layup •
with 1:19 to go before halftime,
cutting the Viking lead to 35-31 .
Burnette picked up nine points to
register 15 ior the fir§\ half ..
Though the Bucs outscored !he
Norsemen 23-15 In th at frame ,

...... ...

'If

77-76

Denney 's offensive output of only
two .•j!olnts were Instrumental In
the Vikings' ability to maintain
an average lead of seven points'
before halftime.
The third quarter was different. Though the Vikings were
able to stay ahead , their average
lead was four points. The strongest threat to the Symmes Valley
advantage came when Pirate
junior point guard Greg Glassburn hit one of two free throws at
Continued on C-

~~

......

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Reg. No. 86-11-10558

·'

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I

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

· Page-C-6- Sunday limes-Sentinel

Burnette sinks three-pointer...
the 4:38 mark to cut the visitors'
in 11 of his 15points in the last act .
Denney 'began to close the gap
lead to 4946. Less thaq a minute
la t~r. Glassburn drove inside to
with six straight points toward
s~ore on a layup, reducing the
the mtad!e of the fourth quarter .
P1rate deficit to one.
He scored on a layup to cut the
Though White restored the
Viking lead to 67-62 a turnaround
jumper to make the score 67-64, ·
tliree-polnt advantage with a
bucket at the 3: 03 mark.
and cashed in on two foul shots to
Burnette found the nylon on a
make the Vikings sweat at 67-66.
layup at the 2:47 mark, making
The Vikings' J!Ji who has
only one hand
s fo ed and
the score 51-50 and getting the
Vi nton faithful to stir for the first
sank both free 't rows
time. White .got back Inside to
his teammates some breathing
give his team back the three- room · with a 69-66 lead. But a
point lead at the ~: 24 mark, but
shOr t jurnper by Burnette cut the ·
the Pirates kept It close with a
lead to 69-68 and Denney's short
layup l)y Denney 11 seconds
jumper gav~ the Bucs their first
later, reducing the Viking lead to
lead of the night , when with 2:31
one point, ';'t 5J.52. Two straight left he drove In for a layup to give
North Gallla a 70-69 lead. a lead
baskets by Vik.lngs junior guard
Tony Schneider helped give
they soon lost when White got
Symmes Valley a 61-54 lead at the inside to score on a layup. Hew as
end of the third quarter.
fouled on the play and when he
The Vikings were ahead as
converted on the 'raul shot, the
many as nine·early in the fourth Vikings were a head 72-70 with
quarter before Burnette and ' 2: 31 1eft to play .
Denney began to shake their
North Gailla called time with
third-quarter shooting slump and 1:39 left, after Tibbs pumped In
dominate inside. Denney, who twofreethrowstomakethescore
scored only two points in that (4-70, to discuss their last-minute
frame and had picked up four
game plan. Whatever was disfouls, came to life. as he pumped cussed on the Pirate bench was

~ovlde

converted into a Burnette long
jumper at the J: 27 mark, which
changed the score to 74·72. Miller
put In the last Viking points when
he made both free throws with
1:22 left. Then, Denney hit a short
jumper with 1: 11 remaining,
cutting the Symmes Va)ley lead
to76-74.
After the · Bucs called time ,
Tibbs was fouled with 19 seconds
left. Tibbs fllissed the front end of
a one-and-one shot, setting the
stage for Burnette's winning
basket.
With six seconds left, the
Vikings called for a time out, but
the officials did not acknowledge
it. A,s a result, the clock was
allowed to run down ' to four
seconds, an act which elicited an
angry respo nse from the
Symmes Valley bench. Though
the officials restored the two lost
seconds, It was of little consequence, as the Pirates got the
ball back and ran the clock out to
end the game.
North Gallia went 13 ofl9 from
the foul line, while Symmes
Valley had 14 successes out of 20
tries from the gift stripe.

The Pirates, having picked up
their th ird straight conferent'e
win, are now 3-1 in the SVAC and
4·1 overall. They play at Unloto
on Saturday and will travel to
Oak Hlll on Friday, December 18.
The Vikings, who dropped their
third consecutive league battle,
are now 1-3 In the conference.
They will host Kyger Creek on
Friday, December 18.
NORTH GALLIA (77) Burnette 11-1-5-4-30; ~e nney 6-03-4-15; George 4-1-0-4-11; Mays
4-0-1-1-9; Glassburn 2-0-3-2-7; Gilmore 1-0-1-0-3; Lemley 0-0-0-3·0;
TOTALS,.. 28·1·13-18-7'7
.
SYMMES VALLEY (76) Tibbs 9-0-4-3-22; Miller 3-1-6-4-15;
White 6-0-2-3-14; McCarty 6-0-0-112: Hayes 0-0-0-1-0; Justice 0-0-01-0; Pernestl 0-0-0-1-0. TOTALS
- 28-Z-14-14-76
Score by quarters
S. Valley ....... .... 25 15 21 15-76
N.Gallia ......... .'.. 12 23 19 23-77
Reserve game - North Gallia
64, Symmes Valley 54
Top scorers ~ B. Stout (N.
Ga llla), 15 points. S. Mootz
(Symmes Valley), 19 points.

.

Meigs girls top VC; lose battle to Trimble
short end of a 28-19 score as the a close. Trimble clawed back to
younger Vikings turned a four knot the score at 54 ali at the end
point Meigs lead into a Joss by of regulation play .
Both teams traded two goals
outscoring the Marauders 15 to 2
each and then with eigh t seconds
In the final quarteF of play.
Erratic bail handling in th at left in overtime, Missy Woods
final frame was partially resop- lofted a ~ass to Beth Ewing who
then· hit Tammy Wright going to
onsibie for the Meigs loss.
Amy Rouse and Kelly Smith the bucket for the winning goal.
Meigs Scpring: Stobart 5-0-4each ahd six points for th e
Marauders with Amy Wagne r 14; Woods 5-0-3-13; Taylor J-0-1garnering five and Jennifer 3; Ewing 4-0-3-11; Wright 5-0-8Taylor adding two. Smith 18; Carr J-0-0-2.
Trimble scoring: Peart 8-0·5·
grabbed 14 rebound in the loss.
21;
Shiflett 8-0-5-21; Mingus 2-0M. Graves and T. Graves combined for 19 points to lead th e 04; Day 2-0-1-5; Jenkins 3-0-0-6;
Lowery 0-0-1-1; Si mmons 0-0-1-1.
VIkings in scoring.
·
Reserve Game
Meigs girls vs. Trimble
In a low scori ng affair , the
Despite the fact they were up
against a tailer team , the Ma- young Marauderettes posted a
rauder Girl's varsity came from 22-12 win over the Cats reserve
behind in the second half to down . squad. Amy · Rouse canned six
the Trimble Lady Cats 61 to 59. points for Meigs with Jennifer
Despite a dozen turnovers In the . Taylor getting five. Missy Nelson
first quarter, Meigs managed to four, Kim Ewing three , D. Smith
stay close to the Cats for two two at~ d Deanna Haggy two.
The win puts the Meigs re·
periods.
serves
at five a nd one in both
Coming out ln the second half,
TVC
a
nd
overall play, m atc hing
the Marauders jumped out to a
the
varsity
record. Meigs will
ten point lead whlch they rna intra
vel
to
Belpre
for a Monday
The reserves came out on the • talned as the third sta nza came to

ROCK SPRINGS - In early
week action the Meigs Girl's
Varsity squad racked up a 10
polnt win as they bested VInton
County 51-41 . Using a triangle
a nd two defense, the Marau derettes kept the ball away from
Missy Runyon and Crouse who
usually average some 20 pohits
· per game for the Vikings·. Crouse
fi~!Shed with only 11 before
fouling out while Runyon a nd
Prater had 8 each for the Vikes.
Mos t of the Vinton players
were in foul trouble and the
Marauders, at the charity 's trip.
can ned l7 of 33 for a 51 percent
average. From the field they nit
17 of 58 for a cool 28 percent.
Meigs hit the boards strongly
with Stobart getting 11 caroms,
Woods 10 and Beth Ewing 8. The
Mara uders, on offense, took the
ba ll to the basket causi ng the
Vikes to foul.
Meigs scoring: Stobart 6-0-315; Woods 2-0-3-7; Fry 2-0-1-5;
Ewi ng 2-0-3- 7; Wright 1-04-6 ;
Taylor 4-0-3-11.

Hoosiers humble J3mes .Madison, 84-52 DATE~GYMNASIUM

Browns claim punter Lee Johnson

Co.ntinued from C-:&gt;

'

night contest against the Golden
Eagles.

Friday's scores
Vidlt•r Vl!: w 4!3, Broo'Mvllh· 61}
VanWert Ill , Limo R11lh li3
Vandulht .Jfi, ('layton Northrnonl 3li
Wllds wurlh 61. Rlrhllt'ld ft.f'vne S3
Wapa.koi'W'II1 71!, IJcolju.ncf&gt; 63

\\'arnm HanllnK 'II}, Hubhurd il l
Warn&gt;n Lo cal fit .llt.ckson 63
Wltl' f'tln " '""n Re~ 16, l ' oLlflk!ii E 3!1
War!Wiw Rl vt•r VIew$~, Philo Sl

W.a.uSol'un 1i, E\·err ret&gt;n 3!1
\\'Olym•dltle 7~. W Sa.lcm N\\' 35

M'l'll~lun iO. Ft•dt'rul Hoc"klnlt 41
M'('ll .. vl lll' 7!1, &amp;av('r Lo cal 1!1
Wl'~t HnlmPs iii, Akr l'tlllnt'heNU&gt;r 51
M' Ulwrt y Sa.lem 111, Hld~tf' monl ~
We"t l nlon Rt ~urlh Adam" 39
M't•su •rvlllt• N iO. Grow City 54
M'r!&lt;Ualw ;i!l, Olmsted Falls !Ill
M'ht'l'h•rsh!U'I: iO, Mlnlurd 5K
Wlllu rd M5, Sh('lhy 56
M' lllhu n~&gt;hura; !l!i, Nl'w Richmond 6:i
Wilmington 6K. GrN:nfldd 56
"'lntt•r"vlllto n . F)t~t Uv£'rpuol IU
M'tJostr. r 1!:1. Nt•w Philade lphia l7
1

K'u rthln ~H n Chr TI. olohns luwn N ' rilf~t ·

.

.~~

Johnson. a left -footed kicker
who punts barefoot and placekicks with his shoe on, also had 36
touchbacks in 68 kickoffs, the
best in the NFL.
.
·To make room for Johnson on
the roster, the Browns waived
tight end Chris Dressel. He was
signed by Cleveland Nov. 18 but
never activated.
Browns Coach Marty Schottenhelmer also announced that Matt
Bahr will be actlvated to do the
placeklckll!g Sund ay against the
Cincinnati Bengals.

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns have claimed
punter Lee Johnson. a 6-foot-1
198-pound third -year pro out of
Brigham \' oung. off of waivers,
they announced Friday.
Johnson , 26, punted in 41
games for the Houston Oilers
from 1985 through Dec. 1. His
career 41 .2-yard average in·
eludes 20 touchbacks and 53
punts inside the 20-yard-llne.
Johnson ranks seventh in the
AFC. In 1986. his 41.2-yard
·a verage was fifth in the
conference.

:'

By GERRY MONIGAN
they have to develop· a ,stronger
UPI Sports Writer
inside game', " Knight said .
Bob'
Knight
must
be
g~iting
Ind ia na took ,.• 23-point half(t F td
l h
so . r ay n g t he let all hi s
time lead and extended the
players have a little fun .
margin to 34 points with 51
At Bloomington, Rick Calla- seconds remaining on a Jay
way scored 12 of his 16 points In
Edwards basket, 84-50.
the first half and every Rooster
"Indiana is a very good basket
scored in No. 6 Indiana's 84-52
ball team," James Madison
victory over James Madison In
Coach John Thurston said.
the first rou nd of th'e Indiana
" They're strong, powerful, very
Classic.
deep, talented, poised, tough and
"This team ha s to become
aggressive. Wemissedanincredmentally strong so that it doesn 't
ible number of lay-I ns and foul
give p'oints away," Coach Bob shots. We don't have tough kids
Knight said of his Hoosiers . "I
a t this point."
thought tonight we made some
In the second game, David
il)lprovement but we made some
Sanders 'collected 24 points and
·errors."
· four steii!S, and Todd Anderson
: Jeff Oliphant came off the adde\120points to guide Washingbj!nch to add 14 points, and Dean ton State to a 73-61 victory over
Garrett blocked 7 shot~ for
Indiana State. Saturday, Jndlana
Indiana, 4-1. Alan Dorsey scored met Washington State for the
11 points to lead the Dukes, 1-5, title.
who shot only 28 percent from the
Washington State, 3-2, took an
field In the first half to Indiana 's 11-1 lead on a 20-foot shot by
6~ percent.
·.
Sanders with 11 :55 left in the half.
. "James Madison .. has good Neil Ev8!l)S hit a shot with 18
movement and good motion, but seconds r~malning In the half to

,AnnouncingFactory sponsored incentives on
New 'BW model Buicks and Pontiacs.
Incentives range from Free Air Conditioning up to $1,500.00 Cash Back.
Most models included. Excellent
choice of colors and models in stock.
WE GUARANTEE TO GET YOU
THE FULL VALUE OF ANY FACTORY INCENTIVE
WITHOUT
"ADD-ON PRICE LABELS. This
could be the best time for you to
purchase a new Buick or Pontiac from
Smith's in Gallipolis.
., .
Incentives end ]an. 11, 1988.
Please stop in.

1

.

1900 EASTERN AYE.
GALLIPOLIS OHIO

'

BATHTUB
WALL KIT

p.m,/College Rec......................................... I2 :JO.I:JO p.m./Fitness Swim
.......
............
6·8new
p.m./College
Swlm
All laclllties...........................................................................
al Ly ne Ce nter are closed for Christmas Break. A
scll.edul~ will be
publls_hed when classes resume on Monday;January '· 1988.
'

Dec.J?-&amp;-8

Girls scores
f:;r~.

m, '" ll• 11h .v !..wl 1/.,,,.,.,,.,,l/

II • I ui••·•l l'rr•••

Gahanna 63. Gr o\epurt :rt
Hilliard 5~. Franklin Hi s n
Miami Val 42, (:0 1 We l\ln~on 30
Pickcrln9;ion &amp;2:. Whltt!hit.ll :iii
•
Up per Arlington 66, Worlh lngi on .U
Westerville N 60, GJ'4;1\'f' City 1!!'1

'" '"'""'i.. rml

/oi irl&lt;n . /)•••· I I

Ch lllh.:othe 68, R ey •uldliha ~ 53

Dela"·are it, Mt Vt&gt;rnon 611

WesLer ville- S -13, (:01 W~&gt;.~thu~d 2'7

..

•3.4 CUBIC INCHES
•SOLID STATE IGNITION
•ANTI-VIBRATION .
•AUTOMAT~C OILER
•CHAIN BRAKE
•VERTICAL CYLINDER

CHRISTMAS
DECORATING PARTY

'

"In sixth-grade Rinky -Dink . tor the C~dets .
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16TH,
Barbara Green scored 18
boys' basketball from Saturday,
December 5, the Rio Bears got 26 points to pace the Clay Crusaders
· STARTING AT 6:00 .P.M.
points from Dusty Hill to beat the to a 28-9 win over the Green
Buckeyes .
Washington Celtics 64-44.
Cindy Elliott was the Buck·
Jason Castor chipped in 19
eyes'
top s corer, with three
markers and Steve Bush reFOOD
points.
corded 10 points to give the Bears
COME HAVE FUN WITH SPUDS MacKENZIE,
The Green Nuggets were led by
• · tl;le 20-pohlt win . Ce!tics Mike
a
14-point
effort
by
Leah
JohnDonnally and Matt Wamsley ·
SANTA ClAUS, MRS. SANTA ClAUS AND
were In double figures, with 18 son, as they beat tile Washington
STROHS SNOWMAN.
Tigers 25-2. Carl Beth Hinsch was
and 12 points, respectively.
tHEm•
BS-3308
· MIDDLEPORT, OHIQ
The Washington Hawks got the scorer for the Tigers.
eight points from Jamie Burcham to beat the Washington _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.!.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Lakers 38-14.
'
Burcham's effort was closely
followed tiy seven points from
Tim Snedaker and six points
from Jamie Caldwell, Bryan
Howell and Ryan Rose. With
Sale Prices
eight points of his own, the
Good Thru
'
Lakers' Floyd Evans t ied Bur:DEtcem~181 19, 1·987'.,._ _,._.,._ _,._._~ ... ~ ....- ...- ...- ............_ ..._ .....
c~am as game-high scorer.
.Fifth-grade hardwood ·ac tion
featured a 20-13 victory posted by
_ _
THOMPSON
the Rio Redsklns over the Green
(
CENTER
Dragons. Timmy Wilkins scored
'"CHEROKEE"
eight for the winning Redsklns,
"HAWKEN"
"RENEGADE"
while Troy Duncan registered
45 Cal. Perc.
50 Cal. Perc.
50 cal. Perc.
50 Cal. Perc.
seven for the Dragons .
Model
The Washington Bulls barely
Model
THE NEW ENGLANDER RIFLE
Model
squeezed by the Washington
lightweight
Right Hand
Converts From Riffe To Shotgunl '
Right
Hand
Panthers with a 9-8 win . Seth
1
•26" Round B&lt;Jrr el
Right Hand
Davis scored four for the Bulls,
•'Sinofe trVger, w~h llf'OfllriQger guafd allowing ~ou 10 wearyout Qioves
•Handles palc~d round bal or l.lu i·Ball
and game-high honors were
•FumJshed wkh luly adJVSiablo Iron Sighl
shared by Panthers Dylan Evans
·USt or lhe 12 oa. access. barrel con~~or1s the rille to a shc tg~n In second_,
and Nathan Neal, scoring four
each.
Fourth-grade cage action had
the Clay team get 12 points from
Wes Saunders to beat the junior
Washington Lakers 23-15. Chad
Shamblin scored seven for the
Lakers.
Girls' action sa.w three blo4X32mm
CHARLES DALY BLACK POWDER GUNS
wouts,lncludlng a 33-6 win posted
HAWKEN
RIFLES
by the Rio Rebels over the Clay
Cadets.
Reg. 53999
Dis1inguished Combat
Gennie Tucceri scored 15
.
Magnum. 357 s&amp;w Mag.,
WATERPROOF
points to lead all scorers, while
•
q
,
.38
S&amp;W
Special
teammate Sara Cremeans had
10. Christina jaggers scored five
.

Black

'

JIM COBB

HOOVER
SPECIAL OF
THEWE:EK

CHEVROLET•OLDSMOBILE•CADILLAC

POMEROY

•

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VACSONSALE
THROUGH DEC. 24

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C&gt;nly

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Camouflage

HOOVER "'
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NEW

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Covers existing tile
Cleans effortlessly
Waterproof resists mold and mildew
Fits tub areas up to 32" x 64" x 58" high

H.P.

• Chec:k ·b•u •lgrr11l
• Comtonabl• grip with
aut:t!Ofllltg~ietor

• Bl~ 4-lnch canl&amp;ter wh"''
• H•ndy top·llde 1wttch
• Edu- cleanin~
• Convenient top-side
tool 110f1Qe
• 0.1~11 wheeled rug 11nd
Hoornonle

iSAVE s40.

saggs

l

1/rliCWOJS
ATTACI-IMUHS •

312 6th ·street
.
.

Store Hours: Monday·Frlday a~ a.m.·S:OO p.m., Saturday 8:00 a.m·12 noon

~if·

Top Of The
Line Wooden
RecutVe Limbs

\.

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150 lb .
Pull

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Open ·Sunday 12 noon - 5 p.m.
~

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Rt. 35, Spring Valley Shopping Plaza, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Store Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 9:30

~

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.11

CAROLINA.LUMBER &amp;
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675·1160

Model 586

'$25999

wallatorage rack
• Washable. reusable filter
• Easy-empty 8 oz . cup
• Handy push-bunon switch

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Rec............................. .. ........... 12:30-1:30 p"m.tF!tne" Swim
......
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Dec.15-6-8 p.m./College Rec........................................ 12:30·1:30 p.m./Fitness,Swim
........., ............... ...................................................................... 6·8 p.m./College Swim

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_

~

1987 MODEL

State. 2-2, which le&lt;l by as many
~
as 20 points with 48 seconds left.
Jeff
added
th Anderson
A I
K
. 15pointsfor
Ni
d
e gges, evm
xon an
Reid Newey added 14 each.
Murray State, 3-3, was led by
Martin . with 27. and · Terence
Brooks had 10.
Murray State took a 19-10 lead
on a layup by Jeff Martin at9 : 15
of the first' half. T he Aggies
re plied with an 18-5 run over the
next 7:.30 and led 32-29 at
halftime.
In the first game, Jose Nassar
scored. a career high 27 points to
lead Texas. Tracy Mays added 19
points and Alvin Heggs 16 for
Texas. Pan American, 3-2, was
lead by Lee Boddie with 18 points,
followed by Greg Garrett and
Johnson with 14 .
Also, Chicago St. edged Idaho
St. 59-52, a nd Brigham Young
trounced Weber State 104-71 in
the Cougar Clas,slc ; and Dela·
ware topped Columbia 63-53.

L~~~~~~!~"I~-~~:f

3- 1·3 p.m.IOp•n Rcc.......... ,. ........................................... I-3 p.m.iOpcn Swim
Dec.l
-&amp;-8
p.m .!Coll ege R!;'c........ " ..................... ,......... ............ 6·8 p.m.i ColJege Swim

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

nio Grande cagers pick up
three wins in Rinky-Dink

·SMITH Buick-Pontiac

\\'·' ' nfurd I OG,'KidR"Cdule 13
~l'llla tiS, Wl'"' C'!trrullton 5~
YtH11111:S i\1uonry ~$. · ,\kr St Vlnc:t•m i l

make It 37-18.
In o.ther games. Auburn
whi"pedSanJoseState70-65,and
"
Chi
Illinois blasted Illinois· cago
109-53 .ht the IJiini Classic; Utah
State dumped Muray Stat~ 74-57,
and Texas stopped Pan Amerlcan 75-62 In the Lonhorn Classic.
At Champaign , Ill, Jeff Moore
scored 18 points to lead Auburn.
Ricky Berry Jed all scorers with
22 points for San Jose State, 2-2.
The Tigers improved to 4-0.
In the first game, Kendall Gll! ·
scored 15 of his 17 points In the ·
first .half to lead Illinois, 6-1. The
Flames fell to 2-2. Larry SmitlJ,
Nick Anderson, Lowell Hamil•
ton, Ken Battle, :' and Glynn
Blackwell also fini shed in double
figures for the Illini. IllinoisChicago was led by Nate
Chambers with 16 points. Illinois
Jed 57-22 at halftime, converting 5
of 9 shots from 3-point range.
At Austin, Texas , Dan Conway
scored 16 points to lead Utah

.

.

11

Sunday Times-Sentinei--Page- C-7

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

December 13, 1987

December 13. 1987

.

•

~

p.m., Sat 9:30-5:00 p.m.

.l

'

•

�...
Page-C-~-Sunday

1eouege scores

At

ln t. rn;~.t ton~~ l

Towume at.~

,

A.l

nut Hound
IIV lJ IN, Weber &amp; , 'I
Ok'ap s.. It, ldabo sa. n

T ii! U tl

Al A.marllkt. Tna K
Ft r R IJomtd
W~t' l Teu• St . lUI, Sow. Utah St. 1.&amp;

Vlah84 . 'U, M~t.rnyst . 5'1
Runnln' Joe llaskNball Clu!lft·

ctuunp~~.l an. Ill.
F1rsl; Ro~d

Oakland 1Mlcla.) 1HI, E. New

At olonNboru, Ark .
Bay lor 1.a , Ml llil. \'JUie y

st . n

St. Thoma&amp; Aqulruu1

Bu c k~IIIO.f , L)' ~mhl(

First Rolltd
Indiana 31. lameti Mi. dt!W.In 52

Your Dollar
Ooea Further

71'

So utbe r11 Tec h 1!, D&amp;IHhorpe II

IAib)l II&amp;, 8randt&gt;l!4 R7
Delaware U , Galurnbla 53

..,,., Re.-,d
Hu lj;JIOn Co lt. I "•. P••• CoU.li-1

Hubler 91 ,

oneonta St . SM

MllweM I

Roiii! -Hulnul• N , Marlan lti!
T aylor 9t, lnd.-Kokomu Ill
'h-1 St. to, Kala mazoo U

N.W. Nu..rene: 11, Mon&amp;aM TB II1'0

Orepn Tec h II, Chil:o S4 . 1\0
Sacramelllo 81.. 1111., llllmbo.,_ Sl. j'J
So uthern Colorado U , Metro St . M

Upper Iowa 113, Adrian 0 ·

Wllhuh 94, Eure.lla llf
Wi s.-La Cro- '7 K. Wla.- Rt wor

P'tatt i4

Farm

December 13, 1987

"~----------~----------·------~--------------------------~·-----------

Open house set Tuesday for
new FmHA~ computer system

F~~ol l8 n

Buy Any New

Gallipolis- An open house will
be held at the Gallla County
Farmers Home Administration
office on Tuesday, Dec. 15 from
10 a.m. untU noon to demonstrate
the new computer system , according to FmHA County Super·
visor, Lawrence E . Bess.
"The open house ts · part of a
state ant! nationwide open house
to recognize the completion of the
three-year automation project:
one of the largest projects of Its

Taylor Ntaun

Nlssan In Stock
For s49.00 Down

Ifill•tiiOO
"" ,.U
MOO
to
Cllh'"""
lloclllor
Ctvtatm•• •apen111
or for your down
pa~menl

(with approved credit)

,Se.ction

~unbaJl1lrimt5~~entind

64, U l'llon 41
Au~u!i&amp;ana Dl. 8'7, Aurora 18

to '1500
CASH BACK

Taylor Nlaaan

llllnol li W••lyan 112, Cot' ll3

Jud!Wn RD, Hunttn&amp;t•n JO
•
Mt. Se M.r~ 90, !«. AmbrOiil" 59
MoUlt \'~:mon IN , Oberlin llrl 120Tl
North Park 94 1 Lale f•re1t 17

WI11.·PlaUeviUe 711, Wia.-81eul e
M'ht.·" 'hilewatn M, Wl!i.-Eau Claire: I&amp;
Weat
Ca i· DI~a lll. tal Pol)'· Pomona '75
• Cal·lrvlee li, Pe• II
C'S Nu ..... rWae 8t, San rra~tel~~e o St. tll
Ha)'waNI St. 74, LAI A.aplel8t . ..

'

'

An~r!iOn

8400

·AT·

WIN.•tkhkOIIIII't, Wht.-Hitperlor II

Haoovcr a , Blackllum 511

· SouU.
Barry t8. Fort Valt.)' Sl. ,
f.lllrt.topller Newport ll!, M•rrmount II
Covenllnl 101. MIUI11n 75
Eastern M, Fe rrum 74
Norf(Jik st. 1$, Wl ..tu•Salem 11
&amp; . Thomas 70. V UdoMa St. II

M t~ xl cul'la

Balvioa HI , Hobart M
Bate r. 81 , MIIQ. ln &amp;Uiule 76
BrktJ"eport 7$, Franklin P1 t l't'C 60

Holiday To lrnaml"ltl

A.l Bloomlnatvn, Ind .

UUca 11.

East

fo'1rll &amp;UJ1d
Ar hays St . I I, Samford 59

Pr ~t nklln 1!7, Urlh•m '7:1

.Julin h.y 182, Sl . oln.eph'MlNY ) 1\J
Nl' Tech IS, Men:)'·t2 ('lOT)
Nl'1J 78. Ca,~ ft.tworvP 70

We:•il T r u ll S l1t.lt' C'11 Jer t'laa&amp;lc

T exas 75, PIUI Amtrk'an II!

.A ubum 71, San .Jow St. • 5
llllnol.!ii 1111, DUnuls·Ck ln•o u
In di ll• ClaHsk

Co•ar Clush•
AI ProYO, Uta II

~ustlD ,

Sl . Tllomlb AQulnali ltl. fA~t U ct o n St . 73

Ftr11 Ru\lld

Ullno l!l CIMI If

Colk&gt;fe
llukelball R H ull s

By V•il.ed Prn•

W,.-hom Clul lt

....

-.

sl. II

Mi'Mhlnllton St. '73, lnd..ft.

Kf' rW..s,... Drake fi iUiSlc
t\ t Pes Mol..-. loflrllt Ro•d
Drab 511, Houat on Bapdlit 5t
No rth eralo-11 . GoRD p 67

FrWI~ 'ii

December13,1987

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

Times-Sentinel

kind ~ in the country , FmHA
Installed 95 compJ,lter terminals
In Ohio and over 6,000 na tion~
ally, " Mr. Bess said.
"We think this computer system Is going to be a big help to ou r
borrower, e specially family
farmer s," Mr . Bess said. ••once
we plug basic numbers Into the
machine, we can help determine
which management decision s
wtll be the most beneficial. We'll
be able to project annual cash·

flow f igures qui c kl y and
accurately ."
"In addition, we can go dl·
rectly into the FmHA mainfram e
computer in 'Kansas City," Mr. ·
Bess said. " We expect th'is
equipment will also help us to
process applic ations quicker
than we have ln the past."
The FmHA county of!lce Is
located tn the Spring Valley
Plaza on Route 35 fiv e mlles from
Gallipolls.

New CCC tax rules _make more sense

TAYLbR NISSAN ·

NO

Prices
Clearly
Marked on

OE"lERS
PlE"SE\

11

Athens Largest''

NIS,SAN DEALER!

.
COMING DOWN - The old Gallla Roller MIUs
grain silo (located on the corner o.' Fourth Ave.,
'a nd Grape st.) was torn down Thursday by ETS,

Long range forecast calls for cold
and damp weather in most of U. S.
I

4~2 PICKUP .
5 speed radial tires, double walled cargo
bed.

NISSAN

~127

NISSAN 4x2 ST5 PICKUP

Per Month

PRICE .. .. . ..... .. ... .. ... $8995

Cash Back ... : . . ... . .. .... ·SSOO
Down Payment ........ . .. ·$1000

Per
Month

SALE ........ : . .. 7495

•

Month

PRICE .... . . .. .......... . ........ $15,038

-'14'9

1

Per

NISSAN
XE VAN

5 speed, radial tires, rear sliding glass, custom
stripes.

Cash Back ... -: ... .. ............... ·$2,000
Down Payment . . .. . ......-. ........ ·$1 ,000

PATHFINDER

YOUR PRICE ............ 512,038
King Cab
4X4

NISSAN Kl

4X4

CAB 4x2

The original King Cab. Stock No. 4423

PRICE .... .. .. . .... .. ... $14,202

~·:nth

C111:'1 Beck . ... ... .. ..... . ·$1500
Down Payment . . . . . .... .. ·S1 000

.. .. .

$127

SALE .... : ..... 11,702"
5

NISSAN 4x4
PRICE ............. $10,688
Cash Back ....... .. . •$1200
Down Payment ...... ·$1000

SALE ..... S8488

Th~td

Per Month

N~SSAN

'234

Caeh Back .. . .... .. ...... ·S1200
Down Payment .. . . . .. . ... ·$1000

- - ---·

~

.•

-~-

·SALE .......... 810,349
~
j~.

r-·~ .;~·

______
.. -~-. - -

'
'·'

..

4x4 HARDBODY PICKUP

PRICE . . .............. .. $12,549

-

---;,;;t~\~~1

------ -·

-

By FRANK T. CSONGOS
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The government's top
long-range weather forecaster predicts a stormy.
wet winter along the East Coast, while the
Southwest will be mild and the Midwest.and Deep
South colder than normal
"We expect milder than normal conditions In
the Southwest," Donald Gilman, 'chief of the··
climate analysts center of the National Weather ··
Service, said Friday at a news conference on the
December, January and February forecast.
" If we' re c'o rrect , it'll be cold in the Midwest. "
he said.
Gilman gave the following forecast:
-Chances of colder than normal temperatures
exceed 55 percent from Wisconsin •and eastern
Iowa. Missouri, Arkansas, and eastern Texas to
the Appalachians and northern Florida. They
reach 60 petcent In most of Michigan, Indiana and
Ohio and also In eastern Louisiana, southern
Mississippi and the coastal parts of Alabama and
the Florida Panhandle.
·
-Chances of warmer thlm usual weather
exceed 55 percent from the Colorado and New
Mexico Rockies westward to California and In
western Oregon and Washington. They exceed 60
'percent from the canyon country of Utah and
Arizona westward to the Pacific and also west of

Stock No. 4446

of the Year!

Per Month

'207

NISSAN PATHFINDER 4x4 OF THE YEARI
EVALUATION VEHICLE

'•r

DRAG IT
PUSH .IT
PULL IT
JUST OIT IT TO OUR LOTI

NOW '13,995

1915 CHEVY Caprice Cluslc,
tal &amp; gold .... . ...... '8495
I
,
1986 NISSAN Smtll ...... l...edl . ...... I • • • • • • '8995
Slit
Per Mt.
1916 NISSAN Shlllu Gl 4 door, sunroof . . : ...... .. '1995 1199''
1911 IUICI Century ........•.. , .. , ... . ....... '2995 '73'"
173'"
1915 MISSAN 310 II 2+2, Wue, 19,000 111llts . .. 112,995
1911 IUICl Sllyl.t .... . .. . . .. ................ i2995
1'17 NISSAN 300 IX tlrllo, fuR power .......... '17,99f
1979 PONTIAC ,,... Aa, •totnettc, blue, nice ..••• '2995 173*'
17311
1916 DODGE Celt, 4 speetl; AM/FM . , .• , . , .•.... '5995 1124".
1911 FOlD Cewler, retl, tepper ... . ...•.•.... . .. '2995
1499$
111311
1914 IISS~II s.......
1913 olDS O.•l•· 2 ......, lllue ...•......••. • •.•• '399$ 11511
1915 MONDA Cl•lc, phi, 2 door .•.• ;..•. ...• ...• . 15995 112411
1979 .PONTIAC flrei!W, retl~ Htatae?Jc .. .......... I JUS '109"
1914 IMW;
pewter,.._.
lnt.mw ...... ... .... ..110,995
1914
NISSAN Sellfta, W.., 4 doar, 5 speed •.....•.••4t95 'l13""
.
.
.
1914 ........
... _, white, air ......... '.. . 15995 .114010
rvnnAC' .........
ltU DODGE .400, ...,, 4 deor, eutt11•IIc, elr_, •••. 14995 . 'll3"
.
i
,• '
'1:'
1
1916 NISSAN Se11111, 4 ...... lllue, S IP''li···· ..•. '5995 'l24" . 1916 fOlD Eacort, dull pewter ................. 5995 · 112411
1914 CHIVY Moltte c.to, ..... eelt•ltk, air •.•..• 15995 114011
1917 NISSAN PltltfiHer XI; 4"4' ... ' .... ' ... ' . 1 13 I 995
1916 NISSAN ~- GIX, tan .....•... .•. ... . . 112,995 .
1913 TOYOTA Coull, 4 apeetl. Wue ............. ~5995 '140''
112,99$
1914 aAii luttl .............. . ....... .... : '5995 1140"
1917 CIIEYY Mo-'1 Clrle SS,
1916 PlYMOU1II c.Pele, 11111111; 4 tiGor, air ... . '69t5 '149""'
1915 NISSAN trwclt, 5 speetl, aport .Mpea : ••• •• ••. 14995
1917 CI"Y S,.ctra, aa~toa, 4 door, llr·. . ...... '7995 '15}~·
1915 CHEYT 5·10, iohl. AM/FM, , .... •oords •. .. 15995 1 12411
19J9 DA1SIIi 2.11 IX, 45,00. llhe •• •. ... . •. .. . i5495 ' '16411
1916 IIISSAN truck, 5 apeed, loae.U .... . ....... , '5995 112411
16495
$201 11
1915 M1$1Aii 200.51, lM/fM, 5 lfled ....... , ... 17995 '110" • 1912 CHEYT Scotfldele, ftlll alae,
1915 OLDS-CwlllJI, W.., , WIIIllllc •.• ' ••••••••••• '7995 '17....
\1914 TOYOTA.,....,, ....... IIMiroon •........ ·: . . 1 59~5 '183"
1917 CIIM lleM, wll!fe, •halltlc, air .•...• ·...• '1995 1110"
' 1914 .,.,.... ... D·IOO, 4 speed, mi .... , ...... 15995 '140"
•p-rmentl,...,.... Wltft a1poo down oah or tr• pt\11 lilt &amp; fUll . 88 l 87 lOt SO maftths, l l l SIIOf 54
1917 CNIVY lien, ._, w1a111ntll,
.-'1995 1110"
monlhl, .. &amp; U fOf .. monthi,G I otdlr for 31 mnt~a, Dolt nol eppty to vehicles ~rlc'&amp;d leu then .,,000,
_I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • •

Drag-Push or .Pull

$lQQQOO
For Your .

