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'

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Friday. M&amp;rch 21, 1986

Guilty plea entered by James

Lifelong residents
have 144 years
•
•
senrtce In grange
Belva and Homer C. Willard
must come pretty close to holding
the record in Meigs County for
long-time membership in the
grange.
The couple has a combined total
of 144 years of grange membership,
he being a charter member of
70.year-old Hemlock Grange :»:19
while Mrs. Willard has 7~ years of
grange membership having be·
longed to the no longer exisllng
Carleton Grange for sev!'ral years
beforE' becoming a member of
Hemlock Grange.
The Rock Springs Road cou pie
was honorl"d Saturday night for
their long years In grange work
when Hemlock Grange held it s 10th
annlversa1y dinner.
Lifelong residents of Meigs
County, Mr. and Mrs. Willard
moved three miles in 1942toocrupy
her family home and have resided
in the comfortable residence since '
thai time. Mr. Willard. 93, farmed
all of his life in addition to working
rut as a toil roU('('IOr at the
Pom!'roy.Mason bridge. being em.
j:ioyed al the TNT Plant. and
working as a call'ffiler on numer·
ru s jot!; over the years. He at one
llme farmed 92 acres but sold off all
or lt-e land with the exception of two

William C. Strain
William rCiilfl Strain. 86. or 283
Maple St.. Duncan Fails, died
Wednesday aft ernoon at his home .
Born J an. 23, 1900 in Marit&gt;tta . he
was a son of William and Bertha
Young Strain.
He moved to Durv:an Falls from
Marietta m 1923 and worked
constructkm

on various power

plants In West Virginia, Virginia .
Indiana and Ohio. He was an
accounting superv isor for Arncri·
can Electric Power. He . was a
membe r of the Duncan Fa lls
Presbyterian Church and Duncan
Falls Masonic Lodge 283.
Survivors include two sons, Davie
Strain of Zanesville and Douglas
Strain of New Car lisle: one daugh·
ter. Mrs. Donna Wi lson of Zanes·
ville: and six grandchildrrn.
His wlfe Bea trice preceded him
in death on JurF Zl. 1975.
Services will be held I p.m.
Saturday at the Clyde E. Thompson
Fune ral Home in Duncan Falls.
Rev . James \\' Cummings will
officiatf'. Burial will be in \\'ater·

Mrs. Willard is the daughter of
the late Mr. and Mrs. William Rice.
She is a member of the Walk -In
Gardl&gt;n Club and belongs to the
aux iliary of the Arn&lt;'rican Legion.
Her hu sband is a life member of
l:x:Jth Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, and Chapter 53 at
the Disabled American Veterans.
Both in good health for their
advancing years, the Willards are
self sufficient in taking care oltt.&gt;ir
oome and needs "1th the exc!'ption
of in the summf"r ti me when th&lt;"Y
employ a grass culler. They no
longer operate an automobile. but
good neighlx&gt;rs see that they are
taken on ne&lt;:"eSsary trips to town .

town Cemetery . Friends may call
at the funeral horne from 2to 4 p.m
and 7 to 9 p.m. F riday.

Juliet Myers
Juliet Myers. 71. of Rl I. Albany,
died Thursday at Four Winds
Health Care Center in Jackson
following an extended illness.
A housewife. she was romNo" 5,
1914 in Athens to Fred and Mvrtle
Olive Whit e J ohnston.
·
Survivors include tlu-ee daugh ters. Mrs. Neal !Nancy! Whil e of
Poml'roy, Janet Myers of Albany
and Mrs. Haril'y rKarent Bowling
of Coalton: a son. John Myers or
Albany: 10 grandchildren and two
great grandc hildren.
She was preceded in death by her
hu sband Wallace tWally l, a
brother James and a sister Joan .
S...-·ices will be 2 p.m. Sunday at
the Bigony-J ordan Funeral Home
in Albany with Kenneth Dean
officiating. Burial will be in Ab·
andl&gt;r Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2to 4 p.m.
and 7 Ill 9 p.m. Saturday .

Dance set tonight

Fh•e emergency runs

The!'(' will be a dan('{' roni,ght at
the Long l:lollom Commu ni ty
Center.

Fivr calls WE're answered by klca I
unit s Thursda)·. the Meigs County
Emergency Med ical S..r\'ices
r!'p011S.
At i : H a.m .. Pomeroy took
1\iorma Curtis from Anne St. , to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Mid·
dl!'p(Jr1 at 10:02 a.m .. took Donald
l 'anCooncy from North Second
A,·e. , to l'eterans Memorial:
Pomeroy at II: 5.3 went to County
Road 26 for an auto accident but no
tll'a tment or t ran~rtation were
required: Middleport at 12: 28 p.m.
t•xtinguished a minor truck fire on
North Second and Rutland at 9:56
p.m. answered a call to a minor
bam fire In Scipio Township.

Square, round and slow dancing
will be held Saturda\· from 9 p.m to
1 a.m. at thr Eli DenL&lt;On Post 41i7.
American Legion Home in Rutland .
Thf're will be a live band , snack bar
and a refreshment stand . Dona lions of S2 lor adult s and $1.50 for
children will be r&lt;'Cei\'ed at ti'&lt;'
door. The danCI' is Op&lt;'n to thl'
~bile.

Game time ('hangt&gt;d
The Eastern High alumni baseball game to be played tomorrow
has been changed from 9: ll a.m. to
1:15 p.m. The alumni ream will pia)·
the high school ,·arsif)· at 4: ll p.m.
on Tuesdav.

Veterans Memorial
Admltted --l.uci;tr Brandt . Cool·
Norma Curtis . Pomrro)·:
Evelyn RricJVes. TUpp&lt;'r-s Plains.
Discharged-- Norma Will. [,·a
Triplell.
vlll&lt;':

Thechargl' was contained in a blll
of information prepared and !Ued
by the office of Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow Ill . The charge
resulted from an incident on J an. 25
in which James alleged ly dis·
charged a shotgun in the direc tion
of his nephew, Robert W. Qualls,
who was not seriously injured.

acres around tt.&gt; IDme location. He
is a son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Elijah Wlilard, and served as a
Bedford Township Trustee for
some Zl years.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard will mark
their 68th wedding anniversary on
May Zl, this year. They were
married in 1918 and one week later,
Mr. Willard !ell for se1vice in the U.
S. Army. At one lime, they were in
charge c1 the Meigs County Children's Home lor several years and
they af(' members of the H&lt;&gt;mlock
Grove Christian Church.

Meigs County happenings ..

Saturday dan('ing st'l

John James, Jr., 60, Pomeroy,
. appeared Wednesday before Judge
Cha rl~s H. Knight in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to
en ter a plea of guilty to an
aggra vated assa ult charge .

The charge Is a felony of the
fourth dl&gt;gree with a maximum
possible penalty, because a deadly
weapon was Involved, of not less
than 18 months nor more than ftve
years in prison and a One ri up to
$Zi00. It is an offense for which
proba tion can be considered also.

43215

All tn teres ted parties
will be given an oppor tunity 10 be heard . Further Information. may be
obt&amp;lned by contacting
the Comm!se!on.
THE PUBLIC UTI L!TIES

COMMISSION OF OIDO
BY: M&amp;ry Ann Orllnsltl.
Secreta•.
.

--·

-

-_

____.

Understanding
the handicapped

Judge Knight accepted James'
plea of guilty and ordered that
sentencing be continued until May 7
for completion of a pre-sentence
The preinvestigation report.
vbusly posted lx&gt;nd was continued .

--Page B-1

James J, Kilpatrick on the move away from the
Miranda ruling - Page A-2
I

Bob Hoeflich discU!ISes helping a clallSmate Page B-6

(Mobile &amp; Double-Wide)

Extradrlion hearings were hrld
this moming in Meigs Count)' Cou11
for two men. one charged with rape
in Columbus and the oth!'r with
robbery and grand theft in
Circleville.
Martin Adams. 27. of Rt. 2,
Circle\'ille. and his uncle, Victor
Meno. 46. of ,18 West Wheeling St ..
Lancaster. were arrrsted alx&gt;ut 9
a.m. this morning on Butternut
Ave. in Pomeroy by Meigs County
Deputy Kenny Klein .
Klein said a fou r-week investigation led to thl' arr'!'st.
Klein sa id that Meno was first
noticed when he began fnqurnting
Meigs County on and off. After
obtaining Meno' s name. Klein ran a
computer ch('('k through Columbus
and d!srovered he was wan led on
the rape cha r~:c by lili' Columbus
PoUce Department. During the
investig'ation if wasdisco,·ered I hal
Meno had a companion who fumed
rut to bE' a nephew who was wanted
b) the Cirv lel'ille policE'.

Weather forecast

Vol. 21 No. 6

HOME PLAN
MAKES IT EASY..•.....

15 YEAR ANANCING
180MONTHLY
PAYMENTS OF

AMOUNT
FINANCED

$5000.

'11,000.
'148.
'13,000.00 '175. 31
'15,000.00 '202.2a

Columbus and Ci rclevillt• police
have been notlfied 1ha I Ihey can
pick up the tw o men. lf bond is
posted in the meanllmc. hearing
dates for the men will have to be set
in Co lumbus and Circleville before
the~· can be relcast'Ci from the
Meigs County Jail.

By JOHN FRIEDIIIAN
and lARRY EWING
Times-Sentinel Staff

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City
Manager Albert R. Pierce was fired
Saturday. His termination as the
city's chi!'! executive officer comes

14.25%
14.25%
14.25%

Immediately foilowing Pierce's
dismissal, the Gallipolis City Cornmission hlJl"d Paul Knotts - the
current president of the GalUpoUs

l

Loans Subject to Qualification of Borrower

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH .
Phone 992 · 2975

OPLES BANK

SPRING AND SUMMER HOURS
OPEN MON.-FRI.

--

9 TO 5, SAT. 'l TO 1

G:t

THE
, GRAVELY
SYSTEM

2212 Jackoon ~-ue
Point Ploa.m. W. Vo.
876-1121

15th Slroot

N-. Hw.,,

w:VI.

882-2136

INTERIM CITV MANAGER- Paul Knotts (renler), retired planl

manager at &amp;bbins &amp; Myers, was named lnlerim city manager
Satunlay loDowlng the firing of Alberi R. Pierce. Knolls wDl serve
wtlhout compensation wttll a new city lllllllllier 18 hired . looldng oo in
the background are Pierce (righl) and his attorney, WIIITEII _Sheels
(left).

We

You!
&amp;Compare!
QUALIFICATION RULES : Program Period; Feb. 27, 1986 thN Mor. 30, 11116.
1 Panrcrpa nt must be 18 year s or aoe or older i Pa nicrpan1 must n~e a valrd arrvers
lrcense 3 lrmr t ol one reward per pafl ropant 4 Fleet and lease unrts are not elrgible
5 Partrcrpanl mus1 tesl duve a new 1966 ford Taurus. Tempo , Est0t1 . Ranger or Ae rosta r
durrnQ tne anove ·mentroneo perrod. aM nave 1ne reward cethlrcale valrdated aft er the test
rlrrve by the p&lt;Jrllcrpalrrn;l local Ford Dealer 6 'P&lt;~rircrparll must have purChase&lt;! a com parallly eq urpped Chevrolel Celebrrly_Oldsmobrle Cutlass Crera. Chevrolet Canlier, Toyoli
Gamry. Chevrote1 Cllevene. Toyota Ter cel. Cllevralet S·lO 4• 2. Toyota 4•2 . Chevrolet A.stro .
or Ood t;~e Caravan i ller test drrvmg an above-mentro ned For!J ··compared" program unit.
Par11cr pant mus1provide pari1C1pahnq l ocal f or d Deater wrlh prool of purchase '1 Rewar~
rs valid at an ~· oartrc rpatrno Local Ford Dea ler Clarms must be submrtted no later than Apr

~fi~ijiijjijiijiiiijijjll
I

•'

By NANCY YOACHAM
Tlmes&amp;ntinel Staff
Envuunmental experts are calling radon gas the
nurnb!'r one indoor air pollution problem In the
country The U.S. Environmental Protec tion Agrncy
has estimated more than one million American
homes have unsafe radon levels and some experts
have labeled radon as "the silent killer."
In the very ncar futurr. several homes in Meigs
County will become part of a sta te study Ill measurE'
the level of radon In Ohio.
Some geological areas contain higher concentra-

.
t

=~~~~~~ ·
Comg:;;,;;t;re'--CHEV£11E
ESCOIIT ·~· CHEVROlET
llWfl7.il lliiCfL
ESCORT PONY FEATURU.

• Ul tv

Otte.......
• Pawtr ltHI •ac trlill

•4·wtlnllllll,.....

• Rldr 1 pH11011 """"'

• • •.,... ru~~~~~r.ww ..
• AM f'Nidr. MWfl 111n

Ha,t~IIINI

'86 FORD RANGER S

MARCH 19- 5 to 8 P.M.
MARCH 22 - 1 to 4 P.M.

The Maples

APARTMENTS FOR THE ELDERLY
AND HANDICAPPED

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

...

--···

•Test Drive •Ccwq a1e •Get $100.

