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                  <text>Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Mary E. Furbee, 93, of 52!n'l St.
Rt. 124, Rac!n(', died Thursday
morning at Julia· s Personal Home
Car.. Center In Clifton, W.Va.
A hou~wi!e and member of the
Methodist Chu rch at Great Bend,
she was born Feb. ll, 1892 in Tvl"r
County, V'(Va. to Wesley 'a nd
Harrtett All"n McCormick.
She Is survived by two daughters,
Juanita Sayre of Portland and
Harrtett Schaeff('r of Day ton; a
son, Raymonf! Furbee of Racine;
seven grandchildren, Dwain and
Roland Sayre; Karen. Eric 'a nd
Richard Furtbee; Susann and
Gregg Sha('ffer; seven great grand chlldren, Christopher and Michael
Sayre; Michelle and Michael Bidwell; Douglas, Aaron and Brent
Furbee; and a great great grandson, Joshua Swann.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Marion L Furbee.
Services will be Sunday, 3: 30
p.m., at the Ewing Funeral Home.
Bulial will be in Letart Fa lls
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home alter 7 p.m. Friday
and all day Saturday. The family
asks that in liPU Of flOW('rS,
donations be made to favorite
charities.

Mildred E. Carpenter
Mildred Eileen Holter Carpl'nf('l'.
Medina. former M('igs rf'S ident who
died Wednesday in Akron , was
preceded in death by her parent s.
and two sisters. a n infant. Mary
Louise Holter , and Wilma Gail
Holter Fenton . Among her su"'ivors are four great nieces. four
great nephews, 1\&lt;'0 grea t-grPlat
niece s and two grea t -g rea t
nephews.

Vern F. Gret&gt;n
Vern F. Green, 88, Phoenlx, Anz ..
formerly of Meigs County, died
Jan . 10 at his te&gt;sidence in Phoenlx.

He was born in Ohio and worked
for 38 years for the FlrestonP Tire
and Rubber Co. In the Akron area.
He had resided in Arizona for the
past 24 years. He was a vef('ran ci
World War I and retired from the
Firestone Co. in 1962.
Surviving are his wi!P. Mutiel: a
son, Raymond V. Green, Akt:vn: a
sist('r. three grandch ildren and slx
great-grandchildren.
Se"•ices W('re held Jan. 14 in
Phoenix with butial in that city. The
A. L. Moore and Sons Funera l
Home was in c har ge of
arrangements.

Lucille Vaughan
Lucille Va ughan, 69, of Pnosp&lt;&gt;Ct
Hill in Pomero~ · . died Thut~day
t-vening at Veterans Memorial

Hospital.
A hou~\\i fr and me mber of the
Lutheran Chu rch, she was born
March 31, 1916 in Pomeroy to
William and Eliza beth Reutt' r
Leifheit.
She is survi,·ed bv her husband,
Richard Vaughan Sr., Pomeroy;
five children, Richard W. Vaughan,
Middleport; Suzanne Warner,
Pomeroy; Patrick Vaughan, Hasting, Mich.: Judith Hunt&lt;&gt;r. Middlepo rt; and Ma rtin Vaughan of
Leland , Miss.; thtw sisters, Florena&gt; Windon of Pomeroy; Ruth
Wipple of Muncie. Ind .; KarhiPI'n
Epple of Akron; a brother, Ernest
L&lt;'i fll eit of Akron; II grandch ildren. four grea t grandchildren ; and
several niecps and nephews.
In addition to her pa rent s, she
was preceded in death by a brother.
Ear l Leifheit : a sister. Ethel
Clifford ; and a grandson William.
Services will be Monday. 10 a.m.
at Ewing Funeral Home with Rev.
James Corbett officiating. Burial
will be in Wells Cemetet-;•. Fr iends
maycall at thdu neral home atrcr 7
p.m. Saturda,v and all day Sunday.

Board takes steps
;Continued from page 11
SpUt voles
During Thursday night' s session,
the board voted - with split votes
Involved - to change t be conCl"pt of
regular board of educaarion meet·
ings. Usually du ting board sessions
there have been additions to the
agenda . These ha vt• been appro,·ed
for discussion and possible action a1
the beginning of the mectings.

was called from the meeting duP to
a fa mily illness. Powell 1·ored
aga inst the motion with Rup&lt;'.
SnowdPn and Barton casting affir
matlv£' votes.

came to a ,-orr hr and La t·l) Powell

Adopts hudget
The board adopted a $3.2b2,8W
budget for the first sL' months of
I his year and named Eliz.abct h Ann
Brown and Robin Boring ro the
substit ute reac hN lis t. Cliff
Kenned~· wa_s named Meigs Varsi ty
Bas!'ball Coach for the current
school _Vl'ar. Hubert Ray Cornwell
was acc"epled as a tuition student s
and a setv ice contract with E. C.
Ba bberr. Inc.. for insp!'C tion and
sen·ing of the sewage aeration
system ar Meigs Hig h School for
19S6 was rcnewrd ewn though
Rup&lt;' did sti'I'Ss that efforts sho uld

voted to rontinur the .;1ppru\·a!

t.&gt; madr to drtrrminr lf thrre is a

Howr ver. la~t night it was agn:W

that in the !uturt' all add itions to the
agenda plt'senred by the adminis·
!ration or board of education
members will be considered without the board vor ing on them. Board
member. Richard Vaughan, commented that he prefe rred to vote on
thf' items. Howt&gt;vPr. whC'n 1hf' issuP

method on the addiltonal ilt'm'
while board mcmb&lt;.'rs. Snowden.
Larry Rupe and Bob Barron ,·ot&lt;'&lt;l
that the addit ions will be aurum.lli ·
ra lly up for considera tion if 1hp~· arc
Hem s from the admin istration or

boa rd mr mb&lt;&gt;rs.
The next changt:&gt; in t..Janl ptucPdurPS ramr whrn it was suggt:•stPd

that pi'Cplc allrnding !he mr&lt;'lings
be allowed to speak allhP clos&lt;' of
sessions. Snowden said this would
relieve residents from going
through the rstabiL&lt;hed pmc't'dure
outlined for app&lt;'aring on the
agenda . \'aughan said a C&lt;'i ling
should be put on such expressions. a
limit ation to .10 minutes. Barron
said the board should listrn to rhr
publ ic and Snowden commPnted
that action on

a n ~·

commf'nl.-; or

problems plt'srnrrd would nor
nl'('('Ssarily ha\'l' 10 ll&lt;' ta ken at the
sam e m ('('ting u nl f'~s an f'mrr gt&gt;ncy situation was invOI\'('d .

Vaughan suggested thai mCf'tings
be set to end at 10 p.m. It was
agreed that public express ion will
be permitted in the futu nc and tha t
meetings will go to 10 p.m. at the
maximum . At thi.s point. Vaughan

7~\HL SER"lCES - Aaron
M. Zahl, 82, of 250 Mt~herry
Ave., Pomeroy, died Wednesday .-enlng at the Berrien
General H6Spltal In Berrien ,
('.enter, Mich.
' A retired school teacher wkh
41 years servlee, he was bom
Nov. 17, 19ro ln Minersville. Hi•
lather was August Zahl Survivors Include a son, William Zahl
of Groveport; a daughter, ~Irs.
Leo (Jean) Smith, Berrien
Springs, Mich.; six grandchild·
reo; four great grandchildren
and three nle&lt;!es. Zahl was
preceded In death by his wife,
Mildred lllll Zahl, In 1983.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday at
the Ewing Funer-.ll Home with
ll&lt;•v. James Corbitt officiating.
Burial will he in Beech Grove
Cem('lery. Friend• may caD at
the funeral home aft er II a.m.
Saturday.

Plan soup supper
Rac ine Post 602, American L&lt;'·
gion, will hold a soup suppl'r from 12
noon to 6 p.m. Sa tu rday at the post
home. Soup, sandwiches and homemade pie wil l be available.

Vetl'rans Memorial

If you would happen to brea k
through the ice, don't panic! Do not
remove your clothing. Your r io thing ca n trap air to provide
flotation along with trapping a layer
of water thai your body will warm
to slow the loss or body beat.
To cli mb out, tu rn the direction
you carne from . Place hands and
arms on the unbroken ice surface .
Work forward onto 1~ Ice by
kicking you r feet. If t ~ Ice breaks,
maintain your position and slide
forward again. Sharp objects such
as large nalls, knives or car keys .
may oe used to jab into the Ice to
gain lev&lt;&gt;rage to help pull yourself
out oft ~ water. Once you are on the
ice, don't stand. This concentrates
your weight in one small spot
increasing t~ chance .of ice
breaking again. Instead roll away
fi'O m I~ break un til you reach solid
ice. Then get to a s ~lter an d warm
yourself Immediately.
When rescuing someone, re-

o5.

today
.. 20 percent
and 60
Chance
of rain tonight..
Is 40 percent
pl'ra&gt;nt.
Extended forecast ,
Sunday through Tuesday
A ehance of showers or snow
Hurries Sunday. Mostly fair Monday and Tuesday. lllgm In the 40s
Sunday and In the :lls Monday and
Tuesday. lAiws in lhe :lls Sunday ..
in the ~ Monday .. and in the teens
Tuesday.

Ad missions.. J. inda Bnmry. 11&lt;l ·

Mu tllh.\

Dance set

The Svracu"' Firr Depa rtment
will stage a dance from 810 II p.m.
Saturrlav in the Svracuse Grade
School auditorium ..Admission is S2
a pl'rson and pmcreds will go
towards the punchase of rescue air
bags for the department .

ThPt'c will be a dana&gt; Saturday,
Syracuse Elementary School audit·
ohum. 8 10 ll p.m. Admission is $2
pl'r person. Proceeds ; to help
puncha.,e rescue air bags for the
Syrac u se Vol un teer Fir e
Depa rtment.

1561.

dra ling with thr
ll'!'pPCti\ 'C' arr~1 s nf work for thosr

PEDIATRICS
I would like to announce
the openrng ol my new offee in
Pornt Pleasant West Virgmta

"Tranarlnnia 1·5000"

"PI"

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sun. t hru Thurs., 7:00

sun . thru Th urs ., 7:10

Fri. and Sat., 7:00, 9:00
Sat, and Sun . Mot., 2:00
Sat Mldnlghr, 12:00

Fri. and Sat., 1:10, 9:10
Sal. and Sun. Mal., 2:10
Sat. Mldnlghl, 12:10

,

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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Monday througll Fnday
9:00 a.m to 500 p m

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lOCATED: Suite 113 Medicel Office

Bt.ilding at Pleasant Valloy Hospital
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

in\olvrd were appt'O\'N.I for M.

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TWO YEAR
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WARRANTY.
'

Emergency squads
answer Jit'e calls

to \'(' tflrans M('rnoria l Hospltal;

REAL NICE!

Rutland at 8:29a.m . to Meigs Mine
~u. '2 fur Ala n E. Clark toO'Fllrnrss
M&lt;•mmial Hospital; Rarinr at 4 05
p.m. transported James A ul~rso n
ro HoiZI'r Medical Center: Syracuse
.11 ii: !4 p.m. to the Carlf'ton School
for Tamm;· Bachner ro \'r ll'rans
Mrmmial Hospital: S;·racuS!' at
R:05 p.m rranspo11rd Robert Hen·
to

\ 'rt erans

Road
'

Gallipolis, 0.

V-8, POWER, POWER WINDOWS, POWER
SEAT &amp; DOORS, TILT, CRUISE.

COunt \' Emergency M&lt;'di·

Sf&gt;rvlcf' reports fin• calls
Thursda'; Middlcpot1 at 2:'27 a.m.
to ~ orth ~'C'Ond for Dessio Boring
c~d

dri.lo(

195 Upper River

1981 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88
ROYAL 2 DR.

and Da\·id Bowen.

$5195

:vtPmor ial

Hospital.

MILLING DIVISION

INSTANT SUCKLE

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MEDICATED
MILK REPLACER

l981 BUICK REGAL 2 DR.
2 tone blue. tilt. cruise. air.
SA~E

W~ Have
So, if you really w.rt to Roach Proof your home,

Grab Arab-H's Deadly on Roaches

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PH. 992-2115

110 MUliEIIIIY AVE.

POMEROY, OH.

King Builders Supply
405 North Stcond

H2-3748

CONVENIENT OFF STREET PARKING

Middleport

0

AT

$3995

7. 9°/o Financing

on Selected Buicks, Pontiacs
and GMC Trucks.

Smith-Nelson Motors
POMEROY, OHIO

500 £. MAIN ST.

tmts
Vol. 20 No. &amp;0
Copyrightlld 1986

992-2174

Page C-1
Inside:
Along the Rlver ........ .... ... B-Hl
Editorials ........ ........ ... .. .... A-2
Sporl.'i " ........ ' .... .. .....,., .. ' C-1 -8
Take-One ....... .. .. .......... Insert
Weather ...... .. .. ,........ .... .... A-3

Ohio weather:
rain likely
-Page A-3-

tttiittt
8 Sections. 58 Pages 50 Cents

Middleport-Pomeroy--Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday. January 19, 1986

A Multimedia Inc . Newapaper

Public hearing on connector road scheduled
By CHARLENE HOEI'UCII
'l'lmes&amp;ntlnel Staff
POMEROY - A public Involvement meeting on
one phase of the preliminary engineering plans for the
.proposed ronnector road from t~ Ritchie Blidge at
Ravenswood-Great Bend to Ohio Route 7 and 33 at
Rock Splings, will be held on Thursday, Feb. 20, 7
p.m. at Meigs Multi-Purpose Building in Pomeroy.
Officials at the Ohio Department a Transportation.
Dishier 10 office, Marietta, advise that representa tives of ODOT as well as the Woodruff Consulting
Firm, OE'Veland, who are diolng the prellm!naring
engineering plans wUI be there to discuss progress on
the project.

By LARRY EWING
Since both the Gallla County
rolleges
and the proposed !our-year
'l'lmes&amp;ntlnel Staff
instllutlon
In Scioto County would
RIO GRANDE- While students
and faculty at Rio Grande College be puU!ng students from a service
and Conununlty College are conft- area of overlapping adjacent coundent of the Institutions' ability to ties, a Rio Grande task force
academically compete, .they do projects potential losses (ranging
express "roncern" about t1w&gt; prop- from 10 to 90 percent ) of students
osal to upgrade Shawn('(' State attending Rio Grande from souCommunity College In Portsmouth theastern Ohio counties.
"Of course, we are concerned,"
to a four-year unlvl'rsfty. ,
said
Dr. Barry Thompson, PresiMany in the administration,
dent of the Rio Grande Faculty
however, fear t1w&gt; Shawnee plan
could have a "serious" lmpacr on Association. "We are roncerned
the future of the combined colll'ges. about educatlon ... and anything that
In a report to tbe community might hurt educatktn at thll
lnstltu tlon Is of conce•n 'to us."
college board of trustees oo Dec. ll,
"All the studies aren't In , but the
1985, Rio Grand(' College President
Dr. Ooudus R Smith reported , prellminary numbers are dark," he
added. "WI''re a strong, viable
"Loss of income to Rio Grande
tnStltutton ... and , given the massive
College could be as much as
$600,!ro to $8Xl,OCXJ annually and amounts of resources that have
been poured inlo Rio Grande, you
S2ll,!ro to Rio Grande Community
can 't help but wonder about t1w&gt;
College."
Dr. Herman Koby, Secretary- need for another institution so
Treasurer of the Rio Grande close."
Need Questioned
Community CoUege Board of TrusRio Grande's Dlrecror of Admis·
tees, sees lhe proposed Shawnee
conv.,rs!on as a "serious problem." slons and Records, Dean Brown,
"And, it's molt' than a financial also questions the need for tbe
pmblem," he said. "A toss of proposed !our-year lnstltuUon at
students rould mean a cutback In Portsmouth.
"I can see no way II (Shawnee 1
class offerings and In supporting
Statl'l can avoid being anything
major programs."
ot~r than an under-funded, under'Snowball Erlect'
"You could end up with a populated program," Brown
snowball pflect ," Dr. Koby added, roncluded.
"Given thai the population pool is
" If classofferings had to be reduced
or a major area cut back for going lobe declining between now
economic r..asons, It could lead to and the late 1900s," he said. "The
addltonal students considPrlng obvious result of this is going to be
transfer to find a stronger major or that 1~ state will have to split the
course of Interest."
(Contlnued on page A31

Clifton man
dies in Mason
County's first
traffic fatality .
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A
Clifton man who died of injulies
suffered In a single-car accident on
Route 62, Friday night , has become
Mason County's first traffic !aral!ty
of 1986
A spokesman for the Mason
County Sheriff's Departm('nlldentl!led the \1Ctlm as W!Utam E.
Varian Jr., 21, a passenger in a 19'79
Plymouth driven by Roy A. Estep,
24, Shade, Ohio.
Varian was pronounced dl'ad on
arrival at Pleasant Valley Hospital
by Mason Coonty Coroner John M.
Grubb. M.D.. the spokesman said.
Estep was treated and released
from the hospital. Both were
transported lo PVH by the Point
Pleasant Emergency Medical
Service.
The sheriff' s spokesman said the
accident occurred at about 9:50
p.m. on Route 62, half a mile south
of the Mason County Airport when
Estep, traveling south, appar..ntly
lost control ol his car. The vehicle
left the roadway and turned over
several times. Varian was apparently thrown from the vehicle, the
spokesman added.
The accident remains under
Investigation by t)le sheriffs
department.
Funeral arrangements for VarIa n will be announced later by the
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason.

will be held and the environment al impact
slalementhis exp&lt;&gt;Cted to be completed in May, 1987,
with the prsllminary engineering to be completed
after that.
.
Alter a location has been established and
environmental clearana&gt; obtained, then delailed
design work can proceed. Actual acquisition of
property right -of-way s and constur tlon funding.
however, appears to be several years down the road,
ODOT officials concede.
II was a year ago this month that Gov . Ril"hard
Celeste announced thai stale funds totaling $800,0CXJ
had been earmarked for the preliminary engineering
to relocate State Route 124 from Pomerov to the

While t~ meellng Is ~~ for 7 p.m.. ODOT advises
that officials will be there beginning at 4 p.m. for
individuals and groups who want to meet plior to the
open public session.
Results of the environmental impact studll's to date
will be detailed for the public along with the two
alternate alignments or routes being considered.
Aerial photographs of the proposed routes will be
displayed at the public meeting, and handouts on the
status of the environmental impact and locations wlll
be available.
Public lmput Is thE' main emphasis of the February
meeting, officials report . In the fall a form al hearing

Rio faculty, students
react to p~posal to
create new university

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CAR SPECIALS

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They've created a reliable German road car thai handles a nd perlorms like many $20,000 European sedans. And has more passenger space than some $20,000 sedans. All lor a ptice that's a /of
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WILLIAM C. CALLIHAN, II,

H•achrr r ffN'lin' Marrh 6. was

attrn d

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Jcc·epted and pmfessionallea\·rs 10

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Sol. &amp; Sun .. All Seol!i $2 15
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~

Page A-2

•

Bargain Matine es

Cinema.,'?)

Sp~ial interest legislation of the worst kind -

Professor: don't blame TV if Johnny can't read
-Page A-8

Admission Price Pol iq•

~T~i~fl R

:m.

Saturday dane!' Sl't

!'~· strm .

of

'j0'

CLEVE LAND tUPI I - Thurswinning Ohio Lottery
numbers: DaUy Number

Walter King. Pomerov .
Discharges --Larry Po\\'ell. Jo,·ce
Sauters. Hugh Leifheit. Geo rge
Everet t. C'anir Moore.

•
are nmnmg
-Page B-1

SPECIAL

lee

Ohio lollery winners

Ticker sales totaled $1,203,164.50,
with a payoff duP of $li4,!*ll.
PICK-I

Millions

"We Oo All"

Weather forecast
Today... cloudy with scattered
showers. High 55 to 60. Southwest
\\i nds 10 toW mph.
Totiight...mostly cloudy. Low 40
to 4S. Southwest winds 5to 10 mph.
Saturday... ra!n likely. High :ll to

Reds' -rosey season

MR. AUTO REPAIR

••• Pl•ri•&amp; lh111 J••••ry za

loml firm which is cerlific'&lt;l to
t'f'Signat ion

member the Red Cmss " reach, Cincinna ti , Ohio, 45240. (513) 851throw, row and go" sequence. 1755.
R('aching rescues Inc lude extend- r;:::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::j"
lng arms, clothing, tree branches or
whatever Is around to the victim.
Ropes oc spare tire could be thrown
to the victim. Asmall boat could be
It
pushed across the Ice to t~ victim.
S10 Per Hr. Mechanical Work
Going out to rescue t~ victim
S1S Per Hr. lody Work
yourself Is very dangerous and Is
not recommended.
Remember that vlcllms of
OIL CHANG£ AND FILT£R
accidents may require artificial
respiration as well as treatment Cor
$995 Plus Tax
hypothermia . Seek medical artenPHONE
949-2044
tlon Immediately. For further
PINE GROVE RO.
Information contact the Division of
RACINE, OH.
Watl'rcralt, 10556 McKelvey Road,

da~··s

cine; Char les Chaffee, Rrwlsville:

handlr th\' work witil thr arnllion
Thr

Friday. January 17. 1986

Ice water rescue: stay calm

Area deaths
Mary E. Furbee

t

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

. ....
'

'·' \l

.....

'

'

' t •!i.l

?;. ~:~·~~··..;.,·"...~~~·

S'IUDENT, FACULTY CONCERN - Students and faculty ai!Uo
Grande College and Community College are confident Ill the
Institutions' ability to academlcall,y compete. They do express
"concem," however, about the proposal to upgrade Shawnee State
Community College In Portsmouth to a four-yMI' university.

Ravenswood Bridge over rhe Ohio River, a dtS ranee of
15.69 miles.
The $17 million Ravenswood Bridge was completed
in October, 1981 with fund s to build the brioge cotl)ing
from both West Virgin ia and Ohio. The building oft~
Ravenswood Bridge was the culmination of W years
of rfforts by residents on both sides of the Ohio River .
Since the completion of the bridge. efforts have
focused on gelling fund s for the road.
The Meigs County Commissioners have tong
contended that building a highway from the bridge to
Rock Springs will open up a new and large segment of
the county to eronomic development.

Decision to cut EMS
director's job was
financial - Burleson
GALLIPOLIS - Thursday's
move by the Gallia County Com-mission to fire Emergency Medical
Services Director Jimmie Evans
and abolish the director's position
was not done out of malice, T. Ka!l
Burleson, president of the commission, said Friday afternoon.
"There wer.. no politics and
nothing pl'rsonal Involved," Burleson sald. "It was just a business
maneuver. We've been watching
the EMS' Opl'ration ov('r the past
year."
The move will save the county
i"" &lt;IOIT"' money trun Ule EMS'
budget, although how much has yel
to be determined. The elimination
of Evans' salary will save t~
servicE' about $16,!ro, plus fringe
benefits that would have been paid
In his behalf.
However, Burleson said the
service will need a leader and t~
commission intends to look to the
ranks of current full -time
employees.
"Somebody has to be In charge,"
he said. "We'll try to get a working
leader and we"ll have to compensate them some way above and
beyond their regular sal ary ."
The commission has tentative
plans to Interview at least three
cummt full-time EMS members for
lhe position on Tuesday, he added .
Evans' position is not the only
place t~ commission is looking to
cut the service' s budget. Burleson
said more cuts, mostly from
overtime and maintenance on
vehicles, are probably on the way.
The service also needs to in·
crease It s collections and the

BUSINESS DECISION Thursday's move by the Gallla
County Commission to fire
Emergency Medical Services
Director Jimmie Evans and
abolish the director's position

was 'just a business maneuver,"
T. Kall Burleson, president of
the commission, said Friday
afternoon. ·
commission is looking a I the
possibility of charging Holzer Medi cal Center and area nursing homes
for non-emergency transfers made
on their behalf, "but there are no
guarant ees there is any help there,"
Burleson said.
Money for the service's budget,
reduced to $210,!ro plus colleetlons
in 19!li, C'Omes from federal ri'Venue
1Cant inued on page A3 )

No recurrence of cancer in Reagan
WASHINGTON (UPI I - President Reagan got good news Saturday that ther.. was no recurrence or
the colon cancer for which hi' had
surgl'ry last year and the three
polyps removed from his bowel and
a pimple takl'n off his face Friday
W('C(' benign.
The White House Issued a
onl'-paragraph statement , attributed only to the office of the press
secf('tary, declaring that detailed
la boratory l.'xams of the colon
polyps and lhe papule, or pimple, on
his light cheek were not cancProus.
Rl'agan's personal physician, Dr.
Burton Smith, called the president

with the new s Saturday morning,
the White House said.
"Final laboratory evaluation on
the three intestinal polyps and
facial tissue removed from the
president yesterday has been completed and all are benign . The
president was in[onmed of the
results by his physician at Camp
David this morning," the statement
said.
A spokesman said no further test
results, such as blood tes~ . blood
pressure or choleslerol counts,
would be released - apparently
reflected a clampdown on the
president' s medical records or-

dered by first lady Nancy RPagan.
who complained last year about the
lack of privacy associated with her
husband's health.
The intestinal polyps were discovered and removed during Reagan's slx·month postoperative
checkup at Bethesda Naval Hospi-tal Friday when he underwent an
uncomfortable examination of his
lower Intestines by an optical tube
inserted through his anal canal.
Alter 5 ~ hours of examination,
Reagan, his wife an~ their dog Rex
flew by ~llcopter to his mountain
retreat 70 miles northwest or

Wa shington . where he did routine
pape!WOrk and delivened his
weekly radio broadcast. marking
the birthday of Martin Luther King
J r.
· In the broadcast. Reagan said be
shared King's dream of a society in
which pi'Cple are "j udged not on the
color of t~ir skin but on I~ content
of t~ir cha racter. "
But he also reiterated opposit ion
to the use of goals a nd rlmetabiPs in
minority hiling and promotion and
said his economic policies have
given blacks greater opport •tnity to
advanre.

(Continued on page A3)

Ohio lawmaker stands up·against Feds

ARIUV&amp;'! FOR TESTS l'mlldent Reagan ...Ill Ids hand
to Ids hear as reporters shout
quesllon!i Ill the Bethesda Naval
H011pltal Friday, 'lbe president
arrived lo undet'lll 1M 111'!11
thorough Internal examlnallon
s~ Ids cancer operallon last
July. Reagan pi pod news
S1ltunlll¥ that tllere was no
reeunmce of the colon cancer.
Tltree polyps removed lrom his
bowel tllld a pbnple taken ott his
face Friday were benl&amp;n.

COLUMBUS (UPIJ - First It
was automoblle seat belts, now auto
emissions testing . StatE' Rep. Louis
W. Blessing Jr. , R-Onclnnatl, Is
"sick and tined" of being pressured
Into passing bills by the federal
government. and he's fighting
back,
Blessing Is calling for a convention
to amend the U.S. Constitution to
prohibit Congress from forcing
states to comply with federal law as
a condition for receiving federal
grants.
His resolution tohtha t effect will
receive an Initial hearing Wednesday In the Ohio House Economlc
Affairs and Fro..ral Relations
Committee.
The House Is meeting In solo
session again this W('('k whlle the

Senate continues with committee
meetings.
Ohio has a mandatory seatbell
law which floated through on
pressure from the bu.s. department
of Transpoliallon.
Now a'ote Is scheduled for Jan. 29
on a blll requiring auto emissions
testing In . the Cleveland and
Cincinnati areas because of a U.S.
Environrnenlal Protection Agency
threat to withhold money from
surrounding counties unless the air
Is pulilled.
"What right d9es Congress have
to tell us to wear seatbelts?" said
Blessing, who points out that the
Conslltu lion reserves to the states
powers not specifically dell'gated to
!he federal government.
"They've been getting around

that by threatenlng to Withhold
money," said Blessing. "I'm sick
and tired ci it."
Blessing said Ihe auto emissions
lestlng requirement , which would
affect his district, is "the perfect
example" of blackman by the
federal government.
"Everyone to a person says It
!emissions testing) fs no good, It
\\'On't work. Yet thzy're going to
pass this bill beca7se orthe threat d
the loss or funds. The merits of thE!
program are not even being
considered,"
Blessing said he f('('ls his proposal
will generate plenty of support
among his colleagues.
I other activity this week,
Senatl'-passed legislation cracking
down on unllcl'nsed fireworks
manufacturing operations will re-

a&gt;ive a hearing i I~ House State
Government Committee Wednesday afterroon .
That same tl'll"&lt;'l ing will provide a
forum for a constitutional amendment permitting I~ goveror to fill a
vacancy in I~ Ueutenant governor's office.
The Senate Judiciary Commlttec
will continue hearings Wednesday
morning on legislation authorizing
wlretapplng by law enforcement
agencies under carefully controlled
conditions to flghl organized cnm ...
The Judiciary Committee also
will consider House-passed legislation autholizlng closed preliminary
hearings oo certain sex o!fen~
Involving a child.
The House meets Tuesday at 11
a.m.

�January 19, 1986

Commentary and perspectiv~
A little poJitics_______:___
Xti Third .\\'\' .. (;allipolis, Ohio

Ill t 'ourt St., l'omeroy, Ohio
tnHl 99t·tl56

&lt;6 111 ll n·:!:IH
IWBEin L..

111\&lt;a:rr

Puhlboht·r

IIOK.IItT 1\'lUiO' .JR.

l'c\T WIIITEIIEAD
.\ ~~ i s tanl PuhlishPr-fontrollt-r

Ext'l'Uii\'t' Edil o1·

l i 'T ! II ''- II)·'tl l 'l\1.1 '• ,, , It t ••11 &lt;\1 1 )\ll , f:•lidt" h • ,,lh , Wll~lll o•t t\o..
\ I'·,,.J. ,, .:o·•ro'••·•'
,. ll•: rt..; .t'ldll'. •'l" •. ~,.n. d tt •J· n.trl lt' .roldlt ' '-' Hlt l
'• , flh••ll • nu'"' " , .., '\ o.ll .. :L'!l• d ], · -,.,,''.I.·~ pull , ... flt·d I, .,,,., ... •IIPU it.J tw- rn

u• tn.:

,_ ,,,.d r "' ' ' .t •l d· •'"' ' 'IC: l• • l' ' ''

rh •' V•'l , '\.• ,. ,, •

Shawnee State plan:
special interest bill
of the worst kind

'PUCM

RUN,&amp;UTYoU

E&gt;amelhing stra nge is going on in II&gt;? Ohio Legislature. A bill thai fe"
~pi('

\\'.1 nt - or can

logical!~·

WASHINGTON- An Interesting
political posslbillty Is beginning to
take shape. If the Democrats can
emerge from next November's
elections wilh a net gain of three
seats In tl&gt;? senate, the 100th
Congress · wUI see the Senate
divided 50-50. Good morning, VIce
President Bush. You could have
busy two years.
The only duty asslgn€d 10 t;.&gt; vice
president by the constitution Is that
he "shall be pre.ldent oft!£ Senl!te,
but shall have no vote, unless they
he equally divided." At present the
Senate numbers 53 Republicans, 47
· Democrats. The Grand Old Party
looks apprehensively toward November, wt..n the raw numbers

