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                  <text>Page-1

The Daily Sentinel.

3; 1986

Ohio

I

Ohioans support
21 drinking age

Announce
winners

t .,

~

{

COLUMBUS. Ohio iUPI I undecided, Tuchfarber said.
Although the state ls fighting the
The poll also Indicated that 32
federal government's attempt to percent objected to the federa l
create a national drinking age, a government forcing the higher
recent poll shows 75 ·percent of drinking age.
Ohioans support a drinking age 'ot
Ohioans can , legally purchase
21 for alcoholic beverages.
beer at 19 and liquor and wine at 21 .
In September, Ohio Attorney
The appeal says that "while
General Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr. states take no position on the iSSue
supported-South Dakota'sappeal of of an appropriate drinking age,
a U.S. District Court ruling that they uniformly believe lhat it is
upheld the legality of financial lmpermlsslble for the federal go·
penalltes against states that do not vernment to penalize states for the
raise their drinking age to 21 by free exercise of the constltutional
next fall.
rights reserved to the states."
The · federal 'government will
The coutt dismissEd South Dako·
withhold 5 percent of federal !a's claim that federal sanctions
highway money from non-comply· violated states' authority under the
ing states beginning Oct. I, and 10 21sl Amendment to the U.S.
percent the next year. The penalty Constitution to set condition lor
could cost Ohio~ million 0\·er two selling and drinking alcohol.
years, state officials said.
South Dakota also argued tha t a
The poll showing Ohioans are in drinking age of 21 cannot he a
favor of the 21 drinking age was condition for getting federal high·
conducted by the University of way money to which the state is
Cincinnati Institute for Polley entitled . Ohio and eight other states
Research.
- Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Mon·
"All major demographic sub- tana. Snuth Carolina, V('rmont,
groups identified In the survey have Wis&lt;.'Onsin and Wyoming - filed
strong majorities in favor d raising arguments supporting the South
the dr inking age to 21," institute Dakota appea L
Director AI Tuchfarber said. "This
In 1983. Ohiu voters !l'jected a
is even true of the 18-to 29-year-old proposal to raise the drinking age to
age group, two-thirds of which 21. No bills to raise the drinking age
support thls change."
to 21 hav"' be('n introduced in the
About 22 percent oppose raising Legisla tu re. but some reportedly
the drinking age, and the rest were all' 'li!~ works.

..

I

L

Meigs County happenings ...
Emergency squads
answer four calls
Meigs Count y Em"'rg('nc~· Medi·
cal ServiC(' !l'ports lour ca lls
Thursday; Middiepo11 at 9: 24a.m.
transported Paul Smith from the
lire station to VetNans M('morlal
Hospital; Rutland at 10:09 a.m.
transported Harold Davis from an
auto accident on Rt. 124 West to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Ra·
cine at 1:57 p.m. transported Fred
Scarbery from Fronl St. to Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital: Middle·
port at 11:19 p.m. !roated but did not
transport Rob('rt E . J ohn son Jr.

Veterans Memorial
Adm issio ns .. Rand y Ri!fle.
Shade: Micha('J Smith , Pomeroy;
Paul Smitll, Middleport; Harold
Davis, Rogers, Ark.; Sabrina Wil·
son. Rutland .
Discharges·· None.

Tuesday meeting St't
Dr('W Webster Post 39. American
Legion. will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday
for a di nner at th&lt;' post home.

Tret' Pickup

Three thousand and seventy-six
customers of Columbus&amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Co .. were without
power in two art'as approximately
14 hours New Yea(s Day according
to Ron McDade. C&amp;SOE area
manager.
McDade said f('Sidents in the Rio
Grande. Rodney and Thurman
area were without JX&gt;Wer from 6: 30

a.m. to 8 p.m. as a result of a
defi?Crive out side terminator.

McDade sa id while crews w ere
out trying to find the ca use.ol the
Fbo area problem, a circutt brea ker
1ripped out. causin g a pow·er ou tag&lt;•
in the Wilkesville and \' inton ar('Bs .
Powrr was off in those communities from 11 a.m. until around 8 p.m.
Thr Rio Grande area has 1.379
customers while thE&gt; Wi lkPS\'il lf' \ 'inton area has 1,697.

Teenager's
body found
CINCI "&lt;NATI ICP! 1 - Ch!ldren
playing in the woods Thursda~·
disco\'Cn:&gt;d in eas tern Ci nci nnali the
body of a Kentucky teenager
missing sinC(' [l('c . 6.
The Hamilton County coroll('r b\
today was ex)X'Cted to ha,·e estab·
Jished the cauS£&gt; and time of death of
Eddie Pence. 14, Newpor1. Kv .
PenC(' n('Ver made it hol11f' from the
Newport AltNnali,·c Middle School
fou r wef&gt;ks ago. \•,: hpre hf' was i}1the

eighth grade.
[)(&gt;nnis Lucas. who \\·as shot and

killro Monday bv a police sha rp·
shooter to end a :ll-hour hos tagP
crisis in Newport , claimed to have
stabbed Pence to death . and
dumped his bodv on the Cincinnati
side of the Ohio Hiver.

Guilty pleas given
Two Middleport womPn received
sL\ month su s)X'nd~ a i lt erm s and
werr lined S2i after pleading ~'Uill~
to theft Tul'Sday in Gallipolis
Municipa l Cout1 .
,Jo A. r-.:ew9Jmf' of

Po mPro~· .

and

Glad~· s Bartl'! I. 49. of Middleport ,
were also placed on 18 months
probation 10 charges stemming
from «'parate incidpn ts at Mur
phy·s Mart in thP Si lver Bridge
Pla?&lt;L

Mt't'ts Mondav
ThP Letart r:tementa"· PTO will
meet at 7 p.m. Monda~· at lh&lt;'
S&lt;'hoot There will he a ~'\Jest
Sp!.'akrr
The Rig &amp;&gt;nd Ci\·ita n Club will
mrrt (If i :.'~l p.m . Monday at thf'
l'ommun•t v Action Agrnc~· OfftCt&gt;s

SCANS COll.ECI'ION

- Ollcqo !luft.Tbnes
t'Olwnnisl Judy Markey looks over her Ricky Nehon
scrapbook and grieves over her leeJiaC~&gt; Idol, Rielly

Nelllon, who died New Year's e\le when a DC-3
crashed near DeKalb, TellaS. UPI.

Fire consumes Nelson plane
followin~ emergency landing
DE KALB, Texas I UPI I - The
lll·lated plane carrying singer
Ricky Nelson and his entourage
mad"' a good emergency landing
with a fi re on board and came to a
complet"' stop before flames con·
sumed th(' craft . fed eral officials
say.
Nelson. his Iiane(' and five
members of his band who died in
the accident succumbed to smoke
inha lation and burns. the Dallas
County medical examin"'r's ofllc('
said.
But . a spokesman said, " II is not
known whether they died befof(' or
after the plane" touched ground.
The D\ .:1 was carrying Nelson
and his band from Alabama to a
New Year's Ew conc"'h In Dallas
Tul'Sday when the pilot rad ioed for
help - sayin!! that choking smoke
was filling the cockpit -and put th('
craft down in rural east Texas.
.Jim Burnett , chairman of thP
:-;at iona l Transportation Safety
Board. told a m:•ws conlerrn(.'{'
Thursday night that the twin·
engine propeller plane settled to th('
g-rouoo on all th.fl't' landing gear
and had come to a full stop in a mw

GALLIPOLIS - A $~ 5
budget to opera tP Ga ltia
government and serYin•s
was appro\'l'd Thursda\

million
Coun ty
in 19~
bv the

count y commission.

The bUdget is alx&gt;u t $1 million k•&gt;S
than the $10.;; million ~p~.·nding bill
approved last .Ja nuary for 1~&amp;1.
· Antic iapa ted revenuPs. certified
by the Gallla County Budget
Commission. wilt a mount 10 about
$9,848,76.1, while the budget ap·
proved by thP commission tolD I'
$9,551,840.

Lottt&gt;ry winners
CLEVELAND tUPI I - Thurs
day·s winning Ohio Lottery
num tx&gt;rs: Daily Numher
6ll .
Ticket sa les t o t a I e d
$L,220.J5;;.CoO, wit h a,,payof.l du"' of
$644,!l92.:i0. PKK-1
486!\. '
P!CK-l ticket .&lt;;a les totaled
SlH0,963. wit h a payoff due of
. $81 ,545.
PICK-I $1 straight bet pay&gt;
$3,840. PICK4 $1 box bel pays$160.

Weather forecast
Today ... mostly cloudy and a little colder. T"'mperatures fa lling to
the mid JJs by evenin g. South winds becoming northwest 10 to 15
mph.
TonlghLpartly cloudy. Low 25 to :ll. Light northwest winds.
Sal urday ...mostly cloudy. High in the upper :lls.
Chance of precipita tion is 20 percent today .. 10 percen t tonight ..
and 20 percent Saturday.
Extended forecast
Sunday throogh Tuesday
Fair Sunday and Monday wllh hichs In the :alsand low :Jls. Lowslli
to 25 Sunday momln1 and $ lo lli Monday, A chanoe of rain or snow
Tuesday. Hips in the 3011 and lows WI the leens.

'

WASHINGTON tU PI \ - The
administration is weighing ex panded sanctions aga inst Libya in
retaliation lor the Rorne and
\'ienna terrorist attacks that LJ.
b~·a n leader Moammar Khadafy is
· accused of finan cing.
Hespond lng to Khadafy 's asser·
t Jon tl1at the attacks well' just Hied.
a ~ t ate Departnwnt spokesman
chargro Thursday th(' Libyan
leader was " making excuses for the
indiscriminate slaughter of innocen t men. women and children ."
Th&lt;' State Department said rurrent economic and diplomatic
sanctions against Libya - Including travel restrictions, a ban on
exports of high technology and and
a 1982 oil embargo - have been
effective.
.I
But department spokesman Cha·
rles Redman said further tactics
are under consideration.
"We are looking a t other things
we cou ld do, " Redman said. "These
measures, of course, would be more
effective if they were underiaken
more widely by th(' International
community. There Is no doubt
about that.
He declined comment oo possible
military retaliation. But CBS News,

•

Bob Hoeflich's 'exciting' New Year's Eve- Page

Vol. 20 No. 48
CGpyriglrtld 1985

B-l

Middleport- Pomeroy- Gallip21is-Point Pleasant

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - The United States has
shifted some of its naval might to within range of
North Africa to be ready if Presidrot Reagan orders a
retaliatory strike against Arab terrorist bases in
Libya, Pentagon sources say.
The aircraft earlier USS Coral Sea left Naples,
Italy, Friday on a course that will take It past the
Libyan coast, and Navy planes with sophistica ted
jamming gear were moved from Washington state to
a base In Sicily, the soun:es said Friday.
One source said plans lor retaliation were being
worked out in the event an a ttack is ordered by
Reagan.
" U there are contingency plans, you have to he
prepaced to tak~ the contingencies," one source said.
At tlle same tim~he crews of th(' ca rrier USS

Moore
meets
•
mmates

I Continued from page 1I
Spratley estima ted the awrage
residential cust001er will save $6 a
year on the Columbia credits. The
utUity estimated the average sav·
ing at $5 a year.
.
Spratley said the 189 communi·
ties negotiate their natufl)l gas
rates directly wrth Columbia in
multi-year contract s. which contain
automatic rate lncreaS£&gt;S. He said
the utility volunteered to suspend
these.
"This concession is proba bl ~
Impossible for any one communlty
to achieve and shows the strength of
statewide and uniform rate regula ·
tion," said the consumers' attorney.
He said he will eontinue to ask
cities and villages In Columbia
Jerritory to join in sa-king a single
rate "and finally end Columbia's
discriminatory pricing practices." ·

•
ram,
snow

Along the Rlver ............... B-l-6
Business ........................... D-1
Dealhs ............................. A-7
Editorials ......................... A-2
Sports ......................... "' C-1-7
Take-One ..................... Insert

Sunday. January 5, 1986

..

MOUNDSVILLE. W.Va. tU Pi l
- Officials restored ordPr to the
West Virginia Penitentiary and
completed a lockdown alter rioting
Inmates released the last of their
hostages to end the two-day upris·
ing and met with Gov. Arch Moore
to discuss their grievances.
Moore, aL5: :ll p.m. Friday, said
the !!»-year-old prison in West
Virginia's northern panhandle was
back In total control of correctiorl6
officials for the llrst time In 48
hours.
,
Three inmates - convicted
killers Kent Sile and .Jess Atkinson
and lddnapper Harold Deo n were slain by convicts during the
uprising.
The governor, as part of an
agreement to end the bloody selge,
met with Inmate leaders lor 90
minutes to hear complaints about
conditions in the fortn&gt;ss-llke
prison.
Afterwards, Moore character·
!zed the complaints as "personal
difficulties" and said "a reasonably
large pe=ntage of· them are
capable of being COff('C!ed in a way
that doesn't jeopardize control of
t~ institutlon."
But Moo!l' said the convicts
would he denied visitors and kPpt In
confinement until officials com·
plete an Jnvestil!ation into the
rebellion and convict slayings.
Th"' seven remaining hostag('S
were freed at noon Friday and 110
correction; dfin·rs marcht'Ci inside
to retake the prison's south wing ,
where convicts held 17 hostag&lt;'s

America, the battleship USS Iowa and their escort
ships at Atlantic F1eet .headqua rt('rS In Norfolk, Va.,
have be('n alerted to the posslbiltty of an unscheduled
pepioyment to the Mediterranean, the sources said.
No decision had be('n made about dispatching the
ships across the Atlant ic to the Mediterranean . a 1&lt;k:l
a y voyage, they said.
The Pentagon has prepared several mllltary
optJons lor Reagan, but the president sought to
dismiss concern the United States was preparing for
rataltatory action aga inst Libyan territory.
"I'm not aware that we'll' doing anything out ct the
ordinary at ail," he told reporters In Mexlcali,
Mexico, describing U.S. ship movements as "various
maneuvers and practiC('S."
But asked If the United States was planning any

retaliation for Libyan SljppoJ1 of tenorists attacks,
Reagan turned his palms upward and said, "1'\o
comment."
The Un ited States and Israel ha ve blamro Libya lor
supporting the Abu Nidal terrorist group , woose
memb('rs allegedly carried out bloody attacks at the
airports in Rome and Vienna Dec. 'IT. American and
lsraell officials have hin ted at retaliation.
Ubyan leader Moammar Khadafy da red the
United States and Israel to try, warning such an
attack cou ld lead to a wider w·ar in the
Mediter ranean, as wel l as possible attacks in thP
United States.
The move of at least seven EA-6B Prowler radar
Jamming aircraft from their American base to the
joint U.S. -ltallan base at Sigonella signaled U.S .

F"""'7:.....-~~~...--

in forecast

-Page A-3-

9 Sections . 58 Pages
A M.ultlmedta Inc. Newspaper

MEE'JS INMATES - Gov. Arch Moore, r1pt,
meets with inmllles to bear their grievances over
conditions in the West Virginia Penlt8ltlary , Moore
told the convicts be would llslen to their complaints
'

they grabbed while seizing control
the prison at 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
None of the hostages released In
stag('S Wednesday night. Thursday
afternoo n and Friday were seriousiy hm1 . but Moot'!' said some
had minor injuri&lt;'S an d "obvious
marks of being roughed up."
Moo1-e sai d he has an "open
mind" about the Inmate demands,
but emphasized . "There was
of

p!l'parat ions for • possible milita ry action .,gainst
terrorists based in Libya, tlle sources said.
The sophisticated electronic jamming gea r aboa rd
the Prowl"'rs could be used to &lt;)('fend att acking
aircraft from sutiace-to-a ir missiles. such as the
Sndet-built SAM ·os Libya is in stalling as a defense
aga inst high -alt itude planes.
One option considered for U.S. at tacks on Libya was
a raid by B-52 bombers, but tha t was discarded
almost immediately, a U.S. o!ficial said.
The movement of the Prowlers was precautionary,
in part because the Coral Sea is not equipped with any
of Ihe planes, said the sources. who spoke ono:mdition
they nol b(' i\l('nlifiro . But lou r squadrons of the
Navy's n('w F-18 strike fi ghter were aboard the
earlier.

Gallia, Meigs jobless
rate up in November

ooly after all IJoslales had been released. The final
seven hostages were freed Friday after 42 hours of ·
captivity.

agreement on amn"'sty In f('gards
to the hostage situation."
John Prlc(o, the governor's press
aide, also said the agreement to end
the convict takeover did not Include
amnesty lor those involved in the
slayingJ;.
"The inciden(.'('s of homicide Is a
sq&gt;arate Issue that will be dealt
with at a later tlme," PriC(' said.
Two convict leaders told repor·
ters Thursday tha t inmates had

tried repeatedly to improve prison
conditiOns thmugh lawful mean s
and warned there m uid be another
tiot If offici als ignored their
demands.
In 1983 a state Judge gave
con:ections officials fi ve years to
remedy 13 unconstitutional condl·
lions at the prison, including
insu fficient living space. resident'!'
and dinin g areas Infested with
rodents and vermin.

SPECIAL

$3995
4 CYL. or II CYL.
WITH COUPON
Includes:

OIL
OIL FILTER
PLUGS
SCO'PE TEST

GAlLIPOLIS - The unemploy·
meni rates in Ga lUa and Meigs
Counties rose slightly between
October a nd Novemb('r, reports th&lt;'
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services.
With the exception of Jackson which posted a modest decrease the November rise in the Jobless
rate for Ga llia and Meigs was in line
with a trend toward higher unem·
ployment thmughout southeastern
Ohio.
Gallla's jobless rate rose by
six-tenths of one percent - from 9.9
to 10.5 percent - during the
onl"-month period. Meigs County
postro a seven-tenths of one percent
increase- from 10 to 10.7 percent.
Both counties fl'gislered their
lowest rates of unemployment lor
19S5 during October.
The bu f('a u !l'ports 1.500 of
Gallla's estimated work Iaroe of
14 ,1m without work in November.
In Meigs, I.nl of that county 's
es timated work force ol11.500 were
listed as Jobless during thr month .
Athens- with a reported Jobless
rate of 9 JX'I'Cent - was the only
county in the region to post an

Art'a jobless
rate in November
County

Percentage

Athens ... ... ... .. .... .... .. ..9.0 (8.8)
Gallia .... .. .. ...... ... ..... 10.5 (9.9)

Jack.&lt;;On ...... ..... ... .... I t.2 ( 11.5)
Lawrence .. .. .... .. .. .. .. l2.3 (11.4 )
Meigs .. .. .. .. ...... .. ..... 10.7 (10.0)
Vinton ................... .. I3.R ( 11.9)
.
JOBLESS RATE - With the
exception of Jack.'!Oil, all counties In the region posted an
Increase In WJemployment lJe.
tween Octoller and November,
reports the Ohloo Bureau of
Employment Services. (October figu res In parenthesis)
unemployment rate below 10 JX'r·
cent in Novf'mhf'r .
Statewkl~. the jobti"Ss rat e h"'ld
steady at 9 percent during the
(X'riod. Nationall.v . the unemplo~ · ·
men! rat e fe ll by on!'-tenth of one
)X'rcent- from 6.RtoG.;- )X'rcent hetween Oct ober and November.

One killed, five ·injured
in early morning fire
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. The state Fire Marsh all's Office
has been called In to dssist wit h the
Investigation of an early Saturday
morning fire that killed onP (X'rson
and Injured fi ve others- including
two fil'l'men - a spokesman for the
Point Pleasant Pollee J)(opartmPnt
said.
Mae Casto. 84. Point Pleasant.
appat't'ntly d_led fmm smoke inhala·
.tlon during 1he fire ll'hich guttro her
one-story, wood framl' home at 21~
North Main St. , th(' spokesman
said. The fire rna~· have been
electrical in natu re, he ~ddPd .
Thfl'(' ~pie . Including the vic·
tim 's husband , Gay Casto.~ . wei'!'
In the house at the time of the 4: 20
a.m. lire. A nu rsing su(X'rvlsor a t
Pleasant Valley Hospital identified
the others as Phillip Honaker. 36,
and Gloria Honaker. 'n.

Both Mr. Casto and Mr. Honaker
were adm itted to Pleasant \·allt'l
Hospital suffering from smoke
inhalation, the nursing SUIJf'IYisor
said. Thry an&gt; listt'&lt;i in stabJ p
condition . Mrs. Hon akf'r ~nt !'i
ln'a1L'(I for srn okP lnhal:t1ion and

rPleasro .
Thr nursing suJX&gt;rvis.or also sa ic1
Charles Mullins, 44 . Poin l i'l&lt;'asa nt .
a memtx&gt;r of the Point Pleasa nt
Volunteer FlrP Department. was
admit tro to the illspital for chest
[J&lt;1ins. He Is Ustro1in fair condition.
Anothrr fif('man . Jeffrey Clark .
30. Route 2. P oint Pleasant . wa s
tl'l'ated at the hospital for an ankJp
inJu!J· and rclm sro . th&lt;' Slt)X'rviso•
added .
'
Further d&lt;•t: ti ls of th&lt;' fi re were
unavailable (X'odlng completion of
th e poli c e de oarrm e nt' • ' .
investigation

'
U.S.-Mexico
summit ends

PCV
AIR FILTER
ADJUST TIMING
IDLE SPEED
OONS'lRUCFION UNDERWAY - An addldon to the MelpCouri)'
Emef'lellcy Medical Services' huDdlnl on Mulberry HeisNs l&lt;i
e•pected to be llalshed by mld·Maroh. CoruttntciiOn bepn In late
November by lite local firm, Roush Construction Co., owned by G"'l

COOPER

Roulh. FIDIII COlt lor lhe projed Ill 1t1 be apprvlllmaleb SM,OOO. 'l1le
addition wll be ulled u a!....._, center for EM!!
as weD as
office and storage space. Pictured left to r1abl are COII!Jirudtoa workel'!l
wry Hayne~~, llllp,erlntendenl, Andy l'alterwn and Erie Iiams.

pe_.,

Mine deaths drop to record low·in '85

CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH DODGE
MIDDUPOI1, 01110
·92-6421

Ohio weather:

tntint

Check:
Khadafy, interviewed by Wes t·
e111 reporters Wednesday, said the
anacks were Justified as rPVenge
for the Oct. l Israeli bombing of
Palestlne Liberation Organization
headquarters In Tunlsla .

Inside:

D-1

Forces preparing for possible Libyan strike

TUNE-UP

"We part lculary abhor Khad·
afy's making excuses lor the
indiscriminate slaughter of innocent men, women and children an d
re)ecting the fact that these were
!lire acts of terrorism, " Redman
said .

..,.p~

tmts

PLUS

airline El AI .

her -dreams

•

OIL &amp; FILTER

quoting unnamed sources, reported
AmeriCan fom&gt;s In the Medlterra·
nean were being lJJUt up and that
the Soviets were monltorlng the
developments.
Officials hope that the terrorist
attacks !)('c. '!I at tile Rome and
Vienna airports will prompt Inter·
national su~rt for sanctions. The
attacks left 18 people dead, includ·
ing five AmeriCans.
The administration charges tbe
Khadafy rEgime with harboring
and flnanctng tile Palestln~ ter·
rorist group, headed by Abu "N idal,
blamed lor last week's anacks,
which were aimed at th(' Israefl

senrice awards

B-'2

I Area death

Additional sanctions against Libya
reviewed by Reagan administration

Evan~ . farms

Richanl Reeves discuS!~~ 'baby-boomers' as they
turn 40 - Page A-2

.• ·"

pasture befon&gt; flames consumed it. Center In Uttle Rock, Ark.
The flash fire was so hot it melted
Rank and Fergu~Dn escaped
the aluminum off the craft
from the aircraft Just before it was
Pilot Brad Rank had radioed lor destroyed .
help, saying he had smoke inside
NTSB spok('sman Brad Dunbar
ihe cockp)t. Three minutes and six said the investlga tlng team still is
SECOnds lat('f, the aircraft vanished trying to locate the Iiane's maintl"from radar screens In Forth Worth , nance records and pin down Us
Anna H. Carson
investigators said. •
ownership.
Of the six fire extinguishers
NTSB lnvestlgator Rudol!Kapus·
Word has been receivro of th('
aboard, the only one used was in the tin said It probably would take
death of Mrs. Merle lAnna
recent
rear cabin, rut l~vestigators stU! about six months to reaci · a
have not determined where the fire conclusion on what caused the Holten Car~D n of Columbus on
Dec. 18. She was the daughter of the
started, Burnett said.
accident.
late
Charles William a nd Mary
The bodies of the Sl'\len victims
Nelson's bOdy was removed from
Strohmeyer
Holter. Funeral servi·
were huddled in the front part ct the 'the medical exa miner's office
ces
were
held
!)('c . 21 with burlal in
cabin, Just outside the door to the Thursday for transport to Ca llfor·
Sunbury,
Ohio.
·
cockpit, b(' said.
nia . Famlty spokesman Greg
Rank, hospitalized In good condl· McDonald , Nelson 's manager in
No dancing tonight
tlon at St. Michael's Hospital in Los Angeles, said funeral arrange·
Texarkana, Ark ., cannot talk be· ments would b(' com piNed today.
Square dancing will not be held at
Nelson, 45, and his band were on th&lt;' Long Bottom Community Build·
cause ol tubes In hls throat but he
indicated by nods that the smoke their way from Guntersville, Ala ., ing tonight as announced ('artier.
came from the cabin area , invest!· to Dallas, where he was booked for
a New Year's Ev(' show.
gators said.
Nelson's flana&gt;e, Helen Blair, 'n; ~---~----------~I
Co-ppilot K"'nneth Ferguson, 43,
the only other survivor, was burned bass guitarist Patrick Woodward ,
on his face , hands and back. His 35; lead guitarist Bobby Neal, 38:
condlti:m was upgraded from crltl· drummer Rick lntveid , 23: pianist
cal to serilus Thursday at the Andy Chapin, :ll; and · sound
University of Arkansas Medical irehnlclan Clark Russell, li, died in
the accident.

in PomPrOY .

Budget approved

woman 'spins'

Settlement

The annual Chris tmas Ire&lt;&gt;
pickup will he held in Mlddi('port
on Monday, Jan . 7. Residents ar('
asked to place their tr('('s near the
curb in front of their homes and
they will he pic ked up by the Str('('t
department free of charge .

C&amp;SOE has outage

Mefgs County

The holiday season saw the.
awarding of prlz!'S lor special
promotions held in conjunction with
th&lt;' S£&gt;ason.
Pomeroy flower Shop prize
~&gt;inners were Opal Kauff, Hemlock
Grove. a Cabbage Patch doil, and
Robyn Stout, Syracuse, a giant
filled stocking.
Winners at the Middleport Dairy
Isle were Carl Gagnon, Mlddlep&lt;irt,
firSt prize, a AM·FM st('reo tape
player, with $5 gift C('rtlficates
going to Gary Mitchell, Lron, w.
Va.; Charles Rife, Middleport:
Roger Watkins, Pomeroy; Gary ·
Adams. Rutland, and Mary McKin·
ney, Rutland.
Winner first prize at th(' 3-ln·On('
Restaurant in Pomeroy was Debbie
Ball, Pomeroy, an AM·FM stereo
tape player and $5 gift certificates
were won by Tom Thelss, Racine;
Darrell R Duncan , Ravenswood;
Ronald K. Zerkl£', N('W Haven;
Stella Krebs, -~tart, W. Va., ancl
Kevin Taylor, Middleport.
January I prizes awarded by the
Pomeroy Fire ~riment went to
Leon McKnight. VCR: Charlene
Thomas, gift certificate at Powell 's
Super-Valu: Jessica Blat'ttnar,
shotgun: Jackie Starcher, televi·
skm S('t; Hank Cleland. gift certifi·
cate at Hartley' s Shoes; VIolet ·
Brown, watches;
Carl Hysell,
socket set; Norman Price, gift
certifica te at Pomeroy Flower
Shop; Julie Sisson, savings bond:
Art Slusher, rod ' and r€('1: Jane
HyS£&gt;ll, coff€(' marker; Sue Kibble,
knife: Margaret Wyatt, search
light, and Danny Crow, gift certifi ·
cate at Sugar Run MilL

Vi

I
I· S I
Monday I
thru I
Friday I
1-.- -: -,-.--------~- J

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Mine Safety and Healtlf Admtnls·
Jration said Friday work· related
deaths in' the coal, metal a11d
non-metal mining industries fell to
historic lows in 198i.
'
MSHA Ad.minlstrator David Ze·
geer sa id preliminary data sh&lt;lwed
there were fr1 deaths In the nation's

coal nelds and another 5o miners
were killed In metal and non metal
mJntng .
Both ligures were the lowest t•vrr
recorded by the federal gowrn
1'1\ent for the respective Indus! rles.
It was only the second time sin(.'('
the government began taking sta·
Ustk:S that roal mining deaths fell

below 100 in till' year. The previous
low tlgu.re for 'coal mining dealhs
was 70, reconled ·m1983.
The number of 1!ei coal rnlnlng
deaths was almost half that or 1984,
when 127 coal miners were kliJed by
accidentS~ lncluplng 'II i~
unctergrouoo lire at a
Utah, mine. ·
j

Kentucky alone suffered 17 t'Oal
mining fata!'it!es last year, more
than any other state, but that sttll
represented an improvement over
the s!Bie's death toll of 39 coal
mining deaths In 198t.
Following Kentucky were West
VirJinla, with 16 deaths In 1!ei and
(Continued on page A3)

WASHI NGTON JUP! 1 - Pl'('Si·
dent Reagan and Mexican Presi·
dent Migu el de Ia Madrid each
spoke of progress made at t~ir
Mexlcall summit , but undeJ-cur·
rents of disagreement prevailed
during the talks .
,
Reagan . [('m inded de Ia Madrid
publicly about hispreviousdenuncl·
allons of authoritarian regimes in
Latin America , and de Ia Madrid
disputed Reagan's contention that
Mexico has failed to do enough to
spur fOreign invesiment.
Reagan. In a luncllE&lt;\0 toast in the
Mexican border town of Mexicall,
described their sessions as "open
and candid,'' a diplomatic way of
saying not everything on the
agenda was selUed to mutual
satisfaction.
However, Reagan said each of his
lour meetings with de ·Ia Madrid

since takl n~ office "SN'ms morr•
productive than the last."
Apart from improv &gt;d a Into,.
phere. senior ,\meric an officia ls
said the talks produced U. S.
suppo11 for a Mexican·propoSPd,
multilateral "drug enforcelll('nt
summit " to examine global 'dro g
trafficking, and comm itment s to
remedy cross- bonler di sputes 0\'er
po lluti on, i in mjgr a t Jo n a nd
fisheries.
De Ia Mad rid, also noting In·
creased cooperat Jon between t~
hi'O countries, warned, howev~r.
that "potential areas of conflict tlult
we must guard against and prevent
have also grown."
Unlike post summits between the
two nations, MeXIco's lukewarm
support of u.s. hlicklng lor anUSandinlsta reb('ls In Nicarag\1!1 was
(Continued on page· A3

'

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

January 5, 1986

.
..

Commentary and perspective

~"he

,------Weather:-----:::,......--------., New England braces

Sunda v Times· Sentinel

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 AM EST 1_5_86

January 6, 1986
,

Page-A-2

•mtbav 'mimes- imtintl

•

.-\ Division of

'

82;; Third Ave .. Gallipolis. Ohio

(614) 446-2:142

Ill Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio
1614) 99HU6

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhlisher .
iiOB.%RT \\'ILSO:II ,JR .
. Exe-t·utive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
;\ssislant

Publish~r-Controller

I F T T J-:IlS IH' OP I \I (l ' .11-,, tl l' h'll llH '&lt;. I. !ht•\ '-ho•ullii X' II''-• t h.1n \U o tt ••: d •
• hli1 J! All h•tfl ·z' ,,, ,. ' ll h to•t·r rn • • l ;11 n ~ .111d mu "' t&gt;l • ~ll! nt ·d 11 11 h n. 1nlt' . .1 • hlr ,,,, .o rrd

h ·lo·pho •Tl •' nu mho·r·._ _ \ ,, , m ~ l ).! ll l ~l lt •l l o'l' u ill ht• puh l l, ht'\1

Lt 'll t'r ~ , h, •lll d r,.~ in

~::nnd !." It'. , l(l&lt;ll t''~i n g l ~"LH' ' · ntol 1)1 '1 " 'll . dlll o''

·celeste's search
:for a running mate
, Cov Richard F. Celeste will be formaUy announcing his candidacy for
re-election within lhree weeks, and he will probably have chosen a running
mate by then .
The [)et11()Crattc State Committee will meet Jan . '!5 to endorse
candidates for statewide office, most d them incumbents, and " I expect to
, .\Ji endorsing a full slate of candidates. including governor and lieutenant
• governor," said party chairman James M. Ruvolo.
• Celeste told United Press International he plans to talk again this week
: ~&lt;ith House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D· New Boston, his No.1 choice for
: a running mate, and he refused to rule out the jXlssibility that Riffe ~&lt;ill say
• "yes" or "no."
Most political observers around the Statehouse expect the 00-yea r old
; . Riffe to decline in favor of retaining his speakership - a jXJSit ion from
; :which he exercises power nea rly equal to the governor's- into the
-: foreseeable fu ture.
: : .The wonder is tha t Celes te would want to join forces with Riffe. whose
: codnections with indicted former Home State Savings Bank o~&lt;ner Marvin
; .L. Wamcr arc ewn stronger than the governor's.
-: "I don't think tha t issue is going to be an&gt;· morercal for us than for any d
&gt;the Republicans," sa id Celeste.
;: "Marvin Warner and his colleagues were as closP to the Republican
: :P,.rty and Republican elected officials as thev were to any De'lnocrats." he
· :Said. "I'm sa tisfied that he never asked us- Dick CPieste as governor.
:;vern Riffe as Speaker - for any specia l treatment. "
; • Celeste sees Riffe as a•·tremendous" asset. " 1think It' s fa ir to say tha t he
·ls a onP. of-a-kind candidate for becoming a partner in this enterprise."
:}aid the governor.
:- "No one has his breadth of experience in terms of state government ,"
:S.id:Celeste of the 26-year la~&lt;maker and six - term speaker. "Tbgether we
·y.-o•ld be the most effecttve and the strongest IPadership team this state
!t•s seen in a \'cry long time."
: · If Riffe decidrs to stay put. it' s a tossup among a ha ~ - dozen others.
·Including sta te Sens. Richard C. Pfeiffer of Columbus and Eugene
: Jlranstool of Ut ica. mayors Paul R Leonard of Da,•ton and Charles Luken
·of Cincinnati. and Montgomery CcAmty Commissioner Paula J.
Macllwalne.
; Celeste wtll not join the p4lJiic specu lation on his choicP. say ing only that
.fK' wants somebody he "feels comlortablo&gt; with ... somo&gt;body who can he
: per!C('Ived as strong, capable of prov iding leadership in the state should
:that become nl'CI'Ssary, of taking on the responslblllties of governor.
· !omebody who would complemPnl my strengths in a positive wa y."
··''!'he governor said he ha s wltil mid-February to make up his mind ; tha t' s
near the deadline for printing, circulating a nd fi\ing p&lt;&gt;titkms d ca ndidacy.
. · ' I'd prefer not to do it as a last -minute thing," he said. "but I don't want
t6 rush pell· mell into it . eitt.&gt;r. "
• While Ru,·olo expect s a d~islo n by the rnd of this month . "I'm mt going
.io bt, pushing him ." he said . "The go,·emor has to he given the wiOest
·~mount of la titude on thi s."

.·

Berry's World

.. .

I

(This. is the first of two Richard
Reeves columns on the aging of
America's baby-boom generation.\!
Happy New Yea r, baby boo!llers.
And, happy birthday, too, a big one,
for all 78 million of you: postwar
, babies: the Pepsi, Now. Woodstock
and Me generations: and Yuppies.
They're tumin g 40. The first of
them were born on Jan. 1. 1946 starting wit h Kathleen. Casey, the
daughter of a Navy machinist's
mate born one se:ond after mid·
night in Philadelphia. The next , lt is
recorded. was Mark Bejrek in
Chicago. the son of a soldier.
On the New Yea r's Day Kathleen
Cast&gt;y was born, the Census Bureau. .
was estimating that -the population
of the United States In the year aJOO
would be 16..1 million. It was wrong
by 46 years. The 16.1-million mark
was reached in 1954. And birth rates
kept booming for 10 more years .
until the [X&gt;pu lation reached 190
million in 1964.
The 78 million boys and girls hom
between 1946 and 1964- "tt.&gt; pig In

powe r, their future prospec ts an d
even
their retirement.
phics - became the most:watched
Many
Yuppies Find They Are
"
bunch of kids slnee Mickey Rooney
and J udy Carland. They still are. Caught In a Financial Squeeze But the latest studies are reporting May Be Worse Off Than Their
Parents Were," headlined the Wall
that they have not found happiness
Street Journal. The newspaper's
in numbers .
key quote was from a 33-year-old
The Census Bureau, looking
Chicago
artist ,.EUzabeth Newman,
backward this lime, reports that
married
to an M.B.A. in the
between 1973 and 1983, the median
income of baby-boom families fell electronics business. "As a genera·
14 pereent In constant dollars. For tion," she said, "we were brought
men between the ages of 25 and 34, up to lhlnk we could have tremend·
the drop was even worse, 26 ous jobs, wonderiul houses. exotic
percent. The Urban Institute and travel, great · marriages, beautiful
the Conferenee Board. among children ... but for us, even a hul in a
others, have reported similar con· distant suburb by a freeway would
elusions. Boomers haven 't saved hopelessly tip our delicate financial
much money or bought many balance."
That may be true, but for those of
houses and aren 'I even going to as
us a few years older, It is hard to
m~ny ferny brick restaurants as
instinctively sympathize with I hose
they once did.
Journalism. as always, Is right people who gloried in !dent lfying
behind the sta tisticians. Whether or "as a genera tion ... Who told them
not money buys happiness, story · they could have It all- the ski !lips
after story these days is quoting and the stereos. the cars and the
boomers unhappy over their buying clothes and the eating out? It wasn 't
their parents. That's not the way

the python" of America n demogra·

Sea of lawsuits______.Ta_c_k_A_nd_e_rs_on_&amp;~D_ale_~_an_A_t_ta_
0

WASHI NGTON - So many
Americans are now suing one
another that the legal but·den is
disi1Jpting productivity and dimin ·
ishing the quality of life in this
country .
The multibillion-dollar legal fees,
liabilit)· insurance and court judgment s are simpi)· added to the cost
of doing busin ess and -passed on to
the public. Thus. every American
helps to pa)• the legal bills and

are g~vmg up their livelihoods,
closing down their businesses and
changin g their ways.
The United States has more than
653,00) 'practicing attomeys who
filed an estimaled 13 million civil
lawsuits last year. Only a frac tion of
the plaintiffs "'Ill win their cases:

insuran('(' rosts in thr form of

higher medica l foes and unnecessary l'xt ras to make goods and
sen·iccs lawsuit -proof.
Liablllt)' lnsura n('(' has soa red
out of the reach of many p{&gt;opie. and
litigation has become so costly that
the,· can 't afford to defend them-

companio&gt;s more tha n they had
anticipated and have wiped out
somt&gt; of their profi ts. In 1~. they
ea rned only a 3 percent rate of
tl'turn on their net worth instead of
the 13 percent they had anticipated.
To recoup the shortfall. in surance
companies simply gouged their

sel\'f'S . So to a\·oid la\\'suits, they

custome rs . Thf' cost of malpractice

yet winners and losers alikP mu st

pay their legal bills. Increasingly,
only the lawyers will win.
The la wsuits have cost lnsurance

........
.

Today in history

insurance premiums shot up 300
percent to 900 percent
for
archit ects. 200 pereent to 500
percent for day-care centers, 300
percent to l.OOl percent tor public
transit authorities. For a host of
bu sinessmen, professional people
and soc ial worke rs, liability insu rance has become either unafforda ·
blo&gt; or unavailable.
Should the Arnelican people sit
still while the lawyers and insu ·
ranee companies pluck them Uke
chickens? W'e think not. With' the
columnists' presu mption. we offer
two simple proposals that we think
would stop the gouging and restore
some sa nity to the system.
PROPOSAL NO. 1: Congress
shou ld require plain!Ufs who klse
their lawsuit s to pay the legal

expenses of the defendants. Lawyers who drum u~ fees by encouraging peo ple to sut&gt; should be
required. If the courts rule against
them, to pay for the trouble they
have caused the defendants. Safe·
guards should be established, pi
course, to give the exploited their
day In cour1 .
PROPQSAL NO. 2: Congrffis
should offer federal liability insu•
ranee at reasonable rates to those
who ca n't obtain or afford prtvate
Insurance. We are convinced from
our study of ln suranee statistics
that a federa l insurance agency
cou ld offer cheap policies and st UI
earp a profit for the taxpayers.
~ea nwhlle the gouging, and ttl&gt;
desp&lt;&gt;ration It causi'S, goes on.

No apologies ________;____~Ar~lB~u~ch~wa~ld

At the end of eaeh ~·ear a pundit
foresee what would happ&lt;&gt;n in lhe
must exa mine his work and confess
Justice Department. I said as early
to any mistakes he or she rom mit·
as July that the first ttme Attorney
ted by accld&lt;&gt;nt or through malice . C.&lt;'neral Ed Meese misinterpreted
Having searched through my
the intentions of the founding
scrapbook for 1985 I was amazed to
fathers when they wrote the
discover I had made none. Every
Constitution, Rea!(a~ would iorce
pred iction was. right on the money .J!-im to resign and become the U.S.
and every story not on ly checked
Ambassa dor to Ireland.
out for authenticity but read better
I guess there are not many
than the original. It was indeed a pundits who take as much Interest
.
banner year, not only for myself , In the economy as 1 do . Therefore I
. ,
but also the readers .
ca n point with pride to a tip I gave
'
" If only we could get Japanese executives to
ThP
first
major
prediction
which
my readers in March. "Sell all your
sp end as much time in mee tmg s as we do' "
got me off to a good start was that stocks because the Dow Jones will
Rt'agan and Corbache\' would plunge below~ jXlints by the end
never attend a summit conference of the y!'ar." I still get letters from
in Geneva becausf' both men were gratclullnvestors who got out of the
afraid to fly .
market in time.
This was followed by another
I don't take credit for every thing
scoop when I wrotP last February . written a bout Jerry FalweUIn 1985.
Today is Su nda:.;. .,Jan. 5. the fifth day of 1!l'li with .li!l to follow
"Trddy Kennedy will throw his But I can't help reminding people
Tho moon is moving toward its new phase
presidentia l hat In to the ring before that It was I who foretold that the
The morning stars are Mercury. Vrnus, M(1rs and Saturn .
'86. ca using all the other Demo· Rt'v . Falwell would go to South
.., The evming !'1ar i.s Jupiter.
rratic can didates to wit hdra w." I Airlca an d hug Bishop TUtu to
ThOS(' hom on this date are under the sign of\ Capricom. Thev include ·. bet my life on this story because I dramatize Falwell' s anti -apartheid
Zebu lon Pike, discoverer of Pike's Fl'ak in Colorado. born in 1179; King
got It while bowltng wit h Tip stand. I also predicted that when
Camp Gillette. inventor of the safety razor. in 18S5; chemist George
O'Neill.
Falw~ll returned to the states he
Washington Carver, known for his research on industli al US&lt;'S of the
Not all the columns had to do with would urge all his followers to dump
p&lt;&gt;anut. In 1861; Wt&gt;st German statesman Konrad Adcnauer In 1876; 191\1
polltlcs. Ear ly In April I wrote an their gold Krugerrands down the.
DemocTatic presidential candida It&gt; Walter Mondale in 19:?8 tagr 581 ; actor
open letter to Coach Mike Ditka of toilet . until Premier Botha came io
Robert Duvall in 19:0 (age 55 ). and actress Dlanp Keaton in 1946 tage401 .
the Chicago Bears, warnl ng him his senses.
On this date in history:
•
that he would become the laugtling·
It wasn't a crystal ball, but just
Jn.J919, the National Socialist (NazJI Party was formed In Germany.
stock of football if he ever sent in a plain shoe leather that made me
: .J)&gt; )9~. Mrs. Nellie Tayloe ~ass of Wyoming·was sworn in as the' first
lineman called "The Refligerator." write In May that Defense Secre~!Ji~n gqvernor In the United States.
Probably the one most people • tary Cap Weinberger would tum
· lf0964, Pop&lt;&gt; Paul VI and Greek Orthodox Patliarch Athen agoras met in
laugtled at was my prediction that down any Increase In the defense
JeWSalem, the first such meeting In more than nve centulies.
once the Blitlsh royal yacht neared budget oo domestic spending would
;dfl::J97!i, President Gerald Ford named an eight-man commission. U.S. shores, Princess Diana would rot suffer.
ill!aded'by VIce President Nelson Rockefeller, lo investigate charges that
jump overboard and seek political
People think I'm some sort of
tft:¢A conducted illegal espionage against Amelican citizens Inside the
asylum. Well, people aren't laugh· see11)lecause a few months ago I •
O"lled Stat~.
lng anymore, particularly since · pi'eO"er ~ that National Seculity
A ihought for the day: Gerald Ford said on being sworn In as pnesldent, U.S. Immigration turned her down. Adv In
McFarland would be
"Our lorlg national nightmare is over."
You didn 't have to he a genltJs to ~ If
White House as long as

...

parents talked - not In 1981 or 1966
.01' 1946.
In fact, the "generatlon"talked to
itself too much- and It listened too
much to j)rople trying to sell things
by telling them how special they
were because there were so many
of them . Too many danced to the
noise of their own voices and
television commercials.
It all did seem to he happ&lt;&gt;nlng for
a while. With a5slsts from an
optimistic nation. the aggressive
marketing of a youth cu lture and
rapid advances In technology, the
bab)• boomers did go fuliher, t~;o
more and have more sooner than
their parents did . But an unhappier
r&lt;&gt;ality set in precisely because of
the huge numbers of young people
- there weren't enough jobs and
opjXJrtunlties or houses and money
to go around for all of them.
Some of the Yuppies being quoted
these days are beginnin g to sense
that they are not the "New
Leadership Cla ss" celebra ted In
special issues of Esquire magazine.
What they may tum out to be Is a
"Used Generation." They were
used by the people selling I hem
speakers and spices for what could
have been the mortgage money .
And many of them now working for
those sa me people may find
themselves used again. They could
be mid-level administrative and
industrial fodder to he discarded for
new generations of more efficient
s~stems and machines , a nd
younger. quicker people.
On the day the mu sic dies. a baby
boomer of 40 is just like any other
man or woman at that tricky
midd le age. You can't live on the
come-anymore. and have to figure
out whether you have tt.&gt; power or
energy to brea k into the preserves
of your elders. or even to just hold
off the hustlers of the next
genera I ion.
But the baby boomers do have
what they were bom 1&lt;1th: the
power of t heir extraordinary
numbers. One of the places that
numbers cou nt is In jXJiitics. That
might be where frustrated millions
of this hu gP, aging generation wlli
make their rpa l mark on the
country of their birth.

Don Rt'gan was Chief of Staff. An all his Ro lls Royces so he ca n buy
unnamed inside source In the the CBS and fire Dan Rather,"
Administration confb·med this a,nd • I'm sony to say many of my
told me the President told him if he colleagui'S prefer to sit In their ivory
had to choose Regan would be the towers rather than go out and
scramble for the facts. Does being
one to go.
How many of you were aware of 100 percent right In 1985 make a
this one before I wrote It? "The person perfect ? l don' t believe It's
Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh will sel l my place to say. Let the record
speak for lise ~ .

Doonesbury

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-3

I

.. AIN (•::;.'.;~sNOW
AI~
~SHOWEU' 'LOW

•
UP!

WU THEA FOTOCAST ''-

SUNDAY'S. WEATHER MAP - Rain wiD extmd from nortbem
Florida and Georgia across the lower Ml8liiMippl Valley ID the Texas
coast. Snow wW occur from the upper Mh ' lppl Valley ID the Great
Lakes region. Ralnshowen wW be scattered from tbe oortllem aad
central Pacific coast to ceutra1 Callfomla. Winds wiD be ~~~roo« aad
gusty over nortbem parts of Texas and Maine. High ternperatul:!!ll wW
be In Che teens from nortbeast Montana acro!lll north Dakota, northem
South Dakota, northem Mlnneso&amp;a to upper Mlcbfgan and nortbem
New England. Readlnp In tbe 3ls and 30s \VIII reach from the mrtlllm
plateau across nortbem and central parts ~the Rocldes andPiah, the
oortbet'\1 half of the Mlsshslppi Valley, the Great Lakes region to
southem New England. lllglw wiD wann Into the ~ . and lower 'llls
aci'GIII Southehl CaiUomla, the desert southwest, the southem half d
Texas, tbe GuH Coast region and the 80Uthem ACianllc Olast, wllb
readlnp In the lower 80s across southem Florida.