Old Car
Or T.r uckl

.

---~---.--

\

.

.

--

;'

*· ............ ..

lllve .. ..........

:j·'

*...........

·~---~---.--

.-•

As lor precipitation, Gilman sald there Is at
least a 55 percent chance of tess than usual
amounts from California eastward to the southern
Rockies and Great Plains and the lower Mi ssouri
Valley . .~owever, he said the greatestl chance of
dryer-than-usual weather - 60 percent ~ Is
expected to occur in southern Nevada, northern
Arizona and also In Oklahoma, Missouri and the
adjacent parts of Kansas and Texas .
The chances of 'm ore precipitation than usual
''
The face value of the certifiexceed 55 percent from the mouth of the
cate received from government
Mississippi eastward to central Florida and
programs is always taxable the
through the Southeast and mld·Atlantlc states to
year you receive lt, Duvlck says .
New York State and New England, Gilman said,
If
you sell that certificate · to
and reach 60 percent from the Florida Panhandle
someone.
that amount is also
up the East Coast to southern New England.
The forecast Is based on statistical indicators
taxable income .
and on such clues as upper level pressures. The
Your tax liability for other uses
Commerce Department agency was relatively on
of
. certlllcates · depends on
the mark with the weather forecast last year.
you treat CCC loans as a
whether
Gilman declined to say whether it would be _
loan
or
income
at tax time. Most
colder or warmer than usual rn the entire country.
farmers
treat
CCC
loans as loans
saying, "Pe'ople live in regions. It is rare for the
so
they
don't
create
taxable
whole country to have the same pattern - like
Is
taken.
income
when
the
loan
cold or "Yarm."
If It is redeemed with certificates, the diffe rence between the
amount of loan and the basis In
certificates Is taxable Income.
rising ."
additions to world population
Duvick says.
The Worldwatch study cited
Increased from 74 million in 1970
to 86 million In 1987," said Jodi surveys showing that hall the 463
Basis in certificates is the face
Jacobson, author of a new study. million married women of repro·
value
of certificates issued plus
The study, "Planning the Glo- ductive age In developing coun· _
the cost of those purchased.
bal Family," said that if the tries outside China want no more
Farmers
using the cash method
needs of even half the women children. Millions more, It said,
of
accounting
assume a zero
lacking access to family plan- would like to delay their next
basts
in
the
grain,
since all
ning had been met, "annual pregnancy.
,
previously
deexpenses
were
"Yet, while the number of
additions !o human population
ducted.
At
the
time
the
grain
is
would now be falling Instead of women in their childbearing
sold,
that
value
is·taxable.
years is increasing rap!dly, few
If you treat loans as Income,
countries have put family planyour
taxable income Is the
ning at the top of their agendas,"
amount
of CCC loan when it is
said Worldwatch, a non-profit
Duvi ck says redeemtaken
out.
research organ.lzation that fo·
ing
the
loan
with a certificate
cuses on global and environmencreates no taxable Income.
tal issues .

OCES plans .seminars

"Payments figured 72 months, $1000 down caah ~r trade plus cash back. Tax &amp; tiUe BK1ra.

.

California~

90-Day Outlook for December,
1987 through February,1988

1r
Month

the Cascades, while they exceed 65 percen t
around the lower Colorado River and In Sou thern

world women _lack access to planning

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - AI·
though millions of Third World
women want to limit the number
or control the timing of their
pregnancies, most lack access to
famlly planning, theWorldwatch
Institute said Saturday.
·
Although growth In the world's
population has slowed since the
1970s from 2 percent to less than
1.7 percent per year, '"annual

5 speed, air, AM/FM, tilt wheel, XE model, cloth
Interior.
Sold New

$18,433

Point Pleasant. On top (In cenlj'r of photo) guiding
crane ls Dwight Tho111pson.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- It
will soon be tax time and farmers
·can expect government commddity certi!lcates to be a problem
again this year.
Using certificates correctly
and knowing how to treat them
for tax purposes are blg concerns
for farmers , says Richard Duvick, farm management specialist
at Ohio State University .
The In ternal Revenue Service
has again changed the rules on
how gener ic commodity certifi·
cates issued as part of Commod·
tty Credit Corporation loans are
handled on income tax. But this
time the changes should make
senSe, Duvick says.
"W~'re back to more normal ,"
Duvick says. "The new interpretation allows farmers to think of
how -they have traditionally
treated loans from the CCC for
tax purposes.
"Last year. the word was you
have additional profit to be taxed
when you redeem a CCC loan.
Now, you don't report that profit,
but take 11 as basts In the
certificate and report your gains
as taxable income when the grain
is sold."

•

--

......
•

You do get a basis In the grain
equal to .the basts In the certifl- ·
cates used. Thus , your basis Is
equal to the face value of Issued
certlflcates plus the cost of those
,
purchased .
When you sell the grain. the
difference between the sale price
and their basis Is profit or loss.
If you sell commodity certifi·
ca tes the additional amount
received Is taxable income. But
buying certificates Is just like
buying feeder cattle , Duvtck

Far;m flashes

'

1

Dairy food industry future '
looks strong, officials report
ending . December 3 averaged
$159.17 per hundred, up $1.10 per
hundred from the opening week.
Average Increased by generally
$1-$3 per hundred for around
Gatllpolls-Gallla County
two-thirds of the grades com·
Dairy producers ate pleased tci
pared to opening week.
learn that the future for the dairy
The few price losses centered
food Industry looks strong.
mainly on the mtied and vatle·
Approximately 12 percent of
gated (K) grades. The practical
all new food products Introduced
top was around $162. As of
In the United States last year
December
3, the pool take was 4
were dairy products. Some of the
percent
to
2.9
percent last year.
new products Introduced were: .
A
special
class
Is being planned
whipped cream ~he;fsewlth fruit,
for
Tuesday
evening,
December
pudding that po\lrs, cottage
15,
7:00
p.m.
at
the
Conference
cheese with fruit, premium Ice
creams , dry sour cream, and Room In the ASC·SCS Office. The
class will be targeted for those
flavored cheeses.
persons signed-up for the cost·
Today's ,.consumers require
food Items to be nutritious, .s hare .money for the muttHlora
rose control, but other Interested
convenient and versatile. Dairy
persons are welcome.
· products can clearly meet these
A slide· tape series and a video
demands. The sale of milk from
tape presentation will ·be the
Gallla County dairy farms Is
class features. These were preclearly the largest contributor to
pared by the State Extension
the farm Income In the county.
Agronomy
Staff. The Gallla
Sales total some four million
SWCD
was
awarded
$3,500 for a
dollars annually In this county
Multl·Flora
Rose
Control
Dem·
alone. The strength of the dairy
onstratlon
this
coming
year.
This
food Industry directly effects the
Is
the
largest
county
grant
in
local economy,
Ohio
for
the
project.
Bill
Wilson.
It's that time of year when
farmers should begin analyzing SWCD Technician , Is the person
working most directly with the
their feed supply, so rations can
project. •.
be balanced to meet the nutrl·
The bottom has dropped out of
tiona! needs of cows and heifers
the feeder pig price. The De·
during the winter. Dairy farmers
cember 3 Graded Feeder Pig
can often see quick results of a
Sale
at Hillsboro Producers
better balanced ration.
1,754 head of pigs. Tbe
featured
Beef operations can plan to use
sale
average
was $70.06 per
available feed supply in the best
hundred.
This
Is
quite a shock to
way . The unbiased services of
those
who
received
prices double ·
the Research Extension Analytl·_
that
just
this
past
summer.
The
cal Laboratory In Wooster are
available for feed testing. Sev· · cu~rent price still reflects the the
io!W time average feeder pig
eral opt tons are available, but an
prife of about 1.8 times the
adequate test can usually by
market hog p•·tce. Pigs In the
accomplished for about $20 per
40-55 pound weight range sold In
sample. The computer program
the $73-$80 per hundred price
then can be used at the local
range.
Extension Office, free of charge,
Free bulletins! Copies of the
to design or take a closer look at
"Farmers
Tax Guide" and "Ohio
balancing the dairy feed of
Corn
Performance
Test" for 1987
various production groups . Call
are
now
available
" free" at the
614·446· 7007 to get Involved.
County
Extension
Office.
Stop for
The second week of Burley
Tobacco Auction ended on a ' your copy!
stronger note . Sales for the week
. By Edward M. Vollborn
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture II&lt; CNRD

required of pesticide users in
COLUMBUS, Ohio '(UPI) _The Ohio Cooperative Extension Ohio. These sessions are span·
Service wlll hold a series of sored by the Ohio Cooperatl'{e
seminars around Ohio this month Extension Service In cooperation
for pesticide appllcators to con· with the Ohio DPpartment of
tlnue the ir certification or be· · Agriculture ,
come recertified.
Davtd R. Miske ll, as sociate
state leader for agricultural
industries , says programs in·
elude updated Information on the
use of ·pestlcides and appilcatlng
equipment.
TEMPERATURE
Herbicides and Insecticides lor
agronomic
and horticultural
PROBABILITY
. crops w111 be covered as well as
those used on, lawns , animals,
trees , and in swimming pools and
greenhouses . .
Dates and locations of the
session are:
-Dec. 10: The Depot-Holiday
Inn in Perrysburg near Toledo.
-Dec. 11: Holiday Inn near
Dayton Mall, south of Dayton.
-Dec . 15: Aladdin Temple,
3850 Stelzer Rd .. Columbus .
-Dec. 16: Mlchaud'sTowne N'
Country in Strongsville near
Cleveland.
Registration Is due by ~c. 4.
Forms are available at county
Extension offices or from the
Ohio Department of Agriculture.
A $10 fee covers materials and
lunch. A $5 lee does not Include
PRECIPITATION
lunch.
MYSTERY. FARM - This week's mystery
PROBABILITY
· Miskell says a bout 2,500 people
farm , featured by the Ga!Uia Soli and Water
will attend the sessions. New
UPII Tulkoit
.
Conservation
District, "Is located som~where In
!
pestclde
users
are
welcome
but
.
Gallla
County.
Individuals wlshlDg to participate
not
designed
for
the
sessions
are
LONG RANGE FORECAST - The government's top long-range
In
the
weekly
contest
may do so by gueylng the ·
new certlflcation. A special
weather forecaster Donald Gilmann predicts a stormy wet winter
farm's
owner.
Just
mall,
~r drop off your guess tq
school for new pesticide ·users
along the East Coast while the Southwest wlll be mild and Midwest
the
Dally
Sentinel,
111
Court
·s t., Pomeroy, Ohio
will be held In-Columbus, Feb.
and Deep South colder than normal. Milder than normal conditions
45769,
or
the
Gallipolis
Dally
Tribune, 825 Third
are expected In the Southwest according to Gllmann, chief of the
24·25, 1988.
Ave.,
Gallipolis,
Ohlo
45631,
and
you may wlh a S5
Training and certification Is
climate analysis center of the Natlopal Weather Service. (UPI)

'

says.
You simpl y keep track of the
cost and use it in comp uting ga in
or bas is on th e P.IK and Roll . You
may not enter It on Sc hedule F a s
an expense .
Duvick also sa ys to keep a n eye
on certificate expirat ion dates.
Letting them expire means a loss
of money. The CCC exte nded
expiration dates when the certlfi·
cates were fir st introduced ·but is
less likely to be so fo rgiving in the
future.

cash prize from the Ohl\) Valley Publishing Co.
Leave your name, address a nd telephone nu mber
wllb your card or letter. No t elephone calls will b.e·
accepted. All contest entries should be turned ln,to
the newspaper office l)y 4 p.m .. each Wednesday.
In case of 1!- tie, the winner will 6e chosen by
lottery. Next week a Meigs County farm will be
fea&amp;ured by the Meigs Soli and Water Conserva·
tlon District•
•

..

�1\'EW YORK !UPTJ - During a
graduation fete last WPek at the
United Nations, il foreign jour·
nal!sts tx&gt;am!'&lt;l , choked · back
emotions, exchang!'() ifTipresslons of America a~d ga,·e gifts
to their mentors from the Ins11tute of 1nternational Education.
That was the routine part as
· 1987 fellows of the Alfred
frie ndly Press fellowship program. named lor a former
Washington Post editor, werP
wlnl'&lt;l, dined a nd presented wit h
certificates marking the comple&gt;tion of five months in American
ne-ws rooms.
More extraordinary were their
views a nd recollectio ns provided
in essays and in questionna ires

and interviews wi th Un!ted Press
International.

.

imp~;essions
"On the receiving end ·was ·
President Reagan. Speaker after
speaker had something nasty to
say about the president and 'their
statements were broadcast and
carrll'&lt;l In the local newspapers,
without much ado . .
"The Kenyan press wo~ Jd not
publish such de rogator y
statements ."
Ranee Sithara Mohamed , 27,
from The Sun, Colombo, Sri
Lanka , said her experience at the
St Petersburg (F l a . ~ Times
taught her how fri endly, concerned and helpful Am!'r icans
can be.
Munyaradzi Chenje, 27, a re·
porter from ZIANA. the Zimbabwe Inter -Africa News
Agency , asked how Americans
could Improve life In the United
States, respond!'() :
"They should have more.sympathy for senior citizens, the poor

" Five months in Chicago has · down in fa mil y life and suffering
certainly made me a tougher of si ngle family childre n," he
man, if not'a better journalist,'' .said.
Sun Ylng Xia, 31, from the Nan
Anwar Iqbal , 32 and a staffer
from Thl' Musllm, Islamabad: Fa ng Daily In Ca nton, Ch inat
Paki&gt; tan , bbsPrved of his time on worked at The Pa triot Ledger In
Quincy, Mass.
the Chicago Tribune.
Money, she believes , Is Ameri"I have already survived one
armed robbery. two football ca' s greatest strength; It s grea matches, Cl!lcago's cabs and, of tes t weakness Is "'was tefulness
course, the Tribune's newsroom (means Americans are Ignorant
culture."
· a b?ut how much they are spoiled
Asked how life in the United by th e material lives)."
States might be improved, he
William Ndenga Onya ngo, 33,
said:
,
from The Kenya Times, Nairobi :
''Try 1o improve race rela tions .
''The differences between the
or it will destroy your count ry." Kenyan and American brands of
R"vi Sidhu, :J6, from The journalism was demonstrated
Tribune of Chandigarh, Indi a, , for me In a story I covered last .
worked at The Dallas Morning! July when The Plain Dealer , my
News. He announced he will be hos t newspaper, assigned me to
envied in the newsroom bac k . to a Democratic Party gathering
home because he is return ing at the Clevelend Convention
with a laptop compu ter.
Ce nter, which was addressed by
He Is distressed by the "break- presidential hopefuls.

Threats to ASEAN summit diminished
MAl'JlLA, Philippi nes (UP l iCornmunist insurge nts rem ai n

the major threat to next week's
Southeast Asia n summ it fo llowing the capt ure of Col. Gregorio
llonasa n and a suspect in a seties
of bomb blasts, the mil itary sa id
today.
Armed forces spokes ma n Col.
Oscar Florendo told n•porters
th"t "&lt;~ fis hbone was removed"
by the arrests only days before
Sunday·s sc heduled arrival of
four Association of Southeast
Asian Natio ns tASEAN~ leaders
for the group's firs t su mmi t in a
decade.
.:The fifth visit in g lead er, President Suharto of Indonesia , was
sc.hedu led to ar rive Mond ay
.-Qorning for the two-day confe rettce and Pri me Minister Noboru
l'akes hi.ta of J a pan arrives Tuesdpy for talks wlth the ASEAN
leaders.
::"We have reduced at least
p~rtly the possible threa ts,"
F:iorendo said. But he sa id a

December 13. 1987

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

Foreign reporter_s give· their
By PATRI CIA McC ORMACK
UPI Senlpr Ed tt o~

D~ber 13, 1987

I

Page- 0 -2- Sunday Jimes-Sentinel

'l'hu rsday's arrPst of ri ghtist
bombing suspect Roberto Eusebio who police say admitted to
buildi ng five dyna mite. bombs
tha t exploded or were discovered
in the past week.
"The biggest threat now is the
CPP-NPA ·,communist Party of
the Philippi nes New People's
Army)," Ftorend o said. "lfhey'
will try to do everyt hing to topple
this government and a lot or
analysts (eel that the summit will
prop up the stability of the
country."
Com mtmjs t spokes man Satur

Third World ," Umendfa Singh,
28, The Fiji _Times, ,Suva, Fiji,
observed after working for The
Seattl e Times.
Claire Rober tson, 26, from The
Star , Joh a nn es bu r.g. South
Afri ca, did her tour on th e The
Washington Post. She conte nds
American journalists "can be
proud of their healthy di srespect
for authorit y-''

'

Hubbards Greenhouse
NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRJ STMA S SEA SON
Poinsettias

Hanging Baskets
Christmas Cactus
House Plants
live &amp; Cut Christmas Trees
Candia Arrangements
Grave Blankets
Monument Sprays
OPEN DAILY 9 -6
SUNDAY 1-6
SYRACUSE ·
992·5776

THE 1988 ·DOG LI(EUSE
: GO ON SALE DEC. 7TH

Township ... ... 1~ ._. .......... __ ... ............... __ ....__ .__ .. ... .... :.. ..,........... ,,:... ,.,,.......... .. ............ ....... ............:...... ,.,.. .. ..
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Whit

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COLOR
Hair
· •• If •·
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Gray
Tan
Brown Yellow ! Long
SHORT! Known ! Paid ·:
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massive security operatio n re-

mains in force, incl uding 3,000
troops backed by tanks, s h i p~
a pd helicopter gunships.
'
;Each of the ASEAJ\' leaders''
has aLso been provi ded wl th a
b;llet-proof limousine a nd authotized tb bring · fo ur ar med
bQdyguards. A fl eet of fi ve
Indonesian naval ships is report"!IY in Manila Bay near the
seaside sum mit to ·protec t

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••••••~•'•••••. •,•••••••••••••••'••••••••••••••• • ••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••••loo•••••••••••••••••••••••"

sUharto.

;rwq ma jor th reats to the
s11111mit were removed wi th the
w'!'&lt;l nesday night capt ure of
H9nasan, the leader of a bloody
A~g.
28 coup attempt , and

:
'4 MESSAGE FROM MLTA
i The Meigs local Teachers' Association has been on strike for

'

WE TRAIN PEOPLE
FOR JOBSI
•
!I'HE ADULT EDUCATION CENTER
Tri-County Vocational School

~
.,:!!
0

(J

jQI\

TODAY'S JOBS REQUIRE SKILL
Skills which you can acquire through our adult vocational programs. Our instruc·
lion emphasizes a hands-on approach to learning with most of your classroom
lime spenlln lab or actual job settings. The programs are nine months in length
(except Carpentry - 12 months, Cosmetology- 18 months, and Nursing

Assistant/Orderly - 18 weeks).
I

~ ~

CLASSES ARE HELD FROM 3:00 PM to 9:30 PM
ALL CLASSES MEn MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY
REGISTER DURING DECEMBER

·O
1-z

I

·

WINTER QUARTER BEGINS JANUARY 4

II .

0:111:

I 0~
oc

]j-

&gt;

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..."'
i5
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IL

Besides developing_your job skills, our center offers you the opportunily to brush
up on your job-sefiklng skills by developing your resume, thinking through
answers to interview questions and other aclivitles. Additionally, you may register
with our Placement Coordinator tor job leads In your skill area.

J

E. The last negotiation session was held on Deceber7,
more than a week after MLTA rejected the Board's last
. offer by a vote of 120-0. Even then, the Board offered
no change in their position during more than seven
hours of bargaining that day.

.

.
Financial Aid and/or.tulllon subsidy is available from a variety of sources: Pel I
Grant, VA, Guaranteed Student Loan, Single Pareni/Homem·a ker Grant and
J.T.P.A. (Community Acllon Agencies).
•

PLEASE CONTACT THE BOARD MEMBERS AND
INSIST ON A BARGAINING SESSION
AND A SEnLEMENT

Call, write or 1top In for further Information about ou.t -programs
Tri-County Vocational School does not discriminate in regard to race,
creed, color, national origin, sex or handicap.
·

. 992-5531
992-3374

1'-:=:::::::INOUSTRIA~

Paid Advertisement

-

--~----------------------------·
'
I

6

0

D. The Board's attempt to open the schools will only
delay even more the ,start of meaningful instruction in
our schools.

Robert Barton
Richard Vaughan

-&lt;

.J

B. The substitutes will be out-of-town scabs who perhaps
cannot find jobs anywhere else, and they may have only
temporary certificates. Their reason for coming is $125
per day and not because they care about the students or
the educational program at Meigs; None of our local substitutes. wtJo do a full day of real teaching for a lot less
money, will cross the picket line.

Robert Snowden
742-3051
Larry Rupe
742-3003
Jeff Werry (New member) 992-6883
Superintendent Dan Morris (Office) 992~ 2153

,z...

7113·3511

&gt;Cl

C. Unless the schools are fully staffed, the State Department of Education •Will cut off state funds and
order the Meigs Local schools to be closed again.
'

m

St. Rt. 691, off Rt. 33 Nelsonville, Ohio 45764

A. If the Meigs schools reopen before a settlement;
none of the regular teachers will be there, nor will there
be regular instruction. The Board's only purpose in try1 ing to open schools is to break the Meigs Local Teach'
,
ers' Association.

.

,.,
,

Opportunity Kn'ocked ·

LET'S CONSIDER SOME FACTS
..

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Jascha Heifetz, whose virtuosity
once prompted another master to
contemplate breaking his own
violin across his knee In envy,
was remember!'() as the greatest
violinist of his time. • "Not since Paganlnl has a
0 viollntst evolved as completely
as Heifetz," New York Philharmonic Cond~J&amp;tor Zubln Mehta
said Friday. "Thank God the
world has all of his recorded
repertoire to remember him by."
Heifetz dll'&lt;l Thursday at
Cedars-Sinal Medical Center.
several weeks after undergoing
brain surgery after a fall at his
Beverly Hills, hospital spokesman Ron Wise said. He was 86.
Heifetz 's son, Jay, said music
· filled even the last moments of
his father's life.
"My wife and 1 were with him
last night until about 40 minutes
before his death," Jay Heifetz
said Friday. He said he and his
wife played a radio at bedside of
the Intensely private musician,
and the dying man "was · still
extraordinarily responsive to
music.''
Violinist Isaac Stern remembered Helfet~ as • 'the most
powerful force In violin playing
in the world .. . the inner ear of
every violinist since at least
1930."
.
"There has been no player or
th ~ violin or any stringed Instrument in thelast50or60yearswho
hasn 't in some way been affected
by the way he played," Stern
added.
Born Feb. 2, 1901 , In Vllna,
Lithuania, Heifetz began playing
the violin at the age or 3 and

0

: 35 days. which means that 24 school days have been missed
: and will have to be made up because the Meigs Local schools
have been closed for the entire time. All of those 24 days will
: be made up with the students' own teachers later in the year.
: The Board of Education claims they will be opening the
' schools with substitutes very soon.
·

I

TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs
mature p6f"aon tor short tripa

NOTIC.E OF
PUBLIC SALE

1urroundlng Galllpolla. Contact
customer1. We train. Write T .J .

By order of the Secured

·Party, the following prop·

D i ~BriOn,

erty of Jack T. Benthall dba ·

Worth, Tx. 76161 .

J . Benthall &amp; Company, will
be offered at public sale at

MAINTENANCE

Route :35, St. Albans. WV.
on December 17, 1987 at

SUPERVISOR
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber
~ompa~y it aeeking .an aggr•

11 :00 A .M . Items to be sold
are :
.
One (1 I Komatsu 066E-8

ciatea Commercial Corpora-

tion Collection Manager at
10172 Linn Station Road.
Louisville, Ky. 40223 . Tele-

phone [502)426-0661/

Asssociotes res_!!I:.Ytfs the

right to bid . ~
DEC.6. 7, t3 , 14

Ann uu ncements
3 Announcements
KUPID'S NEST. Offers two
kinds of dating service, write
tf .O. Box 619 , Ironton, OH

46638. 16061 e36-2745.

Cakedecorating. Special holldiiV
caket. e1o. and up. Call 614 -

992-3903.

4
Public Notice
,

NOTICE OF SALE
THE HOCKING VALLEY
CREDIT UNION INC .. 223
Columbus Road. Athens,
Ohio 45701 , will offer tor
saJe the following dncribed
vehicles, free and clear of all
liens and encumbrances :

1978 FORD THUNDERBIRD, SERIAL NUMBER'
8GB7H289604
1980 FORD LTD TWO
DOOR SERIAL NUMBER
OU62Ft 16092
1981 PLYMOUTH GRAND
FURY FOUR DOOR HT. SERIAL NUMBER 1P3BR27·
NOBA120549
The aforementioned vehi·

ciao shall be sold by sooted bid

Giveaway

Two tmall dogs· male &amp; female .
"!.1 Chihuahua . V2 Fox Terrier. Has
ttad 1omeshot1. Call614 -256-

1343.

6 Free puppies · part labrador.
Good Christma1 gift. Call after 9
PM or all day Saturday- 614·

388-8895.

Yard Sale item• to giveaway .
Call614-388-8449.
Kitten• to good home only . Gold
male; black and gold ·female: 2
tabby femalet. Call 814-843 -

5445 .

Kitte!'ls. liiter trained. 304-676-

3168 .

6 Lost and Found

Union at 12:00 noon on D•
cember 18, 1987. ThBio V8hiclee shall be sold to the hi·

lost ol stolen, Mala Blue Tick•

any implied or expraued warfllnties. ThBSe vehides may

~

w~hout

female Walker Coonhound. 663

North Front St., Middleport, Oh.

6t4-992-5664.

-;::::;:;:;::=::;:;:::=:::::==

bo seen It the office of tho 9 Wanted To Buy
Credrt Union It 223 Cotum• - - - - - -- - but Road, Athens, Ohio. The
Hocking Vahv Credit Union,
Inc. rasarvas the right to ac-

cept or rejll(:t any or all bidl
and to ,withdraw the vahicl•
from sale prior to confirma-

tion. Terms of sale. Cash -

Certified Chedc or Financing

confirmatkm at the time of

We pay c•h for late model clean
us.adctrs.
· Jim Mink Chev.·Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
814-446-3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer uNd cars. Smittt
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eastern

Aw. , Gallipoli1. Call 614 -446·

sale.

2282.

2

WANTED TO BUY : Used wood
&amp; coal heaten. Swain' t Furniture, 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gallipolil.

Doc. 10. 11 , t3
In Memoriam

ELIZABETH R. JORDAN
Words are unable to con·
vey our thou&amp;hts and ••press our appreciation to
our families and lriends lor
the comfort provided at the
time of the hospitalization
and death ol our beloved
wifeand rnother. To each of
you who touched our lives
we say, "Thank You."
We wish to express our
gratitude for the cards, vi·
sits. and flowers sent to
her while she was in the
hospital. Our thanks to the
Rev. Harold Benson lor his
consolation during his
hospital visits_
Our special thanks for
the food "provided; for the
cards received; to the Rev.
Benson and the Rev. Ray
Price for t~eir words of solace; to the pianist, leah
Crabtree; to each of the
honorary pallbewer~ to
each of the pallbearers; and
to those who prepared the
family meal.
Our thanks to the Boyd
Oliver funeral Home ol
Ashville, Ohio, and to the
Waugh-Halley-Wood fu·
neral Home of Gallipolis,
Ohio.
The Family of
Elizabeth R. ·Jordan

Call614-446-3169 .
Good Weathered Oak Barn Sid·
ing. Call 614-446-6592 or
446· 8217 aftlf 6 PM .
Wanted to buy- Standing timber.
can 814 -379-2768.

Good used aho 11.11 &amp; mandolin.
Call814-446-2616 .
Buying deify gold. silver coins.
ring1, jewelry, sterling ware, old
eoins, l•o• currency. Top pricu. Ed Burkett Qarber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh . 614-

992-3476.

In the land of sweet for -

MASTER VIOLINIST- Jascha Heifetz {undated photo), who
was recognized as one of the world's foremost violinists at age 16,
died Thursday. He was 86.
started performing In public at 7.
His father. Ruvln, a professional
violinist, enrolled the boy at St .
Petersburg Conservatory In Russia, where he studll'&lt;l under
Leopold Auer, teacher of famed
violinists Mischa Elman and
Efrem Zlmballst. father of the
Hollywood actor.

ever
We know you linger
there
We know you're in the

best hands

Heifet z spent a quiet childhood
dominated by study and six or
more hours or practice each day.
Upon hearing the young Heifet z perform in a Berlin concert,
violin master Fritz Kreisler told
his friend, Z1mballs t: "You af!d I
might as well take our fiddles and
break them ac ross our knees."

You're in our Savior's
Care .

Mother ... Grandmother
You were the best

the dearest evermore
It's no wonder Jesus
Wanted
you at his
house
To live foreverore
Yes You were called es-

..
:u,
mo

&lt;,

no
mm

"'

I ,.

' I

LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI) Former Ohio State football
Coach Earle Bruce will accept
the head coaching job at '"e
University of Kan$aS If a s;; ·factory financial package can ue
workl'&lt;l out, The Wichita EagleBeacon reported.
The newspaper, quoting two
unidentified sources, said Bruce
has been offered the p6sltlon, but
financial problems have not been
resolved.
,
Doug Vance. assistant athletic
director at KU, would not comment on the report. The school

had previously said It would
name its new football coach
during this Weekend.
Ted To liner, an assistant coach
with the Buffalo Bills, said he
remained -Interested In the job
and would travel to Lawrence in
the next few days If he receives a
call from Athletic Director Bob
Frederick .
Tollner said he assumed
Bruce, 57, has been offered the
job, although he had not been told
that by Frl'&lt;lerlck.
Before h-e was fired by Ohio
State Nov. 16, Bruce's total

The Meigs l-ocal School Dl•trlct
is accepting applic.tlons for
substitute teachers . Subttitu..i:
are needed in all certiHcMkm
areu. The d•tv 1'8te o~ pay·
•126 . Ohio Certrti_. T. .ch•s
Willing to cross a ~ pldt• line
should immediately contact
Meigs local School Sup•lntendent's offlc:e, 821- South
Third Avanue. Middleport. Ohio

door.

QUILTS
High prices Pflld for pre-1960
quilts. Applique, pieced. any
condition. Call 614.992 -2101

or 814 ·892-6867 .

Employmenl
Scrvtces
11

Help Wanted

Tour Guld&amp;s· Male &amp; Female.
Our top P,eopla earn $800 81200 per week. PleBBant work·
ing conditions. Salary to start,
with bonul81 . A really fun place
to work. Friendly, neat. depen·
dable are the requirernenu. Call
614-218-8421 11k for Sue.
WELDER'S HELPER
training

In

m"gen/ g•,

thielded arc, h•d facing and
GMA/ GTA . welding. Good benefits, steady work. Must be
high school grad , 11ga 17-30 in
good health. All jobs are out of
stale. Cell 1· 800·282 -1384,

Monday -Wednesday,

PM .

9 AM-2

Ph11m1cist: Four stare independent pharmacy Athens area
has immediate opening for staff
ph•macist. 44 hour workweek ,
Co~petittve salary bated upon
exphrience. Benefits· package.

Send resume with referencesMedic.! Center Pharmacy , 400
E. State St.. Athent, Ohio
46701 · Att : Eric Riduwds-RPh .
Bidding closes Dec. 16th.

Rio Grinde College/Community Colleee announces
the opening of a POiition ad Director of Continuin&amp;
Education, Off-Campus and Special Programs. This
position is an administrative twelve month appointment
'
Reporting to the Vice Presidentlor Academic Affairs
responsibilities of the position include develop·
ment and implementation of continuing education
programs, course selection, development and
evaluation ol programs and monitoring of the
budget. ,Knowledge of and the ability to relate to business, industrial and comunity organizations is required. Ademonstrated ability to work successfully
in an academic setting is required.
_
Computer communication skills, as well as stron&amp;
interpersonal relations and motiv~ion to be a selfstarter is expected. Master's Degree is required.
Interested persons should send a copy of their resume including the names and phone numbers of
three references before the deadline of December
31, 1987 to: ·
Ms. Phyllis Mason, Personnel Officer
Rio Grande College/Community College
P.O. Box 969
Rio Grande, OH . 45674
Rio Grande ColteJt/Community Colleae is an Equal
P.O . 13657

Opportunity/Affirmative Aelion Eployer

FINE WOODWORKING
INSTRUCTOR
Rio Grande College/Community College announces
the opening of a position for Fine' Woodworking In·
structor.
Responsibilities of this full-time tenure track position
will include the development and leadership ofa new twoyear, AAS program which will teach furniture and cabinet
making as well as industrial production of wood products.
Responsibilities of the position also include lecture.
laboratory and field trip sessions as well as participation
in advising of students and participation in campus-wide
committees.
Qualifications include a bachelor's degree in a woodwork·
ing related area required wit~ a graduate dqree, previous
production and teaching e&lt;perience preferred.
Regular nine month teaching contract is offered with a
special hire date ol June I, 1988, to allow for prep~ration
during the summer for classes beginning August 23, 1988.
Salary commensurate with education and experience.
Medical benelits available.
Rio Grande College/Community College is located in rural
southeastern Ohio in the heart of hardwood country.
All interested persons are encouraged to send a letter of
application, copy of transcripts, names of three professi·
onal references and a detailed description of three personally completed woodworking projects before the dead·
line of January 30, 1988 to:
._,
Ms. Phyllis Mason, Personnel Officer
Rio Grande College/ Community College
P.O. Box 969
Rio Grande, OH . 45674
Rio Grande.College/ Community College is an Equal

Opportunity/ Affirmative Act ion Eployer

P.O. 13595

Real Estate General

GET PAID lor reading books!
1100 .00 pltl' title. Write: ACE33E, 181 S. Llncolnwav. N.
Aurora. II . 60642.