spell trouble: Of the 34 seals in
contest. 22 are now held by
Republicans. only 12 by
Democrats.
Consider those 12 Democratic
seats. At least hall of litem are
solidly Jock€d ln. No Republican Is
going to beat Bumpers In Arkansas,
Dodd In Connectlcui, Inouye in
Hawaii, Ford In Kentucky, Glenn In
Ohio or Hollings in South Carolina.
In Illinois. three Republicans are
vying for a chance to run against
Democrat Alan Dixon, but they
seem not to by vying vel}' hard.
Vermont wUI be a lillie Iaugher
lor the Democrats to hold. Incum·
benl Patrick Leahy barely
~~~ to re-election In 198&gt;. This

OKAY, You
CAN RUN ANP HIDE.
BUT YoU WoN'T
~LEEP WELL!

CAN'T HIPEf

defend -is. according to E'\'eryonr in a

pco;ilion 10 know. guaran ll't'd of p;1ssage
In an age of continu ing studcnl populat ion declin~s and shrinking
budge Is. House Speaker \'prnal G. Riffe . D·New futon. proposes tocr!'Bte
!he slate's J:lth publicly supp011cd uniwrSity in his home district by
upgrad ing Shawnee Stale \ommunit;· College in Porlsmouth to a
four-ye-ar ino;;tituion.
. Consider the follO\\ing:
: ·'--Th e Ohio Board of Regcnls conclud&lt;'d in 1976 lhm Ohio ha s no need for
: a~ npw collegf's or uni•-crsities ~ Ihat tl&gt;? state has met it s goal of
• ~blishing an inSiitution of high&lt;' I' learni ng wil hin commu l ing dislanC'E' of
: 9\~f'~· Ohio ci tizen.

&lt;: -The starr al n?Rdy has 12 uni\'Prsities. and tll,l re' sa v.·idPspread fPE'ling
:Jrult the futult' push shou ld be&gt; 10 ma ke one or morpof tt.&gt; existing facilities

• a "''orld·class institu lion on a par \\ilh II&gt;? Massachusetts Institute of
; TechnologY or Stanford. Such an approach would l'Onlrast with tl&gt;?
: ~r,llctice of giving a lillie mone•· loa lot ci schools and allowing each to tl1'
: to ·be all things to all studeniS.
::· ;...Implementation of Rifle's oi ll will cost an f'S timaled $38 million. And.
, 1hpt's juS! for s1ar1 -up. That doesn't include lulur'!' operating and capllal
' oUtlays. Financing lhP proposal im·oll'f'S a ;:.prmanent commitment that
! wOJ undl?rcut other educational instilutions.
: · '-The proposa l would obv ious lY create grcalt'r educational opporluni·
lor studenl s in Sdolo Count;·. From a Sla tc-wide ;:.prspective, howE'\Ier.

:..u.is

• a Jour-n•ar Sha\vnt"£' State is morr likf'ly to take students away from
· ·lixisting uni\'r rsitif'S than it is to attract nrw .c;r udcnts win orherwise
:;.~auldn'l haw gone w col lege. The !K'I resull: a rc•shufOing of tt.&gt; student
~ula 11on ,

nul a gain in studenl popu lalion.
:-: Su. u·lrat dOt'S lhc proposal ha,·c going for il''
• - )'he answer: \ 'ern Riffe. 11·ho is prooobh· the most iX&gt;"'Piiul polilician in
~jlrf sta te . ,\., Speaker or the Hous.•. h1s cloul ma.-' fall ju st shorl of the
~ernon. -

and that's a maybe.

·:.· !his is Ihe !irS! bill Riffe has int rndured du ring hiS rword 13-year Ienure
:,..jS'S;:.pakcr .-Is one legislaiOr said \\'cdnesda). Riffe's sponsorship is "an
:1lJiequi\'(JCal. not very su blle message" Ihat the bill musl pass.
• :· FormN Cm·. Jamr·s A Rhodes has put it c,·en more blunlly: "Ji Vern
: Riffe has his u·av. therc·s going to be&gt; a four·war co llege al Shawnee
: !\late ... or, tho•re'sgo ing 10 be no more appropriations for higher educa tion
' In Ihe sta te of Ohio ...
; • Who·n Ihe Spo•ako' r appearm al Rio Cranck' Collcgr- which. bPcauS&lt;' of
:;ts pro,imil' 10 Sh&lt;~wnf't' St elle. is mos1 liko'11· to feel the grea tesl negatll'c
: lmpacl of II'- conn' l'...,Jon - hP 'aid lw l11dn't l'XJ.X'l'l th(• ~'Ople of Ga tlia
- ~oun t\

to

ll kt~ t hf' 1dt' &lt;l

\.tw Bo~ton O..'Jn') C'!'~I t -...11c! l.t.'-.1 \\'f\'k hr didn' t E'XpE'CI thE'
... bh io 1\. J&lt;mi nt Hf' gt'nh tnc(1mt~ nut m la \ t)l nf 11 .
: · Thr mt'-.;:--cll:!l~ !--l"'(' m" tu bt• ~ to onr ,J nd .1 11 ~ you d(m ·r haYr to likf' it. just

.. 111c

'X)H 't ·rlu \

;'&lt;fol il
'" .• An\· lc~wm.Jkt•r \\ llo mrght Ll.1 n • llPP\ l't' Hi fft• 11n th i!' unf' c;.m probcl bly be
::as~u{n-1 thdt .tn \ !c•..:lslat1on ht.' ur ~r-.. . m1ght !.11&lt;•r mtroduC\' wUl go
· ~owhc•n ·
:· And . rhc~ t nt t '""'-l~t· "''~ ' m .... tn h:1\t ' t1t·en t't"'( 't•i\c'(l - rl ncl u ndf' r~ tood .
At a TuP&gt;dJI h•'"' mg on tire hill b&lt;'f, rr .r ll uu&lt;o' Eliurullon Commilt!'C
.. subrommilTf'f'. one uhsl't"Y('t ....:1id .
IJ.•pn ht•n•thn'\' ~l'drs and !hi!' is
: thr fi rst l-K""'rfPrt hJJll\·1 · '-t• ·n ·
· Another mdh ·idual . '.rht::.n rl~ kt 'd '' h1c :1 ...,JtJt.~ of tlH? blll hr was on .
~ 'r rsponc!C'l:l. ··,,, h whr·.-i' r s1de he , f1iftt· 1 t&lt;i on

·-r,.,,

. · l t' s not t h,l! th r n · 1~ no o;;u pr.ol t1

Jn~ whtTdOJ t ht.'" bill. Thf' Pf'OPIP of Sc ioto
·count' thmk 11" . . &lt;~ ~-:r~ ·. t t 1dr&gt;a
... hh&lt;.tW!l('f' ~t.J lt' 11,1". r1f ('(I UI"' t' t "VrJ(!Ut lt\l .t fl'd"lhit t !~ st udy And- g\lf"SS
: wruc~ r' - &lt;tr&lt;tllll tng :o ShJW nt't' St.J!t' tht• proposal ~ ~ fpas iblf' .
• Rut th f' q udtt '". pt imc1r: thru'-1 I" on t'&lt; 'Onomtcs. not f'du ca tion .
~ . r\m on.(! tl '-&gt; lt'.t\t "&gt;UJV:i'-Ull: f1ndmg.., i.'- lh,lf south·('('nf rJI Ohio rounti&lt;'S
: ro]lt •c.:! in· I~ d t f' d l• J\·f · 1h(' &lt;..!~tit· ,n· f't ·d ~.::t · m unf'mploymC'nl et nd below the
· St~l &lt;' .t \ ' ' Tctgl' m J:&gt;t' t C&lt;tjJtl a mcomf'
,illr nh\"l(lll 'i h&lt;)~' b fllri l t'Xp.tn" ll lr'! •ll '-'h.t H11l'f' S!..ilf' ~nlltrans la t f' into

&gt;

joP, fot lh&lt;' &lt;Vlmmulllf\

.

.

, Thf'rr• ts no QUl",I!Un th,tl Sc 1010 l uunt~ ht~s t.Jkrn somP hard knocks
: economi l\tl]\ - !hi' .m •; t's once \· ita! "ttl' I ;mel m~mufacturinF! indu stri~
: Wl:' now c~lmu~ t d1•;~d . ;tn l.L n.•n ·m cuTbc~ t b.. ,tt fh(' Pikrlon nuclear plant

· han• t ~tk Pn

r,,.,n.,,

.1

toll

• Hif1c,.~conr\ T n- rtllf'dst m :t panx· hwl .-.,pn~t·- for the wr ll·beingofhis
'-district ~ ~ undn -.,1.mdahlt-•: hut. tn !t •r mo;.; of :ht:-. p. trlic ular p roiX~sa l. it is
:rt~i th rr f'ductllltln,t 1}\ ·Jr \ ·ronomtC'd II\ !i(IU!ld to :1s~urnr 1hat an infu s.ion of
·."dollars will n".. nhl' th t problt•m .
'Thr t'l'g l(l!l \ I'('O nii[Hil' problPfll.'- &lt;HI ' JUO!t'(l rn rart ors 1ha I go far beyond

ftW

far! th ;tt

tlH

fPUI \i'dl Ull J\"f'r"&gt;JI\ I ~ k)('JI('(l!hC'rt'

' ProlXJm •nl ~ t •11 rJt • pn l ptJ.'-J I an...rut' - L' nd t!Y• Shawnf'f' s t u d~· ~ifies -

· tliBt thf' d o'(':-- 1 OhJtJ public iour-n•ar m~titut10n 1S Ohio L'nlversity in
·~ A~h('n s. ~dli JU! x..r) rTlll!·:-- Ln.~ a \ It h&lt;~s btdn " hC's . ho wp\·rr. in Pm1smout h,
.jftmton anrl Chlitlcnt ht
.
· ~ Without 11',1\ mg Pnt1.-.mnu' h. ~h&lt;~ Wflf'f' studr'n t s ra n complf'ff' fou r·year
dpgrf'P!'&lt; in ,trr a!'i such .ts nu r..;.;mg. puhlir hralt h . husin Pss rduca 1ion and
··businf''&gt;S adrrun btrr~t1•m
.: ··And . import &lt;.tnt I\· for r,ur 1\').dun. Hiu CrancM• College does exist. A fact
~~that tlw Sh &lt;HI.'fl('C' St dlt' t.'dsi tlil iry ;o;.fUd\ f&lt;nb to J cknov,:ledge.
:·For man"' t llan Hl.\1f'ar:-. . tax~·J\" NS 1t1 f ;a Ilia. :vleigs. Vinton and Jackson
·~oonll~s lw,·r bern suppnnmg illf' i{lo r;rn nrlc Communit'' Col lege

:ou

D!Sirict .
: -During tlw

past dl'cadr. tht· community rolil"'gf' has grown and

now

stands as a strong. , ·ital rducJtional forn' in o.,outheastrrn Ohio.

: 1n addition. the pri\'irl e Rio Cr&lt;mde \ollege ha' a IIO.,·car lradilion and
. eePutaliOn for C'dUCallonal f'X('(']]f'n('t'

· Rio Grande will have no tmuhle mmpellng- in 1crms of quality- with
1},!' pmpos&lt;'d uni l'ersit,·. In 1r rms of cos1. 110W\Wr. Shawnee·s puiJiic status

\l'OUid give it an obvious ad1·u nlage.
.• j\n advantage Ihat mu st be of concern in an ag(' of declining student

jqpulallons.
.• M'hll&lt;' the impacl of the Shawn('(' proposal cannot be exactly measured ,
. ~l)!llminary es timates indiral e a potentia I loss o( over nJ students, with a
tesultlng loss of rloS&lt;' to $1 million In rPvcnues for lhe public and private
dl\rlslons of Rio Grande.
·: With a tolal. combined population of um. Riu Grande College and
:.C8mmunity Collegt:' cannot afford too many lossf'S.
:• t:learly, funding for 3hawnee would be a slgnflcan t drain oo 1;.&gt; state's
~her education budget. Regionally, the proposa l would do little goodii!&lt;J, could do great harm.
~· /{life' s •proposal Is special inlerest legislation of the worsl kind. A
~slatlve acllon that does not deservelts current statusofbelng-;- as most
Sef' It - a forgone conclusion.

.

dolla~

Page-A-2 :

Extended Ohio Forecast
__:_
Ja_me_s!:.._.K_il...!,_pa_trrc_·k

\

winners' column.
The remaining 13 Republican
seats are In varying degrees of
trouble. Maryland universally Is
regar&lt;k!d as lost. In Florida,
Republican Paula Hawkins has an
uphill road against Gov. Bob
Graham . Mack Mattingly will have
problems winning re-election in
traditionally Democratic Georgia.
Otrer Republican Incumbents have
tough battles ahead - Kasten in
Wisconsin, Symms in Idaho, Spec·
ter in Pennsylvania, Denton In
Alabama. The GOP seats lro Norlh
and South Dakota can he held , but
there had betler be no fumbles.
Slade Gorton In Washington has a
fight on his hands against Brock
Adams, former sec retary of
transportation.
In addltton to the Mal}' land seat.
Republican seats wUI be vacat€d In
Nevada, Arizona and North Carol·
ina. Terry Sanford, a former
Democratic gllvernor, just jumped
into the North Carolina race last
week; in a primal}' !leld of four or
five candldales, he mighl pull a
surprise. Arizona looks pretty good
for the Republicans. Nevada Is a
toss·up.
It's much too early to begin
proclaiming winners in most of the
Senate contests. Politics Is like
football in one respect: The ball can
take some funny hounces. Little
things- Gov. Snelling's beard. for
one example- can divert attention
from large Issues. The 'n incum·
bents seeking re-election wUI have
to cast a dozen tough yea·or·nay
votes between now and November.
Anything can happen . The Senate
could divide 51-49 either way, or
wind up 5().50 with Bush In tl&gt;? chair
on party·llne votes. As my grand·
children say. II promises to be a fun
time.

through the darken€d streets In the franCE' of Libya's military tenant
wee hours to arrest the army's chief and protector - the United States.
d staff and to overwhelm key From lis first day, tl&gt;? Khadafy
government lnslallations.
revolullon acled out a deepening
In the eastern capital, Benghazi, hostility to !he Western presenCE'.
a rebel unit commanded by a an animus so ob\1ous as to make
commu nlca tlons lieu tenant. the new regime's SUIVIval a frontal
Muammar Khadafy, occupied the challenge to Western Interests.
radto station and, after scattered
Our diplomats and their su;:.prlighting, Immobilized the Cyre- lors in Washington were wont to
naica Defense Force by capturing view the takeover through rose·
Its armored vehicles. The victor· ti nted lenses. The State Depart·
ious young officers Immediately ment not ooly Ignored appeals from
proclaimed a Libyan Arab Repulr King ldris but extended official
lie, and by week's end, Khadafy recognition to the Kh adafy
emerged as strong man.
dictalorshlp.
The situation was a grave one lor
This hasty action was taken, even
those in Washington charged with though the argumenl on whether
protecting Western security. A the roup would be ultlmalcly
legltirnale Libyan government. an tolerated had scarC'E'ly begun In
authentic Arab governmenl, a Washington.
governmnt established by the
Why dldn 'l the department's
Uniled Nations, a government knowledge of the usurpers excite
aligned wllh the United States, an caution rather than collaboratlon7
ally which had b(,come the C'E'nter· After all, their battle cries were thai
piece of Western oil strategy and King ldrls was a puppet of the
the pr~·emlnent oil supplier of Unlt€d States and a stooge for the
SE'Veral NATO countries - was oll companies. And given tl&gt;?
overthrown at gunpoint by a unltrokrn anti·Western record or
corpora l's guard of young consplra· radical officers' revolutions In the
tors representing no constituency in Middle Easl, why didn't Khadafy's
pai11cular, whose first act was to cou p disturb the Stat e
abo lish parllment. and which Department•
sought 10 sleal a realm of vast area
Answer: The U.S. foreign policy
and Incalculable wealth.
apparatus Is soft·headed about
It was an area lhey couldn 't left·wlng revolutionaries.
possibly hold except bv lhe suf·

Consumer controversy_____R_o_be_rr_W_a_lte_rs
By Robert Walttrs
WASHINGTON (NEA)
When
Congress reconvenes later this month.
il will agai n confront the controver·
s1a l nommation of a federal official
whose personal integrity and political
JUdgment have come under f1re.
. At the center of an unusually nasty

ness. Scanlon's investments, his health
insura nce and similar non-government matters.
Blaming a faulty memory. Scanlon
belatedly acknowledged that he had
misled the committee' and the GAO but that explanation doesn 't satisfy
critics who claim that he also ough t to
be denied the CPSC chairmanship he·

dt spute that dates back more than a cause he has lillie or no concern for
year is Terrence M . Scan lon. a mem - consumers ' rights.

ber of the Consumer Product Safety "The purpose o! the commisston IS
Commission who was nominated by to protect the consumers. not the man·
PreSident . Reagan rn late 1984 to be ufacturers," says Se n. Paul Simon. D·
CPSC chairman.
Ill. "Do we want lo protect the public '
Wh en Congress last month conclud· If the answer is affirmative. then we
ed its work f~r ~h e rear. Sca~ lon had ought to get someone who lS interested

the dubrous drstrnct1on of berng Rea · in protectrng Ihe public - and th1s
gan s onl,Y nommee to be approved by gentleman clear ly is not."
a romm1ttee (he surv1ved a close 9-7

Simon cites Sca nlon ·s lnsistence

vote) but not by the full Senate.
In testimony before the Senate
Commerce Commrttee last autumn,
Joan C la ybr~k .. president of Publrc
Crt!Zen, a pubhc mterest organrzatron
founded by consumer advocate Ralph
Nader. charged that Scanlon "uses his
o!!ice stall and government property
to conduct personal. private work on
government trme and at government
expense."
That abuse of agency stall and fa·
cilities, Ms. Claybrook alleged. includ·
ed the preparation and distribution of
anti·abortion materials for "right-to·
life" organizatrons with which Scanlon
was affili ated.
In responses offered to both the
committee and the General Account·
ing Office. Scanlon categorica lly de·
nied the assertions - until the com·
mlllee and GAO staffs found a CPSC
employee who had performed typ1ng,
copying and other chores relating to
his private affairs on dozens of
occasions.
The personal correspondence in·
volved abortion matters, church busi·

that the CPSC lacks statutory author·
ity to oversee the safety of amuse.
ment park rides, while Ms. Claybrook
and others oller additional examples.
In one case last year. relating to the
safety of three·wheeled, all·terrain
vehicles, Sca nlon's sympathy for the
industry and lack of concern for con·
sumers was directly criticized by fe l·
low CPSC Commissioner Stuart M.
Statler.
"I only wish you were so moved to
protect the public in the face of haz.
ards that kill and maim people. and
not merely to wave the flag for an in·
dustry where the sa fet y of its product
is ca lled into question," Sta tler. a leilow Republican, said rn criticizing
Scanlon.
Another insta nce involved accor·
dian·style wooden gates typically used
by parents to. keep babies in their
rooms or to prevent lhem from gain·
ing access to stairwells.
Both CPSC and industry were
aware since 1981 that lhe gates' de·
sign posed a serious threat of death by
strangulalion to infants whose necks

became caught 1n the diamond · and v. burea• 1cratl(' ground s The CI'SC stall .
shaped openings
he argued . exceeded its authority in
In laio' 1984 . afl cr at least seven taki ng an action tbat should have been

MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDA,Y:
Fair Monday and Tuesday. A chance of rain Wednesday. Highs In
the lis Monday, 35 To 45 Tuesday and In lite 40s Wednesday. Lows
from the' mid 1ls to low lis early Monday and Tuesday andln !hells
Wednesday.

State zone forecasts
West C8Itral, Celltral Higldands
Saturday night: occasional rain. Low In lite upper lis. Southwest
winds shifting to west 10 to 15 mph.
Sunday: rain becomlnng mixed with snow. High near 40. ChanCE'
of precipitation Ill pert:ent Saturday night and Sunday.
Northeast Inland, East Celltral
Saturday nlghl: occasional rain. Low In the lower &lt;l)s. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph.
Sunday: occasional rain. High In the mid 40s. Chance of
precipitation Ill percent Saturday night and 00 percent Sunday.
Miami Valley, Celltral, Southwest
Saturday nlghl: occasional raln. Low In the lower 40s. Southwest
winds becoming west 10 to 15 mph.
Sunday: raln' Ukely, possibly mixed with snow. High in the lower40s.
Chance of preclpltalton 00 Percent Saturday night and 10 percent
Sunday.
South Celltral
Saturday night: rain and possible thunderstorms . Low In the mid
40s. Southwest winds around 10 mph.
Sunday: occasional rain. High In the upper 40s.
Chance of rain 90 Percent Saturday night and Ill percent Sunday.

Regional state forecasts
Ohio

Occasional rain Satuday night, possible mixed with or changing to
snow In the extreme north. Lows will be In lite lls In the north and
between 40and451n thesouth.SnowlluiTies in tbe northandslnwers
changing to snow OuiTies in the south Sunday with temperatures In
the mid lls In the north and falling Into the mid lls In the south.
West VlrKlnla
Breezy with occasional showers Saturday night and lows In the
mid lis to mid 41Js. Mostly cloudy and windy Sunday with a chanCE' of
snow showers In the north. Temperatures .will hold steady or fall
slightly.
.

Western Pennsylvania

Ooudy with showers likely Saturday night. Lows will be In the ()s.
Rain showers changing to snow flurries Sunday and temperatures
falling Into the low lls by afternoon.
·

Ohio weather report

Mideast tyrants.______Ja_ck_A_n_d_e_rso_n_&amp;_D_al_e_JI:_an_A_ t_ta
WASHINGTON - The para· In power. They brought pressure on
mount danger our government is lite Iranian army, for example, not
supposed to be worried about and to reslsl Ayatollah Khomelnl street
watching for In the Middle East Is lighters. The army had an wnblll·
any threat to the American pres· cal tie to the Pentagon: Its top
enC'E' there. Yet out forelgn·pollcy offiC'E'rs were trained in the United
makers have had a schoolboy's States and lis weapons came from
crush on Moslem radicals, who this countl1' as well. They were
have soughl to oust the United susceptible, therefore, lO U.S.
S tates as a revolutionary · pressure.
imperative.
In lite case of Libya, II was ruled
The hostility or such radicals as by King Idrls , an Arab mo&lt;rrate,
Iran's Ayatollah Khomelnl and whose government had cooperat€d
Libya's Muammar Khadafy was as with American defense policies,
visible In advanCE' as a sandstorm had welcomed American enler·
whirling on a desert horizon. The prlses, and had supported Ameli·
State Department caught clear can foreign policy. Bul these were
glimpses of the sandstorm before matters that apparmtly earned II£
these men E'Ver came to power.
ldrls government no polnls wilh the
Ex -Secreta~}' of State llenl1'
U.S. Stale Department
Kissinger has correc lly · com.
plained : "The working IE'Vel of oor
In September 196!!. the king was
government, especially In the State oot of the count ~}'. In Turkey.
Department , operated on the ro- undergoing medical treatment. In
mantic view that Third World his absenCE', tt.&gt; security of the
radicalism was rea lly frustrated regime was in the hands of his
Western liberalism. Third World personal guard. They were Invited
leaders, !hey beliE'Ved, had become en masse to a party In t;.&gt;lr honor
extrelst ... lor E'Very reason other by some young army dflcers; none
!han the most likely: Ideological snafed anything amiss and all
commitment to tl&gt;? Implacable attended.
anti-Western doctrines t;.&gt;y were
espousing."
As the festive evening was
Not only were our professional drawing to a close, the king's men
policy makers hoi for the anonym . were suddenly surrounded by
ous guenillas of the sand dunes. soldiers, al gunpolnl. and carriea
Ihey were cold on lite governments off to prison. Then the rebels crepl

The weekend started out wet and mUd, but become more seasonal
by Sunday.

I '"

•

Occasional rain ts In the forecast Saturday night as a cold front
sweeps across the state. M. the colder air rroves Into Ohio, the rain
may lum to snow late Saturday night over the mrtt.!rn counties.
Snow Ourrles are expect€d ·across the state Sunday and highs will
return lo nonnal - In the lls.
It was a cloody and foggy Friday and some rain mov€d across the
state. Late In the afternoon radar was showing some rain over
southeast Ohio.
Rainfall amounts Friday at the regular reporting slatlons were
.generally under a quarter inch. However. In Mansfield, around
lour·tenths or an Inch of rain· .3'7·was measured.
Highs were mainly in the 40s, however, readings Ill the Sls and
lower 00s were reported In extreme ooutheast Ohio. Readings by
morning should rangl' between () and 45.
A weak cold front was located !rom New York state through
southeast Ohio to Mls!Dur1 late Friday afternoon. The front will
conlinue to weaken as It moves east. The next front that will move
across the stale Saturday night was jusl east of the Rocky
Mountains.
Fair weather Is expected Monday and Tuesday with a chanCE' of
rain Wednesday. Highs will be In the lls Monday, between li and45
Tuesday and in the 40s Wednesday. Lows wUI be In the :ns Monday
and Tuesday and In then; Wednesday.

ONLY CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE OFFERS•••

7 9°/o
e

APR 48 MO.

ON All 2 WHEEL AND 4
WHEEL DRIVE Dl 00 &amp; D150
PICKUPS

('hildren h:~d di£'d m that manner . the resened for the commissioners.

CPSC t'nforeement staff urged the
ma nufacturers to promptly cease produc!lon of the lethal design.
Ignoring the danger posed by the
gates. Scanlon thwarted that aclion on

Doonesbury

More than two months later. the
commissioners took similar action

~

after an additional 50,000 life·threat·
cning ga tes had been produced and
marketed.

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

WHA77 HMM..
QI(AY, MtL H(UJ

cw, JJ, lETH;
AS( HIM.

Ram 0150 Prospector/Royal SE

I

Ram DlOO Pickup
/}// ' 5/JI/e.
[f&gt;Wj$

SO./

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-3
J

January 19, 1986:

Novembc&gt;r he faces a popular
former governor. Richard Snelling,
but Vermont has a tradition that
only death or resignation may end a
senator's career. George Aiken,
you may recall, carne to the Senate
in 1940 and stayed until he stepped
down 34 years later. If Vermont's
tradition holds. Leahy wUI be tough.
The other four seats now held by
Democrats are form California,
Colorado, i..oulslana and Missouri.
Alan Cranston Is vulnerable In
California, but lite Republicans
have a whole swarm of prospective
candidates who oould cut them·
selves up between now and No·
vember. Cranston will be 72 in
June. His age mlghl be a factor. bul
he Is a SP11' old bird whose
campaign chest already has a
million dollars In cash on hand.
With Gal}' Hart's retirement, the
Colorado seat Is up for grabs.
Louisiana and Mlssou ri also wUI be
open oonle.ts, owing to the retire·
menl of Democrats Russell Long
and Tom Eagleton. The highly
respected Cook Political Report
lists lhe races as toss·ups.
In sum. the Democrats will have
35 holdovers; they can count on six
certainties In November. They will
pick up the Maryland 5eat being
vacaled by Republican Charles
Mathias. They have good prospects
in Illinois and Vermont. To get to 50
seals they would need victories In
only six of the remaining 25 races.
It oould happen. By Cook's
estlmme, only seven of the 22
Republican seats are shoo-Ins: Dole
in Kansas. Gam in Utah, Grassley
In Iowa, Murkowskl In Alaska.
Quayle in Indiana, Packwood in
' Oregon and Rudman In New
Hampshire. My own scorecard
adds D'Amato In New York and
Nickles In Okla homa to the

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Rio students, faculty ... ____IC_on_tln_uro_fro_m_pa_g_eAI_ _
,..---Weather:~----.
higher education
finer than
.
"It would seem Incumbent upon the

The Sunday Times-Sentinel .
'

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipol~.

0KAY.60
AHF:IWANV
&amp;miRHIM

I

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE .INC.
300 lrd

Gallipolis
PHONE 446-0842

it

already Is."
Many members of the Ohio
House of Repre.entatives, however, bellE'Ve that House Bill 739which would make Shawnee a
university - wUI breeze lhrough
the House because It ~ sponsored
by the politically powerful House
Speaker, Vernal G. Riffe Jr..
IJ.New futon. It is pending before
a House Educa tion Committee
subrommillee.
Forgone Coocluslon
"If it' s a forgone conclusion," Dr.
Raymond Matura said, " the ques·
lion then becomes w)lat can best be
oone to betler educirtron in this four
county area ."
"Obviously. the proposal could
negatively impact on Rio Grande
College in tl&gt;? future," he said.
"But, !he future will depend on
what they do aver the oext 10 years
and what we do over the next 10
years."
"In terms of comp&lt;&gt;tit ion. it's
simple, we'll just have to be better
than them." Dr. Malura added.
"You can't tell me that a school
with 110 years of experience with a
four·year liberal arts program
can'l compete wllh a beginner."
"The proposed change would
benefit Shawnee Sta te, a public
Institution, at the ex;:.pnse of a
private institution," Dr. Smit h said
during a recenl inteiView.
Marketplace Equity
"Equity in the marketplace is our
primal}' concern," Dr. Smith said.
"We have no question about our
ability to compete quality·wisc.
However, when you put a public
instltutlon against a private one. we
might find It ha rd to compete
cost-wise."
"That being t;.&gt; case," he added,

state to offer us some fonn or
protectlon... some form d. buffering
during the period of years durtng
lhe lransltlon."
The form that "buffering'' might
take was the topic of a December
meeting of the President's Advl·
sory Committee.
Suggesllons offered by the com·
mittee Included;
-Legislate a cooperative plan in
programming between Shawnee
State, Rio Grande and Ohio Univer·
sity branches.
-Requesl Items and programs
needed to assure an equitable
marlcel; such as, a day care center,
athietic or intramural facilities, a
telecommunicalion system and
relat€d programs.
-Limit Shawnee Stale programs
In selected areas d study, or cut out
their two·year degree granting
status . !Riffe's legislative proposal
includes a provision thai would
conllnue to prolect Shawnee State's
community college serviCE' district
after four·year status is achiev€d. i
-Requf'St to become a four.year
public institution if there is evidenCE' of a negative impact by
Shawnee Stale's change in status.
Student Concern
"Those students who do know
aboul It are concerned," said Pele
Bush, President of the Studenl
Senate.
"The first IWo years Is whal gets
lhe studenls here." he said. "There
are a number of reasons why
studen ts stay... but, obviously, cost
Is one of tl&gt;?m."
The Rio Grande Student Senate
has taken the position tha i Rio
Grande College should sa'k public
status, If ills adversely affected by
the Shawnee conversion.

__

Many among tl£ faculty were
hesitant to address the question
because of perceived "lack of
infonnatlon" ahout !he proposal.
"It won't help," said Dr. Ivan
Tribe. "We can be prelty strre of
that. But. since so much of lhis is
bas€d on speculation, It's hard to
make any kind of definitive staterneni...If there is any consensus
opinl6n among the faculty, it's ho;:.p
for the best. but fear the worst."
Shawnee Faculty Coocem
Perhaps surprisingly - while
Scioto County students apparently
welcome the proposal - some
members of tl&gt;? Shawnee State
faculty and administration are less
enthusiastic.
Not many are willing to talk
publicly about their objections,
howE'Ver .
One faculty member, who asked
not to be identified , was reePntly
quoted to have compared Riffe's
proposal to a "blank check."
''I'm afraid we'll fill in too large
an amount," Ihe teacher said. "This
whole thing could tum into a
disaster."

Reagan••.
(ContinUed from page AI)
Doctors also remov€d the small
pimple from Reagan's face as a
precautional}' measure. The presi·
dent had liM:&gt; skin cancers removed
from his nose last year.
Emerging from lhe hospilal
Friday, Reagan. who celebrates his
75th birthday Feb. 6, gave reporters
the thumhs·up sign, said he felt
"fine."

· Reagan underwenl su rge~}' July
I3 for removal ri. 2 feel of his colon
following the discovel}' of a 2·1nch
cancerous polyp.

EMS decision~··
(Continu€d from page AI)
shartng funds. which are being
r€duced by 35 percent in the final
quarter of 1986, and may be
eliminated as a result tithe federal
Graham-Rudman balanC'E'd budget
bill passed las! month by Congress.
If tbe revenue sharing funds are ,
eliminated. tl&gt;? service's existence
could be in jeopardy.
"It's not m 11&gt;? general lund to
finanCE' !he EMS." Burleso n said.
"Personally, I f('('l we may have to
go to the people for some kind of
levy .. .to let them decide if they
want it."
Burleson said eit I&gt;? r an cpera Iin g
lf'vy

o~.

an incrra!'.f' in the sa Irs li:.IX

from o,e-quancr to onc· ha~ ;:.pr!'Cnl
may be needed .
"It's a very good serv ice," he
said. "I haven 't heard any crit icism
of II&gt;? service it self ... &lt;unforlu·
natelyt WP can'! plan ahPad three
yea..S like we should - we can only
plan lhrough tl&gt;? end of 1986."

LYNN ANGELL
Certified Public
Accountant

Preparing Individual
and Business
Tax Returns
Monday 9 to 9
Tuesday 9 to 5
Wednesday 9 to 9
Thursday 9 to 5
Friday 9 to 5
Saturday 9 to 1
PHONE 446 · 8677
444 Second Ave .
Gallipolis. Oh.
Employers must pay payroll
taxes due by Jan . 31 .

�P~ge

A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January 19, 1986

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

;Woman hound over to Gallia grand jury on 81'89n charge
GALLIPOLIS- A West Vlrglnla
; woman was bound over Friday
: from Gallipolis Munic ipal Court to
: the next term of the Ga!Ua County
• Grand Jury .on a ch·arge of
: aggravated arson.
Regina Hudson. of Point Plea: san!, was charged in connection
· · with a Jan. 10 lire at Murphy Mart
· In the Silver Bridge Plaza.
.,
· Two Rio Grande College students
''
: each received six month suspended
JJ : jail lerms and were fined $00 a Iter
. pleading guilty to reduced charges
\;
of petty theft.
.
Andrew T. George, 21, of Rio
· Grande, and Steve Hayes, 20, of 442
\
. Valley View Apartments, Rio
•. .
Grande, were also placed on 18
.l f · : months probation and ordered to
n_. perfonn 40 hours of communi!)•
!!lE'rvlce work. Thepairwascharged
({ .
:'l.. .
In connection with the theft ci AT &amp;T
, •
phones from the college.
1~ .
Sl'rttenced to six months in the

.

~J
!

Gallia County Jail for domestic
violence was Mark Franklin Ben·
nett . of 402 HedgewOOd Dr. He was
found guilty In connection with the
Jan. 5 assault of Lois Bennett. of
83Jlh Second Ave.
Sentene&lt;&gt;d to three days ln jail
and fined $lXl after pleading guilty
to OWl were Carl E. Moore, 26, of
ro9 West College. Rio Grande. and
Patricia E. NevUie. 25. of New
Rome. Both were also placed on 18
months probation a nd had their
driver's licenses suspended for 1i0
days followlng their pleas. Charges
of dril'lng left of center against
Moore and Nev ille wei'E' dismissed
in exchange for their pleas. while an
additional charge of spel'ding
against Neville was also dismissed.
In other cases. James R Stutes.
39. of Rt. 3. Gallipolis, received all
day suspended jail term and was
fined $2501or shooting a wild rurkP)'

during a dosed season. Ten)' L.
Barr. 19, of Rt. 1, Gallipolis. was
fined $50 tor reckless operation.
Forfeiting bond tor spel'ding
were Mark E. Stepp, 19, ol Rt. 2,
Gallipolis. $.18; MarE Hoafat, 53, of
Rt. 4. GalllpoUs, $41; and Daniel J.
Davis. 34, of Gallipolis, $43.
On Thursday, two women rt&gt;crived six month suspended jaU
terms and were placed on six
months probation for assault.
Phyllis D. Edwards. 40, of 5~
Spring Va~ey Dr., Gallipolis, was
charged With assaulting Betty
White, 41. of Point Pleasant. W.Va ..
on Aug. 21 and WhJte was charged
wilh assaull lng Edwards on Sept.
II.
Charges of driving left of center .
l"ssession of marijuana , disorderly
conduct by intoxication and disorder ly conduct against Claudio B.
Kruskamp, 37. of W. Poplar St ..

Cheshire. and charges of no
driver's license. weavlng and oper·
atlng an unsafe vehicle against
Darrell L. Craycraft, 44, of Utile
Kyger, Cheshire, were dismissed
!oliowlng their pleas to ot~r
charges.
An arson charge against Donald
L. Martin J r .. of Rl. 2. Crown City,
was dismissed after Mat1in was
indicted on the charge by the
January term of the Gallla Coonty
Grand Jury and an aggravated
menacing charge against Stanford
E. Fulks. 32, of Rt. 1, Ga llipolis, was
dismissed at t~ request or the
eomplalning witness. A charge of
no drtver' s license agalnst Don R
Berry. 31, of Rt. 3, Gautpolls, was
dismissed in ex1ange for a plea to
anot~r charge.
Teresa L. Collins, 25, of Rt . 2.
Bidwell . was fined $12 for driving
lett of center and Roger D.

•

~

NEW YORK

tUPI!

-

An

II' -;
_.

d

~l

: : over for Bernhard Goetz, who shot
fll'!r youths aboa.rd a subway tram
' ' more than a ypar ago because he
said he thought they were going to
rob him .
The celebrated case that has been
in the public eye since the Dec. 22.
1981, shootings now heads to a state
appeals court because Manhattan
Dlstrtct At torney Roben Morgen·
thau decided Friday to appeal the
dismissal of attempted murder and
assault charges against Goetz.
Goetz,anxloustoseeanend tothe
tumultuous year-old case, Is confi·
dant an Appellate Division of Sta te
Supreme Court wUI uphold the
judge's dismissal of the charges. his
attorney, Barry Slotnick. said.
"He knows he's innocent. We
know he's innocent. The public
knows he' s innocent," Slotnick sa id.
But William Kunstler. lawyer lor
one of the wounded youths. cheered
the appeal for a different reason.
The clvll rights attorney said the
delay will "keep Goetz on tender·
hooks lor a longer period of time."
State Supreme Court .Justice
Stephen Crane threw out the

II Council on child
abuse remains
i!'!:.'
I . . active in Meigs
I .

"

~.

charges agamst Goetz Thursday , preta tlon of 1~ lega l standard for
cia ! et rors" in lnstructrng a second
gland JUl) in the case and becauS&lt;'
two of the victims rna) have
perjurl?d themseh·es while giv ing
grand jury testimony .
Crane said prosecutors failed to
tell the panel Go£&gt;12 - who said he
shot the vouths be(·ause he feared
the)· would rob him- could claim
self·defrnse iJ he "reasonably
ix'liev·rd that unla~&lt;1ul force wa s
about to be used aga inst him."
A black leader and la"~· rrs for
sam&lt;' of the wounded youths
presSl'tl Morgenlhau to eonvPne a
rare third grand jury and erase
doubt in the case that drew
world"ide attention to the man
dubbed the "Death Wish" \1gilante.
But Morgenthau said he decided
to file an appeal rat~r than take
the case to another grand jut!·
because. " \\'e belie,·e Judge
Crane's interpretat ion of the la w is
wrong and the dismissal is
erroneous."
Mo_rgenthau he "ill file an appeal
shor1ly and ask that it be handled
&lt;'Xpeditiouslv.
Morgenthau said Crane's inter·

Spedal Sunday sen-ice
A special meeting at the Pome
roy Sa lvat ion Army will be held
6:.10 p.m. Sunday night. Speakers
11ill be Lt . and Mrs. Duane Harris,
commanding officers of the Athens
Siilvation Army. Special music will
be fea tured. The public is invited.
Church memhers are asked to note
the cha nge of lime.

FREE SOLAR COVER W/ln-Ground
SWIMMING POOL KIT or SPA INVOICED IN JANUARY
16x32-S23SO

past year of the emotions," Slotnick
said. "He would lik e to see this go
away."
Lawyers for Darryl Cahey. brai n·
damaged and partially paralyzed
in the shooting. pred icted a third
grand jury would rule out sell·
defense upon hearing that Goetz
confessed he fired a second round
into Cabey, saylng, "you don'tlook
so bad . Here's another. "

P~ pie
with a

II you hlvt 1 ht1T1n11on . you 're mrlliAI mort thlfl
word1 •nd 10unds ~OII ·It 111U1n• some of hft rls,41 .
W ,ou Dttlf»~ !lon't tM&gt; to. Up to Wl't ot Ill IMirifll
prolllems tin bt corrected. 1111 10111hould hlv•

hear ng
problem
are
m ss1ng
a lot.

INHlAIUNC SPtt!lhn '" tvllullinllllel SOIWIIII l'ltlf!llll
probltml. 0111 Ctrtll itel 1Ud!Oiotit1 I'IH lhl KIMk
crt&lt;ltnlrah and tilt llptT!ttHt Ia nlfll lnt 10ur M111111

Member : UnltPd Pr(&gt;u In ternational,
Inland Dally Press Assoc iation and thP
Ohio Npwspapt&gt;r Association. Na tional
Advertisin g Representative, Branha m
Ne'&gt;'-spaper Sales, 733 Third AvE'nue,
NPW York. New York 10017

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Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

26 Wee ks .........

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13 We(' kS.. .... .. ...... ..... .............. $14 .$
Ratt• Oul8kle Ohio
52 Weeks .
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26 w..ks .. ..... ..... .......... ........... $31.20
13 w.,.ks .. ............................. 1 1~.60

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COMPLEn KITS
18x36-S211SO

20x40-S2875

SPAS Willi ll.ators, nton, Skirt roody to ust, as low ., S 157 5
Also acrylic wall . concrete bottom pools at wholesale prices

.• complex needs of abused and
neglected children in Meigs Coun ty
remains active and continups lo
i u·
move toward some establlshl?d
!•
program of service.
'.[: . The Council's goal. according to
!', , • Mike Swisher. director of the Meigs
: County Department of Human
Services, Is to establish a "nucleus
•I .1
- of services which a child can fall
. t · lnto."
Swisher said that the iml"nant
Is to get the needed mechanics
' ' . thing
ln place so that the help is there
• when it's needed . He said lhar while
j
: the Council is not into ser.ice wt.
: the fundamentals are berng estab·
1
!!shed so that tile ser.-ices of "one
1r
agency on top of anot her" will be
1
·
• available through a combination of
' ,\ · help or monit&gt;s with a team
I ,
•
. approac h.
Emphasis of the co mbined
.
agency council is to maximizewhat
Is available by working together rn
I'
a cooperative mannPT to bett!'r
.~i
serve the needs of abused and
qecled children in the eounl)·.
Nnt meeting of the Council will
held on Feb. 13 at 1 p.m. at the
l ' ~-- Multi-PUrpos&lt;' Buildi ng con·
I ; i~~ on the second floor

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KANAUGA - The January meeting of the Kanauga
Neighborhood Wa tch Program will be held Monday , Jan . 20, at 7:30
p.m., at the Holiday Inn. All Kanauga area residents are urged to
attend .
There will be a slide presentation on "An Act of Violence." Deputy
Charles Baker and Deputy Chester Stout of the Ga Ilia Count y
Sheriff s Department will be on hand to answer questions.

-

:.J

TAVERN HAM
9
WHOL£ $15
HALF

STEAK

ELYRIA, Ohio (UP!) - Fonner
First Lady Rosalyn Carter says she
believes her husband will ulti·
mately rank among America 's
greatest presidents, but to his
succes~r. she says, history will be
unkind.
Mrs. Carter made her remarks
during a joint news conference with
her husband prior to the former
president's address Friday at a
lecture series at Loraln County
Commu!llty College where more
than 1,1m people turned out.
"My husband will go down as one
of lhe greatest American presi·
dents because of his human rights
policies," said Mrs. Carter. "We
are now experiencing a setback,
but the turure of foreign relations is
ln human rights policy.
As Mrs. Carter spoke to repor·
ters. the 39th president nodded with
approval.
"President Reagan has not given
much attention to the subject of
human rights," said the form er
president. "Lately he' s been paying
more attention to !he situation in
South Africa. bul l don't think he's
done enough . I thlnk he could do
more.''
Carter said President Reagan Is
wise not to take military action
against Libya. but criticized the
president lor verbally attacking
Moanunar Khadaty.
"Ills not an easy question, even
for a former president, to give an
answer to questions about terror·
· Ism," said Carter. "The natural
reaction lor everyone Is to have an
: immediate military action against
· the terrorists. But first of all , you
: ordlnarUy don't know who they are.
. Second, you don't know where trey
• are. And third, II you do locate and
: Identify them, there Is no way of
: telling whether they're located
· adjacent to Innocent people.
· "I thlnk President Reagan has
· shown a great deal of moderation,
because he said when you attack
. terrorists and killlnnocent people,
· you commit an act of terrorism
· yourself."
However, he criticized Reagan

for launching a public debate with
Khadafy because it greatly in·
creased the Libya leader's status.
"In effect, he's treated Khada fy
as an equal, A month ago, Khadafy
was an outcast in most of the Arab
nations, but when President Rea·
gan began to attack him publicly,
all 34 Arab nations locked together
to support Khadafy," he said .
Carter sa id he would disapprove of
any attempt to assassinate Khad·
ady as has been ment ioned by Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D.Ohio.
Carter emphasized the positive
strides he made in foreign policy.
particularly in the Mideast and his
emphasis on human rights through·
out the world .
He disputed the charge that when
he left office. the United States was
left with a "wlndow of vulnerabil·
ity" or militarily inferior to the
Soviet Union.
"That 's a bunch of baloney... he
said. "And I think any of our
military experts wou ld say that the

United Stales has never at all heen
in!Prior to the Soviet Union in the
nu clear warhead !leld or the
,launching field ."
On domestic issues. t ~ former
president reflected briefly rn American presidential politics.
He praised hi s Democratic col·
league former Vice President
Walter Mondale for his political
philosophies, but c riticized hJm for
seeking the suppon of special
interest groups. lnclud lng organized labOr. during the 1984 presidential election.
"Strongly seekin g the support of
special interests was a little bit
debilitating," he said. "It separated
hJm from the Ame1·ican voters.''
Carter said he believes Sen. Gary
Hart. D·Colo.. will be the Demo·
cratic fron t runner In 1988, but noted
that the American electo rate
should lake a gOOd look at Sen. Sam
Nunn, 0 -Ga .. and Sen. Bill Bradley,
[).!" J .
Carter also reflected on his

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Takes pleasure in announcing
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DAI'i DAVIES
P.ru l Dav·ic s Jewe ler&gt;
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An·n 11&lt;-·

G.ol li puli, . Oh.
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POll SHOULDEI

failures, saying if it wasn't for the
hostage situation in Iran. where 52
Americans were being held as
political prisoners. he would no t
have lost against Prt'Sident Reagan
in 198),
"Had I been successful in April in
retrieving the hostages, I would
have tpen re-f'lectrd." he said.

ON

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·Rosyln Carter praises husband's record

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OUI TOWN'S FINEST SUPll MAIKIT - . J

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In central Texas "suggest that
Goodyear either doesn 't know or
doesn 't care what its subs idiary is
doing in Texas."
Citing repons of fo rged doeu ·
ments, perjury and destruction of
opponent's property. Sha rp said ,
"Surely, an American giant like
GOOdyear does not condone this
activity."

Neighborhood Watch program

STORE HOURS :
MON.-THURS.
9 am til 10 pm lj
FRI.-SAT.
·
9 amtil10 pm :
"-'iiiiiiiii....il"' LOS ED SUNDAY ;

POMEROY . OHIO
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 992 -3795
PHONE 446-0303
Open 9 A.M ·6 P.M. Weekdays. 9 ·5 Sat.
APPOINT~ENTS AVAILABLE

1
•

snd muve in.

Pipeline oificials say the dangPr
to lbe aquifer would be minimal
since t~ oU mustbe~ated to move
through 1~ pipeline. They say
there is only a one In 40 chance of a

sp ill over the aquifer dyring the
pipeline's 40-year lifespan.
State Sen. Jolut Sharp, [). VIctoria. a candidate In 1~ May 3
primary lor a seat on the Railroad
Commis,ion, Friday urged Goo·
dyear to "lake charge d their own
affairs " and order Its subsidiary to
alter the route.
He said All American's activities

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Monday-Friday
WHkends &amp; Holidays

(1~ ~

IT'S TRUE 1 We can build m•s home
on your property and yow monthly
. paymenl will be onfy $28 9 50 for 20
(NOT 301 years Your home Will oe
completely pa1d for after only 240
payments
No this IS NOT a "shell' home Even
at ihis low package pr~ce. the three ·
bedroom, two-bath Ameucan model
wiH be finished 90C'~ complete.
mc;Juding Trane forced·a1r heatmg
Just instalf your ch01ce o( floor
covering, pamt intenor walls and
trim. connect to outside utilit1es

Ing a new round of legal as~ults,
says local officials have only begun
to light Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Co. over an oU pipeline that would
· cross the Edwards Aquifer.
"They apparently believe we'll
roll over and play dead now." he
said Friday. "In fact, we believe It's
time to pick up the battle a bit."
Renfro said the county would
· become a party to a Texas Railroad
Commission hearings on the pipeline and is considering llllng a
federal court suit against Goodyear, which Is the parent finn of
· All American Pipeline Co.
· All American Is constructing a
1,850-mlle heated crude oil pipeline

from Santa Barbara, Calif.. to
refineries near Houston on the
Texas Gulf roast.
A 7.2-mile leg of t~ 30-inch
pipeline would cross tlte aquifer.
which supplies drinking water to
more than I mlllion people in the
Austin-San Antonio area.
Opponents fear a spUl could
permanently pollute the vast under·
ground water supply, and they say
construction of the pipellne would
alter tile nature of the Hlll Cou nt ry
west of Austin ..

.·

446-5287

l :. . .
I
i.(. - ~~;;;~~=~~~~~~~~~
- .......

AUSTIN, Texas. (UPl) - Travl$
County Judge Mike Renfro, promis-

Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

..

I

Publlshed f'arh Sunday. 825 Third Ave.,
·G al lipolis. Ohio. by th e Ohio Valley Publishing Company!M ultlmt"dla, Inc. Second class postagP paid at Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631. Ent(&gt;fed as Sll'COnd r lah
mailing mattf'r at Pomeroy. Ohio. PC¥1
OffiCf' .

Sunday ..... . ............... ..... ... 50 Cent s

proftUIOn~lldvltt

me'"

(US PS!~!

All Other S izes and Types of Pool Kits in Stock

~· ago this month to address the

· ~!

Fined were David L. Wallace. 25,
of Rt. 4, Galllpolls, $141or speeding;
Tammy J . Proctor, 21, f1 Rt, l,.
Gallipolis, $12 for !allure to obey a