'

(Income Guidelines Have Been Increased)

MODEL UNIT OPEN
For Further information call: Evelyn Clark, 992-7022
MANAGED IY SILVER HEELS DEVUOPWNT CO.
331 3rd StrHt, Marittta, Ohio
£qual Housing ·Opportunity .

FIRED- Gallipolis City Manager Alherl R. Pierce
(second from left) was fired Saturday rnoming by the

clly commission. GaBfpolls Attorney WIIITEII Sheets
(left) objected to Pierce's dismissal, cfalming the

themselves primarily with the
S!'tling of policy, we would continue
to make real progrl'ss that would

firing was done In violation of Ohio's Sunstme Law,
whl"h provides for public nollllcatlon of meetklpand
"'"' discussiol!l! of personnel actions.

have been of irernendous value to
the Gallipolis city government in
the future."

Sheets objected to the dismissal
ordinance Cll Pierce's behalf, citing
!Continued on page AJ)

colorless, odorless, radioactive gas which ocrun;
naturally and continuously In soil where deposits of
uranium. granite, phosphate and shale are present.
Radon moves easily through soil and rock and
dissipates harm lessly outdoors. The danger occurs
when It enters a building and becomes trapped .
It can ent!'r a buildin g through sewer pipes and
sump pump openings, hollow ro ncrete block walls,
cracks In conrete, wa ll-floor joists, etc., and lower
Inside air pressure can actually help J1l Uradon In to a
hou se.
It can bE' found in building materials such as
concrele,
brick and stone; In natural
li lt

is burned and not ven tedto tili'outside: an d in water.
· The churning of water inside a structure- as In a
washer. shower. toilet or sink- can release dissolved
radon inlo the air.
The accumulation of indoor radon depends on the
vent ilation rate of a house, or thE' ra te at which lnmor
air is exchanged with outdoor air.
The high costs of hOme heating and cooling have led
to the construction of more energy-efficient oomes
and It Is the energy-effic ient homes which are rrore
likely retain radon.
·
(Conlinued on page A3t

Locks repairs
complete; tows
resume travel

se,a&amp;o.·

100 MEMORIAL DRIVE EAST, POMEROY, OHIO

the meeting, Pierce said his firlng
was poUUcally motivated.
" I attribute my termination to the
fa ct th;!t I have strongly objected
from llme to llme to the involvement of the members or the clty
commission, particularly Richard
Moore, preslden1 of the commis·
sion, In the administrative affairs &lt;X
the city government...if Rlchard
Moor!', and certain otller members
ri the city commission, would have
left the administration tithe city up
to the city manager and concerned

lions of radon than others, and according to the Ohio
Geological Survey, any radon venting in thisstatewlll
likely ocrur along two shale formations.
On!' Is the Olentangy and Ohio shale formation
which extends north from the Chlillcothe area
through eastern Franklin Crunty and north to the
Sandusky area.
The second is the Dunkard shale formation
l!ordering the Ohio ruver from Meigs Cou nty to
Belmont County.
According to lactshrets prepared by the U.S. EPA
and the state department of health, radon ts a

1 1986

The First Church of God of
S)Tacuse will hold an Easter
baz.a ar at the Kroger Store in
Pomero)· Friday. Candy, Easter
baskets and oth&lt;'r itpms wiU be
sold.

Area Chamber of Commerce - to
serve as interim city manager.
While the vote dismissing Pierce
came without corrunent on the part
of the commission, the ordinance
terminating his contract states,
" ... (the commission) has discerned
that the management of the affairs
of the... (cliy) ... are being run In an
unacceptable manmer which dictates the need for a new city

Some homes in Meigs will be part of radon gas study

Therr was no SUJX' r loltu winnC'r
Wednesda y night so next week's
jackpot was increased to el least
$6.5 million.

Bazaar set Friday

A Multimedia Inc. Newtpapsr

manager."
In a statement released following

"Equol Housing Lender"

UNDER
Second Stnoot
Mason, W. Va.
773-6614

1 6 Sections. 136 Pages 60 Cents

The dismissal ordinance was
passed as an emergency measure
over the objections of Pierce's legal
representative, Gallipolis attorney
Warren Sheets. and goes into effect
lrnmedla tely.
Pierce's one year $:XJ,(O) contract
calls for him to receive three
months compensation upon
dismlssal.
Knotts, upon his own request. will
receive no compensation dunng his
tenure as "Interim city manager."
The emergency ordinance employing Knotts specifies he will
serve on an Interim basis " ... until
such Ume as the commission has
appointed a permanent city

Ohio lottery winn«&gt;rs

74&amp;1.

7.

ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE

Sunnv toda\', with highs near ll.
Clear l~nighl: with a low nea r~.
Sunny Saturday . with highs l"&lt;'·
tween ~5 and 50.
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
A chiUlce of rain Sunday, with fair
weather Monday and Tuesday.
IUghs will he In the 50s Sunday,
ranging from the lower 4lls to lower
50s :ltonday and between 55 IU!d 6.1
Tuesday. 0\'emlghl lows wUl he
mostly In the 30s through the period.

CLEVELAt\D tUPI I - Thursday 's winn ing Ohi o Lollcry
numbers: Oally Number
223.
Ticket sales totaled $1.2lo.loo.!&gt;l.
with a payoff due of $fill .~i9
PffK-1

less than three months from his
assumption of the office on January

Ot""' Tormo and Amounts Upon RoquOit

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

··Page A-3-

manager.''

34

00

Ohio weather:
cloudy, warmer

City commission fires Pierce; hires Knotts

Manufactured Home Financing

Bond for Mcno "·as 5&lt;'1 b' Meigs
County Judge Patrick O'Brien at
$lO,!XXl. Bond for Adams was &lt;Ct at

Along the River ............ ... IH-8
Business .. ... .... . ....... ........ .. E-t
Deaths ' ' .. ' ' ' ....... ' '' ' .. .. '' ..1\-4&amp;5
Editorials ... ..... ,........ .... ... . A-2
Sports .................... .. .. .. .. C-1-G
Take-One ...... ....... ........ Insert

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, March 23, 1986

Copyrightod 1986

10% Down Payment With
Terms To Fit Your Budget.

Extradition proceedings begin

Inside:

tmts -

OUR NEW MANUFACTURED

LONGTIME GRANGE MEMBERS -Belva and Jlomer C. Willard,
Rock Spnngs Road, are pictured with Ziba 1\lldkHf, &gt;tanding, ma.&lt;;ter 11
Hemlot:k Grange 2001. Mr. IU!d Mrs. WWard h.ue a com lined it4 years
of membership in grange. He l' a charter member of tht• 10-year-old
Hemlock GriUlge IU!d she was a member of Carleton Gmnge before
joining Hemlock Grange.

Page C-1

•

LOOK AT US!

• Dlilt-kiW illldi-IYJI!rtlt Ual

The Public Utilities Co mmission of Oh1o has set
tor public hearing Case
No B5·02·EL-EFC Subrue A, to review the fuel
procurement practices
and policies of Columbus
&amp;nd Southern Oh to Electric Company, the opera tion of its Electric Fuel
Component and related
matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begtn at
10 :00 a.m. on March 24 ,
1988, at the offices or the
Public Utilities Commlsslon. 180 East Broad
Stroot. Columbus. Oh io

A new golf course

SEE
YOUR LOCAL
FORD DEALER
LOCKING THROUGH - One 11 22 lowboa18 delayed because al an
accidenlloeks through the Gallipolis IAd&lt;s and Darn. Each hour the
barges sat Idle cosl the oornpaniefl ownins them S3111, ICOOrdinll lo
flp""' compiled by the U.S. Anny Corpe of &amp;tpaeer&amp;

•

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio (UP! \ With repairs on a Ga!Upolls locks
and dam gate completed a day
sooner than expected, 22 k&gt;wboats
have resumed travel on the Ohio
River.
The problem started Tuesday
when a tugboat with a string or 10
barges ran Into the gate. River
traffic was backed up for mlies,
said a spokernan for the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers In Huntington,
W.Va ., until the locks were reo·
pened at 2:15p.m. Friday.
After repair crews flnlsbed replacing the hinge on the8J.k&gt;n gate,
the first through was the "Allied ,"
an AShland Oil Co. towl:x:Jat pushing
10 barges filled with petroleum
products from Westwood, Ky .. to
Plttsbul)lh.
Each rourthe bafgl'ssat kllecosl
the companies owning them $.'flO,
according to figures compiled by
the corps. Spokesman David Bayard estimated tt.&gt; total cost at
about $2!l),(O).
"That Is the cost to the river
shippers," he said. "Overall, I
would say the river economy will
not be affected much - except, of
course, for the delay costs."
·Bayard said the tugb:&gt;at and
barges were traveling too fast In the
main 600-foot k&gt;Ck. When they
struck tt.&gt; gate, an 1-beam was
twisted and the hinge mechanism
!hat opens and closes the gate was
damaged.
Delay costs. while not usually so
exorbitant, are famUtar to shippers
using the Gaillpolis facility. Bayard
said the bcks and dams average
aoout 12 "tows " a day , meaning
each bafgl' must wail about four

hours.

FATAL ACCIDENT - Roberi William Lee, 22.
Radne, died in lhls OIMHlal' accident Saturday
· rnoming on &amp;ule 82 in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
AcconlinR to olftclal reports, the vehicle was

northbound when II went off the road and stnack a
lree. Lee was a passenger In the auto. 1be driver,
Patrick V. Johnson, :!2, Racine, l• listed In stable
condltion at Pleasant Vlliley Hospital.

Racine man
killed in accident
.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -A
Racine Ohio man was killed and
another Injured in a .one-&lt;:ar
accident Satunday at 12:26 a.m. on
Route 62 near the Mason County
Airport Road, Point Pleasant.
~ spokespel'9ln for the Mason
County Sheriff's Department klen tl ·
fled the v1ctim as Rober1 William
Lee. 22.
Lee was a passenger In a 1983
Chevrolet CaqJaro driven by Pa -

•
tt1ck V. Johnson, 21, who Is listed In
stable condition after being admit ted at Pleasant Valley Hospital lor
head Injuries, a nursing supervisor
at the hospital said.

According to the sheriff's spokesperson, Jobnson was traveling
north on Route 62 when he
attempted to pass another vehicle.
H1s car left the roadway and struck
a tree, the spokesperron added .
I

Both indlvldu,.ls were ejected
from thE' vehicle.
Lee and Johnson were taken to
PVH by the Point Pleasant Emer·
gency Medical Service where Lee
was pronounced dead at arrival by
Mason Cou nty Medical Examiner
Dr. Jobn Grubb, the spokesperson
said .
No citations have been Issued
pending further Investigations by
the sheriff's dep8.1!1ment.
\

�March 23, 1986

.Commentary and perspective
~nnblfJ!

lim:et - jrntin:d
A Division Of

~~

es~m~
~v

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis , Ohio
(614) t-16-2342

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
ExE.'Cutive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
, Assistant PublishN-ControiiE'r

A MEMBERofThP Unilffl Press International. Inland Dally Press
Associa tion and lht&gt; Amerlran Newspaper PubllshNs Association.
LETTER S OF OPINION arf' w~ ro me. ThE'~' should bP ](&gt;ss than .100 words
long. All letters ar"' !'ubji."Ctto t'dlling and must be ~~ned w!th name. addrt'Ssand
t el~hon e numbE-r . No un signed lrH£&gt;rs ..-.·!11 bE&gt; publis h ~ . L£'11Ns shou ld br in
good taW'. addressing tssut"S , not pPrsona lillfS.

:::l..etters to the editor
Being a teen
in Gallipolis
What Is thE'rE' to do In this arE'a for
: · : OlJr teenagE'rs ? If I were a teenager
· ·. • I'd already have seen t t.&gt; movie
- · : thats playing. Maybe twice, be- cause It runs for weeks- or I could
walt a couple weeks a se!' liP same
thing on TV or HBO for free, and
my drink and popcorn wouldn't cost
me my allowance.
Or I could go skating, what a
choice. So afrer a while I get bored,
skating and tiP movies thats all
there Is to do In this area. Why are
so many of our teenagers getting
into trouble- going out drinkingsmoking pot?
These kids have so much energy
to born up and no wt.-re to do it. A
lot of these kids go In to town, SEI at
the park, girls and guys talk to one
another. listen to some music ,
hying not to do what we don't want
them to do. But what can we expE.'Ct.
Pretty soon someone offers these
kids some beer or pot and they take
it. And I would probably do the
same thing.
It's our fault , and I'm not just
talklng about us parents, thfo whole
community. We need to find
something for our kids to get Into.
'What happened to theCellar?Oh.
thats just for after football games .
And I'm not knocking tt&lt;- Cellar it

was nice, but we need something
every weekend. And what happened to the dances at tiP schools?
No one to run Jt? I'm sure there are
parents who would volunteer to
help out. I would.
And het'E' comes su mmer. Well
we have the drive Inn and pretty
soon !hats over. We need a standing
"scene" for the kids. Something
that they know is thfore and will be
thE're the next weekend and weekend alter that. The only thing I see
In the area is restaurants . Where
will they put the next one?
I am talking about our teens now.
not babies anymore. These kids go
to school 5 days a week - gE't
homeworked to death 5 night s a
week and tiP ooly time these kids
can cut loose is on Friday and
Saturday nights.
We have got tofind something for
our teens to do before Its too late.
I pray befo re my 7 year old
becomes a teen that we wm have
already found something for the
kids to do.
And please don't answer this with
a price rag.
Joanne ShE'ets
50! Circle Ave.,
Gallipolis

Maybe you can explain
1 hope the person woo took our 5
month old puppy and removed his
collar with LD. tag. dog name.
telE-phone numtJ&gt;r and a Calha
County dog license. and threw his
collar out on Roush Lane Road is
satisfied .
I hope you fe&lt;&gt;l the pam and loS&gt;
. that our familv fe&lt;&gt;ls. Mavbe voo

ca n explain to my two sons wh~· you
did it .
Th&lt;· fun. the money or thr ttu·iii.
Just wh)·? There are so many dogs
at the dog pound that have to be put
to sleep. How ra n you sil'&lt;'p at
night? If 1t is a rrwa rd it' s yours.