3 Announcements
'

VFW

We miss your voice and

tender touch
But most of all vour love
God knows that we will

meet you
In His Heavenly home
above .

financial package was approxi mately $350,000, including an
$89,000 base salary.
It was thought former Kansas
Coach Bob Valesente, who was
fired Nov . 23 after compiling a
4-17-l record In tWo seasons ,
made a total of $150,000.
The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch
earlier reported Bruce Is known
to want a contra ct match ing the
five-year $300,000 annual guaran·
tee the University of Arizona
offered him in Janu ar y.
Bruce rejected that offe r to
remain at Ohio State.

So oft' we shad our
tears

Uko sifting, grains of
sand
So look for us, We'll see

you
Together we will stand
In thehmdofsweetfor-

evar
Just o•er in Glory Land.
Very sadly missed by
Child~en,

· Grandchildren.
Great- Gra~dchild ren,
Brothers and Sisters.

'

'

•

DIRECTOR OF CONTINUING
EDUCATION

To enler Christ's open

Sources report Earle Bruce willltake Kansas·post if deal worked out
:

Government Jobs. t16 ,0110 ·
•59,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
area. BO.IHI87-1000 Elllt. R9806 for current repO fKeral

Maintenance Supervisor for
placement in our polyester manufacturing faellity in Apple
Grove , W, Ve. Applieanu should
have baCkground• which include
dlreet aupervisorv r.. ponsibili·
ti011 in . m:~nufacturing plant
expeJience in repain , preventive 46760. 614-992-2t53,
maintenanCQ and work scheduling . ExperienCQ in maintenance ~anted: Full-1ime employment
training programs would also be m your own home as a Home
bonficial . If you are seeking a Services Work• with Buck.,a
cl1allenging posrt:ion where you Community Service. We provide
can be en integral member ofthe ·
aal.-y plus benafit. and a d•tv
local busine.s team , submit your room
ancl board rate. You
resume to:
provkte a home. guidance and
Michael! Harrington
friendship In 1 famitv atmotIndustrial Relations Dept.
phere, Requires ability to teach
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber
personal iiv ing a kills and a
Co.
commitment to the groWth and
St. Rt. 2, Apple Grove. W . VA . dwelopment ot an individual
25602
wlttt II'Willre mental retardaUon.
Equal Opportunity Em plover
Contact Sylvia Day at 814·448·
7109 after 5 :00 p.m. Equal
Sitter needed in my home five
opportunity employer.
dav• a week-Mutt be dependable. Call 614-448-2163 &amp; leave
Someone to enter into contr~~ct
m81aage.
for tnow removal. Call 614·
797-4869 .
Someone to s~y with lady from
8 PM - 8 AM. Call 614 -446·
Genaral Farm Work
1414.
Somee.11Perlence requir.t. Long
term employment tor a qualified
Car ing &amp; retponsible person to
peraon. Home &amp; utilhi• pr~
care for inf.nt in your own home
vided. Mutt live on• f•m.· An
in or near downtown Gallipolis
older experl.,.ced p•aon pr•
to start after New Year or sooner
f.-red. Wegea • beneflta negMt.
if possible. Send Info. to Box Cia
lble. Call or write: Rich•d Innis.
1 14 c/ o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Rolling Acree Farm, Rt. 2 Box86
826 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
Witeman Rd ., P.triot, Ohio
46631 .
45658. 614-379-2297.
IIYB

Raw fur, beef and deer hide1.
Gyn Sing end Yellow root. We
h..,e wheat and nita lites.
Trapping suppll• for sele.{Buy·
ing u111d traps) . Gearge Buckley.
Hour&amp; 12-9. 614 -684 -4781 .

Paid

IN
RUTH BUFFINGTON
Who Passed Away
December 15, 1980

2790.

Puppi81. Will be small dogs .
304-676-7156 .
.

at the office of the Credit

ghost bidde&lt; ""As to••

Da iry hrm.' Murt h...,e mHidng
experien c e . Call 114 - 494 ·

hit.

Rish Equipment Company.

Crawler Dozer SN: 45403.
Inspections may be arranged by appointmont .
Cash sales only. Inquiries
rriay be made of theAsao-

Pres .. Southwe.-tern

Petroleum, Box 961005, Ft.

pecially

DIVERSiftEO
'
MACH.tNE ;_.(!)·'
··.,\
MAINTENANCE J..,Uti==
. ===MEDICAL •:.&amp;.,!====='TRADES I·. f ;b
. ==::d
OCCUP,ATIONS !.
.
1 ·· · ·~J

..

Public Notice

Master violinist Heifetz dies

While you were out. ..

I

•
•

Sentinel - 992-2156
RegiSter - 675-1333

By .JAMEs SANDS
The community eri'Cted a Christ- Ralph, "Riding With Santa" by
The Christmas shopper In Galli:
mas tree In the park In front of Floyd Gardner, "1 Wonder" by
polls in 1915 had a lot of good
wh_lch carols were -sung on Christ - Ernest Ward, "No .Peeping'' by
bargains to choose from as he could
mas day, The big community event Lawrence Ralph, and " A S!Jike In
weigh theprtceat
th~t took place on Christmas day
Santa Claus Land''. At Ches hire's
The - Bankrupt
was the dinner and party given by school program held lh the Kof P
Store versus the
the community for poor chUdren of Hall tM Board of Education was
·price at The Un· Gallipolis.
present!'() with gifts: a rattle, a toy
derselling Store.
At 10 a.m. on Christmas day, over · dairy wagon, a toy cornet, toy
These were just
200 poor children were gathered In scales, and a picture primer.
two of the many
the Opera House where they were
On Christmas day in 19151t rained
shops frequented
shown moving pictures. Later that In the morning and turned to snow
by local shoppers In 1915. The
morning they went to the Hayward later in the day. Along the
Underselling Store was located at building and .were entertained by Chickamauga Creek back of, the
the earner of Third and Court and In music on the phonograph. At noon town a big shooting contest was
1915 advertised ladles suits for the Christmas dinner was served to held. Mr Sibley of the Tribune
$3.98, ladles' C93ts for $1.89, table them and includl'&lt;l turkey, mashed wrote: " While gunmen blazed
linen at 24 cents per yard, men's potatoes, cranberry sauce, dreSs- ~way at clay pigeons, we read
corduroy pants at Sl39 and men's Ing, gravy, bread ahd 'butter. The Dickens' Chr istmas Carol and 100
rubber boots at $2.39.
main course was followed by &lt;mgel of Shakespeare's sonnets."
The Bankrupt Store advertised food cake and Ice cream. Christmas
Wrote Mr Sibley about the New
the "Delineator" fashion bookfor75 gifts were also given to the children. Year : "1916 \Iiili bE' a good year In
cents. For furs the place to be was The majority of the money for this Gallipolis" (except he warned) "If
G~'s Department Store In the
endeavor came from the churches. we won't rid ourselves ofthe loafers
Lupton buUdlng. Moch Clothing In So much money was oolii'Cted that and th_e worthless population who
the same. buUdlng sold Adler- there was enough left to give to Mr lrthablt our miserable shacks the
Rochester clOthes. Pres Beall's Clifton, the superintendent of next _best thing will be to let the
store in the 400 bloek of Second schools, that he could use It to buy newcomers crowd them out."
Avenue advertised '"Utile Darling · shoes for the poor in January.
A large erowct attend!'() the movie
Sets" with coat, pants, and cap for
As always there were a host of
"War" at the Gallipolis Theatre. It
$2. Harry Frank also sold this set Christmas programs performed in was one of the !list 6 reel films in
Mr Beall's also advertised the '"new schools and churches. We have town. The newspapers remarked
Duritley Pneumatlc-vac Carpet before us the newspaper wrtte-up that It made the war In Europe very
Sweeper" for $4.98 marked down for one held at Old Kyger School real. Of course It would get even
from $7.50.
and one held-at Cheshire K of p more real in less f]lan 2 years when
J:M. Kerr Hardware had the best . Hall. At the Old Kyger program Gallipolis entered the war in
seii'Ction of toys. The most popular there were recitations like "Santa person.
Items for boys In 1915 included:
Claus and the Mouse" by Gladys
sleds, air nOes, striking bags,
ll!Jxlng gloves, skates, knives,
footballs; flashlights, safety razors,
and tennis rackets.
· , At McBride Music one.could buy
the Edison Cylinder Phonograph,
tbe Hornless Edison Amberola, and
blue am bersol records. Kerr's
Drug sold the VIctor VIctrola and
the Columbia Graphaphone. W.L.
Carleton at 448 Second sold Starr
Pianos. A RemingtOn Player Plano
at Carleton's sold for $400.
For HavUand and Pickard Cblna,
one went to Albert Merriman
Jewelry, for Stetson hats to Mach's,
for women's bathrobes to Halliday's at 48Court. for made to order
taUored suits to H.J. Volz at 251
Second, fur brass beds to Jake
Soden's, fpr Parisian. Ivory to T.S.
Eachus, for cigars to Shartz Smoke
House, for oranges to A.A. Fontana
and for the man who had everything Ohio Valley Bank offered a
$100 Municipal Bond.
At Haney's Grocery, oysters sold
for 30 cents a quart, Arbuckle coffee
THE BUILDING pictured Is located at Third and Court in
for 2il cents a pound, and potatoes
Gallipolis,
was buill In 1858 by Moses Frank for his dry goods
for 2il cents a peck. Grube's did a
business.
In
1915, the Underselling Store was located In the corner
good business In Green Gage Plums
room.
The
Underselling Store and the Bankrupt Store were
while W.E. Spear sold fresh pork at
of' a bygone era.
discount
houses
15 cents per pound.

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

446-2342

Tribuna -

Discount stores of the past

Ocampo was quoted Friday as pollee superintendent Brig. Gen.
saying the rebels would not Manuel Roxas.
disrupt the summit because •'we r,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
support anything that is good for
·
the Filipino people."
,
tAl
Florendo we lcomed the remarkbut said, "We are not going
lo be lulled into believing there
DEADLINE fOR PURCHASES Of 1988 DOG LICENSES IS JANUARY 20TH. FOUR DOLLARS ($4.00) PENALTY If Ll- ..
are no threats . There are always
CENSE
IS PURCHASED AnER lHAT DATE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THE HANDY APPLICATION BLANK AND
threat s."
MAIL
TO
THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURTHOUSE NOW. FEES ARE FOUR DOLLARS ($4.00) fOR EACH DO~. MALE
E usebio, a supporter of ousted
Oil fEMALE. (KENNEL LICENSE PENALTY 120.00). DOG TAGS WILL ALSO BE ON SALE AT THE HUMANE SOCIETY
president Ferdinand Marcos,
LOCATE_DAT THE CORNER OF NORTH SECON,D ST. AND WALNUT ST.. MIDDLEPORT. OHIO 45760.
was found in his home with 250
Male $4.00
· Spayed female $4.00
female $4.00
Kennel ~icense $20.00
sticks of dynamite. 10 timing
devices , an M-16 rifle and
Owner's Name .............. ........... ... .... :..... .......,...... .............. .... ... ..... .................................................. ...........
bomb-making equipment, said
Address .. .. ............. ............. ,, ........ .... .... ... ... .......... -- .................................... ....... -- ... ---.--· ...---------.----···· ·--····

•
•
:
'• A g •e · s
ex ·•· .

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 0-3

lames Sands

of America·
and the und erp r.lvilegl'&lt;l people,
and discourage th e promotion of
Individua lism as Importan t.".
Chenje. who work!'() on The
(Baltimore) Sun , a lso said Am er Icans should be taught " more
about ot her countr ies a nd
people."
Isabel Segue!,' 31, a staffer at
Ercilla newsmagazine In Chile ,
said back home she will miss the
press freedom she experienced
at the Washj ngton bureau of
Time magazine.
The most lasting Impression
she's. taking with her: "The right
to be wrong plus the chance to try
again as many times as you ca n
or like."
"To get to along as a repo rter
in America you need to be sma r t
and full of guts," said De le
Omotunde, from Newswatch.
Lagos, Nigeria, recalling his
stint on The Philadelphia
Inquirer.
· "Working on an · Ame~lcan
newspaper ... ha s been a shock, a
shock of realizing that there is
virtually no free press In the

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W.Va.

CHRISTMAS

DINNER DEC. 15
6:30 P.M .

Members Only
Bring gift marked for
your children.

GALLIPOLIS

FLEA MARKET

Former Thaler Garage
At Rt. 35 &amp; 1110
Open Friday
Saturday &amp; Sunday
9 to 5

CHRISTMAS GIFTS
GALORE
Booko, Tooto,

Blaaaware, Jewelry ,

Antlquos. T·Shlrto.

Craftl. Toy1, Vacuum
Cleaners KnlvH Mite .

Sealed bids will be received until December 28, 1987 at
12:00 noon lor the residence of Jatk E. Gills, deceased,
located at 330 Third Avenue, Gallipolis. Ohio, beinc part
of City lots 106 and Ill. All sealed bids should be mailed
or delivered to William F. "Ric" Gills, c/ o Attorney
Richard C. Roderick, 26locust Street, P.O. Bo&lt;969, Galli·
polis. Ohio 45631. Bids witt be opened by Mr. Roderick at
1:00 p.m. on December 28. Prospective purchasers may
inspect the residence on Saturday, the 19th day of December, 1987, betwe~n the hours of 3:00 and 5:00p.m .. or by
appointment. For appointment or further information
contact Ric Gills at 304/675-3333, after 5:00 p.m. The
owners reserve the righl to reject anv and all btds.
William F. Gills, II. John E. Gllls, -111
.
Mary Jo Gills, OWNERS
:'

{

I

\,

~·

••

�•
•

Page-D-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel
Help Wanted

11

41

P~rt-tim• (Friday and Set morn-

inga onlyl O.ntal hygentlt
wanted for Me191 Huhh O.pt
Dent.\ School b•ed aeaiMt
progrt~m

Begms m•d·Januan-

utllnl• &amp; deposit
A48 2516

cl•'"

ollglblo.

llaek the akillai' We tr11n people
for jobl 11 machlnlttl In our
machtne tred• program Ne•ly
every product of tndu.crv, from
cornflllt• to turbine~ is made
eit h• uamg m.ohme tools or

"We forgot to pour the

011 on
the attackers we were busy makrng
french fnes "

uling mach•n• mlde with ma

3119
Subltnute tnch11t1 for the Ma
son County Boerd of Educstion
call Elizabeth Matto• at 304

678 4640

12

'

S1tuat•ons
Wanted

Will babySit In my home Tuppen
Pl11n1area Calll14 687 6577

---------loChlld care. experienced mother
afl hourt all ag• weloome
Supervlled activit I• Me all fur
mshed C•ll 614 992 2468

13

Insurance

Call Ul for your mobile home
1nsur1nce M1ller ln1U011nce
304 882 2146 Alto auto
home Ide. health

18 Wanted to Do

31

Homes for Sale

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

6 room• bath. endo1ed porch
forced • ., furnace 1n1ulatadnfiW
roof. n..,.. Clrplt Upper M110n

1 acre,121165tralletwith12x24
addit•on New porch furnished

a.

33

N1ee 3 bedroom hou .. Fem1ly
room utrag~ buement.
forced air hut 6 wooded acre•.
bam 1275 per month t100
depo1h No lntlda pMI 10 Ea1t
St Pomeroy', Oh•o 614 423·

116 000

4 room houte With all Ullhtl81,
Peacock St Pomeroy 8100 pM
moflth •e&amp;OO C•ll 614 992

2720 .. 614 992 3569
GOVERNMENT HOMES from
81 00 (U repair) foredosur81,
repos, tax deliquent propertl11
Now Nlling your area Call
1 316·736 7367 ext 2P WV H
for current lit 24 HRS
Three bedroom. brick home.
large liv~ng room ponible loan
auumpttOn c:lou to Point Pie•
nnt 304 676 6308

tV:.: 1tory newly equipped kit

chll!ll"' tero• fam1ty room air
cond convlent location, 304

676 5027

3783

Farms for Sale

I

lend cOntract 6 98 ICI'GI barn,
chicken coop, pony shed work

shop and 3 bedroom house
•2600 down an,JI 836&amp; 90
month 15 yr. or ci'-h prtce of

$26 000

8 30 to 4 30 Ask for m1ch&amp;el

614 992 6373

34

Business
Buildings

Commen::1al buldlng• for lease
Downtown Pt Pie11ent Store.
offioes A One Re.l Etttte
Carol Yeager, Broker Call 304
676 5104

Coli

for Sele
New 1988 Prtlltlge14x70 total
alee 3 BR , 2 blthl, furmshed
Anchor~ eldrt1ng Loaded with
.. ,,., 814,1500 Kaneuga Mo·
bile Hom•· 614 448~9662
Tre•ler for

Sal•

B•50

Call

814 388 8294
M~o~ltSell-87x.14 2 BR VIctorian
Oelu•a G .. , heat parttv ~r~
niahed Call after 5 PM 614~

446 2187

8

Homes for Rent

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Chnstmas paper, decorations, lights, toys,
watches, jewelry, perfume, radios, items
for everyone. Lots of pnzs. •
Rtchard Reynolds. L1sc. No 301 -88

This sale has been continued from Dec Slocated at
83 Mill St, Middleport, Oh1o Gomg Out of Business. Everythmg"goes• From Middleport Book Store•
'MISC"
3 wrc ker shelf unrts m1sc shelvmg, 3 lighted g1ft display
un1ts, stereo tape center prctures all kmd of woad &amp; tm
rtems 1ewelry fenton glas s baskets &amp; dishes hand pamted
pets Fenton glass rtes bread &amp; com mun1an plates church
banners B1ble covers sheet mus1c weddrng &amp; anniversa ry
1tems rolls wrapprng paper mrsc books foldmgtablrl.
stools lots of dishes &amp; kmck knacks records, book racks, commentary set books on Old &amp; New Testaments mrsc ol
free supplies apprax .3 hrs of selling yet
Casll

Ftva lou on corn• wrth 4
bedroom hou.. Carpeted full
b•ement centntl heat. ftrepf~• garege Ctlt 304~882

NICK &amp; DIANA IHLE. OWNERS

Posttrve I D

DAN SMITH: AUCTIONEER

614-992-7301
614 949-2033
'Not Responsible for Accidents or Loss of Property"

Brand new 3 BR near Galhpolit
Loch on Rt 7 2 ear garage nice
lot lmm~Mhlle POI ..IIIOn Will
con11der ,,.de tn of Mobile
home propertv etc Barg•n
pr~ced Call 8,4 446 8038

3254

Completely renovated 3 bedroom plll!ll"'ty yard and garden
space beautiful home All eiKt
nc. heat pump central alr 4
m1les from RINenswood Por
tland Oh 614-843 6309

Apartment
for Rent

For rent ap1rtment tr11ler fur
mshed unfurnished Woodburn
1traplac• Water, sewage
pand Clean Gutet Foster 1
Mobil a Home Park. 446 1602

'"Q

2 BR apts I clos&amp;tl kttchen
appt furn11hed ~uher Dryer
hook up, ww Cllfpet, n.wtv
painted, deck
Reganc:y Inc
Apt• Cell 304·875-nla or

HontVtut:kle Htlls Get
pr!VIte patios Water
.-wer. tralh aervrce furnished
Rent .-rt~ t220 Call814 446
3344 or 446 1 134 Equal Hout
1ng Opponunlty

SiilSn:J NNI078
HSntJHJ.

c

3 bedroom hou111 for rent No
pets or k1~s Depostt reqund
Call614 992· 3169

.. S3Sn.:l NM01B

1~1

&amp;61111~:&gt; I,Ur.l ~ IIIQ '1111 .(w Ul a6UI~I

Furnithad apt nat to library
One profeuional adult onty
Parking Call 814·441·0331

tJ388Vf
jO 101 8 pe6ua4:&gt; 8W8:1,. 'PBIIdeJ
NOtJn3•·~s ·anowa1 eq 01 ·~u nM ~ ~~~~M
MOT13:J
P8lfll 18M IHJ1:18 POOM~IIO~ V
1V07:JV
Sl37-t'VVI:/OS
iNI
t;./i';l~-~lr"'l:!JS 0! SlliMSNY

3 bedroom hou1e Beument 2
storage bu1ldmgs garage, 1tove
furnished t260 par month
DepoSit requ~red 614-949

3027

814 · 446~47B2

~Modern nlee 2 DR apt Located
at 641 4th Ave Adultl onlv
a22&amp; p• mo Call 814 446

Dowmown~

Mod•n 1 BR ,
complete kltch ... c•pet. air
elec:1ric hell Call 814 ·441·
4383~dayl. 446-0139 even •
weeklll"ldS

992 6666

Real Esteta General

Luxury Ten Apanmentl El~t­
gant 2 Br 2 floor fulty
CIJpeted CA 1nd hNt Pnvattt
ent,.nea endosed pat1o pool &amp;
playground Start t299 per
month UtilitlM not m eluded
C•lll14 387~7B60

N1ce 1 BR apt Ne• HMC No
pett Stow, refrlg • drap•
$226 a mo R•f requlr9d Call

Hou 11 for rent 3 bedroom
garage deposit requ~red 814

2300
1 BR new apt furmshed or
unfutmshed Ne• Meig~ Htgh
School Call614 446 8898

.Reel Estate General

NEW LISTING - AFFORDABLE $20s - 3 or 4
bedroom home wrth apprax 5 acres B1g eat rn
kllchen livrng room bath small barn and more
#2524
PRICE REDUCED - Lrk e new cha rce local ran 3
bedrooms Much remodeling has been done 2 car
garage barn and over 6 acres of land adJacent to
Raccoon County Park Pr~ced only m the 30s
Don't mrss thrs buyer appartunJtyl
#2454
VACANT ACREAGE!- Over 36 acres Developed
spnng Several feet of road frontage Call fo1 more
mlarmat1on $1 2 000
#2478
FARM - 147 5 acrrd mare or less 2 story frame
home wrth 4 bedrooms liv1ng room fam1ly room,
f11eplace 3 large barns mmeral nghts and
labacco base rncluded Hamson Township
#2469
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY- Mob1/eHomeCourt
- La rge building very nrce home 10 mobile
homes 11 mobile home spaces, lrghted streets
rrver v1ew great rnco me property Call for
complete l1strn g
#2492

NEW LISTING• - 549 4th AVENUE- I \l story
NEW LISTING' OWNER FINANCING home wfth 4 bedrooms liVIng room dmmg and
$29,500
00 - I\\ story frame home w1th newer
family rooms newer gas furnace Gal l lor an
v1nyl
s1dm~
Over 2 acre flat lawn 3 bedrooms,
apporntment today
IIV
IQg
room
bath
large rooms Gall today
#2522
#2518
IF THIS DOESNT MOVE YOU NOTHING WILl!FARM
LISTING
160
acres
Pr1vate
locatron
Outstanding 4 bedroom 2story home rn Centenary
Modern house, 6 rms, I \\ batris Pr~vate water
wrt h 2\? bat hs l1 vmg room family roam formal
system
spnng development tobacco base barn
dm1n~ 2 car garage full basement and much
t1e
house
many spr~ngs for livestock water:
more Call for mare mformatron
#2468
pasture trllable lan(l and woodlot Jorns Wayne
National Forest good huntmg and recrealion •
STARTING OR ,SLOWING DOWN7 - In either
Southwestern schools Jfr~ced low $60s #2464
case your needs are changing Gome see this
convement 2 bedroom 1anch home Alumrnum
GO AHEAD- Ask us about thrs lovely 3 bedroom
Si drn~ well constructed Nrce ffat fenced rn back
remodeled home wrth ternftc v1ew of r1ver I\\
lawn HURRY' $29 500
#2499
story alumrnum s1drn~ liv1ng room formal drnrng
area Addrtronal mobile ho'J'e space mcluded
FAIRFIELD ACRES- Is your place to be Good
#2498
location off Farrfreld Centenary Rd m Green
School D1strrct Attractive 3 bedroom brr ck and
OWNER WANTS A CONTRACTII Let's make
alum ranch , large famrly roam w1th fir eplace,
contact to see thrs lovely 4 bedroom home Lrv1ng
woodburner, plu s 2 nrce lots at end of
room, lamrly and rec rooms, formal dmmg.lots of
development for added pnvacy Th e best part 1s
stora ge space Ex cellent neighborhood of nrce
the pnce $42 500 00 Gall today
homes and professional- fam11ies Wants to sell
#2494
now' Gall to see today'
#2512
THIS HOME WANTS A FAMILY- B1g kitchen w1th
plenty of cabinets brg lrvrng roam rec
' NEW LISTING• $32 000 _ 4 bedroom home and
room/family roam cambrnatlon, e'tra srze mce
over 15 acres Lrvrng room large kttchen With
wooded lot Owner ISmov1ngaway, doesn 1want to
brrch c~br nets Storage buildmg and some
leave th1s home empty Be the frrst to see'
marketable trmber Call for more detarls
#2485
#2504
JUDY DEWITT
BROKER
388-8155

J Memll Carter

AUCTI.ON

At the Howery Auction
TUESDAY EVENING December 15,
~

1987 at 7:00P.M.
We have been CommiSSioned by a Local businessman to
sell some P11vate Collections pius many many pieCe$
from h1s busmess Also ApproXImately 25 p1eoes old
Country and Oak Furmture
14 K Jewelry Packet Watches, Sterlmg Silver Gold Carns
S1lver Dollars and S1lver Money
Royal Doulton Figurines and Chara cter Jugs Several P1eces
"of Weller and Rosevrlle Pottery Small Gallectlan of Hummell
f1gurrnes lapprox 20 pes I Several Qu1lls and Some Stone
Ja~
\
Furnrture rncludrng Tabl es Secretary Stands and more All
furn1ture 1s as found cond and original varnish
Auct1oneers Note COME AND CHRISTMAS SHOP WITH
us• Surely there Will be many, many bargatns Also there
are so many pieces we may have to lr.un second sale to
elimmale complete parcel
r&gt; '
TERMS CAiH OR CHECK WITH POSITIVE I D
REFRESHMENTS AV~ILABLE
PLENTY SEATS AND PARKING
AUCTIONEER RODNEY HOWERY
614-698-7231 Home-6"14-594-3780 Auct1on House

II

REALTOR®

Becky lane
Phyllis Loveday
Patnck Cochran
ltz long
Sonny Garnes
Cheryl Lemley

'
BRICK RANCH WITH 4 BEDROOMSl'h baths
krlchen, drnrng area liv1ng room With beautrful
br~ck frreplace full basement w1th finrshed lam
roam and 4th bedroom utrlrty roam and cellar 2
car garage N1ce v1ew of fiver Pr~ced m the $50s
#2495
HOUSING YOU CAN AFFORD- R1o Grande- 7
room house near co llege and grade sc ho~ Large
lrvrng room, formal drnmg room eat rn kitchen
With lots of cabmets newer floar caverrng, the rest
rs carpeted Insulated and shows lots of care
Large storage bu1id1ng, beautiful trees and
sh Jubbery on a corner lot Pnced rn the low

379-2184
446-0458
445-2230
446-8666
675-3968
446-2707
742-3171

446-6610

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., rN£.
CONTEMPORARY EXTRAORDINAIRI The decor an
th1s house has to have been done by a
professional' Beautrful stone and cedar contem
parary 1 Sunken lrvrng room lormal drmn g room
3Y&gt; baths family and rec room With wet bar Hot
tub off master bedrooms, 2 beautrful stone
fiJeplaces 2 car unattached garage You must
come and let us shaw you all the amenrtres rn this
one'
#2507

REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR
REALTOR

WANT TO OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESSNhen cal l
' us about thrs g1eat apportunrly' Presently
operatmg as tannrng center Large park1 ng area
offrce 4 tanmng roams and more Buy wrth
tannrng beds and equrpment or buy buildmg
separately for $34,500 00 Ideal for beauty shop
and more'
#2509
44! LARIAT DRIVEl Home fm the ent 11e familY
Spac1ous 4 bedroom brick ranch near HMG
lndudes £ baths, lar ge lam1ly room 2 frreplaces
all f1n1shed basement Newer gas furnace Call for
more tnformat1on

#2486
GfT AWAY FROM IT ALU - Gome home to a
beautiful urban settrng Ju st a few m1les from
Gallrpolrs Custom buill brick ranch 8 rooms 3
baths drv1ded basement Beautrful stacked lake
Crrcular drive lined w1th trees and shrubs Nme
aCJe homestead Gall for appointment Gallra
County's best
#2294

DON1 WAIT! to see the character and charm of
thrs spec1al 3 bedroom ranch Spacrous family
room featurrng cathed~al ce1irng and lireplace,
n1ce carpetmg throughout Attached ga~age
'storage building, easy mamtenance lawn Pr1ced
.J'J sell $55 500 00
#2487
PICTURE YOURSELF HERE• - Lush country
sett1ng w1th a breathtakrng "ew of the
countrysrde Brrck ranch wrth 4 bedrooms 31arge
baths solid wood cabmets rn krtchen full frnrshed
basement, fam rly room Appt ox 90 acres tobac co
base and mmeral nghts rnclud ed 2 ponds barn
ave1 100 lrUit trees'
#2510
REDUCED TO $25,000 - WISH WE HAD MORE
AT THIS PRICE!- Lavely 2 bedr ooms twa story
home wrth lrvmg room, I 'h baths lormal drnm~
lull basement I car gara ge gas heat central a11
!Meigs Co - Mrddleport)
#2470

Ohve St Galhpohs
NEW 6 pc wood group $399
liv1ng room eu•tes 8199 S599
Bunk bed• with bedding •199
Full s•ze mattreas S. found&amp;tlon
llertlng
$99
Recl1ners
stertmg 199
USED Beds droners bedroom
su1tes 1199 8299 Desks
Wringer washer e complete hne
of used furniture
NEW Western boots
$30
Workboots 818 &amp; up (Steel &amp;
soft toe! Cail614 446 3169
County Appliance Inc Good
used apphancet and TV sets
Opan BAM to &amp;PM Mon thru
Sat 614 446r 1699 627 3rd
Aw Galhpohs OH

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
Washers dryers
rf'lnge• Skaggs
Upper Arver Rd
Crest Mo~el 614

2 BR

676-6104

HS/:113

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

rtl'frtgerators
Appliances
bestde Stone
446 739B

LAYNE S FURNITURE

heat

4

6:00 P.M.

4 BR f~replace full b .. ement 3
m• 1o of Galhpollt 134 900
&lt;:111 D•v• 814 446 1616 efte(
6 00 448 1244

2 bedroom 2 batt. 2 c•
9•-.a• ,..,., lot'" on At 33
Sw1mmmg pool utelita cl011
to Me~u• High Call 814 992

6289

THURSDAY EVE. DEC. 17, 1987

Homes for Sale

By owner 3 BR home In
KtnMJga Fenced y~rd carport
county w•ter, new rtnge-refng
water hMt., *32 600 Negot••
.ble Call 114-379 244,

44

PUBLIC AUCTION

Real Eslale

2775

41

6:30 P.M.
HARTFORD COMMUNITY BUILDING

Bab Cline Tax•dermy Member
W V1 TP1dermv Assoc. Rt 2
8011 782 POint Pleaaant W Va
304 675 1448

11507

below

Q ........,., .......

Upatllrt unfurnllhed apertment
Carpeted Utllh1e1 pa1d No
children or pets Call 814 446

1837

Renlals

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11 &amp;
FRIDAy I DEC. 18

Professional
Serv1ces

842 51h Aw Coil 614 448-

Twa bed rooms Upp•1 Rwer
Road will accept working per
•on or famJty whh 2 childr.-.
614-446 060B

Sofas and chMn prtced from
S395 to $995 hblw 860 and
up to 1125 Hld&amp;-e beds *390
to 1595 Reclmen $225 to
8376 Lamps 828 to t126
Dmettas 1109 and up to $495
Wood table w 6 ch•rs $285 to
$796 Desk 8100 up to 8375
Hutch• 1400 1nd up Bunk
bods complete w mattrMsas
1295andupto8395 Baby beds
1110 Mat1ranesorboMsprlngs
full or twin 868 ftrm 878 and
8$8 Queen tats 8225, Kmg
8360 4 drawer chest 869 Gun
cab1nets 6 gun Gn or electnc
range 1$376 Baby mattresses
635 &amp; 846 Bed frames 820
830 6 Kmg frame 850 Good
selection of bedroom suites
metel cabmets headboards 830
end up to 866

Furnlthed Efl•c•encv 8160
UtiUtl• pa1d 607 2nd Galhpo- , 90 Days same as cesh with
Ill Sh•• bath Call 448 4416
approved credit
3 Mllea out
aft• 7 PM
Bulav1lle Rd Open 9am to 5pm
Mon thru Sat Ph 614 446
Galllpol11 2 BR ept Adults onlv
0322
2 lA . mobile home Call 614
448 8221
Vallev Furniture
New and uaed furmture end
Grecioua INing 1 and 2 bed
eppltcanee1 Call 614-446
· room apartments at VIllage
7572 Hours 9 6
Manor and RNefllda Apan
mentt m Mtddleport From
Carpet Prlcu IStartmg at
*218 1ndudmg utlllt1et Call
Commerc11l
84 a yd
• 814-992-7767 EOH
Sculpture 86 a vd. Plush 87 a
yd Lota of room rements 1n
Nice apt Hudd approved New
ltoclc Financing available Mol
c•pet cl..-. Pt PIN1ant 614
lohan Furniture, Upper River Rd

3964

304 675 6104

Chnstma• Sunbed1
Sunal Wolfe Sunbed•
Famdy Bu•m••
Slenderque1t Tonmg Table~
SupM Moneymllk•
Cell for FREE Color Catalogue
&amp; Chr11tmu Speaala 1 800
228 6292

9 room house 2 full baths •
b ...nent 3 room apt • birth on
Nme property Mov~ng out of
county Will ...,erifloe •&amp;4 500

61 4-446-0444

2 buildmg lots Galhpohl' Ferry
tra1l8f on one Phone 304-875

304 876 1294

ING CO recommends that you
do bu11n•• w1th people you
know and NOT to send money
through the m11l until you h..,e
mvetttglted the offermg

40'a C.ll roft• 5 30 PM . 814

12 IJ

Furnlahed 1p1rtment 4 rooms&amp;
beth 1 or2adults Nopet1 Ref
&amp; Sec. dep required Cell

6868

2 Bwldrng Iota· 1% acres each
with countv water Jerrys Run
Ad Apple Grove W Va Call
304 576 23B3

3 BR house &amp; garage A 1 Raal
Estate Carol Yeag81' Broker

I NOTICE I

446 1408

ygu develgp from step

3997 E 0 H

Mobile home In Middlaport
New c•pet, very nice 114·982

by fdlmg In the m ss~ng words

_ j__

SON ESTATES 538 J1ck1Qn
Pllce from t183 a mo Walk to
shop and moviet 614 446-

3 bedroom. 11h: b~h. 14-70

35 lots &amp; Acreage

1984 S~llne. 14x70 centrai
air und•pennlng decks, nWP"
CMPI't khchen appllencat ttt
up on rented lot, IC &amp; K Point
Plea~~nt 81 6 600 Call we ..
kends or after 6 weekday1.