traffic control device; Allen A. Cox,
19, of Rt. 2, Gallipolis, $12 for
driving left of center; and Mildred
Coughenour, 32, of Rt. 4, Galllpolls,
Sll for speeding.
Forleltlng $40 bond for traffic
violations were Oneida B. Johnson,
33 of Culloden, W.Va., failure to
st~p In an assured clear dlstaiK'e;
Jolut F. Sharp, 52, of 5'74 Jay Dr.,
!allure to yield when blmlng lett;
and laiTY L. Lively. 39, of Rt. 2,
Vinton, no muffler.
Forfeiting bond for speedlng
were Kenneth W. Howe, 64, of Rt..2,
Vlnton, $39; James W. Rockwell,
44. of 21 Willow Dr., $42; Beverly A.
Perkins, 47, of Rt. 3, Gallipolis. $40;
and James G. Cox, :18, of Pike ·
Street, Kanauga, $40.

' 100 Will Hold Your Purchase Till Summer At These Low Discount Prices

POMEROY - An Interagency
Council which was formed a )'&lt;'a r

; '~'

wmng
"tCrane1 said the test Is subjec·
tive. Na mely, whether Goetz be·
lieved in hJs own mind that he was
in danger." Morgenthau said. "We
believe 1he test is objective. Would.a
reasonable person in Mr. Goetz's
situa tion !eel just ified to shoot the
four vou ths in sell- defense'!"
Slotnick said he would ask Crane
Tu!'Sday to dismiss related wea ·
pons and reckless endangerment
rhargps against Goetz. Slotnick
saidhJ sc lientis eager to"regain his

anonymity ."

The fo llowing charges were
dismissed at the request of the
eomplalning witnesses:
Alvin Ray Hylton. of Rt. 4. Texas
Road. Gallipolis, unauthorized use
of a motor vehicle; James H.
Beaver. 20, of 134 Fourth Ave ..
Ga llipolis, resisting arrest and
crim inal damaging; Tinn Queen. of
320'n Second Ave, Gallipolis. disorderly conduct; and Ray Hylton, 27,
of 466 Y, Fourth Ave., Gallipolis,
crinn inal damaging.
Tammy Howell , :li, of Rt. 2,
Bidwell. · received a six month
suspended jall term. was fined $12
and was placed on six months
probation for no driver' s license.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-A-5

County plots strategy against pipeline

Sp1ings .

Y)Goetz legal battle far from finished
: \ ;.

Ash11orth. 21, of Rt. 4, Gautpolls,
was fined $12 lor laUure to yield
from a private drive.
Forleltlng $40 bond lor traffic
viola tlons were Bernard R. Mannon. 21. of Rt. 1, Bidwell. stop sign;
and Wlltiam A. Blars, 28, of Rt. 2,
GalllpoUs, unsafe vehicle.
Jay A. Sommer, 43, of Eureka
Star Route, torleited $39 bOnd for
speeding.
On Wednesday, Don R. Berry,31,
of Rl. 3, Gallipolis. was sentenced to
three days in the county jall and
was tined $lXl after plead ing guUty
to OWl.
Berry was also placed on 18
months probation and had his
driver's license suspended for one
year.
Sentenced to one day in ja ll. fined
$12 and placed on 18 months
probation lor criminal trespasslng
was Jolut D. Shular. 18, of Yellow

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

$3 00
B

A

N

K

44 I lnd Avenue. Gallipolis.Ohio 45631 . (61 4) 446·3832

Bedroom
Living .Room
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Recliners
Lamps
Desks
Dining Room
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Page-A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January 19. 198~

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

January 19, 1986

White supremacists protest Dr. King's holiday
Unlled Press International

.

White supremacists Saturday
protested Monday's national hoUday honoring Dr. Martln Luther
King. J r. with a rally in th~
birthplace of the Ku Klux Klan and
a march honortng Confederat!'
Gen. Robert E. Lee.
In Pulaski. Tenn., where the Klan
was organized in 1865, Klan
members assembled in Sam Davis
Park for a rally that was scheduled
5o end with an eight-block march
:~ round the city square.
·: "Martin Luther King ... went all
)lver the country stirrtng up anim~ity ," said James R Venable of
Stone Mountain, Ga .. a member of
jhe National Knight s of the Ku Klux
·!&lt;!an. "King was a troublemaker.
He was a communist and sat up
j her e wi th t h e lead ing
communists. '·

'

The original Ku Klux Klan was a Saturday bega n their first three- enjoy rhe full benefits of freedom, "
secret society formed in Pulaski ln day weekend of the year. But most Rk'agan said In his speech from
1865 and disbanded four years later workers will have to be on t-he job Camp David, Md .
In Tucson. a group led by a City
after it was denounced by the sta te Monday.
Counc
ilman Chuck Ford, who was
Only 29 stales and the Dishier of
Legislature.
the
city
's first black vice· mayor.
In Raleigh. N.C.. members of the Columbia are observing the holiday
marched
tram the University of
Monday,
a
nd
not
all
of
those
White Pattiots Party marched
Arizona
16
City Hall behind a
downtown to honor ·Lee. whosp observlng it are giving their
mule-drawn
wagon
like 1he one that
workers
a
day
off.
All
but
four
birthday is Jan. 19. Party leaders
to its grave.
carried
King's
casket
states
N!'W
Hampshire,
Monsaid they would celebrate Lee's
·tn
California
.
a
parade
was
tana.
Texas
and
Wyoming
have
birthday as an alternative to the
scheduled
in
Berkeley
and
Assem
some
sm1
of
King
holiday
obserKing hollda)'.
bly
Speaker
Willie
Br0\\11
Jr.
was
to
vance
during
the
year.
A
lew
states
But elsewhere, cities found different wavs to ho~or the ci\· U rights made his actual birthda:--·- Jan . 15 kick off a "March to tne Mountain top" celebration b)-' rededica tmg a
martyr - old·timP jazz in Kansas - their holiday .
President Rk'agan. who once King statue In San Bernadino.
City, a five-kilometer nm in
After the ceremony. King's sL&gt;Denver. a march led by mule- opposed the King holiday, used his
ter
. Christine. was to lead a march
weekly
radio
address
SaiUJ'day
to
drawn wagons in Tucson. Ariz .. and
to
a loca l park honoring Ros.1
praise
the
slain
leader.
the rededication of a King statue in
the woman credited 11ilh
Parks.
"Martin
Luther
King
believed
as
San Bernadino. Calif.
igniting
the civil rights mo\·emenl
I
and
so
many
other
AmPricans
do
Monday is the firs t national
holiday honoring King. who would thar our country will nPveT be when she refused togive uphN seal
havr- bet:'n 57. and fPdrral workers completely free until all America ns on a Montgomery. Ala .. bus in 1955.
In Boston, officials al Boston
University said Corella Scolt King
has asked the school to tum O\W
papers of her slaln hu sband so all of
The defendants are Milton J . the civil ti ghts leader's works can
Amppa.
TJ:!e ju ry was left alont&gt; in the Rockman. 73. of Beachwood, a be consolidated in archi ws in
coun room with the govli'rrunent' s Cleveland su bu rb: and Aiuppa, Tl, Atlanta.
Dr. Howa1·d Gotlieb, BU's cura rec01'ding equipment to hear the Angelo LaPietra. W. Joseph Lorntape.
·
bardo. 57, and John Cerone. 71. all tor of spec ial collections. sa id he
Smiles came infreq uently to th&lt;• reputed Chi cago unde r wor ld doubled the universilv's Board of
Trustees would agrE'e io give up the
Jl"(lple wai ling for the )Uc&lt; to mak&lt;· fi gures.
up its mind. A couple of Ihe defense
The five an" the remaining papers becase they are considered
a11omeys had circles under their
15 people named
in
e)·es from lack of sleep. which their defendants
the originalofindictments
in Sepbodies attempted to catch up on tember !9&amp;3.

unlversily."

King I'PCOI\'l'&lt;l a degree in
religious theology from BU in !9:&gt;l.

FREE WITH ANY '7.50
PURCHASE OF MERLE
NORMAN COSMETICS.
, •·,

~··

Cleveland-area man awaits verdict
, KANSAS CITY , Mo. tUPli famtiy and friends wailing on the
:jury considering the fat e Saturday
:of five reputed mob leaders
~harged with conspiring to skim
profits from Las Vegas casinos
were gro11ing weary pacing the
courthouse halls.
:· The six meh and six womenoflhP
federal court jury began their third
day of deliberat ions shortly before
~:30 a. m. Sa turday . They asked to
~galn hear a tape containing the
·voice of Nick Civella and referling
to someone with the initialsJA. the
same initials as defendant Joseph

Frid a~·

: A 21-member group made up of
people from major recording stu dios. Rolling Stone. Music Tele,·i~ion

and thr real estate industry arE'

consider ing possible locations for
the museum.
• Other clUes wh.ich bid for the ha\\

are Phila delphi a. !\ew Yorl&lt;. New

Orleans, Los Angeles. Chicago. and
Memphis, Tenn .
: Civic leaders gaw Ahmel E .
)':rtegu n. chairman of Atlantic
Records. and seven m·er members
Of the gTOUp he heads. a pmmolianaltour of Cleveland in October.
: The cit) will be chosen aft er lhe
first induction

c~remonv

Great Fall
Clearance Sale

All FASHION BOOTS

20°/o-50°/o OFF

always go11en enlhu siaslir receptions in Cle,·ela nd. and it often
PJ Shes them to national and
world \~ ide success." Frey S.:lid .
1\'E!flner mentioned the 600.lXXl
signatu res from Clevelanders that
were presented Ia him. The petition
drive was promoted b)' Clevelandar'E'a radio and television stations.

newspapers. magazi nes and
businesses
"It's the ooe lime that l \'e really
5(1('0 this entirP city comf' to·
gether, " said William Smith , ,-ice
president and general manager of
1\'MMS- FM . which has been

ZODIAC, FRYE, 9 WEST
NICE GROUP

LEATHER HANDBAGS

20°/o

OFF

WOMEN'S $HOES

20°/o-50°/o
OFF
BASS, 9 WEST, COISINA,
MIA, TIOnEIS, SEBAGO

choSi'n radio station of thC' yf'ar in

each of the last sL' Rolling Stone
readers' SUIW)'S

11

inning Ohio

L ottt: 1~·

Dail)' ~umber : '&gt;(li.
Ticket sa les totaled Sl.:\.16.:-ffl.:ill.
ll'ith a pa)'Off due of s;;;HIO ..'il
PICK--I : .1386.
PICK--I lickrt sales totaled
Sl~i .076. with a pa,·off due of

ti
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·We/eome

Headb
/'Quarters

By Juanita

EXCELlENCE by Design

313 Third Ave.

Gallipolis

Deputies probe theft compt.Iint
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Sheriff's Department is
investigatmg the reported theft of four 12-volt ba tteries and a stereo
cassette-AM-FM radio from wrecker trucks owned by Johnnv E.
Matthews Jr., of Rio Grande.
··
The Items. valued a t about $1,3fll, were report('() taken from Ihe
vehicles while they were parked at Ables Salvage in Rio Grande
between 6 p.m. Thursday and 8 a.m. Friday.·

Mobile home tax due January 31

$&amp;3,68'l.

PICK-l $1 stra1ght bet pavs
$.1 ..188. P ICI\--! $1 bo' bel pa)S $449.

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GOOD LEASE ON BUILDINGS AT 57-59 COURT ST.,
GALLIPOLIS.

Fire department elects officers
CHESTER- Officers have been selected for thP new year lJy thp
Chester Volunteer Fire Department
~ They are Bruce Myers, president; Kirk Chevalier. vice president;
ao hn Wickham, treasurer; Harold Newell, assis ta nt treasurer:
Dorsel Miller. flre chief; Bruce Myers, 11rst ehlef: John Ridenour.
.second chief; Larry Clelaxnd, captain; Marvin Taylor. first
lieutenant; Ray Wenry, assistant; Pearl Edwards, first lieutenant;
John Edwards and Lowell Ridenou r, assistants; Bruce Myers. first
lieutenant: assis tants. Greg Hibbs and David Edwards; Harold
New£&lt;11 , first lieutenant; assistants Hobart Newell and F.ddle Werrv·
Roy Chrl&gt;ty. arson Investigator: Robert Wood . assisanl ; Roi:JPr.'t
Wood , publicity.
A report for 19lfi shows that the Chester firefighters respo nded to
eight brush fires , eight structure fires and two ch.imney fi res and
made eight other runs. There were 38 hours for trucks. 6,156
manhours In answering the catis with vehicles being driven 002
mUes.
·
The department meets the second and fourth Wednesdays of each
month and any Int erested resident is lnvlted to attend the mt'('llngs.

3 DINING AREAS (each has private entrance), WITH
ZONED A.C./HEATING AND UNIQUE SOUND.AND LIGHTING
SYSTEM, TWO BARS, LARGE AND MOST FULLY EQUIPPED
AND FUNCTIONAL KITCHEN. TWO LARGE, DRY BASEMENTS
- PRIVATE PARKING FOR 1-2 VEHICLES IN REAR.

Callipolis. 0 .

THE MONTH

POMEROY -Admissions: Cecil Bradbury. Pomeroy .
Discharges: Gertrucle Robln~ n . Earl Stevens. Della Cleland.
Metlssa German .

EMS answers five calls Friday
· POMEROY- Meigs County Emergency Medic~ ServiC&lt;' reports
flvecalls Friday: Tuppers Plainsat4: 39a.m. toRt ffil West for Jean
Hawk to Ca mden -Oark Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Pialns at 6: 10
a.m. to ReedsvUle for Carl Buckley to Camden-Clark Memorial
Rospllal; Rac ine at 8: 19 a.m. to Bas han for Charles Bissell to
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital: Pomeroy at 9:52a.m. to the Pomeroy
Hralth Care Center for Cectl Bradbu ry to Veterans Memorial
llospital: Middleport Fire Department at9: 38 p.m. was called 10 the
Middleport jail for a minor fire .

Save 1/3 Off
MEN'S
GROUP OF MEN'S SPORT COATS

: POMEROY- Juanita Y. Reed. a minor. by her father. Milford
Frederick, has filed for a divorce in Meigs County Common Pleas
tourt from J ames R. Reed. charging gross neglect of duty and
~xtreme cruelty.
· Jacqueline Ann Radford has filed for a divorce from Philip David
Radford charging gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
Linda Beaver has filed for a divorce from George .Jeffrc)• Beaver
charging gross neglec t of du ty.

LEATHER JACKETS
GROUP OF MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
ALL MEN'S CORDUROY SLACKS
ALL MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS
ALL MEN'S SWEATERS

ALL MEN'S

Meig.o; courthouse closed Monday

8325- I/ M)

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Mississippi River, but they do not
know the location of the plant.
Flyash is produced when coal Is
burned for electricity and often is

oftbe labs,Agency's
the EnvironmentalOneProtection
Water
Research Lab in Clnclnnati, used ·
electron diffraction lo discover the
specks are oomposed of silicon.
calcium, aluminum and Iron, with
stiicon the most prevalent element.

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used to strengthen concrete or
grouting, 'o r to stablfize soli to keep
it from washlng away. II is a fine
powder normally composed of
calcium , silicon a nd other
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Me onald'S

SYO, IN AND REGISTER IHIS WED ·' .
DIAWUtiJ SAl., JAN. IS •.NIE6 NO't'll.PIISENT 10 WINi
.

LAKE PROVIDEN CE, La .
cUP! I - Tiny black specks found ln
the Mississippi River have been
identified as flyash, a ffne powder
lha I is a byproduct of coal
combustion.
The specks have been found from
Lake Providence ail the way .
downriver to New Orleans and have
confounded resident s and authori ties for the past four months. The
specks apparently are not harmful,
officials sai d.
Three Jabs have determlned
fl)-·ash is the most likely candidate.
Officials theorize Ihe specks come
from a coa l plant somewhere up the

Columbia 's next flight is a
prestigious nine-da y mission to
study Hatley's comet and other
astronomical targets . Because of
the changing orbital relationship
between the Earth and Halley, the
shuttle must take off close ro Its
planned launch date or data about
the comet will be reduced.

• Sole pri ces re present sa vings off regular or or1gma l pr1ces

Two-3rd.!priz11: Two Meat &amp; Cheese Trti"" •.
S1500
Thr..-4th .pt:i{es: Three 6·packs
val~ at -SSOO
. o('tp~,
.
: .

~hroughout

were told to reprogra m their
computers for landing at Edwards.
After a one-orbit delay, Gibson
and Bolden fired Columbia's big
braking rockets over the Indian
Ocean near Madagascar to drop out
of orbit . The shutUe knifed across
the coast of Californi a near Santa
Barbara and swooped to a pictu repertect touchdown .

SAVE

1st prize:,A.M.at. &amp; Cheese Tray,· ~ohied at sst)OI·:
2nd prize~ AMeat &amp; Cheese fray, ,alutd .at •2000·
'

entry team and all the teams for all
the great work they did for us,"
Gibson told mission control before
the crew left the shuttle 42 minutes
after landing, smiling and shakling
hands with ground crews. "You
guys really pulled us through ."
Afier a quick walk around to
lnspect the veteran shuttle, which
perform!"' like a champ during Its
first ftigh. in two years, the crew
boarded a NASA motor home and
left the runway .
The touchdown, the 18th California shuttle landing, was a dlsappolntlng oonclusion to a six-day,
2.5-mlllion-mile voyage that was 25
days late gettlng started and two
days late coming to an. end.
The space agency wanted to
avoid a California landing because
that wtil add six days to the
processlng flow for Columbia 's next
flight in time lost getting the ship
back to Florida, which probably
will delay the shuttle's March 6
launching on a showcase mlssslon
to study Halley's comet.
Meanwhile, a continent away, the
shuttle Challenger stands poised for
blastoff next Saturday to take a
high school teacher and six crewmates Into orbit on the second of 15
shuttle flights scheduled for 1986.
NASA's gamble on marginal
Florida weather after back-to-back
landing delays Thursday and Friday fell flat and Gibson and Bolden

POMEROY - The Meigs County Courthouse "ill be clost'&lt;l
Monday In obse1vance of Martin Lulher King Day.

I'

RIGISIEI ·TO WIN SUPER.SPEGIAlt PRIIISt,

htgh-impact styrene case . Bold, easy-to-read numbers. Posittve loggle lock. Belt cli p (005-223 /T48-

Page A-7

-

SELECT GROUP

25-feet long, ,,, . w&gt;de ng &gt;d yellow blade . Durable

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Couples filed for divorce

''

Lufkin

Flyash found

Veterans Memorial Hospital news

~

Tape
.Rule

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,
Calif. 1UP II -' Shuttle Columbia
fl oated through predawn darkness
to a landing Sa turday on a Mojave
Deser1 runway after bad weather
blocked a third Fl01ida landing try.
possibly delaying the ship's next
night.
Heralded by twin shotgun-like
sonic booms, the 1{1.}-ton space
glidN banked over the sprawling
Ca!il'ornia flight test center and
gl ided toward a brtilfantly floodlft
3-mlle r ibbon of concrete.
With commander Robert "Hoot"
Gibson and t'O-pUot Charles Bolden
at the controis, Columbia's landing
gear hit the runway at 8:59 a.m.
EST. n mlnu res before sunrise, and
the ship qu ickly rolled to a stop in
only the second shutUe landing In
darkness in 24 missions.
"Welcome back to Earth, you
seasoned space veterans, " radl0€d
astronau t Frederick Gregory from
missio n control in Houston.
"Roger thai Houston, seasoned
by an extra two days," replied
Gibson.
Also on board were Franklin
Chan g-Diaz. the first HispanicAmerican astronaut, Steven Haw' ley, George Nelson, RCA engiineer
Robert Cenker and · Rep. BUI
Nelson. D-Fia. , a congressional
observer whose disUict includes the
Kennroy Space Center in Florida.
"! want to thank lhe ascent and

Chocolate Eclair

SUPER
BOWL
WEEK

:100 Second Ave.
La la yette Mall

ITEM OF

'

GALLIPOLIS - January 31 wtil be the final day owners of mobile
hom• in Gallia County wll! be able to pay taxes on their homC'S
withou t a penalty. according to Auditor Ronald K. Canaday.
: The t~ not lees were mailed In December, he said. If ,enyone has
not recerved their notice. they should contact the auditor's office in
1he county oourthouse as soon as possible. Canaday added .

Shoe Cafe

o•

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
PH . 992 -2588

•I I' '
'I

GALLIPOLIS- Two Gallia County men were cited by city police
for DWI early Saturday morning.
Charged were J oseph G. lngleheart, 38. of 1015 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, and Allen A. Cox, of Rt 2, Gallipolis. Ingle heart was also
·charged with defective exhaust
Pamela K. Wallace, 'lT, of Dexter, was served a bench warrant
charging probation violation and Geneva Jeffers, of ll7 Upper River
Rd., Gallipolis, was served a summons for telephone harrassment
Cited for drlvlng under financial responsibility suspension was
Michael Ray Meadows, of 59 Cedar St .. Gallipolis.

during

IN MANY DESIGNS

W. Main Street
PH . 388-8603
POMEROY, OHIO

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AS IS
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nu mbers:

Monuments

LOGAN
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VINTON , OHIO

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of fin e quality monuments. 1
large and small, ~imple and
. elabuml.e , to adequately fit 1

o

uorl, '''""h.' " ul ~· 't l
· '\1.,. · ~I• r '' 11-•"llilrnu~lr fo •I&gt;IU,ll" .!/'~.

,II[

said.
"Cleveland has al"·ays been a
rock 'n' rolllo"n. One of the c1iteria
for a band to make it nationally is if
the)' can makr it in Cleveland."

~

civilizAtion .
•
We have a huge selection

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FOR SALE BY .OWNER

The jumrs were considering . - - - - - - - - - - - - : ---1
testimony presented 10 !hem during
the Jasl four months. beginning ·
Sept. 23.

in \' ew

York Thursday.
: The city's ·Jobb) ing efforts mclude the fact s thai lh&lt;' ptu·ase
•rock 'n' roll" was coined by
Cleveland disc jockey Alan F'rCl'&lt;l
~d record store ownPr Leo Mint z.
and Cleveland ranks 1\o. I in per
~a pita rock record sales.
· Cleveland has receivl'd endorse
inents from ~mr top performers .
iJJ cluding Nell Young. Tin a Tumer.
Darryl Hall and John Oat"'. Pat
ilenatar and Px -Eagle Glenn F'rey
: "U p and coming groups ha,·e

I

"\

GALLIPOLL&lt;; - Two people were cited by city police Friday
following separatp accidents.
Roy Spears, 68, of Rt. 2. Vinton, was westbound on Sycamore
Street, when oftu;ers said a southbound ca r driven by Ella Long. 71.
of 548 Jackson Ptke, allegedly attempted a right tum from Second
Avenue onto Sycamore and struck Spears' vehic le in the light side.
No lnjurtes were reported in the 2:29p.m. oollision, which &lt;tflcers
said caused moderate damage to both vehicles. Long was charged
by polJce with failure ro yield the right of way.
· Pollee said J~ffrey A. Cochran,~. of Rt. 2, Vinton, was westbound
_on Pine Sleet m a van owned by Ohio Valley Publishing, when a
westbound prck -up In the left tum lane, operated by Clarence
·Richard Gill, 72, of Letart, W.Va .. allegedly continued srralght
slriklng Cochran in the left side.
'
No lnjuries were reported in the 2:44p.m. collision. which officers
- sa1d caused light damage to both vehicles. Gill was cited by pollee for
Improper lane usage.

whiJP waiting.

for rock 'n' roll hall

·\'f'I'Y impl'f'SsiV£' .··

..

Lori II

Two cited following accidents

~a~;";g;re;•;t~t;re;a;s;ur;e~o;f~;lh;e~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~4~4~6~-~2~6~7~3;i;i;i~~;:;:~

City heavy favorite
CLEVELAND tl:PI 1 - The
:publisher of Rolling Stone says this
city. where the phrase "Rock ·n·
.Roll" was coined 30 years ago, is
:heavily fa,·ored to be chosen the
·home of a plan ned mus1c hall of
lame
- "The town loves rock n' roll."
:sa id Jann Wenner. Rolling Stone
:publisher and pl..,siden t of 1he Rock
··n· Roll Hall of Fame Foundation.
: "Cleveland is a hea\ 'Y favolite ...
:he sa id. 'The presentation was

'~' ,r , .
I.' dr'

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• II

l~r

Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Local briefs:____, Shuttle lands at Edwards A.F. Base

and he gave the collection, which
now amounts Ia some83,0llpapers,
to the university in 1964.

,~

Middleport Gallipolis. Ohio

Pomeroy

CHICKEN McNUGGETS
6 PIECES

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25

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20

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SILVEI BIIDGE SHOPPING CENTEI

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POMEROY

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342 2ND

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446·2691

.llfllllll
.............................................. ,__~_~_•_o"-'-"-""_"_"o_IA_m_"_''_o._•nc------~--------------------------~------------------------------------------..
SlAtE IOUlE 7

GAWPOUS. 01110

�!

Page-A-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January 19. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio - Point Pl&amp;aSI!IOt. W.Va.

../'

' . ~;====:====~~§~~~~~~~~~~~~====~~~~

:. ;- ~:~~=h~ed
~ of Math, Sciences
, RIO GRANDE - Dr. Robert L.
• Stephenson has been appointed
: Dean of the School of Mathematics
-and Natural Sciences at Rio Grande
, . College.
• !ltephenson cernes to Rio Grande
Jrom Loretto Heights College In
· Denver, Colorado, where he was aq
. Instructor of general chemistry. He
. has nearly 30 years teaching
experience In tbe sciences and has a
· strong backgmund as a speciallsl
· working with secondary schools in
. science educa tlon.
. ''We are fortunare to have Dr.
· Stephenoon with us at Rio Grande
: College and Community College,"
~ said Dr. Ray Boggs, Vice President
• of Academic Affairs. "His exten: slve background in the sciences and
· expertise In the area of science
: educa ti:ln wUI be an asset not only
• to tile college but the local area as
· well. "
: Stephenoon holds a Bachelor of
: Science degree, with a major in
· chemistry education. He received a

WILMINGTON, Ohio (UPII The standard line tilat kids today
can't read as well as previous
generations because they watch too
much television Is wrong, says an
educa lion profesoor.
"Today's students can read just'
as well as their parents and
grandparents," contends Wilming·
ton College assistant profesoor of
education Gloria Flaherty. "Today's reading problems are just
getting more publicity tilan reading
problems used to get."
When some of Today's college
entrance test results are compared
with those of previous generations,
there appears to be a drop in

BE'ITSVILLE, Ohio iUPII -

· Dreams of Paris in tile springtime
~ have ended for students at Betts·
· ville High School, where the seniorclass tradlonallv has flo"n td
Europe or South America for spring
. break.
: Bombings at airports in Rome
' and Vienna prompted the Senec•
· County students to cancel this
. year's plans to Paris and London.
: The seniors now are considering a
• filght to Hawaii instead, Supt.
. Jal1li'S Kelbley sa id Friday.
"The kids looked forward to this
for six year•,'' he said. "But if thev
.' have to worry f'Very day, that's not
· what we approve senior class trips
: for."
: Kelbley, who began leading
· SEnk&gt;rclasses on exotic trips shortly
after i)?cl)ming superintendent of
· Ohio's smallest public school dis·
· trlct 16
, said tile recent

reading skllls, but Flaherty points
out that a larger variety of students
- including many with lower
Intelligence- are now taking those
tests.
"Anyway," she adds, "It's very
hard to test the kind of things that
indicate good reading."
She believes there Is no single
ca use for reading dlO'icullies- and
that includes television ..
"I don't think TV Is the culprit,"
she said In 8Jl lnlervlew Friday.
"Television Is a two-edged sword
when It comes to reading skills.
There ran be good points and bad
points.
"Kids come to school better
prepared than they did before TV

Master's degree in chemistry
education at Michigan State Uni·
versiry. He holds a Doctorate in
science education from the University of Northern Colorado.
Joining Stephenson will be his
wife. Ellen, thPir daughter, Chris·
tine. 20, and their son Scott. 13.

Section riD
JAnuary 19. 1986

because they see and hear oo much television - "use" TV to their
that kids before TV didn't. Their advan tage.
·
language skills entering school are
"U you're creative enough, you
usually better.
' can use it to your benefit,'' she says.
"But the other side is, when tile
"When I taught in high school 1
kids get In school. teachers have to would give klds a TV assignment compete with television. And it 's 'Wa tch your favorite program and
very hard to compete with 'Miami write a character analysis. Pick out
VIce.' "
a character and write about him.
Flaherty suggests that teachers Write about what the character is
- Instead of complaininR about like and why ."'

PREPARATION -

WILUAM C. CALUHAN, II,
M.D.

~ted

APRIL 24-27, 1986

AUTOMOBILE CLUB O~OUTHEASTERN OHIO

the opening of my new office in
Point Pleasant West Vir~ma

GALliPOliS

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WlHPLASH

It took time to get out of shape, it takes time to get into shape

IT'S STILL TH CC\l.SL

Of' ~liSCRY &amp;Sli'PI :RI\G

By NANCY YOACHAM
11Jnes.&amp;nllnel Stall
Running.
Henry David Thoreau once said,
"Every man is the bullder of a
temple called his body ... we are all
sculptors and painters and our
material is our flesh and blood and

No accidenl leaves more

misery, suffering ,
disability and expense
than the whiplash
accidenl. T realm enl should
nol be pul off . Headaches,
stiff neck , nervousness.
nausea or other aches and
pains can occur in I he days ,
weeks . and even years
ahead . Every accident
victim should be
thoroughly exami ned
by .;~ doctor of
chiropractic. a
spec ialist in problems of the spine. nerves
and muscles.

ANNUAL JANUARY

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runes."

Was Thoreau a runner?
Brobably not. But runners echo
his sentiments.
Today, millions of Americans are

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JIM MINK CHEVROLET -OLDSMOBILE INC.
'

A M es.HJf!l' From The Bib/1'

PUTS YOUR INTEREST FIRST

THE 81\PTISM OF JESUS
Witfiam B. K UJ!hn
rwelw yt&gt;flr5 old. He spoke of being about His
Fatht:r\ bustnt:\S &lt;Lk . 2:44). The templt: was the house of God to which
k ~m ··h '!LI"

He wa s 10 drvnte His life'" .,.,·ork Th1s wa s the first time Christ made a
Dh:int.• examin atimt of Himself. As He wa s de,·eloping. physically and
:-. pmtuall y. the Mess tan ic work ror v.-h1ch H(' had bee n appointed was
bei ng aroused v.oithin Him . He retu rned to His home with His parents
willingl}. 11n d con t1nued to l&lt;!ruu " in wisdom . umf swrure. unJ i11 j~vour
with God !l rlti mm1 " for abo ut eighteen more yea rs (Lk . 2:521. No doubt .
there "a' :1 cominued awa renesli of Hi s Messia nic work growing within
Him . so" hen He heard that John "o~.' 3S baptizing. He went ·
GaliiPf'
to Jorda11 1mt1J Joll11. w bl' bupri:(•J of hun ·· fMt. J : 14 ).
"It hrcomrrh us w fulflJJ g/1 riglrrtousness "
" IJ,.t·nml'th ·-means fittm ~ . The plural pronoun "us .. refers to John
and J e~u ... It .,..a s the dut y of John to baptiz.e Jesus. and th e duty of Jesus
!0 hl' bapti tL'd of John . John 's mission V."3S tO rrepare the people for
(hri ~ot \ l'n mitl ~. anrl tn ntabli..;h the idcntitv o Jesus as the Messiah .
Jc!lll!l encouraged and a~sisted Joh n to fulfi ll .hi.ll duty by submitting to

0

0.

:rrol

hi~ h ap t i~m .
John wa ~ sent hy God "tu htJpti:e y,·ftlr waur" (Jno. I :JJ). The hap·
ti'irll ~.rJ { I]m "as .t n be- in strumental in i~entifyi n ~ Christ ~s the "Son of

God. 1he Ml'''Wth When John bap ll7cd Chmt , he witnessed "th e
S 11irtr d! 'S i'4'11d!IIJ!. frmn ht'/Jl '~ ' " /ik e 11 dnw, 1.11/J it 11bode 1.4pDfl him "
Uno . I :.12 1. and he heard &lt;I \·oice derla re "This i1 m~· bt&gt;!o ved Son. in

wlwm I am m•/1 p/,•m('(/" (ML J :J7l. It was after rhe baptism of Jesu!i
;tncltlll' l'C&gt; nlirma titl n of His t"leing the
uf God '' that John knew He
"a ~ thl' Ch ris t Ono. I :J4). John . without he~i tation. bore -.·itness to
l,r;ll~ l. "'~· ~· in~ . "81•ho/J 1ht• L11mh of God. which taktrh away th t sin of

··so,

tht• world " i,J no. l :NI.

At the Lord\ baptism. the righteousness of God was being fulfilled;
Juhn \ hapti'm voa&lt;; establis hed as bei ng }rom hl!uwn .. (M I. 21 :25): it
"as l'Onlirmcd a"i a ~1g n to John in identifying Christ as the ' "Son of
GuJ ". and rnarkt-d the beginning of Christ's Messianic work, His per'mw l min i\trv
Wl· . of to(by . an· not bap!ized with Joh n's baptism. Neither are we
ha ptl!Ld fur tht· 'anlt' pu rpose of ,which Jes us was baptized. Because
Jolw \ hapti"ll i..; not ,.il lid toda y. and we He not baptized for the same
H'a:o.tlll Je~ ' " was . you cannot atlirm th at you were baptized just be·

(..'a use Jcsm \loa~.

The Two-fold Aapect Of Boptlam
lt'i' ot Dn·ine or i ~in and purpose : Til~ "om• buprism " with which
\loC an: bapt iLL'd is co mmanded by Chri'it (MI. 28: JQ) in order "to be
SIH't-d " (Mk . \O;I b) and to obtain "rile rf'mission of sins " (Acts 2:38).
Bapt i&lt;;m is a bu rial in to Christ's death 1Rm . b:4) where we contact the

during a "coollng

down" period following a nm.

HOSTESS: KAREN RATHBURN

PEDIATRICS
I woukllike to announce

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••

MARATHON RUNNER Common Pleas Juqe Charles
KaJcht pt188et! the 16 mOe mark
In December's Ohio Rlver Road
Runners Marathon In Daylon.
KnJPt, who's'-' nmolog lor
three years, Is now looking
toward the April 13 Athens
Marathon. (Photo courtesy
Janet Pennell)

running- male, female, young, old
and In between. Some are athletes
in the truest sense of tbe word and
some are not . Some are speedsters,
some are plodders, oome are
dedicated, some not, but all believe
running Improves health.
Surveys show that over 17 million
adult Americans run regularly.
Most run a mlle or two at a lime,
two or three times a week, but
many run servera! miles a day.
According to the President 's
CouncU on Physical Fitness and
Sports, tile number of runners has
doubled In the past five years and is
increasing faster than ever.
Why do people run?
Health clearly Is the No. I reason.
In addition to ·burning off exoess
calories, regular vigorous exercise
can Improve the body's ability to
consume oxygen during exertion,
lower the resting heart rate, reduce
blood pressure _and increase the
efficiency of the heart and lungs.
Since obesity and high blood
pressure are among leading risk
factors In heart attack and stroke.
e~erclse offers protect ion against
two of our nation's major killers.
Running appears to . have a
favorable Influence on personal
habits too. For example, smokers
who begin running usually quit.
And runners experience Immediate benefits. Most report they feel
better, tire less easlly and have
fewer illnesses.
Experienced runners say they
develop a "positive addiction" to
running.
Fred Wolle of Rutland, who's
been running for six years, said "It
gets In your blood."
Wolfe says he feels better now
tila\be runs and he's lost weight in
the process, going from 215 pounds
to 155.
Runners Larry Hoffman and
Larry May, also of Rutland, each
with about three years of expe·
rlence, and Phll Burgess of Syracuse, with ten years agree, al·
though May says he stays at 145
pounds "no matter what."
But they admit that along with

tile benefits of running, there are
also some discomforts.
"The first year I ran, I was
constantly treating Injuries. I was
always running with some kind of
pain,'' Hoffman said.
On the other hand , hesayshegets
more dlscouraged noo: than he did
back then . Then he ran for peroonal
satisfaction. Now a competitor, he
runs to win.
HoHman recently finished 45th
out of 800 runners In the Charlotte
Observer Marathon In Charlotte,
N.C., running the26 mlles ll5yards
in less than three hours. He finished
the race In 2: 57:57 - his peroonal
best.

"1 was cookin '!," he laughed.
And even thougb he trained hard running as many as ID miles on
some of those zero-degree days inhe admits surprise In his success. "I
thought I was rPady but I didn't
know I was tilat ready! "
Hoffman also says that for the
first time during a marathon, he
didn't "hit the waU." That's the
term for a mental and physical
condition that marathon runners
experience berween the mlle ID and
24, when tnuscles run out rt
glycogen (the starch compound
consumed by muscle In exercise)
and start to bum muscle fiber.
Perhaps you've seen runners on
television as they end the race with
someone literally helping them
across tile finish line. That runner
hit the wall oornewhere along the
course.
Hoffman, Wolfe, May and Bur·
gess all say they knowtheirrunnlng
pJtentlal, and each has experienced
the "runners high." This is a
sensation that supposedly spurs
runners on with the feeling "I have.
to run ."

Each of tilese men, as well as
many other area men and women,
partiCipate yerly In distance runs.
They often train together as
members of tile loosely organized
Meigs Running Club, meeting
evenings to run 8 to 10 miles,
expeclally before marathons.
They always encourage others to

take up the sport and say "we'll run
with anyone who wants to run. "
Another Meigs County runner is
Cc:rnmon Pleas Judge Charles
Knight.
Knight says he started running
about three years ago for health
reasons. Six months later he ran his
first marathon, but he wouldn't
advise anyone else to do that. "I
almost killed myself doing it. "
Even when Knight isn't in
training for a marathon, be regularly logs 18 miles a day and is
usually accompanied by his wife,
Sharon, also a runner and the
owner-manager of The Training
Station fitness center in Athens.
Knight is looking toward tbe
Athens Marathon, April 13, the
oldest run in the state and the
largoest In this area.
Then there are the runners in the
county who l!el a five mile race is
their Hmit. They still promote the
sport.
It's true there are other f01ms of
endurance exer~ just as effec·
tlve as running - biking and
swimming among them - but
running's Immense popularity Is
due to Its unique advantages.
You don't need lessons. You don 't
need a special track. You can do it
at your own convenience. And it's
inexpensive. The only equipment
requlrrd is a good pair of shoes.
And shou ld you decide to try
running - remember this - the
president's council advises begin·
ning runners not to get discouraged,
since !Pw beginners are capable ot
running continuously for any
distance .
It probably took you several
years to get In the shape you 're In,
and It will take a while to rt'palr the
fiE'glect . Patience would seem to be
the key to success.
Knight says when he started, he
ran three minutes, walked three
minutes, and dldn't go very far,
either.
And the more etten you run, the
faster you Improve. At least five
workouts a week are recommended
by the council for Individuals trying

to raise tilelr fitness level. Three
workouts a week are considered the
minimum needed to maintain
fitness.
All runners say progress seems
slow at first but you gradually
become aware your strength and
staying power are Increased .
Is it important Ill run endlessly?
This is a question of values. The
individual who runs a mile a day for
50 years has a different attitude
than tile individual who runs one
mile on one day in less than four
minutes.
From tile health standpoint ,

speed is not important. It takes
about 20 mlnul es for your bodv to
begin realizing the "training. ef·
feels " of sustained vigorous

exercise .
After eight or ten weeks of
running , depending on your age and
whether or not you'w worked out
faithfully, you should be able to go
the full 20 minutes at a reasonable
pace.
So with all this in mind, running
shoes on your feet and a doctor's OK
if you're over 40. give It a try ... one
step at a tlme ... who knows how far
those feet might take you ?

THEY WALK, NO'l' RUN- Retirees~ and Lawrence Leonard
of Rock Springs have found that walldng a mile and a haH every day
helps them "feel better and get rid of a lot ol fruslrallon." Here they are
In Odober as tl•ey made their way dolm Rt. 7. There are other elder
couples and Individuals In the county who've taken to "hoofing It" on a
regular basts.

ON ALL NEW-

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12 wheel drivef

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' hed blood of Christ i) no. !9:JJ.J4) by which we are redeemed (I Pet. I:
HU qJ_ Baptism is essential to your salvation (I Pet. 3:21). something
you ''mrw do . .. just as Saul of Tarsus (Acts Q:6.J8.22 ). and is ''appoint·
t'ti .. (ordained) by God (Acts 12 : 10.16). You arc to be bapt ized because
it i&lt;; com manded by Christ and for the salvat ion of your sou P
for FTPe Bible Corn&gt;sponden t·t Cnun·t , Writt ...

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

You must take actual retail delivery from dealer stock by February 22,
1986. Dealer financial participation may affect consumer cost. Ask us for
qualification details.

Bula\•111•• Road • 1'. 0 . Box :lOR
Gallipolis, Ohio ~56.11
1iund:l)' \tunln•:
Rlttlt• ~hady !1 : :111

!oiunri:Ly Jo: HIIIn~~: :
\hr&lt;~ hlp 8 (Ill

B l hll' study
~ : 00

II' .......'JL"
, l.t

I

•

••.

-~

~· l'dn!"'day :

K'IN'!IIIIp II : !ll

p.m.
RadiO

" ~f'lllllll'

t"rom

ttw Blhl,"
li111ly • " '.J F.H
1: 13 1.m.

Runner

Carla Shuler, of Racine, prepare~~ lor a race by going
through a series of stretching
exercl8es. stretching exercises
sbould always be done before
,_~ng becau.8e they prepare
the muscles and joints lor
mevemeot through a luD rani"
or mo&amp;DS. Stretching should be

OFFICE HOURS
airport bombings prompted the
Monday throu!dl Fr'day
move.
9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
The hips are considered an
Open Saturday morning by a~ntment
educational experience for tile
(304) 675·7300
students, who start planning for
LOCATED: Suite 113 Medical Ollice
them in tile seventh grade. Kelbley
Building at Pl...,t VoltW~ Hospital
said .
Point PIOMint. WMt Vwginio
"It's OfiE' thing we can do because
of the small classes." he said.
Last year's senior class new to ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiifl
Rio de Janeiro. Other BettsvUIP II
classes have visited Europe, Mex ico, Hawaii or havp taken cruises.
The class of 86- which numbers
only 14 st udents - had orlglnally
selected Greece, but switched to
Paris and London after an airplane
was hijacked from tile Atilens
airpor1 .
"The class ";tt&gt;Jut too much
problem said 'Let' s not take that
trip,:· said Kelbley.
"We're just country folks here,''
said Kelbley. "When tile kids saw
this oo television, wisdom won out."

LARGE SELECTION

When

ltutintl

Dr. Robert L stephen!lon

:Students say -no' to trip
."

~huts·

Professor: don't blame TV for problems

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile, Inc.
1616 EASTERN AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OH.

446-3672 .
•

IN TRAINING - As memben ol lilt bJiel.y
orpnlzed Melp Rumlng Club, PhD II...-, Larry
Mq, Larry Rollman IIIII Fl'tld Wolle,lram .... lrlln
repltlrly ~ and wlh other ~ members.

Club members !1011idlm111 Mllltll wllh the falrl)' Melp Wilt er- Cou!Uy RullllnC Team wNch
bepn having meeD lllil1 .,.. fall
•

CROSSING '11111: FINJSH - Can. you tell what
Larry Hoffm811'1 titg 111 he mt~~es the finish line?

He's stoppJnc his w!Uc* to 11"1 his time.

�. ~- · ··-- ··

Page-B-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
; · January 19, 1986

: Smith - Lemley
vows exchqnged
POMEROY - Rebecca Sue
Smith and Charles M. Lemley were
married on Dec. 24 at the Langs·
ville Christian Church with the Rev.
Robert E. Musser officiating.
Lt. Stanley Lemley. brother of
the groom, Jacksonvlle, Fla., was
best man and Mrs. Lisa C. Zuspan,
sister of the bride. Middlepon . was
matron of honor.
The bride is the daughter of
Carroll and Barbara Smith, Happy
Hollow Road. Middleport, and the
groom is the son of Etta and Harold
C. Will Sr., Pomeroy, and the late
Harold W. Lemley.
A reception was held at the home
d. the bride's parents following the
ceremony.
The couple reside on Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy. Lemley is em·
played at Foodland.

Clerical training set at BHCC
RIO GRANDE - Both full -time
Clerical Training as well as shorter
Hourly Clerical classes are avallable at Buckeye Hills Car£er Center.
The Adult Division or the GalllaJackson-VInton JVSD will be accepting enrollment into these programs as openings are avallabie.
Full-time training can be schE'·
duied IWIJ or four evenings a W£ek.
Hourly classes are generally held

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

on Tuesday and Thursday evenings
from 6-9 p.m. Examples of hourly
classes include: Computers, Typing, Accounting and ClvU Service
Preparation.
For more information or registration contact the Buckeye Hills
Career Adult Education Depanment at 245-5336 between 2 and 9
p.m. Monday through Thursday
and 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Fnday.

.Computer seminar set

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT.; JAN. 25, 19 86

RIO GRANDE - A slx hour
seminar to introduce Lotus 1·2·3
software on the IBM Personal
Computer will be offered at Rio
Grande College on Wednesday.
Jan. 22, from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
This seminar Is open to people
Interested in business, government
and home computer use.
"Hands-on" activities will In·
c iude moving the spread sheet,
saving and restorfug Illes and an
introduction to developing an ac·

counting program. A cenificate for
0.6 Contbtuing Education Units will
be awarded to participants. Enrol·
lment will be limited to 14. The cost
Is $125.00, including instruction and
equipment use.
The seminar is located at the
School of Business, Room· 1.26.
Instructors are Larry Higgins and
Beverly Wilkins. To register, telephone (614) 245-5.1;3 or in Ohio
toil-free at (800) 282-7201. extension
325, no later than Tuesday, Jan . 21.

s a bUS)' gMoup

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POMEROY - Mrs. Donna Wil·
son. 219 Union Ave. Pomrroy . and
C.E. Spt'ncer. Lima. announce the
engagement of their daughter.
Karen Spt'ncer. to Shane Bortner.
He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Bortner. 116 W Main St .. Elida.
The bridP attended Meigs High
School. Both graduated from EUda
High Sc hool.
Wedding plans art' incomplete.

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E.

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Y
J
:

f 1

By BOB HOEFUCH
Tlmes&amp;nllnel Staff
constantly realize that the
Meigs Count y
Emergency Medica l Services is a
busy operation
and aren't we
fortunate to have
it?
However , I
didn 't realize how the unit s of the
services were kept on the move
__.- untO I glanced over the annual
report .
It's incredible- forthestzeofour
county.
.
In 19115, 2,814 runs were made by
· · the units including 2,(136 emergency
: · runs and 728 transfer trips.
: : There were 1,691 patients trans.. ported in the large number ol runs
with 1,114 of these taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. There were 351
: taken to Holzer Medical Center; 58
· to Pleasant Valley and 168 to other
institutions.
All vehicles of the unit were
drlvl'n 88,393.9 mtles in 19lfi, an
average of 31.4 miles per run. Runs
made by the various units included
· PomE'roy, 618; Racine. 324 : Syra·
: cuSl', 1&amp;4; Rutland, 343; Tuppers
· Plains. :~ll; Middleport, 436 and 728
· by transfer units.

-----

Do keep in mind that Monday Is a
holiday- Martin Luther King Day.
Offices ol the Meigs Courthouse will
be closed along with other public
offices and schools.

LB.

KAHN'S REG. BEEF &amp; JUMBO

Franks ••••••••••.•L~.

-

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

lntE'rested in adult education on • local leveJ?
Meigs High School Principal Is
working on a plan to offer courses to
adults who want to further their

educations parhaps, in some panic·

w~:r:S~ : " :· mtnimat

and
you'll be asked about your interest

~::tt~!:r:~~ 1 ::!~~prllt

AIIl&gt; continues to be a major
problE'minthenation. You might be
relievEd to knOw that a check wtth
the Meigs
County
Healthdisclosed
Depart·
ment
Friday
afternoon
that Meigs County has no AIDS
cases. The Ohio Deparment ol