Mrs. Jos&lt;'J) h Schuler Jr
Cheshi re. Ohio

Behind the times
Why doN it seem that the Meigs
County area is alway·s be hind tlw&gt;
times? My r('('ent PJint of in tf:'rcst io;;.
the gas prices.
In tiP last few w{{'ks, I ha\'e !&gt;'en
to the Gallipolis. Attw&gt;ns. Parkers burg areas ard have observrd that
the price of gas varies 10 to 15 cent s
low er than t he Po mer oy Middleport area. Are oor gas

statiOns taking ach·antagE' of us?
I think if morf' an~a rE&gt;S ic:iC'nt s
share this ff'f'ling t hev stnuld \Uicr
tlw&gt;lr opinions. Maybe the gas
station ownE'rs will g~&gt;t til' idea
After all. the majority of us take
regular ,-!sits to the lower priced
areas. Fill 'er up~
Mark O'Dell
Pomeroy, Ohio

Berry's World

WASHINGTON - Justice John
Paul Stevens mourned liP oi!Pr
day that his erring colleagues may
be becoming "Increasingly less
faithful to Miranda's clear teach·
lngs." The proper response to
Stevens' lament Is, "Let us devoutly
hope so."
June 13 w'JI mark the 20th
anniversary of the high court's
landmark opinion in Miranda v.
Arizona. fn 1976. a poll of tiP
American Bar Association ranked
the case fourth In importance In the
entire history of Ire court.lt was In
this dE.'Clslon that Chief Justice Earl
Warren fabricated the famous
"Miranda warnings," by which a
suspect must be Informed of his
right to r~main silent and of his
right to request the asslstan&lt;I' of
counsel during any pollee Interrogation . The warnings have been
woven into tlw&gt; fabric of American

WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 3-22-86

March 23. 1986

Providence, R.I. A 21-year-old
suspE,'Ct, picked up on a burglary
charge, soon was Implicated In the
clime. A£ It happl'ned, Burbine
already had retained a public
defender, Richard Casparlan, In
yet another uru-elatw cru;e.
During the coursE' of a few hours '
questioning, pollee read Burbine his
Miranda lights three separate
times. Twice he was left alone in a
room with a telephone. He made no
effort to reach Casparlan. He never
asked for a lawyer. Eventually
Burblne signed three statements
fully admitting to the murder. He
was tried and round guilty.
Tbe case reached the Supreme
Court on Burhlne's plea that his
Miranda rights were violated when
pollee prevented anolhE'r lawyer,
retained by Burblne's sister, from
rE'achlng him during the Interrogation. That lawyer, who knew
oothing about the murder charge,

had called police headquarters in
rderence to the burglary. Told that
oo further questioning was Imminent, the lawyer did not persist in
trying to see Burhine.
Writing for the majority, Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor made the
point that It was the lawyer who was
trying to Se!' Burblne ard not
Burblne woo had asked for a
lawyer. The constitutional right to
request the presence of an attorney
belongs solely to the defendant and
may not be asserted by a lawyer in
the defendant 's behalf. To hold
otherwise, said Justice O'Connor,
would work a "substantial and
inappropriate shift" In thE' balance
struck In Miranda between the
right of an accused to be protected
against self-Incrimination and the
right of society to secure admissions of gu Ut.
JustiCE' John Paul Stevens, joined
by Justices Thurgood Marshall and
William Bt'E'nnan. filled a dissent Ing opinion that came close to
lzyslerla . He denounced O'Connor's
opinion as "breathtaking In the
scope of its misreading of MIranda ." The majority's decision
was "deeply disturbing." II was
"simply wrong." II ran counter to
the opinions of many stale courts In
similar circumstances. It defied a
recommendation or the American
Bar Association. The decision was
untmable, profoundly misguided
Clearly, the three dissenters
would like to S&lt;'(' pollee Interrogation prohibited allogE'Iher. Their
goal Is eventually to require that a
Ia wyer be provided to a SUSpE,'CI
from tiP Drsl moment the suspE,'CI
Is questioned. No lawyer worth his
salt. Justlce Robert Jackson once
remarked, would permit his client
to say a single word. There would be
no confessions.
The balance should nor be lipped
so heavily In a suspect's favor .
Society has rights no less than a
suSpE.'Cted criminal has rights. The
Burblne case marked the third case
In the. past two years In which the
high court has backed away from
the rtgtd lines drawn In Miranda.
After :lJ years. I say high time.

The killing continues
WASHINGTON- The 6-year-dd
guerrilla war In El Salvador has
been pushed off tiP front pages by
the controversy over U.S. aid to the
Nicaraguan "''"''"'' a few miles
away. But the bloods!Pd goes on ,
and as In all wars of this kind. those
who sulfer most are the inno&lt;I'nt
rkilians caught in the crossfire
between government troops and
rebels.
Our reporter Jon Lee Anderson
rl'('en tly achieved the war correspondent's equivalent of the hat
flick : He penetrated the leftist
guerrillas' stronghold In northeast ern El Salvador; he interviewed
peasants whose lives have been
\\TI'('ked by the civil strife; and he
marched with government !Didiers
on an anti-guerrilla strike outside
San Sai,·ador.
What he learned is bad news for
txlt h the United States. which ropes
fo r a timely end to the war. and to
the Salvadoran masses. who wan t
above all an end to the carnage:
Both rebel and government milltarycommandersaredelermined
to fight it out at whatever cost, and

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale Van Atta

ooth sides are convinced they will rill a "customs" offi&lt;I'rs du tifully
triumph ultimately , which mE'ans JOlted down the details of each
ttw&gt; outlook for 1986 Is ominous driver and his cargo.
indeed .
"I work on this side, but I live on
The excursion behind rebel lines the ott.&gt;r side," said a young man
in northern Morazan province, the named Salvador, woo was on his
wooded mountain redoubt along the way north to pick up a load of coffee
Honduran border, was eerie even beans from his family's farm In
fo r this pecullar war. It was rebel territory . " It 's OK. fn the
Anderson's second try; ·last July, he beginning It made me nervous, but
and two companions were am- now I'm used to it. "
bushed in the middle of the Torola
Visiting nine towns In the l'E'bel
River by army snipers woo mistook fastnesses. our reporter was soon
them fo r "gringo terrorists. " They struck Wilh tiP crverridlng poli tical
barely escaped with their lives.
apathy of the citizens . They com'lllls time the crossing of the plained about the bombings, st.-1Toro la , which bisects the rrovince, lings and ott.&gt;r excesses of the
was uneventful. The jeep ranylng government troops. but all they
Anderson and thr~ colleagues really wanted was to be left alone.
arrived at tiP rebels' chE.'Ckpoint. For example:
where llw&gt;y spent severa l t-ours
- The 500 Inhabitants of El
wailing for pl'rmlssion to proceed Carrlz.al wet'E' forcibly evacuated
no11 h to the guerrilla capital of by the army to La Tejera for their
Perquln .
own safety during an anti-guerrilla
The traffic through the check - sweep. Tbe town thE'y were pu t In
point was bizarre: truckloads of was later bombed- apparently by
timber or coffee beans, harvested mistake. "Now we are bac k In El
in rebel territory and being trans- Carrl7.al," said Simon Benitez Vigil,
po rt ed south lor sa le In "beca use whE'n WE' were In La
government-held arE'as. The guer- Tejera we were completely aban-

do ned . They said we should go there
for hE'Ip, but what we got was
txlmhs."
- The .'DJ or so people left in La
Laguna, where once thE're were
1,::00, had not been bombed lately,
but they complained that the army
was restricting the flow of food and
medicine. And four days earlier, a
15-year-old hoy from thE' town was
forcibly drafted for the army while
worki ng in tiP co ffl'&lt;' harvest south
of tiP Torola River line.
- "We are from Guacamaya,"
said Elias Chicas in El Social, an
Improvised shantytown. "We left
there because of the ma ~ac res.
They (the army 1 killed 18 fn my
family alone. We don't want to
return now, because we have lost
oorcrops. We aren't guerriUas; we
are just workers."
- fn Nahualerique, a kilometer
from the Honduran border. the
people said the Honduran army
ca me In, burned eight houses and
kidnapped some residents. "They
tell us 10 leave because It's thE'lr
land," one man explained.

Hard times in Texas ____~_R_o_be_rt_W_a_lte_rs

rive-member crews on three shifts.

" If there's no rigs running. there's no

men working, " notes Ea rly.
In February , Texas· unemployment
rate reached 8 4 percent after an un precedented increase of two percent ·
age points from the previous month.
A few miles to the north, Edwin D.
Arnold, president of the Continental
Drilling Co. solemnly ponders his future following the collapse or a firm
that began busi ness in 1980 with 22
modern oil rigs.
Today, says Arnold. "we're not
even trying to operate any ol em. indeed. the company has sought court
protection from its cred itors under
Chapter t I of the Federal Bankruptcy
Code

To the east, 10 nearby Kilgore and
Longvi ew. oil field supply stores have
gone out or business. To the west, in
the more distant Permian Basin, the
spot market price of west Texas Intermediate crude oil has plunged
!rom $26_jo per barrel at the begin ning of the year to as low as $12.00
per barrel in recent weeks.Houston, San Antonio and Austin
are atop the list or U.S. cities that ex perienced the sharpest declines In
home construction staris last year.

Texas. which for decades parlayed
a larger-than-life image into a reputation lor unstoppable growth, now
faces the prospect of an economic
contraction so severe thal it could
produce the state's worst rE.'Cession in
almost hall a century.
Although plunging oil and gas
prices are the principal cause or that
economic slump, the growth of hightechnology industries that was supposed to propel the state into the postpe troleu m era has been indefinitely
stalled .
In the Austin area, the high-tech
growth that was predicted alter the
Microelectronics and Computer TE.'Chnology Corp. selected the city as headquarters lor its industry-wide resea rch

consortium

has

rich quickly.
At the height of the oil boom, in late
1981, there were more than 4,500 active rigs throughout the country. Today. there are fewer than 1,200 rigs
operating. The rhinestone wildcatters
have been driven out. but many expe-

Doonesbury
YO.J /IJ/0/AJ, li6a41E.

'OJ If)()/(~ fi4 M/UAR 7/JMt. !IIIAT
PrJ 'fQJ PO /1ffalt

rienced entrepreneurs also have been
bad ly hurt.
"We are living in a boom area sort of the last lrontier,'' the president
of Tyl er's InterFirst Bank boasted
last year . Today. there is considerably
less optimism about the fulure.