·Extended Ohio Forecast .
MONDAY TIIROUGH WEDNESDAY:
Fair Monday with a chance of flu !Ties in the oortheast. Chanceeof
snow TUesday and Wednesday. Highs Monday wUI range retween 25
and 35 ~nd TUesday and Wednesday lnthe lls. Lows Monday will
range between 15 and ~ and TUesday and Wednesday in the :als.

State zone forecasts
NorthwfSI, West Central
Snow developing Saturday afternoon, but likely mixed with rain.
Snow will accumulate about an Inch. Highs were expected to he In the
mid lls. Windy Saturday night with occasional snow and a low near .
20.
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Mostly cloudy Sunday with highs between aJ and 25.
. The probability of precipitation is !lJ percent Saturday, 8J percent
·Saturday night and 20 percent Sunday.

Winds were expected to be from the southeast at 10 tol5 mph
Saturday and from the northwest at aJ to :ll mph Saturday night.
lake Erie Sbore
Snow developing Saturday afternoon, possibly mixed with rain.
Snow could accumulation about an Inch. Htghs were expected to-be
in the mid lis. Windy Saturday nlgbt with occasiOnal soow and more
accumulations possible. Lows,were expected to be in the mid als.
. Cloudy with snow flunies Ulrely Sunday and possibly snow SljuaUs.
Highs were expected to be In the mid als .
The probability of precipitation Is 8J percent Saturday, 00 percent •
Saturday night and 70 percent Sunday.
Winds were expected to be from the southeast at 10 to 15 mph
Saturday and lorn the west to oorthwesl at aJ to:.&gt; mph Saturday
night.
Nortbeu&amp; lnlalld, Central Jllplands
Cloudy with snow developing by aftemoon, and becoming mixed
with or changing to rain and lltlle or no accumulations. Highs were
expected to be In the upper lis. Windy and occaslonalsnow Saturday
. night with a low In the mid als.
. Cloudy Sunday with snow flurries Ulrely and a high in the mid aJs.
The probability of precipitation is ro percent Saturday and
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Saturday night and 60 percent Sunday.
Winds were expected to be from the southeast at 10 to15 mph
Saturday and from the west to northwest at aJ to 3J mph Saturday
night.
Central, East Central
Rain likely Saturday afternoon, possibly mixed with snow. Highs
will range between 40 and 45. Cloudy, windy Sa!lJrday night with
snow flurries ad lows In the mid als.
Mostly cloudy Sunday with seattered snow flurries and a high In
the mid als.
The probability of precipitation Is 8J percent Saturday, ffi percent
Saturday night and 40'percent Sunday.
Winds were expected to be from the southeast at 10 to 15 mph tody
and from the west to tiorthwest at aJ to:.&gt; mph Saturday night.
Miami VaHey, SoulhwfSI
Rain likely Saturday afternoon with a high between 40 and 45.
Cloudy, windy with snow flurries likely Saturday night and a low
near 20.
•
Mostly cloudy Sunday with a high in the mid als.
The probability of precipitation Is 70 percent Saturday, ffi p&lt;&gt;reent
Saturday night and aJ percent Sunday.
Winds were expected to be from the sou theiiSt at 10 to 15 mph
Saturday and from the west to northwest at aJ to 3J mph Saturday
night.
South Ceo_tral
Rain likely Saturday aftemxm and a high between 45 and Cil.
Cloudy, windy with sriow flurries likely Saturday night and a low in
the mid 20s.
Mostly cloudy Sunday with scattered soow flurries In the morning.
Highs were expected to be In the upper als.
The probability of precipitation Is ffi percent Saturday, 70 percent
Saturday night and 40 percent Sunday.
Winds were expected to he from the !llutheast at 10 to 15 mph
Saturday and from the west to northwest at aJ toll mph Saturday
night.

for additional snowfall
United Press International
New England braced Saturday
for another onslaught of heavy
snow after a. "noreaster" storm
dumped up to 10 inches in Vermont
and New Hampshire, whlle a gu sty
Sf!owstorm swept from the Rockies
Into the northern P lains.
A 40-mlle let: ja m on the Snake
River along the Oregon- Idaho
border threatened to contaminate
drinking water supplies, forcing
Gov. John Evans to declare
emergencies in three counlles.
Snow and gusty winds buffeted
much of Maine ear ly Sa turday.
with up to 14 inches p1edicted for
the western mountains of Maine
and up to 10 inches forecast for
much of the rest of Maine and
northeast Vermont.
Snow also fell across 1he northern
Plains and parts of Pennsylvania
and New York .
In the eastern Rockies, snow and
winds gusting to 60 mph Friday
prompted travelers advisories for
the Dakotas, with up to 4 Inches of
snow predicted for parts of South
Dakota. Winds near 25 mph were
· expected to cause blowing and
drifting snow in South Dakota.
The New England storm , dubbed
a "noreas ter" because It intensifies
as it picks up moisture from the
Atlantic Ocean, began as freezing
rain before turning into heavy

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Mine deaths .•'-------------1co_nt_in_ued_fro_m_pa_ge_
16 tn 191\1, and Pennsylvania, with
13 deaths in 1985, compared to eight
deaths In 19Sl.
There were none in Ohio in 1!115,
and three in 191\1.
Neil Tostenson, president of the
Ohio Mining and JU&gt;clamatlon

Summit..•
(Continued from page All
not the major ilem on the agenda.
Mexico's staggering foreign debt
of $96 biUion, Its 60 percent rale of
inflation and its plea -to . world
lending instltut Ions for $4 billion in
new loans dominated the
discussions.
De Ia Madrid blamed falling oil
plices for his country's plight and
said "urgent attention" Is needed
from lndustrtailzed nations to bois·
ter Mexico's own economic
reforms.
Treasury Secretary J a mes
Baker detailed his proposal for
Mexico to take even more austere
action anp Increase foneign Invest·
men! in the country .
"The Mexican reaction to this
was very positive," While House
spokesman Larry Speakes said.
Reporters allowed to watch the
opening of one session of talks
heard de Ia Madrid, in Spanish,
disputing what he said was Reagan 's rontrntlon that Mexico had
not done enough to attract foreign
capital or private Investment.

Lottery w:nning
numbers:
490, 4586
.
CLEVELAND iUPI J- Friday's
winning Ohio Lottery numbers:
Dally Number: 490.
Ticket sa les tota led $1,404,004.~.
with a payoff due of $l57,500.Cil.
PICK4: 4~.
PICK4 Uckel sales totaled
$nl,04J , with a payoff due of
$00,284 .
PICK4 Sl straight bet pays
$7.224. PICK4 $1 box ret pays S.lll.

Association, attlibuted the record
to Improved mini' safety
procedures.
"Ohio companies have bad very
gOOd safety programs," Tostenson
said. "It's plimarlly (attributed to)
the program the companies have
put in to make employees think
about what they are doing and
follow safety," he said.
Tostenson said there are 10,1m to
11,00&gt; coal miners in Ohio.
"Although every fatality Is both
tragic and avoidable; miners and
mine operators deserve praise for
reducing the numrer of mining
· deaths to these new lows," said
Zegeer.
While the number of deaths fell,
MSHA officials said figures on
fatality rates - the number of
deaths per man hours worked were not y!'t available. They noted

r•

.RUFFLES AND FLOURISHES
BATON CORPS
Winter Classes Beginning Mon., Jan. 6
·Registration at 6:30 .
Christian Brethren Church Fellowship Hall
MASON, W, VA.
(all Terua Carr Courtney
992 ·6947 or 667-6513

Ages3 &amp; Up

ltginner, lnhrmtdiat• &amp; Adva111!1d

JOHN A. ·WADE, M.D, Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

snoWfall Friday. The sto1111 caused
numerous traffic accidents, including a 20-car chain coiUsl:m, on
Int erstate 93 between Concord and
Manchester, N.H .
"We've got a bunch d cars off of
the roads ," said New Hampshire
.stat!' trooper WlUiam Quigley d the
scones of accidents on Interstate 93.
One accident on the Interstate
involved an estimated 20 ca~.
many of which slammed Into guard
ralls, backing up traffic for a ha ~
mile during the morning rush ,
Quigley said. Fpur !Tlltorlsts were
injured, but none seriously.
"Cars are off the road allover the
place, " e&lt;;hoed' a srx&gt;kesman for the
Vermont State Pollee In the south·
ern town of Brattleboro.
Idaho Cov. John Evans Friday
declared a state of emergency In
three counties along the Snake
River as a 40· mile ice jam
threatened to break a sewage
lagoon levee and contaminate
drinking suppUes.
"U !he levee were to bredk &lt;r if
water seeps into the sewer lagoon, it
could contaminate the water supply
in Ontario, Payette and Weiser ~nd
spread lllJVpgh the entire Snake
River ," Evans said.
Authorities said 15 million gaUons
of partiaUy·treated sewage at a
treatment plant would contaminate
the Snake River if the levee breaks.

Tag

''SALE''
led 1o9
(hetk our d So'le
S\let\o\s on
ALL SAil SHOES
MARKED WITH RfD TAGS

T.o,P,
111,919.44

Stock No,
168

1986 PONTIAC FIERO SPORT COUPE
CONTIOL CYCLE w/S WIPEIS
All COIDITIOJIING
SOn lAY GLASS
TILT w•El
AM-FM STEIEO WITH .CASSmE lUST HOOFING &amp; FABIIC NOTECTION

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

.

EEP YOUR ONE.Y
WHERE IT.·BELONGS

IN GALLIA COUNTY

Expect more from

-.,"•
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�"-98-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Council -elects president,
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SYRACUSE - Jack WUllams '
was voted president; and, temporary budgets of $5001 for the v111age
and $500) for the Board of Publlc
Affairs were approved when Syracuse VIllage Council met Thursday
night In Its first seSsion &lt;i the year.
At -the request of the Board of
Public Affairs, council Is reviewing
an·ordinance calling for an Increase
In water rates for the village.
U the ordinance Is approved. a
head of household under 65 woukl
see an Increase of $1 a month.
In addition, the proposed ra te
change calls lor a monthly fee of $8
for water customers 65 and over;
$9.25 a month for customers living
outside the corporation llnnits;
$17.50 a month for commercial
users.
It was also suggested that water
meters be placed In the two schools
In the village.

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approv~s

was received to&lt;tfSet t~t I'Xpense.
Council approvl'd Imboden's !'('quest to have thl' department's
truck radios checked.
Also meeting with council was
Jim Gonnolly, pollee chief.
Connolly's request for a scanner,
badge and patches was approved.
Councilman BIU Arnott brought
up a problem on Carleton St. where
the road Is narrow and vehicles
parked along the s!rel't at the
ell'ml'ntary school are cr!'atlng a
probll'm for passing cars.
It was suggested that Carleton St.
be designated on!'-way and that
another outlet from Carleton
School-Meigs Industr!l's to Colll'ge
Rd. be sought, howevl'r. no action
wa9' taken . Council wlU be looking
Into the situation to d!'termlnl' 1f the
problpm can be remedll'd .
It was reported that no parking
signs wtll be placl'd along Carleton

· Council will meet Monday night
with the Board of Public Affairs to
discuss the proposals In more
deta!l .
Fire Chief Gene Imboden !'('ported to council that the department has accumulated mi. toward the purchase of air bags,
OOwever, an additional m Is still
needed. The dePartment has applied for a grant from the Ohio
Department of Safety but word has
oot been received on thl' ~latus of
that application.
Imboden told council the depart mrnt's main pumper-tanker will
have to be completely overhauled
in ord!'r to qualify for state
recerttf!catton. Cost for the overhaul wUt be approxlnnatl'ly S70Xl.
Imbodl'n also reported that $'l'i0
was spent by the depart.ml'nt
during Christmas for Santa and
candy but only $150 In dona lions

Woman sentenced
on D\VI_charge
GALLIPOLIS - A Kanauga
woman was SI'Dtenced iO three days
in the Gatlla County Jail and was
fined $.lXl in Gallipolis Municipa l
Court Friday aflrr pleadmg gu ilty
to OWl .
Deborah A Acker. 26, of 634
Smith Dr , was also plaCI'd on IR
months probation and had her
dr!vt&gt;r's license suspPnded for six
months following hl'r plt&gt;a . She was
also given a six month suspended
la!l tl'rm and was fined $25 aft!'r
pleading guilty to driv!ng under
suspension.
Raymond M. Litchfil'ld, 35. of Rt.
2. Bldwl'!l, recl'ived a six' month
suspl'nded jail term, was fined $25
and placed on six months proba tion
alter pleading guilty to no driver's
llcenSI'. H~ was also fi nrd costs for
no muffler.
Fined $12 and costs for failure to
yield at an inter 9Pction was Alisa D.
Rainey, 20, of Rt. 4. Gallipolis.
. For1e1t!ng $40 bond for traffic
violations Wl'r!' Ja mes B. Harreld ,
26, of Eut~ka Star Route. fai lu l'l' to
yield from a prh·atr driveand Sheri
L. Hamilton. 24. of Rt. J. Gallipolis.
failu re Ia stop in an assu rro cll'ar
distance.
Gary M. Ja ney, 29, or Rt . I,
Gallipolis, for1eited S44 bond for
Spe&lt;'&lt;11ng.

The AMC chief refused to
!'!aboral!' oo what AMCs year- !'nd
I'Brnlngs would look like, although
he did say the final 19Ri quarter
would be much be!t!'r than Ire !bird
quartl'r, when AMC lost $191
rnllllon.
AMC lost $IlKS million for the
first nine months of 191'fi. R!'naull ,
whlch owns 46 percl'nt of it, has
bl'en pumping In milllons rt doHars
to see AMC through Us rough times.
The 54-yi'Br old Belgian ha stened
to add that although 19~ wil! bo&gt;
tough. AMC Is on track and wilt
have thrl'l' nl'w car rnodl'ls begin·
nlng In 1987.
In the spring of 1987 AMC will
lnnport the R-21 Ri'nault compact
car. ,\lhortly afterwards. it will
regin ~ ling thl' Ri'nault Alpine. a
llm!tl'd volume turbo-charged

January 5, 1986

January 6, 1986

.-----~al

temporary budgets

St. at the l'il'mmtary building in an
afort to l'llmlnatl' congestion In
that area.
Also, signs prohibit lng overnight
parking will be placed at the forml'r
roadside park.
Mayor Eber Plckms reported
that Consolidated Communications

Co. is 1eplaclng tre ruble line from
Vic Brown's form!'r trall!'r court to
the Syracuse corporation limits In
order to provide better reception.
Named to the firemens' dependl'ncy board by t hi' mayor wt&gt;re
Jack Williams and Ernie Sisson as
ml'mbers of counctr, and Troy

Zwilling as a •wmlx.•r at largl'.
Zwilling will chair the bo&lt;lfd.
Present fo r the meeting In
addition to Pickens, Williams,
Connolly, Arnott and Sisson w!'re
Cou n~ llmemti&gt;rs Katie Crow and
John Lisle and J anice Lawson, .

Swimming activities cancelled

RIO GRANDE -:- Charges have .been filed against two men In
connection with the early-November theft of :!4 te!Pphones from a
storage area on thl' Rio Grande Coliege Ca mpus.
Steyl' Hayes and Andrew Thomas Georgi', both of Box 433, Rio
Grande, have been chargl'd with the theft of the ATT-owned
tell'phones. according to Sgt. Raymond R. Pope, lnvi'Stlgator for the
Rio Grande Marshal's Office.
Thl' phones. valul'd at $4,005, have bl'en rPCOvered.

GALLIPOLIS - DUI' to mechanical failure, thl' swimming
activities schl'duled by the Galllpolls Recreation Department at thl'
GDC activity center pool havl' t\een cancelled for the frrst session of
program activity.
All classes for yooth swim )essons and swirnnastics will resume
the week of Feb. 24 as schl'duled for session two. Fitness sw im will
begin whrn the pool Is repaired.

GAME VS.

·

BACON

.·1201.99&lt;

.

'

/-r~ -~\

LB.

I

"'.

D .........

"

......,-;

SAVE 60' LB.

P11m• Cll•cUn
Srenl Oulller ~

PIIG.

- tr '~

89#

Chicken Breast

..,. .tt!"' -~ / "·~J\
(. ~

White Potatoes

12 oz.
PIIG.

BAG

~

Mobile home destroyed by fire
POMEROY - Tl&gt;~ tralll'r home of Ronald McWilliams, loca ted on
Holley Rd. offRt. 681. wasdestroyl'd by fire early Saturday morning.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Ll'gar reports the departml'nt
rpce!ved the call at 3: 52 a. m. but the trailer was already a total loss
whl'n the department arrived on the seen!'. Two tire trucks. the
rescul' and EMS squads and 22 men wpre on the call.
Origin of the blaze is stU! under Investigation Legar'says. Thl're
were no Injuries.
The tra!ler was owned by Jprry Sheets of Union Furnace.
At 12:36 p.m. Friday the Pomeroy Fire Department '!'as called to
a car fire at thl' Intersection of Nyl' Ave. and Main St. About $500
worth of damage occurred to the vehicle owned by JI'SS!I' King of
New Martinsville, W.Va.
No Injuries were rl'poried .

GAU..IPOLIS - A Galllpolls man was cited early Saturday
morning by city pollCI' for DWI and driving left of center.
Jack D. McPeak, 38, of Rt. 2, Vinton, will face a hearing on the
charges In Gal11polts' Municipal Court.
lssul'd,summons Friday to appear In Municipal Court wer!' Pau I
D. Casteleda, 23, of21 Gal Ita Ave., disorderly conduct: Allm t-f.Cox,
45, of 11QiY.! Second Ave., telephoDI' harrassml'nt; and Timothy B.
Qui'I'D, 23, of .'m'h Second AVI'. , disorderly conduct.
Jason F . Sommer, 18, ofRt. 3, Gallipolis, was cited for squl'aling

2018.$139

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POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Ml'd!cal Service reports
seven calls Frlday; Poml'roy at 4: 13 p.m. to the Pomeroy H!'alth
Carl' Center for Eurana Thomas to Vl'lerans Ml'morial Hospital ;
Middleport at 4:40p.m. to Villagl' Gl'l'l'n Apts. for Dall' Call woo was
treated but Mt transported; Syracuse at 6:23 p.m. to Second St. for
Eber Plck!'ns to Vl'terans MI'ITlOrtal Hospital; M!ddll'port Fire
Department at 7:54 p.m. to a minor I'II'Ctr!cal fire at $9 Hartinger
Parkway; Poml'roy at 8:32 p.m. to Chestl'r for l.Dulsl' Heines to
Holzer Medical Crnter; Racine at 8:20p.m. to Apple Grove-Dorcas
Rd. for Paul Grady to Veterans Ml'morial Hospttal;_juppers Plains
at 10:24 p.m. to Reedsvntefor Alison Cauthorn to Vl'terans Ml'morial
Hospital.
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Police charge DWI

U.S. NO. I

SAVE 6._D_•_

EMS answers seven calls

GALLIPOLIS - A Ga!lia County man was citl'd by the
Gallla-Metgs post of the Stall' Highway Patrol following a
single-vehicle acctdf.nt early Saturday rromlng on Gallia Coonty 15.
Troopers said Charles T. Angel, 26, of Eureka Star Route, was
WI'Stbound on 15. about one and two-tenths miles west ctOhlo 7, wren
he allegedly went ov!'r a hillcrest and ov!'rturned.
- Angel was not lnjurro in thl' 12:15 a.m. acc!d!'nt, which troop!',.,
said caused heavy damage to his pick-up. He was cited by the patrol
for failure to control and DWI.

HOLlY FARMS GRADE A

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POMER0\1-- Friday Admissions: None.
Friday Discharges: Lots Hubbard. Robert Campbell, Edward
Coon, Michael Smith, Penny Smith, Harold Davis.
·

Driver cited after accident

MT. VERNON NAZARENE COLLEGE JAN. 11, 1986
SUPERIOR

Veterans _Memorial Hospital

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POMEROY - Dis!lllutlons-of marriage have been gran~ed In
Meigs County Conunon Pl!'as Court to Lena Kay Riffle, Reed,\&gt;ille,
and Bruce F. R1ffle, Chester; Teresa M. Drumm!'r, Syracuse, and
Gregory E. Drumml'r, Pomeroy.
Teresa Drumrnprwas returnl'd to the use of herma!dl'n name and
will be known as Teresa M. Tyson-Drummer.

RIO PRANDE BASKETBALL

VE 30'

tires.

We '"""" the

view film of play

Charges filed in theft case

Dissolutions granted

TO FOODLAND NIGHT
.

sports ex)li'Cted to seHin the ~.OOJ
rang!'.
•
In July 1987 AMC will begin
building It s all-new Intermediate
model at Its $675 million plant In
Bramalea. Ontario. The car, which
Dedeurwaerder said will not be a
derivatlvt&gt; of tre Renault R-25, wUI
be in dealers' hands by August 1987.
"WI' will have three DI'W cars on
our plate In the sam!' year,"
Dedl'urwal'rder said. " It is not the
bo&gt;st strategy but was DI'CI'ssary
because of some late decisions at
Ri'nault," he said.
Dedi'Urwaerder noted that the
life cyeles of npw cars arP
becomi ng shorter, espPda lly
among Japan!'se carmakers, and
that AMC can no tlngl'r afford to
add stripes, decals or moldings to
spruce up exis ting models .

briefs:----------. M.A.R.C members

POMEROY- Debra J . Snyd!'r, Langsvilll', has filed suit In Meigs
County Common Pl!'as Court rPquost lng a $20,000 judgment from
Paul R. Pullins, Middleport , for 'compensatory and .punitive
damages allegedly sustained in an auto acctdrnt on Jan. 6, 191'fi.

FREE TICKETS

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page- A-5

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

·Suit filed in Meigs Court

AMC to 'sweat' through '86
DETROIT tUPlt - American
Motors Corp. Chairman JoSI' Dedl'urwaerdl'r said Friday ihe caJ;hshort carmakl'r will havl' to sweat
throUgh I~ becauSI' it ha s no nl'w
car llnl' and cannot af(ord to keep
up with the costly sali'S inCI'ntiv!'
programs olferl'd by the Big Three.
"This yl'ar wUI be difficult and WI'
are going to be wlnprable,"
Dedeurwaerder told rPporll'rs at
AMC's annual new yl'ar's press
COnf!'rence at the Detroit Athll'tic
Club.
"With no new (car) product, it is
very d!fltcult to balance the f!nanciahituation," hi' said, adding that
"WI' will not do anything foolish at
AMC to go for tbe volumes."
Dedeurwaerder. who was formally named AMC chairman last
month and given added respons!billtes by Renault earlier Utis we!'k,
said the No. 4 carmakt&gt;r ex)li'Cts to
sell only !ll,OOO of it s domestically
made Renault Alliances and Encores this year. down from about
110,000 In 1985.
AMC's Kenosha. Wis.. assemblY
plant Is currently on On!' work stuir
and will remain so with additional
shutdowns becauSI' of slow sa il'S.
Its domestic sail'S for the Jan.-I::lec.
20 pl'riod last yl'ar were 36 pl'rCI'nt
below comparable I~ levels.
Dedpurwaerder said AMC would
have to make a decision sometlnnl'
this spring on where to build its next
DI'W llrie of subcompacts when its
aging Alliance and Encore models
arr phased out In 19Rl.
"It is an outdated manufacturtng
operation," he said &lt;t the Kl'nosha
assembly plant , and said AMC wUI
not build another model there
unless it Is In a new facility a nd
Wisconsin offers a substantial
lncen t ive package.
Dedeurwaerder acknowledged
that AMC has been talking to other
states about a new plant. But if a
decision is not reached in time. he
said he could place production of a
DI'W ca r at a Rl'nault plant beca use
they have a large pl'rcentage of
unuSI'd capacit) .

w. Va.

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SYRACUSE - Ml'mber s ~!tend ­
ing lhl' Oec!'mber ml'l'tlng of the
Meigs Association for Retardl'd
Cltizens saw a a fit~ of the Carlton
Srhoot studl'nt s' Thanksgiving
play.
Fifteen adu lt s and two children
werl' In attendance at thl' meet ing
which was presided over by
President Nora Rice.·
The film "'Try Another Way," by
Dr. Marc Gold. was presentl'd to
thl' group by David Milliken,
d!rPCtor of the Ml'igs In dust ties

Vegetable
school
to be ·held

Falwell broadens
budget, agenda

LETART FALLS - A V!'getable
School for Ml'igs County producers
WASHINGTON rCPlt - The
will be hl'ld at the Letart FaUs
Rev. Jerry Falwel l -says hiS nPw
El!'mentary on Jan. 8 and 9 from 7
Liberty Fedt&gt;ration will be just llke
to 9: 30 p.m. !'ach ev!'Ding.
his controvt&gt;rsial ·Moral Majority·.
Topics to be COVI'red during the
.
only
with a bigger pudgl't and an
first session lncludl' preparation of
agenda
that goes beyond social
a greenhouse; growing of toma issueS to foreign and def!'nse polic;·.
toes, peppers and pggplant; growFalwell called a npws conferenCI'·
Ing media: wberl' help can be
Friday to an nounc!' forma tion of
obtained and various other topics.
the new conservafi1·e lobbying ·
The second discussion wi11 cover
organization, which will become
growing ' ml'dia; bare root as
opposed to potting; growing cote the parent of thl' Moral Majority.
Thl' nl'w group witt gl'l $12 million
crops and vinl' crops; disease
a yl'ar to spend , Falwetl said. up
control and bag culture .
from the Moral Majority·s $-;
The sessions should be tnformativ!' and Interesting and everyonl' Is million budget.
He also want s to nm lOO
lnvitl'd to attend . A $5 cost covers
conservative
Christians for statP
both evenings. The school is being
and
loca
l
offiCI'
this ycear and get 2V
sponsorl'd by thl' Meigs County
million rPiigious right voters to c a S~
Extension Office Rl'gistet by
ballots in the J9ffi presidential ·
calling 992-6696.
eli'Ctions.
The gro~p will launch it s pro,gram with a " national summit" in

. .d b oav SpectacUlar
Author11e
Stratoloungei

Washington on Jan. 23-24 featUling
Vlcl' President George Bush. who ·
Falwell suppon s for p1~s idcn t in ·
19ffi.
Falwell. who w11l be president of
both groups, sa id that while the
Moral Majorit y has "lwav' b&lt;'·n as .
Interested in balanced budgl•ls and
fi ghting communism as it ha s been
in abort ion and pornographv. wmt'
belirvro the group's name limitl'd
activities to social issues.
·
"We will alway·s be pro- famill.-,
pro-life. pro-traditional 1·alues."
Fa lwell told reponers. "But it"s ·
limP to broa den our horizons. WP ·

MONDA1!
tU£SDA1!

,
1
WEDNESD A, •

1HURSDA1.~los£o

ntUlS AftliMOOM

.

fiiDA1! .

have found ourselves dra\-vn into

SA1UIDA1!

issues and conflicts which were not
anticipated In 1919." when Moral
Majority was formed .
Fa lwell's announe&lt;'ment dre11·
prompt fire from one of his most ·
pPrsistent cri tics, John Buchanan .
cha irman of PE-ople for 111&lt;' Ameri ·
ran Way.
"Now that he admits he is in the
political arena ... (Falwcll t should
argue his positions on thl' merits,
not bv declaring that God a nd thl' ·
Bible support his views on e1wv
issue from abortion to Zimbab"·e,"
Buchanan ·said .
"He should stop pretendin g to iJ&lt;'
the chairman &lt;t the Lord 's polit leal.
action committee and stop suggest-· :
ing tha t to disagree with Jerr)·
Falwell is to side with Satan again5t:

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More skepticism came from
Democrat-ic National Cha irman
Pau l Kirk, who sa id: "' A Liberty
Fl'dt&gt;ratton won't stand for true
liberty an ymore than the Moral
Ma jority repri'Sent s til&lt;' mo~lli
vaules of most Americans. Under·
any name. Falwell's light wing
extremism will continue to re an
inOu!'ntial forCP within the RPpubli·
can Party."

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MAIL SU BSCRII"TIONS
Sunday Only

one Y.ear .. .............................. . S26.fl0 •
Six months ............... ................ $13.00

Skeens, Mrs. PhWtp Thomas and
son, Donald Warehime, Stephen
WUllams. Larry·Winston.
8bd. - Mrs. and Mrs. James
McCoy, son. Gallipolis.

.'
sheltered work s hu~.
Lee Wedeme.l·l'r, Carleton
School-Meigs Indust ries supl'rin il•nd&lt;'nl , an d Rh onda Koch,
M.A.R.C. t reasur&lt;'r , spoke, ri'Spec tive!y, on family resources and the'
004 Planning Cummi ll!'e
In other business, Rice express'&lt;-d
her thanks to everyone who helped
\lith the school' s r&lt;&gt;eent ,jitncey·
supper and reponed that the dinner
was a success.
The group also \'Otr-'d to change
the January meeting from thl' fi rst
Thursday to thl' last Thursday of
the month--Jan . 30.
Guest speaker at thl' Janua ry
ml'et lng will be Nick Wasylik and
refreshment s wil l be served b1·
Bonnil' Freeman.

.'

Dally anti Sunda)'
'~"
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
IMi de Ohio
52 Weeks ... ..... .......... ........ .. .... .. S58.24' ' ~
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' • ',
52 Wet&gt;ks ..
26 Weoks ........................... .
13 WE'f'kS ..

~

�.•

The

5. 1986

w.

Times-Sentinel

•

Do~ble
SUPER MARKEJ...::oPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 A.M. TO lOP.
. 85 VINE 'STREET, GALLIPOLIS
PHONE 44.6-9593

Reserve The

To Limit Quantity"

PRICES EFFECnYE SUNDAY, JAN. 5 THROUGH JAN.

Coupons·

ALL WEEK
AT JOHNSON$

JOHN-SONS
$129

LB.

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69C

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POUND

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fRANKIES

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.

: TEXARKANA . Arkk . tU Pit1nvestlgators, trying to find the
ori!,&gt;in of a New Year's Eve plane
~ire that kU!ed singer Rick Nelson
;and six others, discovered a broken
fuel line leading to an onboard

BORDEN$

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2 LB.

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FISH STICKS 1.s oz.
OR FISH FILLETS a.5 oz.

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Hoffman said only two families
had so far given inst 1-uctions for the
return of their relatives's txxlies.

Hoffman returned to Santiago
with the perso nal belongings of the
dead America ns, including $8,(0)
worth of travc&gt;ler s checks, money

and air tlckC'ts.

$10.95

$10.95

SWEEPER
SERVICE CLINIC
-OFFER GOOD 30 DAYS OUR 8 POINT SER VIC£
WILL PUT NEW LIFE TN YOUR VACUUM CLEANER
1. Replace Paper Bag
2. Check AU Movable Parts
3 . Check Electrical System
4. Check Filter System

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6. Clean &amp; Check Agitator
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If you could look into your cryslal ball, you
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URGENT
CARE
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' "We did find a ponion oft he fuel
For those times lhat you can't foresee the
line which led into the Inlet filt er for
future . ..
this ... heating system. The line was
fractured, " Jim Burnell. chairman
of the National Transportation
Safety Board, sa id Fr~ay night
"We do not know whether it was
possibly a pre-impact fracture or
Located at Holzer Clini'c
one that occulTed on impact," he
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis
said.
, Nelson, 45, his · rlanc[{', Helen
Blair. and five members of Nel
~on 's band were killed Tuesday
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
night as they new from G unters~
Weekends &amp; Holidays
Monday-Friday
Ntlle. Ala ., Ia a New Year's Eve
1:00 P.M. to 9:00P.M.
5:00 P.M. to 9:00 PM .
~ ngag ement in Dallas.
: Their OC-3 tried to make an
emergency landing near De Kalb,
but the fire was already so intense,
bit s of aluminum and magnesium
fnelted and fell onto rooftops and
grass in the area .
; Bumell said investigators were
not sure whether the broken fuel
hne was where the fire started but
5ald the line and heater would
jmdergo fu11her Inspection.
"We're obviously int erested in it
or we wou ldg'l be taking It back for
analysis." he said.
The only survlvon; were pilot ,
Brad Rank and co-pilot Kenneth
Ferguson, who were isola ted fmm
ihe passenger secllon of the plane
by a wal l.
· Rank was reported In good
condition at the St. Michael's
Hospital in Texarkana. Ferguson
was upgraded to fa!~ Friday at the
University of Arkansas Mt'dlcal
Center in Little Rock, Ark.
A memorial S!'rvice for Nelson.
4-door sedan,autumn maple with matching cloth inteen Idol In the 1950s and star of
terior, fall vinyl top, V -8 engine, automatic ov~rdrive
"Thr Adventull'S of Ozzie and
t~ans .• power steering and brakes, air conditioning, am·
Harriet." was scheduled for 6 p.m.
fm
stereo, tilt wheel. ,cruise control, delay wipers, power
EST Monday at Church of tile Hills
doo~ IQCks, power antenna, wi.re wheel covers and just
i(l Forest Lawn Memorial (&gt;ark.
·
28,700
miles.
located In the Hollywood Hills.
Nelson's father,
Is buried In
WAS
NOW
JUST
..
-·-&gt;.F.oresl Lawn.
Cemetery spokesman Robert
Wheeler said the body would be
!iremated and buried In a private
ceremony.
: Nelson anil the others died of
smol«&gt; Inhalation and bums. how('\.er, the Dallas County medical
examiner's' office sai d It cou ld not
be detcnnln\l(l whclher they died
before or after the plane made the
emergency .tanding._

a

·· '---------------...,.-~

geles, and universit y professors
Walter P . Michael of Colum bus,
Ohio. James C. Howell of Yellowsprlngs. Ohio, and Pau l R. Cox. from
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Ben Ca llis of Key West, Fla ., the
tour guide and I he only member of
the group under :ll. also died in the
crash, as did the Chilean pilot and

446-5287

PILLSBURY BIG COUNTRY

BISCUITS

runway aiia obstructed his visibilIty, Air Force sourt'PS said.
The wreckage of the Cessna was
found by helicopters on t~ side of a
mountain on Nelson Island, 5 miles
from the Air Force base.
The eight men had planned to
spend New Yej r's Eve at a Chilean
Air Force base on the South
Shetland Islands at !lie tip of the
Antarctic Peninsula.
They were identified as Irving
Lambrecht, a reth'ed Los Angeles
resident: ~ Wayne Riddle, a Bucha·
nan. Mich .. engineer; Tim Lang, a
petroleum engineer from Carmichael , Calif.; James M. Jasper. a
librarian from Oknard, Los An~

cause of the crash had not been
established.
.
In Pu~ta Arenas Friday, Alr
Force investigator Capl. Carlos
Manterola said it would take at
least a month to detennlne the
cause from data obtained from 1he
black hox recovered from the
twln-engined CesSila Titan 404.
Manterola confirmed the plane
was flying in bad weather and poor
visibility when it attempted to land
at the Tenlente Marsh base on King
George Island.
The plane's pilot and owJr&gt;r Ivan
Martinez, 34, had !tied to land twice
but was forced to climb away by
blowing snowdrifts that covered the

URGENT
CARE CENTER

~i_l@:(: DAIRY
MARGARINE

194ii. the year after shP was near.Jy
killed whrn her moth&lt;&gt;r committed
s-u 1cide by turning on thr gas in the
New York apartmPnt they shared .
She was horn in Kentucky and
moved to Hollywood as a teenager
Sl'&lt;?king a career in film Her
resemblane&lt;&gt; to Gish in her early
yea rs attracted the attention of
director D.W. Griffith. who made
her a stand -in in "Way Down East"
in 19~ and "The Whil e Rose" in
1923.
Her first featul'!' film was in the
long forgotten "The Fifth Horseman" in 1924, after which she
returned to New York and was
eventually cast with Helen Hayes In
"Coquette" before coming back to
Hollywood to launch her successful
comic career.
Merkel had lived quietly for , the
past several years in her Los
Angeles apartment.

:heater.

FREEZER QUEEN

BLUE BONNET

29

79&lt;

in Broadwey's · "The Pon&lt;k'r dizzy mles," Merkel once told
Ht'art," Merkel was perhaps best United Press International. "As I
kilown as the sweet but daffy blonde got older I got tired of playing dizzy
who never got her man .
telephone operators. Then the
Using her scatterbrained. dm · movies weren't doin g dizzy te!P·
wlingbanter, she starred in a string . phone _operators anymor~."
of commerlcal triumphs through
Merkel dropped out of the
the l!ms and 40s, playing opposlle Hollywood scene in the 1900s and
such com ics as Harold Uoyd . returned to N&lt;•w York. wher&lt;' she
Charles Butterworth, W.C. Fields won critical acclaim for "The
and becoming best on- screen Ponder Hea rt ."
buddies with Ruby Keeler, Janet
The success eventually conGaynor, Myrna Loy and Carole · vinced film producers to cast her in
Lombard.
more serious roles, such as Geral·
She wisecracked her · way dine Page's bitter mother in the
through "Broadway Melody of filmversionofTennesseeWilliams'
1936," " Biography of a Bachelor ."Surruner and Smoke." She did
Girl, " "EvelyQ Prentice," "Born to have to submit to a screen test,
Dance," "Saratoga," and two however':" even though she had
dozen other films In the 19lls, already pcrfonned It on stage.
capping the decade with "Destry,"
Merkel, who toured USO camps
in 1939.
In World War 11 , was divorced from
"I always played sort of nitwit, aircraft executive Ronald Burla in

Antarctic crash victims being identified

Broken fuel line
~ound on plane

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MIDDLEPORT - Clara Wells.
88, a fanner · resident of 575
Broadway, Middleport. died Friday night at the Hilltop House
Nursing Home, Dayton, where sh!'
had resided for the past two years .
Born July 28, 1897 In Meigs
County, Mrs. Wells was a daughter
of the late John Ira and Martha
Smith Kennedy . She had served as
a volunleer for the Meigs County
Senior Cit lzens.
Survivors include a nephew,
Robert A. Winn, Xenia: &lt;If mlherln -law, Homer A. Wlnn. Daylon: a
daught er-In-law, Louise Wells, Reynoldsburg; a granddaughter.
Donna Lee Hale, Pickerington; and
several cousins.
In addition to her parent s. she
was preceded in death by her
husband, Sidney Otis Wells in 1971 ;
an lnfanl daughter, Marjorie; a
son. Donald: a brother, Lawrence
Kennedy: and two sisters, Edna
Kennedy and Carrie A. Winn.
SANTIAGO, Chile (UP!) Services will be Tuesday. 1:30 Forensic experts and u,s. officials
p.m.,, a\. the Rutland Methodist
Saturday sought to finish the grisly
Church. 'fhe body wllllie in state at
task of Identifying the badly
the chur&lt;'h one hour prior to the
disfigured bodies of the eight
funeral. Burial will be in Wright AmeriCan tourists who died In a
Cemetery in Langsville. Friends
New Year's Eve plane crash In the
may call at Rawling-Coats-Blower Antarctic.
Funeral Home after 2 p.m. Monday . The process delayed return ci the
with the fam.ily present from 7 to 9.
bodies to the United States. said
acting U.S. consul Larry Hoffman.
who took part In the recovery
operation In the Antarctic.
John V. Wilson
"Three bodies have stlll to be
identified positively ," Hoffman
EVERGREEN - John V. Wil- said on arrival In Sant!agn F,rlday
son, ~. Rt. 1. Bidwell, (Evergreen night. "We don 't know which is
community! died Friday at his which and need to gel more details
home.
fmm relatives."
HI' was a retired farmer and
The eight men died Tuesday
former GalliPolis postal employee: when their chartered !~seater
Mr. Wilson was a World War II plane crashed Into a mountain
veteran.
during a blizzard while attempting
He was born July 3. 1005, to land on King George Island, In!
Waterloo, Ohio, son of the late miles south of Santiago across the
William Bell and Ella Hivlev Baker fr eezing waters of Drake 's
Wilson.
·
Passage.
He was the was the last of his
The remains were flown from
immediate family. Several ne~ Punta Arenas, the southernmost
phews and niecPS survive. Seven city on the American continent, and
sisters and one br·other preceded taken to Santiago's city morgue,
him In death.
where work to identify the three last
Funeral services will be 2 p.m. bodies continued Saturday.
Sunday at McCoy -Moore Funeral
The bodies were recovered WedHome in Vinton, with Rev. Jimmy nesday and flown to Punta Arenas.
Patterson officiating.
where a forensic doctor took 15
Burial will be in Vinton Memorial hours to carry out autopsies on the
Park
badly mutilated bodi~.
Friends may call at the funeral
Hoffman said Chile's civil Avia home fmm 12 noon Sunday until the tion Authority had sent two investihou r of the service.
gators to the Antarctic, but the

.

FROIEN

IOLB.$149

:: POMI'ROY .:_ Ruth A. Ca mp~ bell, ro. of112 Y, Brick St.. Pomeroy,
~ died Friday evening at Ohlo State
~ Unlversi),.Y Hospitals In Columbus.
; A housewife. she was born March
: 10. 1925 in Pittsf l!'ld , N.Y . to the late
Ernest and Dordy Gulbrandson
~ Hagen. Mrs. Campbell was affll. ·
~ iated with ihe Ho[!e Baptist Church.
~ Survivors Include her husband,
: David Campbell, Pomemy: five
daughters, Sandra Edwards of New
. Riclimond, Connie Pai!Nson of
'' Pomeroy, Debbie Campbell at
home. Kathy Campbell of States. ville. N.C. and Cindy King of
· Pomeroy; one son, David Ca mpbell, Oeves: two brothers, William
· Hagen of Talla has,.:.e, Fla. and
: Ernest Hagen of Norwich. N.Y.;
: eight grandchildren and several
; nieces and nephews.
:. In addilion to her parents. she
; was preceded in death by a
:granddaughter. two brothers and
· her step-father.
: ~rvlces will be 1 p.m. Mond ay at
: the Ewing Funeral Home with Rev.
~Dav id Bryan otflc!atlng. Burial wUJ
' be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
~Friends may call at the funeral
.;home from 2to 4 p.m. and 7 !o9p.m.
:sunday.

: MASON, W.Va. - Vernon L.
·. iBuckJ Rogers, 57, 145 S. Maple St.,
· Oak Harbor, Ohio. 43449, formerly
. of Mason. W. Va .. diedDec. Walhis
: home following a lingering illness.
' He was born In Mason County. W.
~ Va. , on Dec. 29,1927, a son of the late
• Furl and Made Slade Rogers. He
! w~s a veleran of the Korean
' Conflict. He belonged to the Oak
: Harbor United Methodist Church
and was a past master of the Oak
: Harbor Masonic Lodge. He was a
: member of the Royal Arch Masons·
; and the John A. Fader Post 114.
; American Legion. He was em
Joyed for 33 years as a signal
•maintainer for CONRAI L.
: Surviving are his wife.' the former
:Jean Bennett of Middleport: a son,
!James A. Rogers or Oak Harbor; a
,'bt'O th&lt;&gt;r, Robert of Letart , W. Va.;
,two sisters. Madalene Gray of
;Jacksonv.llle. Ark .. and Margaret
:Brooks. Columbus.
• Services were held on Dec. 23 at
•-the Roblnson -Henn~ Brossin Fun~
:era! Home at Oak Harbor with Rev.
;Harold M. Stockman officiating.
:Jlurial was In Union Cemetet)' at
:o ak Harbor.

FRESH

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Una
Merkel, wlme fluttery mannerIsms and high-pitched drawl made
hera leadlng movie"nltwlt"during
the heydey of frothy Hollywood
comedies In the 19lls, has died. She
was 82.
. The Los Angeles Times reponed
that Meri«&gt;l died Thursday and will
be buried near · her parents 1n
Covington, Ky. She leaves no
survivors.
Merkel, who bore a strlklng
resemblanee to actress LUllan
Gish. launched her career on the
silent screen and was part of a
neariyextlnclcadreofenterialners
who made the successful transition
from silent movies to talkies.
Although she received an Oscar
nomination for "Surnm!'r and
Smoke" In 1962 and won a Tony
Award In 1956 for her pertormance

· Rulh A. Campbelr

I

FISH-I-BATTER

POTATOES

BOX

89C

Comedian .Una Merkel dies at ag~ 82

.I

Clara Wells

~ Vernon L Rogers

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PKG.Sl

Ar~a 'deaths

,,.

OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 8 A.M. TO 10 P~.L l
735 SECOND AVE.
PHONE 446-260
OLD FASHIONED
PLAnER STYLE

PEANUT BUTTER !!.oz.$2 49 . BAKING

.

(Pic-Pac)

II, 1986

(i!l~~it~S R0Ct;Rli:I%9

::1

-

.

SEE STORE FOR DOAILS

BONELESS

}··~J=an=u=a=ry=5,=1~9=8=6=============~P~o~m~181'~oy~~M~idd~lepo~;;rt~G~al~l~ipo~li~s,~O~h~io~~P~o;;in;t~Piea~;san~t.~W~.~V;a·~":::==~t~h;e~S;;u;n;d;a~y~li;tme;;;s;;;-S;;e:;n;;t;;in;ei~P~a~g§e~A;;-7

___..__________ ____,
..,;.,

.•

Sizzling savings on your favorite
meals at Rax. Super sandwiches,
.
nrQl:lt baked potatoes and garden fresh salad.
Get 'em while they're Hot!
1503 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, OH.
307 West Main Street
Ripley, WY

WHY IJST EAt

100 CAN EAT AT W:

r.• ---..-.---v.-------,
40C Off I !t£
soc Off . I

I
1

Any

rw ua

I

Large Sandwich

Any

r1u ,,..

I

Baked Potato

, _______ ,...,. ______ ..
r. ~--------v. ------,

1 ~--~-~-~-~ 1 ---~-~-~-~j/
111111r No! valid W'l comblna!IOII wrlh .,.,. (!(her Ra• oner Qtter gooo 81
par!l(tOIIinQ RIX RIStiUf antt ()'11¥ ~ whete prdlltMied Galh tedemp-

l

1101'1 ...alue 1120e

.1..

'oFFER EXPIRES FEB . 1, 1986

'8900. I-[E.
,. m

I

Salad Bar

or Iced T~

oeto~e

~rson.

ordertng One crupon per
p8f
VISJI
11id rn c&lt;Jnlbnabon WITh any omer Rax ot1er ()fief ~ aT
I)IITICIPIIII'IQ Rp Restii.Jrant.sonly 'bd whefe orohibtted Cash "'(Jee'npPlease resenT coupon

r.J .,

·

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w1t

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pure ast o1

Regular Fries &amp; Medium Soft Drink

~~

~raon.

Please presert coupon
01dering One couoon Oflf
per
..,,,, Nol vahd rn combl natoo with any olher R!H otter Ofler good at
parto1::.palrng Aax Reai81J181'11&amp; orYv ~Where protlrblleG Cash~

------- --- -

lion vaLle 1120e

EXPIAES FEB. 1, 1986

•

·

OFFER EKPIRES FEB . 1, 1986

Pltl ,

(AU you can eat}

Drink

hon vt~lue !l20C '

II (E.Free RAX Top Dog I
u
.

SOC O,f

and Medium Soft

VISII Nol viiiC rn cOOlbiMhOn wrlh any Olhft! Ra- otter Olter good II
par!IC!pallng Fla• Restauranti ~ly 'bel wheff! ptohbtfld Cash tedemp-

.

~1100 vatue t l~

OFFER EXPIRES FEB.

t.

lCl

1986

I

0

'

�•

~

'

Po111181'0y--lllliddlleport·-Gallii:&gt;Oiis, Ohio-Point Pl~sant, W. Va.

Pilge-A-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
'

Open Daily 10·9; Sunday 12-6

'mimt!i" itntintl

ON SALE SUN., JAN. 5
THRU TUES., JAN. 7'

's ection fiD
January 5, 1986

MONDAY

\

&lt;

\

\
1i

PRESERVING ART - Pal
Phllson Is Interested in preserv·
ing the art of spinnln~ wool and
seldom passes up an Invitation to
give a demonstrdlion. From
childhood Pat was fascinated
with spbtnlng wheels but It
wasn'l untB just a few years a~
that she learned how to make
yam from raw wool.

••

•

\
\

&lt;

THURSDAY

\

'

~

~

.....

•
•

•

;:..

2$

2
For

For

$

2
For

Save 37%. our 3.98 Eo.
22x42" bath towels of

·.·•. ··.

'

·

.... .