Health requires that any AIDS
cases must be reported.
How about the spring weather?
People have even been golfing. It
might be the calm before the storm
- on the other hand , perhaps, we're
turning into a second Florida. Last
year about this time, things were
really rough and then came
February .
Don 't look at me - I'm not the
Herb you· re kloktng for . Do keep
smiling.

Park meeting set
POMEROY- ThE' Meigs County
Park District Board of Commissioners will meet at 5 p.m.
Thursday at the office of Attorneys
Story and Story.

Page B-3

- - - - - I n the service-----Lentz
Stuan M. Lentz, son of Dr.
Malcolm W. and Kathryn A. Lentz
of Rural Route 3, Bidwell, was
commissioned an Army second
lieutenant upon graduating from
the Officer Ca ndidat e School, Fan
Benning, Ga.
During the 14-week course, stu·
dents were trained in leadership.
small unit tactics and infantry
weapons. They also receivEd in·
struction in map and aerial photo·
gr a p h r ea d I ng a nd
communications.
His wife. Dreama, is the daughter
of August and Darlene Ratt of
Rural Route I, Thurman, Ohio.
He is a 198:1 graduate of Wlimington C~llege of Ohio.

Russ

Airman Michelle R. Russ,daugh ·
ter of Delbert D. Russ of 712 Pine
St. , Rio Grande, has completed Air
Force baste training at Lackland
Air Force Base, Texas.
The airman, who is remaining at
Lahecktandrttor specialized training in
t secu ty pollee fields , studied
the Air Force mission, organization
and customs and received special
instruction in human relations.

ea rned 1112 individual credits to·
ward an associate degree in applied
science through the Communi ty
College of the Air Force.
Her uncle, Ray Pardon. resides
at 127!li Denoler, St&lt;&gt;riing Heights.
Mich.
The airman Is a 1985 graduate of
Gauta Academy, Gallipolis.

]ones
Alrman George E. Jones IIi , son
of George E. and Joyce K. Jones &lt;i
459 Lariat Drive, Gautpolis, has
completed Air Force basic training
at Lackland Air Force Base. Texas.
The airman, who is remainin g at
Lackiand for specialized training in
the securtty pollee field, studied the
Air Force mission, organization
and customs and received specia l
instruction in human rela tions.
Completion of thi s training
earned the individual credits to·
wardanassoclatedegreeinappUed
· science through the Communi ty
College of the Air Force .
He Is a 1985 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School , Gallipolis.

Stone

ing at Recruit Training Command.
Orlando. FL.
During Stone' s elght·wrek trainIng cycle, she studied general
milita ry subj ects des igned to pre·
pare her for lurther academic and
OO·the-job train ing in one of the
1\"vy's 85 basic fi elds.
Stone's studies included seaman·
shJp, claSP order drill. Naval hJstory
and first aid . Personnel who

tll2 Basic Supply Stock Control
Course.
The seven·week course, con·
dueled at Mar.ine Corps Base,
Camp Lej oune, NC, prepared
Sommerville lor future assignment
to supply administ ration and operation duties .

complete this course of instru ction

MIDDLEPOFIT - The Middlepan Literary Club wil meet Wednesday at 2 p.m at the home of Mrs.
J"mes Ciatwon hv. Mrs. Nan
Moor!' will review shon stones and
poems by Edgar Alien Poe. For roll
call members are to give a
quotation from Poe.

Landerr
Marine Pvt . Mark A. l..a nders.
son of Raymond H. and .loan E.
Landers of 1~31 Nye Ave .. Pome·
roy. recently reponed for du ty wilh
2nd Marine Division C"mp Le·
jeune. NC.

Civitan to meet
POMEROY - The Big Bend
Civil an Club wlli meet at 7: 30p.m.
Monday at the Community Action
Agenc,· Offices in Pomeroy.

Sommert·il/e

Marine Sgt. Davtd A. Sommerville, son of Gloria J . Sommer\'ill r
of 735 Third Ave .. Gallipolis. was
The state motto of Michigan is. " If
meritoriously promoted to his you seek a pl easant peninsula, look
presen t rank upon graduation from abou t you "

Navy Airman Recruit Vickie L.
Stone, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Chattin of Route 2. Leon,

,_.,:ft!~

cb

~

f

WINDJAMMER UUISE
SAIL THE

'

Group to meet

are eligible for three hours of
college cred it in Physical Educa·
tion and Hygiene

I~::~:;io~n::o:f:t:hl:s::tr:ai:ni:n:g::~::h:a:s:::::::rec:;ru:it~tr~a~tn~-4

JOHN. CREDICO, M.D.

I LEEWARD ISLANDS
ON BOARD THE

OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY AND INFERTIUTY

S/V POLYNESIA

•Epidural Deiveries
•Tubal Repairs

Think about tt.
Frank and Kate Wilson have
been returned to their home on
Brownell Avenue In Middleport and
things are looking up. Both have
been confind lo area hospital for
whall'm sure they feel is too long.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

MAY 4-10, 1986
Hosted by: Tom &amp; Bonnie Brandeberry

Offi'e Hours 10:00 AM.- 5:00 P.M. Mon., Wed., Fri.

AUTOMOBILE CLUB f#.UTHEASTERN OHIO

2:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. Tuesday and Thursdoy Evenings

GAWPOLIS

675-6700

OFfiCE

tOCATm, Sui&lt;• 114 Mtd i&lt;ol Offi&lt;t B~ld ing, at Pleatont Volley Ho&lt;pitol
Point Ptea&lt;ant, w. Yo. 25550

360 SECO
AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS OHIO 45631

l~======::::::::::::::::::~::::::=l=====================
Open Daily 10·9; Sunday 12 6

ON SALE SUN., JAN. 19
THRU TUES., JAN. 21

SUN.
MON.
TUES.
0 LY!

Regulor Prices May
vary At Some Stores
Due To Local Coonpetitlon

__.. ·--·
_..._
--•

4.97

Our 6.27 l'ks· 6 pn.. Min's rube Socks
34" length, whrte with slripes. Fits ~zes 10-13
Our 5.17, Boys' Socks fit Sim 9-11, Pkg. 3.97

Vidal Sanoon Shampoo or Conditioner
12 oz. Add bocly lo lme.
ltmp hatr.

Peddler's Pantry
446-2755
340 Se&lt;ond Ave.
Loraine Beth Tucker
Kenneth Lester Buckley

TuckerBuJ&lt;ley
11JPPF.RS

U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET

f'I.AI\S -

.

Potatoes ........~s.~~ ••

\n

nounct:mcnt is m~ df' oft hf• f'nga J=:P·

$

149

m Pnl and approaching mJrri&lt;.~gf' of

&amp;&gt;th Tucker of TupP&lt;'tS
Plains. to K~nnr th Lrstf'r Buck l&lt;''.
COOI\'ill&lt;'
Lorain~

•

Gallipolis

STOREWIDE IN~ENTORY
CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES

20°/o TO 50°/o OFF

Sa'- PJic:e Ea. Jay llq·
uld detergent for
sporkllng dishes. hand
washabtes. Lemon
scent, handy 22-fl.-oz,
squirt bOttle.

"""'

Th£' brid£'-f'IN'I is a s tudrn t CJI

Eas tern High School.
Bucklf'~' .

&lt;I

~ra duaT P

of E;Js!rrn

Htgh Sc hool and thr Hocking
T&lt;'C hntc·"l Collpgr. b rmplo,·t&gt;d b!
Ampak . Inc. of ParkNsburg.

KRAFT SINGLE SLICES

Amer.
A9W ROOT BEER, ORANGE CRUSH,
DIET or REGULAR

7-Up.................... .
8 PAK 16 OZ.

$

139

4
9
Cheese~~~!·::~·$1

DINNER TRE.AT

Pot P1es •••••••.•~~~·. 4/

$

1

.
Pie Filling ••••••!'.~'; ••• 89&lt; French Fr1es ..........

SHURFINE CHERRY

ORE-IDA CRINKLE CUT OR REGULAR
2 LB. BAG

••••
.. ..'COU}l(fi •••••••
...... •
••
•

~

••

147

oz. $499

~

limit 1 Per Customer
• Good O.ly AI Powoll's S141trmarl&lt;ot
• Offer Expiros Sat., Jan. 25, 1916 TS

•

·-·............-. ...... .

•

0

s •

BLOUSES - SLEEPWEAR
HATS - GLOVES - . PURSES
30°/o OFF!
DRESSES - SPORTSWEAR
COATS- LEG WARMERS
40°/o OFF!
+

:CHEER DETERGENT ' :• 9 LIVES CAT FOOD
•

NOW!

6

oz.4 J$1

Umit 4 Per Cust""'"
liood O.ly AI Powoll's Sorpermorl&lt;tl
Oller lxpirts Sat., Jon. 25, 1986
,
STS

DOWNY 45&lt; OFF.LABEL

DEL MONTE CATSUP
44

FABRIC SOFTENER

oz. 99(

Umit 1 Por Customer
Good 9f1ly At P•woll's lupormoricot
Offer bpires Sat., Jan. 25, 1916

64
0

oz. $179

Umit 1 Por Customer
Good O.ly At Powell's S141trmarlltt
Oller bpirts Sat., Jan. 25, 1916 STS

SPECIAL RACKS OF
LONG OR SHORT

DRESSES
SPORTSWEAR
50°/o TO 75°/o OFF!

--- &amp;tc. c

2.99 ~ 1.27

34%

Sale Prtc. Pkg. $ ' Energy nylon panty hose;

our 1.94 Ea. 5-pty training
pan11 ol polyester sponge/

colors. A, 8 01 queen .

cott0 n. Si2es 2 to 4.

Sale Price Pkg . Papet napkins. 250. !·ply napkins.
Appro• 13• l H\" 51 ze.

""'

$1
Sate Price. Fantasllk
all-purpose c:'-"'r

tackles many house·
hold jobs Including

countertops, sinks.
appliances. 32 tt. oz.

32 fl Oz.

·

~1.68~~" EJ
Sa'- Prlc:e Ea. Cleaning
needs. Shout. Pine Sol' or
Enduslln papular Sizes.

7a:;,~Josl 2.698

11,000 liTU radtant
IIkiH'OS- heatef has
f Ire,movabte fuel tank.

""¥.. "

77'

Nestle Quik

Real chocola te flavor
2 lb.
.
.

·.

~~

4.

Our 99• Ea. Stantlard
apcuk plugs. Many U.S..
Import COl$; h. trucks .
SOld ont; WII)IIQI. 01' 4, ~ Of I

97'

Our 1.21 Ea. hslllof
lpark plugs. Many u S .

---

Import CQ!S; H. truCks.

SOld ont; 111 pkgl. Of 4 , 6 Ot 8

2For$) B

1.298 5.97

Poppln1 Corn

Henri's

I ••· I pak.

16 ••· Saltol Droning

�Page-B-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Community calendar I area happenings

Bookmobile routes set
in Gallia, Meigs areas
G~llia County
• GALUPOUS - The Dr. Samuel
L. BOssard Mermrlal Library
annou~es Its Bookmobile schedule
lor the week of Jan . W to Jan . 25.
19116.
Monday: Rodney Village 3: 3015; Gallia Metro Estates 4:30~: 15; Kerr 5: 30-5: 55: Bidwell 6: 106: 30; Harrisburg 6:4().7:00; Rio
Grande Estates 7: 10-8: 10.
Tuesday: Gallia Christian School
1: 45-2:30: Roush Lane 2: 45-3: 15;
Addison 4:00-4: 30; Addaville El.
4: 40-5:05: Bulavllle Tr. a. 5: 15~ : 45; Georges Creek 6:00-6: :lil:
Kanauga 5th Ave. 6:35-7:00; Foster
Mobile Home Pk. 7: 10-1::lil; K&amp;K
Trailer Ct. 1: 3.1-8:00.
Wedn es day: No Rout e MaintenanCE'.
Thursday: CR.T.C 12:00-12: 15;
Children's Home 12: 15-12:30:
Scenic Hills 12:40-12:55: Sun Va ll e~
1: 00-1:35; Pinecrest 1: -10-2: 10; Rac coon Trailer Ct. .\ : 40-4: 00: Pa trio!
4:10-4:40: Cad mus 4:50-5:15: Gallia

*'

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

Jenuery 19, 1986

January 19. 1986

service, Monday, noon, St. Louis
GALLIPOLIS - Garland Mont - Catholic Churrh . Lunch to follow.
goll'lE'ry will speak at Mlna Chapel. Public Invited.
Sunday, 7: 30p.m.
SUNDAY

5:30-6: 00; Centerpoint 6: 15-6: ::IJ;
Centerville 6: 45-1: 15: Doris Copley
7: 40-8:00.
Frfday: Senior Citizens Large
Prlnt Day.
Saturday: LeGrande 10:00-10:30:
McGuire 10: .15-li : OO: Nor thup
U:J0-11:30: Rodnev 12: 00-12:30;
EwingTon 1:30-1:50: Alice 2:002: 30; Vinton 2: tJ-3: 30; Morgan
Center 3: 50-i: W: Cheshire i : tJ5:30.

Meigs County
POMEROY - Bookmobile se r\ice in Meigs County is brought by
the Meigs Cou nty Public Ubrar.
under contract with the Ohio Valle}·
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile Schedule for Monday Jan . 20- No serv!CI' on Man in
Luther King Day.
Bookmobile Schedule fu r Wed nesday. Jan . 2'2: Tupper.; Plains
tLod\\1ck's). 7:25-8:10; Riggscrest
Addition, 8:25-8:55.

~DAY

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Cou nty
Historical Society meets Sunday at
Gatewood on State St rwt. Paul
Mossman to speak on Odd
Mcintyre.
LECTA - Rev . Earl Hinkle wlll
be at Walnut Ridge Churrh Sunday
POMEROY- The MelgsCoun['
C..nealogica l Society meets 2 p.m.
Sunday at Meigs Museum. Roger
ThPiss wlll speak on Germany.
Nm1h Gal!la Band
Boosters meet Monday. 7 p.m. at
the high school.
VINTON -

GALLIPOLIS- Lafayette White
Shrine meets Tuesday, 7::JJ p.m.

EC\\' meeting chllftled

VINTON - Vinton Friendship
Garden Club meets Tuesday, 1
p.m .. home of Mrs. Avery Adkins.
Silent auction.

GALLIPOLIS - St. Peter's
Episcopal Churchwomen's Monday noon luncheon-business meetIng has been cancelled. Dr. Arnold
J. Sattler will speak on the medical

JOHNSONS

S·T·R·E·T·C·H

approach to nuclear war wUI speak
at the rescheduled date. March9, ar
the church.
VolleybaD loumey
GALLIPOLIS - Volleyball tournament, Jan. 21, 23. 28, :JJ, lo benellt :
Gallipolis Developmentay Center:
Special Olympics. Teams are
men's, women's and coed. Coed
must be identical in numbers of
men and women. USBA rules.

YOUR FOOD DOLLAR
AT OUR TWO
GREAT LOCATION

SUPEI MAIIlET-OPEN DAllY &amp; SUN. 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

VINE STREET, GAUIPOliS

PH. 446-9593

"We Reserve The

(Pic-Pac)

OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 8 A.M. TO 10 P.M •
735 SECOND AVE.
PHONE 446-2601

To Limit
HASH IROWN

PIKES EFFECTM SUNDAY JAN. 19th TtiiU SAT., JAN. 24th

iiiiililiiii!liiiii~ii!iii!iii!ii

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Rotary meets Tuesday. 6 p.m .• Down
Under.

in setv ices.

MONDA\'

GALLIPOLIS - Ga lUa County
District Library Board at Trustees
meet Tuesday, 5 p.m., Dr. Samuel
L. l3c5sard Memorial Library.

The Sunday Timas-Sentinei- Page- B-5

POTATO PATTIES

LB.

SUPERIOR·

GALLIPOLIS - Ga!Upolls Lions
meet Tuesday. 6:30p.m., Oscar's.

FRANKIES

LECTA - Bible study. Tuesday,
7:30 p.m. at Walnut Ridge Church
with Rev. Earl Hinkle.

SUPEIIOI

120Z.
PIG.

:
9
(
7
99 (
79,(

CHUNK BOLOGNA

LB.

SUPEIIOR

ll.$1 '19

POLISH SAUSAGE

Area Senior Centers
plan week}s activities
Gallia

Count)!

GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
menus for the week of Jan. W
tbrough Jan. 24 at the Senior
Citizens Center. 2W Jackson Pike.
are as fnllows:
Monday, Jan .10 - Martin Luther
King's Birthday. closed.
1\Jesday, Jan. 21 - S.T.O.P./P hyslcal Fitn!'ss. 10:30 a.m.:
Malnt&lt;&gt;nance of Health 1Holzel'l.
1:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 2'2 - Vinton
Bible Study, I p.m.: Card Games.
1-3 p.m.
Thursday. Jan. 23- Bible Studv.
11-noon .
Friday, Jan. 2i -An C'lass. 1-:l
p.m.; Craft Mlni-C'ourst&gt;. 1-:l p.m.:
Open Activities. 7-10 p.m.
Menus ronslst of:
Monday- Martin Luther King 's
Birt hday, closed.
Tuesday - Tuna loaf. spinach.
noodles with cheese sauce. wheat
bread. banana fro st )' r rr me \\1th
fruit.
Wednesday - &amp;ans with ham .
stewed tomatoes. com bread.
pineapple in limP jello.
Thursday - Pork sausage patty.
green beans. SW({'t !Xllaroes. wh&lt;•a t
bmld, ch&lt;lro\ate

puddln~

wtth

jV'aham crackt&gt;r topping.
Frida) - Ht'l dogs. baked b&lt;'ans.
S&lt;'alioped po!Jiocs. whr &lt;H br'f'ad.
fruit cocktail.
ChoiCE' of bt'wragl' serw&lt;i " irh
earh mPal.

i\-1e~Q 1 Colli II)
Mon day -

Squ~l l'l' D~HH'!' 1-

2:.10
Tu c5da~ · - l 'hor u-"' Pr a ri !Cl' l · ~
\VednP sda~ · - Sodal St&gt;l'Urit:·

representative 10 - 1~ ; Blood Pres sure Clin ic 9: :liJ -11 . Jll: Bingo 1 2.

Thursd ay -Ceramics 10-2.
Friday- Bowling 1:30.
Th e Health Progra m with Dr.
Thomas Morgan as speaker ha s
been reschedu led for J an . 29 a t I
' p.m.
MenuMonday- Bee f cubes on rice.
wax

be a n s a n d

tx&gt;ans. fr uit

Fri da)· - Tuna noodk• casse r ole. ro lr slaw , pea s, strawber ry

jPIIo.

Job Bank
has work
for seniors
C:ALLIPOUS pl o~·('('!'

Mature rm-

hm·p shown rhf'mse!ves to

tx• rxp?rienred and dependable
workPrs. T'ne'r talents and skills
C'an l:x=' utilizrd ln many areas in the
Com munit y.

Health st udies show the longer
people arr employed the better
thPir

O\

Pra ll heall h t"£'maln s.

Thr Job Ba nk

&lt;~t

the Senior

Citizcms CPnlf'r wrlromPs c m plo~·
t•rs to S{'('k qualified r mployrrs who
.1n• rrglsrerrd with thr .Job Bank .
Thrse people are 50 )'Pars of agr

and older and havr a \·ari rty of
skills and talrnrs .
Ca ll Hti-71)Ml for morr information .

CRAFT CLASSES
IEGINNEIS KNITTING "
TUES., IAN. 21-6:30·1:30
6 wrns
STENCIL CLASS
Fit., JAN. 31 - 6:30·8:30
1 NIGHT
CAllE OECOIATING
liON., FD. 3-6:30-1:30
6WEEIS
CROCHET CLASS
THUIS., FEB. 13 -6:30·8:30

carr o t s,

applecrisp
Tuesda y - Macaroni and
cheese . cole slaw. harva rd beets.
peac h halves
Wednes day- Hot turkey sa nd ll'ich. mashed pota toes. mi., ed
,·egetabiP. cake
Th urs day - S11·pdish meat balls. scalloped potatm•s. gr!'f'n

white with red custom stripes &amp; red &amp; white interior. 400 V~ engine,
au1Dmatic trans., pow st•rinl &amp;br11bs,air conditioning, am-fm 8-track
stereo, cruise control, carpeq, sliding rear window. bed rails &amp;tie downs.
chrome b41111Jtrl, custom 5" chrome stacks, runnirw boards, !Milll out
mirrors. aluminum turbine wheels. 14-35xl5 Gumbo tires &amp; you won't
believe tllti low miles. - jist 43,000 locally-owned miles!!

Spring Valley Plaza

;;

Etta Mae Reese

LOcal poet
is honored
CHESHIRE -World of Poetry's
Board of Directors. has elected
EN a Mae Reese. Cheshire, with the
Golden Poet Award for 1985.
She entered three Poems In
World of Poetry Contest In 1985 and
won Award of Merit Cer1lflca tes &lt;11
all. rank. bonorabte mention and
galegorey, great . Poems "1nnlng
bonors are "My Dream Last
:-light ... "The Old Vine-Shackled
Shack," and "The Woods Back
Home."
The fi rst two ha\'e been published
in the World Book of Poetry . "The
Woods Back Home" will be published In 'Our Worlds Most Cher ished Poems," scheduled for publl·
cation in JanuarY .
Mrs. Reese has been studying
and writing poet r~- about sl' yean;.
She sa id "the spirit I get from
wri!ing has helped me In ( lot of
ways . I think it Ls good therapy for
the mind. It ran satisfy the
ps)·chologira l and emo tional needs.
So much can 1x&gt; remt"'mtl.&gt;red in
poetry. The hardest par1 for me was
to main tain fai th and the feeling to
go or writing port!}'. but I am glad I
did. "

TOP ROUND ROAST Ll. $189
USDA CHOICE IOIIELESS
NEW·YORK
$349
l
.
STRIP STEAK

USDA CHOICE IOIIEUSS

SHARP TRUCK!! CALL FOR DETAILS!!

LB. $139

FlESH POll

SHOULDER STEAK

6WIEIS

Call to Register

LB. $18 9

CENTER CUT

446-2134

PORK CHOPS

I1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

$299

FROZEN

WHITING Fl

:GRDC

HEAD LETTUCE
T

I

A

I

L

.
/
It's new!

(""

N

A

-I
--------~~--,

p

I

E

-~-· · - --~

NISTU'S

2~

HUNT'S MEXICAN OR REG.

a dclt'Ctablc combination of savory, sliced
meatballs, spices and our own sptcial sauce.
with onions, green peppers and a blend of
mozzarella and cheddar cheeses.
Trv Priazzo" Verona - and all our dl'ltcious Priazzo" lralian pies. They're available
after 4pm, Monday- Friday and all day
Saturday and Sunday at participating Pizza Hut· restaurants . ...........

cleanse· cond ition· control

MANWICH

OCEAN SPlAY

~:;:s oz.
114

79(

t239

oz.

CR4NBERRY COCKTAIL f

DAFT

MAYONNAISE

~

;uut.

''IIIA//l l " , rr •J, ""' ' o•t
1'11" It t" I"' t." '"

HEAD

BROCCOLI

CHOC. QUICK

new Priazzo; Verona,

It's delicious!

KAHN'S .
..EF, lEG. OR RED CASING

CALIFORNIA

Introduc!ng

~.....,__,____

SLICED BACON

PROOUC~
ICEBERG

320Z.

PURE YEGO AILE

hr 1nJ ,,1 ll li~&lt; n 1'''

:;L.oz.

WESSON OIL

'$1 59
$329

lUNCH

TEIIDEI, CRUNCHY

POUND

CARROTS

PIC G.

RED ROME OR WINESAP

3 LB.

APPLES

lAG

CALIFORNIA

4LI.
lAG

ORANGES

KAHN'S

99&lt;
69&lt;
29&lt;
89&lt;

BOLOGNA

LB.
12 01.

PIIG.

COLES

GARLIC BREAD
OlE-IDA SHREDDED

$149 HASH BROWNS

SUPEI SREC1

$129
oz. $119

160Z.

LOAF

24
lOX

'ii!Hi;(DAI RY=I:!Iff9

CUCUMBERS
OR PEPPERS
U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO

BAKING POTATOES

10

LB.$14 9·

uG

PARlAY
MARGARINE

~':~o

59&lt;
-

.ORANGE JUICE ~~~z. $139
FLORIDA GOLD

SonY OLD FASHION

WHITE BREAD 2~
PLANTERS
SNACKS
CHEESE CUllS, .CHEESE IAUS,

SLICED

20 OZ. LOAF

CORN CHIPS, PRETZELS

FLAYOinE

SALTINES

5-7 OZ. CAN
POUND

lOX

99&lt;
89&lt;
59&lt;

7.-UP, DIET 7-UP arm•
ORANGE CRUSH BUTTERMILK
~ ~~·· W ROOT BEER
PIUSIUIY 10 Ct. TUBE
2 UTU
IOnU

89&lt;

4 COUNT

BISCUITS

I'!( G.

PIIIUDELPHIA IIAND

CREAM CHEESE

Introducing
'WIS) Hc\IR C o\Rl : Ill'" t&gt; pl ion&gt; tor glortwh hatr. l ,!Pl' l .1udcr puh tog&lt;•thcr '"
tnl cr,lt t1w prod uct' lh,JI Id vou de&gt;tgn vuur own h,JIIC,HP pmgro~m . luxunou s.
hrgh - prrtmrn r n~ produt h crc.J IE'd to bnn~ ou t I he bc't tn vour h,l!r_ BIPndt&gt;d tn
the U '&gt; \ th&lt;' 'L' tt&gt; rm ul.h rn cl udc &lt;ctm l ltlc .ll lv .Jch ,Jn Cl'citn gred tc nt&lt; Jnd ' iJCCtal Sw"'
P&gt;t r.rrh You 'll'' ''' nottno,Jble rc;ulh ,hHlll'r, more m ,mo~geab lc ha1 r, tmmediately.
Uroow trum two ~en tie ; hamQoo;
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takt&gt; ch.Jrge of even th e most fru ; trati ng
hair probl ems .

300 Second Avenue, Lafayette Mall. Gallipolis, Ohio

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$2.50 off any large, or S1.50 off any medium
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With Purchase of Any Large or

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Offer go&lt;_x!.ftcr 4PMMond..y·fTid.y arxl all daySaturday
and Sund.y.
PkMr pr~TK roupon when orJmn~ Ont· coupcn ,,,., r~rt• r•, mu Jt pn rt&lt; ,.
p1ung PtnJ ~l &lt;~t"' t nunrmt• V•htl on rrK&lt;~IH m,·nu 1" ',.,'
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Page-~-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January 19, 1988

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

:Qebra Miyoung lew united
in marriage to Thomas Harder
Moon, cousin of the bride. Mark
Christensen and JesSica Christensen, neice and nephew of the
groom, were ring bearers.
A receptlon and di.nner followed
the ceremony at the Ohio Prestwick
Country Club. Music was provided
by a string quartet at the reception
and dinner.
Attending the ceremony from
Germany were the groom's grandmother, Helene Baumann and his
brother and wife, Wolfgang and
Ulla Harder.
The bride Is a graduate of
Northeastern Olllo College ol Medicine and Is an Intern at Akron City
Hosplt.al.
The groom graduated !rom Otuo
University and Is In medical school
at Ohio State University.

AKRON - Debra Mlyoung Lew,
daughter o!Dr. and Mrs. Sanghwan
Lew, and Thomas Harder, son of
Dr. and Mrs. Slgsmund Harder,
Gallipolis, were united In maniage
Oct. 26.
The ceremony took place at
Lockwood United Methodist
Church, Akron, with the Rev.
David Lloyd Atkinson officiating.
Music was provided by Carol
Dirham and Kathleen Riley, musi·
clans, and Ann Esch. soloist, who
sang "Du Ring An Meinem Finger"
and "The Greatest of These is
Love."
Given In marriage by her
parents. the bride wore a wtute sllk
gown, made by her mother,
accented with hand-embroidered
alencon lace. She carried a bouquet
of white orctuds and pink roses.
Pamela Lew, Akron, sister of the
bride, was maid of. honor. Marlene
Zetzer, was bridesmaid.
Mark Cornell Chicago, and Rick
Miller, Columbus, were best man
and groomsman. Ushers were
Christopher Lew and Michael Lew,
brothers of the bride.
Flower girl, In tradltonal Korean
dress, was Christina Borahm

CHESTER - Chester Township
Trustees wlll meet at 7::ll p.m.
Tuesday at the Chester To!NII Hall.

Trustees to meet

Substitute quarterback
leads North's victory

ON OUR

RED TAO SALE!

MOBILE , Ala. (UPII - Wa shington Slale quarterback Mark
Ryplen, a last-minute invitee after
Injuries created a vacancy, passed
for three touchdowns Saturday to
lead the North to a 31·17Sen!orBowl
victory over the South.
Ryplen, who joined the North
team Tuesday, went Into the game
In the first quaner after staner
Mike Norseth or Kansas was
InjuRed, threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to Navy's Napolecn
McCallum late In the first quarter.
He added TD passes of 36 and 41
yards respectively to Rennie Benn
of Lehigh and Reggie Bynum or
Oregon State In less than a minute
early In the 'final quarter.

SHOP NOW AND SAVE!

Group to meet
STORE
HOURS
Mon . &amp;. Fri.

'TIIB

Tues,-Wed .
Thurs.- Set .
'Til 5

Mr. and Mn. Thomas Harder

---.............
-

. Big pclure
big !D.R:t tn:m f9lf!f'
Now tOJ ca1 have auOO 5nd ~ that
'fVIII f'realer W&lt;e QU&lt;tWy1 A •o~ rear
~OjiiCU1 1ele'oASIOO 9Cf e@n brings

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BOSTON (UP!) - Senior ro~
ward Roger McCready scored a
game-high 29 poln\s to top five
Boston College players tlltllng
double figures Saturday In an !rr-74
victory over Ohio State.
The triumph at Boston Garden
Improved the Eagles overall record
to 11-5 and dropped Ihe Buckeyes to
9-6.

pro-..oes c'car ""QQ'ls

Mill Ceoow:ent C...._.
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c.anp~ete

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Ttl!! RA I~ C:UnJ»ll!f1 Clb fll!llel:lll urn;~ a
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11(~ chr(11'1(' caSter!' soa:e 10' rec01d slorq
:~roa an eo:t ra ,.l\ellll)f luUe &amp;lpotn&lt;Sa!lHy

The North also had a 2-yard and Jack Trudeau ol Illinois had to
touchdown plunge by Darryl Clack wlthdr,aw, was hit In the mouth with
or Arizona State 10:461nto the third five minutes to ~ in thr first
quarter and a 24-yard field goal by quarter and required 40 stitches.
Ken Harper or Duke with1: 47left In
Ry pien, a 6-foot4, 225- pounder
the game.
from Spokane, turned in a brilliant
The South had a 53-yardJield goal performance In relief, completing
by John Lee or UCLA In the closing 13 of 15 passes for 180 ya rds. The
minute of the first half and closed to North got the ball back on an
14-10 with four seconds remaining inlerceplion by Joe Kelly of WaIn the !turd quarter oo a :»-yard TD shlngton two plays after Rypien 's
pass from Pat Washington of . TD pass to Benn and the WastungAuburn to Ernest Givins of Louis- ton !"tate quarterback connec ted
ville. The South's final TD came with Bynum on the next play.
midway through the fourth period
McCa llum outrushed Auburn
on a 32-yard pass from Je!f Heisman Trophy winner Bo JackWickersham oii.'&gt;U to Givins.
son of the Soulh 9148,but Jackson
Norseth, originallY assigned to t,Umed a short pass Into a 48-yard
the South but moving over when gain to sel up the South's third
Robbie Bosco of Brigham Young quarter touchdown .

Boston College dumps Bucks

h(IQ...er'IC~

J•

~imts· Jentitut Section
January 19. 1986

FURTHER
REDUCTIONS

MIDDLEPORT - Group II of
the Middleport First Presbyterian
Church will meet Tue.day a t the
Mme of Mrs. Harry Moore, with
Kathym Hysell and Mrs. Eddie
Burkett as ro-hostesss. Mrs.
Dwight Wallace wlll have the book
study , and Miss HySJell, the
devotions.

Sports

With BC holding a 54-50 edge wilh
15:46 remaining In lhe second half,

the Eagles ran olf a 134 run to ·pull
ahead by 13 with 10:01 remaining.
Ohio State, led by senior forward
Brad Sellers' ~ points, moved to
wittun seven points with less than
seven minutes to play but could
draw no closer.
Boston College opened Its largest
lead of the game at !rr- 72 with 38
seco nds rem a inin g wh e n
McCready capped his performance
with two free throws .
Junior center Troy Bowers had 14

and freshman forward Sieve Benion. making tus first coUegiale
start, also had 14. Guards Dominic
Pressley and freshman Dana Barros added 10 each for Boston
College.
.Junior forward Dennis Hopson
had 18 while lreshman guard Jay
Burson scored 16 for the losers.
McCready led all tlrsl-half scar·
ers with 18 as BC held a 44- 38 edge
at the int ermission .

SYSTEM 3980 ~FISHER"

NEW YORK !UPI) - Boris
Becker, cheered on by a vocal
chorus of ~upporters from West
Germany, crushed Anders Jarryd
in stralghl sets Saturday lo set up a
showdown against I van Lendl In the
final of the $!'00,001 Na bisco
Masters.
Becker, the 18-year-old Wlm·
bledon champion, displayed tlls
remarka ble reservoir or power
when he won six games In a row and
carried on for a 6-3, 64 victory, his
fourth In as many outings agalnsl
Jarryd.
Lend! had to struggle more than
expected before subduing Andres
Gomez, 64, 7-5, giving him a match
record or 34-1 since lasl August
Nter Lend! raced Ia a 5-1 lead.
Gomez, a lasl minute fill- in to the

Michelle Dawn Bearhs weds
Stoney Lee Johnson, Dec. 21

$449
htll!r'S AIJS IG81i C()Ttl!!, C ('t'lnlci~ Will! lhl:

flA•J5 &amp;..do c.:bnel

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FLOOR COVERING SPECTACULAR

WITH A

Only IU.DO
AT THE
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HOUSii
TOJ SltoltD 5Tl[(T

~IONT

ELBERFELD$

POUND PUPPY

trouble it would pull me out."
Lend! now has reached t he fi nal
all six times he has playro in lhe
Masters. wtule Becker is making
his firsl appearance In this championship even l of the Gran d Prix
circuit .

Lend! has won a II lhr&lt;'t' confrontations betw&lt;'t'n thr 1wo. allhough
Becker carried him lo five sels In
their last meeling . The winner of
Sunday aft ernoon's final wUI earn
$100,00)
"He doesn'l have a weakness,"
Becker said of Lend!. "He ca n pass
you with his backhand. with his
forehand, wilh lobs. "
Trailing 3- I and ll-0 in the
op&lt;'nlng 5('1. Becker gol his mon strous a ttack in molion 10 sw&lt;'t'p lhr
next six games !rom Jarryd.

Marshall, Miami, Kansas, post wins

UPPER RIVER RD.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Luncheon set

SAY I LOVE TOU

field, shocked the top seed by
sweeping 11 straight points and
lhree ga mes before Lend! could
close out the set.
Gomez, despite losing to Lend!
for the 11th time In 12 meetings,
Ihen played Ihe world 's No.1 player
even through 10 games or the
second set umil Lend! finally broke
in lhe 11th game.
Even then Lend! had to struggle
to hold serve, slav ing off lwo break
points by the tall k'ft·hander from
Ecuador before closing with an ace
and a service winner on his fourlh
match J:')lnt .
"I felt very confident," Lend!
said. "I thought I played wetl. l was
tuttlng the ball better than I did
yes terday. I had a lol or confidence
In my serve. I felt when I go! In

..oeo

• •,.,,, ""'~~ ,. .--.. .. ' ' '""".''""~

THE GINGERBREAD BOY
SAYS ...

Tennessee but Is Slopped by North defender Jolm
Offenlahl (48) of Western Mlctllgan during first
quarter action Satunlay at Mobile, Ala., In the ..mual
Senior Bowl Classic. UPI.

Becker faces Lend) in finals

Mr. and Mrs. Stoney Lee johnso11

POMEROY - Michelle Dawn
Thl' bride is a graduate or
Bearhs and Sloney Lee Johnson Eastern High School and is presv.·prf' united in marriage on Dec . 21 ently employed at Fisher 's Big
all he home of hPr parcms. Mr. and Wheel, Laurel cwr.
Mrs. Richard L. Bearhs J r ..
Thr groom Is a graduate of Meigs
Pumero\ . Th~ groom is Ihe son of High School and is employed by
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Johnson .
Benedicl Coal Co. of McArthur.
The Re\ James Sattcrtield
The couple attended church at the
performed Ihe ceremony .
Lighthouse or Laurel Cliff. They
Given in marriage by her father , res ide at Ewlngton.
lhr br ide wore a lace chlffon dress
with p&lt;'a rl accented bodice She
ca rried a bouqucl of red and whil e
poinsettias !.llli Bearhs. sisler-in·
ta w of lhr bride. was ma11un of
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
horor Rncky .Johnson. t~e groom's
&amp;&gt;I a Chapler of Bela Sigma Phi
brolher . was b&lt;•sl man, and Slefani
8Parhs . sister of Ihe bnde. ca rTII'd Sororily will have a luncheon at
1hr bride's train A IT&lt;'Pplion noon on Thursda\ &lt;I I the home of
Donna Jones. Laurl'i Cliff Road.
followed the cerrmon)'.

FIRST DOWN EFFORT - Auburn running back
and He~ an Trophy winner Bo Jackson (34) moves
for a first down on a leap following a handoff from
South squad quarterback Daryl Dickey (II) of

MlSOlil. I VA

773-5977

LOW REI'URN - West Germany's Boris Becker
goes low ID make a return during his maldt agamst
Anders· Jarr:vd of Sweden In the Nalllsro Maslen;

Tennhi Tournament Satunlay at New York. Becker
won tn straight sets, !hi, 6-4 and advanced ro the finals .

UPI.

HUNTINGTON. W.Va . !UP! I Guard Skip Henderson scored 22
points Saturday to lift Marshall
University Ia a 9().70 Soutllern
Conference victory over The
Citadel.
The Thundering Herd . 12-5 over·
all and 3-1 in conference play, also
received 17 points from sophomore
forward Rodney Holden and 18 ·
points from sophomore~nter To m
Curry.
The Citadel. 4-8 and ().3, was led
by junior guard Craig Bardo, who
had a game-high 26 points.
Redsklns triumph
MUNCIE , Ind. (UPI l - Ron
Harper and Eric Newsome scoRed
18 points apiece to lead the Miami
Redskins over lhe Ball Stale
Cardinals 73-59 in Mid-American
Con fernce basketball action
Saturday.
Miami raised ils record 10 12· 4
overall and 5-J in the conference,
gt vlng the Redsklns sole possession

of first place in the MAC. The
Cardinals are lied for second in Ihe
conference wit h a 4-2slate. Bolh are
114 overall.
Miami reeled orr seven unanswered J:Oints In the last five and a
half minu tes or the first half to take
control, and a 34-28 lead at the
Intermission. The Redsklns never
let go ol the lead In the second half.
Miami strelched lhe k'ad 10 IB
points during the second half. 52-:W.
with II: 53 remaining.
Dan Palombizlo led Ball Stale
with 19 points and 12 rebounds.
Kansas romps

LAWRENCE, Kan. (UP! I
Danny Manning scored 16 of his 21
points In the first half Saturday.
Igniting No. 8 Kansas to a !li-72 Big
Eight rou t of Oklahoma Sta te.
Kansas received 16 points from
Ron Kellogg and l4 from Calvin
Thompson to improve Its record to
16-2 overall and 2-0 In the conference. Alan Bannister. Oklahoma

State's 7-fool4 freshman cenler.
scored a season - high 'll. for lhe
Cowboys, who fell to 9-6 overall a nd
0-2.

Manning sark au eighl of his
shots In the first half and Kansas
collectively shol 81 pel'l'l'nl lo build
a 45-26 Intermission lead . Manning
scored eighl polnls in tile opening
4¥2 minules 10 gi ve Kansa s a quick
164 lead and lhr .Jayhawks increased Iheir "dvantage to ll-14 by
lhr 12- minule mark .
Okla homa State cui lhe deficil lo
35-'ll. on a rainbow jump&lt;'rby Dav id
Taylor wilh 4:18 remaining in the
half. Poinl guard Cedric Hunter
then led the Kansas fast brrak,
scoring twice on layups, lo help
build Ihe haHiime ad\·amage.
Oklahoma State never gol closer
lhan 14 polnls in lhe second half as
Kansas ran its homecourt winning
s1 reak to 27 games. Terry Faggins
and Andre Ivy ch ipped in 13 poinl s
apiece for Oklahoma Sta te.

·Winter deals could blossom into Rosy season for Reds
Anotlltr

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1•"1 nr·•n

CMUO.l CUD

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!)- It's a special species of rose
that blooms In winter In the midwest - the unique
Pete Rose variE'ty.
Jusrthe thought at baseball in the spring makes this
Rose blossom In January.
And this winter, Rose Is rarln' to go again . With a
couple or new pitchers and a team with a new attitude,
the 44-year-old Cincinnati Reds' player-manager Is
eager 10 slart his 24th season.
"I'm very excited about 19!li, even mot'l! so than I
was about '85 and I was excited then," says Rose.
"We've got things going In the right direction.
"We're gt&gt;lng to be a strong team this year, not ooly
p&lt;'rsonne!-wlse. but psychologically, too. Our players
finished last season with a good, positive attitude. I
think they proved to themselves they are competitive
and ran win the (National League) West. "
The Reds, picked by many to finish next to last In
[ggj, came In second . Because of Cincinnati's strong
finish . Los Angeles couldn't clinch the division title
until the final week of the season.
· · "you can bet your talt the Dodgers knew we were
chasing them," said Rose. "We played very well In
September. I ttllnk It made us a better team for this
year .
"Even though we didn't go to the playoffs, I ttllnk
attacking the Dodgers like we did In September was
good for us cause it put us through the wars of a
playoff fight.
v"l hope my players realize the ttllngs It takes to be
ronipetttlve thrOUgh the course 11 a whole season. I
hope we come out of the gate realizing that this year
and won't walt tUI the last six weeks of the season to
pu t It In high gear.

"Hopefully. we can get as good as we were in the
(when the "Big Red Machine" dominated !he
National League\. I don't know If anybody will ever
gel th~ good again, but we want the attitude to be the
same as It was In the '70s. What I mean by thai is,
when the ballplayers went on Ihe field, they expected
Ia win . And, they did win."
Crea ting an atmosphere for thai kind d. attitude is
one of the ttungs Rose d()('s best as a manager. For
guiding the Reds .to a second place finish In his first
full season of managing last year, Rose was voled
UPJ's National League Manager of the Y~ar.
"I guess we threw'out the theory that I wouldn't be a
good manager because I was a good player," said
Rose, who broke Ty Cobb' s career hit record of 4191
last year. "No one is commenting on that now- that
good players don't make good man agers. Whal
happened to that theory?
"Whenever someone said that. they were talking
about two guys- Frank Robinson and Ted WllUams.
Those are the oiuy two who were really good players
who tried to be managers and dido 't really do a good
jOb. Why? Look at the teams they had, tha t's wl\y.
They didn't have good players. I'll he the first to tell
you, a manager's got to have good players ."
Rose wlll recelve$1 mU!Jon this season, making him
the highest paid manager In the history or baseball.
"But I'm going to be a player-manager again,"
notes Rose. who wlll celebrate his 45th birthday just a
few days Into the season (April 14) . "I don't think
anybody my age knows how long he can go Cll, but I
Intend to keep playing as long as l can do the job. I'll
play when I think I can help the ballclub win."
Rose platooned at first base last year with Tony
Perez. The Reds had a 64-46 record In games Rose
'7(l;

s1a1·ted .
"It didn't seem like 1 was hurting the team," he
said.
Rose figures he helped the Reds the most In the
off-season by trading for a pair of. veteran .
rtghthanded staning pllchers - John Denny of
Philadelphia and Bill Gullickson of. Montrea l. Linking
those two with Mario Soto and Tom Browning t who
won ~ games as a rookie last yeart , the Reds could
have one of Ihe fines t starting rotations in the majors
lhis season.
"We've tried to streng1hen our pitching because I
think you can always be stronger In the pllchlng
department, " said Rose. "If you have six MarloSotos.
you'd like to have seven. If you have five Tom
Brown ings, you'd like to have six.
"Thai's just Ihe way It Is ca use It 's long season and a
lot of things happen to pllchers - [lllled muscles, sore
shoulders, sl~f elbows, line drives up the middle. You
can never be strong enough In pitching when you're
starting ou t on a 162- game schedule."
Although Sota had an orr season, the Reds came up
with better pitch ing last year than many had
expected .
"Browning was 'Rookie Pitcher oft he Year' and I
ttunk we had the best bullpen In the k'ague," said
Rose. "We had the best record In the league In one-run
games and In extra Inning games. That means we
either had the best bullpen or the smartest manager.
''I'll give u ·to the bullpen ttlls time." laughed Rose.
More important to the Reds than any pit cher,
!hough, Is Dave Parker.
"He's our leader, he's our producer," acknowl edged Rose. "I thought he deseiVed MVP last year . .
We're looking forward to Dave having another greal
season ttus year."

About lhe only p&lt;'rson who could stop Parker Ihis
season is Commissioner Peter Ueberrolh. Because
Parker admilled in a tria l lasl )'ear Ihal he had used
cocaine several seasons ago, hP might be subjecl lo a
suspension sometime Ihis yea r. !l's up lo Uebermth .
VC!eran shon stop Dave ConC'&lt;'pc lon 's fate, however. is in Rose 's hands. This could be Ihe year Ihal
Concepcion, 37, is replaced b\· promlsln!! minor
leaguer Kun Stillwell, 20.
Rose wan ts to see how har·d ConC&lt;'pcion works al
spring Iraining.
"Davey can still play shonslop at a lremendous
level if he prepares and applies himself," figured
Rose. "When Davey wanls to work hard , he can do Ihe
job.
"But when you 're over 35 years old. you have Ia
prepare extra . You 're not like a 'll.-yea r-old ldd. You
ca n't go oul there a nd take tv.o ~,~uund balls and be
loose.

"Maybe It's going to be my job Ihis year 10 slay on
Davey's case every day . On ce we go I ellminaled la st
year, Davey didn't get a hiland Ihal was fou r or fi ve
games."
The Reds, who a ttracted more than 2.6 million fans
In 1916 but slipped to 1.2 million in 19&amp;'l and 1984,
rebounded and drew 1.8 million last season . Rose Is
expecting even more fans this yea r.
"I've played here when there was 40,001 a night and
I'm going to play herein the future when there's «l,OOI
a night ," predicted Rose. "I know the interest Is here,
but you've gol to have a good product.
"We feel we have a solid product to sell this year. ;
We have a solid team to put on the diamond on a daUy '
basts. we've got a great facility and a hard· working '
front office. You don't need too much more ."

�(

,Page- C-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

posed tests as unreliable and an
intrusion of players' lights as
Americans. !'E'flected the threemonth sta lemate on the issue.
Baseball's 18-month-old drug
agrwmen t between the owners and
the Players Association was termi-

starting. It we can catch two
people; If we can stop them early
fromgoingonwlththeuseofdrugs,
II we can offer them some help ...
then I foe! that we have begun to
make progress."
Cashen later compared the lnva-

revealed to abuse drugs.
Because the players and owners
have been unable to agree on
testing, several club owners have
begun inserting drug testing
clauses In lndlvidual players' contracts as they come up for renewal,

and Players
Associat
ion
Cashen general
associate
counsel
Euwne
Orza appeared Frida;· on a pa nel
discussing drug testing in sports at
the New York State Bar AsSO&lt;'ia ·
tion's annual meet ing.
The pola r positions of Cashen,
who reit erated rhe o\\ners' and the
Baseball Commissioner's call for
mandatory tesling for all players.

nated during
the World
&amp;&gt;riesthey
in skl
n of
privacy
find
October
b)' the owners
because
drug
users
In thelll'CeSSary
game to topolice
felt the program was ineffective.
roadblocks set up to find drunk
E,·en before the agreement's drivers.
termination. Commissioner Peter
"All d us give up a little bit ct our
Ueberrolh urged the manda!OIJ' lndlv ld~al rights every day for the
testing of all players, and Casben greater good ,'' he said .
rrida\· sa id the tests' main value
In res(Xlnse to a queslion, Cashen
was deterrence.
.
, safd he believed "90 percent of our
"If by mandatory tesJing, we ca n people would sign drug clauses
because they feel violated," and
of
use

Orza disagreed
90
percent
estimate with
and Cashen'
said alls 62
player representatives attending
the Wllon 's annual meeting in
December voted to challenge the
lndlvldual drug· testing clauses
through a grievance and perhaps
ultimately arbitration.
"You don't say to Dale Murphy 'I
want to test you because Keith
Hernandez uSed drugs,"' Orza said
referring to Murphy, the Atlanta

Another opinion,
operation helps
Indians' Camacho
sLxth t.:&gt;s r total in thP Amel'ican

mess. He said thP first operation

U 'agur.

rnadl' nl(' wo r~~ than better."
Thr Indians triN to convin('{'

m.,· r ltx::lw

what you're looking tor. they
insinuate the presence of
something."
Gas chromatographY. a more .
sophisticated chemical test, can
undisputedly Identity the presence
of speclllc drugs but is a more

.
1

r~no~t~r~ea~lly~tes~t~s~t~he~y~a~re~sc~ree
. .n~s~,'~'r.ex•pe~ns~lv~e·p~rocedui'irer.·~her:;sa~ldi.ii

1

·t..·
-·,·.

II
7

1984 DODGE 600

Camacho.. So. he sent me ro
Pappas.
" PdpJ)(t~ ~aid

and the Mets' star who publicly
admitted his coca ine use as a
witness at drug-trafficking trials in
Pittsburgh in September.
Large-scale testing programs
"are highly inaccurate. They are

4-door sedan. dirt blue with matchi" plush velour interior, front wheel
drive. 2.2 litre qine, automatic trans., power steerif1 &amp; brlkes. air
alilditioninc. cruise control, delay wipers, rs~r defoaer &amp; just 22,!XXl
miles!

·.vas a

Last _w•ar C tmdcho l:x&gt;canw ,1
laz) h' t:ochondriac " ·ho ll'fuS&lt;'d to
. work
So said I he Cle, ·~Jand front office

Camacho that fur1tl&gt; r SUrgPIJ' was
urm0e£'ssa r:- .
"The' sent Dr. James Wilder to

0f thr :29-yrar-old right- hanrler. 1\·ho

St,... mf'. but hf' also \Vas Y.ith

0

Was s7, 90()80 Now Just '6,900°

Lu lheran ~ledical. 11 t.&gt;reBohl did
the first surg&lt;&gt;ry, .. he said .
"l:lohl had never worked on a pro
:could not throw
~l 1 rher in his li Fe. Hf' treated mv
R_\· rhr rnd of thP sumnwr. cllm likf' a cab drt"\'or·'s
"' a r·m. and
Camacho could no longrr bear t.hP
thf'rC' was no wa:v I should've tried
ro ntinuin g pain nor t hr \'l."hi.spPrs r-="n:::d::._::_lh::_ro::.'~
'11.:..:SO:::.:soo:::::n::..::;af: _:et:.:.r.::w::.ar:_:d:::s:....
rlrru\ating at)('lut his dPsil·f&gt;.
had 5111 -gen · to remo,·c bonr' chips
. from hrs pitchtng elbow last .-\prilll
· but maintained he sti ll had pain a net

: · SCRAMBLE FOR BAIL - Kyger Creek's 'Ibn Gonion (3.1) and
: : Southwe&amp;tem'sDan Patrick (44) strugleove.-aloo8eball ..nmgacllon
·: ~ night In the KCSW game aiSouthwetilem. Kyger Creek, behind
: • Riehle GUmore's 19 points and 13 points by BW Loveday won Its llrsl
.: pme of the season, ~:we.

CHESTER

LYNE CENJJ!B SCHEDULI!

"--L-- -----------------------L...;;;;====================---

"Thr brass di dn 't wan t
:· i.l

me to gE'I

• somt'thing was \\Tong ... the S-;Ili nd.s. lallf. nat in' .;did FrtdJ\" tn an
intf'IYir w "'Tht'\ told mP - thr~
t1lid f'\ "f'l~· body - I \rasa head rasP.
""Ru t I knrn· m~· f'lbo w wa~ still

.... : Jan.
•

• • ' ..

•• • •

t~~------TV--C_s_mn
__d•-.n-~------~~

\

·

{·am, tcho 1 ilt' n u dOl,'(! 10 consult
norc&lt;l ;;;prdalt'l ! l~· 1-·r&lt;Jnk Jobr in
l .o.s :-\n g t 'lf'~

j

•

"ThP lncllan .. S.'lKII d t•mbrt rLtss
!ht' tP,tm b.\· ·"''('mg d t;tnc\ cloc tr)r.
that I wa::. artm~ li kt&gt; ,1 b.tb~ ms!('Jd
('! a m.tn . ht' -'dld .
!n .. lt '&gt;tc!. 1~t nl,ll"hl• ··'d"' gJ\·rn

Your Final Cost an.. S.OOmtr's

••b•

Delco Dura Power Batteries
60 monlll, 525 cold cr•nking •mps
Sale 49.88, Reg. 59.88 with uchange

( or11:-.nm• In)•'CltCln" c~ncl ' tiuk J.~
Pilh"h ,~.., !. liH I lTIJ l ll f..'l",lr~b nf

53.88

bU1.t/U\tdl!\ .Jnd nil¥' !" clrl l l IT1P.J.m

mr•

ht '&lt;ir! p11\p1!ct111)/l. ln!-.Omti.cl. dU7J
n('"~

Your Final Cost alter 6.00 mlr's rebate

J.nd hlt:h blo11d p!t""-'Ul t · ... hf'
s.ud "Thn,, '"' rnpt o m~ l.blt"'CI
month'&gt; &lt;~f! t 'r l .. toppt·d T.lkm..z thP

,.,,o

72

650 c::old crenlling amps

:18.811, R0&lt;1.81.11 withuc:h••••

drues ..
c·a mdt'hn ... n tht• ,tch ll'P nf agen t
l &gt;1 ck :\l o,s. fm ,tl l\ r!t ·CJdt•d to ~0t~
.Jot:r m .-\ u~'1.J\f
" Ht · cnu idn·t r1nrl ,tm th ,ng. 1)U!
ht •ard ~~ dtckmg 1n 1 ~1c .~r · m .. :-.Jld

.,.

'dDf.lt
Iii..

Your Final Cosl

1.99

I

..

\:~

- ,.,' ''
l.'r
t-_i'j~~'

-

.-'
--~· \~-~

after 1.50 mfr's rebale

Zerex Antifreeze
Sale 3.49, Reg. 4.19

•

&lt;

limit 2

...............
a at.•

81ow., .......

99¢

Reg. 1.8t,.- AS236

Windshield Deicer

10 Minute Flush
Reg~ ,

...

Anti Rust W•ter Pump Lube

l.J9, I' A$106

~

~ "~

R. .. I .H, #All II

-,

Coolant Tester
Flush 'N Fill Kit
AetJ . 3.49, II AFKIT

¢--.~ ~

•"••75'"''"""""'"

I

..=,. llli-! ---

Powdered Stop leak
Sele

1.7t MAI122

Loveday added 13 (Xlints , Including
five of six charity tosses ln the final
period. and eight rebounds.
"We showed a little more (Xlise
than we have in the past ." first-year
Bobcat Coach Scott Stemple said.
"which Is something we have not
done. We had been hurting at the
foul line, but tonight we were
mentally strong. The kids felt we
eould win . We didn 't give II away we look it."
Kyger Creek took the lead for
good at 16-H on a Tim Gordon
basket with 7: 151eflln the first hall.
That bucket started a run of 11
consecutive points by Ire Bobcats.

J, ~

-

..........

t •00...,., . - .

_,....

Southwestern's John Wollum broke
the string with a jumper at the 3:25
mark, but by that Iinne, Kyger
Creek had opened a 25-16 1ead. The
Bobcats stretched the margin to 10,
30-20. at the half.
The Bobcat lead ranged between