Business
Opportunity

3 BR Ranch An1ched g•age
In town Good locatton Low

Cell after

8EAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
8UOGET PRICES AT JACK

992 7479

Complele lhe chuckle quored

814 446 2382 for

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

2 BA houM with g••u•
I C1rpeted drapenel dlt
hwasher refng•ator 106 t(_i
neon Or Ne• the new cny pool
Clll614 446 4347

992~ 2609

814 446 7028

3 bedroom 12xl6, turniehed
W.asher and dryer t210 month
plus depolit 1nd utilitiel 114~

I

0

apt Stove &amp; refT1g
furni1hed New Go M•rt Call

1 '"mile from ~ M C ~ 2 BR
trail• Call 11't 246 6682

ssklld wliat it was like to be

SWAIN

2 BR

614 367 n43

:=1=1::::1=I='::1~· ~.~hcan'tchangethe,·.H-_..:;U...:R.:...,.:.T;_;;H~S:-.-.:..fl
O
II
[
19
1
1 1
L-1-.L-L.
j_L.J.
No 3

814 992 6113 814 992 8723
or 614

MobUe Home for Nnt
Adults Ref &amp; dep No pet1 Call

A hollywood actress was

Bfuge 6 p1ece p1t grO!JP smoked
glass coffee end end tablas and
lamps Early Amenean couch
and ch•r K•ng waterbed double
shelf headboard 304 675~
1226

or 446 3870

2 BR

~,------~ faJJloua. She replied, "Fame
FL E S HI
changed a lot of thlnga In my

.

Mobile Home for ,.nt C.ll

appointment

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

•

Coli 614-992 2143

749 Th1rd Aw Pretently The
G•ft Shop 1600 aq h Cammer
c1ll or warehouea Parlung on
Side Adjacent to Third &amp; PmeSt

32 Mobile Homes

F1nancial

31

L-..JL..l--1---1.--L_J

~ 3 or 4 bedroom houl81 and
opt in Pom•oy area Pav own
Ut1llt1111. depo1it requtred Cell

6 00 pl ....

5379

23

7

Furnlthed upstair• 1 BR Utili
tiN p.lid 1210 a mo Dep 94
Locutt St Call 614 448 1340

of1or 2 PM 614 441-0527

BRAJEB

8275 V~rgtnis L Sm1t~Re.J
Ettate 814 388 BB21

1973 2 bedroom 12x85 on
rented lot *4 600 304 676

HOUOAY HELP Lit u1 help you
g~n vour home looldng good for
the Hohd-r• Cell Oomest1c
Cleanmg Serv•ca 814 992

21

II1I I I I

4 BFI Country Home for rent

Furn1shed home m M1ddlaport 7
rooms. 3 bedrooml, 2 l•gelots
2 blocks to •hopping churchll
boatmg f1ahtng, tw1mmmg Cell
814 992 6304 beiore Sam
After 6p m
Price under

PM 367 0181 or 367 0121

UNNORE

61 Household Goods

4249

2 BR trill• 1160 a mo No
pets Ref required Call after 8

2 BR

Merchandise

4

Aenawtv redecorated V•y nice
ap1rtment1 In downtown Galltpolie , • 2 8A unfurmshed
..cond floor from t176·*226
O.p • r.r•ences required Cill
eve 114 441 2321i or 448

for Rent

5

3 BR home In Centll!ll"'ery on At
141 Ref &amp; Sec. dep requwed
Ave1lable 1n Januery Cell 614

814 742 2976

I

1400 11:1 It commere11l space
1u1table for off•ce• re1a11ing or
terv1c81 Pnme location cornM
of 2nd &amp; Ptne tn Gall1pohs
Ample psrlcing m rear 8350 pM
month C1ll 614 446 4249 or

992 6858

~
~

614 992 6215
: 2 b~room apartment on L1n coin
Hill, Pomeroy Call 61 4~992
6639 or 614· 992 3489
APARTMENTS mob1le homet
houaes Pt Ple•lntandGalhpo111 614 446 1221
2 bedroom furmted apt, ref and
depolit New Havel), W Va,

304 682 3267 or 304-773
5024
Beech Street Middleport Oh1o,
2 bedroom furni1hed apt ut1h
tiM pa1d, ref•encetand depo11t,
304·8B2 2666
In Middlepon Oh1a 1 and 2
room furn11hed apts priVate
blrthl utll1t1M pa1d 304 882

2666

Furnished Rooms

F~o~~n11hed room 875 Utllttl818
pe1d Share bath Smgle male
919 Second Gelhpohl Call
• 441 4416 aher7pm

I h_...e room for elderly patu11nt
Re•onable. 814 992 7204 or

614-992-3963

~6 Space for Reht
•

H1d•a bed SIMper S1mons and
green couch Call 6 14 446

1107
Brown 1 0 pt ece 1ect1onal Ong1
nel pr~ce81200 Call614 446

6691
56 000 BTU LP gas heater
8100 Call614 446 2971
Upnght frostless freezer ,6
c:u ft White Excel cond $160
c.u 614 446 7885

Office Space for rent Excel
downtown Galhpol•• locetton
lnqu1nes eall 614 446 4222
Mobile Home lot 60 h or leu
920 4th Gallipolis 175 Water
pa•d Call614 4464416after7

PM
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33 North of Pomaroy
Rental nallen Call 614 992

7479
Space for •mall tnut en All
hook up• Cable Alto effu:tency
rooms a1r and cable M11on
W Va Call 304 773 5661

Por1able dryer Space Saver
890 Kenmore washer Both
exr:ellent shape s 1 25
Call

614 367 0322
3 pc: BA su•te gu1tars 10 apd
b1ke kitchen table Call 614
446 0666
Brown flowered couch rocker
chan end end tables S200
Good eond1t1on Call 814 9B5
3510
G E built 1n dishwasher Harv·
es1 gold S75 Coppertonecoun
ter top range &amp;46 large green
sculptutred carpet
foam
backed $60 All very good
cond1t1on 614 992 6031 after
5p m

63

Ant1ques

ANT IQUES Buv or Sell R1ve
r1ne Antiques 1 124 East Mem
St Pomeroy Hours Mon
TuesWed 10am 1o6pm
Sun 1 p m 6 p m By c hance
or appoln1ment ftuss Moore
614 992 2526

54 M1sc Merchand1se

Spec•ou• mob•l e home lots ior
rent. Family Pnde Mob1le Heme
Park. Galhpohl Ferry 304 676

3073
Trailer lpiiCIII for rent At 1
Locus1 Road beck of K &amp; K
Mob•le Home Perle, 304 675

1076

'hAREHOUSES • An AI

1

$f011.GI

SnOWIIOOMS 1 0FflC£S 1 $1'10~"'

64 M1sc. Merchandise

Yf.AR AIIOUNO CO~SrRUCTIO"'
THE (NEIIGY PER FORME~"'
fOR FUEL EfFICrtN C'

CHRISTMAS TREES

STEIUNG. CIUM

Wh1te P'"e, Fraz1er Fu',
Wreaths &amp; Ropmg

"'"""'"WI !l70l

S6911t 60 IIIII
Offiq U0-41 Ul:,lUI

JIM SISSON
MON THURS 9 30 9 00
FRI &amp;SAT 9301000

Buildings
Veal Calf

1'1~7 l..l ntu n 21 f(, 11 l~l n" &lt;..orp o ro~t1Un abo !rullhll ll r lh~ NA ~ &amp; .tnd • - tr.uJ~m"r~ll Of Ct:ntury 21 Rt'11l E~~otah! Corporiillon Equiil Housm~ OpptlrtUnl l)l 8
1

EACH OFFICE IS INOEPENOENTI Y OWNED ANI) OI'ERATED

6 ft S1tellite complete $400
8700

MIMDd hard wood IIebi S12 per
bundle Contammg approx 1 h
ton
FOB Oh1o Rellet Co
PomMOV Oh•o 614-992 6461
Fnowood for sale All hardwood
split and delivered $36 Also
1977 LTD Call 614 992 5519
or 614 992 3862

Frrowood for solo Mr&gt;od

AU Chnstmas Trees; $12 Come
early befo~e cold weather tag
your tree at Newell a Chnstmas
Tree Farm 1 mtle above Mason
on Hengtng Rock Rd 304 773
6371 or 882~28B6

Pharos Books

East Will have no way of gettmg hiS
partner on lead at the nght time to get

@ ~117 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

675 3753
Marhn 12 gltUge over and under
Model90 $275 00 Wmcha~ter
22 Magum pump Model 276
S100 00 304 675 5944
SIGNS l•ghted Arrow S1gn
8 299 Non Arrow 82B9, unhgh
ted $199 Free delivery leners
hll Dec. 1 1 w Va 1 800 642
2434 Oh1o 1 BOO 533 3453
Wanted To Buy Dmette or
dining room 1u1t 304 676
1542
~or Sale
Maytag portable
washer 860 Adjuttable dres5
form $10 2962 Meadowbrook
D&lt;

New 10 •peed b1kD $69 00
Rechners 845 &amp; up Other
ChriStmas G1fts P1ekena Used
furniture 304~675 1450

55 Buildmg Supplies

2466121
Concrete bloc:ks IIISIZ81 yard Of
del•very Mason und Galhpahs

Pine S1

123)1
Galhpohs Oh1o
Call 614 446
27B3

Sturdy wooden cr1b w1th mat
tress bumper pad m81ehing
sheet $100 Gasoline weed
wacker 860 Call 614 367

7850

Used bus1ness mach•nes A 8
D1dt duphcetor pregs and Ron eo
m1maograph mach.ne for sale
Cell 614-446 0196 or 446
4

4404

1 baby bed, good cond111on good
msnres1 feed1ng tabla with toy
tray bsbv carriage wh1tew1cker
shelves for clothOI storage All
$125 614 949 2661

Two fernele Reg 8ef911 pop1
1 1 wks old On• tn·color
an•lemon c:olor $60 each Call
814 246 987B
AKC Siberian Husky pupptea
Blue eyed beaut•• *125 Will
hold fo, Chnstma• Call 114
446 6927
AKC Reg female Poodle pup
Silver Call 614 446 6978
AKC MeleCack•Sp1n1els One
black 1 yr old One buff, 6moJ,
old $100 each C1ll 614 6B2
7164

•at·

Complete hemtten
up with
hamster $6 00 each
Baby•
parakeet• 88 &amp;: 10 each Bah¥
rabbits $1 60 each Baby hams
ten S1 26 each Cell 446

1364

:z. V'"

old female llan Apto
AKC Reg blonde Call 614
446 ~ 4 7 37 sfter 8 PM

Pure brad S~emese k1tten1
Bearded Colhes Call evemngs

814 949 2290
Bu1ldmg Matflnals
Bloc:k bndl, sewer p1pet wm
dows. lintels etc Claud a Win
ten, Rio Grande 0 Call 614

L----------.,.----------.,..----------"'Biock Co,

47
_ ;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ r-

Ready m'• concrete and all
concreto supphBII Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies

304 773 5234

Golden Retnewer pupp1es Be
reedy for'Chnttma~ Cell 114
949 2956
1 AKC 8a11et1 puppy left 6wkt
old Franat Benedum 614·

667 3856
Me1gs Co Humane Society now
h11alovely lll!tlectaon of cats end
kitten• ready for edopt10n Some
already 1payed 111d neutered All
ahot1 pP to date Adopteon fH
requ1tild Cell for morelnforma
tlon about our lowly pet•

614 992 6505 or 614 992
3026

Real Estate General

M1ud f~rewood lBO 00 dump
truck loed delivered 304 576

2903
F~rewood delivered
1tacked
836 00 Mason Counties, Galli
pol11 other areas whhln reason at
our dtseratlon 304 895 3446

SURPLUS

RENTAL

ARMY

DENIM

CARHART CLO

THING Original army camou
flage H 0
Sam
Somerville s
Old Rt
21
East Ravenswood Fr• Sat Sun
noon 8 00 pm 304 273 5666
Insulated camouflage coveralls
$26 00 Black Wh1te snow
camouflage
8 MM Mov1e Camera prCJDCtOr
screen
BlfEIIY u1ed
8200
Lad1as Se1ko watch used once
875 Call614 367 7B50
Walnut saw1ng machtnecablnet
Verv good cond Call614 266

6662

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259
MIDDLEPORT - N1ce gar
age apartment m town 3
bedroom s full basement, a1r
conditraned and all on a
level lo/ close to shapprng
$21 900 00

READY FOR A BIG SURPRISE? -ThiS2 yr old
home IS about tw1ce as big as 1t looks 3 large
bed1oams large dmrng and kitchen area 2 full
baths 1,470 sq ft plus afull basement It rs nrcely
dec01ated and carpeted On 'h lot 10 R1a Grande
$49 900 Owner transfemd to Columbus
Immediate occupancy'
#108

WORKMAN·

LOW
LOW

SHIP

PRICES

FREE

ESTIMATES

Double /111\ Construction
DON MORGAN- 614-286-2498

REASONABLY PRICED - 3 bedroom ame
Mrddleport an n1ce srzed lot With 2 car gara ge
Great family home 10 a convenient locat1an
$37 800
#444

HEMLOCK GROVE- PRICE
REDUCED- Country home
on 1 and on e-third lot 3
bedrooms mew carpet. m
sulaled attach ed garage
cella• $30 000 00
RACINE - ApproXI mately
3\\ acres of land w1th a 3 4
bedroom home also "'
eludes a small mobile home
for rental mcome ASKING
$24 000 00
POMEROY - Frame house
wrth upper &amp; lower on bed
room apartments Good ren
tal rnvest ment• $300/mo
mcome potential ASKING
$14 900 DO
IN THE COUNTRY - Over
70 aCJe /arm wrth older
hom e garage and at her
burld1ngs Close to Pomeroy
ASKING $42 500 00
RUTlAND - Nrce Janch type
home an a level lot 3 bedrooms equrpped klchen close
to schools All rn good condr
lion $33 500 00
MIDDLEPORT - Th1s alder 3
bedroom home leatures a
river vrilll &amp; a low prrce You
can move rrght 1n or ~se as a
rental Small lot $1590000
LANGSVILL£ AREA- 75 acre
/arm barn satellle drs~ fenc
mg N1ce 4 bedroom home
w/cauntry krtchen Owner may
h~p wrth finance MAAE OF
FER $48 000 00
NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT- In one of the most
desirable ne1 ghborhoods rn
town 3 bedroom 2 story
homf rn excellent candrlion I
car gara g~ WB f11eplace full
base me-~t and much more' A
MUST SEE! $54 900 00

tt:NRY f CUIAND II n2 b191
JEAN TRUSSEll
949 2UO
DOTTII TURNUI
991 5M2

Borns

QUALITY

4861

NEW LISTING- ~OMEROY
-4 bed1oom 2 ~tory home
Silting room, dmlng room,
and much m01e' ONLY
$11500 00

Pole Barns
Garages
Storage

LOVELY 2 BEDROOM HOME WITH SPACIOUS
LIVING ROOM, dm1ng area and kitchen Mud
room to the covered pat1o 3/o basement I car
attached garage lighted clo set s front parch and I
acre lawn Located rn Vint on
N2505

4.

Soars combination stereo tapa
player &amp; rad1o Call 614 446

6 pc drum set makeoffM 3 pc
bedroom aultf! 8130 00 304

New Brnvalt for Chr~stmll..
Regl1tered AKC Chow puppi81
Call 614 388 8801

BEAUTIFUL VIEW of Oh10 Rmr Valley and West
V11grnra hills f~ee w~h the purchase of this 5 roam
home With jull basement Nrce krtchen bath fuel
orl forced arr futnace fireplace and hardwood
floors 3 acres, mil of land Extra lot to se'l or use
as garden space or some livestock Haldrng at
$39 900
'
#303

neightrorho1:rd.
dr ng, livrng roam
1 new carpetrng.
comfortable krtchen, hardwood floors 2 car
garage and a full drvided basement wa1t1ng to be
frnrshed $59 700
#402

THE WORKING
MANS FRIEND

NOV 30-7

NEW LISTING' EXCELL£NT LOCATION - Brrck
ranch close to hosprtal 3 bedrooms I \l baths,
eat 1n krtchen l1 vmg room w1th l11eplace lovely
hardwood floors parlral basement 1 car attached
garage Nrce flat lawn Pnced m $60s
#2521

t•3.

Blcyci•10spd. $66 2 ~23 616
mud 1tud1 on Ford R1m1 $46
Honda B1g Red Call 61 4 446
7019

Call 614

.A

NEW CREDIT CARD No one
reiu sed I Major Cred1t C{llrds end
More Get your card today! Call
1 518 ~ 469 3734 ~t C ~2284
hours 24

Dragonwynd Cattery KennM
CFA H1mahryan. Per11an and
Siamese kinen• r AKC Chow
pupp1es Call 614 446 3844
after 7PM

New wood 6 pc hvmg room
IU11eS $399 95
Chest af
drewen 4 drawer $48 twin
maHrenes 896 set microwave
oven 1hlnd1

OLD HOlZER HOSPITAL

PASTURE FARM WITH 25 t.CRES and
lovely ranch style home Home has 3 bedrooms, 1
large bath krtchen, breakfast room larmal dmrng
room, formal livrng room w1tb frreplace Jamrly
room furnace room and utrlrty rm Addison twp
Prrced m the $60s
#2496

Electnc wheel cha•r like new
cond , uted very httle Adult
potty ch11r Call 614 446 0646

t1600 sell 8699
992 6206

•

.7

814 446 2316

sale. Cost

-

•5

Muule lo1d1ng Supphes Pnces
hwa baen reduced Shop gomg
out of bu11n~1 Koebel 1 Mill
Creek Rd Hrs Mon Wed Fn
5 8 PM Sat 1 6 PM Phone

~1telhte Svstem for

., 2

EAST
WEST
North-South drd well to stay out of
• J 52
41KQ98
three no-trump Although East s tO of
.1098 52
.. A 6 j3
hearts would have been the opemng
+92
.87 54
lead West would have an easy sw1tch
J 10
to a low spade aile• wmnmg the heart
SOUTH
ace, and the defenders would easrly
+A
take fwe tncks Unfortunately South
was a careless declarer m fwe clubs
• AKJ3
Declarer won the ace of spades,
.KQ98643
played a d1amond to dummy's 10 and •
Vulnerable North-South
played a tow club back East ducked
Dealer South
and declarer won the kmg He played
the d~amond Jack and overtook with
S&lt;lu1h
West
North East
dummy's queen to play another club
East grabbed the ace as West s1gnaled
Pass
Pass
2+
t+
possesswn of the heart ace wtth the
Pass
2 NT Pass
stx-spot East played a heart to h1s
Pass
Pass
3+
partner's ace, and a d1amond back was
Pass
5+ Pass Pass
ruffed for the settmg tnck
Pass
It's hoe to go after trumps by leadmg from the dummy twtce, but the poOpemng lead • K
tential danger of a d~amond ruff
should persuade declarer to cut commumcatwns between the defenders'
hands Probably he should lead a heart
another tnck wrth that d1amond ruff
at the second tnck But even after gomg to dummy w1th a diamond and
leadmg up to the club kmg, 1t's not too
James Jacoby's books "Jacoby on
late When the k1ng of clubs w1ns the
Bndge• and "Jacoby on Card Games"
tnck, South should then play a heart
(wntten With hiS father, the late OsHe can shll get back to dummy w1th a - wald Jacoby) are now available at
d~amond to play a second club, but
bookstores Both are pub/Jshed by

Chrtltmn Tren for ul•*6 00
*10 00 Rodney &amp; &amp;idwall Rd
Call 61 4 245 5246 Rtchard
F11cher

-6_8

QJ

• Q 10 6

By .[ames Jacoby

Coil 614 446 9846

herd
wood Split and deltverad 835
per pickup load Cali 614 992

.K

u 12 87

Groom and Suppty Shop Pel
Groom.ng All b~eeds All
styln lam• Pet Food Dell•
Julie Webb Ph 614 446 -0231

PARSONS FURNITURE

l1lce new couch &amp; loveseat Call
614 446 7307 after 5 PM

Room• for rll!ll"'t day week
month Galhe Hotel Call 614
446 9680 Rent as kJw n $120
month
r

•

Tree &amp; Stump removel iuewood Heap vouchers accepted
liVe white pme Chnttmaa tr8114

NOR'l'H

+107643

Mat8flllt tor sale from torn
down bulld1ng New and old
2114 1 panelmg new water
heater plywood doofl carpet
etC Pentloostal Church B73
3rd , Middleport, Oh

Pets for Sale

614 446 7444

2 bedroom apt end 1 bedroom
houM for rent 1n Pomeroy

.45

Coll814 266 6261

1973 Jeep good cond
Call 614~388 9376

54 Mise Merchandise 56

An error
of omission

Cellahan lUted TtreShop 011er
1 OOOtlret 11Zet12 13 14 16
16 16 6 8 mil• out Rt 218

037 60

Sunday Times-Sentmei-Page-D-5

BRIDGE

54 M1sc. Merchand1se

For lease

446 2326

42 Mobile Homes

I I' I I I 1~
I
I I I I' I .I

New extra n1ce 2 BR duplex,
furn11hed kitchen low ut1htl•
No pst• Dep 6 rfff required
Cell814 448 1260

W Va 614 992 2813

1973 Fairmont mobile home

Would like to do offiCI
house
clearung Please call 614 387
7833 or 367 7596

614 992-7853

5 OOpm 304 678 6483.

OWLFLE

446 8666

13,000 304-876-1970
Moth• of 2 wUI care for your
children dunng the hohdav f81
trvit111 Ewmngs, week ..dl or
dur1ng the school wcetlon
Convement loc1t1on, reaonable
ratea Cell 614 446 0086

~

1819

Two bedroom htliUII hllf mile
ouJ J•lcho Road, call after

Call 614

Furnished Two 1m1ll hou111s 3
room1 eec:h N•c. end clean
Aduluontv No pets Ref &amp;.dep
Call 614 446-2643

trlinmg tlrlt' tvalllble for those

PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE
m..nse" tr8 moneyformembert
of the Army N1t1Dn1l Guard Call
304-175 3950 or 1 ~800 U·2

....v-""""1

~~·j!'C'G:""

0 FAL TA

3 OR double cer gareg• range
refrlg d11hwath&amp;r t31SO Dep
required Call614 446·1 134

Vocation~! Aduh Center at 753
31511 ext. 14 A varurtv of
funding aourca to pay for

49

Furni1hed 4 room• &amp; bath
Cleen No pet• Adu Itt only Ref
&amp;. dep ,.qu•red Call 614 448

2 pr 3 BR unfurnithed h1 Yetd

ing •••-.tln\'tt--' 1nd 6rderli•.
machlnilts. and weldert Regia
cer now IOf
beginning
January 4th Call Tri-County

304-878 3950 or 1 BOO 842
3619

Hou•e for rent In Mlddlapon 3
bedroom, LA
Dining room
femdy room f~ty carp.ltld
c•port IIIUndry room, *2150
month plu1 utllitl• end depo11t
AvelllbleJan 15 or beforw Call

afV schools. $276 mo ptus

trial matnt~~nanc. work•• nur•

MOM AND DAD IAt the Anny
N1tlonal Guard help pay for your
child's college eductt1on Call

words below to mcke 6
$1mple words
Prmt letters of
eoch m 11$ I ne of squares

614 446-7026

mecharuca carpent•• alldrtcilnl. food .. rv•ce workers
~K'Cronlce techntdll'la lndu•

304 878 1429

l

l~tge 2~3 BR hou• Plenty of
storage Henderson area Cali

Job huntlngi' N..d a sldl\7 We
tram p~le for jobt u IUto

AVON til at. . Shirley Sp..,.a

·~ '~~~:t~~, S© ~4tl ~-!lit- trs ® GAM I
Ed•ted by ClAY R P O l l A N - - - - - - 0 Rearrange the 6 scrcmbled

Apartment
for Rent

44

Homes for Rent

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Oh1o-Po1nt Pleasant, W. Va

WOIO

Coil 614 245 9316

8828

AVON All are• Call Mar.lyn
Weaver 304 882 2646

41

2 BA home- recently remodeled ST RT 279 Oak Hill &amp;
Ata Grande No children or pill

thru Dec 88 , Contract onty Call
Notma Torres at 814 992

chine toolt In the miChme
trild• program you will l•rn
how to UM varlau1 typu of
mach•nerv 1uch 11 ltthe. dnll
Pf•L milling m~tehlne. grinding
machme 1nd punch pre11 We
h•t I Yaritlty of fund1ng IOUJCBI
av1illbl1 lor ehgl~e apphcent•
Call the Adult Eductt1on Cznter~
Tr~County JVS It 763 3611
• t 14 Wmter quarter begln1
January 4th

Homes for Rent

Nicety furntshed tmall hou.e
Aduhs only Ref req\.llred No
Ptrtt Call614 448 0338

Dectmber-13, 1987

December 3, 1987 •

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

TRAcY RIFFU
949-3010
OFFICE ..... ..... ....•.......... 991 1151

NEW LISTING- Clean 3 bedroom home rn great
shape Mamtenance hee home an LeGrande
Boulevard has had the best of care aver the year s
Nrce outburldrng workshop rnclud ed Attractrve
f11eplace Fenced m yard Move rrghtrn cond1tron
$51 700
#307
OH, WHAT A DEAL"
Own er l'&gt;[flakrng thrs 3 4 bedroom 2 story hom ea
very ea51jbuy Home 1ncludes family room living
room drnmg room 1\? baths Nrce settrng an 5
acres overloakrng_the Oh1o River Home has new
fOOl, new furnace new Wrrrn g Askrng $32 500
Wants an oHer Wrll help wrth dawn payment
#215
STARTER HOME WITH LOTS OF SPACE - 3
bedroom old er home rn Rut land The n1ce srzed lot
hasgarden space, sevml fruit tleesand aonecar
garage wrth workshop All for $25 000
#438
BEST BUILDING LOT - Burld the house you have
been dreamrng about on thrs excellent 100 xl75'
'lot 2 blocks from H MC Crty water, sewer natural
gas $13 500 No mabrl e homes
#118
WANT TO HIOE7 GET AWt.Y FROM IT ALL1- If
you love to wat ch wrldhfe and en1ay nature, you II
want to see th1s property before you buy anyth1ng
There s lar tao much included 10 this farm to
mentron ~ a you II have to call for all the details
but here s a short desCflptron 180 acre Iarm w1th
121 wooded acres (lots of limber reported) , 65
acres of cropland several barns and outbuildings
and fr ontage an Raccoon Greek Very well bu ilt 2 3
bedroom home wrth 2 baths large wrndow s and
deck to Jake full advantage ol beautiful rollmg
hill s Mu ch much m01e' $94 500
#242

SPACIOUS CEDAR RANCH nestled rn tall p1ne
trees offers mare than mosl Outstandrng krtchen
loaded wrth beautrful oak cabrnets and large
breakfast nook Cozy family roam w1th hardwood
floors and waarm lrreplace Formal drnrn~ study
partral basement w1th rec room En1oy the peace
and quret an the multrlevel deck whrch cantarns
hat tub 1accuzz1 off master bedroom also ,2 car
garage G1ty sc hools $129 900
#204

ALL OUR
SELLERS HAVE
ONE THING IN
COMMON

SOLD!
49 ACRES - Several excellent bu1ldrng srtes
1200 leet road f1ontage an state highway 4 mrles
from RIO Grande Gently rallrng hrll s and valley
Quret country surroundm g. Outstandrng v1ew This
property will really turn you on
#136
l

QUt.LITY HOME apprax 3 mrles to Holzer
Hasprtal Located on Kerr Bethel Road 3
bedroom s all electriC home has new forced arr
furnace Shop area off garage Large krtchen wrth
lots of storage area Almost 41 acres of land Cham
lin k fence around yard Garden area Prrcedtosell
at $28 000
#305
COMMERCIAL SITE - RIO GRANDE- 2 1ots on
corner of E College Street. I black off Rt 35, 2
blacks lrarn college camp us Excellent lor most
any krnd of busrness $26 500
#147
83 t.CRE FARM - 20 acres very good bottom
crop area nat subJeCt to floodrn~ 30 acres hill
pasture balance wooded Tobacco base 7 room
home, partral basement wrth fUJnace, bath, 4'
bedrooms livmg and drnmg room 2 large barns
crrb and garage Home and farm buildmgs could
be sold separate subJect to owners approval Th is
1s a good qu1et locatron to live along w1th a
productive farm unit Lo cated near Patrrot Askrng
$44 000 lor all
#307

EDGE OF TOWN - Wrt haut sacrificing pnvacy IS
thrs bncklframe home an 0 67 acres w~h many
n1ce trees 1400 sq footage mcludes 3 bedrooms,
den lor fam1ly roo'm) wrth cherry panelin~ dmrng
roam krtchen with breakfast area screened pat10
and rec roam rn basement Convenrent to schot&gt;s
and shapprng Pnced at $59 900
#403
NEW LISTING - Qu1et locatron surrounded by
woods - County water Quality mobile home
10x55 w1th good !Ox55 frame add1tron all under
one roof 7 rooms, n1ce bath fuel orl forced a11
fUJnace and wood stave Also, one room frame
school house m good condrtran and 2 other
outburld1ngs Fruit trees garden area 2 dog pens
4 mrles to Rro Grande, 3 mrles to Thurman "Ideal
place to live Holding at $17,500
#315
TWICE REDUCED' SELLER RETIRING"- Mod
ern 3 bedroom home Situated on a I 27 acre lot
landscaped by Mother Natu re You'll en1oy the
peace and quret of the countrylrke atmosphere
Home offers formal d1n1ng, hardwood floors ';lull
basement and 3 car car port Plus a 16x32
mground pool Scandalously prrced at $49,900
See rt today'
#113
NEW LISTING - Neat I \? story home filled w1th
charm Beautrful oak waodw01k accent; this 3
bed1oam home loc.ted on Rt 35 Also rn::ludes
basement 1 car garage and approx I acre of
land Charmrng starter home Prrced to sell at
$42 000

.

#117

FIRST TIME ON THE MARKET EVERIII - As a
broker and house salesman I see a large number
ol hou ses every week and I can tell you rt rs not
often that we lrnd one ol thiS quality as well
located or 111 as good a nerghhood Its a 3year old
bnck (no exterrm maintenance) lUSt hke new an d
rncludes a large livrn g room larmal dm1ng, large
krtchen wrth 28 feet al oak cabrnets burlt rn bar
1ange dr shwasher and refrrgmto1 big fam1ly
room w1th brrck frreplace 2 full baths 3bedrooms
and an aversrzed 2 car garage Thrsrs abeautrlully
carpeted mcely dec01ated home Located on 2
lots 2 rnrles from town an Rt 160 Prroed at
$95 900 Ow ner does not want a Fo1 Sale' srgn
so call us far exact loc atran
#112
VINTON AREA - 10 acres ol vac ant land an
Sherman Hartsook Road County wate1ava~lable
$7 5Dp
#437

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
(614) 446-3644
E. M. Wiseman, Broker
David Wiseman, 446-9555
Clyde B. Walker, 245-5276

We Need Llstlitgcf

Loretta McDade. 446-7729
B. J. Hairston, 446-4240

l

�•

•
•
'

Page-D-6-Sunday limes-Sentinel
66 , ·

Pets for Sale

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright .

63
246-6831 .

Transportation

Pure bred C.ock-A -Poo'a. 5 wka.

RESIDENTIAL· INVESTMENTS · COMMERCIAL · FARMS

4SO 2nd AVE.
446-6806

old. Reldv for Christ""'- 4
fNIIe. White ·and luff In color.

0125 . 814-378-1278 .

71 Auto's For Sale

5 Be.gle Rabbit dogs'. Aged 2 to

6 yra. otd. Trained. Ra•onabte.
C1ll 61-t- 74~2521 . I
Chrittmu p\,ppill. AKC regiatared Minlture Schn.uzers. Shih
luis, Cock• Spani••· MalteM.

388-8240.

Sweater and c., with each
puppy . Shots wormed also

1979 Pinto. 1500. Cell 81•·
446·-191-3 eft.- .. PM!

health r&amp;ccnd. 304-675-2193.

1982 Ford Efeort. 4 apd •. 1lr.
t1699 . John's Auto S1let,
below theHolid~~t Inn, Kln1uga,

Registered

\~

Brittany Span iel.

025.00. 304-87&amp;-7438.

! l

Siam... kittens for Christmu.
Utter treined. 304-876- &amp;04~ .

D"l

-

67

Five

Musical
Instruments
piece

drum set . Scott

614-949-2680.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

corn. Call for latestquote1. River
Ci1y Ferm Suppty, 614-446-

Now buying shell Corn

2986.

1987 Long 50 HP B4ildozer, 20

,,.,;----;c;--~-;---

hours on tllck, like new. Interne-

63

N...,al Orang• .- Bananas -

International 6156 Diesel tractor.
$4350: 2010 J .D .. PS-IiYe
power. 53350. Call 614-286·

hng ..os -

6622.

All kinds nuts -

Candv - Gr~~p• 8t Tomatoes.
Baking Potato•. 150 lb. $4.00.
Sweet Onions 26c pound
Green cabbage 2Dc pound.

3600 Ford with plows. disc. 2
row Fprd planter, 5 ft . buah hog·
Nice. $6~50 . Call 614-286·

6522.

Form Supplies
ll. Livestock

Now till Dec. 31 all Zeator
tractors in stoclc 10 percent over
cost. No trad&amp;in. Morris Equipment. Rutland, Ohio. 614-742-

2455.

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS

U.S . 36 West. Jacklon. Ohio.

814-286-8451 .
MillOY FergusOn, New Holland.

Bush Hog Sal• &amp;. Service. Over
60 used tractors to choose from
• complete line of new &amp;. used
equipment. Lergest ~election in
S .E. Ohio.
.

BUY WHOLESALE. White farm

Tractors at whol..,.le invoice
plus freight . Compare the prlee
and quality. Models from 16 to
180 hp. LaMing available. Offer
good through Dec. 31 . Siders
Equipment Co., US 35, Henderson. W. Va. 304-676 -7421 .

International 1060 Grinder
Miller, e~tc cond, 304-273-

4215.

1982 Pontiac Trens· AM . PS,
PB , T· top, AC , AM·FM·C•II.

Livestock

0686. Coil 614-288· 6522.

Fresh

Holstein

Heifers. also

O.HJ . records on Oems, alsoA .I .

Sired. We cllfl help youwithyour
bull needs. Cel1614-286-2496 .
Hog 526 to 560 lbs. ReedV for

butcher. See on ferm . !1225. Call

614-258-8509 .
Dec. 19th· 1:00PM. Wewtll be
holding a special feedercalfule.
All breeds including Holsteins.
Cattle will be 1ceeptad l1:1rting
at 4:00PM. Fri .. Dec. 18th up 10
1 :00 PM. Sit.. Dec. 19th.
Hauling aveilable. Athens Live•·
toek se1 .. 1 mllea•t of Albany
on St. RT . 60 . C1ll Stock
yard -61.-,· 692-2322 or 698·
3631, Evenings.

,,

1976 Bonneville. 1200. Cell

614-448-2971 .