$

I

I
Photos by
Charlene Hoefl ich

Special Purchase. •
15x26" kHchenteny
towels mode of soft.
washable cotton .

cotton/polyester. Choice
of prtnts or solid colors.

Save 47%. Our 4.77 Eo.
std.-size sleep pillows;
polyester fill, polyeslerl
cotton Hck.

•While quonhtles lost

Prtnft mov vary oy uore

Mlr. t'nOV Y:J/y

Special Purchase~
52"·squcn table
cover; vinyl wHh protecHve backlOg.

Save 39%. Our 4. 97
Pkg. 7 terry cloth bibs
of washable cotton.

One for every day.

·wn~t~IOif

Sole Price. 3·tler cart.
Mulftpurpose portable
storage unit with caster·
type wheels. 3 removable baskets. Made of
plastic-coated steel
tubing . wire . 13x10x23".

Reach for)dream makes Meigs woman spin
By CHARLENE HOEF1..1CH
Tlme&amp;Settllnel Staff
·. Happy New Year!
'
So your resolutions have already

~f'I C~

OFF
Entire

**'
~~ICf~UM ol
'*
hiOlll C~ltom.a. Wicorw~ .
Mlctigan.
Jllec. ctled; 'tOUf

saaPric

and local

a'ld ~may

testrict fie ~ of b lWI WI ow.1
11'9 01 bUidngs ot lvnon

Alte~

1

707

1

S Gal. Kerosene Can .... 5.97

Rebo1e Aeba1e ~~'~'~~leO to mtr s ~
11,000 I1U kerosene heater; removable tueltonk, 1.2-gol tonk.
Mfr.'s Sug. Usf Price
59.97 Pr. 14-kl. gold
pierced 110nlngs.
SrvleiiTlO'I vorv

4· . 6-hr. recording .

Sole Price Pkg. 250, I·
ply luncheon napkins
in 133/oxll"l\6' size.

2~a~1

Sole Price. 12"x25' roll
ol aluminum loll to
wrap leftovers. more.

Stock
Of
Wall

POMEROY - "From the time I
was a child, I've always been
fa sclnat~ with spinning wheels.
l'w lookro and longl'd. but I never

Paper

SHOW.OI''F TI~IE - Playful
"Peaches" puis a lot of run Into
the lives of the Phll.on famUy.
Whenever Pat gets outlhe wool,
It's show-off time lor their

"'"""""'
Not Exactly

As

Illustrated

loveable pet.

Special Purchase.• Mag.
netic memo holder;
soN sculpture. ........"""_ ""

2For

Save 30%. Our 5.77.
Blank video tape. 2·.

""'

Special Purchase.•
Tree for cottee mugs,
mode ol genuine oak.
holds up to 6 mugs.
Decorative way to
keep kitchen area
organized .

5

been broken, and you're back into
the old routine.
And we're only fiv e days Into the
New Year.
But walt. It's not too late to put
away that old habit, begin that new
project, to reach back and pull out a
dream.
Dreams .....too many limPS they
remain just that.
Not just of faraway places, of
gigantic gains, of major accomplishments, but of the lltUe things in
llfe, like making n&lt;'W friends or
learning something new.

Special Purchase~

Cutting board. 81f.x12";
polyethylene. """"'""""-""'

1

"

• •1 \

Martel Tuna

Wool itt

Packed in water, 6\1 oz.

16

Oz. cold

water wash.

really ever thought I 'v&lt;' have one."
Pat Philson was talking about the
fulflllment of her dream spinning on her own wheel.
ShE' remembers that one winter
not too long ago, she found a book in
the library callro " The Joy or
Spinning."
"I read it and was just lascinatl'd,
but I still thought, 'gee, I'll never get
to learn to spin'."
Then she saw an advenisemenr
in The Dally Sentinel about the Rio
Gran~ Colk&gt;ge classes in homes·
lead living. ·
"Spinning was one of the classes
offerro, and I knew when I read It
that here was something I just had
to do," Pat recalls.
And she did.
Once enrollro she found she was
the only one In the class who didn 't
own a spinning wheel, so she
practiced on one of her Instructor's
wheels. Doing something with her
hands and her feet at thesametlme
didn't c;ome easy for Pat but she
hung right In there and completl'd
t~ course.,
·
Amfwlien shecompletro it, there
shE' was with some skU! at spinning,

cr

r

but no spinning wheE'!.
Raw wool always bas a lot of
But things have a wa)'m working "stuff" in it, and Pat says this can
out.
...,
be removro by puUing the fibers
A soon time later at an auction In apart with a "card" (comes from
SyracuSE' a small antique wheel
thP French word, cardare, which
was put on the aucrion block . Pat means to comb) which looks
bought it, and how she's enjoys it!
something l ike a wire brush . In the
Since then she's also purchased a clays when it was necessary to spin
largl'r wheel, but has never done wool so that clothing could he made,
any spinning on it.
all of the family helped. The
Once she got the whl'!'loperating. children used teasUs, a roadside
the first thing she did was spin the material, to work and S('!larate the
yarn to m ake her son a;nr. Who"
fibers so that the yarn could he
scarf in ltte natural colors of the spun. Pat explains .
wool, black and tan .
Since then she has en joyl'd not
Currently she is spinning some
only the spinning bul experimPnl·
wool for a friend, Roma Sayre. The
ing with colors. ShE' dyes wools in a
wool is the first shearing from her
big kettle on the kitchen stove using daughter's lamb and wUI he used to
(Xlke berries to make magenta,
make somethin!! nice for her.
onion skins for a rich amher,
Pat is interestl'd in preserving themarigolds for golds and chart rues!'. art and seldom turnsdown a chance
Pat ooys most of the wool she to give a demonstration in a school,
works with fmm the Wool Growers at some herirage function, or
in Columbus She says I hat when SOJTleplace like Bob Evans Farm or
spining raw wool. it can be done a museum.
either "In thE&gt; greas\o" which means
Pat realizes that fll'rhaps she got
the
"horse lx-fore the can" when
letting all the l~nolin stay~· or it
can he washed m lukewatm~atr~· she t~arned the' skill wltoout having
with a mUd det ergenttotakeo~he a wheel. Bur it all workt&gt;d out and
for her !Uifltled a childhood dream.
oU baSE'.
•

7

Stouring Pads
Giant pack of 6
Terryside or Nylon

fr"'===--

,.,.,

Wrre Srrair'('r Set

Our 97¢-1.17 Eo. II·
voH terminals,
connectors; lest leads.
SOld •n ..t.uto Dept

5

2For

1

Reg. 77¢.
7' metal pour spout.
Our

Sc*:llf1 AlliO Dept

$)

B

Pitkles
Polish or Kosher Dill
48 oz.

ss

§]

Special Purchase~ 3-pc.

strainer set; lOifo"-.

.__.. ...

Blf•"·. 63/•'·dla .

$2

4 for SJ [!3

§T

Special Purchase~
Wall plaquallrlval.
Copper pkrted .
·VNt~ICIII

STP lullritant
Heavy duty, stops
squeaks. cleans·.&amp; protects.

Candy Ban
Assorted kinds.

SAVE .

A "Dit. WHO" SCARF - The flnt cn!llllon from
wool whkh P,at spun on her wheel Wll8-a lcwll!illtped
'"'""' of "Dr. Who" fame for her son. "Dr. Who" Ill a

Murl8tlc lelevllllon lbow on the Public Broadcuh!J
Sylllem

~~TING

rrom 1the .French

THE FIBERS- A card (comes
wGI'd, cardare, wllldl means to

cemb)., B!CI to remove debrll andseparateflbenof

the raw wpoL Raw wool always has a lo&amp; ci ·,'Mull'' m
It, Pat Philson said.

�.

.

.

Pomeroy~ Middlliport-G'allipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

January 6, ·1986 .
l"&amp;tJe--.1~- 2- The Sunday lime;s-~Se~n~t~in~e~l~~=~~~~=~;~~~~~~~·~Ohio-Point PleaSant, :W. Va.

January 5, 1986

SUNDAY
CENTENARY -Centenary United Christian Church has the End
Timers singing Sunday, 7 p.m.

·Celebration
a lot to be
desired

Limit Quantities

STORt H,OURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM ·

Times,..,.,ntinel Staff
l s it me, Matt ie?

. • • Personally, I
· • ~hought the tele: : :vision program·
: )'ning to "ring" : · :a It hough il failed
: 4o do that for me
• :- in the New
. :Year left a lot to
. ·be desired'
: : I checked a couple of channels in
. ~ )ny exciting New Year's E,·e
: adventure of watching the celebra·

GAlLIPOLIS - Faith Temple
Independent Chruch seJVtce Sun·
day, 7 p.m. Rev . Uoyd Douglas
speaks, God's Children singing.

We Reserve The Right To

By BOB HOEFUCH

CROWN CITY - Sunday School
and services Sunday, 10 a.m., 7
p.m. Big Four Church.

L

EFFECTIV~

THRU
SAT., JAN. 11, l986
.
'' .

·lions in the cit if's and came up with

Tuesday: baked fish, wild rice
pilaf . green bea ns, cherry
GALLIPOUS ·- Activities and cheesecake.
menus for the week of Jan. 6
Wednesday: meatloaf. mashed
through Jan. 10 at the Senior pot atoes, corn , appl!'Sauce.
Citizens Center, 2:ll Jackson Pike,
Thursday: ham slice, swePt
ane as I:Jtlows:
potatoes, kraut salad, ,·anilla
Moriday, Jan. 6 - Ceramics pudding.
Class, 9:JO.noon; Chorus, 1·3 p.m.
Frklay: roast beef. scalloped
Tuesday, Jan. 7 - S.T.O.P· potatoes, glazed carrots, suga r
.!Physical Fitness, 10:30 a.m.
('OQkle.
Wednesday, Jan. 8 - Vinton
Choice or milk, coffE'f' or tea
Bible Study, 1 p.m .; Garden Club, I available with meals.
p.m.; Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thu rsday, Jan. 9 - Legal
Services, 8:30 a .m.; Bible Study,
11 :OO.lllOn; Birthday Party.
Friday, Jan. 10 - Art Class, 1-3
p.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.;
Open Acttv lttes, 7-10 p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday - Pepper steak,
mashed potatoes, b roccoli, wheat
bread, C&lt;?C&lt;JnUt pudding.
Tuesday - Pinto beans with
ham, carrots, corn bnead, sliced
peaches.
Wednesday - SpagheHI, tossed
salad, It alian bread, pears.
Thursday - Birthday Party Baked chicken, mashed potatcies,
mixed vegetables, wheat bread,
white cake with orange Icing and
Ice cream.
Friday - Macaroni and cheese,
stewed tomatoes, plums, wheat
bread, van~ta wafers.
Choice of beverage served " it h
each meal.

n1P.

Ironica lly , I heard a rad io
commentator on the day b&lt;'fore the

GRADE AWHOLE

a bit

Chicken ••...•..•• ;B~ ..... 49&lt;
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$ 99
Round Steak •• ;B~.... 1

ntppantl). I'm afraid - about the
man)' appearances of Guy "Lum·
bago" on th&lt;' New Year' s En•
shows. She appa r!'nt Jy wa s glad
1hat hf' is no longer on the sCf'ne. &amp;&gt;
that as it rna)·. Gu,· Lombardo and
Ills ot-chestra heliJ&lt;'&lt;l many Amerl·
cans welcome in the new year O\'er
a long penod of time- and tf what I
saw Tursrla)· night is th!' best
) lternativE' to his entertainment.
~then as~
' H'

as l'm concrrned. if's
other revolution.

HOMEMADE PORK

: Thr 1\P v Year always brings tl
:f'C\1.' reflf:"Cikms- at leasJ for me.

19
Sausage ••••••••• ~·~ .... $1

• Of course. I remember Mama.
:hut I also remember the late
Jl&lt;'lmar and &amp;&gt;rtha Canada)· who
-u·prf' a J w a~·s good tor a Nt'w Yrar· s
En' part~· Sometimes the~· ~l.:t~tT·
b!ggirs anci so nwtimc'5 just for
·sm,dl gmups - but alwa~ · s wf'll

&lt;lo Ol'

·nw

Cdndd ~t\ s nf'\'Pr faiJed ro
ra bbagr in somr• form dnd
vou alwa\·s found. discn"f't ]\
PlacPCI. son~t·coins mingll:td in ~rish

SC tYf'

the cabbage so _,·ou "·auld hme a
ptO,JX'rous \ew Year. Oh - lh!•
roii" " "'''"'' boiled and clean!'d up
for thP c ~t'l'tl sio n .

I

kn o\~

·' ·our p! a~· ers wUI be w ith

'roctd Spaun. 14 )·rar old son of
C"harlr' 'flu ke 1 and &amp;&gt;tt)" Cillil an
Spaun . wl"O has leukemia .
Todd is undC'rgoing trt'almrnt at

both ti&gt; ' Holzer Mrcticdl C'entrr a nd
Chilclrrn s Hospital. A freshman at
Southern High School. Todd is oot in
school the sf' da)·s and of cou r.:~c\ has
somt' problrrn:.; ha ndlf'd tl¥' inacti\'
it~· 1-if' i.stwingtUlored . however. to
kf'rp him up on his sc hool w ork .
Frif•nds haw• started a fund to

Ground Beef •• ~~ •••. $119
SUPERIOR

Lunch Meats ••~~ •••• $129

POMEROY - The Meigs Senior
Clllzens Center, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, has announced activit~
scheduled for the week of Jan~ G-10.
They !nclude: Monday, square
. ¢lncing, 1 to 2: :ll p.m.; Tuesday,
choru s, 1-2; Wednesday, ,.Social
security repwsentatlve, 1().lll0n;
bingo, 1-2; Thursday, ceramics, 10
a.m. to 2 p.m." and Friday, bowling,
1:30.
The following wf'E&gt;k on Wednes·
day, Jan. 15, the nex t.session of the
Holzer Health Maintenance Program will be held at 1 p.m.
Speakers will be Dr. Thomas
Morgan, and Lee Bowman,
phannaclst.
.TIJe senior nutrttion program
menu for the week is:
Monday: spaghetti, peas, tossed
salad, peach halves.

SAVORY

Sliced Bacon ••••••••• 59&lt;
LB.

~ou' d H·ant to hf'lp ~ ·ou can send d
con t ri bu tton to Dctrlf'n(' \c&gt;wrl l .JI

Hom~

'&lt;ational Bonk.

. Hc•rscht•l ~lcCiuil'WdsmorPt han
otht:&gt;r m orn ing to find

DIC"a~l'(J tht ·

!lltnf' J())

·""d of thr

mbms in the

Mcf'lun" homC' on thr F'lc.ltwood~
Road . !vkl'lun• hopes ll1t' \ \HH' u
~ ihrn of l'i.llh :-.pring- wr'rr all fur

"
.
4
Bananas .•.••••.•• ~....

t1ta I .

LB

f.ilht•J \\.Jnl tht•
rompllmt•n! ..; th . . 11 :'\Iektr Oilf•r h .J ~
l)pe:-.n'l t '\l'I:.

li:titto •n to h~t f.llhr r. ,\ JJen Oilt•r
: \ick it'. 12 "'·"' nlrl . of tho • ~ha d e

BROUGHTON

3ri '&lt;l. \\Tilt·~

: ,\ F'athrr b a pf•r so n ~·ou lrC'Jsurr

fvrC'\·rr rmd

liS.
FOR

S1·

Meigs lunch
announced

'"

$149
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••

f' \ ' f ' r:

MIDDLEPORT - In acconctance
\lith the unlfonn lunch program of
the Meigs Local School District , the
menu for .Jan. 6-10 Is announced:
Monday: hoi dog with. sauce,
trench flies, fruit , oatmeal cookie,
milk.
Tuesday: sloppy toes. com,
Texas shN't cake, fruit milk,
Wednesday: over bak!'d chicken,
green beans, hot rolls and buHer.
applesauce, milk .
Thursday: p izza, sa lad, rhoro-~
late pudding, milk .
Friday: cooks' choice.

GAL

: You lo\'e htm bf&gt;cau-;i •Of what hr
m('ans ;
: \\llct t hl' mrrm ~ i" thr !aught rr in

~

\our drParns:
- Things you \\ ·,:.~nt H1 ~; ~~ .
: ran a lw~l,V.S bf&gt; ~J i d to him .
: HP' s sort of likr 1ht' kr~ ,
Whi c h u nloc k~ mC' .
My s~~ rf'l.s can bt• told to him :

Rc'Causc.· 1 know

h1~

PARKAY

•
Margar1ne .......~ .....
LB

kA r .

Hr•s gQI d h, •,.1rt ,if gnld . or likt• J
n!·Lng dow :
HP kno\.1. ' l \ hl'n ••umt'thing\

wrong.
.Ju st like hi' knnw!"- a song:
I gtJl'SS I! '.; JUSt his magic which
~VC'S

That hr

ts ~11

f'ath&lt; 't

For tllf• fathe rs - and mothers,
too. who hm·pn· r reccivrd .1 wrillrn
lribllff' - don·! \,..·orry nbout it .
Y01J'rr rhilrlrf'n probahl~· ha\'P
grra t 1houghts n bout yoU. So with

that 1n minrl. let" s just k('('psmilin~ .

Pornography info
meeting set Monday
GALLIPOLL&lt;; - A pornograph~
awa reness mt'C'ting wlll be held
Monday, 7:30p.m., First Chu rch of
God. Ga llipolis. AU interested people lnvlt!'d to attend.

POMEROY - Meigs Birnd Boos·
t.ers wU.I meet Morrl!y, -7·p.m., at
the high school.
.

'

oz.

Armour Treet !~~~·.. $119 Pot P1es ............. 4I
BANQUET •

8

$

Diabele8 Interest
group will med
GALLIPOLIS - Diabetes Inter·

POMEROY - Dinner meetin g

FREE \11TH AA"Y $7:JO PURCHASE

OF )fEHLE NORWc\ COSMt'TtrS.
ilt lt l i l t ' ~~ ~~

.,, ' .t

g~,rt••li JI

Lll\ 11. 1Ct tl

nl

It\ ,I\' , \ II• I'

1

Revival set
MIDDLEPORT - A week-long
revival Is being held at the ,Hope
Baptist Church. 570 Grant Sl.,
Middleport , Sunday, through Jan.
12 with services a t 7 p.m. nightly .
GuPSI speaker, special singing and
puppet shows wtll be provided by
tbe young adults from Murray
Colleg~ In Kentucky. A nursery will
be provided. Those needing trans· ·
pOtiallon may ca ll 992·5661 or
773-5.'lf&gt;l.

Argo Peas ...... !~i~ 3I Sl Fried Chicken ••••·.~. $249
•••• 'COUPON' •••• '·•

•

t

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

' FLAVORITE W/OIL or WATER

CHUNK TUNA
•
•

'

oz.

2fSl

limit 2 Ptr (ustomtr
Good Only At Powtll's s,.ormarllet
Offer b'lir11 Sat., JaiL 11, 1916

I

I

:

•

·····cooFtW·······
••
•
•

•

I

•

•

•

••••

f

:• ' DOMINO SUGAR '
••

•
••
•
•
•

• • • • • •• • •••••••••••••

SLB.

BAG

$139

. limit 1 ,., CUIIIMr
Good Only At. Powell'• S..•~!"•t
Offer bpir11 Set., Jan. II , 19i6

•••••••••••••••
•
•••••••

TOILET TISSUE
: . 8 ROLL
• PKG•

•
•
•,

9 ~9(

limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powelt'• S~tnnarllet
OHer bplm Sat, JaiL IT , 1_916

BOLD DETERGENT
147 Ot.

Completes basic

$4 99

Pvt. Gregory W. Long~ son of
J unior Long and Thelma F. Sayre,
both of GallipoliS, has completed
ixtsic training at Fort Jackson\.S.C.
• He Is a 1!l!5 graduate of Gallla
:: ·Academy, GalllpoUs.

limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powt11's . l~trmarllet
OHer bpiru Sat., Jan. 11 , 1916

,,

~

'It
4 ........ .

•2

•

, It•

11

1

Group to meet
POMEROY-·Catholif Wom~n ' s
Club will meet Thursday with mass
at 7 p.m.foilo\ved by the meeting at
7:30. Hostesses will be Anna
Blackwood, Marty Gress. &amp;tty
Ohlinger, and Wilma Mansfield .

,• ' -' •' IT\

•t lo• .11 •'11 ,,,:•1• lrlu.r 1• '•11

' j,
If .,,j 11 h

'II I

$1Jr

1h•.., o tl(• r v,1hd only tor tht• pur( h J~l' o l

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"' ; r,q otolill l»· 1""1''1' .LI L&lt;i l·tlrr'l I•• '.\. rl•

M !C.ll\'l'd ': :&gt;• I,Jdlum H.::. . nng'i b l' IWf'f'n
]Jnuar\ ' I ,md f- dnuar v I. NHb .

\ -'II II i iJ lt lt\ dl

Head .io
/Quarters

Many o 1hl'r ft-dtu rc~ a ttt '"''"'''"'" 1

J 1 &lt;J n exlril c h.Jr~W

Walk '"$
Welcome
Bv Juanita

EXCELLENCE by Design •

Gallipolis

313 Third Ave.

•••

BRING THIS AD

EXTRA
GOOD BUYI

LIVING
ROOM

14 Cubic Foot

SUITES

FROST FREE

50%

REF.RIGERATOR

Gibson

On Sale To Move Fast
UpTo

est Group meets Ti1ursday, 7 p.m ..
French 500 Room, Holzrr Medical
Center.

WEDNESDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Bethel Ladies
aid meets Wednesday, 1 p.m. a t

OFF

• 2 DOOR

r. 3 PIECE SUITES

BEST SELECTION EVER!

LIVING ROOM

BANQUET

6.5

Boosters to meer

EAST MEIGS - Eas tern Loca l
District Alhlelic Boosters meeting,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the high
school.

Meigs County

h••lp til&lt;' f,tmtJ\· wit h thr problem. If
the Racmc

POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu
Cl)apl er, &amp;&gt;Ia Sigma Phi Sorortty,
meets Tuesday. 7:30p. m., home of
Evelyn Knight. Plans will be made
for the Mother's March of Dimes.

Gallia County

men! presented plu st hosedoing the
emcrt&gt; work failed to register with

1

RUTI.AND - Rutland Village
Council meeting, 7 p.m. Tuesday at
the Civic Center.

home of Helen Fustel.

I 11 tH I 1' :\ &gt;jO ' I I I I • ,~ I I ' L ,JH

or no impression and thf&gt; ent E&gt;rtain ·

:nme fo

when Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, meets at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the post home.

Senior Citizen Centers plan
weekly activities in Meigs, Gallia

the C'Onctusion that it was a ll f.OOrly
done.
Tho' wedding on the 17th floor of
som" building or other made little

NPw Y ear commen ting. -

MONDAY .
POMEROY - Meigs County
GALLIPOLIS - A pornography Salon 710, Eight and Forty, meets 7
awareness meeting will be held p.m. Monday, home of Julia Hysell.
Monday, 7:30p.m., First Church of
TUESDAY
God. All interest!'d people invlled .
PI'. PLEASANT, W.Va.- MGM
Running Club meet s Tuesday, 7: 3iJ
GAlLIPOLIS - DAR meets p.m., Mary's
Monday, Down Under , 1:30 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Ro·
Speaker Jean Curtis. Mrs. Daniel
tary meets Thesday, 6 p.m. , Down
Evans hostess.
Under.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis JunGALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Lions
Ior Woman's Club meets Monday, 7
meet Tuesday, 6:30p.m., Oscar's.
p.m. Woodland Centers.

ATHENS - Boyd and Blaine
Cornwell - "Master' s Encourag:
'.
ers" - at East Athens Ch~rch of . POMEROY - Big Bend Civitan
Christ Sunday 7 p.m.
1
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday at Com·
munlty Action Agency offices in
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter Pomeroy.
Order of Eastern Star practice
Sunday 2 p.m. for Tuesday's 7:45
LETART FAllS - PrO meet·
p.m. meeting. Members are to
ing· ~t the school, 7 p.m. Monday,
wear chapter dresses on Tuesday.
with guest speaker.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY OH ~

PRICES

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page 8 ·3

Community calendar I area happenings

r

Beat of the bend

.

TABLES•

C~~ETTEFRO&amp;MASHiEr
OTHERS

SAVE 20%
ro.so%
3 PIECE SfTI

OVENS
.Closeout

· Priced!
MAYTAG &amp; SAHYO
00

p~= ~169

PHone 446-2673

�•

..

Pllge-B-~The S,Unday Times-Sentinel

Tamara S. ·Er-Vin becomes bride
of James R. Hupp Sept. 14
RACINE - Racine United Meth·
odlst Church was the setting for the
Sept. 14 'redding of Tamara Sue
Ervin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Ervin, and James . R
Hupp, son of Mr. and Mrs. James L.
Hupp, all of Racine-"
The double ring wedding was
perfonned by Rev. George Gra~e.
Music was provided b)o Marlene
Fisher, organist, and Larty Fisher,
soloist
. Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a gown of
sheer polyester over taffeta fashioned with a fitted bodice, flounced
· scOOp neckline with chantllly lace
accents, and simulated pearls, and
full puffed sleeves .with lace
accents. The tiered skirt, bordered
~th lace, flowed Into a chapel
iength train. The brlde wore a
1nodllled picture hat fashioned by
brrolyn Powell featuring lace
)lpllques and a crown of i&gt;earls !rem
which fell a fingertip veil and
~usher edged In pearls. She wore
:brldal gloves and carried a bouquet
:pf pink and white bridal roses.
mauve sweetheart roses, forget .
rne-nots, baby's breath tied with
}vhlte lace and dusty pink satin
~!reamers. She wore pearl ear{-Jngs, a strand of pearls borrowed
!rom a friend, and the blue garter
worn by her mother at her wedding.
; Lori Pow!'ll, Racine, was maid of
honor, Lauri Upps, Kinards, S.C ..
)ltd Joyce Foreman, Portland.
were bridesmaids. They wore
hoor-length dusty rose dresses of
llOiyester ch!tfon over taffeta, with
sweetheart necklines and puffed
~leeves with softly gathl'red skirts
'lied at the waist with satin ribbons.
,:ltey wore pink open weave picture

hats with nylon tulk&gt; yeillng at the
back, and de&lt;&gt;p pink silk flowers on
the sldl'.
.
FloWer girls were Heathl'r Dalley·
and Stacy Wllson, nieces at thl'
brid!', In Identical gowns. They
wore pink satin covered hl'adbands
with pink silk flowers and earned
brown Wicker baskets With flower
petals tied with dusty pink bows.
The atiendants carried bouquets
of silk flowers In varlg\ated pink
miniature carnations, tiger IUies.
forget -me-not, baby's breath tied
with dusty pink satin Streamers.
BUI Hupp, Racine, was best riian,
anct ushl'rs were Howard Ervin Jr.
and Herbert Ervin. Groomsmen
w!'re Olarles Hupp, Long Bottom,
Racine, and Pa~l Roush, Racine,
and thl' ring bearer was Joshua
Ervin, nephl'w of thl' bride. Shawn
Dailey and B.J . Ervin. also nephews, were acolytes. The groom
with a rose ooutonniere and his
attendants With carnation boutonnil'res wore grey pin-striped suits.
Sarah Ervin distrii&gt;Jted pro
grams, Kacy and Macyn Ervin
han~d out rice bags, and Chad
Hubbard and Bradley Willford
presented roses to the roupll''s
mothl'rs.
The couple'• mothl'rs wore
mauve polyester knit dressi'S with
pink swretheart rose corsages.
Guests were l'E'gistered by Mikki
Hupp, cousin of thl' groom. Hostesses at thl' reception were
Rhonda Dailey, Sharon Hubbard.
Beverly Wilford, Teresa Wilson.
sisters of thl' bride. and Sally Ervin
and Patricia Ervin, slst!'rs-in-law cJ.
thl' bride.
The bride's tabil&gt; hl'ld at a
thrre-tiered fountain cake, featur-

Mohandas K. Gandhi was assassi·
. nated in New Delhi on Jan. SO, 1948.

Mr. and Mrs.]ames R. Httpp
ing stairways leading to side cakes
with miniature&lt; of the wedding
party.
Thl' Racine.
coup!!' reside on Manuel
Road,
Thl' bride a graduate or Southl'rn
Hlgh School and thl' Hocldng
TI'Chnical College, Is employed
with Best Western Motor Lodge In
Rip~, W.Va.
Th gi-oom. a graduate of
Sout m. works at West Virginia
Business Machines, Charl~on,
W.Va.

A wedding reh!'arsal dinner was
hostro
thl'
at

MIA, TIOnEIS, SEBAGO

Reg. SAil
'30 PRICE

The
Shoe Cafe
Mrr. Phillip lfl i/hehrz

:100 Second Ave.
La layette Mall
Gallipolis, 0 .

106 Butternut Ave.

DRASTICALLY REDUCED
HURR11N FOR BEST SELECTI.ON

2 5°/o TO 5·0°/o

~- · -· - · -......-::- . .

Office Hours 10:00 AM.-5:00 P.M. Mon., Wed., Fri .
2:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. Tuesday and Thursday Evenings

675-6700
LOCI, .1: luilt 114 Mt&lt;li&lt;al Olliu looitding, at Pleaoant Yaltty H01pi1at
Pl&gt;int Pltatcool, W. Ya. !lSSO

Red with gray cloth interior, 4 sp. trans. , air con·
ditioning , am ·fm stereo, tilt wheel, delay wipers,
aluminum wheels, Goodyear Eagle G.T . tires, x -tra
clean car with just 11 ,000 mi Jes .
NOW JUST
WAS

•&amp;,800.