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
THE llifflt'5 {JJ(JJMtlU. 15
A VEiff /lSa/JENTIN6 PflJJ6.
[;VE!(Y TIMe I &gt;TAPJ 1J TJHNK.
.48aiT ~ ~T, I GliTAi.l..
CONR.J5W

never

materialized.
In the Dallas area , almost 7,000
semiconductor workers were laid orr
last year by Texas Instruments, Mostek and other firm s. Elsewhere in the
state, Motorola, National Semiconductor and other companies also have
slashed their payrolls in the wake of
an industry-wide slump.
But it is oil that has driven the economy in ea,, Texas (and elsewhere in
the sta te) ever since 1930, when the
Daisy Bradford No. 3 exploratory r1g
produced the first evidence of a vast
underground reservoir of ll"troleum
Constantly rising oil pnces during
the past decade led some to believe
that the increase would continue indefinitely - or at least until crude oil
sold for as much as $70 per barrel.
During one four-year period, from
1978 through 1981 , the number or active drilling rigs doubled.
Asubstantial portion of the expanded activity was attributable to "rhineslOne wildcatters" - speculators who
had no experience searching lor oil
but were convinced they could get

AU. I OW RtAU.Y

~ISJ/5T

8fT5 ANIJ PitaS.

l/Kf

/liEU. L/Kli, I 'M

/I./HAT? ALMOST lf)$triV£i
I U$W 1D HAl'!:
HAIR

Cold weather lingers in nation's South
B U lted Press Intematlonal
y n
WlntE'rllke
temperatures lin·
So h Sa rd
gered across the ul
tu ~Y·
threatening peaches, strawbernes
and ot her fruit crops and making
North Dakota a more desirable
1
th F l rid
vacal on spot an o a.
The spring cold wave stretched
from Texas to the Carolinas,
Prompting freeze warnings for
.
much of the SouthE'ast. Tempera -

Page-A-2

and "stunning."

warehouse floor covered with scores

Today Is Sunday, March 23, the 82nd day of 1986 with 283 to follow.
ThE' moon is moving toward its full phase.
ThE' morning stars are Mercury. Mars. Jupit er and Saturn.
The evening star is Venus.
Those horn on this date are uoder the sign of Aries. They include
_ pSYchoanalyst Erich Fromm In 1900; culinary expert Fannie Farmer in
· 1857; actress Joan Crawford In l!!Ol; rocket sdentlsl Wernher von Braun In
· 1912; English auto and boat racer Donald Campbell in 1921; Roger
Bannlster, the first athiele to brE'ak the 4-minute mile, In 1929 (age !i71;
former Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson Jr., the first black to hold liP top
post In a major southern city, In !9ll (age 48\.
On this date In history;
In 1765, the British Parliament passed the Stamp Act for taxing thE'
· American colonies, an action that became a major grievance for rebellious
colonials.
In 1942, Japanese-Americans were forcibly moved from their homes
along the Pacltlc Coast to Inland relocation camps.
In 1966, Pope Paul VI met Britain's Archbishop of Cantertmy at the
. Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, the first meeting between the heads of the
· IWman Catholic and Angllcan churches In 410 years.

criminal law.
Yet 11 seldom Is recalled that
Miranda was decided by the
narrowest possible margin. The
court spilt 5-4, with the dlssmters
arguing passionately that Wart'€11
and his colleagues were writing bad
constitutional law. Over the past aJ
years, many lawyers both In
academia and in private practice
have criticized the opinion. Gerald
M. Caplan, professor of law at
George Washington University,
recently argued convincingly In the
Vanderbilt Law Rl'vlew thai Miranda should be overruled.
The court may be moving "sub
silentio" In that direction. On
March 10, In a case known as Moran
v. Burblne, the court voted 6-3
against expanding the doctrines
laid down by Warren nearly :lJ
years ago. The Burblne case
involved a murder In 1977 In

win,lose &amp; DREW

of unmarketable drill bits for exploralOry oil rigs.
Early is field sa lesman for Dresser
Industries, a Da llas-based firm that IS
one or the nation's largest suppliers of
oil field equipment. At the peak of the
oi l boom in the late 1970s and early
1980s, he serviced 60 rigs here 1n east
Texas - but now that fig ure has
dwin dled to eight.
. A typical ex ploratory rig provides
JObs for IS blue-collar workers, with

Today in history

r----Weather:~----,

Away from Mirandat________Ja_m_es_J_.K_il=--pa_tr_ick_

TYLER, Texas (NEAl - "We're
hurting and it's getting worse," says
Louis Early as he glumly surveys a

"'How could ANYONE parlay $5, 700 a year
into $10 billion in 20 years?' WISE
INVESTMENTS! "

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page.....:A-3

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

Rad00 gas...
When radon Is trar!led Indoors, it
begins to breakdown into radioacLfGfND&gt;----,

•••., t:;.:·;1UP! WIA THill FOTOCAST ®

lr.23

IHOWIU.....

.t:w

WEATIIER MAP - Rain L&lt;; forecast lor parts ol tlr mrth PIICHic
Region. Elsewhere the weatoor wiD be ·fair.

Extended Ohio Forecast
MONDAY 11-IROUCH WEDNESDAY :
Chane&lt;• of showers or snow flurries Monday, mainly nortt.&gt; asl,
with fair weather statewide Tuesday and a chanu&gt; of soowers
Wednesday. Highs will range from the upper lls to mid 40s Monday
and from the high 40s lomiddle50s1'uesday and be between 55 and65
Wednesday. The low will be from thE' mid :!Js to middle lls Monday
and Tul"day and !rom thP mid lls to middle 40s Wednesday.

State zone forecasts
West Central, Central IUghlands

Sa turday night, increasing cloudiness . Low In the klwer 30s.
Southwest winds 10 to :!J mph .
Sunday, mostly cloudy and warmer. High In thE' low !Ds. Otancro of
rain is 20 percent.
East Lake Erie Shore, Nortooast Inland
Saturday night, Increasing cloudiness. Low in the low lls.
Southwest winds 10 to :!J mph .
Sunday, mostly cloudy and warmer with a slight chance of
showers. High In the low 50s. Chance ci rain is lJ percent.
Central, East Central

Saturday night, partly cloudy. Low in the lower .l ls. Southwest
winds 10 to 20 mph.
Sunday, mostly d oudy and warmer. High in the mid 50s. Otan&lt;I' of
rain is W pl'rcent.
Miami Valley, Southwest, South Central
Saturda~ night, generally clear. Low In the lowE'r lls. Southwest
" "nds 10 to W mph.
Sunday, partly cloud)· and warmer. High In the upper !Ds.

Ohio weather table
High temperatu re Friday: :JJ.
Low temperature Friday : 9.
RE'COrd high: 76 in 19ll.
Record low: -4 in 1885.
Total precipita tion Friday; trac&lt;'.
Record high Saturday: 83in I9ll.
RE'COrd low Saturday: 0 in 1885.
Tempera ture extremes a year ago Saturday: 27-56.
Total precipitation a year ago Saturday: .10.

live decay products. Although the
decay products are short-lived,
they ·are res ponsible for most of the
harm associated with radon
exposure.
Radon is said to be the grea test
cause of luog cancer in non smokers and the EPA has esti malrd 500l to 15,COO resulting
dea ths in the country each year .
Scientists for the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control be lieve the total
could be as high as ll,COO.
It is loog-term ex posure to radon
that is associated with the Increase
In the risk of lung cancer.
The decay products adhere to
dust particles and other surfaces
and lf inhaled, can also adhere to
thE' aitways of the lungs.
Alpha parilciE's are emilted by
two or radon' s decay products and
these particles can damage et'lls in
the lu ng, sometimes leading to the
formation of cancerous cells .
Robert Qu illen , slate rad iological
health otricer, says that two years
ago, the state sampled 50 homes for
radon gas as parr of a U.S. EPA
study or indoor air pollution. One of
those homes was in Gallia County,
one in Athens County and four in
Washington Coun ty, Quillen says.
Radon is measured in picoCw·ies
per li ter of air or water, and the
EPA: estimates that living with a
radon level of 10 ptroCuries per utrr
Is the equlvqlrnl of smoking a pack
of cigarettes a day.
Of the 50 homes tested, twelve
had concentrat ions of eight or more
picoCuries pl'r li ter which exceeds
the rxposut'E' limit pmposed by the
National Council on Radiation
ProiE.'C iion and MeasUI'E'ments.
"The problem then." Quillen
said, "was that we didn't realize the
sign ifi ca nce of geological
fo rm ations."
The upcom ing study in southeast ·
ern Ohio will be a "systematic look"
at the possible problem according
to Quillen .
Part s of fiw counties bordering
the Ohio River will be Included In
the southeastern Ohio study Meigs, Athens. Washington. Monroe and Belmont. Local health

City... ·
(Continued from page I I
whai-IY:' called vio lations of tlw&gt;
stale's Open Mretings or Sunshine
4w - which requires public
mtlflcalion of special meetings by a
govE'rnmental body.
The law, Sheets said, requires 21
hour notice to the media . WJEHWYPC' radio and ThE' Daily Tribune
were notifiE'd at 6 p.m. Friday. 18'h
hours before the meetln g, hE' said.
City Solicilor Douglas Cowles
said rxCE'ptions to the law are
pmvided - through emerg~&gt;ncy
ml'&lt;'llngs - "and those exceptions
ar&lt;' met today."
Sheets also charg&lt;&gt;d commission
members with violating tiV' Su nshine Law by discussing PlerCP's
future with II&lt;- city among thE'mselves and adopting liP measure
"without full discu ssion in a public

(Continued from page A-l l
departmrnts will set up and
monitor their own counties under
the direction of the state.
Quillen explains that thE' study
will begin with an "Initial threemonth monitoring period." Further
and more in-depth study will be
ba sed on the results of those first
three months.
Jon Jacobs, Meigs County deputy
health commissioner, report s two
homes to be tested In Meigs have
been seiE.'C ied. He expects othE'rs
will be chosen soon.
Homes to be tested will be
somewhere in Sutton. Lebanon and
Olive Townships. However, a! least
one home in Salisbury Twp. will be
tested sinet• a small part oft hE' shale
fmmalion branches off and runs
toward Pomeroy.
Pomeroy and the rest of Meigs
County's border- downrivPr from
Pome'roy - do not lie in t hr
Dunka rd Shale test area.
Quillen say s the "dosimet ers"
used to lest radon level ha ve
ah'E'ady been ordered by thE' state
but he could not speculate wren
exaclly the study will begin.
Just because the area of Meigs
County \o be tested for radon lies
over shale fmmatlon, does not
necessarily mean radon gas is
being producrod in high levels
Jacobs points out. Also. radon could
be detected In one house but not in
the house next door.
There are many variables in
connE.'Ction with radon and until the
sout heastern Ohio study is complet e, state and locallw&gt;alth officials
would prefer nollo speculate about
whether or not high levels of radon
will be found in Meigs County.
"We just don't know," says
Quillen . "Th at's why we're doing
thE' study.
Although the thought of radon
ex posu re Is alarming. there arr
measures which can be taken by
home owners to correct thE' problem, if detected.

a

· 111 cant damagr.
potentia1for stgn
"It' s like plaving
'
.poker ,.. said
Watts Auman prestdenl of thr
National Peach Council. "If you
throw in you're going to lose. But il
you keep on playing, there's a
'b'l'ty
. ·n..
poss1 11 you 11 WI .
Many strawber ry growNs ini gated their fields Friday night to
protec t thE'm from the cold said
.
· .
Georgia state extenSIOn servtcr
horticuilulist Stephen Myers. Rut
he said there was little P&lt;'aCh
growers could do to protect thE'1r
trees
A large high prPssurc systPm
over the vwer Mississippi va lley
chilled the eastern thi rd of the

templ'ratures
warmer
Ro k
Plain Inththe northIn the
em
c
Irs
and
s
an
S0 theast
• u
·
In Fort Lauderdale , Fla ., ~en -.
ttia l I'TlCl:Ca for spring- vacationing
college students, the high Erlda~was fJ7 degrees. In Bismarck N.D.
.
•
.
the mercury htt 68 , and at Havre,
M t 't
10 d
on ·· ' was
egrees.
Record lows were set il !4.cjlleo
t!Y:'
dd
r . F. .
on
secon ay o sprm g n 8ay ..
Lo ~&lt;~ dipped iniD the _single digits
andteensacross theMidwestandto·
below zero in New England.
" If this is spring, i wan! wltller
back," said Susan Perry of ~vi de nee, R.I., who planned ID ~ve
Saturday fo r a 10-day fltltida
vacation.
~n~a~~~~
-o~n~!:!!~~2~~L.!.!.!.!i!!,._:_::,:::,:::::.::.__ _ _ _ _ _ _~-

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

When people look into
your eyes do they
see Jesus?
When you look
into their s. do yo u
share Jesus)

LETS LIVE GODS LOVE
TOGETHER

TAX RITE

Five minute call to Tax Rite will
guarantee a professionally prepared
tax return. Experienced CPAs. availa·
ble to orter ta• saving ideu and lax
planninc prepare and sian returns.
Returns promptly mailed to you .
Prices, belinninc at 117.951tln basic
Fedml and State 10-10, averaae 25% below the price for most tal preparers..
Confidence, Securtly, Convenience. and Rea sonable Rates: the satisfaction of Tax Rite.
CALL : 446-6647

St [ (lUIS C at~l.( (hutch

91 State St1 ef'l
(,~IIIDOII ~ 0 11

446 0669 .

These ca~ are all equipped with 6c~inderengtnes. auto. trans., power steering
and brakes, air oond .. rad io and vinyl interior.
AVERAGE RETAIL - $3.975 .00
AVERAGE LOAN VALUE - $2,925.00

SALE PRICE

meeting.''

"Somebody should be staling
· what brought this about," Sheets
said, " Jo lend credit to the
foundation !Of the chargE'SI."
"Tbere are a lot of ordinances
that are passed wit,oout discussion,'' Commissioner Hugh Graham l'l'plied. "Everybody chose not
to discuss 11," Commissioner G.
Richard Brown added.
Knolls, o2,
- IT't~·ro . plant
manager at Robbins &amp; Myers said he would "do what Is In liP best
intprest of the city. No one will
pressure me except you Ittw&gt;
commission 1. and I don 't know if
you can . What arPyoo going to do~
fire rn:&gt; ?"
Knotts becomes the fifth city
manager in as many months.
OtrlsUan P. Morris, city manager for eight years, tendered his
resignation last August and his last,
day on the cily payroll was Nov . 15.
Keven R. Wright, Gallipolis
Recrcation Director, followed Morris as intE'rim city managE'r. Wrlgh\
resigned effE'Ctive Dec. 3 -the dale
the commission offtclalty hired
Pierce - to return to his native
Colorado.
Tile dly commission lt.'n appointed Homer Pellegrinon as the
second Interim cily manager to
serve untll Pierce took o[fice in
E'arly January.
Pler&lt;I' came to Gallipolis from
Phoenix, Ariz., w!Y:'re he served as
a municipal consul! ant. He had also
been city manager for Sou rh
Haven . Mich., and East Detroit.
Mich ., as well as chief 1•lllage
administrator In Mont icello. N.Y .
Pler&lt;I' said he would return lot he
Phomlx area and would return to
hls rrevious job as a muni cipal
:&lt;Jnsullanl.