1986 Chwetta . • v.,., cleen.
Standard thift . 16,000 mil•.

04600. Coli 814-448-4841 .

'~. ~

I

1986 Daytona Turbo
red·
silver, leather interior. 'nw tires.
loaded, 18.760.00 conslderpertialtrede, 304-675· 5306.

'·

'

T

1987 Cheo.~y Attro van. 304882-3886 or &amp;76-6300.
1981 VW Rabbitt , . e~t cellent
running condit6on, extf'll set
studded snow tiree. 82.000
mil•. $850. Firm, 304-372-

814-448-8898.

1984 Dodgl Charger 2 . 2 .
44.000 ectu•l mil•. Excel.
cond. Call 814-379-2410.

5656.

-

1986 Meroory Cougar. eke
co nd, loaded with extru.
$8,800.00. 304-876-6339 .

1976 Ford LTD . Call614-4468034.
1977 Coug• XR7, moder•te
mileage. color-wtlite owr red.
Excellent running ~ondition.
11300. See at 76&amp; Seeond
Avtnue- C•ll614·448-1871 or

.11'110. • I.W USTIRA- IOiE 0•110•
TOYCMJROW.IIOIE- You
will love tloo pooco1ol
coontry. l-' llodr11s.. full dlnl111 rm.. bath,
por1iol llollt. lood -KIIinp •d anao, loro1hoo .,""· Rom wllh
ototloo1o boor. hllw'Nio Pof10f Rd. 111,000.
1114,. IIIVESTOIS. &amp; onK h~n opts. 2 coloniol. I Dutc~ sty~. Lovoty
!Iff. 1 balll. ~llclloo, dininc r• .. vory prMito,, His Income 11.100 to
IUOO per ••· Clott to schools. ltiJI. Co.
tll7. CASTLE I ..ILE HOI£ ll'sH dh 4 boclrms .. 2 lull b,oths,
- r • In llvloia r•. ond coblo TV. 0011\IORUS of !odd-on runs. One
1101110 boollclnc of wOOII, ..of onotal. On ronllllot.
·
1104. UCIIS, PO Ifill. o• 515~. Re&lt;Oftt~ "'"o&lt;lolod 211ory ho10o. LR.
, DR, 4 IRs, fltftily roo11 w/blr. loads of cabinets, utility nn., sunp«th.
blumlllt. All ~ ""'· loou1iflll troa io tho yord . .ISO..
11159. THIS 5lliC. FARI Ills a "do Kl'"'rsolf' llroruhop, bl&amp;llx42'. ·

"'lot

"Bud" McGHEE REALTY
414 2nd Ave., Suite 200
Gallipolis, Ohic
446·0552 Anytime
'·

TAMMY
REALTOR
367 ·7760

RITCHIE
446-3638

6840.

-

•

I

lltiiMios mll..o.

JJU. VACMT !All D. 50 K. of SII&amp;O. Woo&lt;lod.
,II!. l ..lll HOlE LOI- lllccooo Rd. wu. 13.500.
*135. THERE IS NORIEDOF AIAIMIIATICIM TOFIGURIIHIS HOME IS
WOIIH m.ooo - Jllll Wko now ond .., ooll constructod. Solid ook
cobioots o1111 I£ llvlnc 111. Alldonoo windows. IG' do&lt;k. lac. lot.
tl44. HOIIf w!IRCOIE POISIRE. CIW•Inc211odrlft. homo. illp LR. til ..
.. _.~. - · ood ar. Just a 1111~ bi1 of hoaVOft lon. Eo,tra rood
IMitldiftl was •ltd to rtp~ir 1¥1. Grltnhau•. pdtn 1nd fr~it:. Plus a
on alot acroosU• rood. Allo hoobp for 01obllo homo. Rodney B.

SOUTHWESTERN SCHOOLS - 30 acres mostly tillable.
Hou se, barn. pond, tobacco base. Raccoon Creek
lrontage.............. ............................................................ $41,000
KYGER CREEK - 24'b acre larm, hou se with added
apartment for one person with all utilities............. $49,500 ·

m4. QUIET MO Ell!ll UVING: IHml plos 5acrn.lbodr...l~ ba1hs.
f•iiJ rM.,l c• J1111t. loads oftr•s•IHicoodprdtn
s-. Jos1 oil R-. Bidoollld. lallo ollor. $37,000.
*17l.II-LMllo111 U11in. from dtt~• 3H. 2~ ba1hl, FR, OR, ~it., rae.
rootr~, woodburl'lll, .-ia. La. 10011 nlctlr dtcor~ted ower r~ cell•. c:o•ld
bo oftico or
llooso. Also
po. nd. I~ ac. C"y Khools.
IUD. HOlE MD BIG OPPOITUNIT1: Voty a1t11t11vtromodlld 3 BRs. 1\1
llllhs. prdoll t... I To25'1i1clloo. •• solid oal cablnots, pontry, l111ndry
nrt,
porch. 181 GMAGE: 21'x40', liNt, Wlttr. 200 wirinc,
12'114' door. A bnlnas opport•nltv y01 Cln't ptu.
~136. VACMT IAIID. NIClBUILDINQ lOCATION or mobllthoO'O srto. l to
4 atros appr,., I ac. dOll'od. Sorin&amp;fiold Twp.

m

tc2

VIEW! - Enjoy the Ohio River and
surrounding hills. This could be that Christmas gift you' ve
been looking for. Split level, 3 bedrooms. 2 ~ baths, 2
lireplaces, electn c heat, central air, lull basement, 2 car
garage. A Must To See'

.

1984 Ford Rang•. Take over
peyments. C•ll &amp;14-446-0602 .

"''""&amp;hi,...,
scr•••

DARVIN BLOOMER. Broker
OONA McGHEE .............. .'........ ..... 446·0562
BETH NULL .... .......... ...... ........... .... 246 ~9607

•.

.

CHERYL LEMLEY, REALTOR

SMALL DOWN PAYMENT AND ASSUME
LOAN. Unusually nice 3 bedroom home with
c h ~ ract er. Ow ner lranslerr ed and wants adeal
on this home. Pr ivate sertingl
#2514
NEW liSTING! LOCATION! LOCATION! On Se·
neca Drive. (Mei gs Co.) The k1ds can walk to
Meigs or Saljsbury Elelf\. 5 bedrooms, family
room 2 baths, 2 car garage. In A·I condit ion·.
'
H2515

1 Narrates
6 Mortification

11 Black buck
16 Buckets
21 Omit from

ROCKSPRINGS RD. IN MEIGS COUNTY 1977 sectio Aal with thr ee bedrooms, living
room, 2 baths, fam1 ly room , formal din10g
room, ce ntral air. Approx. 720 sq. H. Covered
patio-c ar port combin oo . Over t acre. lots of
extras.
#2453 .

pronunciation

22 Female horses
23 Choice part
24 Cancel
25 Lincoln nickname
26 Possessive
pronoun

.1 nd ~ - tr.ld\•mtlr l&lt;.&lt;, uf Cl•ntur~ 21 RL'JI L.. t.l!L' Curp~..!r,ltwn E4u.11 I h J u &lt;. m~ Oppor!unltv GJ
EACH OFF ICE IS INDE PENDENTLY OWNED AND OPE RATED .

30 Small aperture

Real Estate General

32 Negalive ;
33 Therefore

~•

THIS COULD BE THE ONE FOR YOU Ranch style homeand approx. half an acre.
3 BRs, lR, kitchen, FR, bath, fir eplace. WB
stove. 2 car aUached garage. l6x32 pool,
cha10 li nk fence.
YOU .ARE GOING TO lOVE THIS HOME! Located on Jay Drive th1s b1· el home
oHers everythmg. you wan lm · your
lamily's comfort. Kitchen w/ 0 , displ.,
ra nge, refrig., living room , fa · m..
dimng rm., carpet, gas heat, cent. air and
wood and coal buring stove. 2 car garage,
12x16 storage·building. City schools. Call
today anjJ make an appointment to see thi s
n1ce home.
GRAHAM SCHOOl ROAD - Very 01ce
ranch offers k1tchen w/range. OW. d1spl.,
m1crowave, LR , FR, d1nette, 3 BRs, 1bath.
cent. air, car pet1ng, 2 metal ulll1ty bldgs.
Shown by.appointment.
COMMERCIAl SITE for sale located at
2206 Eastern ~ve . All utilities available.
AFFORDABLY PRICEO ·AT JUS 29,900
- Closeto city on Rt. 141 th1s hum~ offers
~rtchen. LR, fam1ly room, dining room and
lull basement. Large unattached block
garage. Call for an appointment.

COMFORTABLE, AFFORDABLE HOME
WITH COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE- Located
in Addison Twp. home offers 3 BRs, bath,
LR, kitchen w/stove. refrig., washer,
car pet. woodburn10g stove. KC school
district. $27,500.

DUPLEX 4 SALE - Great investment for
the buyer. Located on Grahain School Rd.
Each unit offers 2 BRs, living room, bath:
kitchen and stove, refrig: , OW and displ.,
laundry. large carport, central a1r and
storage well.

THIS HOME OFFERS A VIEW OF THE OHIO
RIVER THAT JUST DDESN1 QUIT!! - Th e
Iron! of this home faces the river and the
owners have used glass to 1ts full
advantage. Bea utiful living r9om ' with
mirrored wall reflecting the river view,
beamed ceilings, stone lireplace, dineUe,
eq uipped kitchen , 3 or 4 bedrooms, fam ily
room, rec. room, 3 baths, 2 car garage,
centra l a1r.

HOLCOMB HilL - The price has been
reduced on lhis outstanding home just at
the edge of town. Quality workmanship in
every room, large lR wrth FP and view of
city, den w/FP and solid cherry walls and
bookshelves, formal dining, eat-in krtchen,
212 baths, 3 BRs, sewing room, spaciousFR
with · woodburner, screened summer
porch, patio with brick BBQ grill,
gardener's shed. 1.975 acre m/1. There are .
so many other feature.s, lUst give us a call.

GREEN TWP. - 2.5 acres m/ 1, very nice
home offers 5 BRs, 2 bat hs, kitchen, dining
rm., lR, carpet and hardwood, woodburner, new furna ce. Call for an
appointment.

lOTS OF POTENTIAL HERE - 2,000 sq. ft.
building wrth frontage on St. Rt. 160.
12x20 walk·in cooler. 12 ft. dairy case. Call
for more details.

BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER VIEW
40
acr1'5, more or less, home srtes, city
schools.
EXCELLENT STARTER HOME - $39,900
- Ranch style home just 5 minules from
town, offers 2 BRs, bath, kitchen with stove
and side-by-side refrig. ,. lR, carpet and
hardwood, carport and covered patio.
Trailer pad on lot next to house. Crty school
district. Call tooay .

AN EXCEPTIONALlY NICE PIECE OF
LAND - 12.43 acres, m/1, all .flat.
Springfield twp.
RIO GRANDE AREA- 20 ICfes m/1. verv
nice home has been remodeled and offers
3 BRs, 112 baths, kitchen with oven, range,
woodburner, family room/dining combo,
LR, heat pump/cent. air, 30x30 garage,
laundry rm., 12x65 mobile home on
property. SW school district. Call for
appointme~~t.

PRICE REDUCED TO. $39,900 ~GREAT
BEGINNER HOME - This home offers a
large lR with fifeplace, kitchen, dining
area, 3 BRs, bath, full basement, 1 car
garage, deck, fenced yard just minutes to
town on Rt. 141. Call for an appointment.
RODNEY CORA RD. - Beautiful home on
12 acres m/1, this lovely house is
surrounded by trees and offers a unique
floor pian. Living rm. features wood burner,
open ceiling design, kitchen, fofmal dinin&amp;
3 BR, 212 baths, lg:·patto off d1mng area,
26x40 barn and 15x24 garage. Call for an
appointment.

•

••

AUDREY F. CANADAY. REALTOR
ROUER! GORDON. REAlTOR. 446·6lt6
MARY FLOYD, REALTOR. 446-3383
25 LOCUST STREET.
GAlliPOliS. OH(O
.
..

PRICE REDUCED BY $5,000!1! ASKING
$54,900- This home is situated in avery
nice neighborhood at the edge of town and
offers approx. 2,000 sq. ft. 4 BRs, 112
baths, kitchen, dinette, lR, FR. wood·
burner, gas heat, cent. air, attached
garage. City schools. Make us an ofter.

.

47 Moves about

fu r1ively
49 Second of a
series

50 Moccasin

. ·*

51
54
55
56
59
60

Strikes
Antitoxins
S1rokes
Cleaned
Small child
Light antiaircral1:
abbr.
62 Fingerless gloves
. 64 Sprint
65 Prefix: with
66 Paid not ice
67 " - A Living "
69 Jumps

29.8 ACRES MIL VACANT lAND- Fronts
on Rt. 160. Build or put' a mobile home
here. $16,900.
GREEN TOWNSHIP - $38,000- Ranch
style home offers 3 BRs, bath, kitchen, LR,
car~ 1 'tar, attached garage, close to
Green Elementary.
CHAROIAIS HillS- 3.24 acres more or
less. Owner financing available.

· 70 Liquid measure

.....

71 Temporary bed
72 N.Y. player

..· ..

7 4 Pilasters

HOUSE OF THE WEEK

•

-.

.

•.

l.

baths, kitchen w/microwave; unfinished basement, heat
pump/central air. 21\ miles from hospital.

mammals

84 Evaluates
85 Youngsters

OWNERS Will CONSIDER ANY REASONABLE OFFER - THIS BUILDING IS LOCATED JUST ACROSS
LOCUST STREET FROM THE COURT HOUSE. IT HAS
BEEN USED ASAN OFFI CE BUILDING BUT COULD BE
EASILY ADAPTED FOR USE AS ASNACK SHOP, BAK ·
ERY BEAUT'! SHOP OR ANY OTHER TYPE BU SINESS.
OUR OFFICE IS·NEP DOOR. STOP. BY AND WE WI LL
SHOW YOU THE PROPERTY ANY TIME. WE NEED A
NEIGHBOR.
YOUR ESTATE AWAITS - CIRCLE DRIVE, PARK
LfKE GROUND AND A STATELY COLONIAL 4 BED·
ROOM 2 BATH HOME WITH RECREATION ROOM
COMPLEH WITH POOL TABLE PlUS FAMILY ROOM
WITH FIREPlACE AND BAR. ENORMOUS GARAGE WITH
LOFT THAT COULD EAS IL~ BECOME GUEST QUART·
ERS. fNGROUND POOL $125,000.

••

.•

BUSINESS AND HOME- Need an EXTRA INCOME?This isa
carry-out, grocery and bart bu ~ n ess . Well establish ed. A
dr ive-through storage and stock room. has been recently
added. Also a home only I Ii years old. Modern home
w/livin g room and fireplate, 3 beorooms, 2 baths, family
room and modern kitchen with all appliances. Burlt·in
microwave oven. Stereo system. Giveu sa call for appt. tod ay.

'

DOUBL£ WIDE - 3 BRS., . 2 BATHS, DECKS,
EQUIPPED KITCHEN, CATHEDRAl CEILING LR PlUS
2 BR MOBILE HOME ON SEPARATE LOT- BOTH FOR
$43,000.
·H·U·RR·Y·
· H.U.RRiiY.i
iiHiiUiiRRjiY·8·7A·
S·. $.20••0.00•.
CALL-..•WE
' WILl ...
TEll
YOU WHERE!C·RE·

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82 Nocturnal

BEAUTIFUL COUNm SURROUNDINGS
FECT SETTING FOR THIS 3 BEDROOM COlONIAl
HOME. FOR MAL OINING ROOM. DEN, IN-GROUND
POOl , 4 ACRES. $60,000

FANTASTIC RIVERVIEW "TAlCflED
LEVEL. EAT·IN KITCHEN, AI
JUST BELOW CITY. A BARGAIN AT ~-. . uuu .

JAY DRIVE - Modern bi-lev el, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, tormal
living room with fireplace, modern kitchen, lg. family room
also a fireplace. 2 car garage. Washington Elementary. Pricpd
.in the $60,000.00's.
.

'

79 Trite utteraflces

.

zy,ACRE PLUS' WOODLAND- Rustic ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2

''

76 Drink slowly
77 Sleeveless cloak
78 Fil et of -

STATELY MANOR- SPACIOUS ENTRY, WINDING STAIRCASE. THIS HOME ONCE
HAD A BALLROOM. LOCATED IN DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS. PERFECT FOR A
LARGE FAMILY OR COMMERCIAL VENTURE. DON'T LET THIS SELL BEFORE YOU
SEE IT! $69,900.

.,
_,

NEW LISTING - Good Starter Home - Country
atmosphere. Very nice 2 bedroom, 12x 12 eat-in kitcn en
12'x24' livm g room, carpeted, vinyl sidin&amp; storage bu1ldrng,
garden area, on paved road . Only $26,600.00.

Journey forth
The self
Female sheep
" You - For it"
Sun . lalk

45 Bespatter

•.
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'., '

.

Play segmenl
Tiny

43 Propositions ·
44 S tr am for breatn

•

,

R~~~IDU-~~~c~i
REDUCED!
Rio Grande At
setting on 12 acres + ol
woodland, lots of pin.e trees. Hom e features living•room with
woodburn1ng fireplace and lots of bookshelves. Formal
dming room, mod ern kitchen, 2 baths, extra lg. laundry
room. Sp ioal stairs leading to 3 bedrooms. Master bedroom
features a deck; 3 car garage. City scho ols. Shown by
appointment.

34
35
36
37
38
40
42

•

•
..

87

Upholstery

Mowrey' s Upholttering serving
tri county area 2 2 year I . The bact
in furniture upholstarlng . Call
304 · 676 - 4164 for free
••timlltes.

Home
Improvements

ACROSS

,

•

2919 .

SU,NDAY PUZZLER

.-~ ·

HOME AND ONE HALF ACRE FOR SALE1050 sq. ft. of living space. LR, krtchen,
dining rm., bath. $10,900. Call for more
information.

W•ttenon ' 1 Water.. H•uling,
reasonab le rate1 , immedi ate
2,000 gallon delivery, cl1t.erna.
pools, well, etc. call 304-676 -

Rotary or ceble tool drilling.
Most wells compl ..edllmed.,.
Pump 11111 and tervice. 304·

I •

YOUR FAMILY Will ENJOY THIS HOME 4 BRs, 2 baths, equipped kitchen, LR,
auached garage, heat pump/c ent. air,
whirlpool 'in master balh, above ground
pool. Shown by appointment.

446 -3171 .

stump
remo'lfll. Call 30•·87&amp; -1331 .

I.

YOU'LLLOVECOMING HOMETO THIS- A
beautiful log add1t1o n has been added to
this home and it is lovely. 3 BRs, bath,
tormal dinin~. kitchen, family roomw/ loft,
woodburner, stone ch im ~ey . This home is
s1tuated on 10 acres m/1 wrth quiet
surr6und1ngs.

Paul Ruper Jr . W.rer Service.
Pools, citt•nns. wells Call 814·

FeUy Tree Trimming,

•

....:..;.
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE - Qutet but conven jent
' the
best way to describet his property. Modern 4 bedroom home.
11\ baths living room and family room both feature wood·
burners. Lg. modern kichen and laundry room. Spacious pa-·
t1o l~om F.R. Home has 1504 sq. ft. hvm gspace. City schools.
Settmg on 1.4 acres+. Be the first to take a look at this prop·
erty.

3Q4-675-8 370.

OR

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81

NEW liSTING! OVERLOOKING OHIO RIVER IN
MEIGS COUNTY sits a lovely Victorian style 5
bedr oom home with den, I I\ baths, two lire·
places, formal· living and dining rooms and
much, much more. Call for more inlormation.
#2520

446-3636~~

....

&amp; R Wetar Service. Home
cisten. wells, pools filled . For·
meriy J•m• Boys Wet.,s.C•II

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Ca1J1pers

446-6610

Canaday Realty
...

Fl

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY

Reel Estate General

NEW liSTING .:... Mabeline Drive. lovely Californiadesigned
home. Just perfect lor yourfamily . Features living room with
wb fp . Modern kitchen w/a ppliances. Nice lamily room on
main level w/sliding doors lead ing to large patio ar ea with
lots of plants. 3 bedrooms. Also a full basement that has been
8-Dryed. Gas heat and central air. Garage. Washington
Elementary.
3 APARTMENTS - 2 efficiency and 1 bedroom. Brings in
$720.00 per monlh; al so an ofticespace. Asking $37,000 00.
Call for more deta,1ls.

.

304-875-4230.

28 Force

Ills'''

248 -928&amp;.

896-3802

R

,.
"

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SOUTHERN HILLS R. E., INC.
JUDY DEWITT, BROKER

Trucks for Sale

1980 Dodge pidc.up, 318, 3
speed. New paint, sliding gi8SI,
visor; white spok•. tlr•, e"hault. Cell614·448-4462.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

J &amp;. J Water Servl~. Swlmmlno
pools, cister ns, wa lls. Ph. '814-

Budget Transminiont : Used and
· rebuilt, •II tvP•· Guarentee 30
dl'jl. Clll 614-379-2220 "'

742 13171

'72 Chwy, 376 motOf , 304·

Pickup bed ·1979 GMC· all
steel. Coli 814-387-0102 .

,

REALTOR'

675-2457 . .

72

t•wn c•e. 1endacap lng, stump
removal , ;304. 678- 2842 or

Dillard Water s..-vice: Pools.
Ctlttrns. WtKis. Del Nary Any·
tlma. Call 614·448·7404-No
Sunday call•.

General Hauling

21 ft Nomad camp•. phone

'72 Buicll Skylark. f250 .00.
304-875-2338 .
,

extr~·la. kitcltln,

~~:d~~t~ -;:at~~. ~;~;s g~~ Ri. I~4 ho~~: ~~r~·g·e: ~$~~~~fo .

"The results of your test
show· that you:d excel either
on Wall Street or as a
weather forecaster ... "

304-875·5281 .

'

Si~rkl Tree 1nd lewh Service.
~78·2903 .

76

OntuiV~''21 [B

Condition. 30• · 773-

C:doll

RACCOON ROAD - 3 bedrooms, garage, outbuildings, creek
frontage, boat dock, 4 acres, private. 51\ miles to town. SeU
all or part. ...................................... ................................ $69.500

1986 Yamaha 80, 3 wheel•,
good cond, UOO.OO. 304-882 ·
3382.

1980 Olds Cut1111 Broughlm.
1980 Chrysler Lebaron. Both
hwe low mil•. loaded. shltf'p.

~pprox.

15 c:ltll'td 1t., tob. but, fruit trus. If you'rt tired of livinl
jamMd up with nti&amp;hbou. ttliS finn could bt for you. CAll us today.
sn~
.
25 ac.
~164. YACMI IAND.·SI 160. 300 road ~ontaco. ·Z!ac.: also
1201. EXCELLEIIIIUILDING SPOT: 10 Kra, siptk tant..rural wator and
oloc. avaHalllo. - d . 11.500. CION to lolp tl ~lne.
me. DESIIIAILI ACIAQ£ On lllrd1CJ11 rooil out of Portor. ,1,000.

· testin

85

Serv1ces

787·lincoln Town Car; 78 Mtrk

448-8824.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Real· Estate General

V; 11 C.dlllec Seden DeVIlle.
Good

82

304-458-1896.

z.

BONNIE &amp; JIM
STUTES

aptitude

1979 F100. New shOdls, new
duel e~theust, wiper mot or,
hosH. thermostat. oil filter,
antt-h . . e. hcellent condition.
$3350. Call 614-949-3003.

Rally, Wheels. Call 6\4-7422875 .

-.

PORTER AREA - 3 bedrooms, wood finish mterior, partly
furnished, buildings. 5 ·acres, immediate posses·
sian ............ ....... .......................................................... $31,900

'

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1986 S -10 Blazer 4x4. t7.500.
1986 Ford Esc:ort, 6 tpd .•
22,000 mil•. *3.200. C.ll

CITY liMITS- 2 bedroom mobile home and lot. Appliances,
new carpet, building: as heat.. .................................. $19,000

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
Phone 446-7699 or 446-9539

'"
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.•. • l.

IIU IRSTAITLI APPUIIRG if COIOfor1 cHill..LOW LOA. ASSUMPIION
w/20 yrs. ...ain.... lrtck 1nd vinyl 3 lledr11. llftch: Wife saver kit.
w/1-ly cablnolt, I~ ballls, 111Jehld 11'111· Oosillblo neilhborhood.ll
ac. Md ,.......,..,.pool. 151,000. Clly schools.
~190. SP£CIAI. REDUCED TO 115,000. !llo.t10. llazod blotl honloood 2
K. .,;1. An adilloa lloro coold 11alo a -tiful homo. 2 bu lldinp,
sa1oi1Ko dish. Goolll""ll-1. Sii&amp;O.

Real Estate General

~

.

•

19M C1dillec Eldorado. Ec:ell.
cond. White with blue top, blue
interior, tmlll g11 V-8. C1U

814-448-9391 .

8 Yr. ci'td Reefed Sorrell Quarter·
Mara. 16-3 h111d1, eB&amp;O. New
Shoe saddle. $1100 v1lue - for

..

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.

M~GHEE

HOME IN
Walk into formal entrance wfth open i
completely redecorated home wrthin
shopping area. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths a
large
kitchen , living room with lire place, this gracious home
natural gas F.A, furnance.
'#146

.,... .'

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
CARTER 'S PWMBING
WATERPROOFING
AND HEATING
1979 J•-., W~on_., VI , trwil• Unconditional
lifetime guennCOr . Fourth and Pine
hit~h . A.M-FM . C8 rad io, air .
tee. Loettl ref.,.n~ furnished .
Qallipolis. Ohio
·
cond. cruise. 12,500 .00. 304·
Free Mt im.tes. Call collect Phane 814 -448 · 3888 pr 614875-3427 .
1-114-237-0488. dov or nlilht. 44&amp;·4477
'77 Chevy Cht"fnnl Blaztr. 4 RogersBatem ent
W•t«prootlng.
wh!'"' drlvo. 304-875 -&amp;480.
84
Electrical
SWEEPER •nd Mwlng machine
Refrigeration
&amp;
reptir. pant. and suppll• . P ick
74 Motorcycles
up and delNery, D•vis Vtcuum
Cle•ner. one h•lf m ile up
Goorg• Creek Rd . Call 61 4 - Rnidentiel or commercl-' wir·
448· 294.
ing. NtrN nrvice or repaiu.
3-Wheel• ATV -Itew•s1kl 200.
Llcented electrician . Ett1ma1e
Good cond. Ctll 814 · 448·
RO.N ' S Talewilion Service. free. Ridenour Electrical, 304·
7025.
Houl8 ells on RCA, OUiur, 676-1786.
GE. Specilling in Zenith. C• ll
1981 Herl.,. Oavidion S~pi(;
304-&amp;78 -2398 or 814· 448·
glide. Good condhlon. Cell 11 41
2454.
86 G.eneral Hauling
742-2875 .

alpha ·

1979 Ford . 150 Rena• Super
Cab, V-8 . automatic, PS, PB,
C•b hq no rust· Bad h .. some.

19815 Plymouth Reliance K.:
Auto, PS, PB, AM ·FMradio, AC.
fuel ,injection. Excellent condi·
tion. &lt;;Jail 614·992-5084 after, . '72 Che~~y pick up, 12 ft V
5:30. l.
bottom 1lumn boet. 7"h hp
McCuUougl'! motor. 304-676·
1816.
1987 Olds Cutlats Supreme.
Top shape. Assume loan . Fiberul•a.toppet for El Cimino. Call
Vans &amp; 4 W .O.
evanin.gs 304 -773-5911 or 73
304-773·6615.
1982 Dodge 260 Ram . Custom
1980 C•dlllec Sedan DeVIlle convertion. Trailer reedy . Call
Oelsel. Show room condition.
814-448-4383 d~·· 446-0139
Alt power, 18,000 milea on new • evens. &amp; weekends.
motor. 30 mi. per gal . This is a
tteet at only *3200. 614-9921980 Jeep Renegade. Good
3187.
cond. *1760. Call 114-448·
-eHI9 or 446· 6826.
198d Plymouth Station Wegon
converted to truck . 318 engine,
auto •traosmiulon, cheap. tall
19n International Scout for
614·992-2866.
sal IIi. 4 Wheal Drhlo . *300. OBO.
1980 Pontiac G,.nd Prix. Good Call 61•·992·201 6.
condition. Four 16x7 ChtvY

' ..

446-4206

$3500. Coll814·388-9098.

tional lnduttrial tractor with
lo1der. Call614- 28~- 6522 .

Jacks Fruit Market, Route 35.
Hend•IIOn. See us for all your
Chriltmlll needs. Apple~ -

Camino.
0400. Coll814-387-77&amp;0.

462 2ND~ AVE. REAR
BONNIE &amp; JIM STUTES- REALTORS
TAMMY MOORE- REALTOR-367-7760

"

81

1982 Chwy convertion v•n
C·10. 814-882·:1387.

LAFF-A·DAY

8PM .

Fiberglass topper-EI

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

•

t985 C hll'lfrolet El Cemlno.
Shlfp. Topper. lo•ded with
u trn. Low miles. E~teellent
cond. Cell 814 •448-1286 after

colll14-448-2342 .

REAL ESTATE

73

Trucks for Sale

•1500. Coii614-693-8B35 .

seen at tht Gallipolis D•ily
Tribune or for more information

Of • •

B1drs. Call 614 -332-9746.

Sharp! 16494. John' s Auto
Sel• below Holiday Inn in
K•naug-. Oh, Rt . 7 .

Citttion. Am l'lldio,

St'tarp 1983 Toyota Supre.
loaded. Sport packagL power
steering- br•k•· window1. autometic climme control. All
pertorm~nce items. A...,agemlleage. 6 speed. Mech8nictllfo;
perfect.. Meticulously meinteinid. Qgrgeoust C•ll 114448-2417 Evenings.

Utility building spl: 27 ' k36 ' x8 ',
1-13'xB 1 sliding door. 1-3' service door· 84444. Iron Horse

miles. *6196. Call632•2613 or

I • · *1700. Can be

13750. Coil 814-448-0787 of·

62 Wanted to Buy

1986 Oodga b -100 . 4 opd.

1977 T-Bird. 361 •uto., PS. PB ,
eir , AM - FM - Cau player .
Chrome wheels. heel. Cond.
1900-wet asking_ *1100. C•ll

ViRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 388-8828
RUTH GOODY, REALTOR , 379·2828
DIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR. 251-6251

t• 8 PM .

61 Farm Equipment

1983 Z,28 Camoro. 40.000

614-,245-9857 .

clean. 69,000 mil•. 01 . .1.

025.00. 304-875-5479.

72

532-0040 .

.

1982 Olda. 98. All powor. Vwy

Pom . .ni., puppy, 6 montf:\1
ol ... not ~egiatertld . Very fri.,dty.
lovu children, houa.OrDkWI,

-,

Real Estate General

At. 7 .

.

Loving family wanted tor female

CLRSSIFIED RDS

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES. THE DIFFERENCE

1985 ford LTD II . Uh new.
12.900 mi., 1uto.., AC. PS. PB,
tih, crutse. t$800. C1ll 114-

71 Auto's For Sale

.'

Sunday limes-Sentinet:-Page- D-7

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

December 13. 1987

••.

Read' the·

Livestock

Ba17, n~bblta. t5.00 each. Tur:
k.,s, •12.50 .. ch. Call 81•·

AKC Registered Po(eranian
puppt•. 1 male, 1 femal .. 8
weeks old. 8150 . Cel1814 ~ 887 67&amp;8.

~u

December 13, 1987

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

--

&lt;1-

STONE FIREPLACE IN HU GE FAMILY ROOM WILL
KEEP YOU AND YOUR FAMILY WARM ANO COZ YAl~
WINTER. 3 BEDROOM BR ICK AND FRAME RANCI'l

--LN.OU.CTAE.TSE•OFR.OO.NM.lCE~TY·G·R!A5•Nt~6o.~.tV.D.• J.US•T•A•F·EW-M.I·-

J
•

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81;-Apolhecary's
weigh!
88 Undercooked
89 Classify
90 Name ~
92 Skids
94 Performances

98 Eye amorously
99 Escape
100 Oolong
102 Steps over a
tence

103 To no degree
104 Sudsy brew
105 Meadows
106 Cares for
108 Bishopric
109 Faeroe Islands
whirlwind

110 Fulfill
11 1 Constant
112 A house of
prostitut ion
114 Vessel 's curved

plank ing
· 116 Employ
117 Deeply earnest
119 District In
Germany

120 Goddess of
discord
122 Bank employee
124 Indivi dual
125 Cripple
126 Handles
128 Negative prefix
129 Poe1
131 Tumble
132 Haggard heroine
133 Harvests
135 Consumed
138 Ancient
139 Walking stick
140 Ocean
141 Airline info.
142 Sun god
143 Guido's low note
144 Separa1e
145 Unlocks
147 Rejecl
149 Sailor
150 "-on Sunday"
152 Church official
154 Later
156 Once more
158 Fear
159 Conducts

160 Become aware of
161 Horned animals
DOWN

1 Plague
2 Joint
3 Falsehood
4 Lord: abbr.
5 Stitch
6 Dress· protectorS
7 Hurries

8 Exist
9 Coroner : a'bbr.

10 " The sixth sense"
11 Orain
12 Toward shelter
13 "·To -'-, ,With
Love"

14 That th ing
15 "- Smith "
16 Shee1 of gl ass
17 Emmet
18 P,l home
19 Respira1ory
organs

20 Sailing vessel
27 Possesses
29 Is in debt
31 Biller vetch
36 Suits
37 Every
39 Redac1
40 He was killed by
Cain

41 Judge
42 Decrepit horses:
slang
43 Wagers
44 Long, deep cut
46 Near
48 Seed coating
49 Prohibits
50 Time gone by
51 Brand
52 Pattern
53 Canonized
persons

55
56
57
58

Condiment
Diminish
School : Fr.
Lavishes
fondne ss on

61 Aleutian island
63 Shadow
64 Short swims
68 " Blazing -"
70 Father and

mother

7·1 "The - Club''
73 Gossip
74 Assistant
75 Uncanny
77 Heals

78 Hindu garment
80 Story
81 Mournful
83 Deface
84 Repetition
87 Shooting s1ar
89 Quiel
90 Frogs
91 Eskimo hut
92 Bridge term
93 Dl spalched
95 Expires
96 loop
97 Beef anima[
99 Flowerless plant
101 Stick to
105 Key - pie
106 Engll~h streetcar
107 Wi1hered
111 Ward oft
11 2 Dip and throw
11 3 Fabricator
11 5 Deep yearnings
116 Arm bone
118 Nobleman
119 Transac tion

121 M'bre precipilous
123 Behold!
125 Pari of fireplace
126 Conjunc11on
127 Pl anet
129 Tied up
130 Change
131 Distant
132 Prophe1s
134 Equality

•

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136 Characteristic

137 Merits
139 Pastetioard
140 Hurried
144 Split - soup
145 Harem room
146 Sodium chloride
147 Music: as written

148 Scold'
149 Chinese pagoda
151 Brother of Odin
153 French article
155 Iron symbol
157 Pr oceed

•

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'

December 13, 1987

Pameroy-Middleport- Galli.,Oiis. Ohio- Point Pleasant. W.Va .