I Coupon

the t'lmuclt laid. See. here i.s Willer, what doth hinder
lw huptizt·d ~.. .Ancl IJ,•w mmandt•d tht' chariot to stund still: and
rh~ ·y "'''"' duH'JJ hut II illtrJ '"'' M1ater both Plu'/ip and 1ht eurwch: 1111d he
haptizc-cl him .. (Act), 8: 36.38). Peter. writing "10 th1• stra,gers "·uttered
tftrrw;.:h u ut P,mtlfs, Gu/ariu , Cupftudoc'ia, Asia, and BMrynia. ··ca lls to
thl·ir min d thl' 'a h·a1ion of Noah and hi~ fami ly being ".'iflverl by water"
(I Pd . .1:2 1). \\ hich he: ~ay:'i i!'l "th Plik ejigurt&gt; " of baptism . The bapt ism
1\·tl'r prl·;u:h l'd un Pcnlccmt and thrnuf:lhoul his lite was the baptirm
H"ith M'Oit'r,
5. TosDI'f': '"He thut bt•lil•,wh r111d i.s baptized shalf be suved: but he
that IJ«•!iJ•vNh tWI sl!u/J h1• damned "' (Mk . 16: 16): "The lik e jigure
wl~t·~~~ umo_ 1' 1'1' 11 baptum dot Jr u/.w now SQI't' /I X, (tlot thl' putling away of
thl•.Jtlth rij rht •.11,·:;11. butt!ll' 1111.n tw of 11 ROOd conscit•nct• roward G od.)
by tit•• rl'.surn•,·r;un ofJPsus Chrin " (I Pet. J :21 ).
b . Into Chri.t t. Hi\· body, rht church: "Fur ('S 11/iJII\' u) vrm 1u havt&gt;
~~~·,:n. huptized into C~risr_lw1•e p11r 0 11 Chri.u " {Gal. J :.27 ): ·.. 1-'ur by unr
.\fltrrt 1m ' k'f' ulf baptrud mtu on~ body, whrrh1•r wt• he Jews ur Gt•milt•s,
\1"hl'tfH•r lt't' h1• hond orfrt'l'. lind ha~·•• h1'f' ll all mud!' tr; dri11k imo um•
I11irit .. (l Cor . l 2: 1.1).
i , l'llr new hirrlr : ·:!1-.ws IJNSWI•n •d . , ••• rilv. wrill·. I :;uv unro
iltl'l'. L.'Y''I'' H m 1111 !J1 • horn ogai", hi' canwi .tl'l ' ,;,,. k.i11gdum of
God .. .l: .ti "I' /J/11 1111111/w horn of " 1uter und of the Spirit . he cmtw!/ l'fHPr
. i11w tlw kilt~ilom ofGocl ' · (J no . .1:3.5).

1

~·~\

F(OO~AAE .

OFF!

CENTER

SALES &amp; SERVICE All SWEEPERS
NEW &amp; USED CLEANERS
FREE PICK-UP &amp; DELIVERY ON REPAIRS

For Appointment
Please Call:

614-446-7 441
GALLIPOLIS

NO .NEW CARDS
WILL BE ISSUED AFTER

HURRY (

Chapel Hill Church of f.hri.~t
Bulavlllr ltoad • P . II. !lox

:mR

G alii polls. Ohio 156:11
surul . 1~

'lunlnll:
JUhl o• Siud.' !1 ::111

W•r-.hl., til: :111

1

Suoub,\ ' •:\o•nln11 :

Uo · •l•u ""'lil~·:

\\ ur, hlp i :UII

1111-to · ."i!ml .l
i /1!111 II).

ll .llll&gt;l

·· ~~ .... ~: •s:o '

I·,.,.,,

Uu• lllhlo ''

, .hi ..~IV l ::~:~·,: ·: ·~l
1

~· -~c :~ .~ ~r&lt;~

c

c:&gt;::Qto&lt;:&gt;~.

JANURY 19I 1986

STOP IN TODA.1
AND START SA~IM81

:·ot/1 ' h11p li.1m ..

j':

Shop
Powelf'g

And
Savel

\

COURTEOUS
FRIENDLY SERVICE
•

I

'

!
I

l----------------------------OPEN MON.-FRI. 10-6; SAT. 10-2

.

(I Cnr. IZ : 1.1); "carl' bapriz.rd into Christ. the ""om· Lmd .. (Gal. J:27),
\\ 1111 " uu r · ·,,,. hopt• ·· of t;l ory (Col . I :27), and we are hapr;zed accordIll~ tn the_"m/1' }11ith." wherein the operation of the "unt• God" takes
pla rt' 111 &lt;'lrn1~1d".in g Ihe heart {Col. 2:12~. To deny the '"rme b aptis m "
1~ In den~· ~Ill"~ clcmc nh thai compose th1s "1111ity o( tlw Spirit . .. rnak·
lll).llllcm nnt cssl' nlial!
For fl'f'~ Biblt• CtJrr-,fptmdence Course, WriiP ...

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

MINIMUM - 2 ROOMS

STOP IN AND PICK UP YOUR CARD EACH WEEK PURCHASE 520 OR MORE
AND GET OUR CARD VAIDATED.

I'I'I'W/ 11 tt'Qil"r: CJ IIII

HUNTINGTON, W. YA.

!

EASTER HA •••

r

•

I

$16 99
PER ROOM

On A Whole _or Half Boneless

"''' tt;

3RD &amp; ITH STREET
Center:·

!

GET .$1 0°0 OFF

1Mt.18: 14J.
J_. For tlh· r,•mi.\·.\·imr of .~ins : ·R,·pellt. uml be baptiztd rw•ry one of
yu11 "' th1• 110 1111' uf l l'st;s Christ fu r the '!mirsion of .sins" {Acts 2:J8):
··:1mlttow why ltlrri,·s J thou ') uriu . mtd he baptized, and wash away thy
.\ tn.\ , nth'i11g mt 1ill' oume uf tlte Lurd .. ~ Acl s 22 : 16).
-1 .. With k 'Oft'r: "Ami uJ they wem Of/ rh rir way. they came unto u

•7,900.

I

Ph. 992 ·2039

The One Baptism Is ...
1. ~·ommanded by Chrisr: "Go y1• thertfore, and reach all nattmu.
buptt:un~ till'" '
CMI. 28: 19): "A "d lu• Hud 1111/o them , Go Jl' mto all
lftt' ll 'n rltf am/ J'll'ltch rlr~• gospel w i' l't'!V Cff.'!llurt•. Hr! that believeth
1111d is baptized .dwfl b,· llll'C'c/. but 11,: 1hut believeth not .shall be
don wt·d .. (Mk . l b: l5, 16).
1. In the name of th• Father, Son, and Holy Ghost: "...baptizin1f.
tlmu i11 th1• name &lt;~(fht• fatht&gt;r. uud o) lht• Solf, umJ of the Holy Gltost '

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

,----------------------------~
Steam or Dry Foam
1

---Etc. o

PH 446-2327

William 8 . K uglm

•Epidural Deiveries
•Tubal Repairs

or Dry Foam

ANY

Plus Even Greater Reductions
On Selected Items!

M1•ssugt' Frum Tht• Bihlt•...

.. HOURS: MON.·FRI. 9·9; SATURDAY 9·5
~lwk

---- -

Rock of Ages oilers you a choice of 6 dil!erent colored
granites. Whatever your requirements may be, complete
satisfaction Is wssured with Rock of Ages.
Winter Hours : Tues. 1-4 and Thurs . 1-4
Other hours by appt . by calling 593 -1455

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS
MONUMENTSGotlipotis. OH .
352 Third Avo.

.,

"Acro11 from tho

S2QOO

WHAT IS THE ONE BAPTISM?

JOHN CREDICO, M.D.

Steam

ONE ROOM
9
SIZE $19 '
___,____________ --------------..J
I

CLOTHING, ACCESSORIES
GIFTS &amp; MAKEUP

POMEROY, OH.
Or 992·5121
We Accept All Major Credit Cards, and Wire
Flowers Everywhere.

,.J

1984 PONTIAC FIERO S.E.

IN STOCK ·wALLPAPER

Acroo lnm lt111rt

Sale!

On• Baplism And Unity
l'x pn:!lses 1he other six el ements that compose
1l1 i\ " toll!y . .. Wt• arl' haptiud into the "o r~p body " by the ··rJm• Spirit ""

30°/o
HUGE SELECTION·OF

aNTRAL AYE.
VIENNA. W. YA.

OFFICE HOURS BY APPOINTMENT AT PLEASANT VAWY HOSPITAL MEDI·
.CAL OFFICE WED., 1 P.M. TO 4P.M.: HIUCRlST UROLOGICAL CLINIC, MON.
TltRU FRI. 1-5 P.M. AND VEtERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL MON. &amp; WED.,
10 A.M. TO 12 NOON ,
PHONE 675-5100, 446-0021 or 992-2104
FOR APPOINTMENT

LARGE SELECTION

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

!'he

THill JAN. 31, 1916

Coupon

MEDICARE ASSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED .

Second Awnue.

~~- ~~£51250

ANNUAL JANUARY

DISCOUNTED

Airman Gregory T Woodrum .
son of Thomas E. and Katherine M.
Woodrum of Rural Rout e 2, Crown

'

Full Size

WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET
AND BLIND SHOP

704 GlAND

great-grandchildrrn.
The couple married in Winfield.
W.Va. They have resided in
Gallipolis the past 20 years.

. In 1980 Kenny \.Oggins won the
The Space Educatiryn Association
·best-male-vocalist Grammy for his loeated at 746 Turnpike Rd.,
recording of "This Is ,It."
bethtown, PA 17022.

~ri· ~~£ s15°0

OBSTETRICS/GYt-ICOLOGY AND INFERTIUTY

SUPER SALE·
ALL· BOOKS

Woodrum

Queen Size

Herman - Roach

HYSELL RL'l'\ - Mike Thompson will speak at the Hysell Run
Holiness Church at ~arh ser.-icc
during Janu~ ry except two. Le land
Hale,· will be speaking at thoSI' two
S&lt;'tvices which will be on Sunday
!'Vening, Jan . 12 and Sunday
morning , Jan . 26.

: GALLIPOLIS - Mr. ami Mrs.
Jami'S B. Moms celebratro their
~th wedding anniversary Dec. 28.
They are the parents or 7 children
and have ll grandchildren and 3

Available in three
sizes and all at
1/3 off!
King Size

20°/o-33°/o
OFF
BASS, 9 WEST, CORSINA,

tive vehicle s and assoc i ated

Pediotri&lt; &amp; Adult Urology, indudong Oncoloqy &amp; Surgical
Treotmenl of Sexual Dy slun&lt;ti ons. Ultrasont&lt; Dtssol uli on of
Kidney Stones.

:Morris anniversary celebrated

Save on flowers! Flowets ...
ctisp. clean. fresh and exciting ... in all white and
colors, too! Btipten a
cornet or set an elegant ta·
ble with these beautiful
ftesh anangements of lon·
glasting. ~nowwhite cam a·
tions. pompons and deltcate daisies.

WOMEN'S SHOES

~

BOARD CERTIFIED IN UROLOGY

JANUARY
WHITE
SALE

ZODIAC, flU, 9 WEST 1

Bailey anniversary to be noted

equipment.
He Is a 1983 graduate of Southwl'stern !-figh ~hooJ,./patrlot.

Army Reserve Pri vate Theodore
B. Boyce, son of Johr H. and Hallie

City. has comp!Ned Air F ore~ basic
training at Larkland Air ForcP _
Base, TPxas.·
During the six WE'€ks at Lack -:
land , the atrman stud.ied the AI(
For('(' mission, organi?..ation and
cu stoms and rPCeived spec ial traln ·.
ing in human ll•lation s.
in addition, airmen who complete
basic training rarn crfvtits toward'
an associate dcgr"" through the.
. Commto nily Collegp of the -Air
force.
The airman will now begin
on-the-job training in the com mand·
&lt;.md control opcra1ions fiPld at
Goissom Air Force Base. Ind.
·
He is a l!l!\.1 graduate of Galli a'
Academy High School. Gallipolis ..

Mel P. Simon, M.D., F.A.C.S.
•

AU FASHION BOOTS
20°/o-50°/o OFF

&amp;yce
C. Shuler ri Rural Route 2. Patriot.
has completed a wheeled-vehicle
mi'Chanlc course at the U.S. Arm,,
Training Center, Fort J ackson, S.C.
During the course, students were
traiped to perform mainlenance
and assist In the repair of automo-

An open rec!'ptlon Road.
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Johr Bailey,
Their three children, Joyce Ro34795 Flatwoods Rood, Pom!'roy, binette, Lancaster, Darlene Iiuck on their 50th wedding anniversary il'y and Gregory Bailey, both of
will be held Jan. 5, from 2 to 4 p.m. Pomeroy, are hosting the affair.
at the Mt. Herritan U.B. Fellowship Friends and rrlatlves are in vitro to
Hall. County Road, 82, three miles call durtng the open reception
from Five Points on the Texas · hours .

Mr. and Mrs. ]ames B. MorriJ

iii1

service--~

the

belt!'r record of
GALLIPOLIS - Thl' Job Bank, stability and
located In the Senior Citizens rontinuro accept3{1ce by employCenter, 220 Jackson Plk!', fs a free ers one!' they are hired .
employment service, Inviting both
Call thl' C!'Dter at 44&amp;-7001 and ask
thl' applicant :;o years of age and lor the Job Bank for furthl'r ~talls.
older to discus~ thl'lr employment. Our Job Counselors are available
needs with our Job Counselors. five days a week !rem 8 a.m. to 4
Employers find that they profit by p.m. to assist you With your
thl' expertenCI' of 1hi' older workl'r. employment n..OOs.
Older workers have a beller

POMEROY ~

336 Second Avenue, Downtown Gallipolis

[iiiiiiiiiijij~jiiij;ijii..

Kern- Depue

Speakers named

a

L

- ~ngagements = = = =

Both Miss Herma n and Roach
attended Meil(s High School.

1912 .

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page- S-&amp;

-~-In

Job Bank helps seniors

--

,

Maid of honor. was Sue An~r­
son. Matron of honor was Cindy
Asher.
KI'Vin Sullivan was best man and
Dave Holstein was groomsman.
Hostesses at thl' reception were
Debbie Duffy. Marsha Dully, Sally
Wetzel. Estlvoun Matthl'ws and
Marjorie Moore.
The coupil&gt; resides In Grove City.
The bride Is a graduate of Mount
Vernon Nazarene College and
employed by Hirth Norris and
Company. Grove City. The groom
Is •Iso a graduate of Mount Vernon
Nazarene College, and Is with Bavc
Ohio. Columbu s.

: MIDDLEPORT - Announ&lt;:epl&lt;'nt is being made of thl'
~ngagement and approaching mar}lage of Faith Ann Herman. South
Second St .. Middleport. and Tho·
fl1as Rav Roach. Wright Str{'(&gt;t,
• Pom!'roy.
• The bride-eli'Ct is the daughter of
•
1'hirlcy Herman and Dale Herman.
4Joth of Middleport . Roach is 1he son
:Df Mr. and Mrs. Carl Roac h.
'Pomeroy.
: Theweddinl( will take pla cea t the
Ash Stm't Ftw Will Baptist
P,u rch on Feb. 22.

Economist Milton Friedman was
born in Brooklyn, N.Y., on July 31 ,

Dresses 40°/o Off
Blouses 30'~ Off
Sweaters &amp; Vests 30°/o Off
Jac:kets 50°/o Off
Skirts &amp; Slac:ks 30°/o Off
Hats 30°/o Off
Flannel &amp;
G
300/10 Off
Brushed Nylon OWnS
All Coats 40°/o Off

brim.

daughter. Rhonda J. Kern . to
Daniel M. DePue. Pomeroy. The
wooding will be a private e;·ent of
Jan . 11 at the home of the bride' s
parents.

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

ON -ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE

edge and chapel il&gt;ngth train. The
bride worr a hat 11ith matchin g lac!'
and pink roSI'S on the turned-up

•
• PORTLAND - Darrrll a nd
Wanda Sellers. Portland. are announcing the pngagement and
)pproachin~ marriage of tht"ir

Jariual'( 6, 1986

SALE

~ Vde~Jnnkyrradesvows
~with Phillip Wilhelm Sept. 28
LANCASTER - On Sept. ~.
Valerie J!'an Finley and Phlll!p
Wlihelm were united in marriage in
ihl' Lancaster First Church of thl'
:Nazarene.
• The bride Is thl' daughter of Mr.
iufd Mrs. Ray Finley. 138 Mit hoff
,br., Lancast!'r, and the groom's
ll3rents are Mr. and Mrs. James
Wlihelm. Columbus.
: The RI'V . Spurgeon Metzler
Pfflciated thl' aft!'rnoon ceremony
'Jvlusic was provided by the
Royalaires.
": The bride wore a gown of
)\merican lace CNer bridal taffeta.
With a flttro bodice. The scoop
itecklinl' was accented with venlse
)ace. pearls and S«:JUins. Puff
. sleeves with pale pink roses
.completed tbe top of thl' dress. The
gathl'red skirt had a lace flounce

January 5, 1986

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

POMEROY, OHIO

�5. 1986

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

'.Dreama Diane Eblin becomes
:f?ride of Edward Allen Bell
.
MIDDLEPORT - Dreama
a white Bible on a white lace pillow.

Representative to visit area
POMEROY - A repn'Sentatlve
from the offlct&gt; of Congressman
Clarence Miller will conduct an
open door '!,('Sskin from II a.m. to I

Di·

.ane Eblin, daughter of. Mr. and Mrs'. . The ushers were Daniel Rhodes,
flenry Eblin, .Jr., Rutland, and Oak Hill. and Steve Tomek, Middle·
)'.dward Allen Bell, son of the Rev . port . Guests were registered by
:and Mrs. Edward W. Bell. Point Jodv Wamsley , Clift on. W.Va .
;,'Pleasant, exchanged wedding vows ROb2!1 DeLDni;. Pomeroy, was
on July 20 at the Middleport pianist and soloist.
:Independent Holiness Church. The
While satin bows marked the
:Rev. Earl Fields and the groom's familypews, and other decorations
·fllther performed the ceremony.
Included an archway with pastel
; Escorted to the altar by her flowers , white bows and ribbons,
·:tather, the bride wore a gown of f loral a rr a ngement s, and
··sheer polyester over acetate tat- cande labra.
:teta . It was fashioned with a split
Silk .roses wcrr presented by the
·,'neckline, front and back yokes, and couple to their mothers. A reception
·lull lac~ flounce skirt trimmed with honoring tiV' couple was held at the
:venlse lace, sequins and simulated Senior Cit izens Center in Pomeroy.
:pearls. The lace juliet sleeves was A buffet table was arranged by
·detalledwl!haruffledflounceatthe "rs.
' I RebaO'B nen
· , Sea tt'·' h..
..-. "nas
-elbow and cuff, as was the basque Mrs. Alberta Hoffman. Be\le\'ille.
waistline. The skirt extended into a who also cut the cake. and Mrs.
chapel length train.
Daisy Taylor, Middl~port, aunt s of
Mr. and Mrs.
. The bride's flngertip veil fell from the bride. Serwrs wer~ Lois Eblin,
:a crown with sequins and simulated Ponwroy, and Debbie Fields. Mi- and Autumn Bussey. CoolvUie;
:pearls and she carried a cascade of ners\' ille. A three-tiNed fountain
Rev . Ben Watt s and Susan. Crystal
:sltk pink and yellow sweethea l1 ra ke m rainbow colon; with sma ller
and Faith 'Thacker, Ewington;
·r(&gt;se, blue and white carnations, cakes inscribed with tt-e couple's
Re,·. and Mrs. Dewey King,
white daisies and baby 's breath name-s were at either side. Wedding
Michael and Melody~ est Colum with blue and white lace ribbons . bells and blue and white streamers bua; Angela Ma ce, New
She wore a heart -shaped watch on a were fea tured in the decorations.
Marshfield.
-c~aln. gi!t of tt-e groom.
Out -of-count;· guests were Mr.
:.tr. and Mrs. John Wamsley,
Darlene Eblin. sister of the bride . and Mrs. Harle;· Eblin and Stacy . Jody, Kim and Angela. Clifton;
was maid of honor . Pau lette Bidwell: Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Senator Charlotte Jenks, Ami
Winston. Mason. wa s bridesmaid . Jeffers and Regina. AmeS\'ille:
Roush, Rev. and Mrs. Edwrd W.
They wore floor length gowns of
Mrs . .!Pn nie 0\ian and Jenniier.
Bell, Rev. and Mrs. Richard
blue taffeta wit h white lace bodices Scott D&lt;-pot. W.Va .: Mr. and Mn;. Ringle. Point Pleasant : Daniel G.
8l!d carried an as~rtment of silk
Earl Hoffman . Bclle\'ille: Mr. and
Rhodes, Oak Hill; Connie Searles.
P!IStel flowers on white lace fans. Mrs. Rod O'Brien and Ron. Sea ttle.
Rainsboro: Becky Tillis, Hobe
Jennifer Olian. daughter of Mr. and
\\'ash.-. Mr and Mrs. John Eblin So und, "~ a ..· Mr . and 'Mrs . Tt'm
Mrs. Carl Olian. Scott Depot , .---------------------------l
W.Va., and cousin of I IV' bride. was
the flower girl. She wore a blue lace
di-ess and cartied a white basket of
yellow petals.
_The mothers of the couple were in
blue · ensembles and had yellow
rosebud corsages.
Roger Manley Jr. was best man.
and Ronnie Eblin. brott-er of the
bride. was groomsmm. The ~oroom
and his attendants won • blue
tu)(edoes: Levi Burns. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Bums. a ccusin of
tlfi. bride, in simil iar attire. can·ied

p.m. Wednesday at the rout1 house
in PomNO)' . An.vone having ques·
lions concerning 1he federal govern·
menl is invited tn discuss them with
the teptesentati\'e.

SALE* SALE* SALE* SALE* SALE* SALE*:;:
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Sale at Th-e Alcove

~

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~

SELECT GROUP OF HARDBACK
~
~ AND LARGE FOR~T PAPERBACKS ~

~

~

REDUCE'tft-35%

""o..l

Titles from all subject
categorie.r are represented.

~
~

Allen Bell

r.tJ

Ma12y iitle s which were
publisher disco1111ted are
reduced even furth er.

o..l

~

Double, Belinda. Jennlfi&gt;r, Matthew, and Valerie, Southside,
W.Va.; Paulette Winston, Mason,
Mr. and Mrs. John Harper, New
Galilee, Penn.
The couple reside at Route 1, Box
68. Middleport.

~

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REDUCED 50%

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who returned to the Orange Bowl for the first time
since w.auatlng from the University of Miami last
spring, completed 10-of.19 passes for 66 yards in
Cleveland's ball-control offensive sche.e.
6Byner broke his 66-yard touchdown run on
Cleveland's fourth play of the second half, crashing
off left tackle, reversing back add then ou tracing
Miami safety Bud Brown down the right sideline for
his longest run of the season.
Marino finally set Miami's high-powered passing
game Into motion, steering the Oolphins74 yards on
their next possession almost exclusively in the air to
cut the deficit to 21-10 on the touchdown passhto
Moorewlth 5: 131eft In the third period.
Marino connected wilh Clayton for the first time in
the game on a 15.yard pass with 8:56 left in \he
quarter, and also completed 10-yarders to,r~ruce
Hardy, Dan Johnson and Moore during the l2·play
touchdown drive.
•

SUWANEE, Ga. (UP!i - The
Chicago Bears are a little tired of ·
practicing, planning and preparing
for Sunday's NFC semiilnal game
against the New York Giants, says
coach Mike Ditka.
"I think it's been long," Ditka
said of his team' s week at the
Atlanta Falcons' training camp
outside Atlanta.
"You know, it's two weeks for us
now (since their last game\, it's a
long time to wait. You st~etting
, a little (anxious) about 'ft. You've
· got to control yourself and force
yourself to wait ," he said.
The Bears. 15-1, left Atlanta
Friday afternoon folloll1ng a brief
workout. Ditka said a light workout
and meetings were scheduled for
Saturday before Sunday's ga me
against the Giants. 11-6.
The Bears like to play football
and fans enjoy watching them play.
Rookie defensive lineman-fullback
WllUam Perry captured the attention of everyone. especially linebackers. with his bulk and
versatility.
The Bears' defense. rated tops in
the league. Is fun to watch because
"we play rock 'em. sock· 'em
football," said tackle Dan
Hampton.
Chicago's offense will be tested
by the Giant's Iough defense, but
the Bears are also concerned about

*

SALE* SALE* SALE* SALE* SALE* SALE*

l/2 PRICE

SALB

Bookmobile
route. set

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REMOTE

Bookmobile Schedu le for ~·\ o n ­
Jan . 6: Burlingham tCounty
MDbile Home Park 1. .3: 35-l: lB:
HarrlsonvUJe 1Church 1. ~ : :l.'l-&gt;: lB:
New Lima Road tl mi. south nf Fort
Meigs I. 5: 15-6:00: Rutland 1 Di'pot
St.l, 6: 40-7: 10.
Bookmobile Schedule for Wed·
nesday, Jan. 8: Tupper's Plains
\Lodwtck'sl. 7:25-8:10: Riggscrest
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New York' s offense.
"I guarantee you. the defense has
got to be on their toes to stop them
because they'l'f' pl ay ing good ,"
Dilka said. "They 're playing on an
emotional high, too."
The Bears· defense was report edly accused by NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle of being too
aggressive. Linebacker Wilber
Marshall. fined $2,!XXl for a hit on
Detroit quarterback J oe Ferguson.
was quoted by the Chicago Tribune
this week as sayin g Rozelle accused
the Bears of puttin g a bounty on
quarterbacks.
"Bounty ?" asked Ditka. "Wha r
bount;,? You 'd have to talk to him
1Rozelle !. I'w never hea rd of it
myself. but , -ou'd have to talk to
him ."
The Bears may or rn a ~' not han•
bounties, but the season has
brought its rewards - including
commerci als, endorsement s and a
music video.

"I t's been a very rewarding
caref'r for me,·· said receiver Willi£&gt;
Gau It "But unt U we win the Super
Bowl and do some other things, I
think it won't be over yet - but we
have an opportunity to do that this
year."
Ditka said he was plea.ro with
tt-e Falcons' training ca mp. adding.
"We will rome back next week " assuming tt-e Bears win . of ccurse.

Pressure mounts as
battle draws closer

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A Jeff Gossett punt of 26 yards gave ohe Dolphins
the ball back on the Cleveland 48 an d It took Miami
only five plays to score again. Davenport bolted 31
yards off left tackle to make it 21 -17 \\1th 1: 41
remaining In the third quarter.
.
The Dolphins had to punt the ball away aft er three
plays on their opening drive of the four1h period but
put the game away the next time they controlled the
ball. Mario hi\ Nathan with a 39-yard pass over the
middle to move Miami to the CIP\'e\and 34 and the
Dolphins scored six plays Ia ter on the Davenport
plunge.
A29-yard punt by Gossett gave Miami \he ball at its
own 42 for its opening possessio n of the game. Woody
Bennett slashed 17 yards around ri ght md on the first
_play to the Cleveland 41 and 1he Dolphins wound up
settling for a season- long 51 -y«rd field goal by Faud
Reveiz for a 3-0 lead.

Bears-Giants meet
in big ,NFL battle
*

314 Semnd Aml/(e
GallipoliJ. Obio
'*L---~O~p-e_n_M_._s_I~Q~·OO~·~B~:OO~:~S,~tn~~~y~/0~:3~0--4~':00~--~

s

lead.
Marino steered the Dolphins 74 yards on their next
po~slon for a &amp;-yard touchdown pass to Nat Moore.
He then guided them 48 yards In five plays for a
31-yard third-quarter scoring run by Davenport and
capped 111e combeack with a 73-yard drive in nine
plays for Davenport's second ,- and winning touchdoWn.
· The Dolphins sutvlved their opening round playoff
game despite a 161-yard rushing day by Byner, who
had m runs of 21 and 66 yards, and a tenacious
Cleveland defensive effort that held Miami's star
wideouts Mark Clayton and Mark Duper to a
combined one catch. Marino countered the lnetfectiveness of Clayton and' Duper In !he passing scheme
by completing 10 passes for 101 yards to running back
Tony Nathan.
Marino finished 2r&gt;ol-45 passing for 238 yards. His
counterpart, Cleveland quarterback Bernie Kcisar,

The Alcove

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GAlUPOUS &amp; POMEROY
PHONE 446-0699

MIAMI (UP!) - Ron Davenport punched Into the
end ~ne from one yard out with I: 57 remaining to lilt
Miami to a 24- 21 come-from·behlnd vlctory Saturda~
over the Cleveland Browns, sending the Dolphins t~
their third AFC champlonsjllp gametn the last four
years.
The Dolphins celebrated Coach Don Shula's 56th
birthday with their eighth consecutive vict!i)' and
now await the winner of Sunday's other semifinal
game between the Los Angeles Raiders and the New
England Patriots. The AFC championship game will
. be played next Sunday.
·
Quarterback Dan Marino engineered three Miami
touchdowns drives in the final 17 minutes arter the
Dolphins had fallen behind 21·3 to win their 12th
consecullve game in the Orange Bowl.
Earrest Byner bolted 66 yards 3: 38 Into the third
quarter for his second touchdown of t hehday to g ive
the AFC Central Division champion Browns that 21-3

HALLMARK EVERYDAY PRODUCT

~

JANUARY 6-9

Upset-minded Browns beaten in·final minutes

REDUCED 50%

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DRIVER EDUCAnON
CLASSES

~imtt· tmthttl Section
January 5, 1986

'

HALLMARK SEASONAL PRODUCT

~

@)

$ports

SECOND BROWNS' TOUCJIDoWN - Browns rumlng back
Earnest Byner (44) reaches for Ire 20al lne In sroring Cleveland's

second lwchdown Saturday aftemooii In die Orange Bowl at Miami.
The Miami Dolphins rallied !rom a 21-3 deficit to defeat Cleveland 24--21
In the AFC playoffs. UPI.

Georgetown, P~rdue, Temple post wins
consecutive games to El Paso and
LANDOVER. Md. ·1UPI I Pittsbuf1:h, pulled away late in the
Reggie Williams' 23 points led fiVP
firs! half a nd led 55- 43 at ha\ttlll1f.
Georgetown players in double
Early in the second half. the
figures as the 11th- ranked Hoyas
Hoyas scored eight straight points
broke a two- game losing streak
to lead 67-47, and they followed that
with an easy 110-79 victory over Big
East rival Providence at the . ll.! ittle later with a 9-0 streak to take
C!implcte command at M-52.
Capital Centre.
Crorgetown piled up a ll- point
' Guards Michael Jackson and
lead
at 84-54 and later held a 33-point
Jaren Jackson scored 16 points
advantage
at 96- 63.
each, while Horace Broadnax
Crady
Mateen's
basket late in the
added 14 and David Wingate had ll
as the Hoyas evened their confer- game put tre Hoyas over the
hundred mark at 101-70.
ence record at 1-1 and improved
their overall record to 10-2. ,
Guard Billy Donovan led ProviGro11:etown, which had lost

dence, which is 8-4 !Or the smson
and 0-2 in conference play, with 21
points, while forward Ernie Lewis
added 12.
Bollennakers triumph
WESTLAFAYETTE,lnd. IUPii
- Sopbomore forward Todd Mit·
chell hit for 18 points Saturday as
Purdue downed Minnesota 68-61.
Minnesota led '!1-26 at halftime on
an 18-foot jumper by senior guard
Marc Wilson , who led his team with
16 points.
After the hatt. the Boilermakers
poured on 10 points togo ahead 36-29

Cleveland Indians purchase
offer studied in -Columbus
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP! I - A
group of Columbus businessmen Is
considering making an offer to buy
thl' Cleveland Indians and bring the
team here. The Columbus Dispatch
repor1s.
In Saturday's editions, The Dis·
·patch quotes Daniel G~\breath,
who Is principal owner of the
Plttsbull:h Pirates, which he Is In
the process or selling, as saying he
Is giving the group "some direc··
lion" but tha t he Is "not leading that
charge." Galbreath said he would
consider being· a partner ii a
Columbus group Is formed to
finance a -blg·league club.
Galbreath declined to name any
members of the group, but The
. Dispatch reported ~urces as sayIng It inc)udes Ga !breath; R. David
Thomas, founder and senior chair·
man of Wendy's restaurants; John
Wolfe. chairman oft he board of The
Ohio Company and the Dispatch
Printing Co.; and John McConheU,
c hairman of Worthington
Industries.
The paper's source said each
would be expected to contribute $5
mllllon.

Galbrea th said the group does rot
yPt have a firm financial package
and he has not spoken to owners of
the financially troubled Indians.
Patrick O'Neill. Indians chairman of the board, said he had no
knowledge of anyone from Colum·
bus making an offer.
"If he did . he'd be wasting his
time" O'Neill said. " I'm set on
keeping the club In Cleveland ."
O'Neill has been working with a
Cleveland-based group interested
in buying the club.
The Indians have been for sal~
since the death of F .J. "Steve"

O'Neill In August 1983. Baseball
commissioner Peter Ueberroth vi·
sited Patrick O'Neill In November
In an effort to speed the sale.
Ueborroth said he supported keep·
Jng the club In Cleveland but added
that other cities with attractive
markets would like to have a team .
Ownen; of ott-er American
League teams, which share In the
gate receipts when t~ play In
Cleveland, have complained about
low attendance at Indians' games.
The Indians drew 660,360 last year,
the lowest In the majors.

with 17 minutes left in the half and
never trailed again.
Purdue's guard Troy Lewis
added 17 points in the victory, 15 of
tt-em In the second half.
Anotller late bloomer wa Minnesota center John Shaskey. ho had
one point in tt-e first half but
finished the game with 15.
Temple wins
PHilADELPHIA (UPI I - Ed
Coe scored 23 Points Saturday to
lead Temple to a 76-00 vict01y over
Rhode Island In tre Atlantic 10
Conference opener for the both
schools.
Coe was 9-for-15 from the floor
and was 9-for-9 !rom the free t brow
line. The Owls (XIlled away from tt-e
Ram; midway through tt-e first
half.
Temple, which has won 8 in a
row. is 9-1 overall.
Freshman guard Wllliam Alston
topped Rhode Island, 4-6, and with
12 points.

t

LOS ANGELES iUPI l - Los
Angeles Raiders cornerback MikP
Haynes knows a "Commitment to
Excellence" means you must win .
That's why he reels the AFC West
champions will have more pressure
on them Sunday when they meet
the New England Patriots at the
Coliseum In Sunday's AFC playoff
game.
"They havP nothing to Jose."
Ha ynes said . "This was a grral
se~son for them. If trey lose. they' ll
say, ' tCoacht Raymond Berr~y is
still only in his second year and II'P
have a young team to build upon
next year.·
"We live and die on TillS year.
Winning Is expected and there's no
excuse. We can't say the sa me
things they can ii we Jose."
The Raiders arc calmly taking
\his game as the first of three on the
way to an NFL championship.
Hand-painted signs reading ":1·0
equals Super Bowl" are posted
throughout LDs Angeles' practice
facility:
On the ott-er hand, the Pat riots
are playing wit h emotion, enjoying
!heir playoff ride with as much
thrill as they can muster.
"We get emotional on the field

like anyone."

Ha~ 1 nf' S

Si:ltd . "flu l

aft er the gamr. we just don 't yell
aboul it as much . We rra lize it is a

step to take to get fur1lr r.
"For New England. it was a big
thrill to beat the Jets tin last
Saturday's wild -card garnet. The)'
were quite emotional. It was a great
thing to happen to their franchise.
We've got more to do."
Los Angeles beat the Pa triots
35-20 Sept. 29. receiving a fumble
recovery by defensi\'e end Lyle "'
Alzada in the end zone and
inter{'('plion · r(ltum s for

touch·

downs by Le•ler Hay&lt;'S and Sa m
Seale.
"Error-frce football is the name
ci the g-d me-tha t' s what it takes to
win," said Berry .
That's what thry go\ last week .
The Patriots committed no turnovers and just ooe penalty against the
Jets. Meanwhile, New England
came up with two fumble recoveries- tunning one back 15 yards for
a scare - and added two Interceptions and five sacks.
One teason fo r that has been thr
consistency of quarterback Tony
Eason. He has completed oi
percent of hisearccr passes and has
the lowest Interception percentage
In club hlst m~v 1:1.6 percent!.

Wittenberg triumphs
SPRINGFIELD. Ohio 1UPIJ Steve larinarlno scored 24 points ·
and · Steve Williard added 16,
Including four clinching tree throws
In the final six seconds, to lead
Wittenberg to·a ~2 -0hlo Athletic
Conference victory over BaldWin·
Wallace Saturday afternoon.
Wittenberg, now 12-1 oVerall and
4-1 In the OAC, built up a 12-point
margin with slx minutes lf:&gt;ft In the

first half but the Tigers' lead was
cut to 31-ll at the Intermission.
Wittenberg led 50-38 with 10:3.1
left iln the contest, before the
Yellow Jackets, paced by Andy
Ware with 19 points, cut it to 64-62
with 14 seconds Ill play.
,
Wlllla,r d cal)lled a 'pair ot tree
throws with six seconds remaining
and added two more with only one
second to play.

FU'roRI: UMP~ !! - Harry Wendelstadt, from all over the Unlled Slates. There are also two
celller, opened his annutll wnplres bueball 8Chool · represmtallves !rom Germany,
from Canada
Saturday ID ~ Beach, Fla. ~endelllladt, a
and ooe !rom Puerto Rloo,trylng out their MIDis. UPI.
vefenul Nallonal Leque wnplre, has 188 students

I""

�,_
(

January 5, 1986
Sunday Times.Sentinel

Trace press too much for KC
•
·~ihintet, Wildcats post 88-47 SVAC WID
,.r ,
,:~, ;,ME;~CERV!U£ - Hannan
;, 'f.ril_~.~
a•lull-court man·to-man
"· '1- ... ' '
'

1

1

1

bti~&gt;lead ·,en route to a 8847
SV~~ V)(ipl)' over winless Kyger

.~· oo.re F'rlday.

,;~. ~~~.W,U~:tits (7-2 overall, 5·1 in
~~'i·'~;\:':1!\~) P!aced four players in
di~*1~res 1n posting tts highest.

·~t¥~,.oot)l\ll of the season.
:·:.~~·\~NmP/Id . on them early, "

·; ~ ''tl'it~ roach Mike Jenkins

' ·~a/··w~. wb!Ch
j)\liyed like
really
.
haven't done so
we

~am~:tt

he

' ,., ier:lhls'year. We're starting to put
~:together."

V l ~fiihd~Udcats ·outscored Kyger
;: cFeek (0-~ oVerall, !J.61n the SVACl

· :: 22-12tn 1he first quarter and 27-5 in
. · the second ·in .opening up the big
' IEQd, Hillman Trace led 7tJ.27 after
q~s and by as many as
;: 50, ·93-33ln 1he fourth quarter.

: lliree
.;

..
....••.
.
:·.
,.,•
...
.•
'

Hannan Tra~· s senior guard
tandem of Deke Barnes and Phil
Bailey combined for 40 points
(Barnes 22 and Bailey 18) to lead .
the Wildcats. Junior Sean CoUey
and sophomore Scott Rankin each
added 14 for the Wildcats.
Junior Mike Bradbul)' led the
Bobcats with H. Hannan Trace held
Kyger Creek's leading scorer.
Riehle Gilmore to six.
The Wildcats made almost 55
percent of their field goal attempts
(34·1i2l and were W-24 from the foul
line (83.3 percent) while Kyger
Creek shot a respectable 44.7
percent from the floor (2147) , but
only made 5 of 14 lou I shots (35.7
percent) .
.
Hannan Trace out!'E'bounded the
Bobcats, 2&amp;19 and forced 31
turnovers while committing 15
miscues.
The Wildcats will travel to

NBA results

Oak Hill slips past Eastern Eagles In SVAC tilt, 70-68

..........

I M ld H ~

\\iPS! Vlrf,.'\nla Sl::ti E' 96, Dykl' 19
FnniiSNn- llwlal•..a
Ohio NOl11wn 13. OUW't tMk-h .J 48

Fl'idq't Rei lila
J, N('ll.· Jt'fV)' 2

BY SCOTI' WOLFE
OAK HILL - Taking advantage
of the home court momentum, the
Oak Hut Oaks climbed over the
hump to a narrow 70-68 overtime
victol)' over the Eastern Eagles
here Friday evening in a SVAC
basketball contest.

SIL'·EAtv.oanhviBr Itt, NN• York Tt-cll 78
Wr ight Sla!t• 911, St Ml&lt;'hai"'' H (VII 74

Lori

l\' L Pet. GB
7 .71!1 -

~

PhUadlph

Ill 12 .li:li ~
2ll H ~ 6
16 16 .500 9
ll 2'2 .•l.'l.i 141 ~

Atlanta

16 15 .516

)

C'le\'E"ind

1~

7

18 .455

I!) 19 -141

.................
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M I ~Hd llki '('

107. Washln KfOn 100
111 . Dc'troll JUJ
Ck"" ~·l&lt;l ~ J.ll. LA Cl lp!J'rs IJl
L A. Lakm I Ill. Utah IOl
A tlal\ 1&lt;~

PortllU1(! lli, Phcmlx 104
St-all II' 117. DPm:(&gt;f 107
SuiiiiiQ''!!i G.,.,_

LfT US llllP YOU SIUCIIIIIIIGIIT UnDY fOI YDUI WI

~

Elmtursr %. Colorado foil !l1
llllros Wl'Sir\ 411 74, foe&gt; tfi
~th Dalr.ol.;; Sl . 61. i"&gt;tob · Oma ha 62
Wf'51t•rn llllno&gt;is 91. C6mrll \1
Wf'ST \'lrgtnla Stair 91;, ~ kr 79
W ls. · M lM·ilu~ el. Wis.· R ~· pr f all&lt;; Iii

Jloo;.ton U9. ~N' J t•r~ 11 ~

"""""'

~.!2.!'2!!!!!
MAINTENANCE FREE
BAnEIIES

ANTIFREEZE I
COOLANT

-

Phot'fllx at ~ .. nt.•_niKhl

Olduf~ Bu~ball

M lUikin

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t ntRotlad

UP TO 370* CCA

6 -·-

liMIT 7

Oh iO Nor Th(&gt;m 7:1. Qllw•T &lt;M!r h • -tl

Ohio Wf'S ..n lll 7'1 Almii oMic h• ._,

8b- C~Biue

S it ' Edwun.lwillt• ~ - St'\0' York T•~ -t.
Wrii:ht !'!&lt;ttl' '18. St Mirlla•h o\ 't • 7~

Transactions

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1nt N' n.1 t lona l l.t'il~r

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C'IPI. l'land - A('(j uln'&lt;l pi1r hrt' KP. in
l!dfo!!~ fru m Sl Loot ~ and a.;sL ~ I'I 'll h1m 10
Maint' or ltv' lntl'rrlil tbna1 1.Nij(\LI'.

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FACTORY TESTED
REMANUFACTI.IIIEO
FACTORY TESTED

ctn d'ili l ~ t.tn ffol!b.'Jll

FROM

rtn'&lt;l onrnsr. " {1"()1'\lfn:JIOt fl {'ln
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FROM

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THERMOSTATS MOST 1.98

namo .J Dll'llln P&lt;ttnl t•r d ft'f1o.h t•
roordtnat or \\'("o. lt 'fl1 Maf"l·land - Footb.1U

&lt;O.trh . 1~-4!

IMPORn
RADIATOR HOSES

( 'un h

J T2 1'1 1

STARTERS &amp; ALTERNATOIS
FOR M6ST U.S. PASSENGER CARS

l'hom i-ffin. IIRhl md- mill. h ll.tl ph ll m·t~
.tnd .t &lt;;.~Lo. t;m ! ltl'll' fX¥-Ir. t'f"( roarh Srott

llh Woo

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All BA!T(RtES SOLD WI~ EXOlAHGE

Da nll' - li lmt Ton.' Yrto·.ir h &lt;If

lTJIIl'h
1P~ , - Drd a/T'd lunilr
ltY~.~':t rd I"L&lt;antl' Wood •~JWm M· aJ I\ inr!igt
h ~ · !01 ff'frld trrl'r of 1~•·1'41 b .~ _, k1 1 h. t ll
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.. 34.89
. . 39'.89

'CCA=COlO CliAHKtNC AMPI

:lo1inno'S(Ia - StRI'lf'd Cdlc tlfol Pltrt:'lr.
llNrl~'1 .m el il._"-\i ~1 tum ro ToltUJ rJ! thP

NHL results
!'IIAT10~AI.

SOMO . UPT0440' CCA .
60 MO . UPTO 530' CCA

SMrid Cl!WIW

Flrs! fkound

WITH REBUILOABLE EXCHANGE

FR,OM

-·-

'"'

...
...
.....

-·
.....
-·-..
...
-·....

-

a~· ·-

!12. Hopr Tl!

Montana S/ 1!, l.1n.·o ~ Man. trotUll 71
l'Tinlt)· t&lt;l. l..al'rm' 7!1
1\r l't ~ 91 . WI\U !IN ilt
L' S lnlt'fna tlo llli1 !Ill, RlmKtyn 1\.l

WNSI \'lr-.'11\18 $ta ft&gt; !IIi. f&gt;•t kP i!l
Fllllllr. Shann011 tm·ttatbnllol

CO MONTH

~t\0
Gt1~
_____ .. ,..

Biola fil. E:mpo11a Sf ffi
Cal Pol,\ Sl.O Sl'. Sacr&amp;fTP!ll u S/ ."IIi
C.rK'(' 1'!1. Azusa Panik' '16
ti 11~'WIIrd Sl. 71. Sol'llma St 37
HumOOidl Sl . .f7. Oiro Sl o1J

Ohio scores

....

~~

x Arurln:~ 7:1, Mf-lnlJXl(ltan Sl . ron ~
Ok.l.a tumt 100. Austin P'Pa1 9!
St: l.«.~i5lana 66. ,\rk 1111~ Red; !'.1

Wa.'lkllnJZ1cn at LA . La kt'rs. nl~ht
( ~ldl&gt; n Slatr tl! Portla nd , rujl:ht

doettes picked up their third vtctol)'
of the season by pulling off a 41-40
squeaker here Thursday In a girls'
SVAC basketball contest with
Symmes VaUey.
Southern moves to 34 inside the
SV
AC, while posting a 3-7 over all
•.:.v •
mark.
·v . Sophomore Jennifer Arnold,
::
playing the best game of her
"'• . career, earned much praise from
head Coach Kim Phillips as she
scored the gamE--win ning points in
the waning seconds of Ill! game.
With Southern traUing by one point
•.. with seven seconds remaining,
Arnold made both ends of a
onE&gt;-and·one to put SHS on top at
'
41-40.
•:."
Symmes VaUey called time to set
up
the end bounds play, but Arnold
"'• mu!!led
the play by tipping the
ensuing pass then making the steal
as tlme ran w t.
Initially, Southern took a 9-Slead,
but ten to a 23·18deflcll at the half as
Rachel Reiber, Alana Butler, and
· ~
...... Arnold all got In i&gt;ul trouble.
Sout!Em switched to a man-to·
man
defense wllh three and a half
..... nfututes
left in the thlrd frame, to
"-·· come back for a 29-27 lead. SHS
stayed In tiE man·to·man the
remainder of the game, a success·
tul
strategy chang~? that Phillips
......
--. cited as a key to the game.
Arnold paced Southern with 13
points and 9 rebounds, whlle •
"" Cl)'stal Hill came off the bench for a
great 8 point, 12 rebound effort. Hill,
only a freshman, also played a
great floor game as did Arnold.
~ ~

"'""'

11 ll .lll 1ti
12 :!3 31.1 1ti
t"r""ddQ·'!' fk-Nuks

RACINE- Th: Southern Torna·

.~

Alul'flt&gt;ld St 91. AlbaniT 1Pa . I 't&gt;
C'hri§ lf'1'tl'r NN ' Jllrl ~ . ,\\'!'ri&gt;!l ffi
Utrrt;. L: . 7'.2. Sr . \ 'lru&gt;nr &amp;I
!\lm a HI. Cml(&gt;na t:-· ftl

control of the Southern offense and half.
steadily guided hls club to vlctol)',
Symmes Valley missed Its
while Jay Bostick contributed both chance In the first hall, netting only
offensively and on the boards, 4 of 12 free throws the first half,
grabbing 12 rebounds during the several of which were bonus shots.
night.
Southern widened Its lead to eight
Adams led Southern with 15 points In the third round, bavlng
points, Bostick added 14, and.Kenny · four opportunities to go up by ten.
Turley 9.
Instead, SHS settled for a J6-28lead
John Shephere led the hosts with after three stanzas.
14 points and Sly Bloomfield added
Utilizing Its running, fast ·
10 for the Vikings.
breaking, pressing game, Southern
added the straw that broke the
In the first period the Tornadoes camel's back In the final round.
vaulted to an early 8-2 lead, then Despite a stingy Vlklng effort
clung to a ).5.9 advantage at the first Southern erupted for a s1zzllng
period buzzer. Maintaining a six string of points and a 55-38 ttlumph.
Coach Howle Caldwell stated,
point margin, Southern missed
several opportunities to widen the "We played vel)' good team
margin, however, good defensive defense, but not so good of
play never aUowed Synunes to get offense ...we missed several opporcloser than 6, the score 26-~ at the tunities. We hit the boards weU
tonight. Jay Bostick Is starting to hit .
tiE bo;ll'ds well."
Sout!Ern outrebounded Symmes
46-:lll, one of Southern's best
rebounding efforts in recent years.
Rachel Reiber added 6 points,
Bostick had 12 and Turley 7.
Lori Adams 6, Alana Butler, 3,
Thompson had 13 for the hosts.
Diana Simpson 3, and Taquny
SHS hlt 2! of ro for 36 percent and
Theiss 2.
zipped 11 of 16 at the line. From the
Bl)'ant paced Symmes with 12
field SVtripped the cords for 18of52
points, Diane Wlllte 8, Wilson 6,
(35 percent) and hlt only 4 of 13 at
Smith 6, Howard 6, and Owens 3.
the charity strlpe.
Sruthern hit J3of59!rom the floor
Southern coUected 13 steals, had
for 22 percent and canned 15 d 30 at
18 turnovers, and 16 fouls. Symmes
the line. Oak Hill netted 15 d 45 for had ten steals, 21 turnovers, and 14
33 perrent and hll10 d 13 at the line. steals.
SHS grabbed 'II rebounds, while
Southern remained undefeated In
Symmes bad 26, led by Owens 8. the reserve contest winning 6().25
SHS bad 9 T.O. and • steals.
over the little Vlke's. David McMUAngle Bostick paced a 32-31
Ian led SHS with 12 points and 9
Southern win with a great game
rebounds, while Shannon Rlffte
and 12 points.
canned 11. DaUas Tibbs notched 8
Southern next plays Eastern In
for the 1osers.
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium
Southern played Wahama last
In Racine on Thursday .
night.
Score by quarters:
Score by quarters:

3999

88

WE GUARANTEE
YOUR SATISFACTION
....FOREVER

WITH REBUILDABU: EXCHANGE

6AMPMANUAL
BATTERY CHARGIII

99

lead the Eagles. Sophomore gu~rd
Just under eight seconds Eastern
Jeff Caldwell tossed In 13, Eddie had &lt;~.chance to 111n It, but a·n Eddie
Collins 11, and Bl)'an Durst 11.
· Collins shot at the buzzer went stray
A nip-and·tuck first pertod ren· to send the game Into overtime. Oak
dered Oak Hlll the one point leader Hill outscored Eastern 4·2 in tile
17·16, however, an equally close, extension lor the 70·0!l' triumph .
hlgh scoring second frame had
The winners canned 3l of 62 for a
things all tied up at 34-34.
warm 4'l percen t and notched 10 of
Beginning as an offensive or· 14 from the line. EHS hit 29 of 63
lented game, things slowed rome- from the floor and swished 10 or L'l
what in tiE third frame. Behind the from the 1\ne.
dual effort of sophomore Hale and
The taller Oaks domina ted the
HoweU, Oak Hlllsteadlly climbed to boards 37·28 led by lklwell and Hale
a 5044 lead after three periods.
with 9 each. Leachman bossed the
Utilizing a complete .turnaround boards for 12 caroms and Coll ins
from the third frame. Eastern added six.
erupted for a slzzllng fourth period.
Eastern had 6 steals. lour of
outscoring the hosts 22·16. Eastern which came by Jeff Ca ldwell , had
led by two going down the stretch, 10 turnovers, 15 assists, and 11 fouls.
II)wever, another Hale field goal Bl)'an Durst and Eddie Collins had
knotted things up at 61Hi6.
7 and 4 assists respeCt ively in great

80trriii:RN - Jennifer Arnold 5-3·13,
Cry1tal Hill 1-6-8, Rachel Relbfr J-0.6,
Dl1na SlmpSOll l -J-3, Alana Butler &amp;3-3,
Lort Adams 2·2·6, and Tammy Theiss 1·0.2.
TOTALS 11-I.HJ.
SYMME! ' VALLEY - Bryant 6412 .
Willi• 3·2·8. W!l s011 2·2·6. Smltn J.!J.6,
Howard 0-5-5. a nd Owfns 1·1·3. TOT..US
IHJ.III.

Soutilem ....... ........ .... ... 9 9 11 12-41
Symmes Valley ..... .. ..... 8 15 4 13-40

.

-

••

...-·

SOUTHERN -

passing games .
' OH had 6 steals, 15 turnovers, 12
assists, and 13 fouls .
The little Eagles of Coach Don
Eichinger kept their winning ways
in tact by routing OH 61-40. Mark
Griffin had another outstanding
game with ~ points, while Tony
Hendrix added 11, and Steve
Horner 10. Morgan had 15 for the
losers and Rollins 11 .
Score by quarters:
EASTERN !68) - Jim Caldwell (}.0-0,

Toni? Chapman o.o.o. KPvln Bar b(&gt;r H ·3.

E rl Colli ns .l S-11 . G r~ Leachman 15'.'1)..30,
Jeff Ca ldwrll 6·1-13. and Br ya n Durst
4311 . rofALS 29·10.61!.
OAK lOLL (70) - Cr\s Wt&gt;ll s 4-0-8, Chri s
Cr ab t rE'(' 3·0·6, Brian Howe ll &amp;6·18, Mike
Halt' 9+22 . E r ic Fa \'P ~- (}. 8, Todd C opas

t -0·2. and BrPnl Bfow n J-0·6. TOTAI..S
!lll-10-70.
Ea slf'rn ..
. ..... 16 lA 10 22 2-68
Oak Hill .. : ......... n 17 IS 16 4-70

Friday's scores
Kenton Rldgl&gt; 56, SprtnJ! !ilaW!'l'f' To
AIIE'r 67. Tol StJ ohn
KE";•stotr 56 , AYOn ~I
Kings 74 , SpringbOro 4ll
l..aBraoP 69. Hrootfi!'kl 6i 10 !1
LaileWttOd liO. E ar Shav.· :'1!
Lakewood Sl Ed 62. C1P Jotll MarshaU
Ill '
Lancaster 7f, Col Cmt('!'l!\lal 56
Lane nsoor 62, Col Hamlllon Twp :li
~tl.tf'R fi.l , W Urllon Iii
i...eE'tor\La 72, United Local 69
LeipSic n. Aracdia ~

m

1:,~ 1&lt;etr

Semi-Annual

Clearance
Sale

lexington 52. I.JJuOOnv\1~· ~

L!brrty Bf&gt;nlon 5f , Ca)'·Haw30n S2 tell

MEN'S ·SUITS

L.ICklng Val 62 , Hl'bron l..akN 'oal 00
lot)
.
Lima Trmpk' Chr 100. Day Trmpir Ch r
47
Llllk&gt; MU!ml TT. &amp;&gt;tt.ol Ta lt' 46

Lockland 71. Nfw Miami 46
Lor

Oearvw· !It , Brmksi!F

Reg. suooo ..... NOW
Reg. $160 00..... NOW
Reg. 12:5 00 ..... NOW
Reg. 127 soo ..... Now

w

l.or'8 ln K1nl! 11. SandlJ~· !'li
Uraln 73, Marion Hardlnil 52
Lcralh S'\MY.• 75 , Lorain Cath 5~
Loui.wUk- Aqubuts 64. Ca n ( (' 61
Lucas 10. O&amp;nvllk&gt; 59
Macon EasiE'rn :!6, Gt&gt;oo;:rtr:M'n 43
Manctll'stl"r 71, LynrhtJ.ui Clay 48
Mansfield 78, Massillon 11
ManstiC'Id Otr 84, C\.ly Val Chr &amp;I
Mans MadiSon 70, Mans Malabar 00