-tureswereexpE.'Cted lodlptotre:!Js
in Florida and Alabama, an d gale
warnings were posted for parts of
.
rth Carolina
:.~lrgmla and No
"H . full
this weathE'r wlll
ope y,
moderate somewhat, because a
k'll '
f
. t•~ I I lhi g
I mg ree-te IS '"' as
n
Ceo · f
need" said Geor. rgcta armers
f' A . It e
g1a ommrss1oner o gr1cu ur
T
1 1 H
'd there was a
ommy rv n. e sat

$2,900°0

011 ColtlftiHIINII To ~~~ It

Q••llltJ ,., Smle•

RIVER CITYFARM SUPPLY
'11110 AIID 5YCAMOIE

446 - 2985

Open a Civic Savings IRA
and reduce your taxes.

GAlliPOliS

8 A.M. TO 6 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATUIAY

r-----FULL LINE _ _ _...,
•TOBACCO SUPPLIES
•DOG I. CAT FOOD
•LIVESTOCK SUPPLIES
•MINERAL BLOCKS
·•SHEUED CORN •CORN COB MEAL
•LIQUID 'MOLASSES
CAN SEIVE AIL YOUI GRINDING NEEDS

There·s still time lo save on your 1985 taxes. If you open a
Civic Savings IRA before Aprill5 . You can deposit up to
$2.000 tor an individual. $2.250 tor a couple With one
working spouse. or $4.000 tor a working couple. And you
can deduct that amount !rom your taxable gross income
- while earning a lop interest rate on your retirement
money. Stop by CiVJc Savings today . and take a tax
break.

COMPLOE GARDEN CENTER
.•SUD POTATOES •ONION sm •FERDLIZER
"IF WE DON'T HAVE IT IN STOCK
WE CAN GET IT"
BULK SERVICE NOW AVAILABLE

IUYIIIG GIAIII "CAll FDI LATEST QUOTES"

B

"S~R~t~E~!~H!~~~c:!~~~!~~l:er t

CIVIC

§AVllN G.§
B

A,

N

K

4412nd Avenue Gallipolis, Ohio 15631 (0 14) 446·3832

�..

-.-..-

Page-A-4-The

....

·~

Times-Sentinel

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W.Va.

March 23, 1986

Area deaths
Harry S. Bowen
POMEROY - Harty S. (Billl
Bowen. 61. f01merly of Pomeroy,
died March 4 in Waukegan. Ill.
A Pomeroy High School gradual£', he was born Nov. 16, 1924 in
Pomt&gt;roy to tht&gt; late Harry tMox 1
and Laura Stark Bowt&gt;n.
Survivors includt&gt; his wife, Romona: two daughters, Ann Brown of
Louisville. Ky., and Romona
Bowrn of Waukegan: thrt&gt;e sons,
William of Chicago, and John and
P!'ter, both of Wau kt&gt;gan:, and two
sisters. Edith Wilt of Chapel Hill.
N.C., and Hazel Kehrer of Bucvrus.
He was assoclnte superintendent
In charge of suppo11 ivc services in
Wau ktlgan.
Funeral S(•rvices

wrrr

in

Waukpgan.

Norman Max Harmon
POMEROY - N01man Max
Harmon . 61, of Greenville, formerly of Meigs. County, died
Wednesday ar \ 'eterans Hospital in
Dayton
A truck driver. he was born F'eb.
4, 1925 in Columbia Township to th&lt;&gt;
late Joseph Neil and Elllel Bowen
Harmon. A World War TI "eleran.
he was a mt•mber of the American
Legion, the Disabled American
·Veterans, APrie 2171. Fraternal
Order of Eagles at Pom~rov and
the truck drh-ers union. He was a
mt&gt;mber of the Unil&lt;'!l Methodist
Church.
Survivors include two brothers.
Woodrow II Harmon and Hal B.
Harmon, and a sis lf•r, Exa Mae

Christian. all of Rt. t Pomero1 .
He was preced&lt;-d in death b1: one
brother. Aldo.
'
·
Funera l se"'iC&lt;'S will be I. 30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home wit h Rev . James Corbit t
officallng. Rurial will be in Alex ander Crmt~IY . Fnends maY call
from 7 to 9 p.m. Monda1· and r'rom 9
a.m. Tuesda~· until tim~ of SE'n· irf'S
at the funeral home

Calvary Baptist Church, she was
born May 5, 1900 at Webb Summitt
to the latt&gt; Ora and Alma Margaret
Emrick Stuffiebean.
Su rvlvors Include one daughter,
Florence Elizabeth Long Reynolds
of Mason, W. Va.: one brother.
Charles Stuffiebean of Nt&gt;lsonvllle:
one sister. Daisy Italla of Logan:
five grandchildren, 21 greatgrandchlldrcn, two great-grt&gt;atgrandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral st' rvi('{'S will be 1 p.m.
Monday at the Ewing Funeral
Home. BUiial will be In Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Cheshire. Friends may
call from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday at
the funeral home.

Benjamin Cr088
POMEROY - Benjamin Cross.
97. of Madan. N.D .. former~· of
Meigs County and Glouster. died
F'riday at a hospital In the Madan
area.
The Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy is in charge of
arrangemt;&gt;nts.

Lewis B. Talbolt
DANVILLE. ILL.- S-Sgt. Lewis
B Talbott. 55, of Danville. Ill.,
form~rly of the Racine area. died
March 18 at a hospital In Urbana.
Ill.
A graduate of Racine High S&lt;fhooi
and a U.S. Air Force retiree. be was
bom at Ponland to Mrs. Zelia
Arnott Taylor of Middlepon and the
late Hollie Talbott.
Besides his motlwr. he is sur,.i,·ed b)' one daughter, Diana
Anderson of \lest Frankfort. fll.:
and two sons. David Talbott of
California and Dann1· Talbott. at
home.

He was preceded in death b)· his
father and a son. Darrel Talbott
who was killed in rescue service
with tbe C. S. Na1-y.
Ser..-ices were held Frida)· nnoming in Dam·ille.

Kemal Jenkins

Minnie Clark
MIDDLEPORT - Minnie Ma&lt;•
Stufflebean Long Cia rk. ~- of
Gallipclis. formerly of Middlt•pol1.
died Fr ida\ ar thr Holzer Mf'dica l
Center.
A hou,.wife and a member of

March 23, 1986

MILTON , W.VA . - Kernel .Jenkins. 77. of Glenwood, 1\'.Va .. died
Frida)· at St. Ma ry's Hospital In

Huntington, W.Va., following a long Friends may call from 2-4 and 7-9
. p.m. Sunday at Waugh-HalleyIllness.
A retlned finisher for Connor Steel Wood Funeral Home.
Division of HK Porter Co., he was
born Aplil I, 1911! In Cabell County, Martha Chapman
W.Va .. to the late Bailey and Ama
APPLE GROVE, W.VA.
Jane Moms Jenkins.
Martha
Ann Terry Meadows ChapSurvivors Include his wife, Berman,
89,
of Apple Grove, died
tha Susan Jenkins: one daughter,
Friday inornlng at Fairfield HospiMrs. Clora Edmunds of Milton:
seven sons, Bernard and Jimmy of tal In Lancaster following a brief
Glenwood, Clt&gt;Veland of Chesa- illness.
A member of the Barton Chapel
peake. Ray of Huntington. Rober1
and Carlton Eu!lene, both of United Brethren Church, she was
Nonhup, Carroll of Leon, W.Va .: 18 born Dec. 29, 1896 In Mason County
gra ndchildr e n, 11 great to the late Abe Terry and Mary
Taylor TI'I'D'·
grandchldren.
Survlvors Include five daughters,
He was preceded In death by one
son. seven sisters and tltn'&lt;' Mrs. Emma Casey of Lancaster,
Mrs. Mary Slayton, Mrs. Ester
brothers.
Funeral ser\'ices will be 2 p.m. Casey and Mrs. Shirley Watterson,
Monday at Heck Funeral Home in all c1. Apple Grove, and Mrs. Betty
Milton, W.Va ., with Rev. James Vaughn of Naples , Fla.: two sons,
Jefferson officiat ing. Burial will be Harold Meadows of Lancaster and
In Templeton Cemeterv at GIPn- Chester Meadows of Pleasantvillt&gt;;
wood. Friends mav rail from 2-4 thn&gt;e step-daughters, Mrs. Maxine
and &amp;-8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral Adams of Pliny, W.Va., Mrs.
home. Grandsons wUI serve as Modena Duckworth of Columbus
and Mrs. Lois Duncan of Applt&gt;
pallbea1ws.
Grove; tlu-ee step-sons. William H.
Chapman of Logan. Floyd E.
Nora Daughtery
Chapman c1. Columbus and John H.
Chapman
of Monroe. Mich.: sevCHESHIRE - Nora Marie
eral
grandchildren,
several great Daughtery, 85, of Rt . l . Cheshire,
grandchildren
a nd step died Fr·lday at the hom&lt;' of her son.
grandchildren.
She has resided in Gallia County
She was preceded in death bv two
the past 18 months, after moving
husbands,
Oather Meadows and
from West Liberty, W.Va., where
John
Ervin
Chapman, one daughshe operated a grocery store for
ter.
Evelyn
Casey, and one son,
several years.
Otho Meadows.
She was bom Oct. 23. 1900 in
Funeral services wil l bel: 30p.m.
Pittsburgh, Pa .. to the late F\'ter
Monday
at the Beale Chapel United
and Marie Namit Mahalkey.
Met
hodist
Church In Apple Grove
She is su1vived by one oon. John
with
Rev
.
O'Dell Bush officiating.
Ranenegar, Cheshire; and one
Burial
will
be In Beale Chapel
daughter, Mrs. Rose Marie Pratt.
Cemeter1·The
body wlll belakt&gt;n to
Washington. Pa .; 13 grandchildren
the
church
one
hour prior to
and 10 grea t grandchildren; one
se"·ices.
Friends
may
call from 24
sister, Mrs. Harry , (Evt&gt;lynr Neff,
and
7-9
p.m.
Sunday
at
Wilcoxen
Pittsburgh.
Funeral
1\vo husbands. John Ranenegar
and Charles L Daughter. three
sisters and five brothers preceded
her In death .
She attended GaiUpclis Christian
Church and was a member of West
t US P SU-800 )
Liberty Christian Church .
PubllshE'd f'ilCh Sundav. 825 Thi rd Avt&gt;.,
Funeral services wUJ be 1 p.m.
Gallipol is. Ohio. b~· th e Ohto Valley Publi shin g Company Multlm('dla. lnr . Se·
Tuesday at Bodey Funeral Home in
rond class JXlS IU,i&lt;' paid at Gallipolis.
Wh!'&lt;'llng, W.Va. with Rev . James
Ohio -156.11. Enu•red as srrond class
Wilkins officiating . Bulial will be in
mall lnj;; manPr ar Ponl(lr ov . Ohio, Post
OffiC'f'.
.
Prall Cemetery at West Uberty.

Hays McMWTay
PORTI.AND - Hays McMurray, 89, of Old Town Flats Rd .,
Porlland, died Saturday afternoon
at his home.
A World War I veteran and a
member of the Meigs Chapter 53
DA V, he was born March '!I, 1896 at
HB7.el Community , Long Bottom to
Ute late Charles and Blanche Miller
McMurray.
·
SUJvlvors Include three daughters, Gladys Brown of Dallas,
texas: Pauline WIUiams of Columbus and Betty Guinn· of Trenton,
Fla.: one son, Paul McMurray of
Columbus: one brolher, Lewis
McMurray of Long Bottom: 10
grandchildren and four great
grandchildren.
FUneral services wUJ be 10 a.m.
Wednesday at Ewing Funeral
Home with Rt&gt;V. Gerald Koster
officiating. Burial will be In Bald
Knob Cemetery with graveside
services by the Racine Post
American Legion. Friends may call
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday al th&lt;&gt;
funeral home.

Robert W. Lee

2 Pc. Antron with heavy oak frames, pillow
arms. Several paHerns to choose from.

!!.~~·

Bassett
5 Pc.
High Back
Chairs &amp; Table
REG. S499

SALE

PRICE

$24900

Ad\'PTtlslnJ,! Rt'prt'Senta tlvr. Branham

N£&gt;wspapf'r Sai&lt;'S, 73.1 Third Avrnue.
t\f'w York . NPw York 10017.