Page D-B- Sunday Times-Sentinel

~ost weekend frost warning·
By United Press lnternallonal
Plains dropped temperatures
High winds and blowing snow Friday as much as 15 to 25
over the northern Plains that degrees · from levels Thursday ,
reduced visibility to under 100 while ·25 to 40 mph winds over
feet In some areas moved into southwest Wyoming brought
Minnesota ear ly Saturday as a wind chills to near zero.
separate storm ~ystem off the
Winds over South Dakota FriPaclflc . brought hig h winds to day reached 60 mph ·at Pierre; 59
Southern California a nd promp- ll'lPh at Brookings; and 56 mph at
ted fr~e w11-rnings for San Huron and Redig.
Diego.
.
Advisories. for snow and blowA developing storm system
lng snow were posted th orug~
over the Southw~st triggered saturday morning for parts of
wind advisories early Saturday the Dakota ~. where snow a nd 50
tor the mountains of Southern mph winds Friday reduced vis California, · and heralded the iblllties to under 100 feet in some
beginning of a crop-threatening . areas. Between 1 and 3 inches of
cold spell. A frost warning was
new snow was forecast for the
posted through the weekend for region overnight.
agricultural areas of Southern
By dusk Friday, the strong
California , and t he National winds and snowy weather was
Weather Service said tempera- advancing across partsofMinnetures could dip into the 20s In sota. packing heavy snow and
some areas .
wind gusts of up to 40 m ph in
Gusty winds over the High some areas. .
-NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7·AM EST 12·13-87

20

30

m

'

•

A winter weather advisory was
also up .Jate Friday for eastern
Maine, where a stornf system
over the Atla ntic prompted forecasts of 4 to 8 Inches of snow on
top ~~ 3 inches alreadY on the
ground.
Over the Southwest. west· and
southwest wi nds ahead of a cold
front In north Texas combined
with sunny skies .Friday to create
record heat that shattered high
temperature recofds across the
sta te.
'
However, the same cold front
now In northern Texas was

expecied to move through central Texas Sat urday, dropping
temperatures Into the 60s during
the da&gt;J and marking the start of
a cold. M'et period (or region. •

San Antonio International Air- ,
port recorded 87 degrees, edging
by one degree a 97-year-old
record datlhg to 1890. Corpus
Chri sti sweltered under a high of

1rnn..- ieutiutl Section

89 degrees. s urpassing the old
record of 84 set In 1949. Del Rio
also recorded 89 degrees, one
degre~ higher than the old record
· set In 1949.

'

·Market on the mend
I

'

Ohio pilot killed
AKRON, Ohio (UPli- A J'lavy
pilot from Ohio apparently was
killed du ri ng a routine tra ining
mission this week over the
Mediterranean Sea. Navy officials say.
Lt. Joseph Mullally, 26, of
Green Township near Ak ron, was
declared dead after an extensive
search failed to locale his body.
Mullany was flying an F A-18
Horne! jet fighter when he
disappear ed Tu esday night. He
had been assigned to Fighter
Attack Squadron 131, based in
Norfolk, Va. , and operating out of
the Coral Sea.
FINISHING TOUCH- Gary Kljlebrew, owner
of Finishing Touch, has moved his car care
service to a new location, •behind Motor Car
Brokers on Rt. 160. Flnlshlng Touch Is a complete
car care service In protection and cleaning,

Phone --4524

FRONTS: "Warm

SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES
ALL SEATS $2 . 50
BARGAIN NlGHT TUESDAY 11 .99

~SHOWERS

fi$%1RAIN

. . Static

" Cold

fW Occluded

~CI!MRR t1 thru 171
FRIDAY thru THURSDAY! .::_)

WEATHER MAP - Snowshowers will b ~ widespread lrom the
upper Mississippi Valley through much ol the Great Lakes Into
New England. Ralnshowers will be scattered from the upper Ohio
Yalley Into the southern coast ol New England ..Windy conditions
will occur across Southern California and the Southwest deserts.
The rest ol the nation will have mostly sunny or partly cloudy skies.
(UPI)

I

•·

South Central Ohio
Variable cloudiness Sunday,
with highs between 40 and 45.
The probability of prec ipitation Is near zero.
Ohio' Extended Forecast
Monday through Wednesday
A chance of rain or snow eac h

day. Highs will be in the 30s
Monday .and Tuesday mornings
and ranging from 35 to 45 early
Wednesday. Overnight lows will
be in th e 20s through the period.

I

Lottery numbers

. COLO') · .

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Friday 's winning Ollio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
127.
Ticket sales totaled $1,573.807,
with a payoff due of $2,619,200.50
PICK-4
7406.
PICK-4 ·ticket sales tota led
$233,250. with a payoff due of
$105,124.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$7,872. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$328.

•

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1

Caul installed as
president of group
GALLIPOLIS - Or. David
Caul, an outpatient psychiatrist
at W&lt;Jodl&lt;1nd Centers, Inc .. was
recently Installed as president of
the .International Society for the
Study of Multiple . Personality
and Dissociation at the fourth
annual Conference on Multiple
Personality and Dissociative
States in Chicago, Ill. Also, he
was elevated to the status of
Fellow, one of only seven
members accorded the honor.
During the confere nce Caul
participated in five major workshops, conducted a special Con, versatlon Hour with selected
members, and presented a paper
011 "Disaster Plan - the Acute
Loss of a Therapist."
The organization Is composed
of about 800 members from 11
countries, mostly from the Unl'ted States and Canada.

Choose·from '2' Sharpies!

year. Don't miss it"
II

DR. EDWARD BERKICH

1987 PONTIAC
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GALLIPOLIS, OH.

"Friendly; Depen••ble S1le1people To Serve You"
Harland Wood, Jim

, Tom

or

Smith

j'

By STAN EV&lt;\NS
GALLIPOLIS The
cel earnlngs (PIE
quoted In many
stock tables . It
Is the ratio of the
per-sha re price
of th e stock to
the earnings per
share. Many Investors feel th_is
ratio Is thee ;~b~e;s~~t/f'.~~;~to~
ongoing no
of the
company.
To take a sl
examp.le, If a
company had earnings per share
of $2 and If the stock sold at $30
per share, the PIE share would
be 15. Some Industries, like
utilities, have low PIE ratios
(five to 10)r while growth companies may have P IE of 30 or 40.
Some foreign stocks (Japanese,
for example) characteristically
have high P IEs.
High P IEs ·are not always bad.
·If Investors are willing to pay a
high price for a stock In relation

.LL__. .: ,
•

surgical residency at the University &lt;&gt;f Cincinnati In 1970. From
1962 to 1964, Or. Berklch was on
active duty In the United States
Navy, assigned . to the United
States Marine Corps.
Dr. Berklch Is an active
member of the medical communIty on both the state and local
level. He Is the cdnsultlng surgeon for the Gallipolis Developmental Center, Associate Clinic
Professor of Surgery at the
University of Cincinnati, past
President of the Gallla County
Medical Society, and member of
the Ohio State Medical Association. Dr: Berklch Is certified by
the American Board of Surgery,
and Is a fellow of the American
College of Surgeons.
Dr. Berklcb, his wife Karen,
and - three children reside In
Gallipolis.
With )lis return. Dr. Berklch
joins Dr. Charles Holzer, Dr.
Thomas Morgan, Or. Lewis
Schinldt, Dr. Daniel Whiteley,
and Dr. Allee Grlcoskl, who
compose the Clinic General
Surgery Department.

16 cents.
By ALAN KJtAUSS
Prices rose on the American
Ul'l Business Writer
, NEW YORK (UPI) - The Stock Exchange and in over-the•
stock market's modest ra lly at counter tra ding.
Traders and ana lysts said
week 's end capped a strong
showing earlier In the week In Friday 's dlrectlonless trading,
what analysts said was a sign the re flected unce rtainty throughout
market Is on the mend after the market.
''This mar ket has a mind otlts
approaching the Octobe'r lows a
own,"
said Tom Gallagher, man ·
week earlier.
"It's drifting toward s tabll· . aging director. In charge of
lty," said Chester Pado, director 'r:apltal commitment at Oppenof technical research with Jeffer- heimer &amp; Co.
''A lot of traders are extremely
Ies &amp; Co. In Los Angeles.
"The ma rket Is showing some nervous," Gallagher addefl.
signs of stabilization,'' said "Once a rally stops they quickly
Monte Gordon, Dreyfu s Corp. sell, and then when the decline
stops they step back In to buy :
research director.
Stocks closed higher Friday Anybody that says they can
after a late rally ended a predict what this market will do
dlrectionless day , bringing the Is crazy."
Trude Latimer of Josephthal &amp;
week to a close on a modestly
cheerful note. The Dow Jones Co. said she was encouraged by
Industrial average, which fell the market's advance In the face
47.08 points Thursday, gained of lower stock prices overseas
and continued weakening of the
back 11.60 to finish at'1867.04 .
Thl' blue-chip Index had been dollar in foreign currency
ahead more than 30 points during trading.·
Prices fell Friday on Far East
the morning and was up by more
than 10 as late as noon. It then stock exchanges. while the dollar
traded as low as 128.15 against
spent most of the afternoon
the Japanese yen In Tokyo and
hovering around the break-even
point before moving up In the closed at 128.30 In New York
trading.
final hour of trading.
Jim Andrews, head of InstituFor the week the Dow gained
tional
trading at Janney Montgo100.30 points. or 5.7 percent.
mery
Scott
Inc. In Philadelphia ,
Advances led declines by 825said
there
was
some selling of
674 among the 1, 959 Issues
crossing the NYSE tape. Big. U.S. equities by foreign Investors
Board volume totaled 151,680,000 on the opening. but It quickly
shares, compared with alia ted.
Latimer said stock prices got
188,960,000 Thursday.
Broad-market Indexes rose. support from portfolio managers
The New York Stock Exchange looking to reduce casll levels
Index gained 0.72 to 131.79. The before the end of the year.
''They do need to do some more
price of an average share gained

Dr. Miller wins award
The direc tor of Fine and
Performing Ar ts at Rio Grande
Co llege and Community College
was the recent· r eelplent oi an
award recognizing his "outs tahd·
lng ~ontrlbutlons to the presentation of th e performing arts In the
state of Ohio."
Or. ,Greg Miller received the
'-'ORACLE Award of Merit" at
the Ohio Regional Association of
Concert and L«jcture . Enterprises ' "Ohio Showcase of the
Performing Arts" on Dec. 2.
" The award Is given only to
those whose ser vice has significantly Influenced the development of the performing arts ," ·
,Richard Worthing, Assistant
Dean of the Fine and Profes. slonal Arts at Ke nt State University, said In prese nting · the
award.
!·
"The award Is made to the
presenters who have given conspicuous service to the -performing art s; and, or to those who
have given a record ef high and

Price/Earnings ratio

6000's

ONE SE AND ONI LE. LOADED
AND SUPER COLORS!

Galllpolis-Holzer Clinic 'announced Saturday, Or. Edward
Berklch, a local general, thoracic and vascular surgeon, will
rejoin the Clinic's Department of
Surgery on January 1, 1988. Dr.
Berklch left the Clinic In 1974 lto
enter prlvljte .practice locally . ··
Patlents lwbo have an appointment with br. Berklch at bls
Hillcrest location after Jan. 1,
1988, should keep their appointment date and time at his nw
office In the Surgery Department
of Holzer Clinic. '· For more
Information you may call the
Holzer Clinic Surgery Department at 446-5225.
" Holzer Clinic Is very pleased
to welcome Dr. Berklch back to
the Clinic. " Over the years this
excellent surgeon has developed
an outstanding patient followlhg
and bas been extremely active In
community affairs."
Originally from Cleveland, Dr.
Berklch received his medical
degree from the St. Louis University School of Medicine In 1961.
He served an Internship at
Cincinnati General Hospital In
1961 and 1962, and completed his

Money Ideas

1987 PONTIAC

SATION WAGON - A BEAUTY!

ITH

DR. GREG MJLLI!;R

4 DOOR ...... SILVER

198,7 PONTIAC
SAFARI
I

KIUebrew said. The Idea Is to make the car look
like new. KIUebrew has been In business for two
years and Is looking forward to Increasing his
service with more space at the new location.

Dr. Berkich rejofus
Holzer Clinic staff

531 JACKSON PIKE · RT. .35 WEST

I;&lt; ','.'ISNOW

§

Dace'rriberiJ, 1987

to Its ea rnings , they must belle.ve
th at the company has a bright
future, that it wlll continue to
strengthen and grow In the
futur e. Buying a stock wfth a high
PIE' Is said to be buyi ng a stock
with a " high multiple. " "Multiple" refers to the price of the
stock being a "multiple'' of the
earnin gs per share.
A company with a deficit will ,
since It has no earnings , have no
PIE ratio. In this case, since It
has no earnings, the P I E space in
the stock tables will be left blank.
PIE ratios can also be relatively
meaningless whe n a company Is
in or near a break-even situation,
with only a f~w cents of earnings
per share.
Don 't forget that common
stock divldehds come out of the
earnings per share. A drop In
earnings could mea~ that a
dividend is In trouble.
(Mr. Evans Is an Investment
broker lor The Ohio Company In
Its Gallipolis office.)

'

dedicated service to ORACLE,'·
the association's second vice
president added .
"The unique . thing about
Greg," he said, "Is that he could
have won this award for either of
·
those crl terla. "
"As· an active presenter, his
work reflects In an outstanding
way the benefit of presenters
working together," Worthing
added. "It's easy for people to get
together and say that things
should be better. As a board
· member of ORACLE, he has
developed solutions to booking
problems, has shared those solu·
!Ions with others, and has made
things better."
"In addition," Worthing concluded, ''he works not solely as a
presenter, but as a successful ·
producer, director and an artist
- talents that are not always
compatible.
"In his own setting In southern
Ohio, Greg has given his audiences twice their money's worth."
Dr. Miller joined the staff of
Rio Grande -as Director of the
Fine and Performing Arts Center
- In 1985. Since coming to the
college, he has authored and
staged two original productions
- "They Were Vaudevillians"
and "Out of the Red Brush'' - In
addition to coordinating and
directing the production of numerous other stage productions.
He serves as director of the
Valley Artists Series and was
Instrumental in the development
of the Little Buckeye Theatre
Series -: the Rio Grande Collegebased branch of the Appalachian
Children's Theatre Series. The
organization's goal Is to bring the
highest quality theatrical entertainment to the public and school
age groups.
Miller based his play "They
Were Vaudevillians" on the lives
of three famous Jackson County,
Ohio natives - Isham Jones,
Carl Summers and Frank Crummlt. Jones , Summers and Crummlt were successful songwriters
and performers In the early
years of the 20th century.
He adapted the play "Out of the
Red Brush" from the original
best"selllng 1954 novel of Jackson
County native I}erml! Daugh-

.---~--dl·

HOSING IN INSIJ\.ATION- A worker Is hosing
In Insulation to the altlc to prevent the escape of
warm air from the living areas. The house was
being treated by a community-based organization

buying if the market continues to
'
trend up, " Latimer said.
Andrews said retail Investors
are doing some selling for tax
purposes, but that pressure was
eased by institutional buying as
portfolio m~nagers sought to put
cash Into the market before the
end of the year.
" There's no trend at a ll here,"
Gallagher said.
Investors had largely discoun ted economic data re leased
before the market opened, most
market-watchers said.
The Commerce Department
sa id retail sales Increased 0.2
percent to a seasonally adju sted
$125.86 billion, while the Labor
Department reported that producer prices of finished goods
were unchanged in November .
. The retail sales increase
matched ~c9nom lsts' expectations while the producer price
figure exceeded thel)'l.
Traders sa id there was little
evldehce Friday of computerdriven trading progra ms, which
had accentuatell volatility
throughout the previous session
and were largely responsible for
a 25-point loss In the final
half-hour.
On the tra ding floor, USF&amp;G
was the most active NYSE-Ils ted
Issue, adding \i, to 29 %- It was
followed by Peoples Energy, up
1y4 to 15 jl,. Texaco , third on the
actives ll~t. jumped 3 V. to 35 \1.1Pennzoll said it and Texaco's
stockholders committee had
drawn up a plan to settle the two
companies ' $10.3 billion fe ud
over Getty Oil. Pennzo ll shot up 6
:X to79 ')4.

that Is one orthe partners of Columbia Gas of Ohio
In a comprehensive program to make the homes
of about 10,000 eligible low-Income Columbia
;'customers mol'e energy ~fflclent.

Columbia Gas of Ohio .offers
advanced weatherization program
I

GALLIPOLIS- Columbia Gas
of Ohio announced that It, In
cooperation with the Ohio Department of Development and
community-based organizations
throughout Ohio, will off~r a
highly advanced weatherlzati'?n
program worth a total of $12.4
million · for low -Income
customers.
.
In addition to the $4 .million
Columbia has already committed to the program, the state has
jlrovlded an additional $1.4 million . Low -Income customers
qualifying for Columbla'sweatherlzation program will also automatically qualliy for the state's
Ho'm e Weatherization Assistance Program, which v.;Jil add an
additional $7 million to the totaL
"We have ·gained valuable
experience In the c.rltlcally Important area of energy conservation through weatherization ac·

tlvlties during tile past several , by Columbia, but actual weatherIzation of homes will be conyears by working In partnership
ducted through contract arran with community-based organizations, the Public Utilities Com- gements with co mmunity-bas()
organizations throughout Ohio .
.mlsslon and the Department of
The Corporation for Cillo ApDevelopment,' ' said Eugene
palachian Development, which
Gralla, Columbia's president.
serves 27 counties In Ohio, Is the
"Columbia ha·s assembled an
experienced network of grass- agency that will supply weatherization assistance to low-Income
roots organiza !Ions, and we now
residents of Ga Ilia and Meigs
are able to tailor weatherization
Counties.
Other area counties
assistance to fit· the Individual
served
by
the organization lnneeds of low -lncomecustomers ."
.
elude
Athens,
Jackson, · LawThe program. which provides
rence,
Scioto,
Vinton
and Wafor Individual Inspection and
shington
Counties.
testing of homes, Is administered
•

Designate Vicki Irwin, Gallipolis,
as certified insurance counselor

Agency fo r 11 years. She started
GALLIPOLIS - After com· In persona l lines a nd Is now the
pletlng a rigorous Insurance comme fci al lin es
program sponsored by the So- representati've.
ciety of Certified Insurance
Counselors, VIcki Irwin, customer service representative for
erty . In addition to adapting the . the Wiseman Agency, Inc., 500
play, Mlller appeared In the lead Second Ave. , Gallipolis, was
role of Bill Brennan during the designated as a certified Insu play's debut In October.
rance counselor according to Or.
The play has since been ap- William T. Hold, society
proved by the Ohio Arts Council president.
and Ohio Humanities Council for
Dr, Hold will confirm Irwin's
full funding for a period of 4years designation during of(lclal ceto tour statewide and perform remonies, to be held during the
before non-profit organizations.
annual meeting of th~ Profes- ·
Miller Initiated a play reading slonallnsurance Agents of Ohio.
circle at Rio Grande In 1986.
More than 9,500 agents and
Readings of original plays by
Insurance professionals throughOhio authors are held each out the country have received the
month. Each&lt;year, one of the CIC designation as a result of a
plays Is chosen for full produc- combination of experience, fortion at the college.
mal training, and a series of
The goal of the play reading
comprehensive wrltten examlna·
circle Is to find new scripts for
lions focusing on all major fields
production and to encourage ol Insurance management and
Ohio playwrights to produee new
agency operation.
COMPLETES PROGRAM
scripts.
Mrs.' Irwin Is married to
- VIcki Irwin, Gallipolis,
"The ORACLE award Is based
Ernest Irwin, Gallipolis. She
recently completed a proon a record of service to the field · graduated from the Galllpolls
gram which designated her as
o! the performing arts," Wor- elty Schools. Mrs . Irvin has been
a
certified Insurance
thing said." "Greg's record Is one
employed by the Wiseman
colinseior.
'Jf high and dedlcalf!d service." ,

-- - -~

------~·--,-

----·- ---·--~-- "11~--'--------,.-

�...
December 13. 1987

Poineroy...:..Middleport Gallipolis. Ohio ,Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Page E-2-Suriday Times-Sentinel

•

EconoJ:Dist predicts economic slowd~wn, but no recession

. '

expected," said Rob!irt Stalla of
McDonald &amp; Oo. jnvestments
Inc. d~rlng the investmentflrm's
annual meeting.
Stalla said the reduced rate In
growth will be largely due to a
decline in consumer wealth
!caused by the plunge In the stock
market Oct. 19.
He said the slowdown In
consumer spending, however,
will be offset by favorable
developments in the manufacturing sector.

And recent signs of an Increase
In Japan's domestic spending
will benefit u.s. foreign trade
performance, he predicted. •
Stalla said should the economy
perform less than the anticipated
1~ to 2 percent growth rate, the
"likely culprit," would be a too
restrictive monetary policy by
the Federal Reserve Bank In its
effort to control inflation.
"The Federal Reserve Is attempting to steer a n\lrrow

course between two objectives,"
said Stalla.
"They want to stabilize the
dollar to fight Inflation on the one
hand and that requires a firm
monetary policy. On the other
hand they don't want the stock
market tQ crash. They want to
stabilize It and that requires
more liquidity."
Stalla said the Federal Re·
serve's vacillation between llq·
uld and restrictive policies will

continue until some external uncertainties, and that the ecoforce, like an International mane- nomic picture In 1989 is even
tary accord, works to stab111ze more-9Uflcult to predict.
"There's a llkelyhoOd that
the dollar.
fiscal
policy will turn more
He said he sees some positive
·
restrictive
alter the (presldenmovement toward such an
election."
he said.
ltal)
accord.
•
Stalla
said
over
the next 12
Noting that the Federal Hemmlths
he
expects
dividends
on
serve's tight money policies
contributed to the October st6ck the 30 issues that make up the
market crash. Stalla aqmltted Dow Jcnes industrial average to '
that next year's economic perfor- rise to between $73 and $75 from ·
mance Is faced with a number of the current $69-to-$70 range.
~·

Nation's irade deficit soars ·to ·•
record $17 ~6 billion. .in October
'

' WASHINGTON (UP I) - The
million, the dep11rtment said.
lured goods decreased from $14.8
nation's merchandise trade deOverall, imports of manuf~c- billion in September to $14.4
licit soared to a record $17.6
tured goods rose $3.3 billion to . b!lllon In October.
billion In October, the Commerce $29.9 billion in October.
Decreases occurred in aircraft
•
Deptartment said Friday.
Larger imports of . telecom- and parts, chemicals, and office
'
The gap between imports and
munications equipment, motor machinery .
~
'
exports was 25 percent higher
vehicle and tractor parts, airThe U.S. trade deficit with
than the $14.1 billion defic it in
craft and parts, clothing a nd · Japan ros~ to $5.9 billion In
September and easily topped the
footwear, electrical m_achinery October from $4.6 billion In
record of $16.5 billion set in July
and power-generation machin" September . The deficit with
of thts year.
.. ery also contributed to the western E urope jumped from
'
In October, a $4.3 billion · deficit's growth.
$1.7 billion in September to $3
•• •
••
Increase in imports to a record
Imports of petroleum products billion in October.
$39.4 billion more than offset a
rose $400 million to S4.3 billion in
There were smaller changes In
••
S!IJO million rise in exports to
October , the department sa id. the trade gap with other major
$21.8 billion, according to the
The October average price per U.S. trading partners. The deficit
department's Census Bureau .
imported barrel of oil was $18.62, with Taiwan in October was $1.8
The jump in Imports consisted
9 cents higher than in September. b!llion. The deficit was $1.3
primarily · of manuf actured
On the export side. there were b!lllon with Canada, $1.7 billion
goods, petroleum products and
increases in October in sh ip- with OPEC nations a nd $1 billion
agricultural commodities.
ments abroad of agricultura l • with South Korea In October.
RECEIVES
·- A clieck lor 54110 wRS
superintendent of the company's Meigs No. 1 and :~
For the first ten months of1987,
commodities, military goods.
The United States had a $14.8
presented to volunteer llremanRichardLambert,
Raccoon No. 3 mines. Mike Buskirk, personnel ·,
the U.S. trade deficit was $145.8. non-monetary gold a nd fish. million surplus in trade with the
center, for the Salem Center Volunteer Fire
supervisor lor the Meigs No. I mine, looks qn at ·._
billion compared with $138.2
However, exports of manulac- ~ Soviet Union in October.
Department by Kellh ,rDavls, RSsiBtanl r;eneral
'
billion in the same period of las t r-------------------------------.:___.:__.:______::.___________________~---.
year. At the current rate, the 1987
deficit would hit $175 billion, a
record over $156.2 billion in 1986.
Automobile Imports in particular contributed to the increase In
the deficit. From September to
October, auto Imports from Japan increased about $550 miillon.
Canadian car Imports were up
$200 million, while a uto imports
from other countries jumped$450

·Sunday Times-Sentinel- .Page-'-E-3

On the Farm Front

past year

World demand for wheat has

'

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
odds are against a full-scale
recession In the U.S. economy
next year, but because of the
October stock market crash, a
slowing from original growth
predictions is likely, an economhit from a . major Investment
flrn'l'sald Thursday.
"It Is likely that the U.S.
economy, in terms of gross
national product, will grow from
1~ to 2 percent in 1988 instead of
the 3 percent that· had been

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

December 13, 1987

By SONJA HILLGREN
UPI Farm ...dltor
.
.WASHINGTON - World de mand fer wheat la gged behind
burdensome surpluses In much
· o[ the 1980s, but it perked up over
t11e past year and American
consumers led the tu rnarou nd by
buying more bread a nd other
w_h eat products .
For the current marketing
year, Americans are expected to
consume a record 750 million
bushels of wheat , up :1.5 percent
from the previous year .
. Americans are buying more
wheat products - breads,
pasta, et hn ic foods. sna cks and
buns with fast food meals.
Agriculture Department ana·
lys t Frank Gemme sa id last
week that lifestyle changes will

mean good news for the U.S.
wheat industry for years to
come.
'Not only is demand for wheat
picking up worldwide, but surprisingly the growth In demand
in the United States seems to be
l~adi ng the way," Gemme told
the 64th agricultural outlook
conierence.
He said wheat has "!irmly
reversed" its trends of surplus
supplies, shrinking exports and
bulging s tocks. Demand this
year has been greater than
·
.
expected.
American wheat farmers are
not on ly selling more to fellow
Americans, they are also selling
more overseas.
'"'
U.S. wheat exports have increased as a result of lower

prices . required by the 1985 farm
gentina have committed most of
law . and a 16Ubsidy program
their 1987 crops .
under which ~rain firms are
A cold , wet harvest' reduced
given government surpluses so
yields and quality of the Eurothey can export at compe-titive
pean Community's wh eat crop.
prices. ·
~
Canada had a smallerwheatcrop
U.S" wheat exports are ex with lower quality. but Canadi·
pected to rise to 1.45 million
ans, nonetheless. have conducted
bushels in 1987-88, up 45 percent
a s ucces slur sales campaign .
from 1986-87 and up 60 percent
Demand for u.s: wheat is so
from a 1985-86 low. Exports this · strong that the Agriculture Deseason will be the largest in five
partmer;&gt;t was forced .t o seek
years.
wee,kly bids to get governmentSubsidized wheat has jumf!ed
owned wh~?at Into the
from 25 percent to 50 percent of
marketplace. •
wheat exports.
There has a !so been strong
Relatively weak competition demand .within·tne United States
means the outlook lor U.S.
for use of wheat to feed livestock.
. exports through next spring is Demand is forecast at 375 million
"particularly good," Gomme bushels.
said.
Last June, U.S. wheat stocks
Competitors Australia and Ar- were 1.8 billion bushels. By next

year, they are expected to fall to
less than 1.3 billion bushels.
Worldwide, record wheat
stocks are expected to decline lor

the first time si nce 1980-81 as
con.,umpt JOn exceeds production
for the first time since . that
season.

Goodyear sues Firestone over patent
CLEVELAND tUP I) - The froni a tire manufactured and
Goodyear 'fi re and Rubber Co. Is sold by Goodyear und er th e
patent," the suit reads.
suing the Firestone Tire and
A Goodyearf1spokesman said
Rubber Co, for alle gedly stea lin g
in 1985 th e company agreed
that
one of its paten ts.
t,o
sell
licenses to any manufac In a suit fil ed in U.S. Dist ric t
turer
who
desired the patent, but
Court Friday, Goodyear a lleged
Firestone
never applied for such
that the Firestone "Traxx" and
a
license.
"721' ' tires employ the technolThe s uit does not specify how
ogy of a Goodyear tire that wa s
,
muc
h money Goodyear JS as king
patented in 1984 .
"Without license and without from Firestone but it as ks the
Goodyear's consent, Firestone court to award dam ages with
copied the unique pit c h sequence interest as well as court costs &lt;i'Od
a ttorneys lee·s.

..
....
.....
'

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.

Senate
approves
contra aid
: WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Senate, scrambling to beat de·
i tclt cutting deadlines. passed a
$592 billion appropriations bill
early Saturday. first attaching
provisions to give $9 million in
aid to rebels fightiftg the leftist
Nicaraguan government.
Senators capped a marathon
17-hour session with a 3 a.m. 72-~1
vote ·jn favor of ~-t he spending
package. designed to finance
government activit ies in fiscal
1988 and match outlines of the
deficit reduction pact negotiated
last month by Congress and the
White House.
Minutes earlier, in an unrecorded sta nding vote, they autho·
rized the proposal to give $9
billion in food, clothing, shelter
a nd medical aid to the Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
· Lawmakers also added provisions to a llow Stinger antiaircraft missiles to be sent to the
Persian Gulf nation of Bahrain.
That plan, approved on an
unrecorded voice vote, would
free Bahrain from a ban on
Stinger deliveries to the gulf.
The measure would allow
missile deliveries if Bahrain
guarantees that the weapons
would be subject to strict security safeguards and that unused
Stingers would be returned to the
United States within 18 months .
Earlier, senators approved an
amendment to keep alive the
program to develop the Midget·
man missile.
The Midgetman provis ion
·wou ld delay until February a
decision on the future of the
one-warhead mobile missile. The
Senate Appropriations Commit tee had sought to eliminate funds
for the Midgetml! n in favor of a
competing missile project , but
Armed Services Committee
Chairman Sam Nunn. D-Ga ..
said It would be premature to
chOose one project over the
other.
The final proposal was a
compromise between the stand
taken liy Nunn and opponents of
the Mldgetman , who agreed with
Sen. &amp;mnett Johnston ; D-La ..
that it "seems to me to be a waste
of money" to pay for both
projects.
Another amendment, passed
on a voice vote early In the
·debate. would give dozens of
cities more time to clean up their
air pollution problems.
' But much of the early debate
wa• devoted to efforts to shorten
discussion.
"This is the happy season. not
the silly season," said Senate
Democratic leader Robert Byrd
of West Virginia, tl.o/ing to
discourage senators who had
' indicated they might offer more •
than 70 amendments .

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December 13. 1987

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Times-Sentinel

I'

ria oozing trom the piece, the
began using the ·new testing
bacteria could be cult ured from
about six months ago, re.
lt. much !Ike a hospital lab does a
searchers had to examine a piece
throat
culture.
of a plant's stem und er a
microscope. II they found bacte-

Tradition Begins
From
Converse•••

11

"

I

sa~.·

As lis

REMODELING UNDERWAY - The GTE
Phone Mart 'location In Pomeroy Is being
remodeled in preparation for expanded customer

service. Here Gary Bates, m_anager, looks on as
CharUe Cobb, GTE employe, restructures lines In
preparation lor computer terminal installations.

Inconvenience. The project is
expected to be completed by Jan.
1. Accordlng to Bates, GTE plans

implies , the

·I

.

· ~~~~:~a~~-~!a~~~~st~~u~~fs~~n;
The plant finally collapses as if II
hadn't been watered.

Sideline Sports Does COMPLETE Transfer Work I
·
·1
I

"It's probably the number-one
disease as far as · geran ium
growers are concerned,'' Nameth said . The potted geranium
Industry was worth $5.6 million in
Ohio state
last year.
New York
ls the
only
to wholesale
more.

ALL y
S t'
N d "
or
our por 1ng ee S
243 THIRD. AVE. .
. 446·8413

GTE has new look in downtown Pomeroy
I POMEROY - GTE ls giving a
new look to it's Pomeroy downtown business offlce ln prepara- ·
tlon for expanded customer services at the Phone Mart location.
Gary Bates, manager, advises
that business wi ll be conducted
as usual during the remode!lng
process and apologizes for any

name

able to pay their monthly telephone Invokes at the store.

Before Ohio State researchers

s~del~ne
It
It
·

Sp arts

"f

•

I&amp;
I

r------------~-------------------------------L~-------------------------------------------

to return some customer service
functions to the location. Within "
the first' quarter of next year,
computer terminals will be installed 11nd customers will be

Three ounces of roast pork has
about 165 calories. compared
with a bout 140 for the same
portion of chicken a nd 200 for
beef, she says. Pork has as muc h
iron as beef and more thiamin .
·s he says all three have ~imllar
amounts of protein.
Although all cuts of new .pork
are lower In fa t, Saddam says ·
some pork cuts are leaner than
others. She recommends c hoos·
ing all-muscle cuts to a_void fat.
" The loin ls the leanest cut , but
even pork chops have much less
fat than they used to ," she says .
Saddam suggests trimming
any visible fat from pork cuts and
roas ting the meat on a rack so fat
drips off.
"If you want to cut calories-and
fat , don't use gravy," Saddam
adds. "Just have pork roast and
maybe some potatoes a nd
steamed vegetables to make a
light. well-bala nced meal."