SHS girls win third game

~

WIDlams !12, l.:nkln 71

16 .'dl 9
1J '!l .'91 \4

.

BY SCOTI' WOLFE
Wll.LOW WOOD - Th: South·
em Tornadoes broke ~n a close
game early in the fourth quarter
then coasted on to a 55-38 road
vtctol)' over the Symmes Valley
Vikings here Friday evening In a
boys' SVAC basketball contest.
Southern's Tornadoes of Coach
Howle Caldwell mntlnue to lead the
league with an Impressive 7-0 mark
and 7·2overallslate. Symmes drops
to 44 overall and 3-3 Inside bop
play.
Great team play, the key IngrE-dient to Southern success so far thls
season, was aglan a key factor in
Friday's vlctol)', espec ially tea m
defensive play. Another key asset
was fine floor play by Seniors Todd
Adams and Jay Bostick.
At point guard Adam; took

.. .. .

~· abas h t1nd 1 T2. EdinbJro 71
W;lS.ll &amp; Jf'ffM-5011 Rl. f..a strrn 61

$
to~.;

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:!1

-.....

Mf'T'C')·h.J J"51 106. 06\15 &amp; El kl!\5 7G
r-,·y u H6. Wf"S ~ an 69

Kl! -

'l

•
.,.
"'.,.'

~·· f&lt;llrv IMWtblill

Padlk Dh·Won

w

B utrakl, n~h t

Indiana 1Pv ~. Point P nlr. ~

San Anlonl
Utoh
Ill!las
Sacramnt

An~lt"S e~ l

A.rmy 81 . Bingham ton tl
Dtstrict Of Columbia 11 , M ansfiE'id &amp;I
~ lr.; y • 17, Alk't;:hm.l 76

J L~

""""'"

~·

...

7 1~

19 JJ !&amp;J

LA C1PJ.II"i
Gotdt-n Sit

'5,500.

'5,800.

College scores

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I.A. Lak.n;
Port land
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Calgary• at Edmonton, night

14 21 .m ~
9 22 .2!(1 12

indiana

J ALLIANCE

Hannan Trace is
junior high Winner

MIM!.'SOia a1 Ch lr ~. rlight
\'il!K'OU\'t'l' at Wlnnlpt&gt;g, night

Csllnt.l DtYisbn
21 u .657 -

Olk~c ·

"

{)(&gt;tron a t Toronto, riJ!hl

lmtoo

Mllwau ke

9-0-18, SPan Cdlt)o &amp;:H4, SfL&gt;vt&lt; Jarroll 3-J·!I.
Sro11 Rankin 6-2·14, Rldt SWain 1-·Hi, Tre\•o- Small
1·6-2, Rlchllfii Still H 3. Ran~ Angt'l OW, BasU
Ba!k&gt;y IHHJ. TOI'AUistSM.
Byq.wrc
K.,vgrrC'n.&gt;E.&gt;k .......... ....... ... 12 ~ 10 :ll - 47
Hannan l'race ........................ ll:ll T/ 21 ll! -88
~ll'Oie- Hanl'lllllTrace 00, l&lt;ytt&gt;rCret"kl9.

MERCERVIT.LE Hannan
Trace's seventh grade basketball
team downed Kyger Creek, 49·15,
behlng the 15 point effort of J. J.
Bevan. The HT squad, now S-2 .
overall, will play at SQuthwestern
Monday.
In the eighth grade game,
Hannan Trace won, 17-14. Todd
Saunders had' nine points. Vinson
and Nibert had four each for the
losers. Hannan Trace Is 34 on the
year and plays at Southwestern
Monday .

The win boosts Oak Hill to J.5
overaU and 2-4 In the SVAC, while
Eastern falls to 3-6 and 2·4 In the
league.
6' -3" Sophomore Mike Hale, who
tossed In the winning basket in the
waning seconds, was the Oaks
leading scorer with 22 )Dints,

'

• sopoomore
foUowed by another
Brii!ll Howell with ·18. Crls WeUs
and Eric Faye each had 8 for the
winners.
Bulky slx·foot pivot man Greg
Leachman had his usually fine
game with a gamE--high Il points to

Southern ends slump, downs
Vikings 55-38 for. 7th victory

HANNAN 11lAa: (1131- J)(lkp B8r~"A 7S.:l'J, Ptll!

Ba~

Quclrc ar N.Y. Ran!i:fn . nlaht

.... .tic 01\'Woa

New Yor·k

Brian l.~W'day 2-0-4 , Rick Hudson 2-0-1, Miler~
1-3-l, Oiid Leadt J.%. 'IUI'.U.S tt..J.4'7.

Sltlll~'ll Ganw

-.c.-.....

Wshngtn

kl'GER CREEK (C7) - Rlch'e GUITICI'l' Ml-6. 1&lt;1'\'
J~ 1-().2, Mike BllldiiU)' 6-2·14, Ttm Gordon :J.0.6,

Montrral 7, WlrlnCx'a 3

NATIUNAL MSKE11WJ... ASSOC.
By Vld&amp;H Prtee 1nCenw.non1

NewJersy

Fairland Tueooay while Kyger
Creek will entertain Wahama.
ln the reserve game, Richard ..
Stitt and Chris Petro combined for
30 point's to lead the Wildcats to a
6().19 win.
Stitt scored 16 points and Petro 14
lor Hannan Trace, whlle Roger
Garrett and Mike Reece each
scored six for the Bobcats.

'

•

w ~~-_~hlngton

·'. ' Detroit

..•

'19: Alma

' 81ut ( 'I"GAA-IIIM' Shltkl ClaM:

•

... (lr!!S$1!lg defense to open up a 49-17

.·

Ohto WC'S ~· un

Ottlo CotJtwe Ballkftblll
f"'idq'• . . .

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Paqe-C-3

•

January 5, 1986

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

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

110400
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Mark:trt Local ol2. COldwater '10
Marysville 46, fktckt"Yl' Val 4!'1

Mason 59. BlarK"tiC'ster 50

DRESS SLACKS

Ma.sSWon Jacltsorl fil , N f an Hoowr 6J

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Electric has it .•

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Friday evenings
'til

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1115 EASTt .. AVE.
GAWPOUS. OHIO

Davt Amburgey 2-0-4,

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Jay Bostick 6-2-14. Kenny Turley 4·1·9.
Richard Gll brtde 1·1·3, Todd Kimes().} .) .
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MauiTI"&lt;' :ill, Etowllnjl Cl'f'OI

....:ro •

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Mll\'ll&lt;'ld till. Mf'l'ltor IU 100

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DISPLAY YAIIIIAI
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Page-C-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport G•llipolis, Ohio

Poin~

January 5, 1986

Pleasant, W. Va.

North Gallia comeback nips IsvAC standings Lady Bobcats stop Wildcats.
Southwestern ·quintet, 57-56
m
.m .
.

PATRIOT- North Gallia rallied
from a five point fourth quarter
deficit and Paul Lee made three of
four free throws In the final 2: lB to
preserve a 57-56 Pirate SVAC
victmy over Southwestern here
Friday.
The Highlanders had a chance to
win the game when North Gallla 's
todd Holstein missed a free thrQw
with three seconds left but a long
Highlander pass went out ot bounds
· as two players collided and time
expired.
Southwestern (2-8 overall, 1-6 In
the SVACl led 47-42 with 7:24left In
the game before the Pirates rallied
to take a 4847 led with 4:39 left.
After the Highlanders' Andy
Halslop connected on a three-point
play with 4: 25left togtve Southwestern a 5().48 lead, North Gallla (8-1
overall, 5-lln the SVACi outscored
the Highlanders 7-2 to take a 55-52
lead with 2: lB left.
Southwestern's John Wollum
scored with 40 seconds left to cut the
lead to one, 55-54. But Lee hit two
free throws with 22seconds left for a
57-54 lead before Ricky Haislop
scored with four seconds left for the
Highlanders.
Both coaches said it was North
· Gallia's experience that pa id off In
the clutch.
"I was pleased with the way we
held our composure In the fourth
quarter," North Gallia coach Bruce
Wilson said. "We could have folded,
but we hung tight. However. I was
disappointed with our four-corners
offense In the last I% minutes when
our experienced players turned the
ball over three times."
"Some of our inexperll'nce
showed," Sou,thwestern coach Mike
Kinnlard said, "especially in the
crucial situations. But we were in a
positk&gt;n to win and we haven't been
there much. We need to• realize
what It takes to win ."
Wilson said the Pirates rested a
bit on their laurels following thier
first Gallla County Holiday Tournament championship last week,
something they would not repeat.
"We laid off four days after the
tournament and practiced only
once before the game," Wilson said.
"We probably took them {Southwestern! too lightly. But that's the
way this league is. On any night.
any team can beat any other.
Southfestern played the better
bailgame; they wanted it a little bit

.

poJnts to cut the lead to five, 45-40, from the floor (40percent) and 13of
after three periods.
20 (65 percent) from the foul line.
Mike Kemper. the SVAC's leadNorth Gallla tu,med to ball over 14
Ing scorer, was the only other times, while forclng' l9 Southwest·
Pirate to SCOrt' In double figures, em miscues.
with 12.
Both teams are idle until Friday.
Four players scored in double when the Highlanders entertain
figures to pace Southwestern's Hannan Trace and North Gallla
balanced attack. Andy Halslop travels to Ky9"r Creek.
N h
scored 13, Danny Patrick 11 and
In the reserve game, ~rt
Ricky Haisiop and Jim Jeffers Gallia's Rusty Denney scorn•
40-33win
added 10 each for the Highlanders. polntstopacethePirates'
de ·
Southwestern outrebounded the Steve Tarbell led the Hlghianddedrs
Pirates, 29-26, with Patrick grab- ; with 12 and Dave Mershon a
'flt,g nine and Wollum six. Kemper ~ ~'
had 10 rebounds to pace the Pirates.
SOR111 GALUA t57J- Mlkl&gt;lU&gt;mP'fb-0-12. Tockl
Southwestern enjoyed one of its ~RP~ l-2 ·8. Wii,\'Tll' Dtddlf' 3-U Paul lft&gt; l·S.•. Tod:l
HobW&gt;I n 7·2·16. S! P.'f' Th&amp;xl0112·2-i. 'I'OTAIJi 11-IS-5'/.
better shooting nights of the year,
sot."DI\O'Dm&lt;N &lt;"t-J&gt;m"""' n ".Jntm
connecting on 25 of 50 attempts
Wouum " '- """' H•b4&gt; &lt;t.tl. R&lt;ky 1" " ""'
~ 10. BM\ny Bent! 2-0-t Danrt"- Patlirk ~ Hl.
(rom the floor (50 percent) and six
ror.u.s '""•
of 11 from the foul line (54.5
Scon&gt; ht' q~
"'orth ('.;,lila
\3 .U 15 17 - ~7
percent) . North Gallia was 22 ot 55

15

" '' " n-"

ALLGAMDl
TEAM
W
North Gallla .. ....... ..... 8
Southern .. .......... .... ... 7
Hannan Trace ... .. .... .. . 7
Symmes Valley .. .. .. .... 4
Oak Hill .... .......... .... .. 3
Eastern .. .. ........... ... ... 3
Southwestern .... .. .. .. ... 2
Kyger Creek .... .. .. ...... 0

L Pet.
1 .889

2
2

.

4
5
6
8
9

.500
.375

.333
.:nl
.OOl

SVAC

Team
w L Pel.
Southern ..... .. ...... .. ... . 7 0 l.OOl
Hannan Trace .... .. ...... 5 1 .833
Nor1h Gallla .............. 5 1 .833
symmes va1ley ..... .... . 3 3 .500
Eastem .. .. .. ............ ... 2 4 .333
Oak Hill ... ... .. ... ......... 2 4 .333
Southwestern .. .. ..... .... 1 6 · .143
Kyger Creek .............. 0 6 ,00}
Friday'S re5llMs
Hannan Trace 88 Kyger Creek 47
North Gallla 57 Southwestern 56
Oak Hill 70 Eastern 68 (OT)
Southern 55 Symmes Valley 38
tl-~ niRv'
.,_g ~ S game ·

seven points In th!
uarter
sparked the Lady ·Kyger Creek
BobCats victory over Hannan Trace
52-40.
Vogel collected 7 of her 9 game
points in the last two minutes of
play.
, The Lady Bobcats broke out to a
!Hi first quarter lead as Renee
Ward had 4 pts. andJUI Drummond
had 3. The Lady Wilde a ts rallied in
the. second quarter and outscored
their hosts. The halftime score saw
Kyger Creek on top 21-17. Jlll
Drummond scored 7 pts. in the first
half to lead the Lady Bolx:ats.
The third quarter action saw the
Bolx:ats outscort their opponent
15-11 as Renee Ward scored SL\
points, Drummond and Amy
Brown · chipped In 4 apiece. The
Lady Bolx:ats entered the fourth
quarter with a 36-28 lead only to see
the Lady WUdeats rally to tie the
SCOrt' at 40-40 with 2:47 left In the

Scort&gt; by qu arl i'rs :
KO!S ..
. .... U 10 15 16 -52

JITHS .

. . .. . . 6 ll ll 12 - 40

KCIIS (1%1 - 0.. 0.. HOflson

3{).6;

Jill

Drummond ~.16.; Am y Brown 1-J.5: Chris-

tina Carroll 2-().4: Rfoner Ward 5-2·12; Tracy·
Eggleton 1.0.2: Tina Vogtl H -9; Missy
Kllr h('n {)..().{): Ml"lod)' Graham (l.().Q, rorALS
!1 · 10.~2.

~~AN

111ACE (401 -

Julie Dillon

6-0-12: rabiJy Shrets 0-~5: Mkhelle Uruw
4·2·10: PauiD VanHoose 3-1-7; Holley Whitley

3.0.£: Missy Randolph ().(1.(}. 1'01'~ 16-3-«1.

Hubbard to have
foot examined
RICHFIELD, Ohio !UPII
Cleveland Cavaliers forward Phil
Hubbard wiU have hls Injured right
wrist examined by a specialist
before deciding whether to have
surgery, the - team announced
Friday.

Southern at Wahama
Tuesda_y's games
Hannan Trace at Fairland
Wahama att Kyger Creek
Rock Hill at Oak Hill

1984
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'Friday's scores
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By Unifod Prft1111 la&amp;t'mltlonal
~'81Wulll

Ada t.i9. Blutftm 62
Akr ~rinK 61. Nordonla ~5
Akr St V 64. Akr Flmltl1l' ~~
AJJ\mc{&gt; 00, Marlinl{lon 11
Anlho~ Waynt 62. Mlllblr:t· La kr l !l
Arranum 7!1, Twtn Val s Ql
AIThiDid ~1 . Bry an 49
Ashland rKyt 7:1 , Portsmouth 62
Ashland Crt'St\lk&gt;W ~. S Cpntral ~
Asht Harto1· ~7. M.11dl!ion 52
Ash! Edjrtwood M. {j(&gt;!\("o·a .W
Ausnrt-Fitrh 56, You111 UrsullnP ~

Af. r!W' Uiliort 52. Tt&gt;a1s Viii U

Ili•t hi:&gt; I ~. Ansoola 7~
Rr&gt;xtr,· ~ - Rig WalnUI ~2
Rishop Don&amp;lhut' tV.'\'at Iii. &amp;wkl.,'l' w

Ci!ll l!f'l d ~2 . C'&lt;! m pbl •ll 11

r mm ll!on il. TLlsk\

\'iii~;

· C&lt;Jsl al lu M &lt;.~ r ~: ar ·f' l 1~ &lt; ~~ . l"l'r! r ·!uuon ·14

li'ntr•rv lt k• 6.1 r atrt. u n ~j
r'h agrln F;t lls t l tllatrdnn Ill
I llilliCO ihi• ~ - Wh ll ~ 'h.i ll -- ~
Cln .X W '\9. :&gt;.r r! '-'IJI-'.1 •,.,
f' ln Surrrn!l Kl . l ll'&lt;odm~.: ',.\
I 'in Wl! hr(M' 4!C MII!Drrl :t'
fln EIO'&gt;r 't. Un Mr 1•Ur·r -ll'

r!n X;n"W'r 71 Cin I.&lt;JSi,llt• I';

l'm Arkrn ~- ( 'in W ~n H ill~ ~~
the' last eight minutes.
r.eserve battle, but .Scott Williams'
"
f' ln Turpin "t.l lin &gt;\mlt •r..,. rn '' !
Bn,·k ~liJH• 71. Mlil!ilrk" .i l
'We
did
an
excellent
jobofgetting
four
free
throws
in
the
final
two
'l'lmes&amp;1tlnel Staff
Brtstrl it!. Manllf..,.,,s fill
nn Prinu oton tt. MKklk·lh" n '1':1
l 'Ul Hu ~hrs lli, \. H••nd '],tll•ll' ti'•
the bail to the open man and we had
minutes helped the Little MaraudBrooiQ&gt; 1'1\'\ "a• 14, Sk•uhl•nvllk&gt; 70 o:b.n
Arurr;.,.il-k &amp;l. 1'&gt; Rovalroo 61
1'in f{O!!''' H.u •m 'II• ( m I 'urt I'll II•
'
WElLSTON - Meigs placed all · our best executk&gt;n of thP season. ers hold on for a 48-44 win.
I 'tn ·t•"'' ltl(' i'i. •~ . -..t f,•tl ,;c,
BUC'kf'\lf' S K.J. !lurk~(' S ~1-i
l'Jurk ."\ ~: 7• L'•·tJan .• c,~
Dut'kf'\'1"' CmtrJI :.6, &lt;ll'arf01·k ;,;, Meigs led throughout the contest,
13 players In the scoring column The kids really were fired upabdut
('];i\ 1 0 11
'{i 'II Ili ~
Ca diz 71 . Wt•in on 1\V\'a 1 Mad ti9 •:!rll •
A\UJl Lak1• !i4. Faln:tl'l'o· 1l
and set a new school record with the win and proud of' themselves. but couldn't pull away from the
Ck· Hh 1.'1 P armo~ hi
Ca n S fil. Louls1·11 •· ~!I
Fkldjrt'l' il. Ma pN·ood 44
l'IP I ('HI (;,th 71. Lal;t• 1'.1111
C01n McKinJ&lt;&gt;o.· !'t!, Nl'l'/a r k 37
their lOth consecutive win as the Hope!uUy, they'll know it won't pesky Wellston reserves. The
Bat1x'r1on M. SICM' Walsh Jes uiT f.l
Clf&gt; ..;, J{)"• ii&gt;l . Cit• Clt'nll !lt··•,t
·c an Glenetik ofl, Ma~ Prrrv 41
&amp; \' 61 Mrolllll ~
unbeaten Marauders demolished make any difference Tui!S(Iay Young Rockets could get no closer
Clf' ~~ l gn~U U 5 'jfl. ( k I&lt; T&lt;·d1 1u
Can Tlmkrn fir, Akr Gartic-Jd ~
Bl'~\·f'rcl'ffk 61. Kf11 Fairmont ~:0
Ck' L ul l! W tiO , r I&lt;' • lm ~ ·f.Hl&lt;l ~f.' 0 1
(against Federal-Hocking),' said than four points in the final pertod.
Canal Wlnrh 6i , Am:IIlda Clf-arrm ' k ~~
Wellston 92.J9 here. Friday.
H{'(!JDrd ~. Wl l bJRh~ S 4S
Cl•• I Worl&lt;'dll'lint· !h Cit· C"ll m~, ~ ~l 7~
Canal r~lron ':&gt;oW G.1. Akr Man r hfosiN
BMfD111 1Ml• ffi. F\lilorla lin
coach Drummer.
Williams and Mike Bartrum led
Cui Ill'::.,)(•&lt; '1,, ( "' Ho •:•dl ·11
[lrdford r halll'l 7ti , llr llnf\· S;1m1' ~2
Mike Chancey paved the way for
The Meigs ·henc;h.·'l'hich contrib- Meigs with 14 points each while
the 10-0 Marauders with 25 points uted 34 points, had opportunity to Chris Smith added 12. Tom Johnson
and 14 rebounds ' and Rick Wise 'strul their stuff' . Don Becker had led Wellston with 13. Meigs is now
added 18 points. Both shot well his finest game with seven points, 9-i overall and 7-1 in the TVC whlie
from the field as Chancey drilled 11 five rebounds, and four assists Wellston g6es to 34 in the TV~.
or 16 and Wise eight of 11.
while Huey Eason had six points
Meigs travels to Stewart next
SINCE 1933
and four assists. Steve Musser Tuesday to battle the scrappy
1
The 10 straight wins eclipsed the added five 'rebounds.
Federal-Hocking Lancers while
VINTON - Michele George
mark of nine set last year. The final
Scott Bragg led Ihe Rockets with Wellston hosts Trimbll'.
scored 24 points and Jayne Campmal'li!n. 53 points. Is believ€d to be lB points ·while John Lindauer
bell 17 Thursday nightto lead North
446-2362
Gailla to a 53-36 girl's basketball
the most one-sided win In Meigs added 10.
SALES:
school history.
Meigs continues to lead the TVC
::;;:;-;,, - ""' w, .. .o~l8, .,,. " " -'
wtn ovpr Southwestern.
Bearings
Industrial V-Belts
by one and hall games with a g.o &gt;I-7.
"'"" Cll"""' ~~ ~"· """" "'"" '"'· u.
7-3
Powf'lll -2-4, J. fl . Kllrhm H J. O!rll Kmrf'Cb.· 1.(1.2,
1 Southwestern
d bef Geojumpeddout
C to abell
· Despite the lopsided final count, mark compared to Belpre and """
Ea ..n2·2ti, Phl1KingH&gt;&lt;. SrouP""""·H
ea
Oft'
rge an amp
Pump Seals
Lawn Mower V-l•lh
Marauder coach Greg Drummer Warren Local's 6-1 loop slate.
Don ""'"" " ·'· ' " " M"~' 2&lt;&gt;&lt;.,...,., ".,..,,.,
took over for North Gallla.
Capacitors
Aut amative V·Belts
Inserted every player by halftime Wells! on Is 1-6 inside league play.
''::~~~~
K• "' """' t&lt;&gt;2. Rob Ecvln
leaSadn&lt;)?: Pt~twrt.:;,ktesrornredwhillBepoDinrtasnteo
Brushes
Electric Motors
and not one starter played In the
The Marauders blttlro the nets :2-1 -~. Eddie ~· stM" M-t. Shawn .k&gt;nldns (W.O, srotl
,:)4Jll Jl o;;~
Bra~ IJii-18. John Llnd.uuf'f ~)(), AlaJl A s ~().] . }
Nid
dded
nin
d
v·
ki
Couplings
final quarter. Meigs led 23-12,42-24, with 62percent shooting, maklng39 "''' """""' "''· ror...,r...,..
Fun Blades
ay a
e an
1c e
and67.J4 at thequarterstopsbefore ol63. Wellstonmanagedl5of72for
.,.-....
Hammond lour.
Pulleys
Fuses
oulscoring the 1-7 Rockets 25-5 in ach1Uy21percent.Meigsmadel4 ~.~:;-:;; :
: . : ::: ~ ;~ ~ ~ =~
The winupsNorthGallla 'srecord
Regulators
"' 1 1sh
dw
of
,.....,.oam•t
to 54 overall and 3-3 In the SVAC.
of ..,
ou ots an ellston nine ,
MEK&gt;!(I.,-M,,..Ra""'m '"".,"'"wull,""'
ELECTRICAL REPAIRS·.
,
In a tw&lt;rquarter reserve contest,
17 MeIgs led thereboU nd fngbattle
:.~ - U . Cllrts &amp;nllh $-2-12. Elll Brollrrs '.? -fi-t CUn
Buttery Chargers
D'""
''"·P'""'""'"''· J"'' ''""'"""· "'bb North1" Gallia
upended SouthwestElectric Moton
41
Ha rrl!&lt;&gt;onfl..041. ~f"'l.''rracryo.{}.O. ("tlu('kPtilli rt~ ! ~O-O
12
Small Welders
Wellston rumed the bail over 20 """""'' (].()(). rorALS u.,
ern, ,. ·
Water Pumps
tim
M 1 • ll ~- M
.-~....
"-"EU..810N ,..,., - Tom Jollnson 1·5-13. ~Rachel Borden scored slx points
A'lotor Controls
es to e gs . ""' arau...,rs "' ''~'"" ""' ·,.n"'''u'w"'h"·~""'
for North Gailia, Denise Pickens
Alreuton
were whistled for 13 fouls and M;;:.~ll-t """ 0'"..,.'" ww.s 1
"""' five and Tina Parsons 4. Pope led
AUTOMOTIVE ELEC. REPAIR:
• .......,
Wellston 15.
""'"'
"-"
So ut hwestern Wit· h SIX
· po in ts.
AI ternators
Storters
TVC ALL G''""""
~ Things were 'l'luch closer in the w'""'"
.. "' "w 10" 12-"
TEAM
W L Pts Opp
Generators (Tractor) ·
Troubleshoot Wiring
Metgs ..............
.. . ro6 o
~ 464
~ r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·:·~~:·~·~~~~~
Warren
Local .......
2 531

By KErTH WISECUP

\ mt/III IUD I

,~,

"'

~- .

NG girls defeat
Southwestern

JIM Blll'S-

GALLIPOLIS ·ELECTRIC SERVICE

·
I

·

Belpre.... .. ........ ... 6 2 532 ,., :m
Alexander .. .. .. .. ... 5 4 002 002
Federal-Hocking ... 4 4 493 478
Trimble .. ... .. .... ... 4 5 599 m
Vinton Cou nty .... .. 3 5 475 503
Wellston .............. 1 7 444 573
Nelsonville-York ... 1 7 453 500
. ,Mllll'r .. .. .. .. ..... .. .. 1 7 428 546
TVC GAMES ONLY
· - TEAM
W L Pts 0pp
Meigs ~ .
.... .. ...8 o 567 &lt;1.'14
: . ~ Belpre ... ....... ........6 1 485 451
: · : Warren Local .........6 I 473 400
· :- Alexander .. .. ........ .5 3 541 ~
: . :.Trimble .......... : ..... 3 4 449 452
· VInton County ....... .3 4 417 440
Federal-Hocking.....3 4 422 410
· Wellston ............. .I 6 391 497
Nelsonville-York .... .! 6 409 429
Miller ..... ...... ... .....0 7 liO 468
TOTAL'&gt;
31 3&amp; ·eo4 4504
Friday's resuJs
Meigs 92 Wellston 39
Belpre 72 Alexander. 68
Federal-Hocking 58 NelsonvilleYork 56
Warren Local 6.1 Trimble 62
Vinton County 51 Miller 49

Meigs at Federal-Hocking
Belprl' at Warren Loca l
Nelsonville-York at Miller
Ale.xander at VInton County
Trimble at Wellston
RESERVES
TEAM
W L Pts Opp
MeigS . ..... .. ..... .... 7 I 422 l1J ·
Belpre ........... .. ...... 6 I 33li 276
Federal ~ Hocking .... .4 3 257 252
Warren Local .... . j ... 4 3 316 330
Milll'r .... .......... :.. .. 4 3 323 :m
NeisonvUie-York ..... 4 3 ll5 322
Wellston ..... .. ......... 3 -4~ 333 ll8
Vinton Cou nty .. ...... 2 5 260 348
Trimble .....
...I 6 268 310
Alexander ...
... .I 7 349 39.1
T!JfAL'&gt;
36 36 3169 3169
Friday's reserve scores
Meigs 48 Wellston 44
Belpf(' 46 Alexander 39
War['('n Local 52 Trimble 29
Miller 56 Vinton County Jl
NPlsonvUie-Yofk 35 FederalHocking 32

Local bowling

Alter 3.00 mlr'o rebote
when rou bur 12 quarts

Kendall
fOW40
Motor Oil

i

Sole 79', Reg. 99¢
limit 12

' 1~'

. . Y.

GIANT SAVINGS ON ACC~SSORIES!
.
.

~

•'•

"

I

SK\' UNERS LE\Gl,IE
Standin~ for flt.of•f'nlhrr 2i. •

Te~&amp;~n
VIlla~ Ill,.... .
Odd Ball~
. ... .......
Sr1o••tdt&gt;n Ft~rm ....
F'liodland ... .....
Pa5quak' E!('('. .
Thr Elk."&gt; ....... ......
Bob Evan!' Farm . . ............

W I.
. .. ... 6 2
.. 6 2 .

- .. 6 2
62
... . 6 l
.. 6 ~

...... h 2
. "2 "2
·· ; ~
·~ ~
.
:! li
'l n.
1

,k'ffcrs Exc- .......
Cl.l·rk-5 CuTtrrln~ .. .
Rio Mini Mart .
·~ h
Mlctlal'l &amp; Fli~~ .............................. 2 ti
Soowdt'n Ins. won silt poinT s fm m Mmk.'
Auto. Hl~h txM·k'r for Snowdm" lns. wa~ R
!\toot with \'fl. Hlll!:h I:Xl\0'\('f" for Mink." Aut n •
was .1. Clatwort h~ v.11h \tl .
.
Vllla~r 11\S. won six point s from G1110 s.

Hllrtl oowl('f f&lt;:r Vllla~f Ins. wa!' B. Watson
v.•IJh ~l. HIJt:h txJwk'r for r. ino's was D.
Buml'ft v.11h ilU ,
\.ll llnJt h:lm 's won sbi ~XJ inls trornM kh~·l &amp;
Frll'nds Hl~h txM·Irr tor GilliE'S was J . S~w
with ¥.7. Hl~h txJY.•k'f ror Mict\at&gt;l &amp; Frif'fid.&lt;;
~ • WtiS fl C:l~ v.11 h Ul
Ill' • - ·Pa.&lt;;(!UIIIf' Elr&lt;'. lt'On slx p:llnl.~ from ,ffU~
• f:Mr. Hli!h ~· k&gt;!· fur P;1 ~1ualt' (J('(" . WolS H.
NriSOn wllh ~- lil~ h txM·It•r for .l&lt;'ffers EJI('.

was C. WISI' with ~11 .,

Bob En lnll F'unn" \.1'0~ ~lx points frum Rio
Mini Mat'!, Hl~h bOv.'l('f' 'for Bob Ev&lt;tns wa~ R.
Sprrl('(' wll h ~lti, HIJ~:tl OOwlt'f" f01 RIC' Mini

SAVE

675-7479

.

f'.Jno's ... ..... . .
J&gt;l.ul 0 ;1\·k"S .... .. ........ ·
.rtm Minks ...... ....
Cmlra l :,UIYII.\ ' .... . .

E~CAm

*Fr. .

ADVANCED SATELLITES
JUSI Pat The Point Plmlnt

1000

SINGLE ACTION
22122 MAG.
Wmt EXTRA CYLINDER

LNA Cover
10 Yr. Fadory Warranty
(Check Us OutJ On Dish
W. Want To Be Your Satellite Storer
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Open 9 a.m. To I p.m.
CALL

Marauders ·humble Wellston.,
13 men' enter scoring column

C&lt;Jtk's ·· ···· ....

*All Systems Complete

Site

The Sunday Time~-Sentinei-Page-C-5

'fue!ldaJ's 1ames

50 Cal. Kit

50 Cal. Finished Rifle
CHI!STER

.

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

TVC standings

DRIV»i FOR HOOP - Southwf!ltern'sJohn Wollum (40) drives lor
two durin~ founb quarter actkm Friday night against North Gallia. The
Plrales raDied fnlm a fourth quarier dellcit to defeat the JUghlanders,
57.,'16, Watching Wollum are North Gallia's Mike Kemper (32) and
Soulllweslem's J1m Jeffen~ (22) and Danny Patrick (44).
HAWK E~

January II, 1988

4o

VINTON - Michele George
scored 24 points and Jayne Campbeil17 Thursday night to lead North
Gailia to a 53-36 girl's basketball
win over Southwestern.
Southwestern jumped out to a 7-3
lead before George and Campbell
took over for North Gallla.
Sandy Patrick scored 18 points to
lead Southwestern while Diane
Niday added nine and Vickie
Hammond lour.
The win ups Nor1h Gailia's record
to 54 overall and 3-3 in the SVAC.
In a twcrquarter reserve contest,
North Galiia upended Southwestern, 19-12.
Rachel Borden SCOI'ed six points
for North Ga ilia, Denise Pickens
five and Tin• Parsons 4. Pope led
Southwestern with six points.

Despi!e the loss. Kinniard was
cstatic with his team' s effort .
''I'm disappointed we lost," he
said, "but happy with the way we
played. We deserved to win. We
need to reach a level of consistency
and I hope we don't regress because
of the disappointment."
North Gallia jumped on top. 9-2.
In the game's first thf('(' minutes.
but the Highlanders ran off eight
straight points over 3'0, mlnllles to
take an ll -91ead with I: 28left In the
quarter.
Sou thwestPrn led the entire 51'cond and third quarters, stretching
the lead to 37-29 with t041eft In the
third quarter. before Holstein
scored six of North Galiia's next 11

Installation

gat!M'. The Lady Botx:ats then
ourscored the Lady Wildcats 12-0on
the strength of Vogel's 7 points.

NG girls. defeat
Southwestern

· more."

*fM Check
*-===
Fr"
*!!2 Gimmicks

:...,.~:!!!~~~~~~!~~

.

'

49.88

Your Fln•l Coal All•• 5.00Mir'a rebate

Delco Dura Power Batteries
10 """''"• 525 cokl cr•klng ampo
Sate 54.-88, Rei· 59.88

' .

'

57.·8 8

Aller &amp;.00 mfr'a rebate
72 month, ISO cold cr"'nking a !)Ips
Sate 63.88, Reg, 111.81

Sale prices in elfec:t .Ian. 2 through .I an.

Man was 0 . R(O('S with 00..1.

. 304·675·2988
Located next to Mason County Fairgrounds
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

614-446·2335
Rt, 35, Spring Valley Shopping Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Store Hours : Mon. thru Fri. 9 :30-7:00; Sat.

00;

'JlK&gt; F.lk.~ won six point!' fo rm CIITifos
: Callt•rlnp;. Hl,~th bowk&gt;r ror ThP Elks was J .
• Wadr with ,%!, Hla:h bOwk'r for (..,rdCO!I CaL
' Will 8 . PriCf Wtlh ."m.
'
F'oodland won siJc points from Cmlrf'l
Supply. Hl~h lxlwlet" for Foodlnnd was Bill
Hol ltrv wtth ~ 7. Hl ~ h bowltr for Crntral
Suppi\· wus B. Shaw with
Wei Ball.&lt;il won six points from Paul Da,1t&gt;S.
• H~l'l bo\II)C'f' for Odd Balls was H. Ru5SE"Il with
titO. Hl,g:h t:towk.of" ror Paul Da\1('S \IOa5 t..
F L~ M' w11h "iH.

m.

209 UPPER RIVER ROAD
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

•
•

•
•

•

�Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.......
~ ­

January 5, 1986

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

·Marietta de(eats AHS, 60-57
ATHENS- Eight successful free
Jordan's goal enabling Athens to tie
throws by Marietta ltftoo the Tigers
the score at 5I with 10 seconds left.
to a thrllltng lil-57 SEOAL victory
In the second extra perkl&lt;j Brtan
over the Athens Bulldogs In two
Mugrage put the Tigers up 56-5&lt;1.
overtlmes Frtday night.
Matt Jordan convertoo one of two
Down by eight potrits In the third
free throws for Athens; Brtan
pertod the oost Bulldogs eruptoo ror Mortis made It 58·55 at the 1: 2()
nine points lntothefourthquarterto mark; P.J. Lyons' goal closed It to
regain the lead at 5(}.46 with just 58-Sl at the 49 second mark; and a
over one minute remaining.
pair of free throws by Ted Fist with
~dy Schob canned a pair of free
27 seconds stowing gave MariettA
throws with 53 SI'Conds remaining the victory.
to knot the score at !il-!il.
All six Martetta pbints were on
Athen lnbounded the ball and free throws as the Tigers move to
stalled down to 10 SI'COnds before 6-2 and 2-1 whlle ·Athens Is now 5-5
missing two shots with Marietta's · and 1·2. ·
Ted Fist grabbing the SI'Cond
Brtan Mortis and Mark Bradley
rebound and drawing a foul.
each scored 14 points lor the
Going to the line with a one and winners, win hit 22 of 29 free
one, Fist missed, and the. contest throws. while Lyons paced Athens
went to overtlme.
with 12 points.
In the first overtime each team
Saturday night the Bulldogs
tallied four points, v.ith Matt traveled to Greenfield for a contest

Friday's cage scores

with the Wldefeated Tigers.
Box score:

Col
Col
Col
Col

M.UIJE'ITA (It)- MikP Hukill 4-4-12:
Ttm M('Carthy 2·0.-1 : Ted Fbt 2·2-6; Mark
Bradley 5-4-14; Andy Scl\ob () +4: Brian
Morris 4-6-14: Davr Scb!elell 1-0-2: Brtan
MugragP 1·2 -4. TOT .U.S lt- 2%-eG.

Col Har1k'y lil. Col

Arad &gt;M , GrandvkW

.0 IOTl

Hf'rbil' 56. BP1tnd.t Cllr •

5e

Ch ~ ~

C~.umta.na

62. MlnPral R~ ~

Euclid 64. Eastlair

Con~

Fa lrl'lfol d Unbn TR, l.kidn,g Hts 4!1
fairbankS 59, Wa.'r'IV'$ft('id-Gu'\hm 511
ll&gt;dP!-al Hock~ !'l.. Nfii.'&gt;Oil·York 56
J1~d 6.1. Nor1on !l7 tOH
~'ol"f'S t Park 63. C'ln MC'NIC'hOias .f9
f'on fb&gt;co\'('1)' tit. li&gt;l ptm Sl . J ohn'~ "Wi'
Ftank.lln Moiii'Ol' 6.1, l'r l Vlllagr 62
))-a uk Fu m Crn:'l'l 61. Pons na\ -16
Gallipolis 72, Jadtson ¥.1
•

Orsi..W ,., AliNI E :n
~ 4011

f

Geoff Dil belko 3·3·9.

'roi'ALS 23-tt-51.

Day Waynp 76, X{'nla 71 t)JII
Oily StOOblm Ill . Sprlrti[ S ~ I
Dlit}' Pant'r90n ~ . Day Brlmont 4.1
0...\' C'hamJul !'6, Dlly Mt'"'""'diiF )7

Dly ColoTTI Whllr 60
Df(llllft «l, To! Bo-..ftr :!1

Day Dunbar

!I);

Score by iftarte-rs:
Martella .. .. .. .... 8 16 14 12 .a 6 - 60

0Ma'A'Brt"

Atht'fts .. ... .. .... 15 11 , 8 16 4 3- 57
Resen·e scere: MarteUa 51, Ath~u ft .

I,)!&gt;lla 80. l',~ 64
[)oy{'f R'l, A.Vtlilnd fill

7J.

Fran~

His 81

~

GALLIPOLIS- GaJJia Academy
High School outscored Jackson 15-4
durtng lhe first five minutes of the
second baH enrou te to a 72-49
Southeastern Ohio League basketball victory over visiting Jackson
Friday night.
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue [l(&gt;vils

Huron IW . S.Uld us ~· Pf"rkln.s iA
lndlan LnkP i6, Tri;ld 00

lndJ ;In Valk•y S fi t Rid2f"oo'ocxl !if;
Jal'kson fli. N Carnon 63
,l!.,.,·i•IT &amp;: io il. Indian Val N £0
.lohmlown Nor1 hrl~ ~. l!l'l' a 00
!\allda 6.."1, uwr Sclow V~tl t.1

f'.arftd Tr tn!T}' &amp;i, Parma I'!Hl.i:J 64i toll
Gftloa 58, Woodmoff' ~1

KaMa~

Girard 7'2. NA~· tm f all&lt;: ~1
Glm EstP fll. O n Svt'nrnr.l:' \It l'-' ll
Grand Va l 00, J('{f('~son 4~

'l&gt;0·1MICM·n 57, Hllbda\1" .tti
Dublin 62. LonOOn !1.:1

.

W orthi ngton~

Growport ~ - Ga lk:M•ay Wrsrllllld -ali
Ham ilton 64 . '.\' Ch!&gt;:!iiN Lakofa ~7
Han nan TraN' Ill, fl: ~llt&gt;r r~ 47
llardlll Northrrn 72, VantUP 49
ltrat h 1l, ~·a r k Cath 49
llot.Q"a lr ij9, f..d ~ to n tit! tal !
HopN~ ·II Loudon tl!, Rt'IIS\1Jif' 62 1011
II(JI.'Iand .'\3. War Hardin11 ~·!

fa!rtiPi d 83, Uma Sr 74

C'ovtn,:ton oU. Millon Unkln fO tlotf

Bl)'ant 1·0..2:· P.J . Lyons H ·l 2; Matl
Jordan 5- 1·11 : Tim Adams 3·0.6: StPVf'

* GroV{' Cit y 61.

Colu rrb.ls CroYl' 57, Llnrolnv"-' IE
Cmll"aut !II, Ashtal:ll111 !'il

Coplt&gt;)· ~. Hudson

Gallip~lis

Gran•11k' N, Watkin s r-.km 1~1
Gnificl V:. llf"&gt;' Ill. Jdft.-soo H
Grt..'llslar.tl! ·Gn,•n 1(1. Mf'diM Hl~h.Land

E Canton 84, Thslu\\· Sl
E G'llnton till, Cl'daJ·\1lk' :;6
Eastwood m. Elmwoo:l 57
Eaton 55, UniOn Co t lndl :11' •
Etyr1.a Calh M. E lyria~
Etrr1a ~ Fmnonr Ross .\5
£110r1 Grwnor1 81 . St Paris Gra ham 46

Faith Chr !B. GI'BIC't' Mfom l2
Wl&gt;l\rlf £4, Col Walll"r!!n fl

Colurrb CmtvtPw ,;, L!Sbon 41

1\TIIENS (51)- Jim Stricklin 3·3·9: Rod

Milccombs 4·1·9;

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

SEO standings

Lakota 811. Oak Horbor f.l

(ALL GAME&lt;!)
TEAM
W L Pis Opp
Greenfield ............. 9 0 573 370
Logan .................. .9 1 637 !il3
Pt. Pleasant ........... 3 1 218 217
Southern ............... 7 2 589 458
Marletta ................6 2 482 463
Galllpolis .............. .6 3 oo3 419
Northwest .... ......... 5 3 445 313
Chesapeake ........... 5 3 '.:1.'!1 436
Portsmouth .... ....... 5 4 563 568
Jackson ......... .. .... .4 4 ·445 440
Athens .. ..... ...........5 5 571 617
Waverly ................ 3 3 370 372
South Point... ......... 3 5 428 464
• Wheelersburg ........ 2 6 446 478
Rock Hlli ............... 1 7 ~ 524
Friday's Non-SEO resulls:
Fairland 59 South Point 46
Ashland 74 Portsmouth 62
Barboursv1lle 5&lt;1 Pt. Pleasant 48
Southern 55 Symmes Valley 38
O!esapeake 62 Rock Hill 36

KPII S!On ~ . SOlOn 511
K~t

RutN:•wlt

~.

Rllvl11 llil +I

CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE .

0/o
'

I

21)0/o

SEOAL VARSlfY
TEAM
W L Pts
Logan ...................3 0 163
Marletta .. .......... .... 2 1 170
Athens .............. ....! 2 153
Galllpolis ........ .. ..... 2 2 212
Jackson ................ 0 3 147

136
177
160
187
185
TmALS ............... .8 8 845 845

WH

"""

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Opp

HI·R
·33°/o

ANO'DIER BIG NIGifr- GAllS ju.mr guard Gary Han'losn's 39 _
points, sb: assists and five steals paced GARS to a 72-49SEOAL win 0\ler
vlsltbtl Jackson Friday. On right Is Gallla's Todd MIDer, who turned In
a good delellslve effort aeeonllog to GAllS Coach Jbn Osborne.

CASSETTE PORTABLES
to

51)0/o

21)0/o

to

51)0/o

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L Pts
Logan .................. 3 0 146
Athens .... .. _........... 2 1 124
Marietta ......... ....... 2 1 13l
Gallipolis .............. .! 3 142
Jackson .. ...... ....... 0 3 73

Opp

93
118

130
149
124
TOTALS ............... .8 8 619 619

defense sparkles in 72-49 win
led 15-10 after one period, and 29·20
during the halftime Intermission.
Jackson's Shayne Compston hit a
long jumper (7: 27) to open S€COnd
half scoring.
With the aid of three technica l
fouls against the visitors - two
from the hench - GAHS built up a
44-24 advantage at the 2:55 mark .
and led 50-35 go ing Into the fin al
period.
Harrison Hot •
Gary Harrtson popped' In a
cqreer·high 39 points to pace the
Gallians. He was 15 of 19 from the
field and nine of 10 from the line.
Tom Cassady added 12:
Mark Hammond led the lronmen
with 14. Compston added 10.
Galllpolls improved Its overall
mark to 6-3. Inside the SEOAL.
GARS concluded first half play with
a 2-2 slate. Jackson ls44overalland
0-3 Inside the conference.
Harrison. besides his scoring
effort. was credited with five steals ,
six assists three rebounds and took
turns guarding ,rns ace Mark
Hammond. Harrtson picked up his
third personal foul with 58 SI'COnds
left in the first halt.
Praises Defense
Osborne credited the [l(&gt;vils'
overa ll defen sive play' for stopping
the taller J ackson Countlans ..
"Miller (Todd) did a good job on
thei r big man (fi.5 senior forward
Compston ) Osoorne said. He
added . "We' re starting to get it
lflside."
The lronmen. however, became
one of few teams this winter to
outrebound the Devils. JHS picked
o!f24 toGallla's 19. Alan Dickerson.
6-D senior, led the lronmen with
seven. Mark Berkich had seven for
GAHS. Chris Howard, Ga tlia's
second top rebounder, was on the
bench early with three personal
fouls. Howard ca me back late to

finish the game.
GAHS hit 27 of 47 field goat
attell)pts for 57 percent, a nd 18 of 24
free throw s for 75 percent . The
Devils had 15 Jurnovers.
Ja ckson sank 17 of 38 fie ld goal
attempts fo r 44.7 pPrcent. The
lronmen were 15of24at the line and
had 27 turnovers.
O(!icials whistled 4:1 person~ls in
the game -19 againsl Jackson and
22 against Gall ipolis.
GAHS played at Waverly Saturday . The Gallians host South Point
Friday and play at Northwest on
Jan. 11: J ackson will host NoNhwe't Tuesday and play at Marietta
Friday.
Blue Imps Triumph
In Friday·s r·eserve game. Coach
John Jeffers' GAHS Blue Imps won
their third straight game. o7 ·19.

\\'ee~

.Jan. 8 ii·H p_m

COLOR COMPUTER SORWARE

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South Point at Gallipolis
Athens at Logan
Jackson at Marietta
Southern at Eastern
Portsmouth at Boyd County
Milton at Point Pleasant
Circlevil le at Greenfield
Waverly at Minford
Northwest a\ West
Rock Hill at Fairland
Chesapeake at Coal Grove ··
Valley a t Wheelersburg

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·1JD/o to 51)0/o

"&amp;lEerED" - Cooch Jim Osborne's special chair (on tile GAHS
bench ) got an "early exit" Fri~ nl&amp;flt. Offici.U.. asked the veteran
Gallla mentor not to use II because they didn't think It was legal. "There
Is no rule covering II In the rulebook," Oshllme said afterward. He
added, "11 was connected to the bleooher seals."

.Jan. 11 games:
Gallipolis at Northwest
Ironton at Waverly
Wheelersburg at South Webster
Parkersburg at Athens

1~!·2 :

Thomas. I H.!;

SaU ndPf'~. o.O.a:

Hy I]~I'Wrs:
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7: 3J p.m.
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• Automauc Transm1ssion • Pawer Steering • Tinted Gtus
o AMIFM Stereo Radio o And Molt. ..
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Tockl ,

0.(). 0: Huuldrrn. Q.il.O. 'I'(Yfr\L."i ?i·IR·72.

. .. noon :1 p.ru. Open Swim
. . fi.~ p .m . College Swim
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.Jan. 10 t&gt;-R p.m. Orx·n RN·

Gallipolis 37 Jackson 19
Marietta 51 Athens 42
Jan. 7 games:
Pt. Pleasant at Buffalo
Logan at Zanesville
Rock HUI at Oak Hill
Northwest at Jackson
South Point at Ceredo-Kenova
Portsmouth at Waverly

TELEPHONE ACCESSORIES
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Jan. ~0 games:

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lol l~('

(Reserves)

POPULAR EQUIPMENT
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I \ .\Jt .;rt'\' I
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Gallipolis 72 Jackson 49
Marietta 60 Athens 57 (2 ot)

I··, ,,

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0ate-G}ntnaSlum
Ja n . ~ noon.J p.m. Opc&gt;n Rer ..
&amp;8 p m Coll P~l' R('(' ..
Jan_t fi·8 p.m. Coll('UP Re-c . .

(Varsity)

CHRYSLER LASER

over the lronboys
Tim Neville and Tom Hauldren
paced the Imps, 4-5 overa ll, with 10
points each. Chuck Oliver Jed the
lronboys r3-5i with nin e.

L\' \ 'E CE:'Ii"fER SCHEDt 'LE

Friday's results:

ssoo CASH BACK

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-7

�..

.•

,
Page-C-8-The Sundl!v limes-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-G~IIipolis,

Meigs County agent's

Wildlife news

Extension notes
.
BY .foHN C. RICE

Counly Extension Agent,

Agrlcullure
' POMEROY- Vegetable School·
.. .January 8 and 9 at Letart Grade
Scbool. Time: 7 - 9:30 p.m.
ReglsJ1:atlon $5.
Steer Meetings for FFA and 4-H
Exhibitors - January 13 and 27.
Time 7: 30 - 9 p.m. Meetings to be
b'ld at tiE Extension Office. Topics
wUI be rations, determining frame
.score, market weights, and dally
gains.
Frulf and Vegetable Congress January 21 - 24 at the Ohio Center
in Columbus.
Power Show Ohio - January 24
- 26 at Ohio Expositions Center.
We have tickets.
Agronomy Guides Available tb' 11th edition of the Ohio
Agronomy Guide Is now available.
New features Include water man·
agement. multi-cropping and var·
lous conservation tlllage practices.
Also, no-tillage and tidge planting
are two new features. The com,
soybean, small grain and weed

control sections have been revised.
Tax Guides - Farmers' Tax
Guides are now available. These
are freP . We also have most of the
income tax forms.
Tax Treatment of ASCS (CCC)
Loans - as with otb'r income for a
cash basis taxpayer, products
pledged to CCC as collateral for a
loan are generally reported as
Income In the year when the loan Is
redeemed and tb' grain sold or fed,
or tiE grain Is for1elted tfr CCC.
More details on this are found In the
Farmers' Tax Guide. Also, I have
some detailed Information on this.
How Well Have I Done - that Is
the question we ask this time of
year. Anyone needing help preparing nets worth statements, Income
statements; or cash flows - give
me a caU. I have had extensive
training in this area and v.1U be
Willing to help any way I can. We
also now have the capability to
analyze the business by computer
and also to compare different types
of enterprises. All Information Is
kept confidential.

Peeps, a Gallipolis Diary
'Charter' member of early
scribes buried in Wellston
By J. Sam!el Peeps
GALLIPOLIS - Sad news came
out on Page Three of Monday's
Gallipolis Dally Tribune tha t Jolm
L. Weber had died . If yoo're old
enough you'll remember, 'way
back yonder thare was a volunteer
group of sports scribes which met in
one or the other of their private
homes to discuss the upcoming
sports season.
A "Charter" member of that
group was Jolm L. Weber of the
Wellston Sentinel. and he was the
son·ln-law of tb' Sentinel's publisb'r, Bill p!omas. founder of the
SEOAL who also was a member ol
that group. Weber was 72 wb'n he
died Dec. 28 at Rlverside Methodist
Hospital in Columbus.
HE WAS buried in Wel!ston last
1\tesday.
.. ·•
At least on one occasion the SED
newspaj)t&gt;rmen held tb'ir m!'('tlng
in the Rogan Hotel, Wellston, t19531
at a lime that Homer Alley was the
Gautpolls paper's sports editor, and
at another time our editor. Hobe
Wilson , bald oown a sports job.
WEBER INTRODUCED Hobart
Wilson, Jr., 1986 executive editor of
tb' Old French City newspawrs. to
Weber's father·ln-law, the lilte BUI
Thomas. John L. Weber was
always a familiar figure around
any athletic encounter which in·
volved Wellston. He boosted Wellston at meetings of the Southeast
Ohio Regiona l CouncU.

avid golfer, an active member of
Rotary who seldom missed a local
or district meeting and with Katie
attended several International Ro·
tary meetings . . ."
IT TURMi OUT that Weber's
completes some kind of
coincidence: "For many years he
covered Jackson Crunty for the
Cltlzro.Joumal," and Oark called
it "Ironic" that the c.J and Jolm
Weber both ceased publication at
the end of 1985.
~ath ·

ED CLARK'S Sun Spots column
continued:
Eight years ago when I had the
misfortune to b' dealt a blow with
tb' same disease of cancer that
feU"!l my friend, It was Jolm Weber
who stepped Into the breach in my
job, did my work , comforted my
family and visited and encouraged
me.
"I owe him much and I don't
think I ever adequately told him so.
God bless, Jolm. Our Uves were
ticher because you were among
us."

Friday's scores

0
CEml

•.Ilia••-

- : i.o..~~r~~~s~:~!~ss:'!-M:~;r;,.ilil:llil.
.

;

Renegade Rifles

RENEGADES
CHEROKEE
HAWKEN

New Year hunting.expecta~ions .
ward to. Rabbit season Is In through
January. Grouse goes till the end of
February. Then · there Is spring
turkey In April and May. We have
fishing throughout the spring,
summer, and early fair Then, It's
squirrel season in September .
October brl)1gs bow season for deer.
Deer gun season In Novemb'r and
December. Well, It looks like we are
back too quickly to where we
started !rom. Let's throw in a
preserve hunt for wild ooar In
March. How about a sprlng bear
runt in Canada In Mayor June.And
just to draw out the new year a little

518900
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CHESTER

11 WEST MAIN

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January 5. 1986

longer let's go ahead and take that
antelope hunt In Wyoming in
September or October.

Now, that is what I call a well
l'QUnded new year for the outdoor
sportsman.

Business

CHRISTMAS
WAREHOUSE SALES/DISCOUNT· PRICES
AS LOW AS

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• : • .30 YEAR HONOREES - Adrian Haner, left, and
~ ·LoWell (Buz) Call, center, receJ\oed 30-year service
• · ~wards from Bob EvHDs Fanns durbtg the linn's
_ ·""'!'nt Christmas dinner at Buckeye Hills Career

center. Making the presentation on right was C. H.
McKenzie, director. Approxbnately 20 employees
receJ\oed serville awards fills winter.

YEARS- Ellzaheth Fisher
&lt;'I!C!!J\oed a 25-year service
..Warn by Bob Enns Fanns,
'Inc., during the organization's
.annual Christ mRS party.

C-1 0 PICKUP

Buckeye Hill!; Career Center- (left to right) IW!lllell
Potts, Danny Brumfield, Ray Myers, Blakley Stout,
and ~lark Darst. C. H. McKenzie, right, director,
made the presentations.

ONLY

$19 8 .i~RTH

Sale Price 19300, trade equity or
caslt dOWII 112(10.00, amount financed $8100, 48 monthly payments
of '19.8.00, 7.9% annual percentage
.rate , fsxed rate GMAC Financing with
approved credit. Stock No. 1108.

ONlY

DAYTON - Robbins &amp; Myers,
Inc. had lower sales and a loss In tb'
fiscal first quarter. and expects
operatlng conditions to woi'Se!l
during the next few months, as the
computer industry cont inues to
experience a severe oown turn,
accordin g to Fred G. Wall, presl·
dent and chief executive.
For the fisca l fi rst quarter ended
November 30. Robbins &amp; Myers
had. a loss fro m ,continuing opera·
tlo)ls; of $1,000,00l or 46 cents per
s h~ . in cluding a s:m.ooo provision
!Or . closing a plant. 'fl'&lt;&gt; loss
~mpa rcs ""'h nN income from
continuin g otx•rat ions of $301,000 or
13: &lt;;ents per share during the
~ pa ra bl e period in fiscal 1985.
Nrt. .sales for the fi rst quart£,. of
fiscal 19?.6 were $21i.7 milllon. down
fl'Om $:19A million in the compara·
bto.198.1 quarter.
- lnl- lurting discontinued opera·
tto,ns . nr t income in the fir st quarter
of ·flsra l 1985 was $132.000 or 6 ~nt s
per share.
Wall attlibuted the- quarterly loss
to the continuing slump In tb'
ct&gt;mp utN indu stry . "Our Motor

S19 3 .::IH

Sale Price 18900. trade equity or
cash down 11,000, annual financed
$7900. 48 monthly payments of
Sl93Jli. 7.9% annual percentage
rate , fixed rate GMAC financing with
approved credit. Stock No. 1414.

CELEBRITY 4 DOOR
ONLY

TEN YEARS - Rob Allen
was given a HJ.year service
award by Bob E•ans Fanns,
Inc., during the finn's recent
Christmas dinner al Buckeye
Hills career center.
FIVE YEAR HONOREJ!li - Bob Evans Fanri!l, Inc., employees
with five years servloo honored recerttly were, left to right - Roderick
Pontius, Jack Laile and Larry Priest.

$2 24~RTH

Sale Price 110,400, trade equity or
cash down 112QO, amount financed
'9200, 48 monthly payments of
1224, 7.9% annual percentage rate.
ftxed rate GMAC financing .with ap·
proved credit. Stock No. 1438.

and Control Systems Division,
which derives a large majority of
Its business from original equip·
ment manufacturers in tiE o!!lce
automation market, has been
greatly affected by the slowdown In
this market." he said.
"Most of our customers have
made sizeable cutbacks in produc·
Uon resulting In declining new
orders, order cancellations and
pushouts for us In recent months.
Net sales In this division were oown
22'7. in the flrstquartercomparedto
a year ago, and shipments continue
to decline."
Wall said that lnresponse tothese
conditions tb' division has lowered
production rates, laid off non·
essential production personnel, and
scheduled temporary shutdowns of
production facUlties.
According to Wall, division over·
head Is being reduced through
reductions In· salaried staff and
expense curtaiiments. To turt!Er
reduce expenses and to bnprove
marketing efficiency, tiE Electro·
Craft Motor Products Division and
the Electro·Craft Electronic Sys·

A.P.1. GMAC FINANCING
ON SELECT MODELS

SIMMONS
308 E. MAIN·ST.

POMEROY, OH;
.'

JACKSON - Members of the
Gall!pol!s Federal Land Bank
Association have approved a reso·
Iutlon to consolidate Into a dlstrict""de FLBA. The Dec. 12 vote was
approved by !Jl.4%of the members
voting. The vote signifies which
Land Banks wish to become part ct
the disttictwtde Federal Land Bank