END

SUNDAY ONL\'
SUBSCRIP1'10N RATES

By l:arr lrr or Motor Routt

No 85-02-EL -EFC Subfile A. to review the fuel
procurement
pra.ct.ices
and po lic1es of Columbus

No subsrr lpltons by mall prrmltll'dln

triC Compan y . the opera-

a .m on March 24 .
1986. a t the off ices or the
Public Uttlit1es Comm1s·

ston , 180 East Broad
Street. Colu mbu s. Oh1o

43215
Al l

1nt.erested

Available in
24 inch
or 30 inch

The- Sund11v Tim('s ·S&lt;&gt;ntlnrl will noT be

REG.
$JJ9

rt'Spon s lbl; for ad va nce- pay mf'nt~
mad!' to carrlf'rs .

Lion or its ElectriC Fuel

10 00

STOOL

Beautiful
for living

rown s where mmor carrlf'r sc&gt;rvlc&gt;e Is
a\'a]lab](•.

and Southern Ohio Elec-

BAR

TABLE
FLOOR
LAMPS

On r WN'k .. ............... ........... 50 Cents
OnP Ynr ........
.. ........ $26.00
SINGLE COP\'
PRICE
Sunday ................ . .... .... ~ Cf'n ls

for public hearmg Ca se

Component and related
matters . This hearing 1s
scheduled to begin at

S2 9900

' Sale Price

MAIL SUBSCR IP1'10 NS
Sunday Only

1984 CHEV

Silverado Package. 2 tone desert sand &amp; white, cloth interior, ll5 V-8 eng.,
auto. overdrrve Irans .. air oond .. AM-FMstereo. trlt wheel. cruise control. delay
wrper.;, power wrndows. power tbor locks, 31gal. fuel tank, rally wheels, lockrng
drfferential. heavy duty trailering equipmen~ pius much rooret Sharp!'

parties

....

$11 900°0

wtll be g:ven an o ppor
tunlty to be heard Fur t her i:~ f o rmatwn may be
obt.am ed by contactmg
the CommiSSIO n

...

..-.~

......... $13 .00

l :l Weeks ....
.. 51 4.56
Rat1'11 Ouhddt- Ohio
52 WN'ks
S.''i9.80
26 \\'('('kS
S..ll .20
13 WN'k!&gt; ................ ........... $15.60

~
~

HOURS
q 00 'l 00 Mon -Sa t.

9 am til 10 pm

FRI.·SAT.

Prices good thnu Mar. 29, 1986
GO TO CHURCH EVERY SUNDAY

GROUND CHUCK
lB .

SIILOIN YIP

ROAST

$199

lB.

SUPEIIOI

FRANKIE$
12 oz.
PKG.

99&lt;

COKE
REG. 01 DIET
SPRITE
8-16

ans.

oz.

$149
"'"

SUPERIOR

TAVERN HAMS

~H~LE

lB.

HALF
ll.

HAM

$159
$18 9

PORK CHOPS
CENTER RIB · ll. $179
CENTER LOIN 11. 51"
LOIN END
ll. 5119
'$ PII·SliCED

BACON
$ 29

ll.

TURKEYS

AVAILABLE AT
II ..

fLORIDA

TOMATOES
II.

69C

•Firenzas
•Calais
•Cutlass Cieras
•Delta 88's

We Reserve the Right to limit Ou1ntjtie1-

$ 19
MT. YIINOII

20fo MILK
GAl.
$)49

lfl

FULL SERVICE
CLINICAL LAB
Certified by: U.S. Dept. of Health an'd Human
Services, CLIA and Ohio Dept.ol Health. Ap·
proved lor Medicare &amp; lledicaid.

governor and secretary of state
Tuesday. At a news conference, the
winners , Mark Fairchild for Ut&gt;ut enanl governor and Janice Han for
secretary of state, said they have
Ute support of voters but Fairchild
admitted he does not know how
nnany counties there are In Illinois.

observe an underground nuclear
wea{X)ns test in Nevada. ll was not

accepted.

"! . don't know," Fairchild said.
But he contended he and Hart will
be elected because they have
superior Ideas. Hart sa1d she wants
to "gt&gt;t ... traitors out of
Washington. "
Har\, 31. and Fairchild . :18. said
the Gram m-Rudm an deficit -

0

0

TliE PRECIOUS MOMENTS"' BIRlliD'\Y ll&lt;AIN is an entirely
new concept, a collection within a collection. Ail the la~ghter and
joy of a child's birthday is captured in these 7 p~ecrous crrcus
animals and their clown leader. The Birthday Club rs a maiVelous
way for children and their parents to enhance the joy of collecting
Ute Birthday Train.
Why not stop in and see the PRECIOUS MOMENTS Birthday
Train? We know you too will want to "get on board."
PHONE 384-2174

2501 Jadtsan Avenue 120 West 2nd Street
PT. PlEASANT, W. Va.
WELLSTON, Ohio

PHONE 992·6492
786 N. St&lt;ond St.
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio

529 Jackson Pikt, Gallipolis, 011.

0

%

PHONE 675·2303

SPIING VAWY PlAZA

trtrrunlng Ia w was Ute handiwork of
corrupt international bankers, who
they said also are to blame for the
spread of AJDS by forcing governmt&gt;nl austerity programs.
They supper! mandatory testing
for AIDS and quarantines of people
with the virus.

THE ENESCO PRECIOUS
MOMENTS BIRTHDAY TRAIN!

PHONE 743 -48 80

112 S Main Street
MilTON, W. Va.
PHONE 7SS -0128

102 21st Street
NITRO, W. Va.

0
PHONE 446-6620
364 Ja&lt;ksan Pike
GAlliPOliS, Ohio

PHONE 697 ·21 S1
101 Sixth Ave.
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.

RR4, Bo• 1
PIIOCTORVILU, Ohio

.. ......0353

fUlL CUY

ROUND STEAK

$17'

II.

BONELESS LB. 51.99

•Cutl~ss

IOIIIUSS

RIB ROAST

$389

II.