eight and 12 (Xlints in the third
quarter, with Kyger Creek again up
by 10, 37-27.
Southwestern made an 8-1 fourth
quarter run behind Wollum and
Andy Haislop, cu"ing the lead to
42-37 with 1: 391eft In the game.
Highlander Coach lvllke Klnniard
then decided to make the Bobcats
win the game at the foul line.
"We got outplayed in every phase
of the game, " Klnniard said . "And
if you don't play well . you don 't win .
We tried to get them to win at the
line and they did ."
The Highlanders shot a horrible
27.4 percent from the floor (17 of 62t
and were led by Haislop's 11 (Xlints.
Haislop, however, only made five of
26 field goal attempts. Jim Jeffers
added 10 (Xlints and eight rebounds
for Southwestern, which made six
of nine tree throws (66.7 percent 1.
"1 think that 's the worst shooting
night one of my teams has ever
had ," Kinnlard sa id. "We got

it. "

Kyger Cr'-"k. on the other hand.
made 54.8 perceril of lis field goal
attempts tl7 of 31 1 and 18 of 27 free
throws (66.7 percent !.
" It's been tough to keep up a good
attit ude in practice." Stemple said.
"but the kids have always come to
practice and played hard. They
haven't quit ."
The Highlanders won the ba tt le of
rhe boards. 3&gt;-34. wit h Wollum
topping all rebounders with 14 .
Mike Bradbu ry led Kyger Creek
with 10. The Highlanders com mil ·
ted 14 turnover s. while forcing 23
Bobcat miscues .
ln the reserve ga me, Hob
McCart)' scored 12 (Xlinl s to pace
Southwestern to a 37-26 win. Roger
Garll:'1 st"ored

seven

10 lead t~P

Bobcats.
Hm. *-'()"• :

K'H IER ctn·: EK 1~11 - Hlrh!t•f illrr-w Jn ' '• ~ I'+ llill
l.o\•f'Cill l j \.\ . l~f'\ ·in .h&gt;lk'\ ." \ ~X . "11m ~ ,oJ(Ion: 1 '1
Mlkr BrJdh~.w. "11- 'IUI"r\ L..; li-1"-6!
SOllHWfo)ill:R:\ l iji J - •'nth l l,u '~' l' ',JII
H.JCk\ H ~l'~lJ.l ll •• .lllli .ldlt 'l' ~ ~ ](1, .lvhn \l ollun 1
119. Dctnm lj &lt;~l nrk 1 112 llu ;·o· ~k ,, ll•&gt;l' 1 1 1 ~

WTAL.O:, 111-411.
St'Oft' ~· tjiAili"Lo"l"'\;

\-\ 1•·

Kv gr&gt;r C'!"f"-'( •k
"artlllt!f""lrrn

Senior Bowl
slated June I

!l

p,

1'•~

...

OHIO DOM INICAM COLLEGE

Need Something
Electrical?
West Virginia
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-: Gallia girls lose

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Sale prices

209 UPPER
RIVER ROAD
'
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

W• r•••••• the rleht to limit ctU•ntltlea.
tolocot

I

~orris

Dodge, Inc.

II ll "ll"\• '
~~ '~~'II ~

Phone 446-0842

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK .
Store hours 8:30 a.m.lo 8:00p.m. Monday through Friday,
9:00a.m.lo 6:00p.m. Salurday and 10:00a.m. to 5:00p.m. Sunday .
•

i~·

II - ·Ill

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE

FOR A UMITED TIME ONLY
--~-

panicky and out of control and it got
to the point where we couldn't do

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Cobr•lloosterCallles
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..,,o...,.. _ _ _ •._ &amp;Oriviqt..,.ICits

12

Warren Local at Federal-Hocking
Belpre at Nelsonville-York
Wellston at VInton County
TVC RF.'IERVES
TEAM
W L PTS OPP
Meigs
11 I 630 471
Belpre
9 2 5-18 460
Fed .- Hocklng
6 5 421 420
Warren Local
6 6 5-19 549
Nels .-York
6 6 003 '535
Miller
5 6 475 502
Alexander
5 7 536 549
Wellston
3 8 002 500
Trimble
3 8 424 468
Vinton County
3 8 394 528
TOTALS
57 57 4982 4982
dan. 17 Results:
Meigs 47 VInton County 31
Belpre 48 Miller 32
Trimble 36 Nelsonville-York n •
Warren Local 43 Wellston 33
Alexander 46 Federal-Hocking 43

MERCERVILLE- The Eastern Homer 9, Tonya Savoy 9, Lesa
Eaglettes rolled to a 41h15 win over Rucker b ank Arlene Ritchie I.
the Hannan Trace Wildcats in Melanie Mankin was praised with a
good defensive game coming off tre
SVAC play.
Hannan Trace ou t.scored Coach bench fo r the Eaglettes.
For the Wildcats, Julie Dillon led
Pam Douthitt' s crew 12-10 the first
with
21 (Xlints. followed by Michelle
quarter but a strong s~ond quarter
Unroe
with 6, Tabby Sheets 4 and
was (XJSted by the visiting Eaglelles
Paula
VanH
ouse and Lorrie Vanoutscoring their opponents 17-2.
House
with
2
each.
making the half-Ume score 27-14.
Eastern
shot
12 of 52 for 23
The Wildcats fou ght back the
percent
from
the
field a nd 16 of 28
third a nd fou rth quarters, outscorfrom
the
tree
throw
line. Hannan
ing the Eaglettes 11-7 and 1().6
Trace
(XJSted
a
33
percent
free
respectively.
The winners were led by Amy throw percentage shooting 3 of 9
Young with 15 JlOinls, Margaret attempts. The Eaglettes had 7
steals and 22 turnovers. Margaret
Homer led the winners with 16
rebounds followed by Amy Young
with 5 and Lesa Rucker with 2.
Eastern' s overall record is now
104 and 9-1 In the league. The
Eaglettes are In action again
WARRENSVILLE HEIGHTS, Thursday night hosting the Kyger
Ohio (UPII - The 1986 Senior Creek Bobk illens in an SVAC
Soccer Bowl has bi&gt;en scheduled for match.
June 1 a t the Richfield Coliseum,
the first time the event has been
held indoors.
Tim Rogers, a spokesman for the
Cleveland Force of the Major
Indoor Soccer League, said the
game featuring the nation's top
collegiate seniorsis be ing moved
indoors because the S(Xlrt no longer
Is played outdoors on the professional level.
The event actually is a doublePHONE 446-6225
header - a first game will match
1885 EASilRN AVIi.
15-player East and West teams
GALliPOliS. OHIO
made up of players from Division
11. Ill and NAIA schools.
The nightcap pits East and West
teams from Division I schools.
MJSL coaches will head both
squads.
On J une 2, Ule M!SL wUI hold Its
annual player draft in Cleveland at
a yet -lo-be- determined downtown
site, said Rogers.
"That will conclude week- long
Senior Soccer Bowl schedule,' ' he
said. "The collegiate player will
arrive in Clevelan d by May 26-27
and conduct clinics the week before
the games."
In addition, a high-school team of
top Ohio pl ayers wlll face a squad of
U.S. all -star prep players. said
Rogers.
"Soccer is big in the Clevela nd
area, and this schedule of ac tivities
reflects thaI, " said Rogers.

•

iii 1:uia &amp;.B.

l_,;'

Ret. 3.99, NAF1.20

24

Thnes-Sentlnel Staff
PATRIOT - The tong wail is
finally over.
Kyger Creek made 13 of 17 fourth
quarter free throws, Including 10 of
12 ln the final I: 28, to pull away
from Southwestern fo r a 52-lOSVAC
win here Friday.
The win was Ule Bobcats' fi rst of
the season (1-13 overal l. 1-9 In the
league! . while the Highlanders
dropped to 2-12 overall and 1-91n the
conference.
Senior Richie Giim?Je led the
way for the Bobcats wifh 19 (Xllnts,
including six of seven free throws
down the stretch. Sophomore Bill

PROTECTION
PlAN"

• GALLJPOLIS - The Gallipolis
: eighth grade girls lost their first
' basketball game Saturday, 46-45, to
: Vinton County, in overtime.
:: : The Uttle Angels were led by
• Xristi thomas and Lori Hamilton
&gt; wtth 14 points apiece .. Dana Atha
: added nine.
•· Thomas had 14 rebounds and four
: ·assists for the GaiUans. Hamilton
~: had 11 rebounds.
.: VInton is 4-1 on the year. The
• VIkings were led by Tracy Groves
••
. whO had 15 (Xlints.
: Gallla, now 6-1, wlll host Southern
: -In the Was hington gy mWednesday.

Starting F_luid

w it h • c r•~r Reg . 1.8t, NAS24l

2
660 785
;• ' Wellston
t-lels.-York
2 109 697
762
O:MIIIer
I 10 566 713
: TOTALS
57 57 '7235 '7235
•· Jan. 17 Results:
: Meigs 82 VInton County 57
: Belpre 69 Miller 59
; Warren Local 82 Wellston _63
' Federal-Hocking 60 Alexander 51
~ Trimble 71 NelsonvUie-York 58
• Jan. 21 Games:
: Trimble at Meigs
; Alexander at Miller

-~ fii'St ga:"le of year

17JJ8

'

•,
TVC CAGE STANDINGS
• .·
ALL GAMES
. -~ . TEAM
W L PTS OPP
, ·Meigs
14 0 1021 756
~- Warren Local
10 3 ll! B 789
~ Belpre
9 3 795 754
: Trimble
8 5 875 834
' Alexander
6 7 l*i1 891
: Fed. Hocking
5 7 744 739
7 VInton County
4 8 724 789
' Wellston
2 10 713 861
: Miller
2 10 644 792
Nels.· York
2 11 741 833
:
TVC GAMES ONLY
: TEAM
W L PTS OPP
: Meigs
12 0 l*iO 645
- Warren Loca l 10 2 840 728
: Belpre
9 2 748 702
• Trimble
7 4 725 694
·: Alexande r
6 6 llJO lll9
: Fed.-Hoc klng
4 7 673 671
- VInton Count y
4 7 666 726

"'·

Dr II rlliam Bohl. "The rm m to ld
nw to thrcm · hard .tnd 1\ h.:m:'· :-.1~

._:1\ t '

6-ll &amp;m. CoU&lt;gt&gt; SWim
.. ................................... 11: »- :30 Fitness Swim
ti-8 p.m. Co llegt&gt; Slt.vtm
Jan '" •s p m ,.......... o .....
..7:15-8: 15 a.m. Early Bird Swim
. .... 0"
•
• Vl""ll '""""' ........
11: ll-12: :l) Fltnt"SS Swlm
6-ll p.m. Open SWim
Jan. ~ Oosed Basketball .............. ...
...... .. ......
.. ....................... Closed
5:00p.m. Redwomm vs. Walsh

·:::
·• •
·:'
7: :1) p.m. Redrnen vs. Ct'darJUIE'
."'. •
!Ohio Valk&gt;y Bank Bomter Night!
•• • •~ Jan· m
~ noon 3 p m ""-- Rec
. ....... .... ....... .......
.. noon-3
p.m. Open SWtm
· · ..,....,..,
.... ......
6-8 p.m. Collt&gt;ge Swim
"'•.
6-8 p.m- . CollegERec. ............
.. ........... ..

pf'tiolm('(l b~ th&lt;'n tf'~l.m ph~ sic-1an

r:1,1110n clrtl,l:'- d.n]\
'" .\II ltlr J,t· dt1Jg:-. d1ci \\ ,~_..

~

: •: •

Pappas l'r paired a mpiUrrd
bursar sac and ca11ilag l~ impingpnwnt:' on tilt' r)U!!' idr of thf' rl bow.
d nd musck damagC' insidf' JS 1\"rll
a:-. rPmm·ing a C\'st caust:'U b~
inilaiJCin from lht~ first op.:•rJlton.
""lllcl! C~ Sl
\\·as C IUSf'd by
pitch ing ttu· f~_, HTt'ks ,tftrr tht~ .-\pr·iJ
Upt' l" d 11on ... ht' s.-ud of 1r.:-- procedut-p

~ n m'

p.m.

- ••
·... : ~ Jan. 23 6-8 p.m. Co llt&gt;Re Rec. .

.. rnr~Sl'd up .··
Ca mdcho \~·as 1igh1. Last Scp! . !4.
he had d o ubl~ surgerY Pf'rformed
by· Dr. Arthur Pappas.. the&gt; wam
ph\ 'ictan of Ill&lt;' Bos ton Rf-d Svx

'

Woelt (I( JIIOIIII'Y Ill, 111111

Jlalo-G,....tum
Pool
Jan. 19 noon-3 p.m. ()pl&gt;n Rfc .. ..
.. .............................. ... noon-3 p.m. Open Swim
6-R p.m. College llec . ..................................................... 6-8 p.m . College Swim
Jan. 2) 6-8 p.m. Collegt&gt; Rec... ..... .. ..................... ...... .. 7:15-8:15 a.m. Early Blrd Swtm
11:» 12: :ll Fitness Swlm
6--8 p.m . Coll(l!E' Swlrn
Jan. 21 CLosfd BaskE-tball ................ ... _.. ..... ......................... 11:30-12: 30 Fl!ness Swim
7·00 p.m. Rt'dwOITlf'r'l \'S MalonE' ................................... .................... ...... a~
Zl &amp;-8
Collf?g(' Ri'c ........ .. .............................. 7: 1~: \~:a~1l~r~t:~ ~~

Sl'C'Ond opin ion. but I knew

.t rnl H",l. :-.

By JOHN FRIEDMAN

Eastern girls top Hannan Trace 40-35

CL H TLA:\D 1 L'PI1 - In 1984.
Ernie Camacho set a Clel'eland

Indians club rt"&lt;'ord of ~3 sa.n•s, thP

the cleanest players ln baseball,

The

Kyger Creek trips Southwestern 52-40
for first hardwood victory of campaign

~!!~~~ ~~~!~~~~&gt;00~!!~ .!l!e~~~~~,!m?-~~:uem~ ~~~~Mets General Manager Frank
Cashen said Friday90percent of his
players If asked to sign a contract
comainlng a drug testing clause
would do so. but a union representa·
tive said mass testing was too
inaccurate to be reliable.

W. Va .

Ohio- Point Pleasant.

January 19, 1986

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

300 Third Ave.

Gallipolis

•

�.
.,January 19, 1986

Pomeroy

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page C-5

Ohio - Point Pleasant, W. Va .

North Gallia ·moves into undisputed second place with win :

•

Big third period gives SHS 63-39 wm
NBA results

I'' !:.
.

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By SCOTr WOLFE
OAK fiLL - Southern ootdist·
anced rost Oak Hlll 16-41n the third
round to break open a close ga me as
the Tornadoes utilized fine second
hell defensive play to spark Its 62-39
defeat of the Oaks here Friday In
SVAC basketball action.
The, win leaves Southern perfect
Inside the SV AC at 10-0, while Its
overall ledger res)s at 11-2 to rate
twenty-second in the State UP!
Poll. Oak HUl ls now 7-6 and J-5.
Conservative play on the part of
ooth clubs led to low offensive
pmduc lion of the opening round as

the Oaks and Tornadoes battled
tooth-and-nail to gain the early
momentum. Southern picked up the
tempo in the second round, but
couldn't shake the determined
Oaks, who chose a much slower
pace then the grueling running
game that they experienced In
Racine earlier this year.
The first pertod ended at 8-5.
Neit her tea m could gain an advantage as Sou them led just 22-19 at the
half.
Early In the ftrst ha~ Southern
got In serious foul trouble as J ay

Witherspoon cops WBA title
ATLANTA tUP!i- "Terrtble"
Tim Witherspoon won the World
Boxing Assocla lion heavyweight
tit le Frida) night with a 15-round
split dec ision over defending cham·
pion Tony "TNT" Tubbs. ·
Theil' were no knockdowns in the
bout at the Omni. which the judges
srorro 144-143. 144-141 and 143-143.
bu r Witherspoon staggered Tubbs
several times In the late rounds.
Tubbs, 26. en tered his first title
defense weighing 2M pounds - 17
pounds heavier than the cllallenger
- and admitted after the bout that
" I "·asn't as ac tive as I srould have
been" aft er winning the crown last
April by beating Gl'l'g Page.
Witherspoon. a 27-year-old who
grew up in south Philadelphia, was
the aggressor from the opening
round and manhandled Tubbs
throughout the bout. forcing the
challenger to the ropes almost at
wilL
"He didn't do nothing," Witherspoon said. "He jabbed .. . but he
didn't fight like a champion. He

kept moving away from mE&gt;. He
kept backing off, so I just had to
lunge in after him."
Witherspoon opened the 13th
round with combination of body
punches, then a slashing l~ft to the
head that stagg&lt;&gt;red the champion
and sent him ree ling into the ropes.
He ended the round with another
barage of blows to Tubbs head and
went to his corner at the bell with
his arms raised.

Ila;tlck and Matt Harris each drew
three per.;onal fouls and were
sidelined.
Southern playl!d a great second
half, picking up the tempo of the
game, while also playing a stingy
defense .

Coach Howie Caldwell stated, "In
the third period we played really
well. We played a good transition
game and our defense was super
the entire second half. Our sopho·
more played a strong third period
and Todid Adams did a good job
running the ballciub."
Southern's agresslve style pulled
aD stops in the last round, applying
a closely knit defensive alignment
and fa st -paced offensive game.
Kenny Turley opened up thP
Tornadoes Inside game, while
sophomore Mike Hale poced the
Oaks comeback bid.
Leading 22-19 at the half, !he
hu stling Tornadoes exploded into a
thunderous l!-23 advantage, before
simmering to a 62-29 triumph.
Southern was led In scoring by
senior Todd Adams with 16
markers, Turley added 12, and
Dave Amburgey 10.

WILLOW WOOD - With three
regulars in foul troubl~early, North
Gallla Coach BruCE' Wilson was
'forced to caU on 6-3 freshman
, ter R ty Den
d he
cen
·us
ney an ot rs ln
the third quarter Rere Friday but it
was the Pirate yearling who
.responded \11th nlne big markers to
spark a North Gallla comeback
victory over host Symmes Valley,

Hale pitched In 16 lor Oak HIU,
whlle Eric Faye and Brown tOSSI!d
in S.
Southern hlt a warm 29 of 58 4d 4
of 7 at the line. Oak Hill hit l5 o! .44
and 9 ol19 at the line.
Southern won the battle of the
boards with a 33-22 rebound edgi&gt;,
led by Turley and Bostick. Faye
had 5 for Oak Hill.
·
The Tornadoes had 11 steals, 13
rurnovers, and 17 fouls. OH had 6
stea ls, 13 turnovers, and 10 foull!.
Southern won the reserve contest
46-27 to remain unbeaten. Sharuion
Rllfle had 19 points lor the wlnnets.
Jed Rawlings had 8 tor the Oaks:
Southern hosts North Gallla
Friday, whlle Oak Hill lnvaqes
Hannan Trace.

66-62.
. The Southern Va lley Athlet!c
, Conference triumph, North Gallla s
nlnth in 10 starts this winter , left the
, WUsonmen In undisputed second
. place In the standings after Hannan
Trace fell48-47 at Eastern.

BY TOM BELVILLE
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - J ust IJ&gt;ca use
the snow is flyin g doesn't mean vou
can't go ~shlng. Certain specte~ of
fish such as smallmouth bass ,
sauger and oorthern pike, to name
a lew, c!ten hit quite well when the
water temperarures are down .
Or, one can take oH to warmer
climates to do a littlewinterfishing.
Such was the case wit h a couple of
area sportsmen.
I received a letter from Jliirs.
Vernon Clifton oC Gallipolis the
other day and here Is her account &lt;i
a Tenness~ fishing expedition.
"On Dec. 7 an d 8 the Fourth

Kimes 0-0-0; Wickline 0-1·1. TOT.U.S

OAK HJLL ~SI) - Walls ().().0: Kern
1·().2; Crabt ree 0-0-0; Boggs 1-0-2; Howe ll
0.3-J: Hale 7·2-16: Faye 3-2-8: Copas O-()..().
T(1)'AJ.'! IH -31.

.8 l\1 16 24-62
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Cnesapeake at Hannan Trace
, . Parkersburg Catholic at Eastern
Oak Hill r.t South Webster
Symmes Valley at Ironton St. Joe

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50 MO. UP TO 440' CCA
60 MO. UP TO 530' CCA

(6) Bids based on FmHA financing will be
subjectto approval of bidder 's cred it
by FmHA.

Call, write , or visit your Farme rs Home Administration Offlee for det•iled information, bid forms, bid instruction s. or
to arrange a property inspection:
FmHA
Federal Building
Room 320, P. 0 . Box 678
Morgantown . WV 2650L
Phone : 304· 291 -4796

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HOW TO VIEW AND PURCHASE

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(4) Bids based on FmHA financing must
submit a current financial statement
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Form 1965-46 .

FmHA
Agricultural Service Center
•· 224-B Firat Street
. Pt. Ple11ant. WV 25550
l Phone: 304-676 -2420

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Home Administration (FmHA) is offering for sale
through sealed bids approximately 74% ac res, w ith impro ·
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By Tandy

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;.' CONDITIONS: (1) Bids will only be accepted on Form
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121 Bids must be· in Room 320 . Federal
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WV. by 1:00 p.m .. on January
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Friday's games

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LE'I US HELP TOU SILICT THIIIGHT IAnliT fOI TOUI CAll

North Gallla at Southern
. Eastern at Kyger Creek

''!!~
. . ,., ..

.

1\)(111
IJ• · 1
~-4

11·,

Sll ntwmfl,.td M• t"
(,._,hi . ra t hnl!l. l-Hh.. John !'ho·pp;lnl ~-4 !.:! . lnluo
11
1 11
Thom j.tr(}n . l:t
~' "· l'nn~ .... nl 11 " TOT4..,
U-ll-i'l.
,
S&lt;.•orP ~ QU~~n.·Mo:
1
t tltl -

Symmes Valley at Soulhwestern
Oak Hili at Hannan Trace
Saturday
Raceland at North Gallia

Modem Board

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11
Jt rol!lr ·rn. 7 h!n· \\ ,a
IJhklk·
l'.lut
Kmr"" ·! : 1111. s u.,... 11r ,,_,.,, ., 1
"h.m"

from the dock."
"Following the Saru rday fishing
a banquol and seminar was held in
Celina, where Billy Westmorland
and the Hagers were gues 1
speakers ."
I understand Tenm• SSE'(' wasn '1
quite far enough south as these men
braved snow and freezing temperalUres during the tournament.
Congratulations to Vernon CUlton
and Tony Brown for their good
finish in this lournament. Maybr
first place next year, men ~

romes1an ts from II slates, Includ ing ,Jim and Jon Hager of the Hee
Haw Television Show."
"Ninety-eight ba ss were caught
during I he tournament consistin g of
74 smallmouth, l2 1argemouth. and
l2 spotted ba ss. The combined
weight fof the fish caught was 180
pounds. The Junker rtsh of the

Tuellda,y's games

.

Ideal for creating free-hand grBphics with the
Tandy tOOO or COlor Computer. 126-tt85

L
1
2
4
6
8
8
12
13

W L Pet.
!iouthern .................. 10 0 1.1:00
North Gallla ..... _...... 9 1 .000
Hannan Trace ........... 7 3 :100
Oak Hill .... .. .. .. ........ 5 5 .500
Eastern ....... .... .. ....... 4 6 AOO
Symmes Valley ........ ·3 7 .:m
Southwestern .. ... .. .. .. . 1 9 .100
Kyger Creek .... ......... 1 9 .100
Fr~·· resuMs
Eastern 48 Hannan Trace 47
!)ou!hern 63 Oak Hill 39
• North Gallla 66 Syrrunes Valley 62
l&lt;yger Creek 52 Southwestern 40

By Tandy

Tandy 1000 by Tandy

Annual Horse Creek Open Bass
Tou rnament was held on Dale
Hollow Lake. The toumalllf'nt is
sponsored by Jack Huddleston's
Horse Creek Dock . located on the
lower end of tho lake just ou L'ide
Celina, Tennessee."
"The offic ial weighmasler was
famed smallmouth fisherman Bill,·
Westmorla nd, host of lhe "Fishln '
Diary" television show."
"A couple of local anglers came
in second place. Vernon Cli ft on and
Tony Brown of Ga llipoli s. They
caught 24 pounds I ounce of fish
during one and a half days effo rt .
They were edged ou t of first place
by only 8 ounces."
"The tournament dn•w abou t ~

SVAC

Team

Reg. 599.00

Varsi t~

SVAC standings

.\LLGAMES
TEAM
W
North Gall Ia .. ........... , 12
Sou them .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. 11
flannan Trace...... ...... 9
Qak Hill ..... .. ........ ..... 7
Eastern ....... : ........ ..... 5
Symmes Valley .. .. . .. .. . 4
~uthwestern .. ... .. .. .. .. 2
I&lt;yger Creek .. .. .. .. .. .. .. I

Defenders win
GA LLIPOLIS - The OVCS
Defe nders Volleyball team remai n~d in firs t place and undefeated in league play fo llowing a
15-3. 15·1 trounc ing of Marietta
Christ ian So hooi Soldiers. Good
passi ng and stro ng hitt ing
enabled Ohio Valley to dominate
their opponent during the ent ire
match.
Sopho more Sharon Ar cher led
in serving points wit h 9 follo wed
by Chery l Tay lor 7, Beth Wood 5,
Susa n Arc h er an d Rac hel
Dan ner bot h with 4, and Becky
Danner L Senior Cheryl Tay lor
compiled the most kllls with 9.
Also contributing a strong per formance at the net were Trac t
Sisson and Bet h Wood.
The win lift s Ohio Valley to 3-0
inside the lea gue and 7·1 overa lL
The Defenders next battle with
Gr ace Chr is tia n Sohool of Huntington. W.Va .

.
.
.
Ieh?unds: 2,4 ~~OV E'J s and eJ~ht
aSSISts. Sh ... ppat d and Thompson
had five reOOunds apiece .
North Ga llia pi
lh
.
.
ays rw games
thiS w~~ ~Hanna~ Tra~e at homP
'J':'esd~y .. ~ 1 South~l n Fnday and ~ 1
hom; agamst Rac~l~nd Satu rda~ ·
S) mmes yalley pla~s Ironton St.
~~daTuesday and Southwestern
y.
.
In Friday s reserw game. the
Little P~ra l es posted a &gt;448 confer·
ence vlciOry. Rusty Denn~y and
Don Mays had 17 apiece tor the
""nnors. Joey Wh ile and Topny
Sche1
dnrr had 14 each for the Lil lie
Vikings.

Some fish bite-well this time of year

JH-U

Oak Hill .... ................. 5 14

TOOd Holstein's !0 points and six
rel:x&gt;unds paced the Pirates . MikP
K
. ddfod 14
k . Th
~mpei a .
. mar et s.
e
Ptrales got nme potn1 efforts from
Todd [.)e{-1 and Denney
1~12 first period advantage. svHS NG HS hit 25 of 48 {~m the field
forged ahead 28-24 befall' the · and 16 of 30 from the line lor better
halft ime intermission. With rhn'&lt;' than 50 percent. The Pirates had 28
starters in foul trouble, Wilson went rebounds. Kemper had six . The
to his bench and it was Denney who Gallians had ~I tumovers and 1l
sparked th~ Pirates to a 20-ll as sists
advantage in the third period,
Syrn~es VaiiPy was paced by'
leaving the \'isitors on top 44-39 .John Sheppard' s 22 point s. Siv
going Into Ihe final canto. North Bloomfield added 18. John ThompGallla main tained tht&gt; three to fi ve son had II.
point edge the final rig hi mln utrs of
SVHS hit 24 of ~3 from I he field
, . , f u, h . , h· d
plav. .
·
anc1 \\as 1; o 1o ill I ,p 1m!. a 21

Wildlife news

SOUTHERN ill21 - Milliron 0-0-0:
Amburgey S.O·lO; S. Gru e-sE-r 1·0·2: Ha rris
3-1-7: K. GroMer 3-0-6: Adams 7-2-16:
Bostick 3-0--6; Turley 6-o-12; Gllbrklel- 0- 2;

By quu1en:
Southern .. ............

Overall. the Pirates impruwd
their I"E"C'rd to 12·1. Sy mmes Vall e~·
dropped to 4·8 overall nd J7' ·'d
th
nf
a
InS I e
e co erenCf'.
After North Ga ll ia had taken "

-

4
FOR

PIIOT!CTS
TO ·20'
BElOW
ZERO

LIMir4

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Mon. thru Fri. 8 to 8
Saturday a to 6'
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89

SILVER BRIDGE PLAIA -PH. 446-9335

DAVE MICH
MANAGER

�Page-C-6-The Sunday limes-Sentinel

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

January 19, 1986

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

S:low start costly for Devils,
Athens losing stririg snapped

Eastern Eagles upset Wildcats, 48-47
By SCOTI' WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - With only two
seconds remaining In regulation
play sophomore point guard Jeff
Caldwell sank the front end of a
one-and-one to break a 47-47 tie and
give tlv:&gt; host Eastern Eagles a
hard·fought 48·47 SVAC triumph
rNer the hustling Hannan Trace
Wildcats here Friday evening ln
boys' high school baskNb!ll action.
Playing a controlled offensive
game, Eastern took away tlv:&gt;
Wildcat fast·break and was In
charge of the tempo for much of the
game, leading by five points, 4&amp;-41
with 2: 14left In the game. With 2:03
showing on the clock junior IXJSt·
man sean Colley went back door on
the Eastern defense to narrow the
gap at 46-4.1.
After what appeared to he a
costly Eastern turnover. the Wild·
• cats whipped the ball around the
hom until six· foot sophomore Scan
Rankin connected on a swishing
jumper from the f'lbow .
Filled with exciting action right
down to the wire. tlv:&gt; game was
both an emotional and physical test
for bot h clubs. Putting Eastern's
Iii_ _., bulk against HT's quickness late In
the game resulted ln a foul tha t sent
EHS IXJSt·matj Greg Leachman to
the line where he netted one ol two
with :51 seconds remaining, the
score now 47-45.
Satisfied with going fo r one last
shot, the Wildcats of Coach Mike
Jenkins ran the clock down to just
:10 seconds before Deke Barnes
swished a 16 looter to tie the score,
47-47.
Eastern quickly called time and
,.;
,I
planned Its final strategies. pushing
'"·
'%.,A&lt;
the ball to hallcoun before calling
another
time-out with just three
lc
seconds left. On the ensuing play
"
=~ SHORT GOAL - Easlem's Gres Leachman has a smrt jumper
Hannan Trace briefly closed the
• between lwo HT Wlldcals, Sieve JarreD (tli) and St..U Rankin (21)
door, but became a tit overgressive
: · during second quarter action In Friday's SVAC encounter at Eastern.
as Deke Barnes made contact with
· : The Eagles behind Leaehman's 21 point effort edged Hannan Trace
Caldwell in a bang·bang play rn the
:;. 1847. The loss leaves HT with a 7-3 loop rerord.
lnbounds pass. The foul set the
stage for the sophomore guard's
.:

l
.

•·

pleased with our overall hustle.
Brad Robinson had maybe the best
·
game of his career. Shawn Baker
had a rea 1ni""ga me an d s ho t we 11 .
Lee Powell put together his second
straight good ga me and Hue\'
Eason hit the boards ~·ell .. said tt"l·
Coach Greg Drummer.
The Meigs roach "dded, "I am
rea l happy for Mike &lt;ChanceV! on
brea king the record He's a super
.
.
. ·
ktd and an excrllent basketba ll
1
..
p ~e{ee other Marauders cracked
the do uble digit co lu mn including
Baker with 12 Powell with 11 and
.
·
.
·
Robmson 10. Donme Bec ker came
ff h he h
·
, J ff
oBa t eled n~" .'.?ikpuln t m se'ken•l hel2
tes
t•., v
g att ar " t
while Scott Gil liland added 10.
Meigs ieadlng scorer Rick Wise
was held to single digits for the firs t
time this year. f'Jttln!( In sewn
points after a sroreless first half.
But the :&gt;9 guard did not J&gt;'ed to cyo
the hoop often as he co nsistent I;· led

the Marauder fast break while
playing a flawless and superb floor
= me. A
"" ' t
In
The inaI outcome was never
2
doubt after Meigs went oo a 15- run
ln the first period. going from down
3-2 to up 17·5and holding the Vikings
to one fie ld goal in nearly seven
.
mmu tes
.
Anodt her l 2d i :p~ e~rl~ mbtthe
s~on peno e t t on y ou as
to when Chancev would break the
.
record . The Marauders, now 14·0
overall and ! UJ In the TVC. had
their biggest lead In the first minute
of the founh period. taking a
?.6-poln t ad\'ant age at 70-34 on Scott
·
.
Powell s ftve footer.
The Marauders made 37 of 64
f
he fi
rom t
eld for a sizzling 58 per
cent which Included fi ve of six from
L. Powell and 10 of H by Chancey
Meigs made eight of!Hrom the foul
line, had 37 I'E'bounds. 17 turnovers.
and 18 fouls. VInton County made22
of :&gt;4 for 41 ~r cent while dropping
"'throws. Coach Buddy
lJ or 18 free
Bel l' s VIkings, now 4·8 on the year
an d 4-7 In the leagile, had 34
rebounds, 22 turnovers. and 14
fouls. Robinson and Eason led
Meigs \\it h sLx rebounds each while
Chancey and L. Powell had five
each. Gilliland led VCHS with nine.
in the reserve contest. Meigs sa w
a IQ.IXJ lnt halftime lead melt to
three mld·way throug h the third
period. but recovered to score a
47-31 win . Leading 24·14 at the ha lf,
the Little Marauders were up only
26-23 minutes later. The Vinton
County reserves, 3-8 In the league.
could g!'t oo closer after that . Coach
Mick Childs' reserves are IJ I
overall and 11-lln the TVC.
Mike Ba n rum and Chris Smith
paced the Little Marauders with 12
IXJints eac h while Don Dorst had
one of his finest ga mes of the yea r
"'i th eight IXJints. Tim Thompson
led the Little Vikings with 10.
Meigs remains at home this
TUesday when they host Tri mble.
Meigs c&lt;lged the Tomcats 6J62
ea rlier this year. Meigs has never
be ate.. Trimble at the Larl)·

,

MJsor

SETS SCORJNG RECORD - JWgs' Mlkr ChMcey l• sho'm a hove
shooting his authentic record bl'raklng haskrt as the \leigs senior
"-'On!d 22 points In setting a new school scoring mark. M•·Igs won ks 14th
In a row , 82-51 over VInton County.

Friday's . scores ·
Hllllot• ·Ill . Prllblillr '?&gt;
H o\d~tncl ~ .

NIJc'&lt;; ~
Hudson ri.l , M•'dtrm HIJoh.lanU 'il
Huron !i'o, n)~lr- ~

rml mu i&gt;l . I.O\'I'la r'id 50
Jnd Val !' ~ fl . r on Frye• ~1
Jrfl('riKin !D. IL'rlli:('ffionl -lo1
.k'ffmlOn l 'nkm ~!1. Toronto .l'i
Kansas Lai&lt;OI&lt;III l. EIIT!W00'1 .u!
l((&gt;nlon R l~ 51&gt;. CL:~rk NW &gt;19
Kell Al tt&gt;r Ell.

Day Jr ff('I"!!!n m

Kln~ ~. Blarw~n_.r ~
K}R't'f Crt't'll 52, SW G;~ llla 40

La Bra(&gt; 79. N("41 011 Falls 58
Lalu&gt;ldlld ~- Rlda'(Wood ~7

7.1. t.,m,..,, .~ ~· ti.
l.rh&lt;~~ •n i1 Frnnkl1n li:!

Lalli

lt~lrr

l.l'f'lo n~.t ~7. Col Cn..;tdi'Y .f\
I.Pmoo Mfl nlt:H' 11:.! . \\' C arrollton~
l.l ll•rr. fi.~ . Lall:tov~ 11
l.kk ln~ H gt~ 5";, l~llll E lm ~t l
l.lc •kl~ \'nl 71 . .JnM.~t!Yo't'n N'rlQ.:r r.,o,
I lmlt ~.tll'r'J'(' iii . St Man··s -ill
l.llnil ~nlnr R Jl.11tk1k'lnv.:n Yl
l.lnroln llil~JI ~. Maranatha C'h r :r,
l ffk~1n d 56, On SUnvnlt ~
Lodl fiO\·erW1tf .S, Bru!ll..,'k' k 47 wt 1
l.ocan il. MarTIIa oi5
l.oo&lt;bn 7J, BIR Walnu! :'!6
l.n r King !l'J. F.~ rt a ~I
Luca.~ GJ. WorU! fhr Ill

Dea er Quantity Discounts
All work guaranteed Price thru Feb.

...

1O'fw ADDitiONAL
DISCOUNT w/COUPON

~~- H · l~'

.\ t1 \ fi rld

By quartl:"r!i:

ll annan Tr a C'e .. . .... 12 9 10 16-47
Eastrrn .......... ... . ...... .12 15 6 15--48

i\orUtm(JI' !ti. F'rr&gt;dl•r iC'tc tCM'Il ~
~rlflh.\\wd~ l . Mason tMil ~ ~ 1011
~oro~· nlk 94, t\l("'oT\15 rll
NOt'\1.'11\'IT' 63. Smltl'!v UM.' .f!l
O;ok H:u t .ur· 01!. W~morP ffi
();,k GI('TI tW\'al it Min~ Jutrl klh til
Obl.'r lln F' h l'Lanct.~ .t ! . Kr y s iCI'K' 19
Old r orr ~ - ~ 111\lllmnll' !il

41

••Ll\ ilh1l;tllf\

OIPntan.o· ill. 1\ lJnkm ~1
Ontario 12 , l'l'l"SIIIl'IP 6N
Orr C!&lt;l\' .,. , Fostmia "() 101 1
lim'i llt." ~- Woostrr 1'rtv.·ay G?
Oll awt~- {_; IW\001' 1 110. Van wm 61
O:dord Tala~~o·an da r,, Edruxl 61
Paint"'&lt; R i1· '~klf' 56. Connraut 42
l': lnOOr&lt;~.t;I I OOII 61. MC('omb ~I
PatriCk HPnn 00. Bryan 47
Prm&gt;b.ii"J( ~ - An t ho~ Waynr ~

l.i

~ .;~i

\-!.1 \ •nllt• ~-~. I ~ l"ll, •: ill' .' II
MJ'.Ilk•V.blo u t.. '11 I~ ·,JI.,\' 111 · \1
,\ l q;h,lf1i'.'N I); ~I 1\ lib'! h ~.il Hil 1~
\h •&lt;llM i•• r .• "'~"" '•l

" \lt&lt;din.o lim~; . ,, . · 1 (lo • ln r, ~• t'fl ~h
M l"'l l-."' I':~. \'1 n'l lfl ( ,. ,;~

,\ 1ld

r,,,w 1rk ;~,t,

~l l. nm &lt;llu t).: ~ ~

,\ l il,m Et11"-m .'•• IU ,uk 1\i\('1 4.S
\hiiiJ.It"\ l .• tko· ,.,~. l(,,]l' Splinj! ;,1
\liill'l"~ 1\1 11 ol\\ 1 til !\l.tunrr \" ,, ].[;!
Milton I 11~ 111 ••I 1\pnnt.: , ., n w •ulo

Pr l rrsblll: ~rt nJ(

Mr r: rlrml - ,

Pon~ 5!1, A.•tlland i Ky ! .U
Pun (1irtron ri. S mHlJS~ St M il l)' '" ~~
l'n'bK· Sha~~o,.-.t• i'.!. \'alit;.· \'k-.4· 64
It&lt;'\ m tl sllu~ 7~ . GalkM·a.v WI'SIIaJ1d !lJ
RldJ!!'Chllr&gt; ~ - Rh· \'111 -12.
Hidg.:on10n1 m. Rh·t'I"Sidt&gt; ~
Hil't'f VIP\\' 67. Sl!rridan 1&gt;1 11111
S Crntm l 1\l. f'oJI!n~ W sn Rt~ ~

.\ i,1r~:~n

("· o':&gt; lllo'\1 1;;

1':101 '1.1

~11 Ho • c~l l hl '' '

l l,rh H!; l~ 'Mo

1-11 \'rrnon 71

\\ ~l'd1.11i ~ ~

:-: Crntral tll. '&gt;II\ ko•r '~t
1\' !101 ,11"011 '•I. 1\o ro" ·1~1
~~lpolmn . ~1 . Tc •l Whll!l t 'l .1 '
~. l"\"lt ll"f'.nlk ~ ~ 7: 1

5o2

11 . !'.;!"'\\ l.o111.Im ~
Poland -&amp;6. Cnmpbt'll i5 101 1

~ i''l"m . l"" \" .1. &gt;i.t Tt~ruunl\ ~ '" •
:Olo)l:.Hkm iii l"to'' ill ll l&lt; l 'd
\•h l&lt;~nd

Ran~

S Mri~ 6l OaX lllll ll
S \W bslrr ?'1, t•orts N D +ll
S;, nduslc\· til, Marlon Hard l ~ J(t
S.1 nd us~· 1'1 •r kiM ~ . Tiffin Cnl n '11 l.l
~brin~ !i(}, Llsbln f7
~1ll'f ,, F 70, Olntll f'.\' tO
stw!tr. Ell . Upp:•r SanOOsky ~1
S!wnandoH~ 00 , Woodsfi&lt;'kt ~

C m Ful'\ \\t;.'o

~~"'

H l ' lml!IIH I -~ , V..tw ill '• 1
\&lt;'\• -\lllnm t!r _ 1-: l1nt~\ h-;' ,nT •
\f'\\ Cpno,•orol l;io •nn Oti . M or~:tn '1.1
~I'll 1\nuul l.t• ril llrx·kj.,rtJ l':tl K\1,11

offer

Z-BRia

Kf'\'in Har kins [ 0-:.! . 1\·a n Slanlr\ 1 \ -.\

TOTALS ~- 1 3- :17 .
MElGS IR'l l - R lr k Wlsr .1 1-7: Brad
Robin son .j '2 -10: Mlkc ChJnccv 10-2-22:
LP&lt;' Powr ll ~ - 1 · 11 : Sha wn ll:JkN 6-0- 12:
HUPV Ea~on J.ll-2: J .R. Kl !rhC'n 0 0·0. Phil
Kin~ 1·0·2: Donnie Bcrkrr .1·1·7: ..l&lt;'ssr
Howard 0-1·1: C l) rl~ KP nnf'dv J.(• ~ : :\\aria
MussN 1 · 0 - ~: \;MtT Powr\1 j .Q..j TOTAL.'i
:ll·H·H2.
By quart l.'rs :
~n t o n C'uu n lv
7 t:l H n-~j
Mf' ii S..
.: ............ 17 H ~7 H- f\'2
t RESER\'E&gt;; I
VJT\'TOS COUNT\' (31) D&lt;~nn\
Mc Ma n is :\-1-H; Sc011 M.n n.1rd I U ~ - Tiril
Thompson ~ - 0 - 10 : Darin Co llt ns 1 fl2:
Ji mmv S m ilh 2-0-4, Ad ;tm Con w,l\· 1-0-1:
Ro~f'r· Hrrro ld 1· 1·.1. TOTAlS 1-1 ·3:31.
MElGS ( 'n ! - M!k f' Bart rum~ -1 12. !Jil l
Bro th N~ J-0-li: Chri s S mith 3 ti -12: Don
Oors! ~ - 0 - R: ~('Oil W illiam ~ 1 (I:.!: .l o t·
sn,·dr r I 1 · ~ : Hobb H anisun 0-11 IL Churl;
Arl

Hunnf'l [).(l fl .

INCA
Facing.• Brick
•Used

S trn•

li -I:J-47.
By quun l'rs:
\'l11to11 Count v .

Meig s ....

·

" s

12 li

11

NOW!

•Old Chicago

h-.11

H

$4!!.

CAROLINA LUMBER
AND
SUPPLY COMPANY

AUTO
IRVIN'S GLASS
446-4423
1160 SECOND AVE.

. h Street 675·1160 pomt
. PI easant
312 S1xt

Complete Auto Glass
Mobile Service

STORE HOURS:
Monday-Friday, 8 a.m,-5 p.m.: Saturday, 8a.m.- 12

noon

We repair storm
windows and doors .

Everybody Knows How Effective
Chiropractic Can Be
For Neck and Back Problems•.•
... BUT have you ever consi dered going to
a chiropractor for headaches, dizziness, ten·
sion . nervousness. respiratory problems, al·
lergies, digestive problems. numbness in
hands, arms, feet or legs?
Since 1895. tens of millions of people with
the se and many other health problem s that
did not re spond to any other kind of treat·
ment have recovered their health through
gentle, natural chiropractic.

1

I

1

'

If you have a health problem that is not ~et·
ting better. we offer you afree consultation
and preliminary spinal function test to help
you find out if chiropractic might help you.
If xrays or treatment ar.e indicat~d. we accept most insurance poltcy beneftts as payment, except for any required deductible or
copayments.

ACCEPTING OHIO &amp; .WEST VtRGNIA WORKMAN' S COMPENSATION

Call fnr
I
I
I
I

I

----------------'

wr UJIJIOi lltm ertl

10dny.

WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC,
INC.
POINT PLEASANT

2415 JACKSON AVE. .

1175-6433

tu rnovers .

11m Adams led the Bulldogs
attack with 15 point s. P.J . Lyons
had 13. Gary Harrisun tossed in 23
for GaiUpolis.
In the reserve game, Coach John
Jeffers Blue Imps improved their
season mark to 7.Q with a 36-27
conference win. The Imps, now 2-3
Inside the league, led 8-2. 16-11 and
24·15 at the quartermarks.
Kev Stowers had 10 points and
Bill Evans and Tom Hauldren eight
for GAHS. Jerry Jones had 13 for
Athens, now 2·3 in league play.
Box scores:
( \ IU'My)

&amp; rldrh . 1().2. Mlllt•r. :l-2-8:
H&lt;l r nson, Hl.12J: fassady . 2-\H ,
"1-HICf'l . I fl. ~. "&lt;~u Mo"&gt; rs. 0 I 1 TOTAL§ fl.4.4t .
:\TIIE.'S 1.. 1 - STric klin. I·Hi. Lyons. 4·&gt; 13.
{ i.U.UPO~ 1 ~1-

llward.

1 1~4:

!o r"don.

QUI ~

Acl&lt;~m ~.

~

1 H:

Mt'Comt&gt;s. 3-l

~.

D.J bl •l ku. .I 1.11 TOTAL"' IJI..IU!t
8)· QUiU1t&gt;nt:
t

,,r ll rpol ts

:J 141
\M II

12 :.ll - &lt;t-4
M 14 - 4~

( ~1"!1)
E\'an ~.

liALUI"OUS t:Ai ) -

\ .\ ,1'1 Ilk• :~).{; . "it.:M'Prs .

I f&gt;!l.: Hll ukhrt . H).ll:
4-t lll : Todd J (l-4: MlllPr,

0-(}rt TOTALS IH-lli.
,\nu.:\S {n J -

Cl) ·. n 1 1.

( 'unra th. l-ftli. 0 '1.,.,11.,
t~:! - ~ . TOTALs n'::

().)I.

rorn~oo.

J.ll2:

lu rw" . ~.;t.JJ . f Mit'\' ,

·

s,· qual1t'ni:
C..tlli poli'

1&lt;

Arhms ..

2Y

F II 12- :Ji
~l2-Ti

Friday's scores
· GIVE AND GO - lt was tlv:&gt; old "give and go" on
tills play as Athens' '11m Adam!i (42) hurts a pass
down court to a teammate for a layup against
GaiUpolls In Friday's SEO.\L game at The Plakts.

Logan moves step
closer to loop crown

Gr!"'nfield ........... l2 0 719 470
Logan .....
.. 13 I 889 719
SoOthern .......... II 2 891 640
MarV,tta .........
7 3 586 566
Chesapeake ......... 7 4 7U4 621
Pottsmouth ......... 8 5 799 n6
Gallipolis .... .. ....... 8 5 722 ~
Noi1hwest ........... 7 6 719 718
Ja~kson ...
5 5 500 559
Waverly ............. 6 6 713 7'15
Pt. Pleasant ...... . 3 4 408 424
Athens ................ 6 9 8J7 927
Wheelersburg ...... 5 8 742 768
South Point ..... :.... 4 8 660 704
Rock Hill ............. I 10 573 741
- -- Friday's Non-SIW results:
Southern630ak Hlll39
l\%&gt;elersburg 65 Minford 58
Wayne 65 Chesapeake 61
South Point 86 Rock Hill 59
Valley 61 Northwest 52
Waverly b7 Ponsmouth West 09
Cree
· nf1'~id
" M1'am1' Trace 39
&lt;
.,..
Po(tsmouth 59 Ashland 42

MARIETTA- Logan 's league
leading Chieft a in s fou!(h t off in·
juries and personal foul pro·
blems Friday night be fore slip ·
ping pas t the Marie tta Tige rs 51·
45 in an SEOAL contest played at
Marietta .
All of the Chieft ain scoring was
done by Kerry York. Keith Myers .
and Jim Wald , despit e the absenCI'
of York and Myers fo r most of tlr
third period.
York fini shed with 11 points
and nine rebounds. even though
he suffered an ank le inju ry in the
third quarter , and fin allv missPd
the final two minut es of the con t t lth k
l I
es w
a n ee n ur ! ··
M;·ers. with 22 points . topped
all scorers. but sat out most of
h hi d
I e t r period aft er picki ng up
his fourth persona l foul.
Lanky Jim Waid came through
for the Chiefs as he canned 18
points and flnl shPd with eight re·

Loga nshot54 .8percent on23of
42 attempts, made five of 16 free
throws . and outrebounde d the
Tigers 34·22.
Brian Mugrage scored IS points
and Mark Bradley grabbed nine
rebounds for tbe Tigers. who· are
now 7-3 and 3- 2.
The Tigers made 19 of 51 field
go als for a 37 .5 effor t. converted
seven of 16 at the lin e. and com·
mit ted 1.1 turnovers.
The Chiefs sport an overall re·
cord of 13·1 and are verv close to
their second consec u t l~e league
cham pio nship with a 5·0 record.
The box score:
UlGAN t5ti - Krrry Vork o·t·tt: K•i th
:-.tyrrs\0-222: Jl mWatdS·2·18; o . .J. Con•ad o.o.o: Erir Wattt0-0.0 TOTi\LSt:l-~lt .
.I IARif:TTA (IS)- Ctar.nc. Clark J.Q.
1: Mike Hukitl3· J.7: Tim McCa rlhy 2·0. ':
Trd Fist 1·0·2: Mark Brad ley 2-0-l : Brian
Muoraoe '·' ·15: Andy S&lt;'hob 1·1,1; Brtan
Morrl' 2-20·&lt;: Dave S&lt;'hletoll 2·0·4. TO·
TALS t9•7·135.
Scnr&lt; by quar&lt;•rs:
LoRan ...... .. .. .... .... .. 13 13 9 11- 'J

round s.

Marie tt a .. . .. . .. ..... . 12 6 14 13-45
Rcs('n.·t' St'O H' . L~a n 56, Marle na 49

SEOAL VARSffY
TE/Uf
W L Pts
~an ................... 5 0 780
Marietta .............. J 2 274
Gallipolis ... .... ........ 2 3 256
Athen s .................. 2 3 246
Jackson . ........... 0 4 199
TOTALS ............ .. .I2 12 1255

Opp
22'i

280
236
270
244
1255

FrWay' s result...:
AtiK'ns 49 Gallipolis 44
~n 51 Mari&gt;tta 45
SEOAL RE'&gt;ERVES
TEAM
W L Pts
Logan .... ..
. ...... 5 0 239
Marietta ..............3 2 226
Athens .. .. .. . .. ...... 2 3 187
Gallipolis .... .......... 2 3 178
Jackson ................ 0 4 104
TOO'ALS .... .......... 12 12 !1M

Opp
178
222
191
176
167

Friday's "estlh.liC

93t

Boy11 Ollkl' HJ,.tr Sd100I BMwtha\1
By Unlled Pn- IMernlftonai
FridQ'8 R.e&lt;illlfll
&lt;\l&lt;!' RuchiPI 66, Akr F.: ~'
1\kr Con'fllr) 7.'1. Ala Manch(I!; IN fo.1
·\ kr E lk'! ;;, Akr Cm t·HCM'C'I" .'oft
1\kr Fir('!';IOII(' 7K Alu N 62
Akr ( ;artit&gt;ld fill. Akr Kl'nmorl' ~

AHS won, 49-14. Adams popped in 15 points. GARS
defenders are Gary Harrison (10) W1d Mark Berklch
(31 ).

SEO standings
TEAM &lt;ALL G~&gt; Pts Opp

---

[}.0-0, Po~u l Md!on I 0-:! TOT.u ....;;

- hutlng the Gallians Inside.
Berkich finished with six rebounds,
Howard five. GAHS had five

l'l\"rmulh

\1m llldJ..~ · .~7 , I , ,.~ ,\ l lll un :-.; o!1111

:Oln nn • • •II• -:

til, S

Pikf&gt;lon 70. UniOi o 47

Minl'n.o 11"1 , &lt;.;, moll \"~Ill'&gt; 4!l

CUSTOM STRIPE PACKAGES

Fraction of Cost of Factory
Super Low Installed Prices
PARTIAL LIST:
MR 4x4 Kits ...................160
Sideliner
4x4 Kits, sharp ..............129
Camara Kits ....................l38
Double Stripe
Faclpry Look ......... From s1S
Renegade Jeep
Kits lr,ainted) .............. 1145

1 7: Jeff Caldw ell . J-3- 9: Bryan Durst, P.'l: •
1, 1\('\' Barber. 1-0-2. TOTAlS- 18-12-48. :

~ ~~~ 11•m

:\l:t ~~ I ' t Tl) 1-". I .•u1,11lll·

1637 EASTERN AVE .
GALLIPOLIS . OH .
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
446 · 1968

t.

Hir kuf'\ t P.~t 1\l. l lrf(JkJ k'ld ~~
Hllllld;~• · il, ltlrtnu.n ~~

•

Auto Tnm Center

.,

Grrg Lr achman . 1'1-!'l- 21 : Tonr Chapmal\. 3.~. ·

M,m l'n f,, .ol ·, 1 Do·l!• l• " S1 .l.ohn 17
i\t,Jnnrt l ' lt·. t~.mt 7: :\1ull••ll I· I~ 1).1

r--------------,
COt tPON

Phil Bailey, 5-0·tO: sean Colley, ~1- ·

13; Sten• Farrell. [).0-0; S cott Rankln, 6-1). •
12: Rick Swain. 2·0-4. Tql'ALS t!- 1-4'2 .~: · ~
f. ..\~ERN (~8) - Ed Colli ns, 3·2-8: .

BOX SCORE.'i
t \'ARSITY!
\1~'TO~ COl'f'&gt;.'T\' U 71- Randy M;:tri'
1-13: Scolt G tlll!a nd 50·1U: Mar k Saund
NS 2-5·9: Brucf' RJv 2-0-.) : .lf'ff Rnrs
h-0-l2: J rrl\ \ 'anm-l'r 2 ·~.!-li : ~irk l. ill ! -H :

Pu. U\n ~ 0 1 L

four occasions in the final period .
but could not catch the home tea m.
With Athens lead ing 43-40 at the
1:32 mark. Lyons canned two fr&lt;&gt;e
throws, then Geoff Dabelko broke
free for an easy layup tl : 101 to all
but ice the AHS victory.
The triumph snapped Athens·
slx·game losing streak and left the
Bulldogs 6-9 overall and 2·3 Inside
the Southeastern Ohio League.
GAHS dropped to 8·5 overall and2.:t
in league play.
"I hate to give a ~ ·me away,"
said Osborne. "I feel that's what we
did In the first quarter. We Jet them
do everything they wanted to. You
can' t put all the blame on the
offense ," he ·added. GAHS missed
time."
its first nine shots from the field and
Athens built up a 14-0 advantage was only one of II in the first period .
before GAHS dented the scoflng
Overall, the Bulldogs conn~ted
column. That came when Todd on 18 of 31 field goal attempts for 58
Miller hit a jumper 11: 10) In the percent. At the line. AHS was 13 of
first stanza .
20. The Bulldogs had29 rehou nds.13
Athens bull! up an 18·2 first period by Steve MacCombs . At hens had 14
lead. GAHS outscored the Bulldogs · turnovers after committing only
42-31 the remaining three periods, two the first hall.
but the first period letdown proved
Gallipolis hit 19 of 45 from the
too much of a handicap to field for 42 percent. From the line
overcome.
GAHS was six of II for 55 percent .
Gallipolis trailed 27-12 during the The Devils had on ly 18 'rebounds halftime intermission, and 35-24 both Chris Howard and Mark
going Into the final period. The Blue Berkich were In fou l trouble early
Devils pulled within three points on

H:\NNAN TRA.CE (47) - Deke Barn esJ

10-~:

'il. H1plr-. '&gt;-!
~l.1 1\ r• rn ti7 ' o'\\!'11 "'''' ~ !
:O.i.J n_, ~\. Lt,~ t ,,n -..: A ~h~ 1r ,, ~ ••
:\l:tn ~ Ur l d rt 11 1; l•··lld,•n• Ilk ~.1
M . IIU'nlll tll ,,.,_ [ , ,I l'. ll k 1.1

.\l,• ron

Morrison Gymnasium. losing both
previous meetin gs Ihere. Vinton
County hosts Well ston this Thes·
da y.

T rac~'"

ATHENS - Veteran G-6 senior
Athens center Matt Jordan was late
getting to .the game Friday night.
Thus, Bulldog Coach Fred Gibson
staned 5-9 junior forward·guard
P.J . Lyons in his place.
The Bulldogs played so well the
first half, Gibson "just left the
starting five out there." Result was
a mild 4!k4 upset victory over
;isjting Gallipolis.
"We haven't been making our
foul shots or Jayups all year- until
tonight - ," continued the AHS
mentor.
In the other locker room, Galllpolls Coach Jim OsbomecalledGallia
Academy's first quarter defensive
elton "the worst I've seen In a long

Friday's scores

~hancey set scoring mark, MHS drops
finton County,remains unbeaten, 82-57
:• ROCK SPRINGS _ Mike Chan·
•
"!'Y
became Meigs' career scaling
•nader as the 6-5 senior banged
""
tiome 22IXJints to pace the unbeaten
~.
•r.araude
C rs to an easl~82,-57 win ovecr
Ymton ou nty here. nday tn TV
lloys basket ball acnon.
: Needing 18 points to top Nick
Riggs' career to tal ol890. Chancev
drilled a 16 looter with tttree
.
.
.
seconds left m the first half to break
he record Chance)· needs to match
·t
·
his 18 points a game average the
,..,mamder of the year to break the
i.OOO pomt mark .
.
. Wh1le the record·breaklng pomts
rn-abbed much of the attention not
~·
·
to be overshadowed was the
tremendous tra m·plav and hustle
·
·
!he states 13th class AA ranked
Ma rauders put out. Winners by cnly
56-:&gt;4 m the two teams. earlier
meeting, Meigs ca me out fi rmg and
took it right to the smaller \'\kings.
: "Tonight was the
. best fi rst hall
•
1
ed
h
we ve P ay · t IS yea r. 1 was

•

Coach Don Eichinger's lltUe
Eagles won the reserve match
48·45. Sophomore Steve Horner
paved the way with 14 points,
Michael Martin added 12, Mark
Gliffin 8, and Tony Hendrix i Jay
Jarrell had 11, Richard Stlttl7, and
Chris Petro 9.
Oak Hill goes to Hannan Trace
next Friday. while Eastern travels
10 Kyger Creek.
Box scores:

pressured Wildcat shooting ares
Bailey and Barnes. while also
sea ling off t1~, inside ga nle of sean
Colley.
Eastern hit 9 of 12 fourth period
foul shots to S&lt;'CUI"&lt;' the 48-47 win.
Eastern hit a sizzling IRof 36 from
the floor for :il Jl('rcent and netted 12
of 17 at the line. HT managed 23 of 5-l
fo1· 4S percent. while hi tting only me
of thre&lt;&gt; at the line.
Eastern grabbed 32 rebounds led
by Leachman and Coll ins with 11
caroms each. Colley grabbed six of
the Wildcat's 18.
EHS had 6 steals, 12 tumovers, ll
assists. and 8 fouls. Ca ldwell had a
fi ne fl oor game and fou r assists. HT
had 5 stPa ls, 8 tumovers. 10 assists,
and 16 fouls.

winning heroics and a 4847 Eastern
win.
Besides excellent clutch fl-.;;'