Association. N proposed districtwide association must meet flnan·
clal and other criteria In order to
obtain FCA approval.
Of tb' 59 FLBAs voting In Ohio,
Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee.
5.1 supported consolidation .. Stock·
holders voted by proxy through
December 10 or in person at the
December 12 special stockholders ·
meeting.

ImlER one-year service awards for Bob E\oans
Fanns. Inc., employees went to Vlrglnla StiDwell,
terns Division have been combined,
he said.
He stated that anot!Er move to
reduce overhead and to Improve
production efficiency is the closing
of the division's Winnebago, Minn.
plant and tb' permanent relocation
of all operations from the (ac lllty to ·
the Amery, Wise. plant. The
W,OOO provision booked In the first
quarter Is for the cost of this llXlve.
Wall said that despite losSes and
attendant cost·cuttlng measures

Lois Mitchell, Bryan HamUton, Ernest Edwards,
Ivan Bea•er and Steve Pyles.

the division Is maintaining Its
Investment In new products and in
the development of technical pro·
grams for tb' future.
Wall said the company's Fluids
Handling Division "continued to
have good results. Incoming orders
have remained relatively fiat In
recent quarters. Nevertheless, net
sales in this division were up BW
compared to a year ago."
Concerning tb' future. Wall said
"Robbins &amp; Myers Is continuing Its

OLDS.-CAD.
CHEVROLET

HOURS:

PHONE: 992·6614

MON.-WED.-FRI. 9 TO 7
TUES., THUR. 9 TO 5:30
SATURDAY 9 TO 4

"

.

. 'PLANT MANAGER - Cha.rles IWney was recently ap. 1JOlniL'CI as plant manager lor
1-' •Jder:d ~logul. Roney will have
m j,rall responslb!Uty for the
ln!'lntenancc department and
-e~Wlronm ental matters. He Is a
gr'aduatc of West VIrginia Un~
•~lt,Y :u1d lnL~ been wllh
'li:edcnd Mogul since 1918. Ills
tll0$t nocent position ha.• been·
Industrial r n gl n cert ng: ,
supervisor.

program to reduce costs and
control expenses so as to operate as
efficiently as possible during this
slow period. We expect the next few
months to b' extremely difficult.
We are hopeful for Improvement by
our third quarter. but that will bf'
dependent on Improvement In the
computer Industry," he added. " We
believe the company Is positioned to
take advantage of an upturn in the
computer Industry when it comes,"
Wall concludPd.

Mid-December car sales off

AM;C to debut open
air utility vehicle

'Ius lot

financing or rebates of up to $1 ,OOJ
on selected models.
Domestic carmakers had li·
mited, higher Interest rate incen·
lives in place on some models
during the middle of December but
they did little to rekindle showroom
activily. as buyers seemed to walt
for lowPr Interest rate offers to
come along.

Gallipolis native
chosen VP of
Federal Resen-e
Bank of Cleveland
CLEVElAND -The Board of
Directors of the Federal JU&gt;serve
Bank of Cleveland has elected
Lester M. Selby as Senior VIce
President and ~retary. effective
January 1, 1986.
Selby w111 serve as Senior VIce
President responsible for Administrative and Personnel Services, and
as Secretary to the Board of
Directors. He joined the Bank in
1957, and was elected an officer in
1963. He was promoted to VIce
President and Secretary In 1973.
Besides being Secretary, he has
served as sen lor officer responsible
fo r various Bank departments, and
he also served two terms as
Secretary to thf&gt; Conference of
Presidents of lhr Federal Rf'serve
System.
A Gallipolis native, Selby ell'fhed
a B.A. degree from the College of
Wooster. Woostrr. Ohio. He is also a
graduate of the Ohio School of
Banking and of the Stonier Graduate School of Bankin g at Rutgers
Unlve•stty . .

Daniel appointed dean
at Rio Grande College

DETROIT IUP!) - American r:1 the World War II Jeep made
Motors Corp. Friday said It wlll about 45 years ·ago.
The fou r· seater Wrangler-YJ will
debut an all·neW open air Jeep
RIO GRANDE - Nathaniel V.
be
offered In two models - a
sports utility vehicle this spting
Daniel
has been appolnt'ect Dean of
known as the Wrangler in the standard model with a soft top and the Schqol tlf Liberal Arts and
hal! ·metal doors and a Laredo
United States and the'Y J In Canada.
General Studies at Rio Grande
hartop
with full metal doors.
AMC Chaltman Jose DedeurNEW EMPLOYEE - Susan
AMC spokesman Jolm McCand: College.
waerder
said
the
new
four·
wheel·
Daniel will leave his current post
Sisson Is now employed at the
less said that oo prices will be
drive
aeep,
to
be
built
at
Brampton,
at
Ebnlra College In ~ lmlra , N.Y.,
Chateau Beauty SUJa In POIJieo
announced for !he Wrangler-YJs
Ontario,
Is
not
a
replacement
for
.
where
he serves as Consultant In
roy. A 18112 ~190 ll'llduuntil April but that because of more
the
Jeep
CJ.7,
whJch
will
be
phased
Administrative Services and will
ate from Metp IIIIh School !!he
out this month at Its Toledo, Ohio standard equipment It wiD be bring an extensive background in
has received lnlnlng from lhe
priced above the · CJ·7, which
plant.
higher education to Rio Grande.
Wella HDd Goldwell Colomg Co.
, retailed for $7,725.
"We are pleased Dr. Daniel wlll
He Indicated the new model.
She WSIS pre\'lowJiy employC!J al
McCandless said about '30,lXXl of
be
joining us," Dr. Ray Boggs, Vice
which
contains
no
major
compoHeadquarters In GaiBpolls and
the new models wlll be buUt for the
President
for Academic Affairs,
nents
built
by
Its
French
partner
al the Top of the Slalrs In
1986 model run .
said.
"His
educational
background
Pomeroy. She lakes appolnl- · Renault, Is designed to provide a
"We are confident It will Increase
more comfortable "on-road" ride
ments on Monda,y11, WecktesJeep's sales share ln ,IIE four·wheel· and experience will add consldera·
wren compared wl(h the earlier CJ
days, Thul'8days aDd Frltl.ays
drlvti market," Dedeurwaerder bly to our Institution. We look
and e•enlngR.
'
.series, which are dlrect decendants
said.
··"'

'

Gallipolis FLBA
oks consolidation

DETROIT !UP!)- The nation's move Its bulgillli inventories of
major automakers . report a 15.8 more than 1million unsold vehicles.
Last Dec. 26, the No. 1 carmaker
percent drop In sales for midkicked
o!! a 7.9 percent financing
December, the period ju~t -prior to
offer
on
a wide variety of Its cars
the latest round of cut·rate incen·
·and
light
tr,ucks . Ford Motor Co.
live offers.
quickly
matched
GM, but Chrysler
'!'he Dec. 11-20 period was before
Corp.
opted
vto
continue
its pro·
General Motors Corp. touched off a
'w round of sales !ncen t lves to gram, which offers 8.5 percent

S·17 s.i~~

1986 PONTIAC 6000, 4 DOOR

TIIREE·YEAR service awards went to Richard Bees, left, and PoDy
Fowler.

Robbins &amp; Myers·
reports first
quarter loss

T.O .P '12.280 .32

AIR CONDITIONING
CRUISE CONTROL
AM-FM STEREO with CASSETTE
RUST PROOFt4G &amp; FABRIC PROTECTION

ONE YEAR service awaMi for Bob E•ans Fanns,
Inc., employees went to the following during the
finn's annual Christmas dinner last month at

'

down.
Sale Price
S10,99S

AUTOMATIC TRANS
SOFT RAY GLASS
RH and LH SEAT RECLINERS
REAR WINDOW DEFOGGER ·

..·

•

Sale Price 18200, trade equity or
cash down 11000, amount financed
$7200, 48 monthly paynttnts of
1175.00. 7.9% annual percentage
rate, fixed rate GMAC financing with
approved credit. Stock No. 1490.

with only ••95.00

January ~· 1986

01 LAY IT AWAY FOR

lililiiiii~~~~R;ililili~=~~-~i~~iii~iiii=;••=i

ONLY

48 months, 7,9°/o

·

SPA PURCHASED

ON ANY

NOVA 4 .DOOR

84
$255
PER MONTH

~.nti..o~ Section ·D·

.

985-3301

ONLY

i"m.... -

THIS COUPON'• WORTH SlOO.OO

CAVALIER 4 DOOR

THOIIPSOI

Windham ttl. rnr,d~:• · sr '"'
V. ~ l ('f 71 . ~"'\l' l'hti.J 'i.t
Woost('f Trl '-'-a' li. \\ Hul rlT" 'IIi
Wort hlnjlton ll'lr1s 1\.! ~ - ~nrn til
Yr,.JJ\1 S 7ft. i'ourt~ Wrl-.rn 1 ~
\' 0\Jfl! ~~ til. Youn+: Chm-..-. r:
\'ou[l! Monrt'l 'fl Pln.m1rn.ll1 'I!
Z1rnf'~\1lk• 1;.1 I n~hoctno 'i7
7.arw·~ HrN,T:m" "fi \\ .\1u'k ·~o~ r.!nt

you will finally take an antelope or
this spring. Maybe this is the year
mule deer hunt w t west or maybe a
spymg black bear hunt In Canada.
You might even be one of tb' lucky
ones who gets to pursue rroose or
elk In '86. Or, perhaps you would be
pleased If you couldjustget tb' little
woman out of the, house , to
accompany you on one of your
weekend adventures.
Regardless of what your outdoor
wants are for '86, It Is sureyru have
a long time to ponl!llr the thoughts
and plan the trips.~er all. this Is
just January. The first month of\ he
new year.
But walt a minute; I just read In
an outdoor magazine last week
where hunters applying for 1986 elk
permits In Wyoming must have
thelr application In between Jan. 1
and Feb. 1. If you were planning
such a trip, that wouldn't really give
you much time, would It?
Most western states where per·
mlts are Issued on a drawing hasls
hold early drawings. Some as early
as February right .through until
June or July.
Maine's rooose permit appllca·
tlons need to be in by tb' end of
April and permit drawers are
notified by July.
Some states such as Wyoming
and South Dakota most always
have permits left over for antelope.
I understand the same usually
holds true for Wyoming mule deer
permits. So, some western hunts
are stlll available I'Ven if you miss
the drawings.
If you might be thinking of a hunt
where permit drawings are not
necessary, It Is still not to early to
begin checking guides and outfit·
ters for that special hunt. Most
outfitters book early on a quota
basis. Once the quota Is filled they
take no more hunters. Early
bookings are llXlst advisable.
Whatever your thoughts or plans
though, we have a full new year of
wtdoor experiences to look for·

Muzz.le Loading Supplies

11US PERSONALITY oought a
one-dollar insurance policy in 1961
from Rotartan C. Mac McGinness,
a 24-hour policy which got a lot of
publicity and helped achit&gt;ve a
press box at the Gallipolis foot hall
field off Fourth Avenue.
ED CLARK'S "Sun Spots" CO·
lurnn in the J ackson Journal·
-Herald Dec. 30 was mostly about
Jolm Weber. Ed wnJte. In part:
"Jolm Weber lived a ful l and usefu l
life. He had many interests, was an

BY TOM BELVILLE
Special Co!Tespondent
GALUPOLIS - With tb' arrival
of the new year '86, the memories d.
the year past linger on. For the
hunter and fisher 1985 had It's
bright rooments and tt's dlsapp)lnt·
ments as well. I'm sure. From a
hunter's standpoint '85 was a good
year for me. But, I look forward to
the coming year with great antlcl·
pation and expectation.
What Is your special rutooor
dream for 1986 that could possibly
come true? Might It be a 10 point
buck during oow or gun season.
How about an 8 pound Iargeroouth

•

Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

forward to the leadersh ip ne ca n
bring to ·US in t,hr area of liberal
arts."
.
Daniel has also S&lt;'rved since 1\QJ
as Assistant Acad~mic Dean at
Elmlra College. 1-!.e was also the
Dean of Instruction at Patrick
Henry Community College ·in Mar·
llnsville, Va .. from 1971-1918. He
also serv~ there as Assistant
Professor of English and Director
of Student Affairs from 1961-1971.
Daniel re&lt;:eived a Bachelor of
Arts degree in English from
Davidson College In Dqvidson,
N.C .. and earned his Master r:1 Arts ·
and Doclor of PhilOsophy degrees
from the University of VIrginia.

•

�Page- D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Po,meroy- Middleport-Gallipolis; Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

January 5, 1986

Christian militias split over peace acCord
• BEIRUT. Lebanon 1UP]) - PoUcy differences between ChriS
llall militia leaders took a colliSIOn
course Saturday. jropardtzlng the
controversial Synan· backed peace
agreement to end near~ 11 yea1sof
civil war, political sources said
The mtemal criSIS, the most
senous within the Clu ISI!an mil
lila's camu smce 11roseagamst the
traditional Chnst1an leadership last
March. also threatened to split the
mil1tia mto camps loyal to 1ts
leader Ellc Hohe1ka and his
hard llne ch1ef of staff, Samn
Geagea, the sources sa1d
'The criSIS has been bre" mg f01

some tune

llUt If

has no"' come mto

the open " 1th the conf1scallon of the

pro-Geagea AI Mass1ra magazme
Saturday ' said one ChiiSitan
milll!a source, who decUned to lx·
named
"Hobetka's men entered the
pnntmg press where ttxlay sedition
of AI Masslra was bemg pu 1
together and destroyed e\ erv tssur
together with the offset plates .md
procfs They left nothmg sa 1d the
soureP
Hf' sa1d the magazme v. hJch ua"
to ha'" appeared on !be streets

Saturctn. contamed

S£'\ f'IJ I

a111

cles cnttca l of the peace accmd
Hobe1ka Slglled ~ 1th the Shut e

Amal and D1uze P!ogiessl\e SoCiah st Part) m Damascus last
·week
'One of the at ttclcs spoke of a
teccnt heated and long argument
trtwren Hobr1ka and GN1.gea ovet·
the accord Anothet 1atsed the
followmg quesuon
Is Syna s
frlendshtp morl' lffiportanlthan the
untty of Ch1 tsllan ranks&gt; the
source sa1d

"Thts IS not llkc a c1lsts between
pohllctans and the miltltas Both
Hobetka and Geagl'a dfl'slmngand
each has Ius suppoJ1ot s ~!I hill the
Lebanese rOI CCS
!\ Cl ISIS
betwet•n the t\1. a mrn 1s a 'C'n
danget ous thmg. he satd
Both tho Leba nese F"orres
themsei\('S and the (S\ n a n
backed\ peacr agJeement could be
verv SCllOUSIV jCOpa! d!Zt'!l
the
~ou ref' S&lt;lJd
The Chi tsltan mil t!Ja Vo tce of
Lebanon confumed 1\llhoul com

ment , that the magazme was
conftscated @thet ChtiS!tan mil tlta
sources said the mc 1dent was an
mtPI nal mal! PI

Hohet ka 2R and Geagea m hts
mtd 30s took 01e1 command of !be
Lebanese F"m CE's 1n a blood less
coup last ~1a1 ch ,\flO! toppling
leadet s IO\dl ro PlesJdenr Amrn
\rt'md! el

Smce then, the Lebanese Forces
have taken control or tbe once
Phalanglst Party owned Voice, of
Lebanon radio station and the
party's official newspaper, AI
Amal. They also opened television
statiOn LBC and started AI Masslra
to advocate the militia line.
Pollttcal sources satd the two
men agree on the need lor peace but
differ on such Issues as Christian
concessions to Lebanon's Moslems
and relations with Syria
"Hobelka Is more of a polltlctan
and thus more flextble Geagea ts a
real hard· llner, a fighter F"or him,
bending ts not verv easy," ono&gt;
source said
The ChriStian nulltia criSis coln
ctded with prpparahons by the
government to call for a U N
Security Coo nell meeting to protest
Israeli actions m southern Lebanon,
espectaily the "expulsion" of vlllag
ers from Kounlne
Christian Vo1ce of Lebanon radio
sa1d a complalnt would he lodged
after Pnme Minister Rashid Ka
ranu conferred wtth Prestdent
Amm Gemayel, who returned
F"ndav from talks With his Syrian
counterpart. Hafez Assad
It was the prestdent's lOth
surnmtl wtth Assad, and sources
satd he would use the ll'Xt few days

A glimpse of prices in 1790
BY JAMES SANDS
Spectal Com&gt;Spondent
According to an old ledger book
discoveJed m 1890
and pubhshed m
the
Galhpolts
Journal ' Joseph :.
deVachl 111 hose '"'
house

'"'e feat ure

toda\ 1

came to

Gallipolis m 17!Wl
as an agent for a landowner "ho
r&lt;'ma1nf'd m PR I ts In order to gl\ r
a prope1 accountmg of the monif's
expended b\ de\'acht on brhall of
the

\a ndo,~n(&gt;r

Mon"teur rlf'Vacht

kept a tournai, "htch gwes a
glimpse of pnces ill 179().9!
Upon hts arm al In GalltpoUs
deVachl patd lJ pence fm one
turkey He bought 11 from the store
mn by the Sctoto Company There
11 e1e about 30 huniPIS 1nearly all
Amertcan 1 11 ho kept the store
stocked 11 llh game
deVacht boul'(hl veniSOn about
e~en 11cck pav ing lhiee cents a
pound We note tha t some ttems
that had to be b10ught from a
dtstance cost plentv Sugat cost the
equl\ alent of 60 pounds of 1 cniSOn

or bear meat Bea1s must have

O~E of Galha's landmark.' l• this structun', hutlt hetwet&gt;n 1811
1~2:! h) ,JoS&lt;•ph G deVad!l "'"' canwtotheOid Frrnch ( tt~ m 1790

and

as a

~11\ t•rsnut h

de\ acht "as aL~ an 11grnt for the P,\n,r.Ullrutdowner IllS
.u t ount hook of 1'700 "'"·~ rt'iiL~f'IJVt• rt•d .1 't ntun later Md gav£~ ,,
ghrnll"'~" mto tltt• pm '""' of it £" ml;j m t .trl;\o (, tlhpolL' l'he stmdure "- ·lS
tl n guMII~

knm4n .-.."'the de\.u.:ht ap .u1nwnt ..

...---Local briefs:----.

to discuss the agreement with
Chr.lstta11 leaders to try lo lron out
differences before returning to
Damascus next week
Clfflctals started work F"rlday on
drafting a complaint agamst " Is
raell aggression" In southern Le
banon followlng a raid on Kounlne

by the lsraell·backed South Le
banon Army Monday night
Lebanese newspapers have ac·
cused Israeli forces of expelling
hundreds of Kounlne residents, but
Israeli officials say some left
voluntarily while others fled dunng
the SLA search for weapons and

FAA plans
widespread
spending
reductions
WASHINGTON (UPit- Federal Aviation Admin
lstration staff may be laid off or furloughed due to
"severe constralnts" Imposed on spendlng by the
agency chief In anticipation of budget reductions,
mtemal agency documents show
'
The cost-cutting
measures, which lnclude agency·
l\1de hiring freezes ln some employmenl categones,
wo&gt;re out lined In orders signed by FAA Admlnlstra tor
Donald Engen
The orders, copies of which were obtamed F"rlday
by United Press International, were distributed
Thursday to F"AA employees nallonwlde.
Air tralflc controllers, aviatton Inspectors and
security speclailsls are exempt from the htrlng
freezes, allo"1ng I he FAA to proceed with tis plans to
augment those workforces
But the orders could lead to cutbacks In the ll,IXKJ
agency lechniclans who malntam and rppalr crttlcal
air traffic control systems at a ttme when lnternal
studies show the number of thesespeclallsls Is rapidly
dwlndllng
Reaction from a Jittery avtation community ranged
from renewed calls for the removal filhe FAA as the
manager of the nation's aliways to charges by an
employees' union that the plan Is a "fiscal act of
terrorism "
The orders were Issued at the close of international
aviation's deadliest year, ln which more than 2,tro
people died worldwide ln crasbes
'I havf' ttxlay ImpoSed severe constralnls oo
contract mg., travel and other activities," Engen satd,
assertiJlg the llll'asures are necessary because
Congress aulhorlzed $55 million less than the F"AA
requested for Its 19~ budget
Engen noted an addttional 5 percent budget cut IS
expected m March under the newly enacted
Gramm Rudman budget balancing taw which man·
dates acrosstheboard spendmg cuts U de!tctt
reduction targets are not llll't
"While we will attempt to avmd doing so,
reductions-In force and furloughs are possibillttes,
the extent of which cannot be determined until we
have our final budget numbers," Engen said
"Meanwhile, I ask for your support m holding
spending to a mlnlrnum whtle we contlnue to keep
safely as our top prlortly "
Stephen Hayes, a spokesman for the F" AA, declined
to give further details of the cost cuttmg plan
He said the orde'ilf give '"short term" spendmg
guidance lo F"AA offilllals in fteld offices while plans
are formulated on how to deal wtth Gramm·Rudman
requirements
Howard Johannssen. president of the ProfessiOnal
Airways Systems SpecialiSts, the technicians uruon,
satd of the possible layoffs, Thts IS a fiscal ac t of
terrorism ·
Engen's orders will 'mduce a "hole new slate of
broader causes (of safety problems! tha t Is gomg to
cause more and more dtsaster," Johannssen satd
The orders wlll ' ftnd out what the natural disaster
level IS m the name of fiSca l responslbtl!ty "
Wilham Jackman vtce presldenI of the Air
Transport Assoclal!on a trade orga ntzat!On repres·
cntlng most major US airlines and carriers, satd his
group Is 'deeply concerned about reported cutbacks
ill FAA programs, particularly when therf' Is a $3
btiUon surplus m the av1a110n trust fund"

d ' ' 'hi( ](' OHnrd h\

,,,h\

\\ ,1\l,md

Punw 1• 1\

f'IJ BUC NOTICE
llll ISI101{U 1l PI

-

( ou nll"\ rn usll ..,111~£'1

lt1hnm PJ\Ch('('k

'-' J s md K led ~

11de::t ' h\ ,1 Highl a nd ( ounl\ g1 dnd run on r h ~ rgrs of
ff' lolliOU " dSl:iUa 11 1 •m!Jl t ln )i! \\ 11h l'\ Jdf'ncr· dtH.l f .11 1'\ 1ng a m ncC'a lCYI

v. rt~pun
lhl' lh n gP" \' ttl (J it'Cl 1n rurn t'(IIOn \\ llh '&lt;..holiltng m 1
nfJI'ld 1.1' ' nIX'&lt;- ll
P,l\ l ht'fh d ( , , ' '- nf11'lrl nc~ l 1\ f \~ h J'it' 1r 1I fl(l l11t I' I lonmf' I 'liP 1"
rh&lt;~J gt'd \\ !lh (,hoollng l ~u 1\ \\ JSP ll du n ng m &lt;:~rgu mrnt V. 1~r

(dl -j

'i.tld he• siPPI)('(! m bf'lwrf'n

P rl\f hr'&lt; k n nd I IO\d HO\.\t f'l

\~ , 1s fnT'&lt;l "1th thP hullr t g 1n1 mg hh hract

trf'&lt;Jim£'nt

r11 d

nra 1b\

!'.

d ll d a

s hut

Ht."' \~.Js JC'iPasrd :.~ fwr

ho~pllal

r . l\ Chf'("k ~ 7 \.\hOrlOI..-\t li\("S JnM CIIlf'lf a

CJ !Sfll\ o nbondand! S
to br "'' atglHXI Thursda; m H1ghland Cou nt\ Common Plras Court

Tho T141pen I'II011·Chest0f
Water Dirtnet ll llVitilg t:Md1
for an lddrtion to the exiSting
Treatment pt.,t located at
Loog Bottom. Ohio for tho
purpo~e of t.&gt;uling 1 11and by

genOfi!IOr This lddilion to bo
approxtmatetv 12 'x 18' and

plans and specification• are
at tho olfico of tho
Oistnct. 39661 lief JO Rold.
RoodMIIe, Oh)o Offoco loco·
. . , 11 Rt 7, 1 mlto north of
IVOIII!ble

Eootom High Sdlool A

del&gt;·

oort of 110.00 wilt bo -

llfY H plana .- romr111ed from

tho

office.

rrrfundoble H .,.

tum.t to our

~

In Ullble

condition

Unit·ersitv union vote scheduled
AI !IF :\S1 l 1PI 1- 0 htn l ll J\rJSJh clf't!C d i\\ Ol kt
f' i('{' tll ) n nr:-:1 rnonr h 1Hl \\ h( flir T to tn m d un1nn

' "c.tn\olt •m 111

J1u S l ,1!1 l~ mplmmrn1 Htlttllon ~ Hoa1d sc~1d I hi
m 11n

c,l mpu .;;

&lt;1nd a ll btan r h

cdmpust•s

d l l'

\' Hk PI S diO U s
r II)..!J blt ll \fl!( 111 an

\('f'tlon to d rctdc 1[ the\ " &lt;
:mt to ;o m fhf' An!(' ! I&lt; d fl l"Prlrl at JO n of
St .llf• ( ou ntv and Munc1pa l Emp!m("('s umo n '

t

,\ ~'SCME

1&lt; lh~ only UO\Oll that "Ill bt' on lhP !&gt;allot

Athens closes fire statiorJ

Bid optotong will bo hold ..
1 00 P M Jonuorv 1llttho
olfico of tho Dil1ricl The
Diatrict
tho right 1D
fOjOCt any Of II bids

reoerv•

t12) 22 29 1116, t2 4tc
Publtc Nottce

Lott V•ry trt_..d~ black brown
and wh1te mal• dog with blue
IY" Jtrtcho Ad 304 8715

Yard Sale

"Gallipolis

'

81. 448·9525

9

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER

$35,000 JUST REDUCED! FINISHED BASMENT MAKES THIS
A 4 BEDROOM HOM£ WITH 2 KITCHENS 2 BAHTS RECREA
TIDN ROOM SPACIOUS BACK VARD, GASHEAT, CENTRAL AIR
COND CONVENIENT LOCATION JUST OUTSIDE CITY
VDU'VE SEEN THE REST - NOW- SEE THE BEST IT IS A
DELIGHT TO SEE A HOME THIS WELL CARED FOR BEAUTI
FUL CARPETING AND DRAPES , 3 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS
EQUIPPED KITCHEN HAS OAK CABINETS ON FIVE BEAUTI
FUL ACRES CITY SCHOOLS $54 000
BULAVILLE ROAD - BRICK AND FRAME RANCH ON AP
PROX I ACRE 3 BEDROOMS ATTACHED GARAGE YOUR
BANKBOOK WON T BLINK AN EVE $37 000
VERY NICE BRICK AND FRAME RANCH - 3 BEDROOMS
LARGE FAMILY ROOM HAS fiREPlACE m IN KITCHEN, DIN
lNG AREA 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE FENCED BACK VARD
HAS SUPER l6X32 POOL KYCIR CREEK SCHOOLS $58,000

SERVICE htat., ftrm, lntlque
llquk11tkln ule• Ltcenaed Ohio
and W•t Vlruinle 304-'?73-

5785 or 304 n3 &amp;430

BRICK RANCH ON 16 ACRES, $98,000 - 4 OR 5 BED
ROOMS FAMILV ROOM OFFICE OR DEN 2 COMPLETE
KITCHENS, NICE BARN SUITABLE FOR HORSES VERV
h "'"c" SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

Wanted To Buy

We pay cuh for late modal cl"n
uaed Clrt
Jim Mink Chev Old• Inc
Bill Gene Johnton
814 -448 - ~72

Buytng Raw Fur Beef and Deer
hid.. Selltng trapping tupplie•
Whe1t and nlte lites Oeol'file
Buckley 614 864 4761
Houn129pm

WANTED TO BUY ultld wood 8t
coal heaters SWAINS FURNI TURE, Jrd &amp; Ohve St Galhpo
111 Cell 814 448 3159

$39.900 COLONIAL STYLE BRICKAND FRAME RANCH- 3
BEDROOMS. LARGE EAT IN KITCHEN ATTACHED GARAGE
VERY GOOD LOCATION JUST MINUTES fROM CITY RE
CENTY REDECORATED
$25 000 - NICE 2 STORV FRAME 3BEDROOM&lt;; LEVELLOT
HAS NICEGARDEN SPACE CONVENIENT lOCATION IN CITY
BETTER TAKE A QUICK LOOK IT'S RICEO TO SELL FAST•
LAND- APPROX 160 ACRESGUY AN TWP SOME TillABLE
ROAD FRONTAGE. $50 000 OWNER WILL SPLIT lAND AND SELL
77 ACRES"rt!R $20 000 OR 83 ACRE TRACT FOR Sll 000
FARM - ROUTE 218 - APPROX 82 ACRES 2 BE DROOM
FRAME HOM£ PLUS MOBILE HOME14JOKUP BARN OTHER
BU ILDINGS TOBACCO BASE $39 000

(i)
- ·-

AUDRY F CANADAY. REALTOR
MARY FLOYD REALTOR, «6· 3383
25 LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS OHIO

IB
"'"'ao

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992·2156
ll'list&amp; - 67H333
Announcemen Is

Pubhc Nottce
Each Bid shall boOCC0111Jifl
iod by either a """"""' bond to
the aaullfactoon of tho Owner
Of 1 certified check on a
10lvant blink '" the sum of ten
porcont (1 0%1 of tho 'amoont

of tho Bid. rr\ade payl!bletotho
City of Gollipotio n a QUIItan
toe that Htho Bid II accepted, a
Conrr.ct will be entONd into
and i1l performance property
socured
The mammum wage rates
applicable ID tho worll as
p r o d - by the State of
Ohio. Department of l.abOf,
will bo ul!lld in tho Contractl
ewardod lor the worlr Tho
curJ.U Preveiting Wage Deti!W
mlrumon • 11Wded n the
specificationa now on file
The right 11 . . . - by the
Owner to tOfOCt any.,. ol bldo.
ro _,.,.any inloimolity in bids
f8CIIiwd and to occopt 111y bid
which 11 dNmod to bo mo11

favonoble.
No bidder may wtlhdraw h••
bid for I period of 60 cloystho ochldulld do- tome 101"
tho rOCOipt of tho bids

Jan6&amp;t2

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and ltwrng m.chtn•
NPIIt Plrtt and IUPPIIH Ptclt
up and dehverv. Otvlt Vacuum
Cluner o ne half milt up

Georges Creelt Ad

Call 814

446 0294
Recme Gun Shoottponaor.ct b'(
Ractne Gun Club Every Sundav
beg1nnmg at 1 00 p m Ftetorv
Choke 12 gutgt thotguna

No Huntmg or trnpaumg
Pickens Farm at Ftatrock All
prev10us penmnron cancelled
Paul A P•c:tlent

4

Gtveaway

TOP CASH p11d tor 83 model
1nd newer uMd cara Smith
Butclc-PontiiC 1911 EIS1em
Ave Oalhpol11 Cell 814 448
FOUND Cocker Spen1al VICinity
of football fJIId Gallipoh1 Call

Keep those New Veers Reaolu
110n1 lose we1ght fee l great
eam extra dollars 10AM BPM
614 446 47'*5 ~

992·:U76

Dall; Gate Admissions ..
Memberships
Season Passes
Concessions
State Aid .
County Aid .
Income from Advertising .
Short Term Rentals ... ,
Long TErm Rentals .. .
Income F"rom Interest..
Sale of Equipment .. .
Miscellaneous Income.
Total Receipts for 1985
Balance in Treasury
(1984 ending balance)
Grand Total of Receipts
and Carry Over .. ,.

7 mo old JKJP molhltf Reg Irish
Setter fethet' 1 Call 614 2&amp;6

6639

Male German Shepherd L111
than 1 year old Call &amp;1 4 949

2181
6 male Collie mt•ed pupptet and
9 doberm~n pupptel 3 mete 6
femal e 614 992 7468
To QIVI IWI';' puppl.. miMed
breed mother 11 1 betgle

ln s h Setter end Austr1111n
Healer mllted pupplet to suva
.-way 2 to 3 montht c»d Bleck .
co lor~ With features !tire th e
Saner 614 742 2~78
Blk femall! and blk wlth tin
ma te German Shepherd s tloth
AKC regtstered with papert

304 675 4092
1 ugly PUPPV

befo re 4 00

304 882 3427

22 Money •o Loan

2

1

In Memortam

In loving memory of

PEARL DARST

who passed away 1
year ago today.
Wt low you and !l1lss you
Slnet you've &amp;0111 IIWIY,
But we know you now rest
•n the land of ettmal lily
Sadly mtssed by wtfe, chtl·
dren and crandchtldren

In

Lovn~ Memoty

of

tllis life 2)1NIS
aco. January 4, 1984.

dt~ed

It's betn two years stnca
you weal away
Sill you didn't 10 alone, A part of mt went wtlh you
When Jesus catted you
homo.
So many trmes t dteam of
you
AIMI oftan spuk your lllllle,
Someday my dreams wtll
all come true
In a World that his no 1J1d
Look for me. 111 be comtnc
soon
Just •atl rtstdt the pte
Wo'li walk to1tthtr hind tn
hand
Mitre we'll never hwt lo
Stptrltt
Vtry sadly mlsstd by
Wilt, Irene; Sons &amp;
Famtllls, Dtvld, Vicky &amp;
Brtan Paul &amp; Jotdan

Card of Thanks

Professtonal
Servtces

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

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

Government JObs 116 D40 ffi9,230 Now hmng Cell 805
687 1000 ext A 980 5 lor
current federal ltst

4 bed room
ftre ploce 3 m1
hs, S32 ,600
446 1615 or
1244

house for 1811
ao uth of Gal ll po
Call daya 614
n1gh11 614 446-

God Bless hch and
Everyone
The Milstead Famtly

3 Announcements

(""__,...__..,..__..,1
VIDEO PICTURES

367·7660

br

1 973 Baro n trllt ler 3 bedroom•
furm shed total elec new carpet
a nd furllllure Newly pemled
roof ce1lmg1 and outside Out
door storage bldg co rnet" lot
30 4 773 5612

Ju st 2'h mtles off At 35 Jn
Mason County E•c hunttng &amp;
pnvacy on thrs 133 acres
Adtolrung Corn St11lk State Park
ask1ng $37 000 Must aell Call
614 446 0208 after 5 30PM

Rentals
Houses for Rent

4 rooms &amp; bath new ly deco
ra ted lnqutre 11 9 18 Second
Ave Ga llipolo1
t;2 duplex for rent 2 bdr 2 miles
from Holz er 1 yr old Call
614 446 191 0 or 614 379
2248

Nu:e 3 bdr ho me all kttc hen
apphan cet located Sanders
Dnve GalltpOhl $300 par mo
sec de p
ref requrr ad Call

614·446 0254

3 bdr 8 \lr mlln p1111 Holzer on
Rt 160 1300 mo S150 dap
no pel s Ce ll 614 388 9763
2 bedroom house S210 mo 175
ifeposit 42 Chillrcothe Ad C1 11
614 446 1340 or 614 446

3870

Hou se for rent 5350 mo plus
S 150 dap or for tale 3 bdr
family room bat h &amp; v, located
J lh mt ou t ol GalhpoiJS on Rt
5 88 Cal1 614 256 6789 or
614 266 6206
In Mmen'lllle by the Bulk planl
1 bedroom house Total electric
Partu1lly furniShed 614 992

6215 •• 614 992 7314

6 room house open garage In
Alfred Cummumty Referen ces
and depo11 t required Call 614

985 3849

House or apt for rent Furn.1shed
or unfurnished 614 992 2381
daya or 614 992 &amp;723 evea
Secluded country farm house 3
bedroo m F A heat Socurttv
deposn S250 mo nth 614
742 2877
5 room house and beth m Ra cme
area AvailableJanuary4th Cell

614 992 5a5B

3 bedroom house for rent 1n
Middleport 5225 per month
plus deposit Pay own ulllttl&amp;l
Call 614 992 7607 aH 5
weekdays
large houJe and apartment
unfurntahed 304 675 1366

'

If West goes up,
is South down?

NO RTil
+ AJ 9 4
• '2
K ~ 43
• J 62

There wasn t much play lor slam
Not only dtd the trump sutt have to he·
have but declarer had to hmll h1s
spade losers to on ly one, and also
needed to set up dummys foutl h
spade lor a discard of a losmg heart
What ISmvolved JS a t) pe of double fJ
nesse m spades Declarer can pla v
West forthe K·Q the K t 0 or the Q 10
S1nce two chances ar(' bettpr than

Spec ill Guest S~tker
Ch11f of Ohto Dtviston
of Wildlife

the normal play IS to lead to dum n11
and put m the nme tr that force .. an
honor, declarer can then hope that rho

1 4 86

+

8) James Jacoby

SIX

EAST

WEST
+ Q 10 7
• Q J 10 3
• J7
• Q9 8 3

• K 52
• 98 7
• 10 8 5
10 7 5 4

+

• 863

. AK
Vulnerable Both
Dealer, South
Norlh

West

Pass

I•
3+

Pass

Pass
Pas...

J•
5t

Pass

Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pa~s

Pass
Pass

2 NT

4.
••
a•

Opemng lean • Q

the end of the s!Ofl
When South ftrst pla1 t'd a &lt;padt•
West , who had rea d '""'" bndge
books put up h» qut'en Nm\ "hat' I ll

11

l l' '\Oll n •Jdt' r "' 10 d rr. tde
whflllwr d t'('fart' l m,\dr ht " ._I,Jnl Just
r&lt;'me m bt~r th ~t sn mt' ltmrs second
ha nd h1gh ran put il rno nk e~ wrench

tn to dcrlarrr ' marh men If declat er
no" dertdo&lt; that \l est has both the
k1 ng and the queen of spades he wtll
lo.e '" o spa de tncks and the slam
r ontrart .

Ju st avatlabla 2 apartments lor
rent Call 614 446 9244
Apt on Mam St m Chesh re 5
rooms &amp; bath comp turn Oop
rttq
S200 mo Call 614 245
5818
Furmsh ed efft ctencv apt all
ut1ht1es pa td S 175 mo bes1de
A10 Grande College Call 6 14
446 2054
Effen c Je n cv apa rtment 2
rooms bat h full basement
Furnrshed In Po m e r o~ above
Krogers 614 99.2 62 15 or6 14
992 73 14
New 1 and 2 bed•oom furmshed
apts and house tn M1dd leport
Call 614 9925304 or 6 14
446 1552
2 bedroom furn1shed apt n
M1ddl epon Allut ht JBipaJd Ca ll
614 992 5n84
ln Mtddl epon 1 or 2 bedroom
apts tn a 2 slory house With
yard
$150 &amp; S175 plus
utJhtles 614 992 71 77
In Middleport 1 or 2 bedroom
apts Ut lhtJes tn cluded 5200
plus d&amp;posn 614 9 92 7177

2 br house 2107 L1n coln
Unfu rni shed sto ve and refnger
at or 304 67 5 6747

4 room 11pt WJth b11th Part1ally
furnts hed 614 992 5908
Fu rmshed 1 bedroom apt No
pet s OeposJt reQuJted 6 14
992 2937

42 Mobtle Homes
for Rent

5 room unfu rn11hed apartment
Cell 614 992 5434 or 304
88 2 2566

Furms hed AC ceble no ctt y
tiXIII beauttful tJVI!Ir VIOW tn
Kenauga Fosters Mabtla Ho me
Park Cal1614 446 1602

APARTMENTS mobJie homes
nouses Pt Pleasant end Galhpo
hs 614 446 8221

2 bdr fully furntsh ed 12x6 5

2 br a pa rt men t• 1n Henderson
304 675 1972

conv locauon Upper R 1ver Rd
water pa1d sec dep req utt tld
Call 614 -446 8568

N1ce 1 and 2 br 11partments
downtow11 304 676 2218

12x6 6 Windsor furnt s hed new
carpet gaa heat central atr,
Roush lane in Ch•htr• Cell
614 387 0221 or 814 367
7242
14x70 3 bdr m Centenary Call
614 446 4292
2 bdr furn is hed trailer for rent
Netghborhood Ad Call 614
446 4757
12a:65 mobtle ho me 2 bdr
prefer coup le Call Rd Cell
614 2561110
1982 14x70 wtth 22 h e•
p1ndo 2 bdr Call 614 245
9534
3 bdr tra1ler Add11 on met ro
polltan llousmg approved ch1ld
re n Ill pe11 welcome S150 mo
Cell after 6 00 614 246 96'*5
2 bdr mob1le home for rent
ad u1t1 only no pets ref S. dep
r18Quwed Celt 614 367 7743
N1ca one bdr , c•ntral loc1t1on
m city gas httat CA patio &amp; off
4t_reet p11rkmg Mu at have ref S.
de p" Call614 446-4169

1 Ox 50 mob1le home for rent
Call 614 949 2424
14x70 3 bedroom Parttally
furm1hed $226 per month plu1
dep011t and utiltltet No pet s
614 992 7479
For ~ent w1th optton to buy 2 br
t l 35 month Water furmshed
C•ll m er 4~0 p m 304 67S
1108
One
and two
Hill Road
304 bedrooms
675 3834 Sand

Apartment
for Rent

JA CKSO N ESTATES APART
MENTS !Equal H ou1 1~ Oppor
t unlty ) monthly rent starts at
S 169 lor 1 bedroom end 1204
for 2 bedroo m dep0111 $200
locatttd ne~ r Sprtng VaiiiiV Pln a
andFoodland poolandCablaTV
IIVIIIIbll Off iCI hOUrt II PQISi
bla 101m to• pm1nd 7 pmto 9
pm Monday ~r1d1y Call 6 14
446 2745 or leave m.. aage
Ntcely turmshed mobtla home
aff apt central au 1 nd heat In
City adultl only Call6 14 446

1837

740111 S1cond AVa J bdr t190
mo dtp required Call 814
U8 4222 "-tween 9 &amp; s
Oalun 2 bdr dow"t own com
plata kitchen •li carpel wuher
dryer electric hNt &amp; AC Oap
required Call dlyt 814 ~46
4183 tvl &amp; wetlctnda 614

448 0139

Furn11hed apt , 4 rooms 8t bath,
no p•t• adulta Available Dec 1
c.u 814 448 1519
Ll'1t S room upnelra
lurn lshad kitchen, UOO
plu1 utUttiea 238 ht A'll
&amp; dep, no pets C111 614

4928

apt
mo
Ref
448

Apt tor rent In Henderson. WV

1125 mo Col1814 48·8882

LAYNE 5 FURNITURE
Sotas and cha1rs pnced fro m
S285 to 5895 Tables $50 and
up to 5125 H1 de a bed s 53 90
and up to S5 50 sofa beds
5146 Roc lmf:lrs S225 to
S375 lamps fr o m $28 tu
$ 1 25 pc dmetttts from S10 9
to435 7pc S189a nd up Woo d
table w1th su cha1 rs 5285 to
S745 Desk $1 10 up to 5225
Hutches $550 Bun k bed co m
pleta w1th mallresses S27S
and up to S39li
Baby beds
$ 110 M~tllr esns o r b o x
spr ngs tlJII or twtn S63 f1r m
573 and 583 Oueen set s
S225 4 d r ches ts S4 9 5 dr
chests S59 Be d lr1tmt1s
S20 and S25
10 gun
Gun
c.tbmels S35 0 Ge~s o• electn c
r11nges 5375 Baby ma mes svs
S35 &amp; 545 bed frames 520
525 &amp; S30 k nR frame HO
Good seh: ct on of bed room
su tes rock ers metal cabmet s
head boards S 38 &amp; up \ a S65
Used furn1tu1e Dre SMII &amp; bed
metal off cc des ks 3 m1les ou t
8 ulov1lla Ad Open 9a m to 5pnl
Mon thru 581
614 -46 0],22
GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
Wuhe1s drye rs ref ngentto rs
ra ng es Ska g gs Appllences
Upp er R1ver Rd besJde S tone
Crest Mole! 614 446 7398
Countv Applian ce lnc Good
used 8pp liances and TV sets
Open BAM to 6PM Mon thru
Sat 614 446 1699 627 Jrd
Ave Gal l1polts OH
Valley Furnitu re new &amp; used
la rge 58C 1ton of QUality furn1
lure 1216 Easte rn Ave
Ga ll1pol s
BroyhJII sofa loveseat chau
s olid aack wood ltlm Broyhtll
so l1d oak prem1re top of the lme
tables cocktail neugonal oc
t~tgona l anuque bran trtm 2
t ouchmatJ c nnt 1q ue brass hghts
All 1 ~ ea r old A 1 eJtcellent
con dJtton Call 304 675 7559

Thr ea chrome tables wuh smoke
g lass tops 1 coffee 2ands Call
614 44 6 7588

54 Mt sc Merchandtse

86

"1•ddlepon N 4th Avenue 2
bedroOm furnish ed 1partrnent
304 882 2566
Furn ish ed one bedroo m mpt 1n
upper Potnt Pl eaunl ex t ra n1 ce
no pets phone 304 675 1386

House coal lump &amp; stoker ZJ rVl
Co11 l Co Cell 614 446 1408 .
For sa le fill dirt &amp; l'lay Conte ~l
eruce Oav1son 614 256 1427

11
For rent Sleeptng Rooms and
lig ht hou1e kee pmg rooms Park
Central Hotel Call 614 446
0756
HousekeepJng room range re
fr1g lhare bath male prefen ed
utth111tS pd S 125 Call 446
4416 after 7p n ,

46 Space for Rent

COU NTRY MOB ilE Home Park.
Route 33 North of Pomeroy
Large lots Cal1614 992 7479

8

Help Wanted

NEEDED: RETAIL

SALES PERSON :
ASST. MANAGER:
In local area. Prefer·
sales
expenence and

person wtth

knowledge of

Mobile home lot tn Rto Grande
Oh1o Ca ll 61 4 446 9662

accounts recetvable,
Send resume to P.O.
Box 729, Pomeroy,
Ohm

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

2 bedroom mobil• hom e near
Recma 614 99'2 5858

Upst1111 unfum11hed apt Cll
peted all uttllttel pa id no
chtldren, no Pflfl Call614 446

Soulh
1•

New one bdr afft cJen c)' apt Call
614 446 0390

2 bed room homfl 501 Bu rdette
St 304 675 7207

Redecorated IPt 2 bdr , S 150
to 1250 Clll304 675 5104 or
304 676 6386 or 30 4 675
7898

• AK 6 4
t AQ 6 2

~.mC'

rema1nmg honor IS \\ llh \~e~&lt;! -\nd
tha~·s t'hc wav 11 \\ as but th at ,.. n'H

3 bed roo m house m He nderson
304 675 7448

033 8

SOIJTII

\ravr

HOUSES FOR {UN T 811 Wtl
low l ane 3 bedrooms ltvmg
roo m bath eat m kitchen w nh
washer and dryer hook up ) and
ca rport Renter pays electn c and
water 820 0 per month plus
depOS it
7 11 V1and 3 bedroems b11th
hvmg room dtnmg room kt J
chen laund ry roo m and bas e
mant Renter peys water gas
and elect rt c 8250 per month
plus depostl
1102 V1and 3 bed rooms 2
b11ths hvtng room d1n1 ng room
fomfJ!y roo m a nd kJich en WJth
wa•h cr and drver hookup Ren
lftr p.ays gas water 11 nd e lect nc
S 175 per month Iu s de po1tt
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
26 0 5 J11ckson Ave
2 bed
rooms both k1tchen a nd IJvJ ng
roo m renter payselactn c 6260
per month plu1 dep011 1
1410 OhiO 1 bed roo m l1v mg
roo m kitChen combmot1 on and
beth Renter pays elect ttc ond
water 1200 per rnonth plus
depOSit I
TOWN &amp; CO UNTRY
REAL ESTATE.
Broke r 675 5548

44

James Jacoby

THE GAWA COUNlY
CONSERVATION CLUB
MEETING JAN. B
DINNER 6:30
MEETING 7.00
Mr. Cllylon ukes
&amp; Mr. J1y Sherman
11 ~s to lllccoon
Cl1elt Clel~q~ Committte
All Welcome

2

BRIDGE

Some11mes when your s1de has a fit
tn a sutt plus all the con trols an att"ck
of slam·JtJS' sets m Look ~hat hap·
pened here After North had shown dJ·
amond support Sou th proper)) cue
btd the heart A K North should now
1 have settled for three no trump (Nt ne
htgh·card pomts oppOSi te 19 or 20 are
not qutle enoug h for slam ) Instead he
cue-btd th ree spades and then, over
four clubs JUmped to ftvc dt amonds I
rea lly don t blame South for btddmg

1115 ~,~e· ""

for Rent

14w. 54

'------------...........11!!!~~-------------j

r

f&lt;)

I~~~~====~~~~lF~==~~~~~====:l
41 Houses for Rent
44
Apartm ent

3 bdr home walk -m cedar
closet Kyge1 Creek school d11
trrcl Call 614 446 0648

By owner Must sell moved 3
bdr ranch one c ar garage
wal~tng dtatlnce from North
Galh• Hrgh School Reduced to
t29 900 Call 614 388 8711

33482

unc: food .

TAKEN OF
WEDDINGS AND
SPECIAL EVENTS.

Ltb erty

23

Piano tumng and rapatr tun e up
for tfie ho hday s lptteral dts
count Ward a Keyboard 304
675 5500 or 676 3824

Easy Aasembly Work! $600 00
per 100 Guaranteed payment
No Exper~ence No Sales Datatla
send aelf addressed stamped
envelope Elan V1tal 584 7 3418
Enterpnae Rd Ft Pum:e Fl

CARD OF THANKS
The famtly of Aooa luctlle
MtlstNd expresses thetr
helrtfeh thinks dunna our
sorrow. Spti:~o~l thinks to
the nurses on 4-W at
Holzer, Dr Vallee Rev
Hams for hts comfort111g
messaee. the pallbearers.
and for all those lhat sent

flowers

304 576 2336

5 rooms &amp; bath newly d eco
rated InqUire 8 1 918 Second
Ave OalhpoiJI

Salaries
.......... . $8,586 38
Attlnt to n R N 1 1nd
Laborers
............. 6,374 11
1
LPN 1 Pomeroy Health Care
Gallla County Fair Security
3,795 35 Canter
11 accept1ng aPPlications
Insurances
, , , .. ... .... ..
7,263 32 for eleven to seven ah1f1 nuraes
who enjoy working in long term
6 room house 1 'h uory 'h bath
Non-Payroll Business and
care E11 cellent benefrts Salary shower basment 2 car gerage
Professional Expenses
, . 3,578 18 commensurate w1th area On ly 3'1l ecre1 '" Walnut Twp on SR
Board Members Expenses
..... . .. ..... .1,001 81 tho11 nurHI who enjoy the 790 Cal1614 446 0568
proten1on need apply Apphca
- - - - - - - - ·ICAdministrative Expenses
............... 303 62 ttona acca pt8d throug h Jan 10 By owne r Remodeled 3 bed
room hou se on R1 33 New F A
Taxes, Licenses, Etc
226 92 EOE
ce larg a lot *23 000
Junior F"alr Youth Premiums
........... 17, 153 50 San1tar1an po11t1on open Jn t tle furna
Collect 614 423 -6289
Public Utilities Expense.
16,703 32 Gama County Health Depart -----.,--~ · lc Expettence tn Environ
By owner Statelv 3 bedroom
Special Attractions
.. .... .... ~3. 420 50 menl
mental Sanitado n prafanld A S houaa It 10 E Sl 1n Po meroy 6
Awards, Ribbons and Trophies
.......... .1. 734 13 orR S eltgJble preferred Applt wooded acrn, lamtly room
Photography Service. .
. 1.348 50 cet10n1 are av~1labla at the d1nlng room F A heat 2 beths
Hulth Dap1rtm11nt 1n the Bat•
baaement g1rege S27 000
Premium Books and Other Printing
. 9,966 19 mant of the Courthousa
Collect 614 423 6289
Monday lhry Frid ay 8 12 1nd -------,-~· lc ­
Permanent Improvements, Repairs
Equal Oppo rt un i ty Governmant Hom es from f1 !U
1 4
and Supplies ,.
..\
14,686 14 Employer
repatrl Also delmQutnt tax
Postage .
...... .... .... 242 00
property Call 805 687 eooo
needed In pnvete home to
Ext OH - 9 805 for 1nforma110n
Sanitation
1,003 50 Help
care for San10r C1t1zen Apply
· .Payroll Taxes
2,715 37 174 Plum St Middleport Ohto Rt 2 Ashton, Amngton House
45760
3 bedroom s 1 'IJ baths modern
·Purchase of New Equipment and
k1tchen ba ument 1 acra plua
Equipment Expnse
1.583 13 Help w1nted Mu st be able to PriCed 1n the 40 a Clyde 8owen
Loan Payments and Inter est
10,695 64 work day or evanmg sh 1ft Bttng Jr 304 576 2336
rnume to McCiures Derry hle1n
Sound System Rental
4,265 00 Middleport
E~tter1or comp lete
mtertor
rudy to compl ete All br1ck
Junior Fair Judges .
1,825 00
aff1c1ent th ree bedroom
Amusemenl Rides.... .
31,790 66 WE NEED YOUR PRIOR MIL •nergy
Aancher&amp;ltttng on 1 ocr a Pnettd
ITARY
SERVICE
EXPERIENCE
Miscellaneous Expenses. .
.. 9,024 94 IN THE ARMY NATIONAL on 1nspect10n on ly 304 676
$199,427 21 GUARD Monthly paycheck 2961
Grand Total of Expenses for 1985
ret1remen1 benel1t1 educetlonall 3 bedroom house 2 ecru Cltv
Balance In Treasury as of
aaalatlnca and other benef11s
et~ g as 10 mtnutea from
December 31, 198&gt;
30,053 72 eva
ll abla to our part ttme watar frFor
Slit or long term nmt
Total Expenditures and Balanrf'
$229,480 93 members 304 676 3950 or K11t111r
304 273 2848
1800842 3619
JAN 5

Call

3 bdr larg e lutchan mce utthty
room 1 car g11regB $2 95 mo
Rat &amp; dep requ~red Call 614
446 1358

33482

., $229.480 93

reasonable rete•

41

446 4421

Ee1y A11emblv Work I S600 00
per 100 Guaranteed Payment
No Expar1ence -No Seles Datatl s
sand 1alf acldre:ued stamped
enyelopa Elan Vital 716 3418
Enterpttse Ad Ft Pterce Fl

...... ....... 9,034 33

t ured

HOME OWNERS Aeftn11nce to
low fixed rata U1e aQultyforanv
purpostt leader Mortgage Co ,
614 592 3051

AN or LPN for pnvate duty Call

614

2 bBd

ptnnmg tncluded Must sell Call

5535

S1mtanan Po11110n Open tn the
Gallta County Health Depart
ment E•pananca 1n Env1ron
mental SenJtatlon preferred
R S or R S ehgtble preferred
Appltcattons are availab le at th e
Health Department 1n tne Bale
mant of the Courthouse Mon
day lhru Fr id ay 9 12 and 1 4
Equel Opportumtv Employer

$94,705 ()()
341 ()()
31 ,8&gt;0 ()()
25 192 ()()
4,585 66
10 000 ()()
7,610.00
26,290 55
.1 950.00
.1,687 55
... 200 ()()
.. 16,034 84
$220,446 60

1980 liberty 14J:54

roo m unfum11hed vmyl under

BeautY Shop tor u le Ownerwttl
finance Callevenmga 614 698

AVON Sell Avon pay Chr111mas
btlls lrmJ ted trme start up felt
FREE Call 614 446 3358

GaUipolls, Ohio 45631
FINANCIAL STATEMENT- 1985
1985 Receipts

141170 Fleetwood 3 bdr 1'/J
bath s eJttrll mca owner moved
11nd mu11 1ell Call 614 256
6587 or 614 868 1687

Why pey do uble pnce7 We bUild
btg 4 bdr Early Amertci!Jn Ho mes
$18 996 New model open Call
614 886 7311

t NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALL EY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommend s that vou
do bu1Jne!IS WJ1h peop le you
know and NOT to send money
through the ma1l unttl you have
mveshgated the offann11

SWA I'N
AUCT ION &amp; FURNITU RE 62
Oh11e St Gi:!ll•polts New &amp; u~f!(i
wood coal stoves 6 pc wood LA
swte 5399 bunk beds 5199
antrofl reclmers S99 n91N &amp;
used bl!'droom suJtes rangt~s
wrtng er washers &amp; shoes New
IJVm9room suJt es S199 S599
lamps Hl so buyt ng coal &amp; wood
stoves C~tl l 614 446 31,.59

•

u nfurnttked vinyl und erpen nmg
mcluded Must Sell 304 773
6873

Busmess
Opportumty

51 House hold Goods

I

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

21

Merchandise

1982 14x70 w1th 22 tt expando
on rented lot 2 bdr AC
un derpinn ing porch m e t11 l
bUIIdJng C11ll 614 2 45 9534

18 Wanted to Do

Financial

Government Jobs 5 16 040
S69 230 yr Now hmn g Ca ll
805 68'76000 Ext R 10189
for currant fadenlllat

Buymg de1ty gold 11lver co1ns
rmga Jewelry sterl1ng ware, old
COins. large currency Top pn
CM Ed Burkett Barber Sl1op
2nd Ave Mktdlapo" Oh 614

I

1982 Clayton 14X65 fullv
furn W81har dryer, AC t.mrler
ptnmng S. porch Exc con d
Make an Offer Cal l 614 256
1621 or 614 25 6 6315

1980

Good u•ed deak Call after 6PM

614·448·4053

32 Mobtle Homes
for Sale

3047735873
MOBILE
HOMES ' MOVED 111

W1ll baby s1t1n my tlome 5 do~ s
e week From 7 5 daysh1ft Sea
m person 202 1n E MamSt
Apt 2 Pomeroy Oh

1 1 Help Wanted

614 448·1607

Mob1le hame lot 12 ~50 or
sma ller S76 water pa1d 4ttl &amp;
Ne11 Ga lhpolts Call 446 4416
&lt;t h er S PM

2130

Vacancy for an elderly mon or