. I Emergen~o·t~Nrr.f\
t \/alley Hosplta
ine Pleasan
ea needing
one in the ar
~~t'rvice to anY
prov d
·
are
"
t ine doctors
medical treatmen .
urgent
AY
- ment
z.•·\'1-IOUI'.!':&gt;
tne latest eQUIP
!:.iFiff fllied and nav
~~n1y qua "
j:l\'1 tl L.-11T~ncies tneY
~~~ tne emerg
tnem to ttea "
1'1 patient tne
available to
){tend to eac
ihe nursese
.
Pleasant
nandle.
ctenzes
ralt~ctl that chara
person

10°/o OFF

9.9% GMAC

Financing

Supremes
•98 Regencys

{\

C,F\~ C.•~TE.il-

ValleY Hospital .

IOIIILISS

CHUCK ROAST

1-\osPita.l L:nergencY

$159

IJ.

ant \/alleY
\/isit the Pleas

ENGUSH ROAST LB. S1.79

Ln BARR'S BUY
YOUR EASTER EGGS

P"

1-DOIEN
EXTRA LARGE

OLDS.-CAD.
CHEVROLET

EGGS FREE

su.oo PURCHASE

WRH

THOIIITOII'S EmA LAIGI

EGGS
DOZ.

79C

II.

39C

....
BANANAS

Register March 24!
----sPRING QUARTER 1986

3:00P.M. through 7:00 P.M.

A:

9 am til10 pm
CLOSED SUNDA t

AMTS.

blockaded the three gates at Subic,
a strategic base 60 miles northwest
of Manila, preventing U.S. servicemen from entering or leaving the
facility.

WASHINGTON (UPil - Adlai
Stevenson Is Invited to talk politics
with right -wing extremist Lyndon
LaRouche bul he would rather
dump two LaRouche candidates
who won statewide spots on the
Democratic ticket In Illinois.
LaRouche extended tilt&gt; invita tion Friday and said voters told
Stt&gt;Venson, tbe Democratic candidate for governor, "to run with
these two people."
Stt&gt;Venson spent Ute day In
researching ways to "purge" tbe
ticket. He said he will not run with
"candidates who espouse the hatefilled folly of Lyndon LaRouche."
Party leaders fear the LaRouche
candidates will wreck Democratic
chances In Illinois.
The LaRouche Democrats narrowly defeated Stevenson's handpicked candidates for lieutenant

':i\

STORE HOURS:
MON.-THURS.

FOOD
STAMPS
AND WIC
COUPONS

$1
$1

way to stop the nuclear arms race.
"Nothing on Ea11h can be more
Important than in taking those
stt&gt;ps, along with the Soviet Union ,
to reduce Ute level of le!Tor that
keeps people throughout the world
In a statP of fear," Wright sa id .
Sens. Alan Cranston, D-Ca lif .,
and Mark Hatfield, R-Ore. , introduced legislation to halt funding ror
nu clear weapons tests for the
duration of Moscow's rroratorium .
A bill with lhe sa me effect is
pending in the House.
Reagan on March 14 renewed an
invitation to Soviet scientists to

J.Alt.~

Secret.ar:;

lB.

Soviet mora torium is an effective

~

CO MM1SSJON OF OHIO
BY M ar:; An:-1 0Pllnskl .

29
69

nitely as bng as the United States
did not resume testing.
Rep. Jim Wright. of Texas, the
House Democratic leader, said the

::::::J

THE PUBLI C UTILITIES

3 IBS .
OR MORE
lESSER

The nuclear device was designed
to have a force of betwt&gt;en :Jl and 150
kilotons, equal to a maximum
punch of 150,000 tons of TNT. By
comparison, the atomic bomb
dropped oo Hiroshima Aug. 5, 1945,
equaled 13 kilotons.
It was the first U.S. nuclear test
since "Goldstone," an experiment
in Star Wars technology,'on Dec. :18,
1985. The United States conducted
16 announced W!derground nuclear
tests at the Test Site In 1985.
More than lJ congressman and
senators Friday urged President
Reagan to cancel tbe test and
acct&gt;pl a nuclear test moratorium
with the Soviet Union, which has not
conducted a test sin&lt;'&lt;' August 1985.
The Soviels began a unilateral
moratorium on nuclear tests last
August through the rnd of 1985 and
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
extrnded the nnoratorium inciefi-

Stevenson wants to dump LaRouche men

Seven injured as
Filipinos strike base
SUBIC BAY NAVAL BASE,
. Philippines tUPII - Some 2,1XXl
striking Filipinos barricaded the
U.S. Sublc Bay Naval Bose Satur, day, using "worker pcwer" to
· prevent servicemen from entering
or leaving. At least six Filipinos and
one U.S. 'Marine were Injured In
overnight clashes.
The wildcat strike was part of a
: massive job action staged Friday
by most of I he 22,1XXl un ion workers
: employed at seven U.S. military
· Installations In the Philippines after
10- monlll -old talks on a new tltreeyear contract collapsed.
The stlike aiso affected the six
other U.S. Installations. Hundreds
of workt&gt;rs formed picket tines
Saturday at Clark Air Base, 50
miles nonh of Manila , said base
spokesman Maj. Thomas Boyd.
Pickers also turned up at Camp
O'Donnelln Capas, Tarlac Wallace
Air Station In Porto Point, La Union
Camp John Hay In Bagulo City and
Ute Joint Military Assistant Group
offices in Quezon City. according to
U.S. and union officials.
About 2,1XXl strikers Saturday

delay to allow officials to doublecheck wind conditions, which he
said were calm.
A spokesman for the Greenpeace
anti-nuclt&gt;ar group in Las Vegas
said 12 members of the organiza tion sneaked onto the classified test
site in the pre- dawn darkness
before tbe test.
Greenpeace spokt&gt;srnan Steve
Rohl said Ute Department of
Energy was notified of llle trespassers. but there was no officia l
comment on the protesters and the
test went on as planned.
"They had equipment,"- Rohl
said. "They were prepared to spend
a couple of days out there. They had
packs, water and food."
He said anti-nuclear activists
planned symbolic non-violent protests at llle t&gt;ntrance of I be test site
through tbe end of the month.

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.. $29.12

By DAVID KELlEY
YUCCA FLAT, Nev. (UPIJ The United States detonated Its first
underground nuclear test of 1986
Saturday despite pleas from many
Congressmen to cancel It and join
!be Soviet Union In Its moratorium
on nuclear testing.
Tht&gt; blast, which was up to 10
times more powerful than the
atomic bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. swayed high-rise gambling
resorts In Las Vegas, which Is not
unusual for such tests, Department
of Energy spokesman Jim Boyer
said.
"It was a very successfu I test,"
Beyer said at Ute Nevada Test Site,
81 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
Boyer said the test, code- named
"Glencoe," was detonated at the
bottom of a 2,1XXl-foot vertical shafl
at 11: 15 a.m. after a 15-minute

School and member of the Sutton
United Methodist Church, he was
born April ~- 1963 in Gallipolis lo
Robert and Marilla Orr Lee of
Racine.
In addition to his parents, he is
survived by ont&gt;sister, Rebecca Orr
Lee of Racint&gt;: a niece, Amy Beth
Lee of Racine: maternal grandmother, Mrs. Elllel Orr of Chester:
several aunts, uncles, and ccuslns.
He worked on the family dairy
farm and attended Washington
Technical School at Marietta following his graduation in 1981 from
Soutltern High School. While in
school, he was an active member of
Ute FFA having serve as a stale
officer. He was a member of the
Meigs County Agricultural Society,
a 4-H leader, and a member of the
Junior Holstein Assocla lion.
He was preceded In cieatlt by a
special friend, Sandra Harden wbo
died in an auto accident last
January in Lancaster.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m.
Monday In Sutton United Methodist
Church with Rev. Paul McGuire
officiating. Bulial will be In the
church cemetery. Friends may call
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday at the
Ewing Funeral Home In Pomeroy
and at Ute church one hour prior to
the services.
In lieu of nowers, contributions
may be made in Lee's name lo the
Sutton United Methodist Church.

SALE

0nf' Yrar ............................. . $26.80
Sh: mont hs

RACINE -Robert W. Lee, 23, of
Bashan Road, Racine, died early
Saturday morning at Pleasant
Valley Hospital of injuries suffered
in an automobile accident near
Point Pleasant.
A graduate of Southern High

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-A-5

U.S. tests nuclear device in Nevada

Area deaths

Mt&gt;mbf'r lJnltt'd Prf'o;.s lntf'r nal!onal.
Inland Daily Prf'ss Associ ation and the
Ohio N(•wspape-r Ass ocia tion . National

The Public Uttll.~.1es Com mtsston of Oh1v has set

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

308 E. MAIN ST.

POMEIOY, OH.

PH. 992-6614
OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 5

HOURS :
Mon ., Wed ., Fri . 8 :30 to 8
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 8:30 to 5:30
Seturda v 8:30 to 4

ou need ...
tor the treatment 'J

wnenY 0

~m

u need it.

'

Open Registra tion
Classes Beg in
last Day to Add Classes
last Day to Drop Cla sses Without Recmd
Fall Advising/Pre-Registration Begins
last Day to Pre-Register for Fall Quarter
Memmial Day - No Classes
last Day to Drop Classes
Faculty Deve lopment Day - No Day Cla sses
Classes resume 6:00 p.m.

March 24
March 25
March 31
May 2
May 5
May 1&amp;
May 2&amp;
May JO
June 3

Final Examinatiom

june 4-5-&amp;
June 8

Commencement-Founders Day

�. ..

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

.

Page- A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

~

...........

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

March 23. 1986

~--- Localbrie~: ----------------------------~
Veterans Memorial Hospital news

Police issue citation

POMEHOY ~ Adminf'd: Sally Moore, MJ&lt;kl leport: James
Eisdstrsin. Long Bonom; Margie Shulet·, Pm1Jancl.
Dischargc'&lt;l: Paul Va n('oonry . Ha rold 1i·ip1Ptt. Chlorus Grimm,
Yvonne 1\'alkrr.

GALLIPOLIS - Tina M. Pel tie, 24 , of 424 Fourth Ave .. Ga llipolis,
was riled Frida :~ by pollee for a red Ug~ t violation.

EMS answers five calls
POMFRI"IY- Fi\·r r a!l" wrrr answt~rrd hy bcal units Friday , l hC'
Mrig ~ L'uum.'· Enwrgrnc~ Mc'&lt;iical St"'l'\' iC'PS n-oport s.
At 11 ;);~ .t .m .. SYracuse tco k Ha rold Dm·L.:; from Minersvil lr to

Holler Medical Crn1&lt;•r: I 'omrro) at c.H p.m. took .John Hunnrl
from 420 Spring A,., ... to \'rtPran s Memorial Hospilal : Pomrm)· al
2: 56 p.m. wok Ca 1h&lt;•ruw 1\'t•aq•r from 1h&lt;' mu IIi purpose building to
Pumt'I\J~

Veter ans Mt&gt;murial;

at ·1: 05 p.m . too k .Iran Shu lr r from

Roll ll' .3.-t !0 \ 'l' lt'r :m~ Mt•muri ;-ll and s~ li.H.'USt' ~\! -:- ::)1 p.m. too k
Bramh· Fllr!Uilt' trom S\ r,tCU!'t' ld O'BIL•Jwss Hos~i!.:t! in Athl'n.".

Meeting~~/
R.t\CI~E ~

the minds

·· . \ ntt't'!lllg 111" ftl(' minds"' is thf' thf'mt' uf a m('('tingto

br held c&lt;l 7: ~~ p. m . Tu,•s&lt;l.t\ "'I he Southern Hig h Sr hml wil h pl ans
to Ut• m;Hk for· !hi.' 201 h n·un il)n ot 1t'l' r lass of 19f~i . C lass mem lrrs
having qut'S!ions should call L:HT\" CirciC', m Jl21 : Df'nn.v [\",-InS,
~3-5 llti. or (;Ill) . Willfcncl 949 2:~11

Clothing theft charged
GALLIPOLIS ~ A Gallipolis man was arrESted Friday on a tN&gt;ft
charge in connc~ t lon with thE' apparent tN&gt;ft of clothing from a car
drlv&lt;'n by a Tennessee woman. according to pollee records.
Jerry H. Massie, 38, of 100 Fou11h Ave .. was bdged In the Ga\Ua
Cou nJy Jail following his arresl.
Heports said Johnna J . Swaim of' lebanon, Tenn.. apparently
sJOppPd on 160 in an attempt to help Massie and 1\\Ucompantons, who
wrt'f' experiencing car trouble. Swaim then gave Massie and hiS
companio ns a ride Jo his t'f'sidence. After sN&gt; 12ft the re;ldence,
rPpOJ1s said thl'('(' articles of clolhing were reportedly missing !rom
her vehicle and sh&lt;' coni ac ted IN' pollee.

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Sll VER DOLLARS
UNITED STATES GOLD COINS
PROOF COINS

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FREE•/6WIPIEC
TH
I&gt;U A CH ~:OE

MTS Coins of Gallipolis

with f.1ilun' to yil'ld .

OF aNY I.S.P. UPRIGHT

ELBERFELOS
POMEROY -

992-3671

SU'PE*R eA~LE

Chrysler • P6·mouth • Dodge, I ---.....r
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S2,000,000 in RARE COINS
OYER 12 DEALERS WILL BE IN
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Power Ortven Beater

GAlLIPOliS, OHIO-NO ADMISSION CHAIGE

( ;AJ.I.IPOLIS -1\m c;;i!licr l'ounl\' womrn f'~c:q)t'd mjur' when
thf' c~1 r · s thl·~ H"t 'n ' dri\"lnt:: L11lltdt•d Fridil~· aftf'rnoon &lt;tl !he'
tnt rJ s.tTilu n of L' ~ t"1 ,tnd Ohttl :. ,H·rording to 1t¥&gt; C.tllia ·Meigs ~s l
of thr St.llt• ll i.l:::hH .1~ P,llml
Linda l. 1-I.IIt·. 2:\ uf H.t 2. Hichq•Jl. wa ... sourh0.1und nn 7. whrn
rroo pt'r" ~.nd ,J nonhlxHmd c. 1r. dri\'('n b.\ Laura.J William s. 19. of
Ht. l. Cht•shtn ·.. lilt'l!l"tlh ,t1 1t'rnptt 'tl ,t]l'f1 turn on1o ~in thr path of
Ha It·· s \'l'h trlt' 1-Lt It • ruu ld not st up m 1\nw .md s !11lCk 1h.' r-ight sict' of

~~! -1 \.

. pared, dlroots Vonda Reynolds
In typing braiDe. Vonda Is a
student at Chesltire-Kyger. AI
right, Heather Cookie and
Christy Palmer from CheshlreKyger take turns at role playing
as an UJ!Sighted person. The
students had speakers, role
played, lnspeded . and used
handicap aids during the weeklong study, conducted by gu~
dance OOUJISI'Ior Jan Coen.

HOLIDAY INN TODAY FROM 9:00-5:00

Drit ·er cited nfter nccident

p..iinl]

Flementary School classroom
teacher for the visually' lm-

Coin Show

nn L

\\ illiams · ,.t'htclt•
\\'il liams Hd s ch.t l l.!t 'd h, tht•

FOR VISUALLY IMPARED
One handicap studied by
Bidwell-Porter and CheshlreKyger Elementary scllools recently was the visually bnpared.
At left, Ann Packer, Rio Grande

0-KAN COIN CLUB PRESENTS ITS ANNUAL

i\tam St Poml'r ·o~ · Policr said
Char IPs 7.d)21&lt;'r. l'umrrn.\ "'nit ·k 1hf' l'f'il r of a c~r r dri\·('n b~· Shane
F. V\'hiho. :\t'". l i.l\'t'll. wlnt· h !ht•n S!t"Uck the rear of &lt;:t rardri\'C'n by
Marjorit • F St.mlt '~ wh() \~.!:- ,lftrmpring a turn frnm F ~·l ain St .
Tiwrv Wf't.t ' light d&lt;~magt'' rtnd Zl'iglrr was citrd .
Thi.' St't:onrJ :HTidt'nt lcll'nitt\tl in n.11urr. l)('('Un·rd at -t·:Ji p.m .
wht•n .1 c.1r dr in·n b\ \\ tllictm J),,,·is, S~T;J:C'USt.' , SII\J c k thr I'P&lt;.tl" of a
car dri\ t ' rl b~ .Jd coh Hc•ush . PomPtu.\ . which sfluck t hP rf'd r of a car
drin'n b\ El su I . :--;l,t.lt~ . ~1.1,11:- wa:-. also att('mp t in~ a turn off E .
M nm S!. Tht'l"f' m•n• mudt'Ltlt ' LLIIll agps to tht.' thn-t' \'£'hirll'.s unci
Qa\·is Wd S c ift'(i

PRESENTS

{)&lt;f_Jj

fHRfSL[R

34 •

Special classroom unit helps
children understand handicaps
By LEE ANN WELCH
ments with the handicapped, she
Tlmes-Senlinel Sial!
said. "If we approach (the subject)
PORTE R - IJ 's fine to be before thes ltuat!onarlses, the chlld
different, and one guidance ooullSf&gt;- will be better able to cope."
lor in Gallia County Is helping her
Several of the sprakers to ttr
students understand.
students were handicapped, and
Jan Coen is guidance counselor at dealing with their. situation in