throw shooting, Eastern was wellrepresented through the ranks by a
great overall team· effort. Greg
Leachman hauled down ll re·
bounds and ripped the nets for a
game·hlgh 21 points. Junior guard
Ed Collins tossed in 8, Ca ldwell 9.
senior Tone Chapman 7, Kev in
Barber 2, and Bryan Durst 1.
Hannan Trace got a fine overall
team eff011 from Sean Colley with
13 points, Scott Rankin 12. Phil
Bailey 10, Deke Barnes 8, and Rick
Swain 4.
FIRST HALF
Saturday's victory was a big win
for Coach Dennis Eichinger's Ea·
gles. who took command of the
tempo early In the first half. Scott
Rankin put HT on the scoreboard
first but Wade Leachman quickly
retaliated at the 6:29 mark for a 2·2
score, the first of slx ties In the first
half. Despite somewhat shakey
play in the opening minutes. when
HT tried to force Eastern Into a
running game. the tempo deliberately slowed and a see-saw scoring
battle developed.
With :40 seconds left ln the Initial
stanza Jeff Ca ldwell broke a J(). IO
tie with a 15-foot jumper. however.
Deke Barnes and HT went for one
closing shot to knot the score 12·12 at
the b\llZer.
Senior Tone Chapman had one of
his best games Inside fort he Eagles
to compliment an 8·polnt seco nd
period by Greg Leachman. Th at
duo sparked EHS to a 27·21 halftime
lead .
A deliberately slowN third from
saw Eastern take fewer shots,
while the Wildcats tried to play an
up-beat game to post an exciting
33-31 comeback.
Playing conservative, but enjoy·
lng a ftne shooting night Eastern
held a slight edge early ln the fin al
round . One key to that success was
a sticky 1-2-2 zone defense th at

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C· 7

Alllanct&gt; 66. ~ Camon ~
Ash!JttlL1 76. Madison Gt;
Asht Ed.,, &amp;1. Astir lla rtxJ r 5!1
Alhf'rts tl Ga lllpoll' "-'
,\uc:tmtow n-Filc-h 5:9. lloitrdman !\.1
.\} ''~'"""'11 .., t\."1, Shml·ood Fall"\·~· '11
Bur trr ton 911. t\f'fll R rnt•\·~ ·11 70
Barl"l'!'i \il~ 6~ . ~ ~ nair!ivUl' %
l];w ~- A\'On l .akr .19
IJt&gt;;rH' Tt'rf'MI \l Oa, C&lt;~ r mll29
Br;r.w Etls1rrn ~·. F'rank F\rr Gtw o
~

IWon:l I Mi o ~. ~h- lvan]a 1\'\ww til
lt'lla lll" 7t f&lt;lmbr1 drr 00
BriJP.·\11' 64. Ti ffin &lt;·olumblan 62 1(/f ,
1\&gt;lpw 69, Mill•·r 5!1
Ben Logan ffi. Tria d .l!l
ll&gt;r C'm W ~ n Rt'!. ~1, Mcl):)nald 19
l\&gt;f'ROOlz ~rl~ \1 Sou il\rrn LOt' ~~
&amp; rlln Hlland S4i. ~f'll."ffiOif'nl tM' n ~~~
BC'Ihtl lfi . Arcanum 8.1

Br:•)lk&gt;;&lt; ~. 9Jdttoy ~· V~l 26
Dloom1 if'ld S9. Lord510'ol"h ~2
Bloom-Ca rroll K.!, Lanr Flsiv&gt;r '14
Bris Tol 67 . F armlnJ110n 4.1
llroolcvtlk' 'IR, C'a rlls l' ~
8 ~'(' N ti2, Unb n Local 61
HU~'f' ~

6.1, Mil l11ns ff'l'"l'\ il

B~'tl

Trdll ~ - S~· si li' U
r an Glm&lt;ll k ffl. Ca nt ons ~
Can C't"'n1 C'al h ~. M an~~ ~ Pt'll'r '"&gt;t
Coin Wi!11.'hf&gt;&lt;.lr-r 'i7, Llt-..rf}· L'nlu o ~I
Ca•t M arEi! rM1 ~ 6G, f rm10n1 S1 Jor :li
Cl'd:ln.il lr 11, Clark SE f1
Cmlt'!"bu TR 69. Da nvUk' ~1
Cmtrrdlk· ~ . KMI f al nrunl 61
lnampiOn -16, Ba ~r 42
fhrnOOn fi.1. W C.t' ~ Uj(ll ~2
O!anutn f alls iii. Oran£{' 4.~

9l, Hllllan:l 11
firrlt'\'lllf&gt; 1\l Hlll"'nro 60
C1ii rk !-ol E h'i, Sprl n .~: ~a\\'ft'i' ~
('i(&gt; ~T h 62, (1(' lti!Otr!; ~7
C'il' t:as1 i1 , 0.• f ol llmtoood till
t"h lll ~lhf&gt;

Cil'

w 1'f'ch t11. f1t·

John liar S1

Clf&gt; Lulhf&gt;I'Wl W ~l S Am ~l 51
Cll• C't'll Cal h ~ - rk• ll o l~ !lilllllt• '1.2

Milhoan, eight others are
honored by Marshall Friday

C1f' St lliOlallus fl. Can Tim Km 47
Uf'ril&lt;l l:l' aM, CJr F'll"!!l Hap f"f
Clr Gll•tn11 1f' 10. (1(' Max Har'P!i. 11
('k' Jotm Ad &lt;Vll.~ n. C'lr Manila\! 91
Col E 67. Col !liorttlland 6.l
(ol w 65. lol lnli'fll."~'ldr'ro«' 61
Col S ~ . Col Walnut Rldw .a9
(ll'

HUJ\' Tll\GTON. W.Va . ilJPl l Kine moi'E' former Marshall Uni ·

Lang! it t.
Th&lt;' ceremon)' raises to 42 the
v('r sity star athletes wer f' induc ted
number of rTK'mbers in the Mar
into the school' s t\thletlc Hall of shall hall of fame.
F'am~ Friday night. Including th~
:i&lt;&gt;l'eral of the mos t recent
"Gold Dust" twins - Pa ul Under· inductees paid tribute to Cam
wood and tlw lat e Cetxo Price.
Henderson. Marshall 's winnlngest
"Until toda;'. there had been a basketball caoch.
void In my life for eight years a nd
"Any time you played for Ca m,
two weeks,"Undrrwood told thoSi' )·ou worked hard and were competi ·
attending the cel'!'mon.v. "Now. tive or you weren't around long,"
Cebe and I ar~ together again.
Wilcox sai d.
Underwood and Price. bot h from
"Ca m was the best coach I E"'er
South Charleston. starred for the had... said Underwood , who was a
Thundering Herd basketball tea m sophomore on Henderson's lat
from 195510 1958. Price. who is No. team. "1l1at's why my sophomore
10 on Marshall 's all ·time sro ling Jist ~:ear w as m~' best year. "
"ith 1,449 IXJlnt s. di•'!l of cancer In
Current Marshall basketball
January 197!! at the age of 42.
coach Rick Huckabay said he was
Price's son. Da in. acceptf&lt;l a impress('(! wilh the ceremony.
ring, ccrtlficat&lt;' and plaque on. his
"This is Ilk£' a history lesson."
(ather's behalf.
Huckabay said. ''l'm going to use
Also en shrined were the Jatr.Ioh n what I h(•ard here tonight In my
Wa tson , Lew Wiocox. Yost Cun- pre·game speech tomorrow to fire
ningham, Mervin Gutshall. Bob up our players."
Koontz, John Milhoan and Tom

rut Dl'Sa~ KJ, rrn rtrarl('!l; ~
Col Wan f't"Mn 59. rol RPa~ $'

Col Ar adr"-rrl)' n.&amp; . W .k&gt;f lf'n;on ~I

Col Easnmor 1!1, Tol llos hwt"r ~
Clll BtwiX'rofl 9.1, ro1 U !Khl ~
Col Har1.-.,· Ill Col Wt•rhlf&gt; 'l'9 t.'WIT1
Col Brookhawn 70, Col Ccolrn nkl l 17
fol WtW't!i iOI'Il" 7'.!, Col Mtmtn 71 tffi l
Col B rl~ ~ - Col ll.brlon f'ranklln Yl
Coldvoat('f" bi . MlnsiN ~1
folnnl'l C raw1()rd ~ Rt1•r rdak' .fi
Columbia ~. Avon ~
Coluni:l la na ~2. l.oo,o,·rl ll lllf' 12
Colu rrbus Crow HrJ . ll luHI OJ\ ~
Con tinrrt lal tl'l. F"l J rnnln~ 'ft
C!4-'it'~ 57 . F'k'ld 50
Ca&lt;ho&lt;-1on 711, Cran\'Uif' ~
(OU n11'\' OOIV 1K1·1 ~ 1 . ~li41l'li \ 'dl ~

12ffJ'1

'

Cu~ · Pall"
Dalton ~ .

.

a

.

'

~

'

fter a hectic day or a
··
workout, you can't beat this pleasure.
Just step in , lie back, and enjoy the
swirling action of hot water massage.
Aaaah! It's enjoyment you can count on,
because your portable HOT SPRING SPA is
engineered to assure trouble-free operation.
Costs less than $20.00 a month to operate.
we guarantee it! Get the HOT SPRING SPA
Experience this week.

.

lil. Akr Sprlnl! 41'

w Sal'm

J~.;W ~~

Gallipolis 36 Athen s 27
n., Wa\"lll' 511. F~lrh1rn ~I
. DB)· Du.itmr 7:1. na, Pottt'f50n foo4
Logan 56 Mari&gt;tta 49
f.\l y TNnpif' Olr 1\!. Mlllord nn· 411
Jan. 21 games:
n•! lh1 ~- Cnl To•m111t' li• •rllat~:P 'i'l
Da) M f'~· dalt· ~7. I:M\· Cokll'll'l Yt'h 1lf'
l.ront on al N011hwest
Green at Rock Hlll
DQ _\ {)ak\l.·~ld !\.!, Cl~ym n N ' m~ Iii
Cambridge at Marietta
'"''
[)fo!lanrP fll. F.lld11 ~~
Point Pleasant at Wahama
D~k' tB. &amp;&gt;llbrook lli 12m"1
FL-\IR FlJRNITURE
Jackson at South Point
Dubl in '7fi. Ma !)'~~·l l ~ ~
E
Oin
lon
H.
WuVI'IC'SI'Ulfo
67
J'l". 24 games:
t: M"'.':" ~- Ha nMh Tmt•t• ~~
Afhens at Parkersburg
l:asr., ood R!!. 01~11:'0 SJ
}~1 011 6fi, Mid ~ a!ll.wn ti..'l
P¢rtsmouth Wes t at Wheelers bu1~
fii5-1371
l:d)(l't'"lm n , Ti nnm .1fi
Ellf'lld ~. M('ntoc ~I
North Gallla at Southern
_/ -.;;;;ijjjiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
5 miles from Silver Bridge on Rt. 2, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.
NorthwE'S t at Waverly
I
F'alrtlf'ld Unbn 7.'!, Amanda ~
f'Hirf'l&gt;id n w Chf'51l'r Lakora ~
C~1'5apeake at South Point
Cool Grove at Rock Hill
1-r.:------~---4
-.
-~
--.-.-~~----- .~;:;;~;;~;;~~~~~;;~,
Marietta at GalliiXJiis
Rossell at Pm1smouth
Huntington East at Point Pleasant
Greenfield at Washington CH
Ja:ckson at Logan
Jan . 25 games:
Southern • t Ravenswood
Za.nf'sville at Marietta
WavPrly at Ironton
s t: Charles at Logan
West at .Jackson

"

&amp; DESIGN

JUST ARRI~ED!

~

Friday's scores

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

Fol\ t' llf' n.!. fAun Iii
FPtl HlX'kll'l,ll I'll Alf'~1nOO \J
~, rxlla1 111. Lootaln 'rl
~hll"'l l'.1rk !'o2. C'ln \'\', ~ I
F'rttnklln l l J:I~ I'll, 1-'l('!(f'f·tnglon 'II'
~)unt lt•t j)_ Caltf'A ·t ~l

n

fl1

~.

!'ldnl-:&gt; Fttl rla v.n \2
Fl fW!'lll't't:&gt; I«J, P.1&lt;'1'ukln Union i l
\JJr;tmk·

.at&gt;.
c 0.1n1"'11.1 ti.l

r:ahanm

t
tt ',~ :f
6 ~~

'
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t
t

(trtJI.l ' f llv ~
S!ro~ll bu !'R

+I

( io.W'\ '11 Til. ,\,!~ 1 S t John ~
(;moo~. (;H.K111 1x.t r~t ~2

Cilmrrl

7!1.

1(111

Wur n.'f'l l\ f'!l ~

;,s

Crundi '\Pol' 41 , .J on~~ than Akk&gt;r .W
GrHII d \'aJ 1!;, F'11 lqur 1 Ha rt:u- !'Ai
C~m'tl ltll ~

92 , l hmbon 72
(;f'!'fflup t t\ ~1 ~. Jronlon Jl
t:n'mOn 61. IF\ Ioloiontotrw• IW
fill'f'flblfJI GrA"ff 7l Rf'\'ert' ~
r.r'('('fl('l.'ll~· T.l. 'V f'lkM• SpMng:~ ~ '
Gl'f't"nl'lt'ld McClain +1. Miami Tr~CT ll
HamlltOII 6.1. Cln P rtlmon .f9
Hanrllb&amp;l Rlw•r Tl . ~ ~

Hc-a1 h m. Ultr• 48
Hli'brotl

Lak~·tJXI

!lfi.

JoM~tow n

41

Riden~ur
CHUTEI

Supply
915-3301

PRESENTS

Shoal a basket and win $500.00! Thah right, Ohio Valley
Bank is giving away $500.00 lo I he firs I person to make a
basket, and it may end up being a layup! To find out more
details, be sure to attend:
Ohio Valley Bank Night
Rio Grande vs. Cedarville
January 2Sth, 7:30 P.M. at lyne Center
Pick up your free game ticket at any of our offices. You
must be present to win.

'

't
t
6

t
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t

�.
:P.-C·8-The Sunday Times· Sentinel

:pEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary

Meigs County agent's corner

:Twice weekly card playing

BY JOHN C. RICE
Coumy Extension Agent
Agriculture

:for
Gallia senior citizens
.
.
BY J. SAMUEL PEEPS
: · GALlJPOLIS - One activity for
: ihe old folk who go out to the senior
· ¢itizens' center on U.S. 35 about a
:~e from Gallipolis is card play·lng. These superannuated people,
:including the author of this column,
: i.ave lunch on Wednesdays out at
·lbe old brick building, and then
: !eltle down at the bng tables to
; rompete at rook. Mm1h rook, that
· ~- Some of tile sharper guys and
:pis play bridge or some other
blmplex game. No gambling. Just
:sompetttion!
·; LEO MOSSMAN was in New
:erteans when the Mississippi
- ~een sank. This five-deck river: ~at had passed Gallipolis in
:A}Igllst of 1985, and Leo brought to
·this newspaper a copy of the
'"'lmes-Picayune - the States
.:ftem" of New Orleans for Friday,
Dec. 13, 1985, selling for 20 cents.
THE EQUIVALENT line at the
· top ct tl» front page of tl» Gallipolis
. Dally Tribune reads: "VoL 92No. 67
Copyrighted 1986 Thursday Jan. 9,
: 1986..... 2 sections 14 pages 25cents A
Multimedia Inc. Newspaper." The
. LDulsiana dally paper has a
. four-column night-time photo oft he
big craft. There are five spectators
In the photo, an mal€s; at least.
· tl»y're ali wearing trousers.
. 'TWO-COLUMN headline reads,
: "Riverboat evacuated after
·crash." The lead paragraph of a
·story written by Greg Belange r and
Bennett Is this: "The Missis · slppi Queen rtverboat collided with
: a tugboat near DonaidsvUie during
; a rainstorm Thursday tDec. 121
·and 272 passengers dressed for a
: gala dinner donned lite jackets and
' Were evacuated as the boat's band
; played 'You are my sunshine'."

:nan

-

• THE JAN . 13 Tribune "river·
:rront" page oontains a correction of
·a name -Waiters- with too many
:letters In it, but it' also contains
:another naine with too many letters
'1n It: Haskins is spelled Hanskins~
:ya can' t win .

mouth Rd .. Gallipolis, is going to
retire this summer.
" YOUNG" Smith, superintendent of Delaware County Schools for
19 years. announced his retlrement
the nrst week in January. It wtll
become effective the end of July.
Ru!IYan, 57. has been an educator
ll years. Before moving to Del a·
ware, he was principal of a junior
high school in Mt. Healthy, near
Cincinnati.
He said I» announced his plans so
tile school board "ill have ample
time to hire his replacement. He
said his 19 years in the post is the
longest anyone has served as a
county superintendent in Ohio.
A native of Cambridge, Runyan
re&lt;'eived a bachelor's degree from
Rio Grande Coilege and earned a
mast er's degree at Miami University in Oxford_. Ohio.
DAN DA \1ES, president of the
Gailia County Community Improve ment Corporation, and
Thelma Elliott, executive secretary
of the Gallipolis Area Chamber of
Commerce. ,invite the general
public to inspect the recently
re modeled structure at 16 State Sr .
"We want the people (both c ity and
COUnty I to know this Is their
building and it is available for
public meetings or functions upon
request," Davies said. For additional information, contact &lt;ificials
at the chamber office , 446-0596.

Friday's scores
\"an rl;lli,r Rutll:'r 51 Day

~onhmonr

.t1

W Muskingum titi. :"'t"" l.t•Kinf;!!on ~

W Ln10n

~.

Wt'Strrn

B~· n

£,.1

Wadsu·onh '+-1. ~oMon 6.1
Wam'll La·al K! . Wt'&gt;l lston 63

Wam•n w,n IU&gt;- tl. Wa nfft Ha rdml!

"

W .J!Prklo 14 . R&lt;10ISIOl\ 11

71

\\' arkln~

:l.l,•mon;l l ti'9. :\r.,. :uk t'Ath .;.·1
\\'!tu~\m 70. l.it:rrf) Ct&gt;ntl'l 4.1
W!l\ IV' Tr,~t'f' h4 . HK'~t~\11\r- ~
Wa\l'l ·~ ril' ld-(~l'l'n "-1 lr~ d bn Lakf' 11
Vl't'lfTon • \\\ · ~, i\1&lt;!dor111il 00. Rud1r\t'

w~

Wrlllll,("'on 'B. Med'drw 41
\\"PIIH11if' 5.~. !li';!IW l.o.-•al ¥1
Wf"itfall .'&gt;1 . Clnl! nagpr ol'l

POMEROY -The Melgs County
Beef Cattle Association wtll hold
their annual meeting on Monday
evening, January W at the Club
Restaurant In Racine. The dinner
meeting \\111 start at 7:00 p.m. The
business meeting will start at 8: 15.
Dale Flowers, manager of Muskln·
gum Uvestock Sales, wtll be tile
speaker.
The 4-H and FFA steer meeting
that was scheduled for Monday,
.Januarv 13. was cancelled due to
weather. This meeting will be t»td
January '!I at the Extension Office .
The Ohio Fruit and Vegetable
Congress wtll be held in Columbus
from January 21·23.
The 1985 farm bill. now formally
koown as "The Food Security Act ci
1985", has been signed into law.
Many questions have been raised
I'egarding its provisions and
implications.
Many of tl» provisions in tl» law
provide rather wide discretionary
authority to the Secretary of
Agriculture, thus, a number of tl»
details as to how these provisions
11111 be translated ·into actual
programs is not known for certain .
Nonetheless. a reasonably good
idea of the program detalls br the
major commodities of interest In
Ohio -corn, wheat, soybeans and
milk - can be pieced togetl»r.
Keep in mind, however, that recent
history suggests that tl» law is
likely to be changed several times
over Its five-year life.
The anticipated rorn program . in
particular, deserves careful consid·
eration. Almost assuredly, tile 1986
loan rate wtll be $2.16 and tl»
season average market price for
the 1986 crop is unlikely to be much
higher - to say In the $2.15-2.25
range. History shows that, whenever season-ending stocks exceed
about one billion bushels, the loan
rate denominates season-average
price. The Secretary Is also given
authority to lower tl» loan rate to
Sl.94 ard to Implement a "market ·
ing loan" payback scheme .
The most optimistic price prospects for 1986 corn come with tl»

w. -slf'l"vtl\o"' \ li.'i. r_:.,]awan&gt; ~1
1\'MtPr.·iJk' ~ ~ W ort hlr1~rton ·.1.1
"-~l!akt' t~. Olrre;Trd f alls 13
Wht.'('lm;I:I.Jf'll li'l . Mmkml ~

IN

Wrklifft• fll. Sokln ~3

'"

Extension notes •••

most pessimistic production prospects. Acreage reduction In 1986
\\1ll amount to a net of either 15%
(12.5% ARP ard 2.5% PIKI or W%
(17% ARP and 2.5% PIK) of a
producer's base. Assuming the high
figure 120'!1-) and 75% participation
in the 1986 program (70.8"4 in 1985),
this would result in about 71-72
million acres planted to corn and
about 63-64 million harvested for
grain.
Dairy Herd Buyout: Do I Participate or Not? .... Dairy farmers
s hould check aU their options before
deciding to participate In tile new
"whole herd buyout" program
passed as part of recent farm
ieg!siatiop , according to an Ohio
da try economist.
Some Ohio farmers may benefit
from the plan, says Robert E.
Jacobson, agricultural economist
at The Ohio State University .
Others may be better off slaying in
business or selling their operation to
another farmer.
The progra m, slated to begin
AprU 1, hopes to reduce milk
production by 12 blllion pounds In 1E
months. Farmers wlll receive
payments from the government
based on past milk production In
return for slaughtering or exporting
. their cows and leaving their
milking facilities Idle. Jacobson
says.
With this new program ava ilable,
the big question is ''How do I know if
this is for me? ," the ""?nomist
says.
"Anyone who is even slightly
interested should do a detailed
analysis of the business and maybe
even submit a bid to the government ," Jacobson says. "A bid
doesn't b ck you into the program ,
and the analysis gives you a better
idea of where you reaily are at this
time.
"it's a complex farm management decision that is very much
financial and partiaily personal,"
I» adds . " You need to be able to
compare the income you can
gen~rate by staying in da irying vs.
what you would get by getting out of
the business, either through the
whole herd buyout or private sale."
Jacobson says farmers should

ask themselves several questions
while deciding whether or not to
participate In the herd buyout
program.
• Wha t were my plans anyway?
If a dairy farmer Is about to retire
and no family member wants to
take over, the government buyout
may be a good way to get out of
dalr;1ng. If a family member does
want to keep dairying, the program
may not be a good option.
• Am I better oft seiling my herd
privately ? For some fa rmers who
want to retire or just quit milking
cows, the buyout may offer enough
returns. Jacobson doesn't think
many herds wut bring more than
$50,(Xl) from the program and a
good size -herd of quality animals

)lnd Mrs. Smith Runyan. Ports -

446-23112

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446-2282

1rimf§· ...ti..eJ

'

. ROCKSPR !NGS - Doors wtll
soon he installed on restroom stalls
at Meigs High school. That action
was taken follOwing a lengthy
discussion at Thursday night's
meeting of the Meigs Local School

board.
Led by new board member Larry
Rupe, the discussion brought out
'lfrat doors on stalls were removed
some time ago i'n the restrooms.
Several members of the board
indicated that this Is a violation of
privacy and Barton, Snowden and
-Rupe voted to have the doors put
bac~ on the stalls and to order new
doQJJIDr those which can oolonger
~-- Powell cast a dissenting
votr.:'.f'ollpe charged that some
lt@J
at the high school and
. - lllgh wtli not use the
'i! lioums. MLTA representative
Jack Sla\in said that restrooms at
the high school are 95 percent
Improved over the situation a few
~sago.
High School Principal Mllier said
that putting doors back on the sta.lls

\\1ll not necessarily solve the
problem. He said that students will
Intimidate other students.
Rupe responded hy saying that
the restrooms should be supervised
"at the salaries we're paying".
Mjller pointed obt that he has lW
students at the high school and 55
teachers. Some assignments he can
make and others he can't, Mill€r
commented.
Snowden commented that doors
on the stalls in the restrooms Is a
matter of privacy and that he
resents any other attitude by school
officials.
Rupe then brought up school fund
raising merchandise selling. He
said that in 198!1 the people of the
dislrict purchased approximately
$W:J,(Xl) of school fund raising
merchandise \\ith $198,(Xl) of this
being paid out to the lund raising
companies while the district kept
$66,IXXI. He cited similar figures for
1985.
"Meigs Local citizens could save
themselves approximately $200,(Xl)

r----Business briefs--..,

Section

J8'r1uary 19.

D
6

per year by simply removing the
fund raising comparies from tile
process," Rupe reported.
Rupe objected to the time
children are now using to peddle
merchandise ard he was authorized again at a 3-1 vote with Powell
casting the dissenting vote to use
newspaper to poll patrons of the
Meigs Local District to deterrnlne
how they feel abuut the selling
programs held in tbe district.
The board accepted McNealy
and Patrick &lt;i Jackson as the agent
of record for administering the
hospitalization Insurance program
of the dtslrict but again, the use of
local businesses to handle matters
was brought up by Rupe and Barton
who said that the board should stay
local.
Supt. Morris and Asst. Supt.
Carpenter said that the Jackson
finn was selected after presenta ·
lions were made hy five businesses
before representatives of the three
local district earlier. Carpenter
said that the Jackson firm presentation pointed out more specifically
what the firm could do for a district
as agent of record while the other
four indicated that tiley didn't know
what to do but were wililing to work
at filling a district's need.

Bill Quickel of the Quickel
Agency In Pomeroy was on hand
ard stated that it would be no
problem for his firm which has
combined with a Gallipolis agency
In handling the rJ2a!SSarY work and
Quickel pointed out that the combined firm already has the Carleton
School in Meigs County and Gaiiia
County schools.
Powell , Barton and Snowden
voted to use the Jackson firm which \\111 be of no cost to the
district - with Rupe casting the
dissenting vote.
With agenda items out oft he way,
several board members discussed
other items about which they are
concerned.

Handicapped signs
Barton said that he had asked for
handicapped signs at the high
school and that they were not up
yet. He asked that the signs be
posted. He also said that the vocal
group, the Chorallers, were told
that the vocal Instructor did not
have time to take them Into solo and
ensemble competition In Athens.
High School Principal James Miller
said that he had signed a number ci
entry forms for vocal students to
take part. Barton said that the
competition should he open to more

than a lew and he asked that the
matter he looked into.
Rupe discussed the 1985 unencumbered balance and suggested
that the board suggest area sci need
to use the money for students. Since
the appropriations resolution will
be prepared by Treasurer Jane Fry
for tile February meeting, it waqs
suggested that the superintendent
and principals provide lnpu t Into
where tile needs are for spending
the carry-over balanoe. To questioning by Rupe, Supt. Morris said
that the training and experience of
applicants Is not used as a
f:(etriment to hiring reachers in the
district. The only time this is a
consideration is when a fl~ed
program has limitations on expen·
ditures and a teacher must he hired
whose pay scale wUI fit into the
program budget. Rupe asked for a
list of applicants for teaching
rosttions in the future.
Snowden urged that tile in the
main hall at thl&gt; Harrisonville
School be repaired. He asked about
foundation repairs at the Salem
Center School addition and was not
given an answer as to whether or
not the repairs have been made.
Barton questioned the failure of the
Meigs Band to take part in the

Christmas parade in Pomeroy and
a planned makeup Christmas
concert was not held. The last two
meetings of the band boosters have
been cancelled by tre band dlrec -.
tor, Barton complains .
Items extend meetings
Powell commented that items
brought up by board members at
the close of the meeting absorbed
some 45 minutes of time and were
matters that should have been
taken up with the administration'
and oot brought to a public meeting.
Powell charged that meetings
would be going to 2 a.m . if this
procedure continued.
Barton and Snowden responded
by charging that some of the.
matters had been brought to the
administration some time ago and
that no action was taken thereby:
making a public airing necessary :
they said.
li
A parent, Iva SISson spoke triefiy
stating that there are no matters too
small for consideratbn lor the
board for the good of tl» students.:
Mrs. Sisson said that she has
attended a number of board'
meetings over the past months but;
that Thursday night's session is the
first one to seem like a board
meeting.

Farmers move into the computer age
Brenda HeMOII

C. Rolft' Barron

Pair joins staff
GALLIPOLIS - Brenda Henson and BoMy Thomas have joined
the staff of Charm Beauty Shop.
Henson comes to Gallipolis from Columbus and has attended
Eastland Vocational Beauty School and tile Ohio State Barber
College. She has also worked at FlO Hair Designs.
Thomas is originally from Stockport, where she attended Morgan
County Vocational Beauty School.
Henson is available for appointments Tuesday through Saturday
• and Thomas on Monday and Thursday.
Appointments can be made by calling 44f&gt;.3703.

OVMA meets at RGC
RIO GRANDE -The director d. the Procurement Outreach Center
was the speaker a1 the January meeting of the Ohio Valley
Management Association.
Kenneth E . Shelton spoke on the purpose of the Procurement
Outreach Center and what services it can !I'Ovide to local businesses.
The association meets at 7:30a.m. on the first Tuesday of each
month in Room 115 of the James A. Rhodes student center on the
campus of Rio Grande College and Community College.
For more information. contact Dwiglit Leedy at 245-5353, or
1-l0}2E2-7201.

Burlile Oil purchases Huron Oil
GALLIPOLIS - The Burllie Oil Company of Galllpolls has
purchased Huron Oil of Jack!Kln, Huron Oll Owner Alfred Stewart
and Burille Oll Owner Robert H. Burlile have announced.
Huron Oil is a jobber of Gulf Oil products, operating mostly in
Jackson and Vinton counties .
The purchase includes real estate in Jackson, Coalton, Wellston
and McArthur.
Burlile's main office is In Gallipolis with other offices and bulk
plants in Point Pleasant. W.Va .. Kenova, W.Va., and JackSOn.
In addition to Gulf, Burllle is also a jotber for Union 76 products.
No purchase price was disclosed.

RIO GRANDE - A six-hour seminar to introduce Lotus 1-2-3
software on the IBM Personal Computer will be offered at Rio
Grarde College on Wednesday, Jan. 22, from 9 a.m. to 3: :D p.m. The
seminar Is open to people interested in business, government and
home computer use.
"Hands-on" activities will include moving the spread s heet, saving
and restoring Illes and an introduction to developing an accounting
program . A certificate for 0.6 continuing education units wlll be
awarded to participants.
Enrollment will be limited te 14 and registration must he
completed by Jan. 21. The cost of the seminar is $125, including
instruction and equipment use.
To register, call 245-5353 or 1-lm-282·7201. ext . 325.

YOUR CHOICE

1986 Pontiac Bonneville 4 Dr.
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GAlliPOLIS - C. Roger Barron, Senior Marketing and
Customer Service Representative for Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Company's Gallipolis area office, recently retired following
more than 28 years of service.
Barron, of 122 Bastian! Dr .. began his career with Columbus and
· Southern in 1957 as a residential representative. He has also been a
. general sales representative, general marketing representative and
· · general customer services representative.
'
A graduate of the State Highway Patrol Academy, Barron also
holds an Associate Degree in Industrial Arts from Ohio University.

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Meigs board agrees to have doors installed

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AUTOMOTIVE ELEC. REPAIR:
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Alternators
Troubleshoot Wiring
Generators ITractorl

7.9°/o

• What are mv alternatives if I do
get out? Farmers need to be aware
r1 all of tl»ir rotentiai options. They
need to know before they enter the
buyout plan tt they can put their
land to other uses or If there are
employment opportunities off the
farm .

__

GALLIPOLIS ELECTRIC SERVICE

1983 OLDSMOBILE
NINETY EIGHT REGENCY

• Am I financially strained? The
economist says farmers facing
severe pressure from their credi·
tors may find tile buyout plan a
good way of getting out of the
industry quickly ard being able to
pay off some debts.
·

1981 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88
ROYAL 2 DR.

CLOSED MONDAY, JAN. 20
OBSERVANCE OF MAmN lUTHER KING DAY

SALES:
Industrial V·Btlts
Lawn Mower Y·Btlts
Auto-tin Y·Btlts
Electric Motors
Fan Blodts
Fuses

would be worth considerably mar~
than that.

SUPER USED
CAR SPECIALS

JIM
BILL'S
SINCE 1933

: SMITH E. Runyar, son of Mr.

•

January 19, 1986

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

CCC adds electronic guide
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA . - Con!Kllldated Communications
Qroup of Poillt Pleasant, W.Va., is now providing The Electronic
Program Guide (EPG), an on·screen program guide for its cabl~
television subscribers.
The new satellite-delivered programming service on channelll
provides upda.ted programming information 24 hours a day for 18
cable channels, according to Ted Rood, assistant regional manager
for Consolidated Communications.
The schedule wtll be transmitted by United Video, lnc., via
satellite from Tulsa. Okla. Network, local, independent, basic and
pay programming schedules are fed Into Untied Video's computer
system, along with the individual system's localized programming
and advmislng information. The data is thell relayed to the satellite
and transmitted to CCG.
Program schedules will appear one Une at a time, scrolling
upward from the bottom. Each .D-mlnute segment ct !I'ogrammlng
Is coior-hlghllghted . Repeating every three minutes, the EPG
system displays the curt'€11t hour and also highlights the next two
hours of programming by Ustlng the channel number, network call
letters, time and program name.

HOUSTON (UP!) - A former
Cotton Inc. official is selling a
computer package to farmers to
help them document their cash
flow, information that proves useful
as they strive to become better
managers and obtain loans.
David Cox directs Intelligent
Decisions Inc., which is based In
Raleigh, N.C .. with a sales office In
Fresno, Calif. Cox was interviewed
recently by telephone during a
selling trip (Q the Southwest.
"The current tight financial
times faced by farming In general
actually are favorable times for
farmers to invest in the IDI system.
The costs are fully known In
advance and are low relative to the
improved financial retums that
farmers can get by using that
computer," Cox said oft he package
that sells for $4,500.
Since the system is especially

helpful In determining and explain ing a farm 's operating loan requirements, many farmers see it as an
ald to obtain continuing financing,
he said.
Formerly a senior vice president
with Colton Inc., Cox was appointed
in lim to supervise a computer
project for farmers.
IBM was ready to designate
Cotton lnc. and its program as a
Value Added Dealer, but tile
struggling farm economy prompted cotton officials to kill the project
in 1984, Cox said.
Cox then acquired the rights to
the software and was designated by
IBM as a Value Added Dealer.
Other Cotton lnc. executives also
involved in the new company are
Lawrence Shaw, former CI analy sis director and R.O. Cramer,
former CI consuitart.

"We are s till doing the job of
helping farmers," Cox said of the
executives' departure from Cl. Cox
has been working with computers
since 1954 and has been working in
agriculture for the last:!! years.
"The farmers who are really
going to survive are going to use
every trick in the hook," Cox said.
He said agricultural lenders have
become ''very Interested In seeing a
farmer present a detailed plan of
his cash operations."
Cox said the computer package
- about 50 have been sold and
installed - gives customers the
cash flow documentation on their
individual farms that proves helpful when they approach lenders.
"We're going to go through a
period of recovery. We're going to
see a level of management that Is
better than we had before," Cox

II"edicted
Intelligent Decisions sells IBM
personal computers along with
speciallzed software and also provides the training farmers need for
f€COrd keeping and decision·
analysis.
"The level of support needed to
have the farmer be a computer user
is very high," Cox said . He said
company employees will go to the.
farmer's home to train the customer although the firm perfers to
conduct regional training if a
number of customers are concentrated in one area .
"I haven' t met a farm situation
yet that we couldn't make the
system work," Cox said .
"I think I've never failed to look a·
fanner in the eye ard say the most
important ingredient is your decision to do it," Cox sald.
~·

Farm federation endorses tax reform
By SON.JA HILLGREN
UP! Farm Editor
ATLANTA (UPI)- The nation's
largest farm organization has
en.tlrsed federal tax refom• as a
means to discourage excessive
investment In agriculture by outside, non- farm interests.
As part of a long list of
resolutions, delegates to the 67th
annual convention of the American
Farm Bureau Federation endorsed
repeal ol the investment tax credit
as part of a tax reform package the
group wlll push before Congress
when it resumes debating tax

reform after returning trom recess.
The Farm Bureau tax package
also proposed taxing sales of
Uvestockk as onllnary income
rather than as capital gains, which
is taxed at a lower rate and has
encour ..ged outside Investors to add
to surplus red meat and dairy
supplies.
Earlier this week, delegates
turned back an effort ·endorsirtg the
current tax code and instead
adopted a reform package drafted
by a committee headed by James
Lockett, president ci the Oklahoma
Farm Bureau.

Delegates said as much as 30
percent ci U.S. agricultural production is the result of current tax
Inducements. Surpluses of agricultural products In excess of demand
have rnntributed to low commodity
prices and depressed farm income.
Fam1 Bureau delegates also
opposed federal tax increases as
part of deficit reducing efforts by
the Congress.
They rejected compromise legislation opposing aU tax increases
unless accompanied by significant
spending cuts.
Delegates agreed that the definition of national security should be

SAN ANTONIO tUPil - The
founder and president of thriving
La Quinta Motor Inns Inc. chain
says the hotel industry, facing
prospects of more bankruptcies In
coming months, is moving more
toward the no-frills concept.
"We are the new trend, and we're
17 years old," says Sam Barshop,
head of the San Antonio-based
chaln of 163 moderateldy priced
motor inns in 29 states. With 22 Inns
under construction, the finn plans
to boost tile total number of
properties to :nJ within the next five
years.
The chain reported revenues of
$43 m Ulion In its first six months of
the fiscal year that liegan In June.
compared to $.1!.5 million for the
same period in 1984.
"A lot ci people have copied what
we're doing. That means more
competition, but it also broadens
the market. More people wtli be
using this typeoffacllity," Barshop

said.

La Quinta hovers somewhere In
between the hotels that charge $100
and up per room per night ard
budget motels, he said. La Quinta
rooms generally let for$20to$40per
night.
But wl.at La Quinta does not ri.fer
- In-house restaurants and night·
ciuoo, room serviCE' - is what the
industry is now learning does not
pay to keep, Earshop, 56, said .
"I think the trendwlll be no frills,
a moderate price. What you're
getting away from Is large meeting
rooms, large lobbies, the discos,"
he said.
The Holiday Inn people are
branching out with lower cost
Hampton versions, while tl» Mani ·
ott people are coming out with their
Courtyard version, he said. "It's
more upscale, but that is their
version of the no- frlll ," he said.

"The more seiVlces you give
people, the more chances :,uu have

of making a mistake," Is his motto.
"We don't try to be everything to
everybody. You can do a better job
keeping the room clean and giving
~service at the desk. That's the

OOsiness we're in."
Barshop says the advantage to
his operation is that, "we're wholly
cwned; we don't franchise" - a
position he says gives the firm more
control over quality and rates.
if Barshop anticipates a rash of
bankruptcies in coming months, he
also anticipates an eventual leveling off of this response ro an
overcrowded market. "It's like
anything in the real estate industry.
The real estate industry is overbuilt, period, " he said.
Pari of the blame Is due to the
"1981 tax law tha t made people do
business for tax reasons rather than
for good business reasons," he said.
"So everybody jumped in and
started building. Now they're disappearing, " he said . ''There are just a
lot more Indians than there are

'British Air heading to public
FRANK R. SCIINAUE
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - British
Airways is about to take off on the
longest Oight in Its 60-year history.
Colin M. Marshall, chief executive officer of the British earner,
expects blue skies and no turbu·
lence on its joumey Into public
ownership.
The carrier's Initial stock offl'l'·
ing, which Is being valued at more
than $1.5 bllllon, was delayed
several times during l!llri by the
Brltlsh government.
"We still are awaiting a decisbn
by the govenunent on the date
when· this wtll occur," Marshall
said In an interview . ."OUr best

guess is sometime In the middle ci
the year."
Marshall, former head of Avis
Inc. in New York, said the only
oootacle to the line's initial public
1
·t fled
offering is a class-act on sut I
by passengers of Laker Airways.
the no-frills airline.
Former Laker passengers have
until Feb. 16, to set111' any and all
claims made against several transatlantic carriers including British
Alrways.
In jest. Marshall said he would
like to see British A1r stock land on
the New York Stock Exchange .
However, the chief . executive
said, the first and major concem for

the carrier in 198i is Increased fuel
costs.
"We have seen our fuel costs at
Kennedy airport rise by 13 percent
for a galion of aviation kerosene or
k j t fu 1 w 1 ha
h d
ero e
e.
e a so
ve a
increases of at least that _amount.
and In fact , on averaging, In excess
of 13 percent in Britain. We're
seeing increases all over the world
but not quite 13 permrr ."
Marsha ll said "the oil companies
of course have all sorts of excuses
a nd reasons for this despite what
you may hear about forecasts for
lower prices." They seem to zero In
on the fact there is a shortage of the
distillate which Is used for produclng aviation fuel and heating oil , he

•
'•

expanded to consider agricultural'
production .
:
"We believe a strong and II"oduc: .
tlve agriculture Is essential to ou ~.
national defense and should toe:
considered when formulating na~
tiona! security policy," the resolu•
lion said .
:
Delegates said their resolutiol(
was consistent with an admonltiort
to the convention by Sen. San{
NuM, D-Ga., ranking Democrat 01)1.
tl» Senate Armed Service Commit;
tee, who said a financially dis~
tres5ed agriculture "jeopardizesthe ~anomie found a tion" on whic~
national ~urity rests.
.;

..

Hotel industry moving towards no
· By RENEE HAINES

•••
'
:2:
••

frill~,.

chiefs out there."
New tax Ia ws will mean (
slowdown in development, he bet.
iieves, but Inflation will continue t ~
keep profit margins down.
.:
"I don 't know of any businesscl'
making II» margin they did five o~
six years ago," he said.
.•
But Barshop believes in "going
against the tide." planning to";
inCrease growth while others in the :
Industry decline.
~
"You don 't hunker down. You do '•
things when other people tell you :
:,uu shouldn't be doing them ," he~
said .
•
"Real estate prices are stable. ··
The cost of C&lt;lnstruction Is stable . .;
lnterest r ates are down . If you start &gt;
a product tOday, by the time it :
opens, it's IE months . Hopefully bv ·
thattime the turn wUI be there. And :
if it 's not. it will be tl»re in a year ," ;

.

he reasons.

~

"Now is the lime to be doing~
things If you have the finan cial•
capabilities." he said .
•

ownershi~
said .

•
•
"This Is ·particulaiy s hort in th~:
United Stat es," Marshall said. " I
a m told by some of the oil
companies there was a shortfall oh
something like 35 million barrels of !
the distillate in the U.S. market this:
fall .
"As a result . the United St ates:
has 11ten siphoning supplies out of!
the European market, which
Russians traditionally dump oil into ~
during the fail."
~
This year, because of very poor~
production, Marshall said, "the ~
Russians for the first time in many!
years have not dumped any fuel:
into the European market at all." :

me;

.,
~

�Page- D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January 19, 1986

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

·cause of deadly explosion
at chemical plant unknown
ASIITABULA. Ohio IUPI ) One day alter an explosion tipped
through a chemical plant m northeast Ohio, killing two people and
injuring several others, Dramond
Shamrock Corp. officrals were still
trying to pinpomt the cause
"We're upset about thiS, and we
want to know why rt occurTed,"
Diamond Shamrock's Ken Haseie~
sard Saturday
Shon ly before 11 a m Fn day, an
explosion rocked the facrilty, send

rng a cloud of g1 een dust mto tbe air
In addition to the two workers
killed, at least seven plant em
ployees, seven outside cont1 actors
and one flrefrghter wei'(' InJUred
erther du nng 0 1 after the explosron,
Haseley sard
"We know that where tbe explu
sron took place ammonmm drch ·
romate Y.as bemg proct'sscd ·
Haseley sa rd ' The question 1s. whv
did tbe explOSIOn OCCUI ?
'We can' 1 sfl&lt;.-culate II e don t

,..---Ohio briefs:----.
Men indicted in shooting death
NEW CUMBERLAND, W Va tUPII- One Ohro mdn and two
from West V1rg1nra haH' been indicted. in the shooting de.lth of a
Chester, IV Va. woman
Charged by a Hancock County grand JUI"I' Thursda1 1\CI e CA'Orgc
Ely of Steubenvrlle, Ohro, John Mart m of Follansbee. WI'&lt;~ . and
Franklm Tesack of Weirton. IV Va
They are accused of bu rglanzmg the home of \I'Illldm and Bell\
Pear9Jn Bettv Pearson was shot to deat h dunng the burglar"&gt; Jd,t
month

Rockefeller selling resorts
WH ITE SULPHUR SPR INGS. W \ 'a 1UPI , - LiUranCP
Rockefeller 1s sellmg severa l of hts resons m til~ \ 11 grn Islands.
Wyommg and AI !ZOna to CSX Corp , "h1ch olso owns The
Greenbrter luxu"'' n?sort m southPrn West Vng1ma

•

Bill Gtlmo!'!'. a SJXlkesman fm The Greenbner sa id Satu rda; that
CSX. based Ill Cleveland. IS buymg tbe Ne" Ymk nu llionane·s
RockResorts Inc for an und isclosed amount l.ctt ei s of In It'll \ " PIe
sigTJed !hiS month, he sa1d
Among the properlles mcluded In the sate are the Caneel Ba 1
reso11 on St John's Island and Lllt le DLx Bm 1t'SOI1 oo I'll gm Gm cia
Island It ai!IJ Includes the Jackson Hole L:ldge, Jcnm Lake l.odge
and Cotter Bay VIllage resort m Wyomrng. Gilmmc satd
CSX also Will acquu'(' The Boulders IPS0\1 m C'atefree Am
Gilmore sa id
In add!fron. CSX "'11 manage the V. oodstuck Inn m \ 'ermonl
which will cont mue to be owned b) Rockefeller an uncle 10 Sen .la1
Rockefeller. D W Va
The Rockefelle! famill has been dl\est mg laige chunks or !I S
properlles fi'Ci' nl ll

Krishnas offer meals
CLEVELAND I UP!t - The Hare KriShnas clatm 1be1r
wgeta1 Ian Meals on Wheels program fE'&lt;'ds mo1 e people fo1 less
mane)· that maJOr agencies do
The KriS hnas began then program m Jul\ !9ll-l "lFn Clc' eland
C1tv Cou rnl granted the group S.ll,OOJ aft er the} promtsf&lt;i to ft'E'd
mar'(' people wuh less monev than agencres wnh fatt e1 budgets
Some 50,000 meals and 18 mont hs la ter, tbe Knshnas claim tbe)'
no" handle 1.500 mea ls a week
Rolling through needv nPrghbor hoods of C\ewland. the Knshnas
say they serve four cou~&gt;;e dmners for J.l cents. compat f&lt;i to the $1 50
to $2 50 cost of meals from other agenctcs
·our formula 1s simp\p," sa1dTei n Sheldon p10gr amd11-ect oi fm
the 1\riShnas' Pa\,\ c~ Chari I IPS
--...~don t ser&gt; e meat V. e don't ask for persono~l sa la liPs And" e
takf' out work so setJouslv that wp re d('tf'Jmuwd to make gradua tes
of our food pmg~·am people" ho can fccd them s~\1 ~s. Sh~ldon said
It' s not a quest ion of com erting aU the meat ~at~rs mto
\Pge1anans. Sheldon sa td "It 's a matter of wakmg up to the
economic reality of how ma nv more people can bt&gt; ft'!l" tth non meat
sources of protPm like g1 ams mrlk products and IPg&lt;'lablcs
Sheldon sa id solvmg mner ctt\ hu ngc1 and pro mot mg d1eW r,
reform are mseparable
" If \\e can't IE'ach people ho" to cook and carr for themsel\ es. then
;ust filling cmpT) be\Ues ts not gelt mg a! lhe hunge1 probit•m . lw
sa1d
The Kt l'hnas teach people hOI\ to cook at trn loca tions Ill Ohio.
PennS\ Jv ank1 and West \'1rgmia

Police ask for help in search
WJLLOUGHBY 1UPl \ - Police officials are askm g rm help to
locate a grwn \ 'olv o bc\ICI ed to be !he em thai ll t'!lnl'Sda' night hll
a Wrlloughb1 Y.Oman breakmg bon&lt;" m both legs
The ca1 ma1 ha; e damage to Its nghl front Sid~ offiCe! Rick
Toqlf'v said Saturda1
Ma l ga1 et Sharp, 35." as "alking along RIWI St!l'f't 1\ hen she wa s
hit She \\as In fatr condltton Suturdal 31 l~Ik l' Count\ M~ monal
Hospital \1 PSI

Gunman shoots self in head
Cll\C[)';I\X\1 !L: Pl l -A gunman l'.anted on a murdet charg&lt;&gt;
shot htmsdf tn tbe h~ad afte1 holdmg a fo u1 1ra1 old gul hostage
four \!ours Fnda1, authonties repmif&lt;i The gill \\a s not harmed
The gunman Ma1k Lmdsev Jones 25. Cmllllndtl. "as m CIItical
condition at Un11 pr s111 Hospit al bemg t rca trd for" gunshot" ound to
hts jpft lrmple
J ones took AliCia Bra\\n, l. hostag1• at I 1&gt; p m 1f.S T&gt; F11da'
after hr sa ~ offJcf't sat n ve at the L..a un.:J Homrs npd rtmr nt s on
Cmcmnat1 s west s1dr to arf'('st htm on susplliOn of mu1ck•r j..XJIIu.'
sa id
"Whm JXllicc di SCO\ Pied h1m there hr fn ed a shot to md1t atr hr
II OU!d !PSIS I raptUll' said Cmcmna tt Poiirr Ch1r f Lam II hah•n
OfftCCI s su11uundrd !he apa1 tment buildmg and nego11ated on Ihi'
Irlephone" 1th .I ones r\rgotwtors toought the\ had convmcrd him to
gw e up

~\h{'n

h£' shot l11 m sPli

tn

ttw

hPad

at ~",

l r-, p m aur ho ntles

Said

Aftei hearmg the shot and grtllng no n:'Sponse ft om Jones on tbe
telephone. police b10ke mt o the a p&lt;~rt mrnt and found Iones slumpf'd
on a couch" 1t h a gu nshot \\ound to hiS left temple The grr\11a s finr

Part y launches campaip!
CLE\T.LA.\/D 1UPI1- Dt•muct alll Na uona!Chau man Paul G
Kirk krnd led !he fu'P Fltda' mght the Jl&lt;lt'!\ fallhfu\ nccded lo launch
the campatgn lcadmg up to tbe No1 ember r lrci!On at" h1ch ttme be
predicted a Democra tiC VICIOI}'
He told a fu nd raiSmg dmne1 where some ml pa111 faithful pa1d
$150 a plat e that he fpll Sens Howard Metzenba um and .John Glenn
bot h D-Oh1o. would be Ill the maJOilty m !he Senale m \987 (,Jcnn IS
Sl'ekmg Je election this yea 1 and is bemg chd llr ngr rl h1 Rep
Thomas Kindess of Hamil1on
' 'We can nrve t tum our backs on the&gt; mmor tltrs

Ktr k sa rd

The

Democrats stood behmd South Africa. fo1 r 1gh ll adc the rarm~rs
The Democrat s are m Ibe fo urfront with p11de , st'U respect, dignit y