'•

MIMII!III&lt;I'!lliB¥1!111&lt;MI•I'l:II•IMI!IK.;.._ _ _ _ 'I'&gt;':III!IK•IM•.l

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- E-5

battle that began in lg85, when plan of reorganization with Tex Pennzoi! won a record $11 billion aco," Harper said . ''As part of
judgment agai nst Texaco in their that plan, Pen~zoi! would accept
battle over Cetty Oil Co . owner- not less than $3 b!!Uon in cash
ship. Ti)e · award was later payable on conllrmation of the
reduced to $10.3 b!!!ion.
plan."
.
Texaco was ordered to pay
Texaco 's management said in
Penrizoil alter a Houston jury in a statement late )"riday it was
1985 found that Texaco !!legally not ,aware the stockhold ers'
persuaded Getty Oil Co. to back committee had raised its earlier
out of a merger agreement with settlement target of$1. 7 billion or
Pennzoil. Texaco bought Getty that members were meeting with
for $10.1 billion in 1984.
Pennzo!l.
The plan must be approved by
"Texaco believes that a more
the bankruptcy court · of .Judge · economic single number settleHoward Schwartzberg and two- ment could have been achieved
thirds of Texaco's shareholders. with Pennzo!l if the (committee )
Texaco filed for protection under . had not acted unilaterally," the
compa ny said. l
.
~hap t er 11 of the federal ·bank·
ruptcy code Apr!! 12, saying
Management said it would
Pennzo!l had refused to negotiate
present "fairly the advantages
a "reasonable" setllemenl of th e and disadv antages of the plan" to
judgment .
shareholders while also working
The plan also is contingent on its appea l to the Su preme
upon resolution ol questions on Court. The Texas Supreme Court
covenants about cert ain Texaco · earli er refused to hear the case.
debt a nd approva l by a creditors
Harper sa id talks with the
committee.
shareholders' group were al"The shareholder s committee lowed under a ruling by
a nd Pennzoli have agreed to a Schwartzberg, who said if Pen-

nzoi l and the credito rs could g~t
together with Texaco, he wou ld
e liminate the period during
which Texaco hils th e exclusi ve
right to file It s own reo rganization plan .
Earlie r this month the judge
extended the deadline for Texaco
to fil e its plan until Jan. 18.
Harper said the agreemen t
was reached on Wednesday and
that Pennzoll was "hopeful all
pariies will agree to the
proposal. "
Harper said TWA Chairman
'Carl Icahn, who recently acquired 12.3 percent of Texaco's
outstanding stock, had a ro!e '!n
I he settlement p!an:-tlarper sa id
Iehan also owns about 1 percent
of Pennzoil.
"!chan played a part in It, but
so did a lot of other people,"

Ha rper sa id .
N!'Ws o! the pla n sen t the stoc ks
of Texa co and Pe nnzo i! higher on
the New· York Stock Ex cha nge.
Te xaco stock closed at $35.675, up
$3 .50 a share. and Pe nnzoi! stock
surged $6.75 to $79.7o a share.
One analyst, who asked not be .
identified.- said th e shareholders
committee represent s only. a bout
1 million shares of Texaco whil e
th e views of hold ers of the other
243 m!tlion shar.e s a re yet to be
·
heard.
"This is only an announce ment
by Pennzoi! and it remains to be
seen If it really represent s a
seHlement. You can oe s ure
other shareholders will have
something to say, es pecially
when Texaco is not able to pay
'the dividends to them for years
under this settlement ," the ana -

lys t said.
Te ~aco·s di vide nd payments
were automa tica lly suspe nded
as a result of the ban kruptcy
fili ng.
Jn Austin , Texas Gov. Bill
Clements welcomed th e prop·osa l, say ing both ~omp a n ies play
an important r ole in th e state's
economy.
"Hopefully bo th part ies wi ll
a gr~c on a .settlemen t th a t
prese rves the fiscal integrit y of
both companies and tha t protects
ihe jobs of the employees of both
companies," he said.
• Pe nnzoil earlier thi s week
rejec ted an offer from Texa co lor
a non -refundable paym ent of $1
billion if Pe nnzoil would agree to
cap it s awa rd at $3 .5 billion even
if Texa co lost its case before the ''
Supreme Court.
;

Junta -to swear in elecioral council
'

Serge Gilles, a Senate candi·
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti
stitution, the electoral co un cil
date
of
the
Nat
ional
Front
for
(UP! ) - Haiti's caretaker milmembers are to be named by
nine organizations or group of
itary government, ignori ng calls Concerted Action. commenti ng
on
the
new
council
members
,
by four presidenti al candidates
interes ts, including the junta and
for the junta's resignation. has said, •'I know none of these t wo government-affiliat ed boa nnounced the creation of a new people. "
dies, the supreme court and th e
Namphy has ruled the black
nine-member electoral 'council.
jun ta's advisory counc il.
A party so urce said only th e
Lt. Gen. Henry Na mp!l:i's Caribbean nation si nce the col junta announc ed Friday night on lapse of the Duvalier family
junta and its two affilia ted bodies
Bank and Trust, which has $254
have named the ir ·represen ta state-ow ned radio and teie\, ision dictatorship in February 1986.
million In assets. First National
that it will swe ar in the new His junta failed to control wides -. tives. At least four independent
of Piedmont has $23 million In
council members today. Politi· pread political · violence and groups - the Federation of
assets, she sa id .
clans and observers in Haiti said canceled t~ e presidential elec- Protestant Churches , the Roman
Lawmake rs passed the interit was uncl ear how the members . ti on, Nov. 29. On the same day . Cat holic Episcopal Conference,
state banking law in 1986, but
were selected. The nine-member the junta dissolved the electoral the Association of Haitian Jour·
delayed its implementation until
na !ists a nd · the Hum an Rights
panel would oversee the January council.
.
nex t month. Before a n out-of·
for
new
The
junta
ha
s
called
group - have refused to name
elections called for by the junta .
state bank can begin operating in
·
The ru ling came just hours ·elections on Jan. 17, but with a anyone, they said.
West V!r!gn!a, the law says it
different set of regulations. Thg
after four leading pres ide ntial
On another issue, Dejoie commu st first purchase a state bank.
ca nd idates, in a new sig n ol presidential ca ndidates main· plained Friday about the visit to
unit y, called for the immediate . ta!n the reforms have violated Haiti on Thursday by five !)Time
the constit ution.
resignat ion of the caretaker
ministers of the Caribbea n
The junta's announcement fol· regioll&lt;
military government led by
lowed the opposition state ment
Namphy.
Dejoie acc used Jarl)aican
made
by
the
four
top
ca
ndid
a
tes:
In
their
first
joint
statement,
Prime
Minis ter Edward Seaga of
mas Day. 1896. and il was first
Wo
rld
Bank
officia
l
Marc
former
"coming
to boost Mr. Namphy"
the
candidates
charged
Namperformed before Preside nt
Bazin,
center
left
human
rig
hts
phy's
government
was
"
leadi
ng
and
sa
id
" Ha itian were mad as
McKinley In ·P hiladelphia the
campa
igner
·
Gerard
Gourgue.
hell
to
see
Seaga and the other
following year at the unve!!lng of the country to catastrophe,"
populist
businessman
Louis
Dejcaribbean premiers em bra ce
demanded " its immediate reslga statue of George Wa shington.
oie Jr., and Christian Democrat Namphy, " as shown in a video·
The march , featu ring the sous- na ~ion " and urged voters to
Par ty leader Sylvia Cla ude.
tape of th e visit aired by the
aphone and the piccolo, Is played . boycott ne w election s the· junta
According to the Hait ian co n- state-owned television.
at almost every patriotic , pol!tl - plans to hold in Janua ry.
~a ! and national celebration.
According to House floor deba te cited In a While House
memorandum reco mmending
the pres id ent's signat ure, ''Stars
and Stripes Forever" has become "an integral part of the
celebration of American life , and
in many ways, already is the de
facto national march ."

New interstate banking law
not creating much interest
CHARLESTON. W.Va. tUPI)
The commission expects to
- West Virginia's entrance Into , hold hearings early next year on
the world of Interstate ban)&lt;ing a Maryland holding company's
' next mon th Isn't attracting rnuch application to purcha se the First
interest among ou t-of-state National .Bank of Piedmont.
banks looking to expand, state
"They were almost ready to
ba1tking officials said Thursday . file a couple of month s ago,"
So far , only two out-of-state Kelly said of First Unit ed Corp.'s
bank hold ing companies have application. "They have signed
signed agreements to pu rc hase an agreement to merge."
-banks in Ohio · and Mineral
First United, located In Oak·
:counties.
land, Md., operates First United
' " It doesn't seem to be c reating
-a groundswell of in terest," Dep_uty Banking Commissioner
David Mudie said of the law
WASHINGTON (UP I ) - Pres ·
::which goes Into effect Jan. I.
ident
Rea gan has sig ned into law
; Next week , the Banking Comsomethin g tha t has been 1J't'etty
. mission will hold a hea ring on
well accepted for most of this
: American Bancorpora tion's ap·
century- the "Stars ~ nd Stripes
· pllcation to purchase Wheeling
Forever " is the national march.
: National Bank.
The nation had been without a
American, a n Ohio holding
national march for its 211-ye'l!r
company with offices in Wh eelhistory, and a bill designating
, lng, already has ties with Wheel·
John
Philip Sousa's g~eatest hit
lng National, sa id Patty Kelly, a
salled through both houses of
commission analys t.
Co ngress on a voice vote last
Whee!lng Nationa l has $154
week.
·
• million in assets. American has
Sousa, fa med for hls' leader' $73 million In assets and owns two
.s hip of the Marine Band, wrote
banks in Ohio, one in Quaker City
the march, also known to childand one in St. Clairsville, she
ren · as "Be Kind to Your
, said.
·
Web·F~oted Friends," on Christ-

Nation has an official march ·

New leaner pork now on market
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Pork has long had an image as a
fatt y mea t, btlt pigs with less
backfal are being promoted as
"the other white meat" and are
really quite lean, says Alma
Saddam, Extension nutrition ist
at Ohio Slate Un ive rsity.
~'The new pork is made much
leaner through breeding and
usi ng different types of feed ,"
Saddam says.
·
A recent study by Iowa Cooperative Extension agricult ure and
home economics researchers
showed that leaner hogs averaged 2. 7 percent backfat.
Fatter animals averaged 4.3
percent. The st udy was sponsored by the National Pork
Producer's Council.
'
"lt's certainly comparable to
other meat options In terms of fat
content a nd other nutrients,"
Saddam says.

..

•White/Blue
•White!, Red

. ...

HOUSTON tUPl ) - Pennzo i!
says it has agreed with the
stockholder committee at Tex ·
aco on $3 billion plan to sett le
their $10 .3 billion legal feud , but
Texaco management expressed
doubts about the offer and said a
· Supreme Court appeal would be
• continued.
Pennzoil Co . spokes man Ro bert Harper said Friday that
·Pennzo!l and a sharehold ers'
· committee set up after Texaco's
'Inc. bankruptcy filing have
·agreed Pennzoil should receive
a t least $3 billion to settle a
·two-year light over Texaco's
acq ui sition of Getty 011 Co.
Texaco's management, however. chided the committee for
accepting the offer without informing l)'lanagement a nd said it
. will ''preserve the company's
legal position" by seeking to
have the case heard by the
Supreme Court.
· The plan, which Ha rper said
: will be !!led next week wi th a
: bankruptcy court in White
P lains, N.Y ., could end a legal

a

A New Bas

..

'

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

Texaco management wary of Penqzoil settlement ·pian

New test detects · bacterial wilt
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1\.JPI) Researchers at Ohio State Unl·
verslly have developed a new
test, similar to the one used to
diagnose AIDS in humans , to
detect bacterial wilt ln
geraniums.
In developing the technique,
research e rs at OSU' s Plant and
' Pest Diagnostic Clinic have
taken a leap toward preventing
the spread of the disease, said
Stephen T. Nameth , director of
the clinic.
Nameth said tha t before the
new testing procedures were
developed, researchers had to
walt about two weeks before
confirming if a geranium had the
disease. Now, tests - being
conducted only at Ohio State can be completed within hours.
That's important , because bacterial wil t can spread quickly.
"Once it's in the greenhouse,
ij 's nard to get rid of," Nameth
said. "I! we find one variety is
infected. we tell them to clean out
tha t whole greenhouse. jus t to be

.

December 13, 1987

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•

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'•

ELBERFELOS
POMEROY

�..
Pomeroy

Page-E-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 13, 1987

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

•

\\ASHTNGTON tUPI)- US
officials say Soviet act10ns next
week at the UnJted Nations wtll
show whethrt they are really
mterested m brmgmg an Pnd to
the war in thr Perswn Gulf ,
Asststant Secretary of State
Richard Murphy, addressmg a
dts pute left unsettled by the
superpower summtt, cnttctzed
the SO\iets Fnday for stalling on
act10n to tmpose a U N .·
spon sored arms em b argo
against Iran.
Murphy, the State Depart ment's point man on the Middle
East. satd m a speech to th e
pri vate Middle East Institut e,
·•we say forthrightly that dra ft ·
mg a second (UN Security
Cou nctl) resolution Is long
O\e rdue "

Sovtet leader Mtkhail Gor ba chev, at his summ!t-endmg news
conference Thursday, sa td hts
nation believes more tim e ts
needed !01 the U N. e ffort to
persuade Iran to accept a ceasefire m tis 7 year old war with
ll'aq
Mnrphy said Gorbachev made
the same point m pn va te meet Ings wtlh President Reagan
during their conference The
Perstan Gulf war was one of the
numerous topics broached at the
summit, a nd o ne m wh ich little
progress was made
Murphy satd , "We believe
these Soviet positions reflect
co ntmumg efforts to pla y thts
Issue both ways by avotd lng
actions in the Umted Nat tons that
would sour Sov tet-lra ni an rela

•

Most cable
WASHINGTON fUPI) - . A
federal appeals court has tht own
ou t a ru le forcmg cable com pan·

1es to 1eserve ce rtam channels
fo r local broadcasts. but most
opet alors p lan to keep the
st at tons to stay m t une wtth thetr

\'iewers
In a unantm6us dectston Fnday, a three Judge panel lou~
the "must carry" r ules vtolated
the free speech nghts of cable
ope t a tors, calli ng the t egula
t10ns "un)ustihed" a nd "unduly
sweepmg "
·
Wh tie It ee to drop the broadcas ts , cable offictals predtcted
the rulmg , would lead to few

t10 ns while doing ju st e nough to
blunt the mcreasing cnllcism by
the Arab s tates dtrected agains t
Moscow."
Murphy also rejected Sovtet
c nllcism that the Navy's 5
month -old escott mtsston ·in the
gulf is the cause of persis te nt
tenstons
"The problem fs the Iran-Iraq
war, not our naval presence m
the Gu lf " he said "Debating .
only serves to dtvert attention
from the real need of t he hourearly passage of a follow-on
e nforceJ11ent resolutton " •
This ~ummer, the Unite'd Nallons passed a resolution urging
the warring parties to cease !Ire
or risk a second resolution
tmposmg a n arms embargo Iraq
agreed to the t ruce, bu t Iran

comp~ntes ~ay

programmmg ch a nges becau se
ope rators atm to please their
customers. who expect to be able
to vtew certa in local shows
"We expect that the court 's
dec iston wtll have little Immediate s ignificance bcc~use most
cable systems are unlikely to
drop a ny loca l broadcast signal s
they are carrying now ," said
James Mooney, president o! the
Na ti o na l Cab le Televtsion
Assoc iation.
Mooney satd he wou ld adv ise
cable co mpames to mamtain
cu rre nt programming whfle
awaitmg word on whether the
Federal Commumcat10ns Co m -

refusM. demanding offtctal recognition tha t Baghdad ,was the
belligerent Si nce then, efforts to
vote on the embargo resolution
have been stymied by Soviet
s talling.
This week, wht le Reagan a nd
Gorbachev talked in Washmgt on, U.N. Secretary Geneml
General Javier Perez de Cuellar
met with the Irania n and Iraqi
foreign ministers In New York,
but the State Department sa td
the Iranian response to a ceasefu'€ remains a flat refusal
Undersecretary of State Mi·
c hael Armacost, speak ing to a
group of foreign correspondent s
Friday, sa id , ' 'I have the imp res
sion the Sovte ts are ready to
begin discussions (about an
e nforcement resolu tion) , but the

and
black lnterlol', power steering, 4 speed
manual, gauges, AMIFM stereo cassette, on

Uo~;;o*CRR

Brldget~n hitting a mme on the

test will come next week m
fir st convoy m July, the Iranians
discussiOns fn New York."
have not. ~nterfered with any of
" I can only s peculate about
the s hips under U S protection,
their motives, " he sald, "but
they expressed fear of putting he sa id
·
Murphy a lso' said a n informal
Iran in a corner that m1ght wreck
rather than factl!tate efforts to arms e mbargo against Iran ha s
e nd the war They have also been been a s uccess, estfmat mg that
In 1984, 23 western nattons sold
explorin g atte mpt s to expand
arms worth more than $1 billion
relations with Iran. "
to Iran but In 1987, only four
One compli ca tmg !ac tor m the
U.S desire to get action on an Wes tern na tions were detected
arms embargo is that the presid- s hippi ng arms to Iran at a value
e ncy of the Securtty Council now of less than $200 mtllton
In la te 1985' through 1986 , the
ts fn Soviet ha(lds That job
rotates monthly among the coun - United St a tes made $30 mtll!on in
secret arms sa les - TOW anticil's 15 member nations ,
Murphy said the Navy opera - ta nk missiles and Hawk antiaircraft weapons - to Ira n
tions have been a success. with
Those
deals were part of the
U.S warships escorting 20 con- ,
g
lobe-spa
nnin g Iran -Co ntra
voys through the perflou s wat er
way Other tha n the ta nker scandal.

* CLEARANCE

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That's the Dodge A.mer•ca Plan See your part1c1patmg Dodge dealer today

they will keep local access

mt sston would ap pea l t he
decision.
!fhe FCC suf!ered a stmflar
defeat in 19R5 when the sa me
appeals court struck down an
earlier set of mu st-carry rules,
which had been enforced for
nearly two decades
Lawyer Jack Cole, who represe nte d Century Co mmum cations
Corp. and a dozen other gr oups
that brought the s utt , called the
rulfng the !mal blow to the
federal rules
"Th e probabtlil y of the FCC
havmg 'Must-Carry III ' is mi. I
think mus t-carry as a pra ttcal
matter is now dead. Thts horse

has been beat to death," he sa id
But Diane Killroy, an attorney
for the FCC, said the agency has
not decided whe ther to a ppeal the
dectsion
'
Cole po rt rayed th e rulmg as a
sym bolic vtctory for the cable
industry, saying the court af
ftrmed the operators' rights to
make thetr own decisions about
what broadcasts to carry.
" It is not a ques tion of
companies not wantmg to carry
loca l Signals. It ts a ques tton of
whether the government has the
power to requtre s uch carriage,"
he satd ·'I t is a tacttca l v tctory ''
The governmen t began requu

ing ca bl e operators to carry all
loca l broadcas ts m the 1900s
because they feared the industry
would s upplant tradtttonal
television
The modified rules whi,ch
would have been in e ffect for ff ve
years, re qutred operators to
reserve about 25 perce nt of their
channels for local broadcasts
while consumers adJusted to a
new cable gadget.
The devtce allows vtewers to
switch from cable to loca l broadcas ts by flicking a button. e limi nating the need for ope rator s to
offer the progra ms on thetr
channels.

Get

"We s tmply canno t accept,
wtthou t evidence to the contrary,
the s luggish profile of the Ameri
can con s umers that the commisSIOn' s argume nt presupposes,"
the appeals court said In throw mg out the must carry rules.
Bull he three-judge pa nel court
dodged the lar ger question of the
amount of Ftrst Amendment
protection c able operators
s hould receive, suggeshng the
FCC co uld still regulate the
indu s tn If it 11 r ot&lt;' n na rrower
se t of ru !Ps

struriiO ns to the Jury, accusmg

ch tef defense attorne) Herbert
Miller ,Jr of vtola tmg IPga i ethics
tn hts c losmg argument s by
a ttesting to personal knowledge
of Deaver's mtegri ty .
The seven-woman, ft ve man
J.Ury , s hortly after noon. began
clec tdmg whether the 49-year-o ld
longtime !nend of Presiden t and
Na ncv Reagan ts a willful liar
who tzaded his rela tton shtp with
the Rcaga ns fat proftl ora v tctim
drawn mto a tra p by the
pi'OSC'C U tor

,

He faces up to 25 years m
p1ts0 n and $~4.000 In lines If
'

convicted ol all ltve counts of
lymg under oath to a congresslonal committee and a grand
Jury mvest!gating whether Deaver's ac tlvttt es after lea vmg the
Whtte House to form his own
pubhc relat ions fi r m violated the
Et hics in Governm e nt Act .
Before sendmg them to the
JUI'Y room , Jackson ordered the
panel to dt s regard Mtller's s tatements about Dea ver's c harac ter
a nd any mention of Deaver' s
, drmkmg problems m a de durin g
the course of the seven-week
tna l. That order was a n expanston of a n earlier ruling by the
judge, who barred the defense
from ment10mng alcoholism du r
ing its closing arguments
Thu rsday.
"There is simply no evtdence
m this case that defenda n t's
tes timony before the House of
RepresentatJves subcommtttee
or the grand JUry was affected tn
any way by alcoholtsm or a lcohol." Jackson sa id ma45-minut e
ins truction to the ju ry.

'Consequently, alcohol and
a lcohohs m a re no longer ts sues
m this case. a nd you are not to
speculate as to what the evtde nc e
on th a t s ubj ec t mtght ha ve been
in t h e course of y ou r
dehbe ra t10n s."
The defense had claimed in
open mg arguments that it would
prove alcoholism a nd other
hea lth problems affected Deav
er's m e mory whe n he was ·
questioned by Co ngress a nd a
grand )ury mvesttga tmg ht s
lobbying activity after leavmg
the Whtle House as de puty c hte f
of staff May 10, 1985
Howeve r , the defense res ted tis
case earher thts week wtthout
ca llmg any witnesses or present
mg any ev idence, and Jackson
sa id prosecution testimony by
th1 ee Deaver e mployees that
they beheved hts a lleged alcoho!ism •affected his mood a nd
m emory was msuffictent.
Miller', in his closing argu ments, as ked Jurors to fmd
Deaver mnoccnt o! l\'lng und er

oath because thP prosecutwn 's
case was weak and De aver is a
"fine man "
" He Is not a c hea t. He ts not a
liar He ts an ups tandm g man,"
Mtller said
Jackson ·a dmoms hed Mill er
Friday, saying hts remarks were
"contrary to the canon of
et hics "
Mtllet compl a ined that mdepe nd e n t prosecutor Whitn ey
North Seymour Jr. "put my
mtegnty on the ltne" by portra ying the defe nse counsel as "pa r t
and pa t eel" of a n a lleged coverup tha t Seymour charged Deaver
waged about h,is post governme n t lobbying
Referring to Mtller' s repeated
references to Seymour's a lleged
over zPalousness m pt osecutmg
Deavet. J ackson told Mtller,
"You put his mteg t ity on th e line
as well "
"Frankly, I was vte ry s urprised" by Mtller 's comme nt s.
Jackson satd in rultng the s ta te-

ment could be corrected be fo re
the JUry
Jurors requested a tran scrtpt
of tes timony by form er nationa l
security advtser John Poindexte r in the afternoon before
reqessing for the weeke nd
Poindexter tes ttfied m ~e lation
to Count One of the five-count
indictment, whi c h charges
Deaver "facilitated" a meetlng
between Reagan and South Ko rean trade representa tive Kim
Kthwan at least p a rtl y through a
call to Pomdexter
Poindexter tes tified the National Securtty Council favo red
the two minute October 1985
mee ting and there was nothmg
unusual about 11 . though Deaver
did call htm at home to ask
wh ether 11 had bee n scheduled
Deave r a lso is accused of
making admlntstratton contacts
on behalf of his clients, Boemg
Co , Trans World Airlines,
Puerto Rico and Rockwell
lnt e rna t tonal.

%

Financing

-

J ~ sur

Gorbac t1e' had stopped Fndav
tn f:a st Bf&gt;t lin on ht s way home
ft om Was hmgt on to brte fle a ders
of I hi' seve n Warsaw Pact
nallons on ht s latest a nd third
su m mil wtt h Reagan The Sovte t
lea de r won qutck su pport from
hts Warsaw Pact a llies for the
firs t US Sovtet arms accord
s mcr SALT r!. e tght y0 ars ago.
At th(' samP It me , Secretary of

State George Sh ultz m et wtth
NATO foreign mmis ters in Brussels. Be lgtum, for the same
purpose
All of the East bloc leaders.
exceptmg t)Ie a bs e nt Ntcolae
Ceausescu of Romama, "ex -'
pressed thetr lui( s upport and
htgh opm lon of the results of the
negot tat tons in Washmgton."
sa td East Germany's Foretgn
Mtnistry s pokes man Wolfga'ng
Meyer
Thetr public backmg of Gorba·
chev's summit pos ition s d td not
come as a s urpn se s mce the
Soviet satellites in Easter n E u rope generally accept Moscow's
leaders htp.
Ceauresc u linke d hi s absence
to prepa ra t iOns for th ~ Romantan Com muni st Party co nfere nce
In Bucharest Monday, but specu lat ion arose th a t he m ay have
st ayed home because of d1 sa p
proval wll h Gorbachev's reform
movement
At a banq uet m the Palace
Hotel hosted by East German
leader Ettch Honecker , Gorba
chev pledged tha t the Sovtct
Union wt ll pursue additional
arms control agreements.
"As far as we are co ncerned,
the people of the world can b e

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Wzlliam B. Kughn
A Simple Rule
O•J&lt; , ,mpk rul&lt;&gt; to he re membered m studying the scripture is, if you
§ 1un L.lkt· t ht· correct mcamng of a word and substttute it for the word
ll "t d. 1! must ex prccos the same meamng and be m perfect agreement
" ll h 1111 01 her word s or I he scr ipture. Jr tl does not, it ts not accordmg
LO trulh and mus:.t not he used.
Death · Separated:
Oeath me&lt;~n s separation, and thts meamng can be used where the
word appears: How be~t 1/esus spoke of h'IS separation !death) ... Folwwm e and let the separated (dead, that JS, souls separated from
Chnst) bUT'IJ thetr separated (dead, that ts , souls separated [rom the
body
L1k ewtse reckon ye also yourselves to be separated (dead)
t.ndeed unto sm
Wherefore, my brethren, yc also are become
seporated (dead) to the ln.w by the body of Christ ... But now we are
delwercd from the ln.w, that being separated (dead) wheretn ye were
hell/." (,!no. ll 13, Ml. 8:22; Rm . 6:11; 7:4,6). In these passages and
others like 1hem. t he meanmg does not change when the meaning of
th e y,ord for whtch tl!S substttuted ts used.
Sprinkle· Baptize:
Let us su bsutute the meantng of the word sprinkle where baptize ts
u~t·rl
Then went out to htm J erusalem, and aU Judaea, and aU the
re&lt;JW1l rou11dabout Jordan, And were sprinkled (scattered in drops) of
htm "' Jordan, confesszng thetr stns . Go ye therefore, and teach all
natwns , sprinklmg th em (scattering in drops) tn the oome of the
Father, and uf the Sun, and ufthe Holy Ghost . . He that belwveth and
" sprinkled I seatter~d in drops) shaU be saved
Repent, and be
•prinkled (scattered In drops) every one of you m the m~m e of Jesus
Chnst for the remts.•wn of sms" (Ml. 3:5 ,6; Mt 28 19, Mk 16 16; Act s
2 3H). Now do t he same wtth po~r (let flow in a steady stream), and you
"1 !1 see how you abuse the English language and change the meanmg of
~ I h&lt;· " 11ptures. Sprinkling and pauring will not pass the test!
~
11 you '"I! usc the meamng of th~ word ba~;~t•ze { dip , bury, cover up)
o~n d &lt;u hstt tute tl for t he word bapltze, there ts perfect agreement wtth
~ t lw othPr word s of the scr tplure, and there ts no change m the meaning

85 FORD , ... , . , , ... '3995
Escor1 2 dOOf, red wllh matching Interior,
power steering &amp; brakes , 4 cylnder, 4spe'ed
manual , fold ing re'ar seat , AM /F M stereo
c assette, whitewall radial a Local one owner

new ChevY trac:le

86 FORD .......... . '7995
F150 "h ton pickup, gray with matching In·
terlor, power steering &amp; brakes, 6 cylinder,
4 speed manual, below eyellne mirrors,

'

85 FORD ..... , ..... '4595

,
73 CHEVY
'195
79 fORO· · · · · · · · · · · 2595 lm ala 2 door ere~· ~~t~ ~~t~~i~ 'interior,

Conversion van,
brown Interior,
· brown
ak with
VB
lilt
power steering &amp; br 88, , automath1C, b ,
cruise, 4 captains chairs, rear couc ,· ay
windows, AMIFM sleieo, factory air,
overhead lighting, roof rack, ladder, drink
tray, whitewall radials Local owner
Plymouth trad,e

• &amp; b k
P
power
s1eer1ng
ra es ,., 8, augt oma11 c,
_
I
c'hevy Irade
L
r~:~~.~ 1o oca owner new

83 CHEVY

'3195

Caprice 4 door ~h.lt~ ~~;~ ~a·r~o~ cloth In·
terior, power steering &amp; brakes, automaticA,
cruise, AMIFM stereo, factory air, rear

defogge~, w~ltewall rad~~s, l~l:mwheel
Sierra Grande 4 whHI drt~Je, two tone brown Chevette 2 door, orange with beige Interior, covers oca owner new evy r e
with brown cloth Interior, V8, automatic, 4 speed n1anual, 4 cylinder,' Iadlo, folding 84 FORD
'2995
power steering &amp; brakes, radio, on road/off rDodear seat~whitewall radials Local owner Escort 2 door,~~ "w;,~ ~~~~h.ln.g .Interior, 4
road radial tires, rally wheels, painted rear
ge tr e
cylinder, 4 speed manual , radial tires,
step.
77 CHEVY , .... , ..... '995 AMIFM radio, folding 1ear seat
84 GMC ... . ........ '6395 Monte Corio 2 doo1, 1ed with white landau 81 MERCURY .. , ..... '1595
High Sierra 11\1 ton pickup, blue with blue top and white lnterlpr, power steering &amp; COu
bl
llh bl 1 t 1
1
cloth Interior, power atetrlng &amp; brakes, tilt, brakes, tilt, cruise, automatic, AMIFM power
garsteering
wo 1one&amp; brakes.
ue w va, ue
n er or,
automatic,
heel
Ort
II
adtat
hll
I
cruise, gauges, AMJFM stereo, factory a r, stereo w ewa r
s, sp
w
cruise, wire wheel covers, whitewall radials,
powe r windOWs &amp; door locks, VS, eutomatlc, coVers'' local owner trade
power windows &amp; door locks, power seat,
chiome bumpers
78 PONTIAC ... , : . .. . '1195 AMIFM stereo cassetle, reardetogger, fac85 OLDS ....... , . , ,'5695 'Ftreblrd Trans Am, maroon w1th melchlng lory air.
cutlass Suprema 4 dooi, ~ack with b1ack tnteflor, powMeriFMstee nn~ &amp; brakes, VB, 85 CHEVY ........ .' . '7995
vinyl top and gray cloth lntenor, powers 1ear- automatic, A
s ereo casse11 e, ra11Y El Camino, maroon with matching custom
ing &amp; brakes, V6, tilt, cruise, AMIFM stereo, wheels, raised white lettered tires. Local cloht interior, V8, automatic, power win
factory air, automatic, whitewall radials, ral· owner trade
ly wheels, 60140 spilt seat.
•
d~s, power locks, till, cru!se, factory air,
1, ....
78 DODGE .. .... .. .. !·1295 rally wheels, AMIFM sle1eo cassetle, rals85 PlYMOUTH . , , , •. ,'4395 Aspen 2 door, blue with blue lntertor, power ed white lettered radial tires , bed ralls ,
Caravella 4 door, gold with brown cloth In- steering &amp; brakes, 6 cylinder, factory air, power steering &amp; brakes
terior, power steering, pow,r brakes, 4 automatic, radio, radial !Ires. Local owner 85 CHEVY ... , , , , , . , '4995
cylinder, wire wheel c.ove ~!l, Nhltewall trade
Nova4 door, beige with light brown cloth !nradials, tilt, cruise, AMIFM st ueo, factory
77 FORD ...... . .... '3995 Ieiior, radial !Ires, 4 cylinder, 5 speed
air, rear defogger.
Explorer Y2 ton piCkup, white with red In manual, radio, sun roof, Loc;al one owner
86 CHEVY .......... '8595 terio[, power steering &amp; brakes , V8, new Chevy trade .,
Cavalier RS convertible, blue with blue mat· automatic, factory air, AMIFM radio, s!iding 86 CHEVY ..... , , , '!'iGt~F•·II
chlng Interior, automatic, double power, tilt, rear window, cruise, sport wheel covers Nova 4 9oor, light blue with bl ue
,
cruise, air, low miles, factory official car 85 CHEVY ........ . 15895 cylinder, automatic, rad ial tires, radio Local
pickup, gray with blue Interior, power own owner new Chevy trade
87 CHEVY ...... . ... '8495 S-10
steering &amp; brakes, V6, automatic, tilt, cruise,
Celebrity Eurosport , 4 door, gold metallic, AMIFM radio, factory air, Whitewall radials, 85 CHEVY ...... .. . . '8995
power windows, automatic, double power,
Silverado pickup, two tone blue with blue
cruise, air, low miles, factory official car wire wheel covers, topper
cloth Interior, power steering&amp;. brakes, V8,
automatic,
wheels, whitewall radials,
83 DODGE , ......... '3295 82 MERCURY .. .... . '2595 sliding rearrally
window , tilt, cruise, AM /FM
Zephyr
o4 door, brown with brown Interior,
Aries 4 door, white with blue Interior, 4
power steering &amp; brakes, 6 cylinder, stereo cassette, gauges, factory ai r, chrome
cylinder, automatic, whitewall radials, fu!l automatic,
wtre wheel covers, whitewall rear step, power windows &amp; locks local one
wheel covers Local one owner new Dodge radials, factory air, radio Local owner owner new Plymouth trade
trade
Dodge trade.

81 GMC ............ '6795 77 CHEVY, .. , .... .. '1195

1987 DODGE LANCER

4 door hatchback, blue 'finish, dual reclining
bucket seats, rear defroster, automatic,
AM/FM stereo cassette. Stock No. 3490.
LIST ... .. . . ... , • , .. , , . . . . . . . . . $12,607
Le11 Gribble Dlacount .......... , . ·$1614
REGULAR PRICE. . . . . . . . . . . .... $10,993
Caah Back ..... , , ..... , . .. . .. .. . ·$770

OPEN
MON. THRU SAT. 9:30 nL I P-"1.
SUNDAY 1 P.M. TO S P.Al

e cylmder

Escon 4 door, charcoal with gray cloth !n
door locks, power seat, AM/FM stereo 84 FORD . . . . . .. . . . . '3 795 terlor, power steering &amp; brakes, 4 cylinder,
caeaette, factory air, rear defogger, va, Escort wagon, 4 door, blue with blue In facto~ air, automatic, AMIF Mstereo, rear
automatic, wire wheel cowers, whllewall t~nlor, power steering &amp; brakes, automatic, defogger, folding rear seat, radial tires, sport
radials, tilt, cruise, power steering &amp; brakes factory air, AMIFM rad!o, cru!se, whitewall
wheels
radials.