woman m pr1va1e home 614
99 2 755 3

Employment
Services

Gallia County Agriculture Society

Jeny L Sllaffer, M!o

5 part pupptes, B weeks old Cell
614· 388 8180

Wanted To Buy

pm

1985 Expenditures

$15,000

Situattons
Wanted

lnd1v1dual w11h exper~ence tn
typ1ng shorthan d end word pro
cesstn g See.ung e mploymttntas
secret&amp;f\' or receptto ntst For
co fT1llete reaume call 614 992
7419

350 eng me tor 77 Chevy pJckup
tructl. 304 676 2695 after 6

Public Notice

$32.000- AT EVERGREEN- RECENTLY REDECORATEO l
BEDROOM HAS PREffi WAllPAPER CUSTOM KITCHEN,
NEW ROOF WOODBURNER GARIGE ALSO SEPARATE
BUILDING PRESENTLY USED AS OffiCE COULD BE CON
VERT ED INTO APARTMENT
PRECIOUS ACREAGE ON RT 35 NEAR STATE HIGHWAV PA
TROL STATION 16 ACRES, SUITABLE RJR RESIDENTIAL OR
COMMERCIAL PRESENTLV HAS l STORV FRAME 14lt.t: WITH
fUU BASEMENT, GARAGE, IN GOOD CONDITION $69,000

9

Wanted To Buy

2282

9

.

Homes f or Sate

NEW AND USEO MOBILE
HOME S KESSE l S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SA LES 4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOLIS AT 35
PHONE 614 446 7274

Vacancy for ttlder ly man or
wo man tn my home Expo
rJan cttd ca re rttasonable ratn
Call 614 667 6329

"It's new. A garlic-flavored
cough medicine that'll help
your cough... and keep you
from spreading it."

Moving S1l1 ktng a~e watarbad
whh beffle, bunkl beda Call

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

1905 N Matn 4 br house
N.ewiy tEtfTIOdeled 304 6 75

Vacancy for the elderly 1n ou r
holll8 TriiJned 11nd ftheen years
upe rt e nc a Cell 6 ~ 4 992
7314

2189

8

ARE THOSE BILLS FROM TH E

12

Pert S1tm•e mel• Cit Body
Cl'elmy, rut atnpld lllue ey11
0'"' Rd RMardl 304 5715

7

31

lAdy to l1ve tn wnh elderly lady
304 675 2686 or 576 2242

8t Vicinity

$14 ?U -2010 1nyttme

\fHENS iUPJ) - l&lt;lyoffs of rmplo;ees thts wr&lt;'k foJt"d It» ct l ;
of Athens to close a fire stat ron thiS weekend
Mayor Edward Beckett satd two fn r flghters two code
enfo• cement workNs the communrt' cable TV dccess coordtn dlot
and a cit y cle1k have be!'n latd off !Ius 11 "'k I 11 offs r ame after
voters IPJPCted a tax mcrease m Nm t•mlx.•J
Besides closmg a ftre stat ton , houstng mspecttons are betng cut
back and otho&gt;t services ate being curtailed

'I

LOST m1le brown G... m1n She
ptlerd lnd also 1 bl8f::k Dober
m~m If found dud or alive
pl..u call 814 H? 7191 Rt
WJrd offered

HOMES, FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45621

Po'' l' ll .., " a" b1 nkt•n tnto o~nd !lAO ' IC'I ro SfJt\ll·a 1~ " f 1P stoll' n Thr
IC'ft ckx.1t lc~&lt; k of tht• \f h1clt \~d s dc~ m.t g{'d llw m.Jfl(•r IS und t' r
In \ rst 1ga 11on

PQychl'ch· indi£·ted Friday

814-24&amp; 8375

446-3636c.A~

.m Lnipkl\( '(' of

Public Notice

coli

46 "SpaciJZr' Rent

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"'by Larry Wnghl

1 1 Help Wanted
CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY S PIL
lNG UP Jotn ttle Army National
Gua rd and you w1llgat a monthly
paycheck a good part ttme
career end m1ny oth er great
beneftts 30 '* 675 3950 or 1
aoo 642 3619

7448

Realty

Junhq
. limet·

Public Nottce

LAFF·A·DAY

LOST llaclt &amp; tin Gordon
St1hr Since Chrlttmu
Aodnay lktwell Ad arM Pltlll

guerrillas
Jn southern Lebanon, SLA
gunners shelled ftve villages with
tanks and heavy artillery In
apparent retaliation for lncreased
!Ojil&lt;et attacks oo northern Israel by
guerrillas based ln Lebanon.

T!le Sunday Times-Senttnei ~ Page- D-3

Pomeroy- Middleport- Ga!hpolis, Oh10- Point Pleasant. W Va.

6 Lost and Found

Pnlicf' prnhe theft
] '( ):\1FPO\ - Pnmt&gt;ro•. l_)0l trP 11 p.1 11 ,r lh( fl F1 JdJ\ t'\Pnmg
tx'HI.f't'n l dnd ~ p m on POHPII "Su(x 1 \lith ' p 11 kmg In! PviH'i'Sd\

January 5, 1986

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

From ~athpolt s. take Route 141 turn left onto
Route 775 turn nght onto Patrtot Cadmus Road
Watch for s1gns
Lookmg for merchandtse1 Try the Pa1110t AuctiOn Barn'
We have alllypes of new and used mercllandtse- apph
an ces, furnttu •• anllques and collectors 1te ms Someth·
mg lot eve~yonet

SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7 00 P.M.
Door Pnzes Gtven Week ly
ConSignments accepted flom I 00 S00 p m on Satu rd ay
Have soll1&lt;1hmg you want to sell1 Con tact Marho Wed e
meyer Au ctronw Anangements fo1 ptck up serme
avatlab le
Barn andiAuctJOneer avatlable for Publ iC Auctto ns on co n
tract Con tract mcludes haolrng and ttansportmg all
merchan dtse
Resodent an d Busmess AuctJOn SerVIce also avatlable

Marltn Wedemeyer, Aucttoneer

614/ 245·5152 -- 614/388-8249

ABSOLUTE AUCTION

Wednesday, JanuaTV 8, 1986 at 10:30 a.m.
965 Thtrd Avenue . Galhpolt s Ohto
(Corner of Thrrd A,venue and Sycamore Street)
We have been commtSStoned by the Parllersburg Na·
t1onat Bank , Parltersburg, We st Vrrgnta Larry E
Staats Trustee tn Bankruptcy and a secured party
to sell the valuable real estate and contents of BOSO
AGRI-CENTER INC
99(m/ l) acre of and wtlh 10 200 sq It Ware hou
se/ Offtce Botldmg &amp; Other Butldrngs

Storage Units
Unde11round and Free·Slandmg

Feed &amp; Gram Machinery • Forklifts
Truck Tractors, Bulk Trucks , Pickup
Trailers • Office Equtpment
For complete terms &amp; descnpttve brochure contact
JIM McCUTCHEON

AUCTIONEERING COMPANY

wv #469·86

OH #57 ·70·0891

P 0, Box 4268
Parkersburg, W'l 26104
304/ 48 5-6561

Telex 535895

�\

January 5, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.
'64 Misc. Merchandise
Catllhlft'l Ulld Tire Shop. Ov•
1.000tlroo. oluo12. 13. 14. 15;
11, 11.8. I mil• out At. 218 .
C,III14-ZII· RI1 .

· :a•

Commodore 84 COft1)1tte, 3048715· 1712 ...... 8:00.

55 Building Supplies

..

.• t30o.

_.fl aos .

c.n 114-245-

..,.• FlrMood t40 loed delivered .
~ Ll~o- Get your ,,..
-, Mtimetu NOW tor Spring 1nd

·-

· C.lll14-441·1799 d4Y'

• or 114-441-9141

'""e.

• Sllbt· tl per bundle while they
' IMt. C•ll 814·245·5904.
lltcll powder 115.95 . Thompaon
~ -cent• guna, muzz.. kJading
_. a~ppli• lhop. Kaebera Guns •

.. .. RtPiir. MillCreek Rd . 1 mile off

-~ Rt. 7, Hn. M-F, 5-8PM . S.t.
·: :1-1. C.lll14-448-2318 .

.•
" Kenmore ltwlnO maChine. wei' .. nut cabtnet •so. Presto cooller-

' ·cann• includlna jars 125. Ctll

BuilcUng Material•
Btoclt. brick. teWer pipa. win ·
dow•. lintels, etc. Claude Win ter~. Rio Grtnde. 0 . Call 614 ·

114-445-2783.

.

Block, bridt, morttr and mt·
aonrv a~pplin . Mountain State
Block, Rt. 33, Ntw Htvtn, W.

v•. 304-882-2222 '
66

' :to.d.

t35.00 deltvered . Call
: . 114-251·1201.

TIFAH

tCURPES

IX)

.'" 10 &amp; 410 thot sheila, rifle &amp;

.''" piltol emmo reduced eddltkmal

: n .00-12.00.

~ Sale

10m1

r~ritiea .

continuing thru 1-14-88.

Bri1rp1tch Kennels All· breed
grooming . Adults a. pupp~1
English Cocker Sptnlelt. 388·

9790.

-.300 11ri• John Oaere garden
"'trtctor bllde, farm g1te1 , Reeu
-:tlhch. ton chlin hoist . Ctll

.

"814-26&amp;-1&amp;2$

...Mixed herdwood tltbt. $1 2 . per
.bundle. containtng tpprox . 1 VJ:
, .•ton, fob. Ohto Ptllet Co .. Pome·
.....,oy, Ohio. Phone 614 -992 ·

. -tl481 '

· stvl 60 percent! Fluhing arrow
-ligns t2891Ltghted. non -trrow
UnUghtld 1219 . (FrH
"o..lettersl) See loctlly . (8001 423 ;..0163, tnytlme . (800) 828 ·
4
2828. ext . 504.

:s2ee.

Beta Mu . 1 1
...euttttn. S200 . Excellent con -

: sony VCR

-dition Cell 514-992-5357 .
...edroom suite, living room
. couch and Zenith con tole TV
"'"Mtkt otter . 614-992 -5650 day-

lhau Apso pupp111,
wormed , firtt
1 famtla. Call

new . Ho.,.t-Euton pro ..medallst compound bow Blue
.. tnd wtlite . Ctll Btrbtra Sttwtrt

.. 814-742·3001 .
: FirtWood f3&amp; .00 ltrge pick -up
4 kt... H..p .v ouchers accepted
..114-742 -2466 .
..2 yt:lr old Tappin tltctrlc range .

Almond . S200. like new . 6U:S85-,U58 anytime.
: TONY'S GUN REPAIRS. Mit dip
-rlblueinv , Ill typts of gun1mi1h
-work, t..t aervk:e. 304-675 ·

..... 831

&amp; Liveslock

446-4462 .

61

Farm Equipment

1982 Camaro. sharp, AM ·FM

CROSS &amp; SONS

stereo. AC . cruite. V-8, new
tirH , mutt •II . Ctll 614 -44 6 ·

U S . 36 West. Jackson. Otlio .
614-288 -6451 .
MetH'I' Ferguson. New Holland.
8uth Hog Salee &amp; Service. 0\tllr
40 Ulld trtcton to choote from
&amp; COJilllete line of new &amp; used
equipment. Largest Hltction in

S.E. Ohio .
3.000 Ford dienl trtctor , 4 new
tir11 . 12.996 firm . 5 h lntemt·
ttonal bulh hog $296. 6 tt Ford
heavy duty gradet blade t150

C•ll 814 -288-6522 .

'

1985 Malley Ferguson trtctor,
grtder bllldt. 2 wheel trtilff ,

pototo plow , t2 .300.00 . 304·
578-2005

63

Polled Charolais bull• purebred.
900 lbs. Woodwtrd Ohillco
F.rms Call 614·379-2597 .
2 Reg1s1ered Holstein bull1. ,
Cha irman . 1 VtWtnt . Both out of
elevttion dtmt Cell 614 -446 ·

2412
Goats avtilablalor ule or trade.

304-675 -n 11 .

Hay &amp; Grain

Alfalft, orchard IJfiQ hty- 1 st.
2nd. 3rd . Cutting by the bale or

•~us . oo

304&amp;-882 -

Uucklo~ .

C•ll 614-251-6535 .

Rugtr Riflt No 18 300 Win ch•ter Magnum with 3x9 Sim ·
mons . Scope priced •no. EKe

Cond. 304-676-614 1

~ .One tltctric. 1 9110line • •r
~ 't:Omprnsor 6 HP S750 etch .

• '3404175 ·3002 .
#&gt;~Apt.

lilt

a12o. c.n 614-388.8720.

Good clean clover &amp; orcflard
gran hty . Caii614 -388 -B713.
Hay for ule $1 00 bale Ctll
614 -256·8681 .
Hty for 11lt E11ctlltnt quality
Large round b. ln. 120 &amp; t26

614 . 742 -2877 .
Htv f&lt;lr s1le. Orchardgrtu&amp; red
clo'oftr. S.e11ei\ty five cent•• b.. t .
614 -.949 -zese aft 5 p m.

949-2237

Good miKed hatt for llle
742- 2331

Good ne~ for u le . 6t•· 992 ·

5533 .

Transportation

• "F irewood h111dw oo d sp lit.
:.tacked . delivered. S36 1 ltrge
Joad . delivered promtl'l' Ctll
..61 4-446· 7993

1979 Concord 6 cyl , auto ., PS ,
good cond. Ctll614 -446 -1522
1983 Dodge Charger Shelby
Edition . AM -FM cell , 14.000
mil11 . Ctll 614-446 -7307 after

4 ,30
1981 Otttun 810 Maxon AT.
full power. aunroof . C1ll 614·
446 · 1607 642 Fifth Ave • Galli1978 Dodge Magnum enellent
condition, S1, 600 Ctll 61 4 -

245-5104
1985 white Mustang with red
1nterior A -1 condition . 614 742 · 2325.
1982 Chevy Ctvtlltr. bltck. 2
door hatc hback 4 cyl., 4 sp!Hid ,
E.C . . loaded . One ownef
13600. Ctll 614 ·992-"7422 .

1974 Gran Trino 69 ,000 mil" ,
IUtO , lif. 304 ·675-1866.

76

304-171 -4891 '

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

For ••~ or rr~t prof•sional
built pro -stock rtce car chat~lt,
look like Jegtter cha11ie. Air tir•
chtni)er. Hyd. unit for Oliver 71
or 88 . Oliver 66 standtrd wide
front . Oliver : 4 bonom drag
plow. Ctll614· 388·9684 after

1980 YeUowstont cMnper. 29
h . tir cond tnd twning .

S8,800.00. 304·671· 200.6 .

54 Misc. Merchandise

1968 Dodge Polaro , 73,000
actual m i le s. _good co nd .
$ 1,600.00, 304-895-397·2.
1974 Oldt Toronl&lt;lo. new tirn .

good running cond. 304-676·
5689

Quiot

71

Autos for Sale

1974 Ford Cou ntry Squirestati·
onwtgon , 59 ,000 , exe cond
Call 814 -445 -0254

1980 Chovy Luv 02,199 1980

OPEN 10

ADVERTISEMENT FOR SITES

U.S. POST OFFICE

Vinton. Ohio 45686
I. The United Slates Poslat SeN ice \USPS) desires offers that
~70vide the USPS the ri&amp;ftl to pJrchase a s~e located in
the Village of Vinlon. Ohio. within Y. mite of the present
Post Office to the North. Soolh. E.ut and West.
2. Offers may be mailed or delivered so as to be received
by the USPS before tht close of bus iness on January
10: 1986 at the office of Mr. lorry Fiddler. RES
US Postal Service
Two Crossroads Cenler
150 Campusview Blvd.
Columbus. Ohio 43086-1488
llhe desired s1te size is approximate~ 14.500 square
teet of usable land: exclus1ve of easements &amp; set backs.
4. OHerors must own ot control the site and the price
must be stated. Alegal description must be included in
lhe offer.
.
5. Offers should be submitted on USPS Form 7421-U. A
minimum period of 180 days tor acceplance is re quired. Forms wilt be available at the Vinton Post Of·
lice - Jackson Streel. Vinton . Ohio .
6. The property offered must be zoned to permit use for a
Postal facility, or capable of bein1 rezoned for such
use without delay ot construction.
7. Offers should include plot plan or SUNey showing size.
conticuration. building locations, it any. and olher
pertinent data.
8. The Postal Service reserves the ri&amp;ht to 11110liate with
owners lor terms . conditions, clarification of ambiau i·
ties. or other chances; to secure offers on Sllitabte
properties in lddition to lhose offered ; and to reject
any or all bids.
9. Offers will not be opened pJblicly. Information IS to
the number ot offers received. the identity ollhe ofterors. lhe sites offered or cosls thereof wilt not be
made available 10 offtrors or to tlli public.
10. Additional information may be obtained from:
William Reid , or
larry Fiddler, RES
US Poslil Service
Two Cronroads Conter
150 Ca111pusvi111 Blvd.
Columbus. Olllo 43086·1488
Phone:-614-469-4417 ·

' '

B3

Til DARK

HOBSTETIER
REALTY

1972 GMC truck V-B. PS. PB .
long wide bed, price t6&amp;0 . Ctll

304·458-1997.

POMEROY
Wright St.
15 aetes wooded land. huge
poplats. excellen t timber.
scen1c.

Real Estate General

2 BUILDING LOTS
1 ACRE PLUS
14,000 CASH

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
SPUT LEVEL HOUS£ w~h 3
bedrooms. 2 complete baths.
~ining room, livin&amp; room and
IQ! recreation room. Localed on 8 acres. 1..-&amp;1! f:rm
pond. Racine area.

SPRING STREET

6 ACRES - $6,000
ATIENTION BULDERS
Thrs prope rty has been su b·
d1v1ded 1nto I acre - !0
acre sites, can be sold 'nd1·
vrdualty . Leax water obta~n ·
able. pnced low, possibl e
excellent letms. Th1s is an
excellent buy for e1ther farm
or development.

3 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME
on 3 lois in Syracuse.
OLDER HOUSE with 3 bed·
rooms on corner lot in Syrcuse.

MONTGOMERY
REALTY

HOME NATIONAL

BANK

614-385-7419
Collect Calls Accepted

0

THREE ACRES - w1th
bea ut1ful cedar, twr story
home. full base ment, approx 5.00 0 sq. ff. PRICE RE
DU CED
POMEROY - Condor Slreel
- Welt kept, low mamtenance.
bt[k home. L1mg room w/ firep~ce, dinrng room, two bed·
IOOillS, bat~ full basement,
garage. N1ce VJiW of River. Asking $42.500.1Xl.

Leadingham Real Estate - 446-7699
WHY
FOR
THE WHOLE
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TELL THE
WHOLE WORLD?

Real Estate General

Ask Yourself lhis Question-Then List With Us

PH. OFFICE

Velma Nicinsky. Associate
Phone: 742 -3092

NEW ON TH£ MARK£1
Ideal home lor family: 7
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
modern kitchen. Nice·landscaped lot County water and
sewer. City school distr ict
Call for more informalion.
n1ce home.

.

~630

1"0rr•d fur. Ci'l _
,..'fChfH il ~

•:
•:
••
•

NEW LISTING - Olde1 2BR
home 'n Pome10y Walk lo
stotes Only $6.000
9 ACRES - Easlern schools.
1 P watet. 3 Brs basemen! &amp;
outbUildings Ask1ng $30 lXXI
MIDDLEPORT - 8 1ms. 2
stones. 2 baths. gaslurnace.
wood &amp;c8at heat. near bus,.

!•
••
:
••
•

ness secl•on .

2 or 3 BEDRM. HOME localed ak&gt;ng Gart~ld Ave.l ot
by 200' Very comlorllib~. $30,000.
Will.r I "ill¥• - I..A.JI.t of /ft*-'&lt;'n. Jhrub•. llll'"' pin I' rrw.~. plru o l'f'":\' ••il'll rlf'41i""rd hnmf'.
F1'ftfl!fl'.1 ,., jt~r nwllir ·in• r(Jnm, fnmil;r mom, J4 ln lromm, 117 lmth.•. m rtiplf'll' ltjtcll m
u-ldi.•hwmher, .tlm f' nnd N""/r4ft&gt;rrrlrw. FU1i.•ht'd IJOM'mml 11' / tYlrf'f'l, 2 mr JlO'"Oil" n111l
.W'/HJrfll f' wtw~d ~ hl'f)• ni(Jf"lf" l..'f)tV'ff:d #rndr fKJrdt, l(ru ~ ~·nL ff'D.&lt;Ihirt,tlon F.lf''!'f'fl farv.

1977 .\.ffklular lamnf' - , IH'drtwmu, lidn.r ronm,formol dinin.rroom , f"H , 2full 1!0/hJ.,
mudt•rn lril chl'fl wf.,if/p.by-~idf' rP{rijlf"T"ntrlr, 2 rlt'i'tu, 1li.•lum•hf'r nml rli,, l'fml . lluill·in

"'"'"a'"'· c, ..,/d IH· lt/(Jn'IJ. I A111' ~·o·~

0 ArT Ill mtlr•• n r l1•.u ll'l niw 2 Jtorymunl ry ~om ~. Sll"lt'n,l'l' h11ildin/(. N'flrrr. em Ill' nr hmMr

bnrn. Mo•tly filii . ,,,,'f!f"Oi jruil trP.fl.. City tdtoob.

R &amp; M Fu.{niture Manufacturing ,
St. Rt . 7, Crown City, Oh . Cetl
614 -266-1470, call Eve . 614 448 · 3•38 . Old &amp;: n ew
Upholtered .

Estate General

AE,II\lfQA

offer. For rent alSO.

!FFOROABIE 3 IJ&gt;Irran siarter hrme

oilers large Irving HDll, 2 bilths, h;ll
basement and CiN"JX)rt. A~rox 2CK:res.

iillt.:.l.oll

148.lXI.

11238

CHIIIIING BliCK RANCH oilefs 4
bedrooms. 2 flllhs, dinmg rrxrn a~d

fi r~ .

spaoous family room With
l&gt;nck brepiace and tn:~oor BBQ

159.500
Nl18

OWNII IIAV HElP FINIIICII -

Spring Val~ lmle ofl!o 31odrooms.
I ~ bath, lcrge eatil't k~chen and din11g
area F~ t basement $55.000. but need
,.. an otl!r .

CHESTER - N1ce little
hou se in town. nice lot. must
be seen. Want $26,500.00.
HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL In Middleport. 1~ · ~ory
older home that needs everything. Nice level lot all /or
$12.~0. 00 .

Ni ce home, cenlral air, nirat
water system, large family
room, 26'x22' garage, storage bu ilding, storm windows
and doors. Nice home close
to Holzer Hospital. Now only
$34 . ~0. See it now.
#570

RACINE .- Bautifu t older
home. realty a classic. Plus a
smatter renlat home. If you
have a taste for "sly/ish
old". Call Today.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

Glt garag~

$44 51){]

Clyde Walker-245-5276
B. J. Hairston-446-4240
Dave Wiseman.:... 446-95S5
E. M. Wiseman-Broker

[B

reasona~

Eou1pped k1tchen and drn1ng area. 2...,

·. ~t:.'

Call One of Us

any

WEll OECORAriD 3 BR rnh

SiliCIOUS 8E-UYIL '" Spoog V•~!
olfe~ 4 bedi'Oli1S. 3 OO!hs. lormal
cinrng 1J1d 2 car g;11age 2 firepla:es,
SOEeled 11 deck OYer1ooks rngrou n1

il&gt;li 187.500

if2(l

CAI'TIYATING CAPE COO. -

4

l:edroorm. 2 baths ~M tun base11ent
Decoratoo 1n Eartv 1\'nencan cha1m
F&amp;ntas1rc vew ol1rwr $75.SOO

!103

QUAliTY m !fORI STONE HOII

otters J.4 bedrooms. den. famj~ rem.
lormal dinmg, 2 balhs, 2 ~
firEPlaces, 2 c.ar garage and luU

,.,.,.,1 172.~

l BR RANCH bcaled on a large klt tn
Sprmg Vallt\'. 217 baths. full baSEmen!
wrth fR. 2 car g.tra~ $64 90J

l!AIIE All OFFEI on tho """"" 3
bedroom home Situated on li lt, ac res.
lt1ts lone offers I. 79J SQ ~ rJ ~vng
space 2 baths. hardwocd llooo andwell
nsuotol. 1511.111111.
#126

PRICE REDUCE01 -l)mer anxiOUs to
~~ thr~

3 BR home 2 baths. lull

unf1nnshed bilse~nmt oo 2 a: kll Over
1700 5Q ~ AsiooR $38.500

SOLD
12-21-85

ASSUME LOAN oo lhrs 3 t:a:Jrocrn
sbrtef home. lnclllcles 3 redroorns.

3 BEDROOM ~ - lEVEl olleo IIIIIooo

CONVENIEIIT LIJC.ITION -

En~g,

efficiE!Ill 3-4 t:edroom tme 1s well
loc&lt;JIOO near 0011)1oyment atld sh0pp111g
"""' Goo i&lt;ot. $28.500.

0340

$2•.'m BUYS THIS lllljm: II.?

9:or~

hOOle. 4 ba:lrooms tul baseme-rt gas
heat and wlffl stove New roof and new
Sld11g_ WOOd dec~ .

1332

BARGAIN! - 2 story Mille tJffers l
bedrooms. large hvmg room. dinflg
room a11d l!(lUtpped knchen wrth eat-11
bar 2 car garage I ac. $39.900
lf2lll

0000 OLD£11 STOII'I HillE "'"' 5
bedrooms 3 car garage aoo ertra lilt
Comer lot has pd frontage on ~- Rt. 7

2 hall baths, !2mrly room Ml:h
lYOOdburmng fire(llace, 1'' car ~rage
and large cm&lt;ered prbJ N~te ftat yard.

155.1XXl

ll'lf1l
CURIOUS? - We'd love to show you
Ills Dg cabll on Mitchell fhJf Offers 4
bedrooms, beautful count)' kitchen
and liii"Re stme hrf!l)lace.. 5 .:re ki.

$59.!MXI

~- in

kitchen. I car garage and I acre

kll i1

lalll~

144.1100.

tmenll!d ~lxrhood .

#110

REMOOIIID lilliE has 7 rooms wrtn
fl'lr1!il basemer1t Fuel o~ furnace wfh
add-on coal/ wool urv1. .mble tme
pad

EXCILUIIT LOAN ASSUMI'IION on

lhrs 3 BR starter home LR. FR. cwered
pabo. edra lar ~ ~ard $45.000

128.1XXl

$29.!100

#313
COMMERtiALBUILDING rn OO.niDvln
44 fl. frontage mckJ~ 7 'leW

G.aB~rs.

OOALITY BUILT 3 t:edroom brick ranch.
fol d•Miol t..emen1 W!lh heal flllll~
WoodstDve wth forced u to 2 I"OOOls.

14x30 111roge and wlllkshoo. 159.!1ll.
1001
INVESTMENT DPPOITUNITVI! l'Ml IDuses
piJs 111rage apartn01l C.! lor

store fronts Newer gas lun1a:e Across
frcrn pubic park1ng kll
11215

RISTAU.RANT BUSINESS FOR Soil£!
- E~c road front~ge A" eqmpment &amp;
utilities 1n new condrtJon large lot Call
f01

w e 11lormaOOn

Th~ rftltal units 11 city.
additi:ln~

NIC!tv RlliODELED O&lt;ier hoole
klCate:l on large lcll HomeconSISts ot 4
BRl LR. nee kitchen and bath

11bmiii:rl and stowlflg.

ll!l,!lll

11343

BR HOME • mce
Nee FR. LR. €at-In

3~

ne~ghtahood .

k~chen ood l car garage $47.500

$12.000 lm thr.; pnmP loc.al'(ln b
&gt;ehr:ds Well 111 s ut at~ 2 l:lalh'i.. l car
gangf $58 oo:l

llCillEIIT OPPDRrt/fOTV FOR BIISI·
"(SS!! - COmmerCial bur1&lt;111g on
UPIJI!' Secord Ave has Ove&lt; 3.000SQ.H
00 a 73 I 190 lot A·I CDrd.
11242

AND WE .CAN
SELL YOURS
.Real Estate General

!FFOROABLE

SOLD
9-26·85

l U tl*E 111 fllme locatoo 101
schott Well mutated 2 lllths. 2 car
garage ISSIXXI

1.\NCH 110111 IN TOWN - 3 BRs.
krtchen ~ n d d1nmg rl»!l lull basement.
d€l~ ched

gm ~e

~nd

worll ~ hop.

129 !100

Real £state General

IWI•Imt·. Fitrmnf ,Jinirllf rrliiiUI

11 llllin.•nlfllifl/1 fWidJm! II P \ . \·l o~ /"'"" kitc#wn , fnmih r&lt;HIII I , 11 .h. firt' t•lliN' nml pnli11
rl,•on . IH!t ~- jlfl/111. 1 / u•,/r..rtnL'&lt;.;! .full ~11 / ' :· lmrlu. h"i~h,tt l l .a.wm~·11t II" n·r. rnom , :!t•nr

d u"rw f"fWIII im·t . ~

614 -446 -7833 or 614 -446 -

1833.

42 ACRES IN COUNTRY
5 rooms, remodeled home, one floor. bath. !toni porch.
Drilled well w1th elec tnc pump . Paneled walls , carpetingand
lino. Hurry. Pr~ ced $26. ~0.
#635

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(6141-992 -3325

Hou sin g
H ea dqu arl ers

1. 57 ACRES - 7 ROOMS

BRICK HOME - ·25 ACRES
tn countty. 7 rooms, 4 athrooms, 2 baths, heat pJOlfl. Steel
doors, double glass roll window s, country ~itch en with lots
and lots of cabinets. full basement-finished . Outsidebuild·
ings. one 8Wx l8'. one 9'x 12'. one 9'xl2'. 18 assorted fruit
trees. Many olher leatures. See it now. Only, $59,900.
#642

~~

BAUM SUB. DIV. - 3 yr
old b1-level. 4 BRs. low heal
b1ll. msulated. 2 baths &amp;
n1ce lg. lot.
BRADBURY - Near Rt 7
s1ts lh1s 7 tm . family home
Cool &amp; bake un1ts. natutal
gas lurnace. garage &amp; level
lot Only $28.000
SYRACUSE -Remodeled 5
rm , full basement. gas I a
fu~na ce . equ 1pped k1tchen .
1 ~ . garage &amp; b1g lot for garden.
POMEROY - 2 story, 2BRs.
fu ll basement. gmge &amp; al·
most one acto
MtODLIPORT - l g. level
tot. garage, storage &amp;3 BRs.
REDUCED - Small 5 rm.
home 1n Middleport near
schools &amp; stores $17 ,500.
HANDYMAN - 2 hou ses
you can· rent or restore
Close to stqres in Middleport.

446-7699

$39. ~0. 00 .

TEAFORD
Real Estate

TRISTATE

Busi ness
Services

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 See Av11., Ga llipolis .

Real Estate General

DESI'ERA1I OIINEI IN MICIIIGM
war11s thtS 3 bedroom bnck ranch sokJI
Heme 11dudes llrl!'! eat~n 'Mellen,
fam~ room With woodbtJrner ~~ one
car garage. $49,900 001 itjlf comider

9 ACRES ol h1tl top w1!h a
barn and oldet hou se that
need ssome re p a~t. Pr1 ced to
sell at $12.000.00 .

IJ1 ;11 .1 I ~· I Th~, Or11' .. Iii' l h - 8f"¥1H i i/ll lh· llf'(VJrfll ~ot/ f'H/II~ ' flll'"nl";'- lwmt•.
h11nlf• for rh r&gt; '"'"w'

fiiiiiiO!"u f m~ · h

7447.

Real Estate General

COUNTRY - Near Pomeroy. Almost 4 acres and a
nicely remodeled house .
Severa l buildings and ten c. in g. $32.500.00.

COUNTRY LIVING - Just two
m1les from Rutland Modern
all electnc ranch home. w'th
large liv1ng room, din1ng and
kcchen, thtee bedtooms, full
basement and garage. Asking

. ,&gt;t , ~'

lor•.

Dump truck alrVlct now tvailt·
ble. will haul gravel. Nnd. fill
dirt. cotl, etc. Cttl 814-448·

614 -387-0678 .

•Willis T. Leadingham, Realtor, Ph . Home 446-9539

46 Space for Rent

JlflftJilf ', ! lmu h n 1pnl

7741 night or dav.

Rt. 1. Box 365. Galllpotis . Call

'
Good -1 hcevating,
basements.
footers. driveways. uptic tanks.
ltndtctping. Call tn'(lime 614 446· 4637. Jame1 L. Daviaon,
Jr. owner.

608

COUNTRY STYLE HOME
lnvery good con dition. Corner tot, approx. I 'h aetes level
tan d. Metal barn. 45'x45', 8room home. 3 tedrooms, 2 bath·
rooms, approx. 1750 sq ft. of livmg space, mod. kilchen. fi·
tep/ace, basement, ru~at water system. Fam1ty lype home
close lo grade school. Phone now lot appo1n tmenl.
#633

.formnl U &lt;. IHIII'

JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING .

Excavating

E. Ma i·nWill

FREE NATURAL GAS - 140
App1ox. !0 m1tes from Gallipolis - tots ol Raccoon Creek
ftontage- approx. 60 actes tillable and tobacco base. Nice
40'x60' barn. 6 rooms, 3 BR home w1th !tee natural gas lo
heat your home 1n winter and cook your food . Lots of ftu il
!lees. N1ce' country se«mg. See lh1s one.
#419

1.011 ,.;_..;.,- ' ' TFR 1-Y T 1\ r, \ F ·IRS - 11'-lfl'-:r, Fl .\ Ell R·l n-:s
H.R7.1'; I 4R/HII.f: R4H:;&gt;

111/jnN'III

Ken's W1ttr Servioe. Wellt,
ciltemt. pool• filled . Phone

614-367· 0623 o• 114-317-

POMEROY,O •
992·2259
POMEROY - Here is a nicely remodeled.hou se thai 1s
in good condition . 3 or 4
bedtooms and a large yard
to play in Unique des1gn
and style. Call lor an ap pointment. $24,900.00.

446-4206

1-:•lln llflll

445-4477

1219

Ph. (614) 446-4206

BO NN IE STUTLS. BROKER

/1111111' -

AND HE-AnNG
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
Gallipolit. Ohio
Phone 814-&lt;646 -3888 or 814-

STUTES REAL ESTATE

NEW LISTING - Fram e
!h1 ee bedroom home. on
one acre. NewL1ma Rd . Ask·
1ng $26,000.00.

·sTUTES REAL ESTATE

Rrirl.·

Waugh's Weter Service. Wells,
cla1emt, pools. F11t, reliable
service. Cell •14·268·1240 or
81, · 25G· 1130 . Reasonable
rttll .

CARTER'S PWMBING

lf'mliltl( fo a lar/(1' hrx·k 1Wrk 1tmppM 10 a/ron f dl'dt. '\1twlern
kit, .'un w/ u11k mbint&gt;U, 2 Wroonu. lar~ loundr:r N)OIIt.
l\1osrl_v l~'f'l 1111 Ctm pur tJ rm tnl 11ropPr1~· in bark. G1y
J.Chool~. ldr'fll hnnw for n nt&gt;U ·I~· marrif'd or N&gt;tired coo ple.

Geo. S. Hobsletter. Jr ..
Broker

ST. RT. 124 - Just off Rt 7
Modern ranc!i home with lour
bedrooms. full basement. lree
gas. •tuated on 48 aws mI t
Ask1ng $45.000.00.

Upholstery

baS611Mt 2 car garage

LGrpo opfll liriii iC foom a11d clininl( nw1m w / 111rium rloor~

84 Pi ckup F100 Ford , 76 Olds
Cutl1111 Salon . 304 -675 -2130 .

'87

Oaths. krmal d1nmg, sillily. partial

Real Estate General

3002

FARM OR INVESTMENT
&amp; BUILDING LOTS

General Hauling

SPICIAliQII on lsi A"'ue.48Rs. 2

PRICED /1\ THE 3U'•· ONL I' 1/,900.00 l)()if' N. .,~IIIN 'r u
PAY.Itf:N1'1281.23 H HIABL/i RATE: OF 8.875%- A new
ranch hom~&gt; ju.~l ront~)ff'tffi. builr wirh qualilJ mat.-rids.

1971 Cflevy ton B tt. bed , V-8
standard shift. $700 304-675·

Trucks for Sale

85

a95· 3802

OLDRT.TIME
HEATING CO.
7-6 miles below Gallipolis

1f.l

Real Estate General

General Hauling

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Molt wellt completed same day.
Pump aeles end service . 304·

6275

5950

RON ' S Telewl•lon 'iervice .
House ctlts· on RCA. Quazar.
GE. Speci1ling In Zenith . Call

85

Sttrkl Tree and Lawn Service.
l•ndsceping . 304 -678 -20,0 .

1984 Ford Bronco II . 304 -676·

Buick Skylark. c onverta ·
ble, 64 ,000 actutl mil• . exc
cond. 81 ,500 .00 , 304 · 773 ·

Pump aelet, aervice. Registered
In Ohio. All work guerenteed .
Ctll 304 -273 -2811 . Ravent·
wood. W. Va.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

NO PAYMENT nll APRIL

1979 ~ ton Ford P.U. 400
engine 82~00 . 614-992 -8270.

304-675-4181 '

COLEMAN WATER WELL
ORILLING

B2

Fetty Trea Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-676 -1 331 .

30°/o to 50°/o Off

Ford Couf'fier • 1 ,999. Johns
Auto Stlet. Bultville Rd ..

Home
Improvements

675-2088 "'875-7388 .

3 Announcements

•

Get your carpet in thip sh•p~
with Captaln Steimer. tumlture
clet~ning - water damage work,

81

The Sunday Times-

RINOLES ' S SERVICE. expe·
rienced carpenter, etactrician,
mnon, painter, roofing (includ·
ing hot tar appUcation) 304·

~reo

SUilEl - Rotoil space
IO&lt;attd at 47 Court Stroot,
Lalayotte Mall. Gallipolis,
Ohio. Square laotago af
I, I 57 so IIi~ span ant!
227 squaro fttl a! slorago
spo&lt;t on tht second floor
of tho Lafa.yotto Mall.
Call 614-446 -7653
'1:30! til 8:00
~ thru ~lwda

614-992-2772.

STOVES-FIREPLACE INSERTS
WOODBURNING FURNACES

~ 962

lftCIS. "iity room. Wlllr. sewer
and trash serviCes provirlocl.

UncondltiontiiHetlme guaren ·
ttt . Loc11 refertnces furnished .
Fr" a.tlmatts. Ctll coll ect
1-614-237-0488, day or night.
Roatr• Basement
Waterproofing.

KINDLEWOOD

1971 Ford PU, new ptint, like
new . 1982 Dodge PU. like n8W.
Call 814-381-9109.

Gallipolis .

'83 Camero Z28 . loaded. Sertous inquines only . 304-675·
6363 tfter 5 p.m.

Brookside Apartments
Pllone 446-3003- 446-1599
446-3474
One bedroom lfl'llnwlls with
~ r:ounby lrrtdwl, ... ~~~~i­

J .tnd L.· Installation . Roofing,
vinyl 1iding, atorm doors tnd
!Nindowt. FrH estimlttt. Celt

54 Misc. Merchandise

882 -3195.

Apartment
for Rent

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Home
Improvements

Real Estate General

'

'79 Oodte Ornni, AC , PS, PB,
67,000 mlln, t1 ,200.00 or
malt• ,.._,ntbl• offer. 304&amp;-

44

B1

304· 576-2398 o• 614-446 2454.

1976 Chevy picku~ . 6 cvl . 3sp,
red &amp; white , S2. 300 . or trade

72

Home
Improvements

304-876·2295 .

eu . 1------------------

911 ltOVI 175 . 304-

' _3019 .

T-OWARD

Autos for Sale

71

256-1417

B1

MtKed gran h1y for 11le 814 ·

.171·4835
: ~Trtctor , rlditl uw. grinder
. ·Nnd•r. drill p1e11. fir• chein 1.
" "870 Bi. Cent . 12 gt . 304 -895·

by the abOVe canoon.

GE NTRY

John bolt for lilt Call 614·

Truett camptr top,- fite 8ft. bed .
18 lncl1 ovtrctb, exccond , must
IH to apprlcltte. f300 .00.

6.

Good mi"td "hay squirt balet

3376.
-.seve 150 per centll Fl. .h1ng
. ~rrow ligns t289 !1 Lii!hted .
. ) on-errow 1289 . Unllgh1ed
,U19. jfrH let1ertll SH locally
.(8 001•2 3 · 018 3 . anytime
.(BOO)e:ze-2&amp;2&amp; . ... ~. 504 .

1983 Plymouth Rel11nt SE 4
door . automttic, AC . PS . PB.
cruiae, rpr window defroster .
47.000 miles . 1984 Plymouth
Turisrm 2 2 tutortlltic. AC .
sunroof. 19,000 m1ht1 . Ctll

1968 Thunderbird , 4 door .
56 .000 milu , eKe stltpe ,
U.OOO.OO T-E Ferguson trllc·
tor t1 ,800 .00 . 304-676 ·4478

.Ceriout ~t toting wti(Jiht1
--cont..:t Glorill Grete. Rt. 2. Bo•

..mobil•.

3789 .

poll&amp;, Otl

livestock

large 10und btles of hay 120 ea
Call 61 4 -441· 1052 1fter 6PM.

.. Moto Ski 250 Ski doo anow

304-578-2005 .

2532 .

814 -379-2726

:.tnd up . Jim Lanier. 304-G76·
:7397 or 67&amp; -1247.

'1175-5743 .

Autos for Sale

713 Ford Pinto black with red
stripet. run• &amp;: looks good ,
1500 . Call 6 to 10 PM . 614 -

:eravtl, und dtUvertd, ont ton

2 ~now tirtt , 2 c:heint. towing
"""'irrnw, g•rdltl1 sh.-.dder, ceiling
.l't ight fiMturt, toilet 1111. 304 ·

71

Farm Supplies

house cOli , limntone,

'282, LitO... Wll . 25253. 304. ) 82·3152 .

Now arrange the circle&lt;! letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug·

FLUID

&amp; Campers

'

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

One 19n GMC 8500

(Answers

Mustangs . will sell
Burrot. 1-6 mo . m1 1e. 1-18 mo . package tor *850 or par1 out .
melt. Verv gentle and well ~ Call &amp;14. 379-2830 .
maMered . 814-742-2877 .
1981 AMC Concord OL, tulo,
good thtpe. Atking s 1.800 Ca ll
•14· 256 -1932 tfter 4PM

64

~ump

1979 Chevy Luv. 4 whHI drive ,
lttndlrd 4 IJ)Hd transmiulon
witt! camper top, 12.000 00 .

One1982 Ford 4-WD. ett .
11tndtrd, 8 cyl. engine,

r 1 I I I ][ I I II )

3 -1966

~timt, 814-992-5086 ev...
~ike

9700 .

ft., duq&gt; bed . Cell ""'· . .·•·

O lt~ led

Baets and
Motors for Sele

·_January 5, 1986

$5,500 . c.u 114 ·245-6407.

WHAi'SiHE
BESTiHIN$
FOR NAH.·!IITINC5 ?'

7PM .

:.~8~,l~O.~O:::pon~ol:.l~dll:.v:..S:.•:;:t.~•:..:.su::._n.

""tobrt CB. 2 ehtlt of drawtra, 2
btd1. capttin ' t IMMI, 16 ' snow
..J:irtt. Ctll614 -256 -1768 .

1979 Jeep. CJ -10. long wheel
bue PU , quadrt track , 310, V·8,
•uto., elr, PS , Pll. tUdlng rtttr
Ofiindow, lOw mileage. 1979
CJ ·6 Golden Eagle, V-8, 3 spd.,
tpol!,e whtell . AM -FM stereo.
low mileage . Cttl 614 -446 -

Ortgonwvnd Canerv Kennel
Yesterdays Answ-. Whal a person who ca ll s a s pade a spade
CFA Himaltyan , Persian and
..,. .
1980 GMC, S~• Ortnda V-8 ,
probably about t o gl~e someone,
32 ooo
,
Srem11e kittent . AKC Chow
A DIRTY " DIG"
au o.,
•
·• 1 own•• · c-11
•
puppte\ Ctll 448 -3844&amp; tfter ~------.;,;.;:;;;..;.;..,;;.;;..--------1 614-&lt;446 -1638 lhtr &amp;PM .

a

. &amp;14-448-00&amp;6 .

.J

76

,..lcod 02.300. T7 Old•
teoo. c.n 114-317-7238 .

1980 Chevv 4M4 350 auto ., 4in .
lift kit, new 38 Gumbo' s. 11iding
bllck gla11, m.,y extras, atklng

. I Jum~es: LIMIT

814-«B-1822 eve. 4 ·30-

: 20 gttlon aqutrium eomplttt
..whh bleck rod iron ltlnd &amp; til
...ICC81101"i•, like new S76 Ctll

Fot ·ult Ford I
t710. 81
Rod, 11 .200.
9901.

80 CJ .a

114-441-4482 .

tJ I I tI J
Answer here.

73

78 Ford F- 100. AM-FM 8 trtck.
4 rlditl tire~ , new eMhtutt
avstem. new baHery . runs &amp;
looks good . Call 6 10 10 PM,

HATTUG

Pets for Sale

: ... Stop In • . . 10 pe. dlaplty of
. hNYY light IUbmtchine gunt .
~ -- Ctll

II

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

72 . Trucks for Sele

1978 Dodge 0-100 short btd,
new paint, new topper, tuto,
U .ot99 . John ' s Auto Sal•.
Bullville Rd., GaUipolit.

(]

I K1

: · Continued- Ammo Sale a.t 2310
" Ea11tm, further l"'ductiona on

I

·~-

::.~·~14~-44~~~-n~4~1·~------­

• " Firtwood fOr nit 125 .00 pickup

i

I SEECA
10 ...

245-1121 .
Kentucky Lump , Ohio Lump .
Ohio Stoll..-. Yard or dwlivery,
ctmant blocks end ·bulldinQ
mattrNd. Gallipolis Block Co ..
Pine St.. "'Gallipolit, Ohio Ctl

~THAT SCRAMiLED WORD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscromlllo lheSe tour Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to lOOn

lour ordinary woros.

,oau9h.wldawithremote

:. ·

'iJfll}i.\.ft ffi~

~ ~ J.N!.l'!)~•

••
'

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY located a1 corner ot Second A".
and Sycamore St. Call tot more mlormat~n .
COMMERCIAL BUILDING ~catoo abng Court St. 10 Gilthpo/~.
3,500 sq. ft. plus 1,200 SQ. ft. apart ~nt. Call klr more
mforrnallon. PRICE REDUCED
!ELLING YOUR RIAL 1ST ATE I! BIG BUSINE!L .'
CALL AN EXPERIENCID WOOD REALTY

3.2 ACRES WITHIN II MI. OF GALLIPOLIS
Also 8 roo mhome, up to 4 bedrooms 1f needed, white vinyl
sid1ng \no upkeep). nat ·gas lotced air furnace, city water,
latge block garage !up to 4 cars). nice healed large green·
house. all of this plus apples. pears. cherries. plums and
peach lrees. tn Gallipol is and Green Twp. Be the lirst to see
aft of thiS.

24 ACRES M/ L HARRISON TWP .. CLAY UCK
ROAD - Rolling lilld, welt on prllf)erty, bam
and tobacco base. C./I for more detai~.

SOr.IOt« WANTS YOlll HOAI
AND WE HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO
FIND THAT SOr.IONE. CAll USH
FREE NATURAL GAS - 140 ACRES
Approx. 10 mites from Gallipolis - tots of Raccoon Creek
/rontage - approx. 60 acrestillable and tobacco base. Nice
40'x60' barn . 6 rooms. 3 BR home wtth free natural gas to
heat your home 1n winter and cook your lood. Lots ol fru it
lrees. Nice counlry se«ing. See this one.

#419
.
SWIMMING POOL IN GROUND
Block basement started - mobile home pad. 2 septic tanks.
Ru ral water system. Columbus and Soulhern Oh1o Electric.
Large level tot. Would you l1ke to wild yoor own home?Basement already blo.cked up. See I his property now!
#639
OWNER FINANCING - HANDYMAN SPECIAL
Make us an offer. B room home in Heatley Addition to Bid·
welt. 4 bedrooms, buill-in -cabinels, dbl. s/s sink, shingle
roof, wood ot coal heater. apple lrees, s1de porch, tural water
syslem. Ca ll us now.
11622
GREAT LOCATION FOR A NEW HOME
Spring Valley Subdivision. Two large lots. Each tot is 10).8 by
171.2. City water, city sewer and natural gas are ava~labt e .
Speciallhis week. CAll now.
11456
I
LUXURIOUS
Courilry e'Siate with 3 Indiana stone fireplaces. including one
in a mas let suile. 4 BR total, 2' balhs. 112 acres more or tess.
Just short distance from Gallipolis. This custom built log
home lealures nearly 2700 SQ. II. of beautifully decorated
and welt planned living. Stunnin gliv1ng and dining area with
beauliluf hatdwood ltoOrs. The lovely kilchen IS tully
equipped and designed for convenience. Central heating
and ait. Attached garage. Includes 5 toom ca retaker home.
1610
•

•

IDOIONG FOR! convenie~1re. extra
tot. 4 Blis,
large krtchen, LR,
bath, large front porch
and small screened back porch, gas heat,
urnlltached one car garage. Call for an
appoinlmenl.

•

We're Out To Sell The Earth ·

LOOK AT TIUS!! 10 ACRES MI L ONE YEAR
OLD RANCH - $39.900! - Th ~ tmre offe~
1584 sq. ft. 4 BRs. 2 baths, kitchen. lamity
room, 12x24 LR, din1ng toom. carpeting, e~.
B8 heat, AndetSen thermopanes. county water.
S'N schooi district. C.tt today and make an
appoi1tment to see this ooe.
MOBILE HOMEFOR SALE - 14x70 fleetwood
Broadmore, 2 BR, 2 baths, krtchen with tange
and reftig., carpeting, lOKI I metal stilrage
bid~ Call lor mrre delai~.
GREEN TOWNSHIP - 150 acres m/1,apptox.
40 acres tillable, tobacco barn, dtive-thru shed,
metal cattle barn. Approx . •h acre take on
property.
QUALITYIN EVERY DETAIL- 3or48Rbrick
home offers a 20x40 fami~ room, 3 baths,
krtchen llith fNI. displ, m'crir.Yave and trash
Compactor, dining room. intercom system,
central air, 2 car garage. deck and a 20x40
pooL Over $100.000. Call for appoinlirent.
NEW USTING - NEAR l«lRTH GALUA HIGH
SCHOOL - Tri-level home offe~ 3 BR~ LR.
bath, 24x20 family mom. carpeting electric
hea~ nice deck, attached garage. CaM for an
appointment
·
103 ACRES 11/L SPRINGFIELD lWP.
A~rox. 96 A. tillable, older home has 5 BRs,
bath. LR, krtchen, counly water, 40d~l pole
bldg,, 40x60 IDbacco barn, various . other
outbuiklinfli.

200 ACRES MIL. FRONTS ON RACCOON
CREEK - Apptox. 65 acres tillable and 135
acres woods. Comfortable two story home

YOU'U LIKE LIVING HERE -3 BR ranch just

4 BRs, bath, krtchen, l~ing room,lamiy
room, two litep~ces. bam, 2 ~rge screened
iXJrches. Lovely quiet settin ~

minules !rom town on Rl141. Other features
include kitchen 'ilith range, refrig., £ltV, d~ pl
and oven, LR wrth fireplace, bath. lull
basemBI\ dec~ lenced backyard, gas heat
central air, city school district.

ADDISON IWP. - Apptox. 7 miles from
Ga/ijpof~. 39\\ acres more or tess. Froots oo
township road. ~I woods and brush. $8,!ro

NICE BEGINNERS HOME - $22.000 - 3BR
ranch, k~chen. INing room, bath. natural gas
heal. city ~hoots . Call for an appoint~nl.

GENTL£MAN'S FARM- 35 acres masl moslly
'li~ble. 3 mies north of Rodney. Sprin~ welt
and counly water, fenced and criES fenced,
tobacoo base. VEry rice 3r:t 4 OOdroom ranch
style home With k~chen. LR, bath, breezeway,
woodbutmng fireplace . Call for an
appointment.

PRICE REDUCED TO $55,000 - !Niner
moving tofarm. Exceltenlly located 3 8R brKk
tanch in Mil~ Village. Other features include
LR. fR; equipped kichero, l\l balhs, full
basemen\ 10x20 coverfll patio. very mre ltat
lenced bacllyard. M•ke anappoinlment to see
this one today.
,,

FRIENDLY RIDGE ROAD - 25~ ~ m/1,
approx. 5acres tittab~ ~lb. ldll. base. Older
2 ~IllY home has LR, Uchen, dining room.
bath. Barn on prllf)erty.

CLOSE TO TOWN - Nice one story home
featuring krtchen, LR. Iami~ toom,dining room,
full basemBOt carpehn&amp; gas heat. cif'l water, 2
car unattached block garage.
GUYM IOWNSHIP - 100 acres more or tess
located south of MerCI!Mite. Approx. 20 A
tit~ble. Batanre woods, IDbacco base. Owner
wiD help linan~.

offe~

COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL - INDUsTRIAL - 50 acres, more or less. vacant land
ideal tor mveslmenl r:t any )Ype developmenl
lbad frontage on· U. S. 35 and Mitch~/ Rd.
ATTINTION INVESTORS!! RENTAL INCOME
OF $485 PER lllNTH - ASliNG PRICE
$29,900! - 1.5 acres m/1, 5 rooms and bath
home, 12x65 mobile too~· and moti~ home
pad. Call lor more details today.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - PERRY'IWP.NEAR CORA - 600 sq. II. steel bklg.,ileal lor
anyone in truckin&amp; drittin' or m~ltg busiless.
O..ner may consider leasing or filillcit~ Call
for more informal/on.

RACCOON CREEK IIIIIESITE - Offers
· swimmi1&amp; belling and fishing, Lot sizt is
100x600 and has electlic, waler !Jp and seplie
tan~

Call for more details.

CENTRALLY IDCATED - GREEN TWP. 22.11 A(; m/l 'ilith ftontageon St Rt. 141 and
Neighl:xlrhoorl Rd A~ adjoins Sande~ Hill
SubdN. Owner financing avai~bte. Call lor
100re details.
THE PRICE ON THIS lilliE IN CENTENARY
HAS BEEN REDUCED - Home ~atures 2
BRs, I ~ baths, equipped krtchen,dmette. cent
air. natural gas hea~ covered patio, unattached
garage. Call for an apPointment
APPROXIIIAnLN MillS FROM RODNEY 4\1 acres mil. all til~ble. Older home has been
remodeled. 3 BRs, LR. krtchen, bat~ gas and
wood stoo;e, carpeting, cou~ Wlller ~d small
pond.

YOU CAN OWN ALITTL£ BIT OF COU/rn!Y 5 acres mast on St. Rt. 141. Nice one story
home has a!ami~ toom llith woodbumer, full
basemBI~ heat pump. cent a11, c~tern, w~t
and county water. Green school. Call for an
a ppo~tment.

ADDISON TWP. - Possom Trop Rd.- 93
acres m/1. all woods. Old barn oo j&gt;'Operty.
. $21 ,900
RES10ENTIAL - COMMERCIAL - OR
BOTH!' - Very n1ce bnck ho~ located at 225
Third Ave. has had excef~nt care and offe~
1424 sq. ~. of INmg area with afull partial~
finistM;d basement Also features a carport.
workslllp and a 28x38 ·concrete block
commercial lype bldg w1th 3 ba~ lormerly
used as an automotive repa11 shop C.lt lor
more mfotmat1on
NORTH GALLIA ESTATES - f/()rgan Twp.
100x300 lot Ask1ng $3.900 !Niner Will
cons~er fmancmg
BRING YDUR HAMME &amp; NAILS! - I 'I &amp;ory
home located at 62 l1ncoln need ssome wor~
Full basemrnl c1ty water. city schools.
$13,000.
BRAND NEW DUPLEX - Great mve~~nt lm
the btiyet. Located on Graham School Rd Each
un~ offers 2 BR, l1ving room. bath. latchen-with
slove, refte~. OW and d~pl , laundry, large
catpor~ rentral au and storage area.
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL - HAS REDUCED
THE PRICEBY$10,000 - 132.9acres mil, in
Watnul Twp. l'h slory !xi.-., has 3 BR, bath,
42194 barn, btge tobacco base. Call lor an
appointment.
SB.OOO - II ACRES - CHESHIRE TWI'. Vacant land. Septic tank on properly, C.lt for
more infof'mation.

I

�•

"-.' \
JJage-D-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

...

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Plea1111nt, W. Va.

January 5, T986

Christmas miracle

Countdown begins for Monday shuttle launch
··. CAPE CANAVERAL. F la.
'(UPI) - The countdown began
.:wtlh computer 'Precision Sarurday
;!Or '!he shuttle Columbia 's predawn
jlunclllng Monday. 19 days late, on
·jlle first of two January shuttle
flights loring In the new year with a

.roar.
. Columbia and Its crew of seven.

including congressJonal observer
Rep. Bill Nelson, [). Fla., are
scheduled to ta ke off at 7:05a. m.
EST Monday on a flve-&lt;lay voyage.
the first ff. a record 15 missions now
planned for J!)llj.
The veteran shuttle's countdown
began on time at I a.m. and NASA
officials said work at the seaside

firing stand was on schedule. A
preliminary · weather forecast
called for acceptable conditions at ·
launch 11me.
At the controls wm1X, com·
mander Robert "Hoot " Gibson and
co-pilot .Charles Bolden. Their
crewma tes are Franklin Chang·
Dial , Steven Hawll'y, George Nel-

.:Fugitives commit suicide
•
:after. bloody cnme spree
SALEM. Va. (UP!l - Two R.M. McCoy. responding to com·
fugitives who killed a salesman. his plaints of an errat ic driver on
Interstate 81 tailga ting cars and
wife and a state trooper, committed
suicide when their stolen van · trucks with bright 'lights blaling,
overtllrned during a lugh·speed pu Ued over two men in the stolen
chase and gunfight wit h sher iff's Buick Opel.
Police said ti"&lt;' 28-year·old
deputies. police said.
"It may take us days to pi!'C(' all truopo.' r was shot in the face with a
this together," Roanoke County sawed-of! shotun as he approached
til£&gt; ca r. T he two suspo.-,ts fled on
~riff s Capt. L. J . Wade satd
foor through a w(l(){j('d area until
Friday.
' One dead suspect. beliPved to be they came to the home of Antoony
!'rom Jamaica. has not be!'n Loicano
Thev blasted through a sl iding·
. Identified. The other. Danziel N.
. .- Malcolm, was wanted for the O!'c. glas.' door. shooting and stabbing
· · ~ murder of hi s i(lr ~rien d . Annie the -14-year-old businessmen to
death . Police said the two men
· ~ones, In Hanis burg, Pa.
The two arrived in Martinsburg . ordered Loicano's two children into
· W.Va., Thu rsday night and paid an upstairs lx'dmom. fo=d his
Harry Har tis SJO for a ride to wifp Christine into t~r muplt&gt;'s van.
Winchester. Va. Outside Winches· and spo.'&lt;i awa~·.
When the suspects spotted a
ter, they commanck&gt;ered Harris'
· Buick Opel and shot him in 1he deput\· approaching them from the
opposite direction. they ran him off
back.
~ Harrts said from Ius hospital bed the road . la unching a high-speed
chas.' back on I.S1 that ended wit h
he was "blesSj'()" to surv ive.
: About 2: 30 a.m. Friday. Trooper the va n cras hing 7 m iles south oft !1(:&gt;

spot the trooper was killed .
"Alt er the vehicle tu rned over,
I)Jiice officers heard ""' shots
come from inside the van," Wade
said.
"When (deputies! looked inside,
they saw the hostage had be!'n shot
and the two suspects had commit·
ted suicide," said Salem Police
Chief Harry Haskins.
1\'adp said Christine Loicano had
be!'n shot In the a bdomen with the
saw!'d-off shotgun duling the chaSI'
and added "the suspects appa r·
ently committed suicide with the
shotgun and a handgun."
The Lolcano children , boys age 7
and 8, were unharmed physically.
but one was in shock when pollee
arlived and had to be hospitalized.
Harris. an employee of the
Veterans Administration Hospital
in Mar1 insburg, was hospitalized in
sa tisfactory condition with shotgun
wounds to the shoulder. neck and
chCPk.

~exans

call for boycott of
Ohio tire finn·'·s products
DRIFIWOOD. Te., as t l 'Pi l Opponents of a proposed oil pipeline
that wouid cross an acqu tfrr tha t
provides drink ing water to 1 mil!ton
Tt&gt;xa ns Friday called for a bo;coll
of products made b\ the \.ood,·ea ,.
Tire &amp; Rubtx'r Co. of Akron. Ohio.
and It s subsidiaries.
: Goodyear is th~ parPn 1 firm of a
company that plans to build a
1,750-mile p ipelin~ from ll{'ar Sant a
Barbara. Ca!U .. to \I'Pbs!Pr on tht•
Texas G u ~ coast
Former sta te Rep. Bob k..tl'lun of
~~~
Marcos told a rail\ of
opponents a l J r ~JllCh a OOut ~~ mt!C'~