and hard work These are thr values we stand for
Heard that \\hen President Reagan was runnmg he ""' e1 talkPd
about Republicans
"He talked about Roosevelt He talked about Harn Truman He
talked about John F Kennedy He talked about Hubet1 Humphre}
HP talked about Scoop .Jack9Jn, · Kirk said "People were saymg
thE'n that we should beeome more like tbe Republlcans
·'The las1 thing 1hrs country needs IS two Republican pa1 ttes, " Ku·k
sa rd.
Kirk said \he Democrahc Parly in 1986 has to do what the
Democrats did in the days of the New Deal It has to be a party
unafraid of change. he said.

January 19, 1986

t.

\

I

'i

.(

EIIIP IIIVI\IHI\1

Public Notice

Sl;r VIC I:S

11

NOTICE Of

Help Wanted

PRIVATE SALE

Notte&amp; IS herebygtv., that

on J anu r ry 31 , 1986 at
1 O·OO A M a private oale
Will be hold at the offices of

T~eCantto~ITrustCo. NAof
Mtddleport 0 rio to •II for
ceah the follow1ng collateral
to wit.
1-1981 Ford 4•4 Ptckup
Senot # 2FTDF14EO
BCA07022
The Central Trust Co NA
of Middleport, Ohio res~rvea
the r1gh1 1o bid at this sale

(1)17 20. 213tc

MediCal llborttory techmoen
Apply 1n person b1twten 9 &amp;
4 30 Mon -Fn Medical Plaza.
203 Jackton Pike, Galhpolil,
Ohio
Pott~n Open. Social Workar
Contract, pert t1m1 MS preferred. SS with counselmg ••P•
r~ance requ1rtd
For further
Information . cell 1hl Gellla
County Httlth Otpertment at
814·441·ol812 eJ1ten1lon 292
Equal Opportunity Employer

cludmg talks wrth the opposttlon
Spokesman Bernard Ka lb sard
Shlaudeman would VISit Central
AmerK'a f01 consultat ions aimed at
determmmg "if there IS any way m
"h1ch " " Ihmk wp can eon ttibut~­
to the ne" Contad01a effo\1 .
But calling Nicaragua s Sandi
msta g01 e1 nment 'the heart of the
problem · Kalb cautiOned tbe
admm1st ration 11111 consrde1 anv
Contadora SP!Uement · from the
standjXltnl of wo1 kabi lttv ·
At tlF same llffit'. \he d&lt;?part
mrn1 s top official for Latm Amen
ca n affairs. Elltott Abrams. hmted
stronglv that tbe Rfoagan will. as
expected . as k Congress to approve
m1htarv a1d fm the Contra guernl
la s seek mg to ovNt hrow tbe
Managu,J gov crnmcnt He sa id
1he1e IS noconfladlction" betW&lt;'l'n
Sff'king a peac&lt;' sett lemen1 and
backmg tbe rebels
Abrams sa id "sweet talk" wrll
not gel the t:nlted Sta1es anywhere
"1th the SandmiStas "Pressurt' has
to be appllPd if they're gomg to
agree - diplomat ic pressurP and
mdltary pressur\' and economic
pressure. he said
··Nolhing Is going to come out of
tbem except rl'presslon," hPsald m
a 1\t'WS conference beamed to
Britain b~ the U S Information
Agency "So we think It LS ImJXlr·
tant to continue the pressure."
The administration is imthortzf&lt;i
to prov ide $27 mllllon in "humanltarran," non-mJlltary assist1lllce to
the Contras through March and Is
marntaming a trade embargo
against that Central American
coumry It accuses of fomenting

I NEEMY I

2 bedroom unturnlhlld t railer.
deposit requ~red. M1ddleport/
Ohio. 304 882 3267 or 304773-5024

I····
KJ
.......---- ...
I THAWE I
[J I t J

44

Apartment
for Rent

•

people and Injured eleven others at the Diamond

Shamrock chemical plant located wtslde of
Ashtabula. The blast, IICCOrding to authorlltes, does
not pose a threat to the sumJUndlng residellts.
~

f!'VolutiOn m the region
The mrlit ary assistance package
Reagan is expectf&lt;i to seek from
Congress could. by some t'('port s,
amount to as much as S:IOO million.
Abrams said It would be "logi·
ca I · 10 rl'Spond to mcreased Cuban
support for tbe Sandin istas "by
giving' some marl' beip for those
woo are flghtmg for democracy ··
Kalb said Shlaudeman would
'lSit Panama , Colombia, VPnezu
cia. Costa Rica and El Salva dor on
his tnp starting next week Next
month, Ka lb sa id , the envoy hopes
to IOSit MPxico, Hondu ras and
Guatemala

said the president will hlt tbe
Gramm- Rudman targe1 wit oou1
rarsmg taxes
The military spending mcreaS&lt;'.
lack of taxes and SPVere budget cuts
PXIJPl'led Ia be Ill the prcsidenfs
budget have led congresSional
budget leaders to declare the
document If!'!' leva nt before 11
arrives.
"A cut of \hat magnitude m
domestic programs is patently
ndrculous,'' said Rep Les Aspin,
chairman of the House Anned
Servtces Committee "We des·
cnbed last year's presidential
budget submission as dead on
arrival I'd say this year's budget
request 1s dead before arnval "
But Gray disagreed
'! think 1his year his budgo-t IS not
dead,' Gray said. 'We'rE' gomg to
take a good, hard look a1 11 "
Under Gramm Rudman, the cur
rent deric1t of more than ml bl\ilon
mu st be chopped to $144 billion nex1
nscal year If Congress and the
prestdent cannot agree on budget
cuts or taxes mc ~ases- large
enough to hit the target, automatic
budgPt cuts take effect m no-arly
every program - exCPp1 Social
Sccunty and a number of other
"safety net" programs.
Some congi'I'SsJona lleade~&gt;; have
been suggestmg a "summtt " meet
mg among themselves and admintstrat1on ofricrals to t ry to agree on a
budget pian beforP the automal!c
cu ts of Gra mm-Rudman klck m

Gray sa rd be would "support" the
summit tdea but noted the adm1n1sIration "will have to play a vital
pan " In such diSCUSS IOns
"The problem is the White House
ts not exertmg leadership," Gray
main tamed
AdmmiStration and co ~s10nal budget offices es timated last
week !hat Sll 7 biU10n in cuts must
be made this spring under GrammRudman to satisfy the CU!TE'nt
fi scal year's deficit rf&lt;luctlon
targets
ThoSP figu res are expected to be
verrfled next week and imph&gt;mented March 1 m vtrtual\y !'Very
ar\'a of govPmment
But tooSP cuts are only an
"appetizer." Gray said. "The entree IS yet 10 come," hes said
Under Gramm-Rudman , the
morp thil n nxJ billion deficit must
be dropped d:lwn to $144 blllion nexl
fiscal year. U Congress and the
prl'Sident canno1agree on tbe cuts
among themselves. automatic reducttons lake effect - similar to
this yea r's au1omatic procedurl'
The severity of tbe automal!c
cuts "dictates 1hat tbe Congress
and tbe president really need to
workt ogetber to try tocome upwrth
a plan tha t does ool cause (the
automattc cuts of) Gramm Rudman togo mtoeffect,"satdSen .
Lawton Cht les or flonda, ranking
Deroocrat on \he Senate Budge1
Commlltee

HA 5/'l tTH

J I K [J

"This planet has two colonized artificial satellites. One
for smokers and one nonsmokers."

GO OD

Laureland 1pts, equal hous• ng
opportumtv 2 bedrooms car
peted, all elec, tpts , for more
lnformal•on 304-882 3716
would hke to keep elderly people
in my homa C11ll 614 -3670t21

Libyan students

Secrettry· Immediate opening
pan-11me, expenenced, fast , ec
curate typ11t, f•hng phonn,
record ktepmg, organ1z1t1onel
ability, e• c gram mer &amp;apalllng
Racme Gun Shoot apont ored by Send raume to French Art
RacmeGunCiub Every Sunday, Colony, P 0 Bo• 472. Galllpo·
begtnntng at 1 00 p m Factory ..'_" _
·O
_ h_ 46_B_3_1_ _ _ __
Choke 12 guege 1hotgun1
1·
Recreation Program Speciatist
Eurclse Program! Tutsdeysand Full-time profeulonel po11110n
• Thursdeya, 5 00 p m Hertford planmng tnd Implementing year
Commun ity Butld 1ng Stlttl round recreation progl'lm of
J1nuerv 28th 304-882 3164 activ1tt11 for Oellle County real ·
1 1.2 00 for 10 ..11 ,0 n1 Mary dent• ofellegH. OuelifiCitiont

6 Lost and Found

7

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

·RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER
SERVICE Eltate. term, antique,
liquidettOn Hln Llcentld Otlio
and W•t VIrgin••· 304·773 5785 or 304-n3 5430

9

Wanted To 8uy

We pay cath for late model cl"an
uatd ears
J1m M1nk Chev Okb Inc
BIA Gtnt John ton
814-446 -3672

ONE ROOM

.Buying Raw Fur Be.t end DHr
·hidll Selling trapp1ng supplin
•Wh .. t end nite lites George

I

II

S1699

I

II

II
PER
ROOM
!I
.
L£~~2~--~~~~~-:!_~o~~~------ --J
OPEN MON.-FRI. 10·6: SAT. 10·2

SALES &amp; SERVICE ALL SWEEPERS
NEW I USED CUANEIS
FREE PICK-UP &amp; DELIVDY ON REPAIRS

For Appointment
Please Call:

614·446·7441
GAUIPOLIS

Buckley , 1 814 · 884 -4761
Hours 12-9 p m Le11 tlmt to
buy fur I• February 2 . 1986

' 11

Help Wanted

Pherme c ~tll Pharmacy Sys·
ttml, Inc 1 leading hotpltel
.pharmecy mtn-uem~~t~t com•PinY •nee 1873, It in Wnt
V1rginle managing hoapltlll phar·
•macI• We art In need of 1 111ff
' phar,..clft 11 your erea Out,ltlnding long tarm csrNr opportunltiM Come grow with ut
Cell Mondty or Tuetd-v for
• inttrv~w 800· 621 · 2755, in
·Ohio 814· 788 -01 C1

.,

Card of Thanks
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to tha.. all -no
helped us in ..Yway dlf·
ina the illness aill death of
our mother. We especially
tha.. lhe staff of POillfiOY
Health Care Center Who
took sueh Iovitt care of
her, Dr. Mansfield and the
stiff at V.M.H.. the Emerpncy squads, all those
Who kept her rn their
pra~. the ones -no
visited so ftlithfully, the
ones who sent cards, flow·
ers and food. A very special 1111.. ~u to Rev.

Richlrd Rotllernich and

Rf'l. Melvin Franklin for

their pastoral care.
God bless e~eh of you.
The Glaze Family

•

1982 Clayton , 14X66 fully
furn , wether, dryer AC under
p•nnlng 6 porch be cond ,
Make an Offer Call 614 -266·
1821 or 614·256 -8315

Deluxe 2 bdr downtown, com
plete k1tchen, all carpet, wa1her,
dryer. electnc heat 6 AC Oep
required Cell days 814-446
4383, eve &amp; weekends 614446 -0139

1973 Cameron traHer, 1n New
Hrven, all alec. partially fur·

Furmahed ept . 4 room• &amp; beth
no pets. adults Clll 614-446·
1519

nithed , new underpennlng, must
304-8B2 2688 .

oell. •s .soo 00

3 bedroom mobile home 12x65
w~ 110x200 lot , Plyma le
RoW, Gall1poi11Ferry, 304 675 3693
Mut t tell1972 , Schultz 12x85 ,
7x11 expando, 3 bedroom.
wood burner AC, wuher dryer,
partially tum111'1ed. all eppllan·
2 porehn and underptn500 00 Phone 304nlng,
6B2-2B86

c• .

ee

Ukenew 1981 Man11on, 70x14,
2 full beth• 3 bedrooms fro nt
kltehen, wood burmng fweplace.
coach hghted front. cath pnce
t12 . 90000 NotradelnpiHn,
wedf111ver K 6 KMobileHomH,
304 -675 3000

Baby-littlf needed for 10 month
old in MldcUepor1 Send ret. .n.
cea to P 0 lo• 743, Pomeroy
Ohio
WE NEED YOUR PRIOR MIL·
ITARY SERVICE EXPERIENCE
IN THE ARMY NATIONAL
GUAR 0 . Moothty poychocll,
ratlrement ._nefit1, tducationlll
....ttanca. end oth1r bentflt1
ewa1leble to our pert -time
mtmbet'l 304-171·39150 or
1 · BDO-U2-311t9

Professional
Services

ARE THOSE BILLS FROM THE
CHRISTMAS HOUOAYS PIL
lNG UP Join the Army N1tional
Guard and you will get • monthlY
ptycheck, 1 good part·time
ClfMf. and many othet greet
blnefltl 304 ·175·3980 or 1800·642 -3819

Income to Mrvict F~eral &amp;
State. Wtllt~ Ruuetl, Brad·
bury, Oh 814·892·722e
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,
redlloovtr your plano·• bleutiful
tone, cell todey. Ward'• Kev·
boonl. 3011-676-5800 or 875 3B24

31

41

Homu for Sale

Houses for Rent

Rt 180, UOO mo , t1&amp;0 dap .
no pet• Call 614 388·9783.
&amp; btth furnilhed
Loeeted 736 Third·,.., *75
dep. •125 mo Call440-3870
or 448· 1340
4 rGOtnl

Hou11 for ,.nt or leal8 with
option to buy. 3 bdr • g ...ge.
central 11r, 111 new carp«.
fenced In back yerd. approx. 1 VJ
mi. from town on BullVIlle Rd
t325 mo • 150 II8C dep Cell
after 6PM or weekendt, 614
448 -92BO
Hennen Trac e

4 bedroom tlouH tor aell.
tlrepftct. 3 ml lOUth of G"1IHpo.
Ill, U2 ,&amp;00. Caft dey• 614·

School dlttrl et, ref &amp; depo11t

441·1115

3 bdr

1244

Of

night• 114-448·

•

- - - - - - - - -lcBy owner, Remodtlld 3 bed·
room houNon At 33 New F.A
furnace, l1rge lot *23.000
Colfoc:t 814-423 -82B9.

-lc-

required Ca11814 -446 -B132
garage, city, get F A

woodFP . U76mo f100dep
• ref required Cell 8 14 -446·
I t71 or 614 -448 -4305

2 bedroom house full betement.
stove and rehrgerator furnished,
n8W'Iy decorated 42 Chillicothe
Rd U 10 mo , e76 depo1it Celt
614 -448 -1340 o r 614 -446
3870.

REPS NEEDED for bulln111
1ccount1 Full -time •80.000 to
•ao.ooo Part·timt •12 .000 to
•1a.ooo No 11Ring. Repeat
butln•• s.. your own hourt
Trakung provided 1 112-938
8870 Mon -Fn. B AM to 5 PM
CST

houM at 10 E St In Pomeroy 5
wooded l tr• . flmity room,
dining room, FA hilt, 2 battlt,
besement oerage *27.000
Colfoc:t 81 4·423·82e9

S.m1 drivers wenttd , 2 ~afli
ower t he road e~eperlence , 1 ye•
fltltbed . 23 yeert of age or okltr
Currtnt macUul card Call J L
McCoy Inc .. 304-273 -9391

CioH to .:hool Easy to heat,
Bla Buck WOOd or coal stove
wfth meton r y c iHmnev
*22,500 Completelyfurnilhed,
US 000 Coli 614 -909-2933

Nice duplex houM ~om~etety

'"" 4 •00
2 bldroom hou11 on 1 ecre
ground. bltwnn Syr1cuaa 1nd

Homn for rtnt, leal8 or lend
contract, Rodney Ytllage II.
2018 Ea1tem Aw , 2004 Che
them &amp; Eurllite Deposit &amp;
reflflftCQ reQUired Bl.ckbum
R..ttv. 814 -446 -0006

FULLER BRUSH Salea &amp; Str·
VICe , eam •e to e10 hour. For
tnform1tlon . ce ll 304. &amp;7! 1090

Mature woman to i ve in w ith
akltrly lady Referanc.. re ·
quired. ctlltftlf 8 ·00, 304·87&amp;·
1197

12

Situations
Wanted

Bv owner. Statetv. 3 bedroom

Stngleltory, 3 bedroom m town

AeeineonRt. 124 Vlawotrlver,
glf'lge and 2 building~ Ownet
will help finance Co mpf ..ely
romodottld . Colt et4-992· 8903
until 3 00 p.m . after 114-992·
5849.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Vacancy for th1 tkleriy In our
horna Tr••n.t end fifteen y11r1
exper ience Cell 814 · 99 2·
7314

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S OUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, • Mt
WEST GALUPOliS, AT 35
PHONE 114-441 -7274

18 Wanted to Do

8 1- level , 1 1h be ttl , 1 0 x80,

Wallpapering Wll do trim plint·
inO pertaining to wtllpap.,, frM
Htimttel, wallpapering idHI .
304-875 -WII or 875-2eeJ
Will do bebylllnlngin my home.
Evenings end wHkenda. Cell
, , . ...... 0137
JWD ' t Septic Tankl CINntd
Ae11onebly prlctd. Call anyttme, 614 -2415·9284
Wanted to do Want tv ciHn
horna or office, evening• Cell
81 4-441· 71102

2

In Memoriam

In Iovine memory of
Danny E. Bowtrs who
pissed awty 5years 110
on January 19, 1911.
Today recalls a memory,
Of a love done cons to
rest.
Those who think of him
today,
Are those who loved him
best.
Deepy loved &amp; sadly
missed by family &amp;
friends.

2 bdr trailer, • 200 month,
ut1liti81 furni1had, 11duh.s or 1
smell ctl i ld Clll814 -2156· 11 &amp;7

turn11htd , water Plid, 1200
mo , 1ec dep req no Inside pet
Col\114 -246-5818

In A1cint nlee, 2 bedroom,
par11y furnl1hed *200 per
month plut depo11t Call 8 14·
949 -2801
3 bedroom hou11 1n Middleport
Fulty c:arp,ttd No pet• Phone

81.·992 -2051

MITCHELL'S FIREWOOD
PROCESSOR

e160 , * 116 , or
UOO per month Oe potit ,..
qulred No Pltl Speci fy employed or rlltired Kev• at 289 N
Ttl~rd St in Middleport or cell
1-218-835 -3952

1982 Townhouu 14x70. 71122
upando 2 bdr . AC , bulh · ln
microweve a Itt reo Ltrge bath,
getdan tub. aome fumltura,

Bend.,.. 2 bedroom•. tlomeon
rivtr, fireplace and garage Homlltaed , 304·6715· 15540 or
304-182·2405

1161 Elcone 12• 60 Call 814·
261 -6068 or 614·251-8180.
18781eyvfew 14•70 on 'h ecre
ground. 2 bdr • 1 IH!th, den, tottl
al.ctrlc. air. 11l22 ou1buildlng,
axe cond Will ..a1 togtther or
MParatt Celll14-441·1425 or
114·,..1-4171 altar IPM

3 br houll in Hartford. Fully
carpeted d ot e to tchool 304·
B82 -2011
For rent or Hie, 2 bedroom,
unfurnihsed. with b..emenl in
Htnderlon , eUO 00 month
*715 00 d•p ot it, 304 · 675 ·
11tB

'42 ' MobUe Homes
for Rent

1971 14x70 FIIIIWood, new
ClfPet, woodbumer. elactrfc. all

appliance~

3 bdr , 1 ~ bathe, 3
deckl. underpinning 1nd ttormwlndow• Extn n lot Mutt Mil,
f10.200 CoN814·281·8517or
814-181-1187

t 9BO Uborty 1 4•14. 2 bod·
room. unfumilhld. vlnyt uncle,..
pinning Included . Mutt Mil. Call
304-773 -5B73
MOBILE HOMES MOVED In·
lUNd , NMOnlblt fltll, Ctll
304-57t -23311
ttiO Uberty t4d4 , 2 br
unfurnilhed, vtnvt URdtrptnnint
lncludod Muot Soil 304· 773.
8873.

3 room a. b11h, furnlthld ,
suiteble for edutt• Ctll 814·
446-3733 or 6t4 -446-0171 .
Fum effiCiency *190 uti11t1•
paid 920 4th . Gallipolis Sin·
Call 448 441 6 after 7pm

t

e

Can 614-992-5304 or 814·
448- 1552
2 bedroom fum11hed apt C11ll
114-992 15434 or 304 882·
2568
The Mapln Elderty and Hendi·
capptd HOUIIng. All Utlhti•
paid Conweniently located for
HPIOr CltiziOI Off ltrHt park
•ng Secun1y and tire prottct1on
Uve-1n reaident manager Rental
111ittence ave1l11ble C11ll 614992 -7022 E H 0.
APARTMENTS . mob•le homes,
houUJ Pt Pl11111ntand Galllpo·
tit 614-446 -B221 .

Nice 1 end 2 br ap1rtment1
downtown 304-675 -2218 ,
B-B
Two bedroom apartment for
rent f2 26 00 month, Camp
Conley, phone 304 773·5 143

3 room furnished tpartment
ground floor, prJVete entrance,
utliiti• included, 1 80 Bow• •
St . Hende~on t 250 304
175-8730
2 bedroom fum 11hed and 2
bedroom unfurnished apl, refrence• and deposit requ~red
New Haven W V1 304·88 2·
3267 or 304-773 -5024

11

Help Wanted

•&gt;
Furnl1tltd, AC . cablt, no c tty
beautiful river view in
Kaneuge . Folttrl Mobile Home
Perk C1ll 814-446-1102

t••••·

2 bdr fully fu rnlthed, 12d Ui .
conv location, Upper Rtver Ad •
Wltlr peld, IIC. dep required
Con t14-446·8558.

a.

2 bd r. unfum
dO, wa1her
dryer hookup ' mHe ptl1 HMC
oo Rt. 31. C.ll 14·•41·4388
or 304-8711-8710
Double wkla trail•. AC .

3

bldroom1. 2 full baths. nice
lo c a ti on , OIII IPOIII Ftrry
' 325.00. 304 -878 -3017

.

WE ACCEPT HEAP VOUCHER S
And Commun1ty Act1on Orders

AP PLI A N CES

112 5. 00 - U-Prck-up
135 00-Pick-up (Dehwered)
1100 00-Dump Truck
(DeliVered I

1200 00-Dump Truck

Apartment
for Rent

~ Delive red)

125 00-per ton
(Commercial Sales )

Brookstde Apartments
P1tone 446 3003 - 446-1599

GOOD HARD WOOD

446-3474

Cut at

Ga ry &amp; De loros M1tch el l
B1dwell Rodney Ra

larJ! country ld1chen. new apph
ooces ut1l1ty room. Water sewer
illd tras h serv1ces PfOVIded

Btdwell, Oh10
A LS O BUYING
STA NDING TIMB ER

Qu JC1Area

46 Space for Rent

~

any len(!lh needed
Phone 388-9031

One Dect-oom apartments With

Real Es1ate General

Mob1le home lot 12'•50 or
1m1ller, 875 weter Plld 4th &amp;
Ne ll Gall1polts Cal l 446 -4416

after 13PM
Dawntown ofl1 ce spac e Excel
lant location on Sec ond Ave
Close to court house parfact for
11norney '1 CPA 1 or otl'1tt pro
fttStl)naft Beaut1ful hardwood
floors &amp; tnm All ut1ht181 pa1d
Cell The W1aeman Agency, 614
446 · 3644
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park
Route 33, North of Pomeroy
Large lot• Call614 992 7479
Mob1ie home lot Mowrev Up
holstery 304-875-41 54

Merchandise
51 Household Goods
County Apphence Inc Good
used 1ppllance1 and TV sets
Open 8AM to &amp;PM Mon thn.t
Sat 614·446 -1899 , 6 27 3rd
Ave Galhpohs OH

NEW ON THE MARKET
Ideal home lor tam1ly, 7moms. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths , modern
kitchen N1ce landscaped lot Coonty water an d sewer City
school d!Stnct Call IOI mo1e mlormat1on N1ce home H630
lEADINGHAM REAL

Real Estate General

Valley Furniture new &amp; used
Large aect•on of qu11ltty fum1
ture 12 16 Eut er n Ave
Galhpohl

Whirlpool alect nc drye r, u cel·
lent cond1t1on &amp;125 Call 614 ·
992 2084

11

Help Wanted

NEEDED: RETAIL
SALES PERSON
ASST. MANAGER
In local area . Prefer
person w1th sales
experience and
knowledge of
acounts receivable .
Send resume to P. 0
Box 7291 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio

NIGHT SUPERVISOR (R.N.)

PRI CED 1\ w·s O'VIl' su ;n n o rrrv PAy.
Mf:i'/1. M0\71/Lf PA l \1F:YTI 3 1~00-30 YRS.
90:. J 4R/ 48LE RA IT ~ -1 n P it: ran ch hom(' JUU
complrl ('d hu.tr 1u1h quo /a, mat er urfs Larfll'
open i lllllfl rnom ruHI d uu n/{ roo m wl nr nu m duon

lt'U{/ IIIJl ro a lar,_rt• l'ack fif•rk u..' rappl'd tn a fro nr
dPck \lodPm k n chl'n l.t 1 nak ro bt n!'l~. 2 he el·
roo m ~. larJlt' lnu mln room Ha.t\ l f've llnt Can
p u t a r PTIIn l t)ropi•rl \ 1n hnok C tl \ :!if' h o ol ~

Mercy Hospital hos an immediata employment
opponunity for a Nursing Supervisor. night
tlhift. part-time. Desire previous supeM90fV
experience. Require previous successful rned.
I surg. experience. Critical care or emergency

room experience prefened.

Excellent

STUTES REA L ESTA TE
· Ph . (614) 446-4206

salary

and bnnefits Please contact
Sharon Carver
Director of Nursing. Inpatient Services
Mercy Hospital
614 / 353 - 2131,e~ . 352
1248 Kinneys lane
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662

Stutes Real Estate
BONN IE STUTES, BR OKER

446-4206
u sn \'(, -

Mkldlepol1

Two bedroom houte, · Point
PIHtont. 304·e711-7183

lot . Mutt Mil •11.110. Call
IU-245 -8534

Call Earhe Ca rr, 614-446 -3793

Housekeepmg room, range, re
fr1g share bath male preferred ,
ut dltl81 pd $100 Call 446
441 after 7pm

USED

re fn ger11tors
ra nges .3 ka g g s Ap p liances
Upper R1ver Rd beSide Sto ne
Cr&amp;st Motel 614 44 6 73 98

3 two bedroomhouMI for Nnt In

• 1.500. Call eve'• 614·4481324.

walhtr· drytr. Underpinning
b10 matll building on rented

3 roomt 6 bath rfutntlhed
utllttlll furn11hed, 8200 mo

For rent Sleeptng Rooms and
l1ght tlouse keep•ng rooms Per k
Central Hote l Call 614·4460756

New 1 and 2 bedroom turnlthtd
ept1 end houH In Middleport

3 bdr, 8 VJ milll paat Holler on

bedroom

Duplex for rent. 666 'rh.rd Ave
Galhpohl 2 bdr , hvmgroom,
diningroom new kttcl'1 e n
fenced back yard, refr~g &amp;
range, *280 plus ut1liti81, &amp;
MCUrity depollt Call 614 446
0890

Fum. etf•c•encv
uti11t1 01
paid Shere beth, 807 2nd Aw
G111lpol11 Smgle Call 446
4418 after 7pm

4 room• &amp; beth, nawty deco
r•ted lnquirt 11 918 Second
Ave , Galllpolil

3

Furn apt 939 2nd Ave Galli ·
pohl 1 bdr , '236 mo , ut1lltt81
paid Ceil 446-4416 after 7pm

•ao

Rentals

6 rooms &amp; bath, newly deco·
rated lnq1.11re at 918 Second
Ave , Galllpohl

Leota's TaJI Set\llce Rtuonlble
fbl:ed retn Cell 614-24&amp; -9693
Rodney Vlllegt II

Mov1ng Sale 20 v-art 1n 11me
home Fumtture, carpets, hou••
hold Item• Call 614 -4t16 -3C33
Of 304 175 1217

------·----·-·--·
·---------------1
Coupon

1

23

&amp; Vicinity

Ceth for old books, letters,
dianel. and pamphlet• *200 or
mort for good copy of Brown1 '1
C•netnnatl Alm.nec:. 1 S 10 Bo•
114, Athens, Oh10 46701 .
614·5i3-8915

,-------------------Steam or Dry Foam -- - -- ----~I

256-1772

Yard Sale

Buytng d11ty gokl, t ltvtr coms,
rlngt. jewelry 11ert1ng ware. old
co1n1, large currency Top pnce• Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd Ava Middleport, Oh 814 992 -3476

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

Unlimited cepibl evelllble for
any buoln- purpoH Cllt6'14-

......Ganrpolis ........

8

54 Misc. Merchandise

Washers, dry ers

44

HOME OWNERS-Refinance 10
lowflxldrtte UaetQultyforeny
purpo11 Lucier Mongage Co ,
6.1 4-592-3051. "

Found black and white male
Bordar Coli•• on Rt 7 In
Pomeroy Call 814-992 -7071

W1ntld to buy motor 'for VW
Rebb1n Cell614-446·488•

S19''

.,v..

22 Money to Loan

In- ~ !~]·f.~~·:;~~~J]~,~1

Ave , Galllpolit C•ll 8U.· IMG ·
22B2.

ANY SIZE

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO recommend• that you
do busln•• w1th people you
know, and NOT to 11nd money
through 'tha meil until you have
tiglted tht otftnng.

Lonely, nlld a dtte1 Ctll Date
ltnt I -800 -972 · 7678.

S1ngl11 Introduc tions, write for

TOP CASH paid for '13 model
tnd n.wer uNd cera Sm1th
Buick-Pontiac, 191 1 b1tem

Steam or Dry Foam

Business
Opportunity

troduct10n1, P 0 Bolt tl536 .
epph
cahon W
Persontl Touch
Cherl•ton.
Ve 215302

or relattcl

coal Meter1. SWAIN 'S FURNI·
TURE, 3ril &amp; Oliva St G•lhpo·
111. Callt14-448 3169

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

~C~o~\~log~e~d~og~r~"~"~P~o~rlul~~~

21

Mtjor ttHI buikhng company
has lfel IVIIlable for con.truct.on or 111• Oriented dealer
Complete tnnmng provided , no
expet'llftCI ne~111ry All cath
bu1tn•• with txctllant Income
pottntial Refundable depoalt
required ContiC1 Y1c Ryan It
1 -800 -22B -4154

WANTED TO BUY used wood &amp;

allowed to slay
WASHINGTON !UP!) - The
admrmstral!on will allow paymen1
of up to $500.00J in Ltbyan funds to
about 3,00l Libyan student s so they
can remarn in the Untted States.
despit e econom ic sanctions aga inst
the North African na11on
Officials from tbe State. Com
merce and Treasury departments,
briefing reporters Friday on ImplementatiOn of Presidenl Reagan's
sanctions agarnst Libya, said a
license was grantf&lt;i to a U.S bank
allowmg payments to the students
for tu itiOn room and board
"We are aware that the fu nd mg
has come directly from tbe government of Libya." sard one of the
offiCials. who spoke on condition he
not be 1den1lfied
Last \\eek, Reagan ordPred a
U S ('('()nomic boycott of Libya m
response to alleged support for
te1roriSm by that country 's leader,
Moammar Khadafy The presrdent
also froze Ltbyan asse\s In the
Umted States
Offlctals said the precedent for
allo" lng the Libyan student s to
l'!'mam m tbe cou ntry and receive
funds from their government was·
set during the Iranian hostage
crisiS wben Slffillar sanc11ons werl'
Imposed by the Carter adm!nistra
tlon against Iran Thousands of
Iranian students were allowed to
~mam in the Unitf&lt;i St&lt;J tes
The offlcrals said wben 1be money
m the account for the Libyans is
e)\,bausted. permission may be
rfedcd to allow tbe Khadafy
government to replenish the
account
The license Issued this week
authorizes the bank, which 1be
offlclals did not identify, to honor
checks " not excet&gt;dlng $2,(0) per
item for tu ition payments or
normal scholarship support rl'mU·
lances for the students. namely for
their room and board and tbetr
living expenses up Ia a iota! amount
of draws on the accounts of
$ro:J.OOO." the official said

SWEEPER and aew1ng mach•ne
parts, and auppi1e1 Pick
up and dahverv. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, ona half milt up
Georgn Creek Rd Call 614 448·0294

Smtth
McDantal Cutto m Butch•mg, 6
day• 1 week, 304 882 3224

Used Fu.rmtu re Drtu&amp;r S. bed
metal of11ce desks 3 m1les ou t
Bulav •lle R d Opoo 9am to 5 pm
Mon thru Sat
6 14 446 0 322

' 8

repe~r .

INSPECTION - Ftremenandsaletyinspeclorstry
to detennine whal caused the blast which ldUed two

· su •tes rockers metal Clb i.let t ,
head boa rd s $3 8 &amp; up to S6 5

LARGEST FIREWOOD
PRODUCER IN GALLIA
COUNTY

3 Announcements

Envoy bound for
Central America

dmtsta goverrunent meets long
standmg Ame&gt;rJCan rondl1Jons 1 m

H1ll Aoed, 304 676 3834

a.

ratsf&lt;i He looked to the pi'I'Sidenf s
WASHINGTON tUPlJ - Con
trarv to predrct1ons that the new budget for fiscal year 1987 - to be
budgPI JS dead even beforl' tt submll1ed to Congress early nex t
month - as an example of tbe kind
arm es on Ca pllol Hill. the chan
of
cuts the president favo~&gt;;.
man of the House Budget Commit
"You
are talking about $64 btlhon
'"" savs Congrpss wr\1 take a 'good
1m
cuts
\ 10 reach the !Gramm
hard look at the spendmg cut s 11
Rudman)
target of a $144 billion
conta ms
deftrlt
...
Gray
sa id m an lntervrew
Rep Wtllram Gray, D-Pa said
Reagan plans to s~mlt a budget
the spendmg 1educt ion r,equrrP
ments of the new Gramm Rudman tlult will rnclude a 3 percent
ba lanced budget law will brmg mcrease m mllltary spendmg bu1
Dt i::ICOntan cut s m go\'rrnment sever'(' cuts in l!Parly Pverything
spendmg unless taxes arp to be else Budget director James Miller

rrg10nal peace mtttatJVI?
Har n Shlaudeman. the admmiS·
trauon's special Central AmeriCan
emo) wil l 11s11 the area next week
to consult on the 1esurnption of the
srrca11ed Contadora peace talks.
the Sta te Oepallment said Frtdav
Eight Latm Amencan ambassa
do~&gt;; prcscmed Scct'('tary of State
George Shu ltz Thursday w!lh a
cop) of a " message for peace.
sccun11 and democracy rn Central
A.menca" approved m VPnezuela
earlic1 m the W('('k . The document
SigJMied a 1esumpt ion of the
C'ont adora process and also ca llPd
on the Umted States to resume
d11 ect talks w1t h Nicaragua 11broke
off last vcar
The State Department sa1d F'1 1
dav Shultz welcomed th&lt;' resump
uon of rPgronal peacP talks, but
1ema1ns opposed to US Nicaragua
ncgotllltlons umrl the Marxist San

One and two bedroom•. Send

lour ordinary words

I Wllh lo thank a ll of ttlose who
tent flowera, food , money gave
words of contolet1on In our hour
of beareevment, also to the
Paramed1c' • doctor·a, nun• 6
•taft 1t Holzer Medttel Center &amp;
Scenic Hill•
The PhilliP Lee Fam1ly
Oinltl, T1m
Ph1l Jr

Gray: Congress will look hard at budget

10 explm'f' efforts at rev1v mg a

2 bedroom m o bile home for Nnt .
near Rec1ne Cell 614-992 ·
585B

1 Card of Thanks

'

WASH INGTON iUPIJ -While
1'o111ng to · contmue the pressure"
on lhP k•ft1s1 Nicaraguan gowrn
ment. the admmisth!Ion plans to
s~nd an em oy to Central America

Unscramble these four Jumbles

one Iefier to each SQuare to form

1 bdr in city. gat central en .
peUo, off strNt parking Call
114·•48-41 s9

FREE . Coli 814-448 -3388 .

Cent er

A lit h person. Dav id Beck"lt h
49. \\ as m cn!Ica \ condition Satu r
dav at CleVeland Metmpol!tan
Gene1al Hospital He suffered a
fract ured skull a broken leg and
chrmrca l bums on the upper part of
his bodv

lAYNE 'S FU RNITUR E

Sofas and ct1a1n l)f'ICed from
&amp;285 to 5896 Tables 160 an d
up to $125 H1de a bed s, 8390
and up to $560 , 10f1 bed l
$145 Rechnen t22 6 to
1375 , Lamps from $28 to
8125 pc dm ettea from t 109 ,
to 436 7 pc S189 and up Wood
table w1th 101 ch atrl t 286 to
$745 Onk S1 10 up to 82 26
Hutcl'1 ea S55 0 Bunk bed com·
pl ete w•t h mettren es, e 276
end up to $395 Baby bed t .
$ 11 0 Mattresses o r boll
spnn gs, ful l or t w.n 863 f1rm ,
s 73 and S8 a Queen tet l .
$225 4 dr chests 849 5 dr
chests S59 B&amp;d hemea
$20 and S25 10 gun · Gun
cabtn ets, S360 Gat or electric
ranges S375 Bab y m11t1rene1,
$35 &amp; $46 bed frames $20.
525 &amp; 530 k•n g fram e 860
Good select1on of bed roo m

14.1170 3 bdr In Ctnttnery Ctll
51 4-44B -4292

fti}~i.\,0 jj)'i} ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~·
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

AVON Sell Avon pay ChrithNI
billa, limited time tten up fn·

Announcements

LAFF·A·DAY

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Tribune - 44&amp;-00
Sentlnll - 992·2156
RlrJrAir - &amp;7S-1333

have any Idea a1 this pomt We have
a lot of teams here from Diamond
Shammck and other organrza
lions,' he sard.
Ammomum dichroma te 1s used
to make chromtum tnoXIde. UISed m
pamt pigments and m the photogra
phtc and cosmehc mdustry
Among those on the scene
mvest&lt;ga tmg tbe accident were
Envrronmental Pro1ectJon Agency
off iCials h om Det roit and
Columbus
The Ohio EPA sard \he threat to
tbe envrronrnent seemed mrnrmal,
but tests were being conductf&lt;i to
del e! mme if 1here was any
contamma t1on
Plant officials we1 P also tryrng to
Jearn the extP!lf of damage to tbe
raciltT)'. which employs about 70
people an d 1s one of about 25
Dwmond Shamrock plants m the
Umtlu Stall»;
"The explosion occured m one of
f1ve production ar\'as That area
sustamed a farr amount of da mage
V.e '" try mg to determme rf there rs
am damage to other areas. It' s
rough to say wben the plant wrll be
back m operatiOn · ·
Thu teen of the mjured people
II PIP m farr condit iOn Sa turda~ at
the Ashtabula Cou nty Medical

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- D-3

Pomeroy- MirJdl'!port- Gallipolis, OhiO- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Sl

\1ndnn ~

lw•rlmmn

hmnr 2 r.~ u

Jmmnl f.R. dmmfl room ll ' bu ilt-tn chmn
mo''"''' FR h'fltl.n l( ln nuhu/1• (nmr I}{ f'tll ut nJOo.
k ll ciH'I1. anot hl'r II{ m1 nnd &amp; mrruo tf)(/ pnr&amp;o.
on I ')9 M r 1os morf• "' f, ~~ [Hl ~rlwolj,
nnh S.l8.00i!

~

I.A'I Thi' Ont' S/1p R' - Rt•tJuu(ulh fl pc,m l ('mfwra"' homf' •I rf'fll tillY&gt; ht1mf' for
£nln hnll Ot l jtu'('MI (nrmnl I R. how

Equal Opportum1y Em ployer

lmirul&lt;&gt;&gt;&lt;'. ,. _____ , dHlUifl

ronm u

ll'fl HI\OI0 /111/{

mul

\1()dl'rn 1otch«'n. /omd, m mn 11 h / irean rl pn1 1o dnnrs. bark pnl '" 1 h1•rlmwnA,1:!
and L!&gt; hnth.~ f•n • ~ hf'd ha~f'lnt'tll 11 r('(' ro11m.2
j(Offlf!t', ! land~t'tlp(• dloh l mmrruln h•h rrmvl
Cit\ « hnnL~
lf':r

POSITION AVAILABLE
The Area Afen cy on Agrng 1s seek me applicants for 1he
pos1tton o Planner Responstbtlrtres 111clude Devel opment of Area Plan for the utilization of Older Amen·
cans Act Funds, evaluation of funded programs and assist wtth development and rmplementatron of coordinated soCII I serYices to older adults throulh A.l.l.
/ S.S B.G. and other resources tn a ten-county area of
South ·Centra I Oh 10
Mtnimum qualifications include Bachelor's Degree in
Public ~dmtnistratron . social work, plannmg or related
field and three years admin istration experience in agina programs and/ or social setvice administration: or
equivalent expenence. Knowledge and experience wrth
older adult prog1ams and fllndmg sources Abtlity to
analyze needs, ressarch . and develop proposal s fo r soeta! services to the elderly Travel requ ired Starttng
salary $16.000. except ional fringe benefits. Office
located in Rio Grande , Ohio.
Send resume 111d reference s to: Area Agency on Acme
Distnct 7, Inc , P.O. Box 978, Rio Gr.. de Colle1e. Rto
Grande, Ohio 45674. Resumes must be recelvad no Ia·
tar than January 31, 1986. An EEO Employer.

1

Ill~

(XJO - 1 am

E~rntf'~

- Pnol nnd du hhouw fl'l·

l'l'f'l'l' ~

Mdl1 l '1llf¥(r - l..ot~ uj JlotJ'(' r• . ~l1ruh~ larll'' / Hilt'
/i(lf' ~. f lfUii n l 'f'f"Y IIY'II dt·~r,.rfu'fJ ltottH' f l'fllll r('!l( a
fur m all u •tn,l{ ronm.jnm1h mmn . 1-&lt;1 IK•tlmom~. I I;)
bo1h.". romplt&gt;tf' k •t r ht'll u v .Jt, lwn.~ fwr Vmf&gt; an d
rr&gt;/nf(r&gt;rrrf nr Firr i~ h r'fl ba~f&gt;tn1•nt u 1m rp 1•1. 2 cnr ll'lr ·
6 flP an d lif'Jmraff' U'()fHf ( hop. a lnrl(l ' (" I l'rr•d llaC'k
pnr('h .!{tt~ ht&gt;n t Wn.~hm,nm1 1-.lt ntf't1/rln

/9 77 Modulnr lwnw - 1 lu'flmmn, , 111 In/{ rnorn,
formal tllllm [l rtHm1 . FR . J full lmt/L, , tnfldf'rrr
~'1 /('/],11 11 w/1 /), ~ulf' rrfnl!l'rn t t~r, 2 mlfl \ rlu•·
dl ~f!ll •nl Rwft -111 4hmo t'flhmf'l

ln1 fl df'r , nu .l
20 ~

9 A t•rr~ rnor1· ar /r'is

WI /IlN'

2 d nn

CHu n t n

ISt.orn,.., btud~rr,r r f'llar. r ntt ff' ur hur~~ f,arn
jru 11 ''' ~ Cuv N('htJfJ/.!:.

11om('.
\lfo"rlv

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

=P~a~ge~~D~-4~Th~e~~~'~'"'rl~•~Ti~l~m~e~s-~~~t~in~e~I~~~~~P~o~m~~~o~yr;M;i;dd;l=epo~rt~G§a§l;lip§o 1i)s,~O~h~io~~Prn~·~nt~~~N~sa~n~t~,~W~-~V~a~.~~~~~~ii~~~~~J~a~n~ua~19, 1986
-61 Household Goods

54 Misc. Merchandise

54 Misc. Merchandise

Whirlpool dr;ver 4 yr . old, good

350 A dOll', 6 way blede. all

Half Price! Flashing arrow sign•

cond. Cell 614 -446-7231 after
&amp;PM.

power hydraulic winch , brush
canopy . Call after 4:30PM .

$269. Lighted , non -anow &amp;249
Unlighted S199 . /Free lettertll

Electric dryer good cond .. 90
Call614 -266-6251 .

614-256-1479.
Sear~

cond ..

Mollohan Fum.

&amp;

Kenmore dryer . good
t126 . Call 614 -388 -

Appl. Solo• _
8_
18_5_.- - - - - - -

Gibaon &amp; Maytag , St. Rt. 7 N.,
Gallipolis. Call 61.t -446 · 7444 .

Maple dine1te set Table, t ill
chair~ end hutcfl
S125 . Call
614 -992 -2371 .
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gtllipolis. New &amp; used
wood·coalstovas. 8 pc wood LR

1399, bunk beds S199
antron Ncliners S99 , new &amp;
us~ bedroom suitel, ranges,
wr1nger washers. &amp; shoes. New
liylngroom suites S199 -S599.
lampa. also buying coel &amp; wood
atovea . Call 614 -446 -3159
SUite

1978 Volate 6 cyl .. air. new
tires, priceisr'ght . Couch&amp;11nd
tables like new. Cell 614 -... 8 ·
3224.
Mi1.ed hardwood tlabs SH . JMI'
bundle. conlaining tpprox . 1 1/J
ton . fob. Ot-tio Pellet Co., Po me·

rov . Oh . 814 -992 -6461 .

Demonstrator Sale: Woodatove,
S1ihl 024AV Chainsew end
Bruahcutter, 361 Vl Chainuw .
Call 614-992 -2094 , Pomeroy
Home and Auto .

1

54 Misc . Merchandise
6 kitchen upholstered blr atoole .
Very good condition . Call &amp;U -

sanytime.
.. loc·'~
(8001423-0163
(800 )628
-2828 . ext . 992·2441 ·"·· 5,00
604.

Pole Bu;ld;ng 24X40. com·

pletety erected overhead and
entrance door. $3600 . Other
lizes available . Cell 614·697 ·
0380.

Hone¥ extractor. bee hNe &amp;
other betl equipment . very reaso nable . Must sell Cell 814 -258·

1579.

mi~ted

4f
•

1984 Ditch Witch 6610 . 272
hra .. U9.SOO . 1984 Ditch
w;tch 6610. 602 h• .. 126,600.
1980 oi&amp;SO B Cue Oonr 8 wey
bled e . a hours on engine major ,
200 hours on new underc.,riege. U5 ,000 . 19•&amp;Aogerw25
ton low boy . $2600. 1965
Prescott tandem a11.le 26 ton low
boy , t8500. lawson and Law·
son Inc. !1,4-949 -2293 or 614·

688-8364.

Split firewood S.40 pet" PU lo.t
d&amp;livered . 2 mi . above Silvll'lr
8rKfge. Call 614 -446 ·1199 or
eve. 614 .446 -9646 .
Firewood

...

&amp;4 Mite: Merchllndiae

WE ARE
IN HOME ·SA
IN·GALL.lA CO.

Fer .... ftM cltrl

~ ~forllle . Coiii14 - M9-

WISEMAN

814·112-1311.

wwortc,

Antique Quilts (handmade) .:aid
con•ignmant also " New
Appliques " . I White, At . 3. 8o11.
5-C. Rodney . Ohio 46631 .
614 -245 -9448

C. WALKER

• 282, Loto~.
• aa2-31U.

seasoned . t20

lrailer . tandam

ule, road reedy , f1rst S550 C•ll

814·448·2281 .

Sunbeam va ccuum cleaner good
con d . e11tra bag1 . $25 Cell
614 -266 -6417 .

House coal. lump &amp; stoke r. Zinn
Coal Co. Cell614 -446 · 1408 .

_,., no.oo. 304-17s-ee 04

• .,.., 4 :00.

0701.

fii&amp;Md 125 .00 Ind . 304-

Red

446-3636ut~

:

~·

0

3872.
57

Musical
lnstru ments

M~'Msi~
THE WHOLE

WHY
FOR
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TELL THE
WHOLE WORLD?

.

-

,..

SURPLUS hewy denim , army

A Iitie new Peavey guitar amp .
4~ serial, ph .... 11reptlic EO.

Ill lln1. Sam Some-

11404

3 BEDROOM - BRICK AND FRAME Rr\'1(}( . FRAM EAREA HAS.
BEEN COVERED WITH V!NYL SIDINGFOR EASY MAINTEN!t-lii.
FAMILY ROOM WITH fiREPLACE 1\US WOOOOURNER.
EQUIPP£D KIT(}lEN. DININGIREA SATELLITE TElEVISIONDISH
AND FOR FU N THIS SU MMER ABEAU TIFU L 16X321NtROU ND
POOL FENCED BACK YARD. 2'' CAR GARAGE WITH STORIGL
KYGER CREEK SrnOO LS THE ffiiCE IS AVERY PlEASANT SUR·
PRIS£1$58,000
PRICED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE 13 BEDROOM RAN CH [AI
IN KITCHEN WITH RANGE AN OREF RIGERATOR f Ull BASE
MEN!. ATTACHE D GA R ~G E NEAR Cl fi' BETTER HURRY
trS PRICED AT $26.50 0 NEW LISTING'
KERR-HARRISBURG ROAD - BR IC k RAN CH H~ S 3 BED
ROOMS. 3 BATHS. FULLL BASE MENT fA MILY ROOM EAT IN
KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH TAPPAN SELFCLEANINGRANGE ,
AMANA REFRIGERATOR . KIT CHEN AID DI SHWASHER
4'A.' X6'' HOT IUS SP~ 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE ON ·.
ACRE AVALU E AT $79.500 NEW LIS TIN G'

RANCH STYLE
3 BEDROOMS - I Yr ACRES
On Slate H1ghway 160. 3
garages to garage 4 cars I '

COUNTRY STYLE HOME
In very good cond1I10D .
Corner lot. app101 117 acres
lev.l land. Melal barn,
acres MIL, rural 'hater . wtn - 45·,45·. 8 room home. 3
dow a~r condll1one1 . lull ba
bedrooms. 2 bathrooms. ap·
sement . front porch . storm pro• 1750 SQ It ol hYing
doors and thermopan e vM
space mod k1Jchen . f~re·
dows Home less lhan 10 pla ce. ba sement. rural water
yr; old Prrced lo sel l qu1c k system fam1ly ljpe home
On ly 129.900
close lo grade school. Phone
#647 no • lor appom tment.
11633
REDUCED $5.000-42 ACRES IN COUNTRY
5 rooms. remodeled home . on e 11om. ball1. tronl porch
Orr lied .ell w11h eleclrrc pump Paneled walls. c a~petmg and
ll no Hu11y Now only p11ced at S2l.'ll0

ms

UPPER SECOND AVENUE - IN Cl fi' $33. 000 I WO STORY
fRAME HOME HASVINYL SI DING FO R EA SYMAINTENAN fE
4 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS W IN KIT CHEN FORMA L DINING
GREAT LOCATION

3.2 ACRES WITHIN 't, MI. Of GALLIPOLIS
Also 8 10om home. up to 4 bed1ooms1l needed . wh1te YID yl
s1dtng Ino upkeep). nat gas loiCed a1 r turn~ce . c tly ~at er ,
l a~!e block QalaQe luO to 4 cm l n1ce heatro large green -

60 ACRE FARM - COLONIAL 4 BEDROOM HOME fOR MAL
DINING ROOM FAMILY ROOM SOME fiLL AB L£ LAND
WOODED AREA A GREA T PLACE FO R A FAM IY $60 000

peach 11m
all ol lh•s

WANT TO SELL?
CALL US
WE NEED LISTINGS!
REDU CED fOR IMitl'"s0\.0 - 1970 Rill CRAll MO
/ ~ ~ SG S RANG£ ANDR[FR IG
BIE HOM£ 12X60 ~
BE TIER HURRY II S"\ -" ' I $2 'JJ O

house. al l ollh1s plu s ap ples. pears. cherl te s . plums and

In Gallrpol ,s and Green Tw p Be the l11stto see
#644

Building Supplies

• lulld... M-olo
• llodl. brick. ..wtr pipee. win • ...,L tinw&amp;l, etc. Claude Win -

ACRES - 7 ROOMS

/ "\
BY TOPE S. FUL lY : AkP£1E D FIVE ACRES Clf Y SCHOOL
SYSTE M $ ~ 400 0

#570

UNHEARD Of PR IC E SOLD 1 3 BEDROOMHOME
CARPORT NICf LE VEl 1 /7 186 IRE VILl ~G£
CONVENIENT LOCATI C" s'·QLD I[ NUE NEARGROC·
ERY 2 BE DROO M fR A
J / S 6lU MSIDING GREAT
INVES TMEN T PROPER11 I 1
$35.000 JUST REDUCED' - f iNIS f£0 BASEMEN TMAK ES
THIS A4 BEDROOM HOME WITH ? Kl TCHENS 2 SA IHS. RE
eREATION ROO M SPACIOUS BA\ K YAR D. GA S HEA l CEN
TRAL AIR CO ND I.ONVE NIENT l OCATIO N JUS T OUTSIDE
Clfi'
PRECIOUS ACREAGE ON RT 35 NEA R Sl ATE HIGHWA YPA
TROl STAIION. 16 ACR ES. SUI! ABLE fOR RESIDEN TIAl OR
COMMERCIAL PRESENT LYHASI STORY FR AME f() t.{ WITH
FU LL BASEMEN I GARAG E. IN GOOD CONDITION $69 000
BULAVIILE ROAD - BR ICK AN D FRAME RAN CH ON AP.'
PRO! I ACRE 3 BEDROOMS. ATT AC HED GARAGE YOUP
BANK BOOk WON'T BLINK AN EY E $37.000
THE BACK FORTY IS FOR SALE - OWNER WILL (l] NSIDER
FINANCING ~0 ACRES $11 .000
EBENEZER CARMEL ROAD - APPROX 31 ACR ES. $15.500
GREATLOCATION IN RACCOON TWP
$25.000 - NICE 2 STORY f RAM E. 3 BEDR OO MS LEVEL LO T
HASNICE GARDEN Sf' ACE CONVENIENT LDCAIION IN CI TY
BETl[R TAKE A QUICK tOOK lf"S PRICED TO SELl FAST1
lAND - APPROX 160 ACR ES GUYAN TWP SOME TilLABLE
ROAD FRONTAGE. $50.000 OWNER WILL SPLIT lAND AND SELL
77 ACRES'TOR $20 o:xJ OR 83 ACRf TRACTFOR $ll.OOO.
FARM - ROUTE 218 - ~PPRO X 82 ACRES. 2 BEDROO M
FRAME HOME PLUS MOBILE HOME f()OKUP. BARN. OTHER
8,\JILOINGS, TOBACCO BASE. $39.000.

m
LDI

AUDRY F. CANADAY, REALTOR
MARY FLOYD. REALTOR, 446-3313
25 LOCUST STRIET, GAlliPOLIS . OHIO ....,,,.

7 ACRE BUILDING SITE located'" Green Township Excel~nt road
lronlage. small creek and woods. $10.000.
#237

IIIDOLEPOtiT - Clean 2 bedroom 2story home' ror.ven.,nl Jo
everythm~ Would be ~ rental l)'operty $18.\IJO.
#231

PART TIME FARM - 79 ACRES - 4 bedroom bnck ranch.
coo nil)' krtcher1. full basement 2 car gmge, healllJmP 20 ac.
meadow. balance '" v.oods, large barn, tobacco base, lrurt trees.
V.ll sell 2 acres and home for $69.000 IJ all tm $110.000

1 YR. OLD CEDAR HOME on pnvate 98 acres. Also. ~der 6 room
house. Tobacco base, 21arge barns, ~lo. var~us s mal~r bu1ldmgs
and 40•80 muk1-purpose sleet b ulldin ~ $75.000

-~350

U·FINISH - Home on 30 aCies 111ih 24 acres creek lxlttom. Many
yoong lrurt trees and grape vmes. Perlect for thepan·llmeIarmer
Pnced to sell al $22,000
#330

141 ACRES M/ L ot soothern Oh~ h1l~ and val~y a1ea. Good road
lrorttage and Raccoon C1eek !rootage 100 acres ot timbeL Ask~g
$55.000
#334
CHOICE LOT approx 100 ft fronlage on U.S. Rt. 35 Jackson Pike
at good bus10ess klcat~n . City ut1l~es avanlab~. Askmg $30.000.
H--

68

Hent, 50 cent1 NCh, Buff•lo. W.
Va. 304-937·2216.

Fruit

Nrce home close to Holzeo Hos polal Now~·l v $34.900 See11
no•

WEST

SOUTH

Vulnerable: Neitber
Dealer: South

3 NT

Pass

Hay . 30•·875-2991 .

Pass

overtrick.
Look how easy ~ ctriense is if Eut
simply willll the first club trick and returns that suit while h• still has a
probable dlamend entry. I can 11!1 out
for down ooo by cubing two biBb dj,monds and end playlac West in hearts
as before, but I can never make the
contract.

1983 Chevrolet Cavalier Stationwagon. auto . AC . PB, AM -FM
ca11et1a. t3 .300 . Calt 614 -446 1761 or 6 14 · 388 -9811 after

SPM

19n FOfd Mavrick , fair cond .,
S300 Call614 -266 -6251 .

Real Estate General

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

•ltM NJWIPAP'IIl i&amp;N'I'ZRP'IWE AJIIN

Transpnrlalt on
71

Autos lor Sale

1978 P'tymouth Veti~mt Scamp
V-8, 2 door, 318 motor. AC . PS :
raditlllif•. rldio. CIII614-245 -

18S8 .

2 ton• 1911 Oodga Challenger,
exc:. cond . Call 614 -256- ,946
efler 4PM .

19n TO'(Ote Cetice GT, fully
lo.ted . 19716 . Cell 614 -446-

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE wilh
3 bedrooms , 2 coiJ1)1ete
baths, dining room, living
room and large recreation
room . Located on 8 acres.
lJrge farm pond . Rac ine
area .
2 STORY HOUSE in Rae me
near Elementary School.
OLDER HOUSE with 3 bed·
rooms on corner lot in Sy·
rae use .

0028.

HOW NATIONAL
BANK

1982 Ptvmouth Horizon 4 dr •
*Jtd .. "tc.. tl.399 . Jot1n ' a A~to
S•les, ftulaviUe Rd .. Galllpolia,

949-2210

it

you're selling or buy·
to work with NtJtnber 1.
/:ft11!1!V&amp;!fJL

tM5
S4S,OOO - Vinyl and bnck ranch . 3 bed rooms.
newer deluxe kitchen , full basemen! wilh fom ily
room, rec. room, 2 l11eplaces, nat. gas, central air,
2 car garage
•
#1012

REAlTY

FARI- 147.5 acres, solid 2story frame house.
3 barns. lots of paslure land, 35 mes timber.
some machinery included. Owner wants an otter.
#1076
, ACREAGE - 40 ACRES - D11tled well , part~ally
wooded . m10eral righls included.

U89

TEAFORD(H

wrth rNer &gt;1ew. Cozy 3 bedroom ho100 Wllh 111
baths and n~e I car garage Localed on upper Rt. 7w1th large lol
and ga1den space $47,500.
#232

$46,000 - 36 Acres. ellra nice 45 '•75 ' metal
barn. double wide w1th add Ill . Ow ner will f1

nance.

/ Real Estate_IIUI.ro-

Judy DeWin-Broker- 381-8155
J. Merrill Carter-Realtor-379 - 2184
Becky Lane-Realtor - 446-0458
Jim Cochran-Realtor-446-7881
Virginia Smith-Realtor- 388-8826
Phyllis loveday-Realtor-446-2230
liz Long-Realtor-675-3968

{!/)If

pag 0(}0'

Gil tM[H
AEALTOA 1

llt.11 LISTING - 2 yr. old
ranch , lull basement 3 BRs.
IR modern equip~)«~ kit.
and 11. dining w~h serving
bar between. Garage and
1.3 acre leve lot near 5 pts.
Want $70,000.
SCfPIO - 12•60 Two BR
trailer. Obi. garage/ shop
and 6 acres.
1
SliACUSE - 7 rm. older
. home with gas heat, bath
and 3.75 acres.
Pill£ ROY- One lloor 2 BR
home. full basement, hoi
water heat, dbl. garge and
_ lg. lol near the hospital.
• , RACIIE - Lg. 2 story 3or 4
: Bfl tlmily frame. Lg. rooms,
;. colt stoker &amp; aas F.A fur . nac(. 2 car garare with lg.
. block storage. Now only
54•.500
.
· SUTTON - 300 acres of
hills, woods &amp; wildlrte on llt .
124. Some tarm land.
tf:DUCED- Nice 6 rm. modernized home in Racine.
Above all floods near the
schools. Buitt in 1957. Gar•&amp;e &amp; nice. Lg. lot.
HAIDT.AN - 2 slory 9
room or so home. 2enclosed
porches, carport tg. base·
ment, hot waler turnace &amp;
lets 1M reparrs. But a one
ltre latllfSUped IGI. Aslling
$27,500.

THIS IS YOUR CHANCE to own alne 2story home. 3
,
large l~1ng room. dining room and eQuipped klchen Wtlh eal·ln
bar. 2 car garage. I ac. lot $39.nt.
#200

WAREHOUSE FOR SALE - 2 slory mason ry bUild~g w1th 7.563
sq. n.on flrsllloor. Includes 1DsideOO&lt;:k, small oH~e and oamp to
the 2nd floor. Locati!d in l1glll mdustr~al zone on Sycamore Slreel
Excellent tor mO'Iing and storage, mach1neshop.lactory. garage,
etc ~need at $49.500
#142
AFFORDABLE BI-LEYEL on Debby Dnve. f!J $55.nt. you can
have 3 bedrooms. I lull and 2 hall bat~, large eal·mkrtc l~en , large
lam i~ room and I car garage
#116
HOUSE 'N' HA\F - AltlaciNe 4-6 tfilroom. 2 story br~ &gt; ort
corner tot in downtown G.jllipolis. Addibonal6 rooms oould be u!OO
i1Jr professional offices or mother·in·law's surte. $120.000

Litt Yftr 11.- tritll Us
lor s,riJta Stlllll'