84 MERCURY ........ '6895

Genutne peanut
13" antique
Round butte ••: -•• ~ towpoy

road/oft road radiale ,

Lynx 2 door, light blue wlth ,blue Interior, painted rear step , radial tires slld!ng rear
automatic, power steering &amp; brake8 ~actory window radio
air, AMIFM stereo, fold!ng rear seat,
83 FORD . ... . .... . . '3995
whitewall radials
~.TO wagon, belg e with Hght brown cloth in·
t
ulor power steering &amp; brakes, 6 cylinder,
83 FORD ...... ..... '5395 automatic,
radio factory air, luggage carrier,
Thunderbird 2 door , red with red Interior,
rear
defogger,
wire wheel coven,, whitewall
power steering &amp; brakes, ve, automatic ,
whitewall radials, wire wheel covers, AMIFM .adiats
stereo, tilt , cruise, factory a!r, power seat,
86 CHEVY .. .... .. .. '6795
windows &amp; locka
Eu ro$port 4 doo r, gray with gra~ cloth in
86 CHRYSLER . .. . ... '8495 tenor, power steering &amp; brakes, fuel injected
Laser 2 door, fluh red with black leather In· 4 cylinder, automatic , radla! tl res, rally
terlor, power steering &amp; brakes, factory air, wheels, AM/FM stereo, factory air, rear
AMIFM stereo cassette, aluminum wheels, defogger, tilt, cruise, luggage carrier
radla! Urea , fuel Injected turbo charged
engine , 5 speed manual , split folding rear 87 CHEVY ...... , ... '6695
seat, tilt, cruise Local one owner new Chevy Spectrum 2 doo r, Slt"Jer with gray cloth rn
terlor, 4 cylinder, 5 speed manual, factory
trade
air, AM/FM stereo, tolding rear seat,
83 FORD , , ....... . . '2895 whitewall radials rear defogger
Escort 4 door, two tone beige and brown
with tan Interior, power steering &amp; brakes, 86 CHEVY . .... .. ... '6795
4 cylinder, automatic, AMIFM radio, foldi'lg Gelebrlty Eurosport 4 doo•, black with gray
cloth Interior, fue l Injected 4 cylinder,
rear seat, whitewall radials
automatic, rear defogger, whitewall radials ,
79 DLDS ........... '1295 raily wheels , factory alr, AMIFM stereo, lug
Cutlass Supreme 2 door, cream with tan In gage carrier
tertor, power steering &amp; brakes, tilt, factory
air, AM/FM stereo, V8, automatic , whitewall 85 FORD .. ..... .. .. '4295
radla!s, rally wheels , 60/AO split seat Local LTD 4 door, white ~tilth blue cloth In tenor
power steering &amp; brakes, tilt, cru ise, factory
owner new Chevy trade
air, AM/FM stereo, wire wneet co~Jers ,
81 SUBARU. , , ...... 13395 wl:!!tewall radials, V6, automatic
Dl2 door beige with tan Interior 4 cylinder,
4 speed manual, radio, rear defogger, radial 84 CHEVY ........ . . '5295
Caprice wagon, !lght fern with fern cloth In
tires, rear wiper
terior V8, automatic with overdrive , tilt,
84 CHEVY . . .. . ..... 13695 cruise, wire wheel covers whitewall radials,
C.waller 4 door, gray with gray cloth Interior, rear defogger, luggage carrier, 8 passenger
power steering &amp; brakes, iactory air, AM/FM seating, AM/FM stereo, power door loc~s .
radio, tuel Injected 4 cylinder, 1automatlc, factory air Local owner Chevy trade
rear defogger, whitewall radials.

Grand Marquis, 4 door, two tone brown with
cuatom c!oth Interior, va, automatic with
overdrive ' power steering &amp;. power brakes,
tllt cruise power windows &amp; door locks,
po~er seat, AMIFM stereo oa..elte, factory
air, aluminum wheels, whitewall radials, rear
defogger local one \owner new Chrysler
trade

1987 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER
4 door sedan, bronze finish, 50150 cloth seats,
automallc, AMIFM stereo cassette, conventional spare tire. Stock No. 3770.
LIST ..... . .... . .... . ... , , ...... $18,873
Less Gribble Discount . .. . . . . . .... ·$3878

PINAL PRICE • • •14,888

PINAL PRI,CI! •• •10,223

1

Th e B1ble

~
.

1987 PLYMOUTH CARAVELLE

1987 CHRYSLER LEBARON GTS

4 door, charcoal finish, light package, trunk
dress-up, automatic, wire wheel covers.
Stock No. 3803.
LIST ............ ...... ... ... ... $12,411
Less Gribble Discount. .. . .. . ... .. ·$2424
REGULAR PRICE ................. $9887
Cash Back ....................... -$770

4 door, blue finish, leather bucket seats, rear
defroster, power convenience package,
automallc, power seat - Iell, AM/FM stereo
cassette, Stock No. 8643.
LIST ......... .. . : .. ............ $15,640
Leas Gribble Dlscciunl ............ ·$2182
REGULAR PRICE .. , . . .. ........ $13,458
Caah Back ....................... ·$770

t

t

84 FORD LTD ....... . 15495

Wagon, ~iue with blue cloth lnterlort power
steering &amp; brakes, cruise, AM/FM stereo,
factory air, roof rack, wire whee! covers,
whitewall radials, rear defogger, automatic,
6 cylinder

85 FORD. , .. , ...... '5295

PINAL PRICE

PINAL PRICE • • • • •8217

• • •12,888

1987 DODGE WAGON
Brown walnut and Ivory cream, bucket seats,

8 passenger, automallc, rear door vented

82 RENAULT ........ '1095 86 CHEVY

glass, air condllionlng, cruise control,
AM/FM stereo, cassette, tilt wheel, bumper
guards, mirrors. Stock No. 3467.
LIST ... .. .......... , . . .. .. ... $18,522
Leas Gribble Discount ............ -$3881

PINAL PRICE • • • •14,841

1987 DODGE SWEPTLINE PICKUP
Graphic red, bench seat, heavy duty package,
automatic. mirrors, AM radio, front bumper
guards. Stock No. 6970.
LIST,. ......... ............. ... $13,703
Less Gribble Discount .. .•. . . , .. . -$2708
REGULAR PRICE .... .. , .. .. , , , , . $10,995
Caeh Back.. . . . . . .. . . . ...... .... -$770
~~NAL PRICE • • •10,228

&lt;

•

"" hat ~oe vo r!

Baptism A Burial
The noun "bapttsma, "dertved !rom "baptizo, "Sigmf•es "conStsltng of
Llw procc~s of Immersion, submersion, and emergence' (W. E. Vme).
ll mo,r•w r, !'au! mforms us for the first ltme that baptism IS a burial in
ltomuns B:•l, 'Therefore, we are buried With h•m by baptism tnt o
death " Later. tn w~ttmg to the Colosstans, he penned these word s
"Buried wtth htm m baptism" (Col. 2:12). There ts no doubt about 1t:
baptism is a burialt
Pl ease observe what the word burled suggests Somethmg to be
hurtcd, t ho malertal to he used in whtch to bury, and the act of placing
m or cover ing up The be liever (man or woman) is to be burted , the
nMt r n .Jllo be used 1s water, and t he act is to be placed tn or covered
UJl There ts but one act because there IS but "one baptlsm" (E ph. 4:4),
:1nd 1l 1s a burial.
For Free Bible Correspondence Course, Write .• ,

• 48 monthly payments of only $24 27 pe1 $1 000 borrowed, w1th 10°/o down FQI quel1fled buyers
through Chrysler Credit Corporation A longer term rate Is also avatlable Oea!er contnbutton may
affect f1nal pnce Ask your pantclpattng dealer for deta11s .. See 7/70 hm1ted warranty on powertra1n
&amp; outel body {USHhiOugh and.IIS restoCllons at your deale! EXCLUDES IMPORTS.

The Dodge America Plan.
The right way to buy. ,

S

Chapel Hill Church. of Christ '

irs
GOTTABEA ·

DODGE•

Gribble-Dodge Products

.1.
.L

750 E. State St. - Athens, Ohio_:_ 593·6671

r·

83 FORD ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' · ' ' '5695 83 PLYMOUTH
Thunderbird 2 door, beige with brown cloth
Interior, power stetrtng &amp; brakes, automatic,
factory air, AMIFM stereo, wire wheel
avera whitewall radials rear defogger,
c k ' t
'
buc et sea a

1

2795

··•· •·
Horizon 4 door, gold with Hght brown cloth
Interior, power steering &amp; brakes, 4 cyllnder,
automatic, AMIFM stereo, factory air, full
wheel covers, whitewall radials, folding rear
seat Local trade
~

85 CHEVY .......... '7595

' Landau 2 door white with blue
Monte Carlo
custom cloth Interior, power steering &amp;
brakes, V6, automatic, aluminum wheels,
raised white lettered radials, rear defogger,
power windows &amp; locks, AM/fM stereo
cassette, tilt, cruise, factory air, gauges
Local one owner new Chevy trade

82 CHEVY .......... '3995
~ton pickup, brown with brown Interior, V8,
automatic, power steerlnc;; &amp; brakes, radial
tires, cab lights, chrome below eyellne mlr·
rors, &amp;lldlng rear window, painted rear step,
AMIFM radio local one owner new Chevy
trade.

81 FORD .... ....... '1995

LTD wagon, green with gree~ Interior, powe1
steertng &amp; brakes, VB, automatlo, Wire whee!
covers, whitewall radials, factory air, rear
defogger, cruise, AM/FM stereo Local one
owner new Plymouth lrade

'8995
W
79 FORD . . . .. . ..... '1295
FORD
85
Bronco two ~~~e' br~;,n· ~nd ·~tge with 82 CHEVY · . ....... 15795 LTC 4 door, maroon with maroon cloth In
brown clottl Interior, power steertng &amp;
brakes, V&amp;, automatic , cruise, AM/FM
stereo, factory air, split folding rear seat,
gauges, whitewall radials, sport wheal
covers, below eyallne mirrors

,

Beau\11111 van, two tone brown with brown
custom cloth tnterlor, power steering &amp;
brakes, V8, automatic, rron' and rear air,
tront and rear heater, whitewall radials, tilt,
cruise, running boards, AM/FM stereo
cassette, swing out mirrors, 8 Pllllenger
sealing Local one owner new Dodgelrade,

84 FORD .... " · • .. · 5795 81 CHEVY
Ext van, charcoal, automat ~_. power steer·
lng &amp; brakes, radio, factory air, cru!ae con
trot, cuatom seata, exceptionally clean
Must be seen.

terior, power steering &amp; brakes, cruise,
AMIFM stereo, factory air, whitewall radials,
full wheel covers, automatic, power win
dows, power seats, power locks, V8 Local
owner new Plymouth trade

79 CHEVY ..... , . , . '2995

~ ton CustorT) Deluxe pickup, green with
• • • • • • • • • '1995 matching Interior, powor steering &amp; brakes ,
cuauon 4 door, brown with beige custom VB, automatic, gauges, painted rear step
cloth Interior, power steering &amp; brakes, V6, Local owner new Chovy trade
automatic, tactory air, cruise, AM/FM radio,
folding rttar seat , whitewall radials, full
whep! covers Local owner trade
"

.G ribble CheVrolet
750 E. State St. -Athens Ohio - 593·6671

"'

'

'8995

Lo Car 2 doo1, oiiVOI with black lntortor, 4
' ' ••' ••• ·
speed manual, 4 cy!inder, AMIFM stereo, Suburban, double rear doors, automat 1c,
factory air, rear detogger, radials
power steering &amp; brakes, radio, va, brown
metallic with tan vinyl trim, snow room
86 TOYOTA . .. ... . .. '5995 condttton
longbed pickup, brown with brown Interior, 73 JOHN DEERE . . .. . '7995
4 cylinder, automatic, sport striping, radial
tires, painted rear &amp;tep, AMIFM stereo Model 1530 diesel tractor Roof, roll bar,
locking differential, 1100 hOurs John Deere
casse,tte
bush hog and flail mowet Purchased new
85 DLDS ... ... . , ... '6495 by Mr Gribble Excellent condition
Cutlass, Ught green 2 door with green cloth
84 FORD ........... 12795
Interior, power ateertng &amp; brakes, automatic, Escort 2 door, tan with matching Interior, 4
V6, AMJFM stereo, factory air, cruise,
speed manual, 4 cylinder, AMIFM radio,
whitewall radials, full wheel covers.
redial tires, folding rear seat

CARS TRUCKS IMPORTS

,j,

I

~ture Galleries ,

stg ned an a gr eem en t on procedu res governm g the vts tts of U.S.
in spectors to venfy that the
Sovtet mtsst les d eployed are
bemg removed
Pravda Fnday r e por ting from
Washmgton ca lled the three-day
s ummit bptween the two leaders
"a qualttattvely new • link" in
Soviet -US rela twns and the
realtza tton of th e two ear lier
s ummtt s m Ge neva m 1985 a nd
Reyk javik , m 1986
"W htle the key problems of
war a nd peace were ma!Je the
main s ubjec t of the talk s in
Geneva, a nd the posstbthttcs for
real dt sa rmamen l were g rasped
m Rey kJavik , now these posstbih
'ttes m a te rialized for the ftr st
tim e." the dispatch s a td .
The offic ta l Tass agency sa td,
howeve r , that "certain c ricl es~'
tn the Wes t are a lready tr y mg to
throw a s ha dow on the new
trea ty" mclud ing the use of the
ques ti on of human rtght s

.1.I '*'****************************
**
Old Fashioned H erbs and Quaint Collectibles

t

SILVER CHRISTMAS BARS
1 OUNCE .999 FINE SILYEI
ONLY
75 EACH
•
....~.~

s ure th at theSovtet Umon a nd the
socialist st ates wtll doeverythmg
they ca n so that the treaty tha t
was just s tgned m Washmgton
will be (allowed by new agreeme nt s so that the arsenal s of
deadl y weapons will cont inue to
be removed unttl they no longet
are a danger for the exts tence of
humanity, " th e East German
news agency ADN quoted htm dS
'ay ing
The INF trea ty o utl aws mere ly
a fractton of the tota l nuclear
a rsena ls of the superpowers a nd
ts to go to the Senate for
ratlfic?tion
But the treaty
stgned by Got bachev an d R ea
ga n ts the first arms agreement
tha t e limi na tes 1weapons rather
than JUSt set llmtts a nd It a lso
a llows s tringent on -s ite in spec,
tions to check compliance to
ver ify the mtsstles a t·e b e mg
rem oved
Meyer, t he Eas t Germa n spo
kes man, sa id East Germ a ny a nd
Czec hos lovak ia had already

83 CHEVY . . .. .. . ... '5995
Caprice Estate wagon , brown with
woodgrain, power windows &amp; door locks,
ve, power sleerlng &amp; brakes, automatiC, tilt,
cruise, factory air, wire wheel covers,
whitewall radials, rear defogger, 8
passenger seating Local one owner new
Chrysler trade
LeSabre Limited 4 door, Hght brown with
brown vinyl top and brown custom cloth In·
terlor, power steering &amp; brakes, rear defog·
ger, wire wheel covers, whitewall radials, tilt,
cruise, AMIFM stereo, 60140 spilt seat,
power windows &amp; locks, factory air, V8

Gorbachev home; briefs Warsaw Pact allies
~~~~~~
r:::::;:nm
.u&gt;~-~~l
§ ,

!'10SfOW I UP]) So \let
leader Mtkhat l Gorbac hev was
bac k tn the Kremlin today after
b1tcfmg Warsa w Pact alhes m
Ea&gt;t Berltn on the Washmgton
summit and the lteaty that nd s
EUI ope of land based mt ermedtatc rd nge nuc lea r mtssiles
As Got bachev returned Fnday
ntgh t tci a snow\ Moscow. the
offtctal Ta ss ne\1 s agency at
tac ked President Reaga n lot
dccla nn g a Human Rtghts wpek
begmmng Dec 15
Tass a lso lashed out at those
who "adopt the pose of p10secu
tor " toward the Sovte t Un10n
(;orbac hrv h.td usf'd the sa me
cxpress ton tn one of ht s mectmg s
wtth the Reagan savmg the
pt c•st dent wa s "not a prosecutOI"
Jnd the Sovtet Un ton was not th e
lJceused on the human n ghts-

Cavalier 4 door, brown with matching cloth
Interior, power steering &amp;. brakes. fuel ir•·
jected 4 cylinder, radio, automatic, t!!t , radial
11res
'

84 BUICK .. . .. . ... .. '6795

Plus

\ I' ll

Deaver jury can't consider alcoholism, reference
WASHINGTON iUPI) - A
federal Jury has e nded tt s ftrst
day of dehberatlons m the
pequry tna l of Mtc hael Deaver
under a JUdge's orders to ignore a
defense a tim ney's statements on
the ex -Whtte House a tde 's good
c ha r acter
l) S. Dtsl ttct J udge Thomas
.Jackson rendered two judgments
aga mst the defe nse l"nday m
la st mmute argument s over m·

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- E·7

r··.···········--~~~~:~7,~~~=~·-··········ir::::::~;==::::::;;;;~====~~~J~ee~p~CJ~7, m·a;od~ ~l;h·b~~~ ha;dtop

U., S. watching Soviets on Persian Gulf policy'-in future
I

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

'

December 13, 1987

'

'

�'

•

December 13, 1987

Ohio-Point Pleeaant, W.Va. ·

Times-Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

HOP. T PAT HILL FORD

Christmas
countdown

He Will Save Yo

Daily Number
063

Pick 4 ·
2058
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•·

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Rick Tolliver, Pat Hill or Jci'y Hill

,.

CHO..DERS HONORED - Howard Childers, left, of Childers
Saw Supply In VInton, receives the Oulsl~tUJdillg Performance
AwRI'd from Bob Crawford, territory manager lor Rahrig Sales,
Inc., of IJma, for the salil of Echo Products at his store.

ttr;-e~

"These are nasty guys," Tew
SlJys. "All of a sudden the varroa
are here and having a very
negative impact and we're· not
sure how to deal with them.
These parasites knocked out
about halt of the Israeli bee
Industry and have done similar
damage everywhere they .have
shown up."
Honey bees are a $150 mllllon
.Industry in the United States. In
addition, beekeepers provide an
estimated $20 billion in polllna·
tlon services to the nation's
farmers. Ohio has more beekeepers than any other state.
Tew says varroa migrated to
the United States from Central
and South America. Asian bees
have been plagued by them for
centuries and have adapted. But
the European honey bee found In
the United States has notadallted
to the varroa mite.
·
Tew says It will be hundreds of
years before the bees get use&lt;) to
the mites.
.
Varroa are tortoise·shaped so
bees can't rub them off the way
they do other mites. They are an
·external parasite and feed on the
blood of both developing a'hd
adult bees. One mite multiplies to
10 within a year.

,.

$3756°0

You'n ·sa~e

Plenty ·
On These!

Plenty _
On These!

20 \'EARS TUESDA \'-Once a prominent part of the land•cape
of lhe Gallipolis-Point Pleasant arf'a, the Silver Bridge, shown in this

1918
IIONCO II

HUGE YEAR-END SAVINGS ON All OUR
QUALITY USED CARS &amp;TRUCKS!!! . ·· .Come· in and Checl~ Out Our Prices and Big Discounts
Low Financing·Rates Available •••• (On the Spot Financing)

302 engrne, automatic overdrive.
XLT Lariat package. Air, cruise,
power locks and windows. tilt
wheels, styled
steel wheels.
AM/FM/Cassette.

1985 GMC 112 TON
PICKUP SIERRA CLASSIC

V-8 engine, auto. transmission, air
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wheel, power locks and windows.

1987 E- ~50

CLUB WAGON

V-8 auto. overdrive trans .• quad captain
chairs., sola bed, cruise control, dual air
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wheels .

1,985 FORD F-250
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1986 RANGER
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1985 F-150
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V-6, 5 speed. AM/FM, power
brakes. long bed.

(2) TAURUS LX 1986
V-6, automatic transmission,
cruise •. tilt, air, power windows.
power locks.

560, air conditioning, cassette,
sunroof.

NEW BUS FACILITY- A new bus garage Is

- of

"It (the Senate plan) specifies
that part of the (cuts) will come
from the opera tlng budget and
part simply from reducing the
commitment to ca pital invest·
ment and equipment," said
Hooblng.
''It also specifies that in no way
can the Postal Service increase
rates -(to cover the $1.7 billion in
new costs), nor can they add to
their borrowing - so that's why
it forces (the agency) into the
channel of the operations budget
and capital investment commitments," he said.

Parts of Southwest
get 4 feet of snow
By PETER ROWE
United Press International
The first major snowstorm of
the season from the Southwest
paralyzed parts 'or the southern
Rockies and Plains 1,mder as
much as 4 feet of snow today,
knocking out power, stranding
motorists and killing at least
three people.
New Mexico and Texas were
the hardes t hit today. Four feet of
snow was rep_orted in Torrance
County, N.M ., and more than 2
feet of snow piled up at Guadalupe Pass, Texas.
A record 16 Inches buried El
Paso, Texas, where the lnterna·
tiona! airport was closed for
about an hour la te Sunday. The
snowfall total more than doubled
the city's previous record fo r a
24-hour period.
·New Mexico Gov. Ga r-rey Ca r ·
ruthers sent four units of the
National Guard to Torrance
County Sunday alterri'oon to help
state pollee with stranded motorIs ts. Officials said the heavy
snow in the area forced some 200
to 300 cars off the road.
Eleven Inches fell at Amarillo ,
Texas, where schools a nd roads
were closed and authorities
worked to rescue s tranded .

motorists.
"It 's a mess," Amarlllo police
dispatcher Rodney Ford said
today . "It's been snowing for 28
hours straight. We have an
average of 3 to 4 feel (of snow
and) drifts up to 5 to 6 feet.
"We are at a standstllL
Wreckers are stuck, four·wheel·
drives are stucl&lt;;. We are having
major problems. The city is
paralyzed."
On Sunday the storm had
burled New Mexico, piling 19
Inches of snow on Ruidoso, and
triggered a 70·vehlcle pileup on a
Denver interstate. Winds accompanied by heavy snow hlt AlbU·
querque, N.M., at 71 mph before
the storm pushed on to Texas.
In terstate 40 west of Amarillo
to Albuquerque was closed
toda y.
"We're telling people not to
drive at all, but some people
don 't listen," Ford said. " ...
People are ask1 ng for help and
there's. no one to help them ...
Once we start digging out, we're
afraid of what we may find."
Some El Paso school districts
delayed the start of Classes for a
few hours, while others canceled
them for the day .

;---r~~fj:"'&lt;;T'TTJO""--,

underway at Southern High School. Occupancy Is
e"pected In six-to-eight weeks.

Southern Local School District conslruct(on were ·prepared by for mechanics to work on two
Is having a new bus garage architect Don Glenn. Rose Exca- buses , Southern officials report. ·
Southern Board of Education Is
constructed 9n school property ' vatlng of Racine prepared ihe
currently
renting space that Is
'
site
and
constt:ucted
the
new
behind the high school football
jnadequate
and located in the ·
to
the
new
garage.
roadway
field .
high
water
area.
Besides
meeting
health
and·
B&amp;L Utility Contractors of
Proper maintenance of the bus
South Point were low bidders on safety codes, the new facility will
fleet
for safety of students is a
be more efficient In that it will
the $85,000 project.
high
priority
at Southern, school
Design speclllcations to meet have adequate storage and room
officials
say
.
state codes for safety, health and

V-6, - A ir conditioning, AM/FM,
rear defrost. '

Racine Council to purchase new dump truck

Shock. Absorbers by Cabriel t
HEAVY SHOCKS ................: ......... $11 9 5 per shock

After deciding It Is no longer
prudent to put money Into truck
repairs, Racine VIllage Council
at their most recent session
discussed steps to get another
dutpp truck for the .village.
It · was reported that several
councUmembers have . begun
making phone calls to ou t·ofcounty dealers, In hopes of
locating an SO's model l'h ·2 ton
truck. A special meeting to
discuss further plans for a truck
purchase has been scheduled lor
tonight (Monday) at 6:15p .m.
Mike Warner of Brogan·
Warner Insurance was present at
the meeting to advise that
council's liability Insurance will
be going up about $1,600, and that

Installed _Price '16" per shock

GAS SHOCKS ••••• .-......................... $1 8 75 per shock
Installed Price S1175 per shock

FOI ALL DOIIISnC CAIS AND TIUCKS

ON THE SPOT BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE

··~.

laws, but praised the nominee lor
will be painless."
a
decision chastlzlng pollee who
In his prepared remarks, Sen.
bribed
a 5·year-old child to tell
·
Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohlo,
them
where
his parents had
said he was concerned over some
hidden drugs .
of Kennedy's past civil rights
Kennedy,· 51, a Sacramento,
rulings and for belonging to
Calif., federal appeals judge,
private clubs that excluded
women or blacks from member· faced little announced opposition
on hls first day before a Senate
ship. He said Kennedy "would
panel that will consider whether
not be my Ideal nom inee ... but
he shOuld be confirmed for a
the signs are that he Is an
Supreme
Court seat vacant since
acceptable nominee ."
June.
Sen. Ed)Vard Kennedy, D·
The nominee's testimony was
Mass.. said he, too, was con·
expected
to last two days. Thirty·
cerned over Kennedy's "n;u:rJ)w
two other witnesses have signed
clvll -rlghts"
up to tes tlfy , with the hearing
expected to last no more than live
days. In contrast, the heariJngfor
President Reagan's first high
cour\,llominee, Robert Bork, who
was rejected 58·42 by the Senate
In October, lasted 12 days and
drew 112 witnesses.
Kennedy, a judge on the 9th
. U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
si nce 1975, was nominated Nov.
11. A 2onservatlve, he is Presi·
dent Reagan's third - and, so
far , least controversial- choice
to succeed retired Justice Lewis
Powell, a moderate.
Bark, 60, was widely de·
nounced by senators and libera l
organizations that contended his
conservative writings and
speeches lndlcatetl he would turn
back the clock on civil rights and
clvllllbertles gains of the last 30
years if he were eleva ted to the
high court .
Reagan's next selection. Douglas Ginsburg, 41 , another conservative, withdrew his nomination last month after admitting to
smoking marijuana as a college
student and later as a law
professor. Both Bork and Ginsburg are judges On the U.S.
·Circuit Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia.

will be one of \he subjects of a
House-Senate conference com·
mlttee this week.
• In addition to cuts in service,
the agency would h&amp;ve to slow
down automation of Its operations and halt construction pro·
jects across the country, including those In the states of
Callforn i·a, Florida , New York
and Texas , and In the cities of
Atlanta, Chicago, Cincinnati,
Cleveland, Dallas. Houston and
Minnesota .

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
U.S. Postal Servlcemlght have to
eliminate Saturday service and
trim lobby window service at
post offices under a Senate plan
to cut deficits, an agenc)1 spokes·
man said today .
The Senate plan would shift
$1.7 billion In expenditures from
the federal government to the
independent agency during 1988
and 1989, but the agenGy would
not be permitted to raise postal
rates to cover the costs, said
postal spokesman Bob Hoobing.
The delicit·reduction proposal
would turn over $1.7 billion in
payments or health benefits and
cost·of·iiving increases received
by federal retirees who left the
postal service before it became
an independent agency in 1972,
Hooblng said.
Postmaster General Preston
Tisch and Deputy PPostmaster
General Michael Coughlin are
scheduled to hold a news conf,er·
ence on the agency's concerns
la ter today.
The postal l:uts are not included in Hou ~e leglsla lion and

New Southern bus garage under construction

NOW AVAILABLE AT
PAT'S MUFFLER SHOP

YOUR COMPLETE EXHAUST
AND SHOCK ABSORBER
SERVICE CENTER ....
ASK FOR
IL HOOD TODAY.

~

.

1984 MERCURY
COUGAR

1987 ESCORT 'GT

aerial photo taken by the Army Corps of Engineers, collapsed on Decemher 15, 1967, killing 46 people. (Photo courtesy of City Ice &amp; Fuel
Co.)
·

Supreme Court nominee draws praise
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The ' Kennedy realizes that justice
con firma lion hearing for Su· requires not simply protection of
pre me Court nominee Anthony the accused's rights but· "deKennedy opened today wrth his mands the protection of . those
~·
allies praising him as a conserva- harmed.'~ ·
tive model ef judicial restraint
Committee Chairman Joseph
Who would be tough on crline Elden, D·Del., told the nominee
while protecting the rights of the the comm~ttee would conduct a
thorough inquiry Into his civil
accused.
Introducing Kennedy to the rights and civil liberties views.
Senate Judiciary Committee, But Indicative of the general
Sen. Pete Wilson, R·Callf., ~aid friendliness by Democrats to
Ke.nnedy "subscribes to the Kennedy, Elden, in greeting
conervatlve principles which the Kennedy 's family before the
told the nomlframers of our Constitution hearing
's wife,
"This
a'dopted . years a·go. " -He said

198_5 FORD _F-150

25 pents ·

Pt Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Postal service
may -c ut .~ut
Saturday mail

RANGER PICKUPS

~ou'll Sa~e

2 Sections, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 14, 1987

Process 44 cases
in Meigs court
POMEROY
Forty·four costs; Patrick C. Riehl, Bradner,
cases were processed In the hunting without written perm Is·
Meigs County Court of Judge sian of landowner, $20_and costs;
Patrick O'Brien.
Carroll Coy, Mt. Gilead, possessForfeiting bonds in the court Ing deer without having attached
were Tondalaya Hartman, Jack, temporary tag, $100 and costs;
sonvlllt:; . Fla. $55; Gary Albert Baker, Pomeroy, possess·
Mayeau•x, Denham Springs. La.:
lng two deer taken during gun
$55; Marshall Eubanks. Jackson, season, said deer untagged, $50
$55; Thomas Everett, The and costs; George Parker,
Plalns, •$75; Mark Staufeer, Point Pomeroy, failure to wear hunter
Pleasant, $45, David Mann, orange ·while hunting deer, $25
Pomeroy, $55, a II posted on and costs; Jim 'Logan, Dayton,
speeding charges, and · Robert possessing a loaded firearm In
Whitely . Cu~ah ga Falls, $125, the field after 5 p.m. $25 and
possession of a deer without costs; Robert L. Price, Mary·
checking a an official deer ville, Tenn .. attempt to take deer
check ing station.
(rom motor vehicle, $75 a nd
Fined on speeding cha rges costs; attempt to takedeerwith a
were Diana L. Aleshire, Syra- .22 magnum rifle, $75 and costs;
cuse. S22 and costs: Timothy C. Dudley M. Price, Wharton, W.
Tackett, Langsville, $21 a nd Va., attempting to take deer
costs; David · R. Roush, Pome- from motor vehicle, $75 " and
roy, $20 and costs; Timothy W. costs. attempt to take deer with
Braley, Middleport , $22 a nd .22 magnum rifle, $75 and costs;
costs; Gary McDonald. Mil- Paul J. Jones, Racine, taking or
lwood , W. Va .. $24 and costs;
possessing a deer without immeMichael McCort, Logan, $20 a nd diately placing temporary tag,
costs; Michael Fain , Lafayette, $50 and costs, checking a dee r at
Ind., $27 and costs; ~le Gar. a -permanent checking station
land, Hamllton , $23"'3.n&lt;\ costs: with no legal entitlement, $50 and
Kenneth E . Smith, Athens. $23 costs; Paul Hlll, Jr., Racine,
and costs; Alexander. Couladis
failure to tag deer with tempor:
Athens, $22 and costs: Jame~ ary tag where deer was killed
Boyer, Pomeroy, $23 and· costs; $25 and costs; Charles Muihot'
Robert Nelson, Pomeroy, $30 and land, Wilkesville, hunting deer
costs; Norman Schafer, Gallipo- upon lands of another without
lis, $33 and costs.
written permission, $20 and
costs;
James Smith, Hamllton,
Other cases processed In the
passenger
failed to wear seat
court Include: Jotm Roush, Ra·
cine, hunting on land of another belt, $10 and costs; PhUllpJones,
without written permission, $25 Jr ., Athens, reckless operation,
and costs; Jerry Haning, Albany, $100 and costs, expired reglstra.
domestic violence, six months lion, $100 and costs; Duane
jail, suspended to 10 days, six .Jones, Middleport, no operator's
months probation, restraining license, $75; Eric R. Mitchell
order Issued and costs; Dale E. Rutland, speeding, $42 and '
Flaherty, Columbus, hunting costs; reckless operation, $50
upon lands of another without and costs; no operator's license
written permission. $20 and $75' and costs, 30 days jail
costs; Fred J. Neace, Pomeroy, suspended, unsafe vehicle, costs
taking possession of a deer and only; Larry Grimm, Sr., Mason,
not immediately tagging where W. Va ., domestic violence, 10
fell with temporary tag, $25 and da s jali, suspended to time
costs; Brian· K: Bowling, Reeds· se ved, six months probation, ..
ville, no valid license, $100 with re training order issued , costs:
$75 suspended and costs; resist· J rome K. Howard, Pomeroy,
edlng-, $20 and costs· no
lng arrest, $100, ten days In jail
' In
perator ' s license , $75, 30days
suspended, six. months proba·
tlon, costs; ' Debbie Young, jail suspended, one year proba·
Reedsvflle, falslflcatrion, 30 tlon and costs; Sue E. Geog,
days jail sentence suspended, Albany, driving while intoxl·
restitution 'order and .costs; La- cated, $250, three days In jail, 60
man E. Riehl, Fremont, hunting days suspension of Ohio license
on property without written and costs, failure to control
'
permission of landowner, $20 and costs. .

enttne

SAVE UP TO

Ohio's bekeepers are
facing major problem
COLUMBUS, Ohio' (UP!) Pancake lovers and crop
farmers ~r.eabout -to get stung by
a cu,stly problem that could wipe
out half the country's beekeeping
Industry , Increase the cost of
honey and elimlna te crop
pollination.
The varroa mite Is one nasty
critter, says James E. Tew, Ohio
Extension bee specialist and
national Extension apiculturist
for the USDA. The pencil pointsized parasites can destroy a bee
colony in three years and there's
not much a beekeeper can do
about it.
No pesticides that kill the mite
are approved for use on bees.
About seven states, Including
Ohio, have the mite. Florida and
several other southern s\lltes are
heavily Infested. Tew says the
United States' borders wlll prob·
ably bf closed to bee trade since
foreign beekeepers don 't want to
risk brjnglng In the mites.
The Ohio Department of Agriculture · will decide In early
·January whether to quarantine
bee movement in and out of Ohio.
Tew says the state \s, In effect,
already quarantined since com·
mercia! beekeepers don't want to
risk bringing varroa into their
colonies.
•

•

1988

F-SERIES PICKUP
'

at y

.

Vol.38, No .151
Copyrighted 1987

,.,•./

•

e

,.

1988

Rain tonight. Lows In low
40s. Rain, wind Tuesday.

~··

CQSts for property Insurance will
decrease slightly. Warner also
reported that inland marine
insurance lor various lire depart·
ment Items has also Increased.
The finance committee reminded council members that
even though the village has
several large ba lances In funds,
after the first of the year a lite
truck payment, with Interest,
insurance premiums, etc., will
be due. It was also noted that
some of t~e moneys _have been
pledged In funds for truck re·
placement, pollee car replace·
111ent, and to a water department
contingency fund.
Council declared a former
emergency squad vehicle, a 1974

Chevrolet van, as excess prop·
er ty and authorized the village
clerk to adverstlse .for sealed
bids. Bids will be opened at 7:30
p.m . on Monday, Jan.4, and must
be received by 6 p.m. that same
evening. Council Is reserving the
right to reject any and all bids.
It was reported that a new
double-wide Is bei1Jg moved into
the village, allegedly without a
permit . According toreports, the
footer for the double·wlde will be
too close to another property, in
violation of the village trailer
ordinance. Council President
Frank Cleland reported he would
check on the matter.
Continued on page 6

EQUIPMENT - The ~llddleport Fire
Department recently purchased a hydraunc
spreader and cutter oulflt manufactured by
Amkos .Rescue Systems. The unit cost Sl2,000 and
was purchased from Howell Co. Inc. Fire and
Rescue Equipment Specialist. The equipment Is

used to free victims from auto accidents. The
equipment Is being paid lor by donations and fire
deparhnent fund raising activities. Pictured with
the rescue tool are L-R Bob Byer, Eric Davis ol
Howell Co, Frank Epple and David Hoffman.

'

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