southwest of Austin that Hill
Country farmt&gt;rs and ranc hers
should stop bu,·ing Good.' ear
products.
"Why should we• pa~ monr) to
makr a profit for a com pam· lx'nt
on ignoring our past and drstn1~· 1n g

our fullln·. " he Silid.
The All Amr-rican Pip&lt;'irm• t'o .
qwned

by

CI¥J(J~·t\lr' ...

one of

sra:r officials who allended the
rally. including Rl•p. J.J . Pickle.
D-Texas. a nd s!Hte Agriculture
Commissio ner .Jim Hightower.
But SC'\'rra l ranchers said thP\
~WP

l:&gt;anding together to 00\' CO il
the rompam . And Travis CountY
.Judge MikP .Renfro said he will ask
thf' county Jttonw~ · to explorP the

fXJSS ibillty of the cou nt\ bo\'COI·ting
proclucts

r.ood~ Par

"Alt hough I want Goocl\'f'ar to

'hw d0\1.11 dncl 10 look ·or thf'
c on~qut·n('('o.; _ moq of all I n·a nt
t!wm ru s11 up ,1ncl t a kr not icc-:· sa id
Ht·nfrn
· lJur l'lt'C' ff'(_i officiJb and our
la"~'ers

arr dotng all thE'y can. but

proplc in the Hill Coontry l grew up
in neq'r let a noth('r man dO his

work or fight his figh ts for him ."
said Barton .
"l.f't'o;; lrt our frirn ds do their
~11

the' agrncirs . commissio ns
.md rourt ..:.." 1-K" sa id . " Bur when

nnrk

t•nou~h ~·opil'

tha t can•stop bu~·i ng

:Stfl.t tl'il('lOJ' lire~ .m d nthf'r Goo;

subsidiariPS . is SPt'king .1 pt'rm rt

rl~ rrdt

!rom th&lt;' Trxas Railroad ( o mmt~
slon to build the Texas pori! on of 1ht&gt;

rou r1 o r romn 11ssion f'Y Pr t'Qu ld

plpelint?, which ~~,-ould tr~n~f t • J
hea ted hPa,·~ rrudr oil To n' fin t'rtt'"'
rfear H ou:-.ton .

Thf' rou tf' would plaC(' ti l. mtlr . .

of the pipeline O\'Pr part ot thr·

enviromrntall.v sPnsit in' Ed \A. at d~
Acq uill'r. a largl' and import" n'
undf'r~&lt;t·ound source of \\'ali'r fm
south-rent ra l Tr xa s.
Barton's ca ll ror

~'

hovcort of

Goodyrar was not sanr tionf'd b\

products. thr' n ll ' f' will havr
'l'nt ;h r lf'c.n· d mf'ssagr as a n~ ·

.riXJu l hm~· s1mngly wr frcl aboul
out land and our wa1rr ..
( lppnnt·nT.., nf thf&gt; prpdmr Sd~· il
\-Al-"t'" .r ctangt"'r lo thr a('(Jui.frr. and
tl" ct m... T:\Jciion would pr 1manPntl\

J)tt ·r !Ill· rwtun• of the Hill Cou ntry
~.~-~~~

and ..;outh of .·\ustin .

Pip! •l!nr officrdl~ hcwe concf'd.C'd
th.rt cl ll\ lk ls likrl~ ,II SOffi(' point
dunng ih -U. I .\ "f'&lt;:Jr lifrspan . but t he~
"~ri d t l~t • r t• WJ!-. o n!~ d 1 in iO chan('f'

it woukl be along the acquiler
iXJt1ion and tha t it would be quickly
contained .
Spokesman Dan Moody also said
ttw&gt; oil. which must be heated in
order to move through the pipeline.
would cool and thicken U the line
ru ptured. limiting any damage tha t
a spill could cause.
Hightower said thP pipeline
should be renamed the "unAmerican pipeline" sin('(' the pipe
will lx' from Brazil or Europe a nd
ti'&lt;' pipe coating from Canada . He
snid IIY'rf' arP only SE'Vi?n TPxas

companies listed among the pipeline'.s 49 vendor~ .

"We suppon the oil industry and
a i wa~· s will. " said Hightower.
"Bul wr'v(' got to protect our water
at ti'e sdme time. After all. you
can't drin k oil and neither ca n your

we

cat tlr."

Meanwhile. Travis .County Com.
missioners joined the ba tt I!' to delay .
mnst mctio n of the pipeline until
thc'rC' is moll'
impac t .

stud~·

of lts C'COiogical

The commiss ioners voted Thurs.
Jxorome partir s in a lawsuit
aimed at stopping ttw&gt; Railroad

1 To hang In folds
6 Strander
11 Sour in tast e

t6 Change
2 t Textile fiber
22 Hollow stem s

23 Sphere at conflict
24 Concise
25 I possess: cont r.

26 Plague
28 Vetches
30 Display
32 Tantalum symbol

33 It follows U
34 Greek letter
JS ·Decorative kn o t

36 Pass over
37 Spread lor drying
38 Naval ott.
40 Spirited
42 The Alder tree
43 Fencing sword
44 Modify
45 High note
47 Save
49 Spoiled chil d
50 Pelt
5 1 Endures
54 Seven. in Sp ai n

Commission from Issuing a con.

55 Farm building
56 Recover
59 Always: poetic
60 Music : as written

62 Reorganizes
64 Son ot Adam
65 Artificial language
66 Father
67 Equip
69 Lustrous
70 Surrender
71 Unruly person

72 Mr. Gershwin
74 Haartng: comb.
form

76 Nothing
77 Expressions of
triumph

78 Tropical lrult
79 Helpers
8l Breaklast food

94 Farm laborers
98 Italian currency

99 Withstand
100 Household pet
t02 Diner
103 Goal
t 04 Beast of burden
105 Control
106 Sweeping motion

t08 Zoology suHix
109 Concerning

110 Myself
111 Christmas car ol

89 Collections: suffix

BUY 2 LBS. OF

GROUND FRESH.
SEVERAl nMES DAilY

LUNCH MEAT, GET A
: LOAF OF HEINER'S
.: BONUS BUY BREAD

FREE
·~:r~H~PS LOIN END

~. S179

l8.

Sl 29

ROUND STEAK

..

II .

$179

90 Worries
92 Winged being

3
4
5
6

lustrous
Aftirmative vo te
Italian river
Inner: comb . forM •
Pencil tip

7 Wants

9 Revised: abbr .
tO P-U linkage
t t Moses' brother
12 Gang
t3 Electrical

compartment

15 Container
16 Over and above

119 Lawyer's concern

17 Actor Ayres

96 Funeral hymn
97 Stander
99 Spelling contests

ceremonial
dinner

152 SoN mud
t54 Enrage
156 Accumulate
158 Odorless gas
159 South Pacific
Island
t 60 Clark Gable role
16 1 Acoustical device

20 Prepared
27 Finial
29 Open: Sp.
3 t Hasten
36 Bridge

93 Tempt ·

t Urge onward

Jimmie Jude, 29, of Rose Alley
Rd .. Pomeroy, was arrested early
Sunday rnol't)lng on a cltargt! of
rape.
Meigs County Sheriff Howard E .
Frank reports that Deputy Kenny
Klein and POIJII'roy Patrolmwr
Harold Will were called to the Jude
residence near the Intersection of
Rts. 7 and 33.
When the officers arrived, Pam·
ela Marie Jude said she had been
srruck by her husband wm was In
the act of s(lxually assaulting a girl
under the age of 13.
The officers entered the house
and removed Jude.
The gi rl was transported to
Holzer Medical Center where she Is
listed In stable condition following
surgery .

101 Steeping sickness

tty
105 Cult ivated
106 Purity
107 Singer
Krl stofferson

11 1 Nanosecond :

37 Scarlett's home

abbr .
112 Gala event: sl ang

39 Scorch
40 Craze: pl.
4 t Rhone tributary

1t3 Prophet
115 Sign ol boredom
t t6 Solar disk

42 City in Texas

118 Hebrew month
119 Attract ive
121 A small amount

43 Goes astray
44 Cavity
46 Lanthanide
symbol
48 A hundred: Sp.
49 Without hair
50 Entenatn
51 Dark reddishbrown

52 Disrupts
53 Walks in
swaggering
manner

55 Seethed
56 Cincinnati team

57
58
6t
63

Angry
Knots
Verdi opera
Pertaining to the
ear
64 Fasten
68 Cotton cloth
70 Large country
house

DOWN

Man .faces
rape charge

feature

95 Letters : abbr.

compound

amoog IaiJor and bo•eln'!lll
Interests.

92 Prison

engineers: abbr.

t8 Transpose: abbr.
t9 Chemical

wW belln 80011 on IPcl!th!!gn to
replate IIM0'11. Al1lo on tile
agenda 15 lhe slate's woltlen'
cornp&lt;matlon relonn wl*h
WitS aegotlaled fate Jut yeal'

89 Conceive

14 Hospital asst .

t20 Fastened
t22 Christian testlvat
t24 Plot of land
t25 Quieti
t26 Declare
t2B Little
129 Not professional
131 School subj .'
t32 Open: poet. var.
t33 Got up
·
t35 Pony
t38 Axle part
t39 Weary
140 Friend: Fr.
t41 Bulkhead: abbr .
t42 Physician: abbr .
143 Silver symbol
144 Variable star
145 Unexcited
147 Adjust by line
149 Enemy
150 Jewish

SENATE HEARINGS SETSenate Presldeat Paul GDimor,
(R. Port CUnlonl!Nil'S Bnlp

' 90 Fire
Stairwa~

7t Hut
73 Spring !towers
74 Snakes
75 Former

t 23 Selenium symbol
125 Harry
126 Sacred bull
t 27 Collarless
undershirt co mb.
form

A flrsJ degree aggravated felony,
the rape charge carlies a possible
penalty of not less than five years
nor more than 25 years In prison
and a fine ci up to $10,(0).
Jude has also been charged with
domestic violence In connection
with the assault on his will'
A first degree misdemeanor, this
charge carrys a possible penalty of
up to six months In the county jail
and a fine ci up lo $1001.
Several Items of evidence were
collected from the residence and ·
will be submitted to the Ohio
Bureau of Criminal Investigation
according to Paul Gerard of the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's office.
Jude was scheduled to make an
Initial appearance 11 a.m. this
morning before Meigs Coonty
Couti Judge Patrick O'Brien.

129 Capital ot Tibet
t30 Boring_ toot
t3t Roman 1004
t32 Nebraska city
t34 Edition: ab br .
t36 Worship
137 Snowless
t39 Ripped
t40 In addition
144 New: comb. torm

t45 Vagrant
146 Corn unil

t47 Mature
148 Curved le tter

t49 tn place ot
t51 Decigram: abbr.
153 Musical syllable
155 ''The Granite

State"
t57 Agave plant

GROUND BEEF
SUPIRIO•

FRANKIES

89&lt;

12 OZ.
PKG.

CUBE STEAK

$229 ·

lB.

SUPUIO. JUMBO r•E-SLKED

BOLOGNA
WHOlE OR HAlf

STICK 89• 18.

II.

99(

3-LB. OR
PKG

MORE ll.

$1 09

BACON

•

at y

S129

BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST tl.$)59
ENLGISH ROAST 11.$)79

COKE
· TAB, SPRITE

Lester made a complete adm!s·
sion to Sherif! Frank and Is
scheduled · to appear 10::.1 a.m,.
Tuesday bl'fore M~!gs County
Common Pleas Judge Charles
Knight toentera pleaofguUty lathe
charge .
·
Lester remains In the custody of
the sheriff.

::ns.'6 oz. $14 9
Plus Dtp.

:(OOICING
311.

:· lAG

® 1985 United

•

entt~e
1 Section, 10 Pogeo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 6, 1986

COLUMBUS (l,JPI) - Gov.
Richard F. Celeste wW address a
joint session of the Ohio General
Assembly Wedlnestlay evening as
state lawmakers begin their 1!Ri
meeting.
.
Celeste w!ll deliver his annual
"State of the State" address In the
House chamber to kick off the
second half of the 116th legislative
session.
The governor's speech Is sciJe.
duled for 7 p.m. -a time calculated
to get sOme staleWIIie" television
exposure.
One administration source said
the governor w!Jl dwell on "the
messy situation he took over and
describe the progress he has made
In thn:e years." HI' Is expected to
stress economic development, edu·
cation and taxation. ·
"He wUl characterize quite
strongly how the decline rJ. the state
has hailed and the recovery has
started," said the source. "Tile
state Is back oo track."
The legislaJive pace may be slow
for the early part of the year. Tile
House Is expected to meet weekly to
vote on bills, but the Senate wW he
concentrating on committee work
untO the end of January.
The Senate may take up House
amendments to a mandatory auto
seatbelt bill Wednesday, If the right
combination cl votes Is on hand.
"My strategy would bl' to see who
all Is there on Wedinesday," said
Sen. Paul E. Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
chief sponsor of the measure which
cleared the Senate by only 17-16tast
year.

"My hope would be that we would
he able'todo It on Wednesday," said
Pfeifer. adding that some senators
may bave ·thanged their minds
since tbe vote last May. "It wW bl'
nip and tuck, there isn't any doubt
about it."·
Senate concurrence would send
the pro~ to the govermr for
signature and fl'qu!re seathelts to
be oockled 00 Ohio highways
sometime In AprU. Defeat would
send It to a conference committee
lor negotiations with tre House, •
Another piece of ooslness left
011er from late In 1985 Is an auto
emissions Inspection bill for the
Cleveland and Cincinnati areas,
stalled In the Hoose lor lack of
votes.
1bat blll, defeated onre, was
offered In response to a U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
threat to wllhhold federat highway
and sewage treatment funds •from
the Cleveland and Cincinnati areas
If exhaust fumes arent' eUmlnated.
But tbe measure may remain
dormant for the first part of 1986.
VIrginia Aveni, tJel&gt;uty director of
the Ohio EPA, reported that the
U.S. EPA Is "SEVeral months
behind" in Its evaluation of the
situation and It wW probably he
May he!ore federal sanctkms are

pressed.
Meanwhile, Rep. Robert L. Cor·
bin, R-Dayton, said he has a
majority of &amp;use members ready
to vote to chan~ the p-ovlsklns of
the bill from a centralized tanp!pe
Inspection system {operated by an

outside contractor) to a decentralIzed system (in existing service
statlonsj. That Idea laUed in
November.
Senate President Paul E. GU·
im&amp;, R·Port Clinton, said hearings
wW soon begin on legislation to
regulate health maintenance
organizations.
Gilllmor has been annoyed since a
special Senate committee found
examples of abuse In the Celeste
administration's program to switch
Medicaid recipients to "unrnon!tored and potentially substwrdard"
HMOs.
.
"Much work needs to he done in
the second hall of our legislative
session," said House Speaker Vl'r·
nal G. Riffe Jr., D· New Boston.
Riffe said top priority Items wUl
Ill' to enact a cap!talimprovl'menls
bill andpass enabling legislation lor
a S100 mUllan pondlng program lor
research and development on
high-sulfur Ohio coal as approved
by the voters in Novembl'r.
Riffe also said he IDpes lawmak·
ers revise slate ethics laws and
enact workers' compensation reform. The latter Item was nego.
tlated late last year among labor
and business Interests, but no
consensus was reached.
Rep. Clifton Skeen, D-Akron,
chairman of the House Conunerce
and Labor Committee, Is expected
to Introduce a bill and start
hearings on It In the absenCJ&gt; of an
agreement.
Gilllmor said the Senate also wUI
he holding hearb\gs on workl'rs '
compensalkm, which he said -~

26

Cents

A Multimedia Inc. NewJpeper

Feature Syndicate

'

I

..

been a concern to labor leaders,
small business operators and
farmers.
"I also would expect the General
Assembly to tackle legislation
which strengthens the Medical
Board, addresses the med ical
treatment or terminally ill, and
chan~s sentencing laws to make

oorprison syst em more workable,"
said Riffe.
A special Joint Committee on
Savings and Loans will he looking
over six months worth of testimony
and planning a final report on th&lt;'
sav ings and loan crts!s ofl9ffi, due
Feb. 1..

wn.t. ADDRESS SESSION - Gov. Richard Celeste w!ll address a
joint session ol the Ohio General Assembly Wednesday evening. He wW
deliver his annual "State of the State " ad~ kicking cif the second
half rJ. lhe With leglslallve session. Celeste Is expected to describe
progress he has made In his three years In the governor's mansion.

u.,

..

..

Mechanical problems delay Columbia launch
CAPE

CANAVERAL,

Fla.

(UPI)- TI!edelay-plaguedslruttle

Columbia was grounded today for
-the third lime In 19 days because of
mechanical problems despite a
down-lo-th!'- wtre effort to launch
the spaceship. Another launch try
was scheduled lor Tuesday.
"We'll look forward td trying It
again In lhe moming,"commander
Robert Gibson told ground
controllers.
·uwas a bitter d!sappointmentfor
Columbia's seven· member crew,
including Rep. BUI Nelson, D·Fla.
Tile shuttle filers experienced a

similar frustration Dec. 19 during
the pl'l!lllous taunch attempt when
the counldown stopped 15 91!COnds
before blastoff because of electrical
problems.
The llnal blow today came when
rJ.tlc!a!s In charge cl. the satellltl' in
the ship's cargo bay saldtbeYhad to
he off by 8:47 aJil: EsT In order to
have the sateU!te deployed under
the proper conditions. NASA did not
have enough time to meet that
deadline.
~toll had been scheduled for
7:05a.m. EST but a series of snags
· delayed the countdown as engl•

neers scraml:jed to come up with a
Columbia' s countdown pro·
way to get Columbia airborne ceeded flawlessly throughout the
before Its "launch window" closed.
morning iintU bur minutes .IJefore
The request to postpone blastoff the planned launch time when
came from RCA American Com· • mglneers stopped the countdown
munlcatlons Inc., owner of the $50 because a liquid oxygen propellan t
mUI!on RCA Satcorn communlca· drain valve failed to close on
lions sateU!te in Columbia's pay· computer command.
load bay.
.The valve was resPI manually bu1
The other crew members are the Initial trouble allowed too much
commander Robert "Hoot" Gib- lrigld Uq~!d OXY.gen In to the ship's
son, co-pUot Charles Bolden , St""en main engine propellant Inlets,
Hawley, George Nelson, Franklin dropping temperatures bl'low aJ.
Chang-Diaz, the • flrsJ Hispanic· Iowable Umits, and the countdown
Arnerlc8)1 astronaut, and RCA was stopped again at 7:10a.m. just
satelUte engineer Robert Cenker.
31 seconds before the planned
launch.

Engineers did oot give up and the
countdown was recycled to ti'&lt;' '
T·minus ~· minute point In the hope
of ~lting the shuttle airborne
before the day's launch opportunity
expired.
"You're going to try to recycle
and go today? That's terrific ," said
~ i bson when told mission manag.
ers plan ned to proceed with the
launch attempt, which then was
posti)Jned at RCA's request.
Columbia 's flight , scheduled to
end with a landing In Florida , is the
first of a record 15 missions ):ian ned
for 19&amp;i and the Impact of today' s
delay has not been determined .

'Suicide squad' threat
· sent by Libyan leader
WADDIALKHAIR. Libya (UPI I
- Libyan leader Moa mmar Khad ·
afy has threatened to Sl'nd suicide
squads to "American streets" if
President Reagan orders a strike
against Libya for Its alleged
suwort 0( terrorists.
Khadafy called on the United
States to help ease tension result ing
from the guerrilla attacks on Rome
and VIenna airports, bu t said
Sunday U.S. military moves in the
Mediterranean had pushed the
nations to the brink of war.
"America can hit any place with
Its aircraft earners and stra tegic

bombers." Khadafy said at a news
conference on a state farm 35 miles
west of Tripoli.
"We don't. have aircraft earners
or bombers but suicide groups ,"
said Khadafy, his head wrapped In
a linen cloth . "We would act Inside
American streets bull think It is a
dangerous tum. madness."
Friday. the U.S. aircraft carrier
Coral Sea left Na ples, Italy, on a
coui'SI' the! will ta ke it near the
Li bya n coast, Navy planes arlived
at a base in Sicily. a nd U.S
warplanes in Britain reporl ediv
\\.'err put on &lt;J lrrt .

·

Ohio has eight deaths
By United Press lntenlatlonal
Eight people were' killed in
accidents on Ohio roadways during
the weekend, the Sta te Highway
Patrol reported today.
There were four deaths Sunday,
thn:e Saturday and one Fr iday
night, a patrol spokesiVOman .said.
The victims, Including a pedes·
tliwr, died in seven accidents.
Only one . of the auto-crash
victims was wearing a seat bell. the
spokeswoman said.
Tile patrol counts fatalities resuit ·
Ing from accidents on the stat~1·s
public roads each WEekend bet wet'! !I
6 p.m. Friday and midnight

&gt;

"

..

SeePage6

·Mean whUP, Bobby Joe Lester,~.
of near Vinton, was arrested
Saturday afternoon by Meigs
County Sheriff Howard E . Frank In
connection with the Dec. ll breakIng and entl'ring pf the unOCCI.\pled
Irene Steel residence on Bui:zard
Run Rd.
The B&amp;E was discovered and
reported to thesherUfsdepartment
Saturday.
Several household Items. lnchldlng a radio, electric blanket,
telepoone, 'sleepplng bag and a
small quanlty, of cash were taken.
Mc;st Items have been recoVered.
1 The felony charge carries · a
possible penalty of up to 18 months
In prison and a line rJ. up to $2500.

IAHN'S NE-SUCm

II.

Story, pbole 011 Pqe S

quiz ·team

Celeste prepares 'State of State' message

84 AcJOr Bert
87 Card game
91

Mei~

Vo1 .3&amp;. No.182

abbr.

8 Horse dlrecti've

Tornado victory

Copyrighted 1986

77 Nest
78 A Span1sh lady
· 80 Jot
81 Indian weight
83 Royal Air Force:

1t2 Trades
t 14 Pigpen
116 Turkish otticiat
t 17 Deletes

84 Ear features

85 Spinning toys
86 Semifluid butter
88 Stitched told

2 Black and

Stories on Page 4

e

SUNDAV PUZZLER

da~· 10

st twtion permit un tilrllies regu la!·
ing the cunstr1Jction ar(' approved.
A Tra\'L' County District Coun
.Judge will hear test imony Monday
in support of a req uest for a
trmporar,· In junction against the
commission, which has scheduled
a11olhPr hearing on the pip&lt;&gt;linr for
.Jan . 14.

Letter 011 Pqe %

lime of! over th&gt;' holidays resulted
O.allen~r. bolted to a newly
son, RCA engineer Robert Cenker
and BUI Nelson, on board In his activated shuttle pad about I 'n in the Monday launch dale.
Columbia's landing back at the
capacity as chairman 11 till' House miles !rom Col\llllbla, Is scheduled
Keni'ledy
Space Center Sa iurday
to
take
111
Jan.
23
to
launch
a
new
subcommittee that oversees NA·
SA 's budget.
NASA communications satl'illte wlll be the fi rst Florida shu ttle
The shuttle filers !lied to take off and a retri.....able science probE&gt; to touchdown since April when Sen.
Jake Gam , ft. Utah, the first
Do;&gt;c. 19, but an electrical problem study Halley's comet.
Columbia's launch oclginally was lawmakl'r to fly In space, landed
stopped the countdown just 15
seconds before launch. which was scheduled lor Dec. 18 but It was with his six crewrnate&gt; aboard ttw&gt;
already 24 hours behind schedule delayed 24 hours bl'causeenglneers shuHle Discovery.
needed more time to makl' final
One of Columbla ' s~dlfications
because of wtflnished work.
preparations.
On
Dec.
19.
the
is
a new nc;se-w!l!el steer ing
Landing now Is scheduled lor
system
expected to reduce the tire
stopped
just
15
countdown
was
Jan. 11 back at the Kennedy Spac~
Centt&gt;r.
seconds hl'fore liftoff hecauSI' of and brake damagt&gt; experlt&gt;nced
"I guess they 've been telling us U electrical problems in the right -side during many shuttle touchdml'!ls
solid rockl'l booster steering and It was the Implementation of
we keep practicing this we'll get It
system.
that program that cleared the way
right ," Gibson joked when the crew
Time needed to correct that for a resumption of landings on the
arrived at the shu Hleport Friday.
problem and NASA's commitment relatively narrow runway In
"We're looking forward now to
to hard-pressed shuttle workers lor Florida.
being the first flight c1 '86 Instead of
the last flight of '!5."
~;;;,:~=;:;;;:;;:;:;:;:;;;:;;:;:;:;;;:;;;:;:;:;:;;;;:;:;:;:;;:;;;;:;;;:;;:;::;:;
During their live days in space, lr
the shunle fliers plan to launch an
RCA communlca lions sateU!te one cl. the most powerful television
relay stations ever carried aloft and to carry out a variety of
experiments, Including ob.serva·
lions of Halley's comet as It races
toward the sun .
It wlll be Columbia's seventh E:F.
flight sinCP kicking all the shuttle E;h++.
era in Aprill981 and Its first since
O!'cember !983.
In the in terim, the billion· dollar .....,.+7-rT.h&lt;
spaceship has been dry docked lor
ex ten sive Improvements to bring It Ei~h
up to par with the oti'er three newer
membl'rs of NASA 's fleet .
1-i':+-7Launch crews also are readying
7.4-.;ct-'~
!he shuttle Challenger lor blastoff
on a weeklong mission that feal\lr-es ~+=+-7New Hampshire high school 1-:::+-7teacher Sharon Christa McAuliffe 1-:.~
as a crew member.
1-C'~it-'i't-:~3-

br,Rtll~!:

Patriots, Bears win

~y.

_,.,111-=11
'

Satunlay

Dayton : unidentified woman. so.
when struck by a car as she
attempted to cross a city street.
Cleveland: . Jennifer Farrer. 1.
Clevelan d, In a too-car accident on
a cl ty strret.
Cincinnati: Dorothy M. Auble, 74,
Cincinnati, in a !IVO· car crash on a
Ha milton County road.
Friday night

K!lled were:

IAVNQIDEIAYBDAGAIN-'nluplllle..-ale dlea.11•' 'llel .......... '111tllid&amp;lew..louve
Colz•~~*••...,.Pad8Lhller_.S. ' , llll'ltltll a _ . , _ •• 'crlarltlacoiC•=
reMJ l1lr
wltldtt- CMM. Far tile 111111 Ml N ' • lJPl
tl*dtme Ia It dip, tile 1llallle ...... _~

U.S. 52 in Clermont County.
Bowling Green; Ja mes A. Gib·
son. 60, Bowling Green, In a
two-vehicle accident on Ohio 25 In
Wood County.
Cincinnati: Kt&gt;nneth Overstreet .
.17. Cincin nati, killed one-vehicle
accident on a city street.

Sunday

Batavia: Joseph F. Bol ton, 24,
Felicity, and Honle R. BoltOn, ll,
Norwood, In a ooe- car accident on

ColumblJS: Hol:eri D.· Evan s 26
' '
Co!umrus, In a one-car aCCident on
a Franklin Coonty'I'Oad whtle being
pursued by pollee.

�</text>
                </elementText>
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