C«t~lttl A"nisals.

Hllli

FAMILY O~IENTED - $69.900- 4 01 5 bed ·
room tri·level, appro•. 8 years old, 3 balhs. 2 car
garage, tamily room, lor mal din10g room . Situated
on 4 ~ acres.
MIDiS
SPRING VALLEY AREA - Brick and lrame In·
level. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,2 car garage. $59,900
Ml057

••
••
•••
••
••
••
••
••

EKCHLENT LOCATION -Brick ranch w1th 1.25
acre lawn . 3 bedrooms. large bath. I car attached
. garage.

's Time To Seii"We Have Buyers"

Ht ,dqtJ.JJio I'&gt;

•

U049

SUNKIST SUBDIVISION - 3 bedroom b11ck
ranch . lull basement. 1'' baths. eqUipped
h1tchen, central all , 2car ga~age P11ced below w
praised value.
#1061

CAII'T BEAT THE PRICE - 3 bedrooms, liVIng
room , dining, lam1ly room w1lh ilreplace . ~ mile
from cily. $39,!JJO

WAIT NO MORE - I 11 story home, basemen!. 3
bedrooms, 1'&gt;1 baths, hvmg room ilreplace. lo1
mal d1mng, custom drapes, c1ty sc hools

LOTS - 1 acre lots located irl Add1son Twp
S1tualed in awooded area with restnct1ons. Hurry'

•
t

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY located at corner of Second •
Ave. and Sycamore Sl. Call for more inlormation.

t
•

COMMUCIAL BUILDING located alongCourtSI. in Galli·:
polis. 3,500 sq. R. plu s 1,200 sq. R. apartmeni, Call fort
more information. PRICE REDUCED.
miiHG Toliw REALESTAti 1s BIG aliSINtsL.
CAU AN EX~IIiN&lt;ED WOOD REALTY .SAIISPIISO'I;.

t •

t

t

\,

I

I'

oil(!

H• Ill\.

1 • '!

·l·lh

l 1 I'

lilldl

lr'
I \\

#1041

~987

LEAVIII&amp; AREA - WAIITS fO SHL- l 'l slory
home, 4 bellrooms. localed al St. Ri 160
$34,900.
#1000
GEORGES CREEK AREA - 3 bedroom ran ell. 1
car garage. bath , Kyger Creek school system .
$32,500.
U028
POSSIBLE LOAI ASSUIIPTION - 10 yr. · old
bnck and lrame, bl·level, l 'h bath s, 3 bedrooms,
large kllcHen. tam1ly room , garage. $5Ji000.
#1039
•
UNMATCHED VIEW -LOYely vi!w of the nver, 3
bedrooms, 2 ~ bath s. anraclive oah lloors, 2WB f1·
replaces. central air. $69,500.

*1043

$21,000.00 - 14'170' llobilt Home - L~
baths, 2 bedrooms. lormal dining area. complete
w1th k1tchen appl~ances. Pnvate location.

U064

$11,500- StJrter Home or 1nves1ment property.
I ~ story ~eme, 3 bedrooms , b1th, notural gas.

N989

MOBilE HOllE AND 1.4 ACRES - 1971 l 2.x65
Windsor home w1th 3 bed rooms. 1'o balhs.
equ1pped k1tchen. small orchard $26 000
#1036
VACANT LAND - 127 ACRES -localed'" Har·
nson Twp.
. #995
COMMERCIAL - RESTAURANT - Sealrn g tor

54 . repeal cuslomers. mobile home space '"

eluded.

#1025
ON THE RIVER - N ~ee b1g fa~ m house. 7 aCies
more or less of r1ver bottom. lots ol road fr onta ge
on SR 7.
#1087
PWICED TO SELL - Borck and "nyl 3 bedroom
ranch . South western area
#1026
COMMERCIAL - INVESTMENT - CommerCia l
building and 40 acres more or~s. located SR35
and SR 7.
#1027
WAITING FOR YOU - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
-five rooms, bath. enclosed su n porch lull ba ·
semenl . one car garage Located uppe1 Second
Ave . $36,500 .
#1067

1999

$21,500 - 3 bedroom trame and alum111um
sided ranch. I \\ car garage, c1ty schools.
11019

IN TOWN LOCATION - 2 sto1y home 3 bed
rooms, I ~ baths, tam 1ly roo m. na tural gas heal
Pnced in the 40s.
#1073

CUSTOM SLAUGHTER HOUSE- Appro• . 2 years
old , buitt accord1ng to state code. state inspected,
includes all equipmenl, mobile home space.
Owner financing poss1ble. Call todoy!

NEAR SHOPPING CUTER - 3 bedroom frame
home with an extra lot Priced '" the 20s.
Nl040

OWNERS SAl D SELL!! - 14 ., 70' mob1le home.
extra nice. Siluated at a slate highw ay.

t

#1080

PRIVATE LOCATION - I 0 y1 old mu ll1 level
home. 4 bedrooms. 92 acres. barn. cellar tobacco
base. $48,500.
#1078

rooms, I
kitchen , dining or family room.
Located '"city. Make offer.

1 or 3 BEDRII. HOllE klcaled alongGa_rfieldAve.
75' by 200'. Very comfortable. $30,000.

NEW USTING -SUPER BUY' - 2 story J bed room. 2 bath. upsta irs could be aposs1ble 1ental .

WELL CAllED FOR- SIX rooms and bath . bu ilt-in
krtchen, includes opplian ces, di•ided basement.
Price r!Jluced . $29,900

U\1,3\l~.u.J - Owners need larger home. 2 bed·

( .til VI.'

Holl'&gt;llllj

NEW USTfNG -A GOOD QUIET PLACE TO LIVE
- A-frame, wooded settina. 3 bedroom s. 11&gt;1
baths, woodburner. Pric~d at $24,\IJO.
#lOIS

#1090

21 6 E. 2nd St.
Pttone
1·f6141-992 -3325

IN THIS VERY PEACEFUL NEHlHBORHOOD you'l l lind th5 3
bedroom home wailing for a new owner. Includes 2 lull baths.
beaubful knchen. large 2\\ car l'ilrage and 24 n sw1mm1ng pool.
N1ce ~el lot wi1h option on 2 ad~cent lo~ $59.500.

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR BUSINESS! - Climmerc~al
bu1kl1ng on upper Second Awnue has lots a pos~~lrt~es. Over
3.000 SQ . ft. building on a73• 190 lot II A-I condilion.Call 11Jr mote
detailS.
11242

Pass
Pass

Seut:h

Opening lead: • 6

CARRY OUT- OWNER WANTS A DEAL- EQUipmen I and inventory included 1n sale.

Real E1tate General

MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOllE ort. I acre ol ma;tly 1~1 ~nd . Wood
~0\'e '" basement a~ng with tuet ~I ilrced a~r turnace. City
Schools $39,800.
#341

East

1978 AMC Coocord wegon.
good cond., fuMy equipped , new
tirH , k)w mileage . $1,500. c;an
614 -446-7904

Oood hey for ule . 814 -992 51633 .

2 NT

NEW LISTING - OWNERS lOVING OUT Of
STAT£ - Attrachve 3 or 4 bedroom tri-tevel. Fireplace. 2 baths , Iamity room, 2car garage. Situated
on lree lined 4.7 acres near Bob Evans Farms.
UOI6

4 BEDROOM HOllE klr the e•pand1ng tam1~ La1ge hvmg room
w1th f~replace, tam1~ room, step·saYing krtchen and d1D1Dg room.
Shop bUIIdin&amp; mach~e shed and 2 other struciUies. $39,800
#337

614-315-74U

NOTHING CAN COMPARE to tho brd ranch at lh~ IJICe. f01
$59.500. you get 4 bedrooms. 2 baths. ~rge lt&lt;mg room. tam1~
room. and 2 !~replaces. Excellent ne1glllxlrhood.
#128

Nortl11

2818.

firm . Call 614 -446 -3486 . ,

500 bales of hay tor sale. t1 .00
P"' bela . Clerencs Wickline.
Racine. Ohio . 614-&amp;49-2916

• 54 3

Real Estate General

Collect Cllls Ac~tttl

#304

A K9 5

West

Timothy &amp; clover hrt for ule.
&amp;t com 12 .25 . Call 814 -446 -

1976 Mustang II Ghia 302 , V·8 ,
PS . PB. IUIO , new tires , lhockl.
excellent conditioJ'I. 112 ,000

~rve Dales of hay . Cen deliver.
UO . Ceil et•· 992 -7401 .

+AQJ
• A K2

t

379·2112 .

Autos for Sale

#408

* HIGHER PRICES * PAYING THE LANDLORD

qualrty bu1n home'" like new condition. 31Edrooms, 2baihs.lt&lt;mg
room. lam1~ room and 2 car garage. I acre lol $59,nl.

+2

Mixed tlay tor ul• . Call 814 -

.QJ
• Q J 10 8
+AJl0986

+2

For 11te hav never wet red clover
a orrllard grau mi1ted . Call
304-458 -1997 .
Hay · tDp quality orcherd gras1
Md c6DV8f mixed , 11 _6Q 8 bafe.
Cal 114 -441-4699 .

lUST

.U7854
• JQI7 6
t32

3903.

WHAr HAVE YOU GOT TO LOSE BY WllnNG TIU SPIING??

OWNER FINANCING - HANDYMAN SPECIAL
Ma&lt;e us an oiler 8 room home.1n Heatley Add11ion to 81d ·
well 4 bedroom s. bu111 1n cabmet s. dbl si s s1nk. 1h1ngle
root . wood or coat heater apple trees. stde porch. rural water
syslem Call us now
11622

LUXURIOUS
Country es late w1th 3 Ind~ana ston etrreplaces. mclud1ngo ne
'" a master su1te. 4 BR total. 2 ~ baths. 112 acres more or
less Jusl short d1slance !rom Gall1polrs. Th1s cuslom bu1lt tog
home lea tu res nearly 2700 SQ . H. ol beaut1lully deco~aled
and well planned liVIng. Stunn 1ngliYIDg and d1ning area wrth
beaut1ful ha~d wood ·floors. The lovely kilchen IS fully
equipped and des1gned tor con vemence. Central healing
and air. Attached ga1age. Includes 5 room caretake1home.
IHiiO

• 764

446-6610

SWIMMING POOL IN GROUND
Alo ck base men! starJed - mo bole home pad 2sept1c lanks
Rural waler syslem Colu mb us an d Sout hern Oh10 Electnc
lar ge le vellol Would you l1keto bUild your own home' Base·.
menl already blocked up See lhrs poope1ly nuw'
11639

GREAT LOCATION FOR A NEW HOME
Spnng Valley Sul&gt;diYISIOD I wolarge lots Each lol ls 10 1 8 by
I It 2 Cily wale~ . City sewe1 and natu ral ga s are aYa1la ble
~pectallhls week Cal l no w.
#456

&amp;1•·

~139

BRI CK HOME - 15 ACRES
In counr·y 7 100m1. 4 ba lh1ooms ? bath s. heal pu mp Steel
doors. double glass roll wtndo ws. countr y k1tchen wtt h lots
ana loll ol ca b•nets f ull ba semen!. luliS hed Ou111de bu1ld ·
!figs. one 8·,.118' one g·,t r one g·,tr 18 assoned tru1t
Jrm Many olher le a1u1es See 11 110' Only $59.900
11642
FREE NATURAl GAS - 140 ACRES
Apro • 10 mrles 11 omGallipol's - loisol Ra ccoo11 C ~ee k l1on
ta2e - aooro&gt; 60 acres tillable and lobacco ba se N1ce
40 •60. bar n 6 roo ms. 3 BR home w1th li ee natu~a l gas to
heat votJ r home tn wtn ter and coo k ~ou r toad lots ol !ru t!
tree s N•ce country set1 •ng See th•s one
#419

FREEZER IEEF for lilt, call
C.n Kinnlefd :104 -87&amp;-•182 .

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY

228 lsi AVENUE - ·Very desirable.
i
throughout Large liviDg room. tormal dinin&amp;
room.
mept~nally mce krtcheo. 3 bedrooms, 21ull bat~ J1d basemen!
2'; c a~ carport. $1 14.000.
#123

l·ll-U

50

App•loota conteu mare
tiOO .OO . ltapordWeetem pte•
su,. Gekting, 1960 .00. Numeroot hi ..,.,, ewents , 304 -195-

LOWEST lntereat Rates Since1979
•HIGHEP d!ORTGAGE RATES

+K Q7

+10

SOUTHERN- HILLS R.E .. INC.

·· ~

1.~7

2 year otd Quarter Horae Mire,
brolce tD ride, 1175 .00 . 304·

875-6799.

· ..,.,.,

NEW ON THE MARKET
Ideal home lor tam1ly 7rooms. 3 t&gt;;d rooms. 2 balhs. mode~:~
~ ~ tcht'n N•ce land 5caped lot. Countv water and ~ ewe r r.tty
sc hool dt&lt;;tr ct Ca l! !o r more tn formatton Ntcf' home
#63D

DON.T OVERLOOK THI S - BE ST BUY IN GA LLI A COUNIY'
AN OUT ST AN DI NG VALUE r" " 'JS TO M TOP QU ALITY
RAN CH IS PRICED B'· ·so\.0 10 Sl ll QUICKLY' 3

COLONIAl BRI CK . SOLD
BE DROO MS fULLY
6
~~m~EDS~~~~ tJS; , I "\S I ~ 1 ROA D CllY SCHOOL

COUNTRY COMFORT in th~ rozy h story log home Well
decorated home oftm 3 bedrooms.INingroom.lotted tam1~ room.
I bath, eat-rn krtcher1 and utdlj 1oom. Several oulbUilrlings
$49.500

C."

By James Jaeoloy

!IU· 9oi&amp;9 -2S82 .

be. c:ond. 304 -882-323!1 .

•. aiMII, Mtck. mortar Mt41 "'•
...,t~et . Mountain State
• . llo-t* , lilt. 33. New Heven. w.
Vo. 104·112-2222 .

#117

3 HOUSES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE' On~ $24,000 l:liys all three.
located '" ely schoo~ IJ1 a 1.5 acre c.,1ed lot large house has
2·3 bedrooms.IMng room and mce knchen. Both smatle1 houses
have 4 rooms plus a bath.
#234

•

: ""· Rio Orande, 0 .

""' •141-51 21 .

SOftiONE WANTS YOUR HOME
AND WE HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO
FIND THAT SOMEONE. CAll US!!

N1C E' home rentll ,JH. ru ral 'fl·ater )yslem . lar ge lam1ly room .
26 ' ~ 22 gara ge storage bUIId tng. storm wmdows and do01s

~6~R~fc~ ~A~i:~l "\ ~{,~~f~~~~[ST~~~~~;:E~

629 KRISTI DRIVE - Well arrangoo 3 bedroom ho~ has I'?
bal~, INing room wrth f~rep~ce. handsome kdchen Wllh d1n1ng
area and 2 car ga~age. &amp;tra lot /IJI 101 $65.000.

.g 9.

Registered H.rnplhlre Ptg1 fo•
Hie. CaM 614 -843-5165 .

&amp; Vegetables

PH. OFFICE 441&gt;-7699

·'

Cf'OII.

Mu1ie Men 130 watt amp head .

:104-171-3334 .

•Willis T Leadingham. Re$1tor . Ph Home 446 ·9539

._of

NORTH

I coafesa I hardly knew what was
happening when I played today's hand,
but somehow it worked out. Today's
moral is "Don't 10 out of your way to
do anythinc fancy." I won the spade
jack and played the heart ace. When
East played the queen, I thpught he
might have Q-J-10. If so, be would win
the third heart and probably lead back
a troublesome spade. So I decided to
see if West bad the club ace. When I
played a club to the king, it held.
East's holdup was the fancy play 1hat
scuttled his chances of settin&amp; my
contract .
Now I played a diamond from·dummy, intending to insert my nine, but
East split bis boollr!l. I won the ace and
reverted to hearts, playing king and
another. West had to win the 10, East
shedding the diamond eiibt. Aa you
can oee, Eut was desperately ltopinc ·
that West bad another club to play. No
such luck. West returned his last heart
to dummy's nine as I discarded a club.
Now I played,. diamond back to my
king.llltill thoucht West probably had
the club ace, but it was now safe to
clear the diamond suit. East had to
win the diamond and play away from
his ace of clubs, so I made an

71

large round ..
hrr fo, . .1.
ortredeforcattle. Call 814 -446 1062 lifter &amp;PM .

10 tricks,
pure and si,mple

3 Springing Hatters. 2 Hoi.
Herford cro11. 1· Hol. Angus

revert. w-a 4 · 1l " IP•ker
cMifttl on cllter w -cover . PurchiHd new- foJ t1.150 in 1984
but wa1 onty used 4 Of 6 tlmee.
Must ... to appreciate! AMing
1760. Call tn4 -4-tl6 -9407.

POUTieAL AOVEAnSEMfNT
IPICI hill, Union IM(Hi, fectory
· jolll;er, tlilcou"1 pricH. AM ltamt
o-r.ntwc~ . Sam Sornenih.

: 65

James Jacoby

Hay &amp; Grain

Low,.. piono good cond .. •eoo. •6,.3.-------o~--~BU-3&amp;7-7e89
Livestock

Cell

• 304·171-3334.

~,,,

-

64

Oh .

304-175·10110.

Mh' l. bst· ftft'eniWOOd, af.
••tw4, weelench, dehery,

#104

2 row. 300 gallon, tob•cco
trantplenter, like new
11 . 1CO.OO . 5 ft. Bush Hog
1260 . 1,100 gaiW)n piHiiC WI ·
ler tank 1300. DenuMr 4 wey
wood aplitter 1600 .00 . 3 to ·
beceo balllf box" t100 . tor all.
304-675-1286 or 394-6 23·
5843 .

Four miniature poodle pup I, two
mel•. two females. 304-882·

Ask Yourself This Question-Then list With lk

HOliES. FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 lOCUST STREET. GAlLIPOLIS. OH IO 45621

992-31150 .

614 -742-2888.

Fwtler lrulh product.. w.r1 n.op1
pri~» te.!ll coiTifllot•.

doth~

Grevety trector. Electric •tert .
Dual wheel•. wheel weightl
piow, mower, tiller, bl.:te. 11 4-

Eftglith 8eagte. S3~ . No papert.
bone Coon dog. s&amp;o.

...,;.1

BUYER BEWARE' - Th~ 4 bedroom hoiOO • m es~b b~ 1 features
large tamily room. large INmg room. 3 bat~. klrmal d1DID&amp;
basement w1th rec. room. 2 car l'ilrage Perlect settmg on a 1.55
acre lot. $94.500.

Ptows· Dear Bom 2· 14 6n . l pt.
hitch , J. 18 in. Case 3 pt. hitch
ldjutteble plows. 5 bottom 11
in. Cate Hmi-mount plows. 2
bottom plows 10 fit C Ferll"'lll
tractot, 2 bottom dreg pW)wt.
Oliv..- 4 bottom drag plows. 4ft.
Woods belly mower fit1 Cub
. Far!'NIII , Oliver II tractot inde pendent Wve PTO wfde front end.
Oliver eo tractor 2 new ti,_ runt
like new . c.n 114· 388-8184 .

Male LA11 Apto 9 weft• old.
Rttieterecl with AkC . S~ts &amp;
wormtd . t1715 . Call 114-441-

.._,._. co.,..ct dfyer, Neda-

' '•

930 Cue tractor, with cab, low
1\oura, 16 bottom semi-mounted
plow1, • rvw JD com planter,
f4.660 . Cel 614 -288-81522 .

814-441-7432.

304-411· 11501 .

o~'o£'~"~"lo~

Canaday Realty

··~.~

Pric. reduced on beeutlful AKC
BoltOn Terrier pupptes, Cell

•100. Fino. 304-111·1014.

&lt;-

\.=.1

: Bar. 4 steoh, like new, antiQue
. 11 fill, Mona jar. ll'hone 304 -

. - · E..... Nfo UOO. 0 ...

RELOCATED OWNER MUST SELL - Aslling $49,nl, bul will
coosller any reasonable offer on this 3 bedroom home. Includes
large eat·mknchen.lt&lt;ing room, fami~ room woth woodburner and
IJ1e car garage.
#
219

f3.850. Coii14-288 -IB22.

Pets for Sale

• 104-571 ·2171 .

•1•. tae .oo. 18hone

. lov•ut and stand reuphol, te:..-.1 t171.; Coneole lf:erao

~

1 3!; MF tractor. 2 bottom plows,

9790.

en-HM.

.

Sl•b•· t6 pet bundle white the.,
la!lt . Call 614 -245 -5804

523-5843.

Kennell All -breed
grooming . Aduha 6 puppiea.
Entlith C~cket Spanielt. 388·

· forMie. ur com 12.21 bu . Call
Wo.. I • ·R:'· or after 10 p .m .

5052.

S.E. Ollio .

lftarpatctl

WttlriiUOI compacu au1o
., . . . . . 4 Yft old. 1225 .00 .

Oairv ca1o 9 It wtdewith remote
comp .. SJOO Cell 614 -245 -

~

wv. 2B·U l . Jo4.

171-41113.

COZV AfA KITTEll! - Thafs how you'llleel ownmg th~ tidy 3
bedroom home. E.al-in kitchen. I car garage. Energy eff1cienl
window~ fenced in yard. $37.500 Don't be caught napp1ng on
th~ one' .;#246

Armstrong wood burn er stove or
can be mede in to furnace . Alto
soma wood S150 . Handi -Kieen
part1. washer S100 Call 814 ·
245 -5067.

C11llaflan '• Used Tire Shop . 011(1r
1.000 tiret . sizt~a 12. 13 . 14. 15 .
16, 18 .6 . 8 miiDS out Rt. 218 .
Call 814-256 -6251

or 11200. for ell. Tobacco 1tiek1
lie ..ctl. 304·676 -1288 or

66

• 304·171-1483 or 178-14110. ·

bedroom home i new condilon. I ~
ntPr&gt;~r•, heal pump, 12124 pool. Over ~ ac. in all wi1h
area. City schoo~. ~umable mortgage. May ~ade for
mo~te home $59.500.
#326

- -

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himalayen, Pertien and
Stam.. ki11ens . AKC Chow
puppies. ~ell 448 -)844 after
7PM,

for

'

2 row MF com pl111ter. lpt. ditc .

Pk*tnt UNCI Fumlture, good
. ..-Jity UMd fumiture, hour~
1 :00 tei:OO or br .,..ointment

: 0..,..-

CROSS I SONS
Wnl, Jackton, Ohio.

3~

Mauey ftrgu10n, New Ho61Md,
Buth Hog Sal111 a Senrie.. Over
40 uted trac10rt to choOM from
&amp; co""lete line of new a ullld
equipment. largnt 111'-ction in

304 -8'7&amp;·

'•

Firewoodtorsale Call814 · 2ti6 1528

64 Misc . Merchandise

'

Farm Equipment

81 4·288-11451 .

weight?
Centect GlerNi Gt-ete Rt 2 loa

a pickup load , you haul it . Ca ll

8x14 flatbed

.....nee

s.-. •out 6oeint

table, 5 pc _ fi repl•ce ut insel•
brus plated. double bed mettreu &amp; toundetion , Ce11 614·
440 -U37

on

feet

4131 .

U.S.

300 4~~:oi&amp;J.4 ' GMt po1t1 •~ . each

·

TON'f''l GUN R04~1. t.cn dip
......... 811 fYINI of ...... mitt.

REAL ESTATE

61

UtHtty Bldg. Spl.: 30'•40 ' x9' .
Eave w - 15' a8' tlidlng door &amp;
Mrv. door· 15251 erected . Iron
HorN Bldg1 . 8H - l32 -974~

3_....,._moun uoo
c.ftee ~le • 2 lnd . tllbln. collect.
Uzt. v..., good condltioo. 1-------

614 -U&amp; -4699

Antiques

Kentucky lump, Ohkl Lu~.

occ:e-

love teat &amp; cheir, oblong coffee

53

a tll'r- Contw.:t

I Ifill ~~~~ pi li''
I« L:v 1:slu" k

- . o...- . 114-2111-1427. Ohto Stnar. v~ or delivery,
oetntnt ltlockt and bYIIding
flrewoo41 t.r Mit 130 .00 PU rne...-lat. Galllpolil llock Co •.
lo .. . HEAP
Con 814· 1''11" St.. DolNpoils. Olllo CoM
311·1341 . Rog• Me.. e.
814-441-2713.

E. M. WISE""•N,
BIOIEI
lilA

.46-3644

66 Building Supplies

D-5

U048

LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION- Two 5 acre
lracts of land, within 2\\ m11es lrom town. Owner
financin&amp;lo qualified liuyer.
VACANT LAND -97 acres more or less. $25,000.
MIOOI

.,..

$22.000- NICe lormat ranch , 3 bedroom s, bath,
large kitchen, living room . Close to town . city
schools.

•tell&amp;
FAR• LAIID - 62 acres ol fine clean lond, 2
ponds.
Ml016

CITY SCHOOLS - 3 bed roo011. 2 baths. tam1ly
roo m, torma lltvmg ar.d dtntng room. Stlual ed on 3
acres more or less.
#1032
ACREAGE - 72 aCies more 01 less Appro• 60
acres pasture and woods, some tillable. located 1
mile off SR 7. $28,000.
#1038
LOTS- Nice 100' lot s lor $3.500 each, 13 m1les
!rom Holzer HospitaL Owner w1ll land contract
#960

C 111M Century 21 Ileal Es1A1&lt; C9rllr&gt;rttiotiUIMIM for the NU. ill anrl"- lrldettlorts o1 Century 21llool E11lte C&lt;&gt;rpllrtllon. Prlnlet! in U.S. A. Equol Housing Opporlun ill
.
UClli!WICI 18 OOlUDIIIIIml OWNID AND OIUATBil

Ci)

�•

Th8 Sunday Times•Sentinel

Page-D-671

Autos for Sale

73

Vans lit 4 W.O.

'79 Chevy \61, 4f WD, tiC, cruin

1979 Ford F.lrmoat, 2 dr., blue,
no rutt. 8 cyl. , au1o ., 90 .. .0
milu. reel d..,endlble Clit. AC .
AM-FM CIIHttl. reer window
deff011 . new
tnow radllll.
Diehud blttery • brakee,

cont., Scottldale pek . Men 0
Wu c1mper top lntulated
04,200 . 304· 823·8843 or871·
1288.

'16

Boats'\nd

76

Motors for Sale

Auto Parts
lit Accessories

79 Motors Home•
lit Campers

John boat for •Ia. Cell 814-

258·11'17.

Black i•P top lor 1951 -57 N
38 , A1. 0100. 814·949· 2481 .

U,100 C.ll 814·.W8·03&amp;2.

81

, BLACKBURN
REAL1Y
514 ..
A"'"

For repeir or ~rtl . 1976 Dodge
Chargtr. Slant 8. EltCtllent
cond.. Standard. 4 Goody. .r
radial ti ..... almo1t new . white
r1illd lentr~ . 70 Mrill. 4 elum.
IIPOkl Whll . t500 . 614-9492800 evn.

Plumbing
lit Heating

~

u•·
GalliJloliH, Ohio ·i 5h:J
l'hon .. I h 14) .J4n-01108

1976 Che11y Impale. 37,000
Ktull miles . 11760 . firm . 814-

742 2187.

1973 Maveri ck UOO.OO. Phone
after 2:00 PM 304-67G-'823.

rune!

CARTER 'S PWMSING
AND HEAnNO
Cor. Fourth end Pine

19711 OMC Jl....., c .... V011,
23ft. 114· 241·1441.

St:il ' ' '

814-742 ·2802 .

82

86

General Hauling

Jam.. Bo&gt;tt Wet., S.W:.. Alto

s••,.

1954 Chevy Belaire. 2 door
tllrdtop , ttlnderd, Nns good.
Body feir . 8550. 080 . Cell

January 19, 1988

Ohio- Point Plellunt. W. Va.

Home
Improvement•
BASE MINT
WAUAPRODFINO

Unc:.n4itlon.a lifetime guer.n·

OaMipolit, Ohio
PMne 114-441 -3118 or 114-

448-44'77 •

JIM'S I'LUMIINO. HEATING.
Itt. 1, loa 311. Gtlllpolls. Cell
814-:117-0t7t.
Clarfl Pklinblng end Hetting. 18
YNrl ~.,ce , unstop dreln1.
New-remodeling · reptlr work .

83

Ao11r1

Oood-1 bcawdng, baaementL
fool~~n , drivewllfl, septic tlnh,
l.nd•caping. Cell envtlme 614·
448-4537. Jtmll L. Devieon.
Jr. owner.

laaerntnt

Weteirpreoflng .

814 -448 -117&amp; or 114-4415 -

7911 .
Ken't Water Stntice. Welle,
dlltmt. pools filled . Phone
814·387·0823 or 814 -387 ·
7741 nigh t

Of

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

Excavating

Weugh 's Water S8r.ice. Welis.
cisttma,. poolt. Ftst, reliable
HfVIc.. CeH 814-256-1240 or
814-258 - 1130. A..sonsble
relet.

87

Race heats up

Jr. Miss orientation

See editorial on Page 2

Photo, story on Page 6

·

day.

Phon• 304· 812·2012 .

t•. loal referenc.e furnllhecl .

frM lltimetel. Catt collect
1-t14·237-041t, doy. ·

pools filled. Call 614-2158-1 14'1
Of

Busim,•ss
St'nict•s

Upholstery
TRISTATE

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis
814· 446 -7833 or 61.t -446 -

183J .

.Tar Heels win again

Nation honors King

Story on Page 3

Story on Page 10

VIDEO PICTURES
TAKEN OF
WEDDINGS AND
SPECIAl EVENTS.

e

367-7660

n

Oldsrmbile Cutlue 1800.
Fuel oil flO Yt, 250 gtl. mnk,
both $100. 304-676 .2738 .

•

at y

en tine
1 Section. 10 PagM
26 Cents
A .Multimedit Inc . NewiPaper

Dttaun 280 ZX 2 2. lilver blue,

1c, 11ereo. uc . cond. 18,900.
304 ·!23-5843 .

Miserable conditions

1976 Ford Pint o 1979 engine,
nM battery end aterter. alumi-

num &amp;lot whtelt, 4 eyl. , 4 II).
Nnl IIIC. bod¥ gre~t l Am -fm

ctssette tap e . " Bills Gas Ia Carry
Out " . New Heven. 304-882 ·

2428 .

72

Trucks for Sale

'86 4x4 S-10 Mui Ceb eir . PS .
auto. tren1. AM -FM cllteftetnd
Start 6HP go-kert, like new .

THE FA lillY lllllllOVE IT HERE! - This
home offers 1728 5(1 . fl .. 3 BRs. L~ baths
plu s shower in basement. galley kitchen 11
completely eQ Uipped, LR. family room,
drnmg room, carpeting, cen l!!l air/ heal
pump, rear dec k overlooks Raccoon. C&gt;ll
lor an appoin lmenl loday

OANV ILLE AREA - Clost to llti&amp;s llinu
- 67 acres. m/1. mce home offm 3BRs. 2
baths. krtchen wi DW , diSpl., double owen,
relng., WB stove, 22xl2 LR. din ing room ;
elec . furnace, carpetmg. Bam on property
24xll with loft. Call today 101 more in lor·
mal1on.

GE. Specl•ling

ift

z.,.lth. C.U

304 -5711· 2391 Of 814-4.tl•

2414.
Fetty TrM Trimming, stump
removal. Ctll3o.t·671-1331

197fl Chrvsler Cordoba. Ctill

rienced ctroenter, eftctridtn,
1175-2088 or 1175-7318 .

Starks Tree tnd Uwn Service,
ltnd..:tping. 304-1178-2010.

197 8 Chevy Scotttdllt 4 -WO
with msnv tllltrat . good cond.

n

7,

Rotary or r::able tool drilling.

MOlt weHeco~ttell MmldiV.
Purnp Nlel 1nd HNiot. 304-

1978 Chevy Luv 4 IPd., radjo,
IPOrtv 11 , 799 . Johns Auto

896· 3102

hies, 8uleville Rd ., Gtllipolis.

Bttl'lroom. kitchen r.mdeline.
cerunic tile inltllltktn, •oofine.
drywell. ~umblng , tlectr+ul, (eN
ph .... of building!. ltM-87&amp;2440

1980 ChttVy PU 6 cyl .. 3 spd ..

l hlfl) , 12.696 . 1978 Dodge VIR
11 ,495 . 1978 Ford PU 11 ,095.
1978 Jeep CJ5 Golden E.gle
5&amp; .000, S2.096 . B &amp; D Motol'1,
Hwv. 160. 614 ·446· 7322 .

1 978 Oodge iiJ ton pick -up . New
cemper top . 6 cyL , 3 speed.
Excellent con dition . Mey c;on·
sider tr lde Ca ll61• -949 · 2658.
1976 Chlt'o' . pickup , C~eyenne Yz
ton . V·B, PS Cell lili14 -388 -

8272 .
- - - - -- --- lc1979 1.&lt;. ton Ford . 2 whl. drive.
400 eng. tow mi let, 12000 .
firm. 614 ·992 -6270.

1963 FOld pickup. lair cdti d.

Ph o ne 304 -676 -

$300 .00
4168.

VW R1bbitt LX

piclup. new

diesel engine. ac . 1tento. 48
mpg . ex c. cond. n .soo 304·
623 - ~43 .

NEW LISTING - NEAR NORTH GALLIA
HIGH SCHOOL- Tn ·level home offers 3
BR s, LR, bath , 24x20 fam1ly room , carpet·
ing, electric heat, n1ce deck. anached gar·
age. Call lor an appomtmen l.

CLOSE TO TOIIIN - N1ce onestory home
featuring kitchen . LR. lam1ly room , dming
room , full basement. carpeting, gas heat.
city water. 2 car unaHached block garage.

200 ACRES MI L. FRONTS ON RACCOON
CREEK - App roxima tely 65 acres tillable

QUALITY IN EVERY DETAIL - 3 01 4 BR
bnck home offers a 20x40 fam rly room, 3
balhs, k1lchen w1lh OW. drspl., mr cro wave
and trash com paclor. dimng room, inlet·
com system , central arr, 2 car garage, deck
and a 20x40 pool Over $100.000. Call fo1
appornlment today

.

and 135 acres woods . Comfortable two
story home oHers 4 BR s, bath , krlchen . ll v·
ing room. lam1ly room. two lrrepl am .
barn. 2 large sc reened p01ches l ovely
qurel senlng.
RESIDENTIAL - COIIIERCIAL - OR
BOTH' - Very niCe bnck l'&lt;lme located al
225 Thrrd Sl. has had mellen! ca1e and
offers 1424 sq ft. of liVIng area wrth a lu ll
pa rt ~ally finiShed ba sement. Also features
acarport. workshop and a 28x38 concrete
block commercral type bldg wrlh 3 bays
used as an automottve repa11
I lor more 1nformat1on .

1979 JHP CJ ·10 . long wheel
b111 PU . CJ,~IIdra treck . 360. V -8 ,

eulo . a1r. PS . PB, tlid1ng , ..,
windelw . low mil..ge 1979
CJ -5 Golden Eagle. V-8 . lspd ..
spoke wheels . AM ·FM stereo.
tow mtleege Cell 614 -446 9700
~
1982 Dodge A1 m custom va n
auto . urpet . AM-FM tape . w ire
rimt . ,por1y, 14 , 499. John ' s
Auto Salel, Bulaville Ad , Galli polis , Oh

1970 Ford window ven . Econo·
line. S500 Ce l\614 ·446 ·9650

NORTH GALLI A ESTATES - Morgan Twp
l00x300 lot Ask1ng $3.900 Owner w1ll
cons1der fmanc1ng.
24 ACRES 11 / l , HARRISON TWP .. CLAY
LICK ROAD - Rollrni land . well oo orop erty. barn and tobacco base. Call lor more
detarls
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE - 14170 Fleet
wood Broad more, 2 BR. 2 balhs .~ krtchen
wl range and ICing . ca rpeting, lO x1l me·
tal storage bldg. Call lor more delarls
GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres more or
less located sculh of Mercervrlle Approx
20A ti llable Balan ce woods toba cco base
Ow ner wrll help llnan ce
OWNER ANIIOUS TO SELL - HAS RE ·
DUCED THE PRICE BY $10.000- 132 9
acres mi l rn Waln ut Twp 11: story home
has 3 BRs. bath . 42x94 barn . lar ge tobacco
ba se Call tor an appornlm&lt;nl

POMEROY , 0 .

992-2259
NEW LI STING - Syracuse
- ~ 2 IJedH)(]m home on a l
ac1e lot Room tor a mobtle
Mme life 'ISO $1 3.500000
NEW LI STING - letart lnexpen :;tve houstng 1S availa ble wtth thiS 2 3 ~droom on a
large

101

Rental

mestmen l

lor on I&gt; $1500 00
NEW LISTING - Rt. 33 near iCWI'fl Acompletely remodeled 3 bedwom horne New
furnace. carpe!lng, k1tchen
cabmts and bathroom h;.:
lure, Nolhrng to dobut move.
,,, $1 900000
NEW LI ST IN G - Pomeroy
- 5" '"of wooded land to
en1ov are great Add to lhrs a
3 bedroom 2 ba th home
w1tf' basemen!, ga r.:t ge . and
barn rna kes 1! 1deal for you l

Near 1own - good condr
t10n Only $28.000 00
NEW LISTING - Foreclo·
su1e p10perty pr 1ced to sell

at $12 900 00 Needs some
work. bul has great polen ~a l Call for mf ormat1on
NEW LISTING - Trnec lusu re
property - up to l r!'fltal
un1ts PU1 ch ase as IS, good 1n·
veslment .v1th repa1rs .vould

navegood gross mcome Sieal
al $19.900 00

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

follow heavy snowfall

RINOLES ' S SERVICE . lllP•

muon. painter, roofing (lndud·
ing hoi tar lppUCIIIiorl) 304·

614 ·" 6·4256

Chevy 4-WD . Ce ll efter
8U -3C57-0661

RON ' S Ttlevitlon Service .
Hou .. ceh on RCA, Queru,

LOOK AT THIS! 10 ACRES ll l l , ONE YEAR
OLD RANCH - $39.9001 -ThiS home
offers 1584 SQ II . 4 BR s. 2 bath; , krtchen.
lam rly room . l 2x24 LR . drnmg room. carpetmg. elec 88 heal. Andersen thermo
'panes. county water SW school d1slnct
Callloday and lnake an appmntmenllo see
thiS one
PRICE REDUCED TO $55.000 - Owner
movrng lo farm. E&gt;eellenlly located 3 BR
bnck ranch 1n M1il1 V1l iaie. Othe1leatures
rnclude LR. FR. eQurpped knchen . 1·- bath.
lull hasement 10x10 covered palro. very
nrce llal fen ced ba c,yard Ma •e an ap
porn tmenlto see thiS ooe today
BRAND NEW DUPLU - Greal rnveslment
lor the buyer Loc ated oo Graham SchOol
Rd Each un11 offers 2 8R s. IrVIng room.
bllh. krtchen wrth stove, oelrrg., DW and
d1spl . laund1y. large carport centra l a11
and stor age area

THE PRICE ON THIS HOllE IN CUTENARY
HAS BEEN REDUCED - Home features 3
BR s. l 'l baths. eQ Uipped krtchen. drnene.
central a1r , nat gas heat. covered pat1o.
unanached g"age Call for an appornlmenl
DO YOU WANT LOTS OF AOOII PLUS !HE
CONVENIENCE OF LIVING IN TOIIIN1 Th rs home offers both. l ocated on Second
Ave lh rs home has 3 or 4 bed rooms.LR,
dr n1ng room . large ki!Chen Wllh pantry off
k1lch en , smal l back porch . large lronl
por ch. full lol ·w1lh plenty of room lor garden and k1ds. gas heal. unanached one tal
ga rage Callloday for an appornlment
ADDISON TWP . - Appro. 7 mrles from
Ga llrpolrs 39 '' ac r~s more or less fronts
on township road All woods and brush .
$8.9JO.

GENTLEMAN'S FARII - 35 acres m/ 1,
mostly bllable. 3 miles north of Rodney.
Spnn g, well and county water . fenced and
cross fenced . Tobacco base. Very n1ce 301
4 bedroom ranch style home wrlh k1lchen.
LR. bath. breezeway . woodburn mg lrreplace Call for an appOintment
$1,000 - II ACRES - CHESHIRE TWP.
- Vacant lan d. sepiiC lank on property.
Call lor more rn formatron.
ADDISON IWP.- Possom Trot Rd .- 93
acres mi l. all woods Old barn on properly.
$21.900
COIIIERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL - IN·
DUSTRIAL - 50 acres, more or less. vacant land rdeal lor mvestment or any type
development. Road honlage on U. S. 35
and M1lchell Rd.
GREEN TOWNSHIP - 150 acre; m/1, approx . 40 acres llllable, tobacco barn . drrvethru shed . melal callle bam. Approx 1?
acre lake on property
ATIENTION INVESTORSII RENTAL IN·
COlE OF $415 PER IIONTH - ASKING
PRICE $29.900' - 1.5 acresmi l, 5rooms
an d bath home, l2 x65 mob1le home and
mo b1le home pad . Call lor more delarls to ·
day
YOU CAN OWN A LITTLE BIT OF COUNTRY
- 5 acres m/ 1on St. Rt. 141. N1ce one
story home has a lamrly room w1th W()Od ·
burner. lull basement. heal pump. central
arr. CISiern, well and county w~le1. Green
School Call lor an appornlmenl
YOU'LL LIKE LIVING HERE - 3 BR ranch
IU sf mrnules Irom town on Rl. 141. Other
features 1nclude k1!chen w/ range, rel ng.,

OW . drspl. and oven . LR wllh llfeplace.
balh. lull basement. dec•. fenced back·
yard. gas heal. cenlral arr . Clly school diS·
trrct.
RACCOON CREEK HOMESITE - Oilers
sw1mmrng. boat1ng and frsh 1ng Lot111e rs
I 00•600 and has electrrc. water lap and
seplrc lank Call lor more delarls

90 Rinse, as the
throat

1 Courses

7 Classifies
12 Mlll1ary student
17 Musical
Instrument

21
22
23
2&lt;4
:15

Master
Extra
Reason
German river

Compass point
26 Ex1rernely terrible
28 Keen
30 Hold back
32 Math term
33 Dollar bill
35 Japanese

92 Roman road
~Faction

95 Delineated
96 Zodiac sign
97 Seesaw
99 Storage
comp,artment
100 Remainder
10 1 Nobleman
102 Notice lheloss of
103 Obstruc1
105 Most unusual
107 Samarium

166 Trapped
168 Biblical character

169 Handle
170 Dispatches
171 Place opposite

DOWN
I City in Nevada
2 Beasts of burden
3 Above
4 Spread for drying
5 Goddess of
discord
6 Wander
7 Steamship: abbr.

75
76
77
79
80
82
83
84
86
88
89
90

Dawn goddess
Relies on
Pamphlet
Kind of beer
Tropical lruils
Wireless set
Shore
Lilts wilh lever
Damp
Bone ol body
Lock of hair
Stares open·
mouthed
g 1 Place for combat
93 Deliverance
95 Surgical saw
97 Shade
98 Male sheep
t02 Obligation
104 Rodents
106 Female deer

37 Sling
39 Band worn

symbol
109 Abstract berng
110 Short hit
111 Forgive
1t3 Soaks up
114 - Bela Kappa

around waist
40 Lair

115 South America:
in it

41 Japanese drama
43 Equals twelve

116 Time gone by
117 Dress border

15 Landed properly
16 Importune

118 Uncouth person

lOB Bogged down in
mud
110 Prohibits
111 Feel indignant at

17 Brick -carryi ng

112 Mountain lake

be\lerage

months
4 5 Haste
47 Tellurium symbol

48 Chair
49 Of the nose
52 Hail ·
5-4 Ancien t Jewtsh
ascetic

56
57
59
61
62
63

Lounges about
Entertained
Pack awoy
Willow
Food fish
Soil

64 Teu tonic deity
66 Ocean

67 Opp. of Rep.
68 Burden

120 Babylonian deity
12 1 District in
Germany
122 Vehicle
123 St rain for breath

124 God ot love
126 Essential
cha ra~ ter

128 Unruly children

130 Choral
co mpositio ns

t32 Informal letter
134 Bound
135 Corn units

136 Myself
137 Cuts
139 Lounging slipper

69 Manuscript : abbr .
7 1 Frozen water

141 Exist

72 Pintail duck
74 Cornered
76 Hard of hearing

143 River islands
145 Civil in juries
147 Pecan and

77 Pedal digit
78 Concerning
79 Praised

almond. e.g.
149 Edge
152 Equally

8 1 Npgative prefi)(
82 Harvest

153 Heavenly beings
155 Female relative

83 Craw
84 Couple
85 Nol processed
87 Strips ollea1her

157 Expanse ot grass
159 Fulfill

89 Brown. ss bread

142 Free of

~ 60

Gratuities

162 Ci rclets
164 Pre-eminent

8 Harvest goddess

9 Cheers
10 English streetcars
11 Mexican shawl

12 Centimeter: abbr.

13 Swiss river
14 Club

107 Portion

assessments

device
18 Commerc1al ·
19 Amend

20 Publishes
27 Pieces out
29 Chief eJ~;ecutives

31 Rhodium symbol
34 Guarantee

36 Dines
38 Tried
40 Erase: pnnting
42 Kiln

44 Decays
46 Judge
48 Traded for money
49 Lowest point
50 Priest's vestment
51 French arti cle

53 Bard
55 Sodium symbol

56 Molded mass ol
'bread
58 Petile
60 Give prior notice
62 Cleaning
substa nce

65 Blushing
68 Meadows
69 Antlered animal

70 Clan s
72 Goes by wa1er
73 M ost uncanny

t 14 Very poor person ·
116 Strokes
!17 Chapeaux '
119 Fate
121 Pierce
t22 Pasteboard
123 Proceed
125 Stupefy
127 Near
128 Chastise
129 Dried grape
130 Shooting star
t31 Shoo1s
!33 Hebrew monlh
136 Force
t3B Cubic meter
140 Babylonian hero

143 Artic le
!44 Wild plum
146 Peruse
148 Trade
t 50 Roman dale
t51 Fashion
t 53 Beast of burden
154 Health resort
156 Goal
158 Pinch
181 River in Italy
163 Saini: abbr.
165 Dysprosium
symbol
167 Behold!

CENTRALLY LOCATED - GREEN TWP . 22 11 AC m/ l wrlhlronlageonSI Rt 14 1
and Nerghborhood Rd Also ad101n1 San ders Hrll Subdrvrsron Owner frnancrng
avarlable Call lor more deta~ ls
PERRY TWP . - 11 8 acres, mi l, older
home oilers 2 BRs. LR . krtchen . bath. full
ba sement. storm wmdow s. well . rural water available. Call for more delarls.
103 ACRES 1 / l , SPRINGFIELD TWP. Appro• 96 A. l1llable. older home has 5
BRs. bath. LR, krlchen . county wale! ,
40x60 fX)Ie bldg., 40x60 lobacco barn. Va rrou s other oulburldrngs

NEW LISTING - 2 unrl renta l tn Middleport 1n good

condrlron $355 00 monlh ly
g JO s~ 1ncome. owner want s
$24 900 00 ' nd m'y help fr~
nance CAll TOO.AY 1
IDEAL TIME TO BUY A
HOME ' WE HAVE A 9.8%
RATE MONEY AVAILABLE'
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992·6191
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dollie Turne1 992· 5692
Jo Hill 985-1466

CDIIIElCIAL BUILDING - PERRY TWP.
- NEAR CORA - 6000 sq. ft. steel bldg.,
ldea_l for trt_yone m truck10g. drillin' or
mmmg buSHless. Owner may consider
I
gor hn1r1cmc. Call lor m01e in forma·

® 1986 United Fealure Syndical&lt;

•

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel. Staff Writer
Treacherous roads and scanered
power outages made !11e m iserable
Sunday night and Monday morning
for some Meigs Counlian s, not to
mention for highway department
and power company work crews.
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. reported the greatest
number of outages for customers
served by lis Atilens' lines.
Fred Deskins of Columbus and
Southern's Athens office reported
approximately 3,000 customers off
on a llne running from Nelsonville
south to Pomeroy. Areas of Meigs
County affected by this outage
Included Texas Rd., lhe Harrison·
ville and Snowville areas, St. Rt . 248
In tile Chesler area. the 1\Jppers
Plains-Coolville area. Success Rd .
and Cherry Ridge: AI 10 a.m. this
morning, about 550 cu stomers were
wtlhout power In these areas.
Ron McDade of Columbus and
Soutilem's GalUpoUs ofilce reported aboul859 customers on their
Cheshire line toward Middleport
· werewlthoul powerbetween4and6
a.m. this morning. By 10 a.m ..
customers on this line were r es·
tared " 1th the excepllon of aboulll
in the Little Kyger area.
McDade also reported !hal about
100 customers on Hysell Run.
Monkey Run and Cave St. in
Pomeroy were out for a lime, as
well as 175 customers in the Lincoln
Heishts area.
,
Altogether, McDade said abOut
100! customers served out of
Gallipolis were affected by tile
outages. As of 10:30 this morning,
only about 1~ of tilose customers
were still without electnc service.
Ohio Power Co. was also plagued
wflh outages dunng the night and at

10 a.m. reported about 270 CUSIO·
mers were without electricity In the
Story's Run, Langsville and Racine
areas.

Both McDade and Des kins and
Ernie Sisson of Ohio Power anl!ci ·
pated the problems would be
corrected today.
Buckeye Rural Electric Co-Op
and Monongahela Power Co. could

not be reached this morning for
infonnalion regarding tilelr Meigs
Coun ty customers.
The stale highway departrnent
reported tha i lraffic on primary
roads in I he county moved at a good
pace this morning desplle I he five to
eighl inch snowfall. Rts. 7 and 33
and the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
(Continued on page 10)

GET om TilE SHOVELS - Employee Jam Guinther got 1m
exercise Monday momlng as he shoveled snow from the driveway at
SmJth..Nelson Motors on East Main. Next door at UUie Dan's Exxon
they used a front end loader to clear Lhelr drive.

Economic turnaround in Ohio
no~ed by· Governor Celeste

•

FINISHING UP - Things around Pomeroy got a
Ultle harried Swlday a1temoon when the pumps at the
SuperAmesica Service Station at Zl9 West Main
(botlom photo) wouldn't shutcifand about:JIIlgaDons
of gu.soUne escaped. The Pomeroy Fire Department
was called to Lhe scene around 3: 30 p.m. and

everything was mder control by 5:30. Some of Lhe gas
went Into the river and Ohio EPA and the Coast Guard
were both notified. (Top photo ), The area was closed
to tralllc from the Pomeroy-Mason bridge to
BuUemut Ave. The sherl!!'s department and
Pomeroy and Middleport PoUce assisted.

Trucker charged in traffic
death early today on US 35
GALLIPOLIS - A North Carolina man has been chargl'd, wt1h
negligPnl homicide and passing
wllhoul an assured clear distance
by the Gallta-Melgs post oflhe Siale
Highway Patrol followtng a twovehicle collision on U.S: 35 early
Monday morning wlllch killed a
Montgomery County man.
The victim was ldenlifled by tile
patrol as Gary A. Porterfield. 21, of
216 lrwtn St .. Daylon.
JamPs A. Winstead. ~5. of
Graham, N.C ., Is lodged In the
Gallia CO)Jnty Jail pending a
hearin g on the charges In Gallipolis
Municipal Cou rt .
The pa l rol sa id PortPrfleld was
eastbOund on 35, about one and
two-tenfhs miles wesl of Ohio 588.
when a trarlor·lraller, driven by
Winstead, allegedly allempted lo
pass another vehicle and struck
Porterfield head-on.
Winstead was not Injured In tile
12:01 a.m. collision. troopers said.
Porterfield was pronounced dead
al lhP scene. lhe patrol said. His
deat h Is 1111' first fatality this year In
Gallla County.
A Meigs County woman Is tlsled
In stable condlllon al Veteran!(
Memorial Hospital followtng a
single-car accident Sunday mom·
lng on Ohio 325.
Candace L. Tillis, 35, of Langs·
ville, Is being lrealed for fractured
ribs, possible Inlra·abclomlnal ln·
Juries and a possible concussion,
hosplial official s said.

The Gallia-Meigs post d the State
Highway Patrol said Tillis was
southbound on 325. al the lnlerscctlon or Salem Twp. 321. when sh&lt;'
allegl'dly lost conlrol d her car In a
curve and went orr the right side of
I he road lnlo a ditch.
Her vehicle sustained heavy
damage in the 6:15a.m . accident,
troopers said .
Meanwhile, three prople dieil in
weather-related accidents and a
Amish youth was killed In a l&gt;Jggytruck crash Sunday, boosting
Ohio's weekend traffic deat h toll to
10, according lo the Stale Highway
Patrol.
Three separate accidents thaI
OCCUlTed on snow-covered road ·
ways and wlihln a few minutes of
5:30p.m. Sunday claimed I he lives
of a Marysvil le man. a Bellefon·
Iaine woman and a Clermonl
County teenager.
A horseodrawn buggy pulled lnlo
the path or a tractor·! railer on U.S.
250 In Wayne County abOut 9: 15
p.m . Sunday, killing the 17·year-old
driver of file buggy as well as the

oorse.

Across the state, there were six
deaths Sunday, I'Ml Saturday and
two Friday night . Only Of\e of the
victims, woo died in 10 separate
accidents, was wearing a sea t bell.
a P,alrol spokesman said.
The patrol counts fatalities resu lt·
ing from accidents on the state's
JX!bllc roadways each weekend
betWEen 6 p.m. ?rlday and mid·

nigh! Sunday.
Killed were:
Sunday
Marysville: Richard R. Gruen·
baum, 47. Marysville, in a I'MJ-car
accident on a Union Coun ty road .
Bellefontaine : Rebecca P. God·
frey, 61. Bellefontaine. in a I'MJ-car
crash on U.S. 33 In Logan County,
Panna: Josephine Lenarcic. 71,
Panna. In a two-vehic le collision on
a Parma street .
Baiavla : Lisa A. Kidwell. 15,
Goshen, ln a one-car crash on Ohio
131 in Clermont County.
Wooster : David J. Schlaybach,
17, Apple Creek, when his horse·
drawn buggy pulled lnlo I he path or
a lraclor·tralier on U.S 259 In
Wayne County.
Cleveland: Ronald G. Planlsek,
7, Cleveland, whPn st ruck by a car
as he anempled to cross a city
street.

Saturday
Akron: Cheryl E . Newton, 22 ,
Plllsfleld, Mass., in one.car accident on the Ohio 1\Jmplke in
Summit County. ~
Hamillon: Ha1vey Wayne Brock,
28, Ham!llon, in a one- vehicle
acclclenl on a Butler County road .
Filday
Usbon: Bryan B. Samherson, 19,
Wellsville, Ina car·sernlaccldenton
U.S. ll In Columbiana Coo nty.
Hamlllon: John K. Williams, ll,
Hamilton, ln a one-vehicle crash on
a Butler County road .

COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPll -Gov.
Richa rd f . Celeste predicts lhP
Buckeye Sta le will experience the
same economic turnaround thai
happened in New England and "be
the Massachusen s of l hP next
generallon."
During his life half·hour lelevi·
sian call·in show Saturday night,
Celeste said Ohio has been gaining
populallon the last couple of years,
allrlbuttng that growtil lo hi s
policies.
The governor addressed a variety or topics that arose from
questions from the audience and
caller erom throughoul the state
during that show broadcast over
nine · Ohio lelevlslon statio ns and
paid for by hi s re-election campaign
commtnee.
He deal! with l hP thorny Issues of
Ohio's busines's I axes and workers
compensallon progra ms. wtth the
state lonery proceeds and wllh I he
Income tax hike he engineered in
19&amp;1
'
But Celeslhaid populalion sla t!so
lies show that "staning In 1984 we
actually began to grow again." He
said this Is because his admlnlslra·
lion's policy furnished new jobs

which drew prople lo the Buckeye
State.
"People wrote Massachuse1 1s off
about 25 years ago," commcnled
the governor. "They said now that
the textile mills havP closed, and
the shoe faclories have closed.
everyone's going lo leavP Massa·
chusells. Today If's leading lhP
country with the lowesl unemploy ~
ment and a growtng population.
We're going 10 he the Ma ssachu ·
setts of the nexl generation."
On workers compensa lion. Celeste said he recognizes " legtlimaiP
concerns" oft fxo business commun
ity and sa id tilose concerns result
from a number of " unknowns"
anached 10 recent court decisions
liberalizing workers compensation.
He said lfxo business concerns are
" panly a result of what 's happen·
Ing around the countr,• wllh
increaSI'S in casualty Insurance
costs and of her costs."
The goveroor said he hopes the
GenPral Assembly can wrile legis lation to revive lhe workers com ·
pensallon system by providing a
" frame11urk for costs" so bu siness
wtll know what it mu s1 pay fo r.

in response to a quesllon alx&gt;ut
busmess 1axes. Celesle sa id Ohio's
s1a1e and local bu siness !axes
ranked 361h in the coumry and "if
you compare us 10 mos1 of · the
heavily induslrlali7.Pd sfales, we
rank very favorably in terms of tax
burden."
"I think in 1erms of rhP coSIS of
1axes wr are very co mpetitive,"
said Celesle. " Our lax&lt;'S are
coming doMl ."
The governor also look lhe
oppotuni ty to explain lhal while he
and lfxo GenNa! A!i';cmbly raised
laxes in Iffi..1. they had provided
some reductions since lhen.
On other matiNS. lhP governor
said:
- Th~ slaiP gov~rn menl can help
!ann fa mill~s by providing lowInterest loans. maintaining tile
quality of educ1ron and extension
service and trying lo expand
markel s for Ohkl products.
- He is working with lix' goveroors of other Greal Lakes stales to
somehow redute the water level in
Lake Erie 10 pmlecl the shoreline
while still permilting hea~· shipping.

Governor still seeks running mate
Riffe Jr.• D·New Boston, and Sen.
By United Press lntematlonal
The biggest question circula ting Eugene Branstool of Utica, hath of
In political circles these days whom want to remain In the
appears to be "Will you run wtlh me • legislatu re.
Celeste has been looking for a
for lieutenant governor?"
While Republican guhematorlal running male since Myrl ShohOpeful James A. Rhodes has his emaker died last year.
On thP Republican side, Paul
running male firmed up, other
has asked House Mlnorily
Pfeifer
candidates are still asking.
Leader
Corwin
Nixon d Lebanon to
The Columl&gt;Js Dispatch Sunday
take
I
be
No.2
spot
on theGOPIIcket
said Public UtU!tles Commission
Thomas V. Chema, 39, of Shaker wtlh him.
Several sources close to Celeste
Heights- former exectlve dll'l'clor
the Dispatch I hal Chema heads
told
of I he Ohio Lottery - Is favored by
a
Ust
of possible candidates for
a clear majority If prople whose
lieutenant
govermr that also In pollllcal advice Gov. Richard F .
cludes
Sen.
Richard C. Pfeiffer Jr.,
Celeste has relied upon In recent
'
.
·
d
Columbus.
years.
"A lot of prople are fighting for
Celeslt' has already been turned
Chema,"
the paper quoted one
doMI by House Speaker Vernal G.

,,

ad \'iser as S.'l~' in g. " ThPr£''s ;t grrat

movemen1 11wn~ for Tom C'hcma."
The Dispalch sa id none of the
advisers \\'as willing to rule out
Pfeiffer or Bran stool becauSI' of
shared unccnalnty over ihP gover·
nor's thinking on lix' question. v
Celeste held separate interviews
last week wllh Branslool. Pfeilfer
and Chem a. Rhodes has picked
Hamillon Cou nty Commlsskmer
Robert Tall as his running mal e.
Senale Presldenl Paul Glllmor.
the lhlrd Repu blican in the race,
h.1&gt; hirh'l \\' ll•n or whO rt' will pick.
Rho&lt;b .mrl 11 L•lfl'r had announced their candidacies, but
Gilmor Isn't planning his formal
announcemenl until Jan. 27.

,,

'

il

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