Bldweii·P ort&lt;'r a nd Cheshire· positive manners, Ms. Coen said.
Kyger Elementary schools, and
One speaker, Etica Armstrong,a
recently taught a week of lesslons junior a North Gallla High School, is
about bei ng handicapped.
almost tolally deaf, and has had
"There is a lack of understanding accompnaylng speech problems.
on lhe children's part about why "She was, I feel, Inspiring," Ms.
some people are 'different ,"' Ms. Coen commented . Miss Armstrong
Coen said. "!! we reach the kids a t spoke a bout her handicap and IN'
an ear ly age t about handicaps 1 Ohio School of the Deaf, where she
they will be better adults.
spent SI'Veral years.
"They will accept people lor what
During her segmenJ. she showed
and who lhPy are."
lhr studen ts sign language, some·
Children, especially the young thing Miss Armstrong says ha s
ones. can be unsure whatto say and trlped trr live a full and more
how lo act In embarassln;;.;::g:...:.;m;,;;o_· .....me.;;.;;an;.;.in;;;gtu;;;..l.,l~l fe~.l"'!:'-

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MO.

#268

Monday, March 24th

Colt 4-door

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7:00 PM Semi-final s (ET IPTJ
9:00 PM Finals (ET/PTJ

USA Network
NIT Semi-Finals 7:00p.m.

Tuesday, March 25th

•

MTV Network
Lover Boy In Concert 10:00 p.m.
Chrysler LeBaron GTS

Section~

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DELUXE UPRIG
WITH
HEADLIGHT

dislanrr charges.

'limts· ientinel

March 23, 1986

\.,\LUPOLIS ~ A Gal lla County man was listed in good condit km
at lhl' Cabell Huntington Hospttal Bums ~nter Saturday rmrning
"here he was taken Friday following a fi at his home.
Hospilal officials said Richard Rutt, 29, o Rt. 2, Pa triot (Cadmus
c·omnmnilv 1 sufft•n'&lt;l first and second degree bums over J3 percent

P0:\1FlH lY - "I\ \\) ,ICC!dl'nh Wt' re im-c-stigcllo:l Frid.1y and l\.\-'0
drivl?rs ci!rd tn &lt;lppt '&lt;H tn P tH nf'I'O\ Ma~·or·s Cout1l\fl ,1ssurro clmr
(X't 'urTr-d

long the ri

Bum victim in good condition

Village police probe accideflts
B:Jth accidents

of his body.
According to witnesses, Ru tt and Mark Holbrook were awakened
by the noise of a !Ire at the Rutt rESidence early Friday morning.
They reportedly yelled for help and were able to leave IN' burning
structure N&gt;fore It collapsed. Rutt was treatErl by the Gallla County
EMS !or bums suffered when he ran ru t.slde with his clothing on fire.
Rut! was la ken to the Holzer Medical Center lor emergency
treatment before being transferred to Huntington .

#263

Wednesday, March 26th

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"Erica's optimistic ou tlook upon
N&gt;r hearing loss has had a positive
Effect on our children," Ms. Coen
said. "Students can a ppreciate
IErlca'sl success an d admire her
determinatio n."
Anoltrr classroom visitor was
Paula Eichinger, RN , from Pomeroy. Ms. Eichin ger Is multiple
handicapped since birth, and
brought her first pair of legs for the
children to see. Despite herhandic·
aps, Ms. Eichinger graduaiErl frotn
nursing school and now works for
Medco, a Cincinnati company, as a
med ica l records auditor. She for·
merly worked at Holzer Medical
Center lil Ga illpolis.
Handicap aids were not new·to
the children by thai point, Ms. Glen
said, rotlng Mary Harrison, RN,
staff development coordinator al
Holzer brought numerous ones to
IN&gt; classroom. Wit h her, Ms .
Ham son brought wheelchairs,
walkers, crutches. a white can and
variJus other lab materials, like
rea ring aid s. braces and 1.-aille
print
Ann Packer, Rio Grande Ele·
mentary School viSually lmpared
classroom teac her brought a braille
typewriter, along with games,
calendars and books . Carol Jack·
son, physical therapist, vlsitErl the
classroom and sho wed how nu rses,
doctors and tN&gt; PT workt cgethert o
N&gt; lp prople.
Frank DiClemente, from Guidin g
Ha nd Schooi-Gallco Workshop,
brought In dlscussiJn of ttr men·
tally retarded, tN&gt;ir strengt hs and
weaknesses. He talked of special
work projects they do a nd how Jhe
prople are proud d their work and
accomplistunents.
The students learned one very
important thing during Jhe week,
Ms. Coen sa id.
" Handicapped lX'Qple do many of
the sa me things they do, only they
may do tN&gt;m a Utile differently.
Our students are now better able to
accept the attitude it Ls OK to be
different."

· Photos courtesy
Gaiiia County
Local Schools

LI!;ARNJNG SIGNS - Heather Conkle from
Cheshlre-Kyger Elementary School i!i .nstructed by
ErlcaArmstronglnslptlanllfllle;MissAnnltrongls
a sludeni at North G,allla mgh School and Is almost

oompteteiy deal. She spent several yelll!i at the Ohio
School~ the Deal, and sign language has helped her
lead a more active life, according to guidance
oounselor Jan Coen.

ASSISDNG 'l1IE WHEELaiAIR - MillY RantRN, 1111!1 tleTdoponeot ~ ai Rolrer
Medical Cenier lnGIIIIIpols,explalnstoJarneJones

a wheelchair.

Thursday, March 27th
NICKELODEON
Family VIewing Beginning At 5 p.m.
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Friday, March 28th

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TEACHING 11IE TEACHER - MIU'IIba lluldJer,
thlnl grade teacher al Bldweii-Po.rler ElemenCary
. School, gets btvolved wllh her claa! aa ihey are

l!OII,

ll!ld Mike lindbury how to properly.assist someone In

�B-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

~EMS addition nearly complete;

~

''.

Engagements,_ __

'~Iassroom, storage, nearly double
thcrnnopane windows. There are
two gas fu maces to near tne
st ructure which also Is air
conditioned .
The large tralnlng room fe atures
recE&gt;ssed flourescent lighting and
silver ca rpeting . Six emergency
squads wUI be receiv ing training In
ttl' room plus some inserviCE&gt;
training for fire departments is
planned for· the facUlty. The
training rente•· wlll serve as a
model study for other emergency
sen"ICP units In Ohio.
Training requirements 6:Jr emergency '"] Uad memhersare lncreasing regu !arty and having a ready
facilirv where this additio nal train·
ing can be provided will he an asset
to Meigs County All EMTs must
have an additional 'll hours of
training over the llE'Xt thrE'€ years ;

advanced EMTs wUI he required to
have the 27 plus an additio nal six
ho urs per year over a three year
perbd and EA's have even higher
requirements for addit ilnal training. Currently in Meigs County
there are 145 EMTs and 58 have
CNer that level ot training.
Whl-n the plan for the construction of the addition first. materalized. it was felt that money would
have to be borrowed for the $98,(00
st ructure with the first half helng
paid out rl a tax levy in effect lor the
emergency medical serviCPs.
However, Director Byer reports
that at the tresmt tlme, It appears
thai the structure will he built
without any outside loans having to
he made.
An open house lor thl- public is
plan ned In the nea r future.

Zembry - (:rews

••

.

·• · POMEROY - An approxima te
~iOO,!XXJ addition to the headquar·; ters of the Meigs County Emer: gency Medical Services - just
;about doubling space for the fac!Uty
· - is all but completed .
Greg Roush, owner of the Roush
Construction Co.. Syracuse, which
. was the cont racting firm on the
-project. says that addit ion wUI he
: completed in abou1 a week.
; i Tied into the fmm er headquar. iters lor the services, which handled
~a lmost J,!XXJ runs in 1985. the
· addition includes a 24 by ffi training
room, an office for the director,
Roher! Byer, a restroom and
• -storage facili ties. Ground was
• broken on the new structure last
:: Novemher.
:· The exterior of the addition is
: done in brick with aluminum
: ·inserts
there are aluminum

March 23, 1986

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

GALUPOUS - Ms. Marilyn
Reapp of Gallipolis Is announcing
the engagement and approaching
marriage rl her daughter, MartjUI
Zembiy to Roger K Crews, of
Patriot
Ms. 2embry Is the daughter of
Ms. Reapp and the late John L.
(Bud) Zernbry of Pt. Pleasant. She
Is a graduate of Gall!a Academy

High School and Is employed by
Frontier Fanns Restaurant
Crews Is the son of Mr, arid Mrs.
RQhert Crews of Patriot. He Is a
graduate of Soutbwestern High
School and Buckeye Htl1s Career
Center. He Is employed wtth
Captain D's.
The wedding wt1l take place Aug.
21ln York, S.C. They will reside In
Patriot.

Salser - Hunter
TRAINING AREA - Roben Byer, director~ the

Meigs Emergency Services, and Greg Roush, o~mer
~ Roush Comtructlon Co., Syracuse, which Is the
conlractor on the project, confer In the large lralnlng

RACINE - .Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Salser, Racine, are announcing the
.engagemj?nt and appi:oocltlng mart lage of their daughter, Tonja Lee,
•til .Owglas Dean Hunter, Columbus, son of Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Hunter, Beverly.
The open church wedding will
take place May 24 at l :llp.m.at the

ceoter room~ 8n addHion to the ~rlll!ncy ~
fa.cllltles oo Mulberry lletlftts, POmeroy. The
addition wiD be completed In about one rmre week.

Flrst Baptist Church, Racine.
The bride graduated from Soutllern High School and attends Ohio
University.
Hunter graduated from Fort
Frye, Beverly, Ohio State University and the Ohio State Schhool of
Medicine. He Is a physician at
Grant Medical Center, Columbus.

Cole - Stinson

•

·.••·,

.'••

; POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
.Raymond L. Cole, Pomeroy, are
;announcing the eugagement and
•approaching marriage of thelr
·daughter, Rayanna S. Cole r:i
:Galllpolls, to Ted L. SUinson,
:Bidwell. He Is the son of Daplme
Stinson, Bidwell and the late
Clarence Stinson.
. An open-church wedding wlll

EASTER FLOWERS

,.

LILIES, MUMS, AZALEAS, TULIPS,
HYACINTHS, CALADIUM,
HANGING BASKETS

..•
•

OPEN DAILY 9 TO 5 - SUNDAY 1 TO 5
!Ciosotl Eostor s.,dayl

•

HUBBARDS GREEN H

•

.••

Bookmobile schedule announced

OHIO

•

take place May 3, 2: ll p.m., at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Mlss Cole Is a graduate of Meigs
High School and Mountain State
College. She Is employed by Holzer
Medical Center.
,
Stinson Is a graduate of ChapmanvUie. (W.Va.) High Sc hool and
Is employed by American Electrtc
Power River Transportatbn Division, Lakin, W.Va.

POMEROY - Bookmobile service in Meigs County Is brought to
• 'you by the Meigs County Public
~ Library under co.ntract wtth tlw2
; Ohio Valley Area Libraries.
~ Bookmobile Schedule lor Monday •.March 24: Carpenter (Laura's
~ St ore ). 3: 1 0.3 : 40: Dexter (Church ),
• 4:104 :40: Danville !Church) , 5:aJ.
::s:50: Rutland !Civic Center), 6:30; 7:30.
• Bookmobile Schedu le lor Tues~ day, March 25: Portland (Post

Floyd Ridenour

Eagle Scout
is named

Office). 2:10-2: 40;

Letart Falls
(Effie's Restaurant). 3:()5.5:50;
Racine (Bank), 4: 35-~: 35; Syracuse
(Pool), 5:50-7:al.
Bookmobile Schedule lor Wed·
nesday, March 26: Baum Addltiln.
2:10-2: 40; Keno (No. side of Keno
Brtdge), J:(J().J:ll; Success Road
(near 3900}), 3: 45-4: 15: Long Bottom (Post Office), 4: 25-4: 55; Reedsville (Reed 's Store), 5:()5.6:05:
TUpper's Pl ains (l.odwtck's). 7:()5.
7: 50; Baum Addition, 8:05-8:35.

!

CHESTER - Floyd Ridenour,
: son r:i Mr. and Mrs. Keit h Ridenour,
: Route I. l.ong Bottom. became an
. Eagle Scout in ceremonies held
, Saturday at the Chester United
· .Methodist Church.
The Eagle Scout award, highest
homr in boy scouring, was awarded
to Ridenour by Ga il Osborne.
sco utmaster r:i Troop 235, in a
candlelight cermony. Assisting
with the cermeony wa s William
Buckley.
Mrs. Patricia Schaekel had the
openil!g prayer. and Eagle Scouts
Scott Starcher and Mike Sim
!'S&lt;Drted the hororee to the altar
where the candle lighting took
pl ace. Each one of the 1'2 candles
represent a point of the scout law.
The thrE£&gt; separa te candles represen t the po ints of the scour oat h, and
each candle was tlghted by a scout
from Troop 2.li.
Greg Hilils gave the Eagle Scour
charge, JoA nn Newsome read
"What the Eagle Badge Means"
and Jackie Starcher recited a
poem. A Eagle Scout trophy was
presented to Ridenour from Cub
Scout Pack 2.li and a reception was
held in the felloWl hip haU following
the ceremony.

f" MrNt BUND

ENTRANCE TO FACJLli'IY - ElectriclanSherTY
John.son, an employee of Rousl1 Constructkm
Company. checks out a light fix ture al the front~ an
addition to the Me igs County Emergency Medical

Services buDdlngon Mulberry Hel&amp;hls In POmeroy.
The addHion cos1 approximately SIOO,OOO and will
nearly double the area lor training and storage.

Airman Brent E. George, son of
Harold D. George ol Rural Route I,
BidwelL and Dianne Reyno lds of
i 90 Gran 1 St.. Middleport, has
gTaduatrd from the U.S. ~ir Force
med ical administrative specialist
rourse at Sheppa t·d Air Force Base,
Te.,as .
During til' murse. student s were

taught medical resource managt'ment. patient administrative control. filing. typing, and the use of
computerized med ical Information
gystems. They also earned credlls
towa rd an associate degree through
tlw2 Commu ni ty College of the Air
Force.

•

Send a

~

,

•

t.

6:30-8:30
6 WEEKS

704 GRAND CENT11 ~ AVE.
AND
VIENNA, W. YA.

Instructor, Debbie Copley
Learn to knit with our fine

Pi"n-

gouin ynrns. Proteaaionel in·

atru ctors. Guaranteed results.
Phone for Details

295-4532

HOURS: M·f 9-9; Sat. 9-S :,

446-2134

'

INSTALLED

INCLUDES HEAVY SPONGE PADDING AND YOUR CHOICE OF HEAVY·
WEIGHT INTRON Ill - ANSO IV OR ULTRON NYLON CARPET IN TO·
DAY'S MOST POPULAR COLORS. COMPLETELY INSTALLED- NOTHING
ELSE TO BUY.

Allen - Coffee
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs .
Roger Allen, Syracuse, are anouncing the approaching marriage of
thelr daughter, Rebecca Lynn, to
Matthew William Coffee, wn o! Mr.
and Mrs. Luke Coffee. VInton.
The open chu rch wedding will
take pl ace Cll Saturday, May 31, at
1'2 :30 p.m. at the St . Paul Lutheran
Church in New Haven. The Rev.
George Werick wiU per1orm the
CE&gt;remony. A reception wUI be lw21d

CARPETLAND OF GALLIPOLIS

446-1641

446-1641

161 THIRD AYE.

(ON THE CORNER - SAME LOCATION FOR OYER 15 YEARS)

~

•

SALE STARTS SUN., MARCH 23, ENDS TUES.

..,.•••
+
•

•
••

The FTD8 Glory of Springe
Bouq uet.
Easter Sunday is March 30.

•'

. The FToe Easter Basket

Bouquet.

Call or visit us today.

Easter Sunday is March 30.
Call or visit us today.

••

~

•
•

•

••
••

l OiR "EXTRA TO UCH"' FLORIST SINCE 19.5 7

--.-.
...

. WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET
AND BLIND 743SHOP
AVE.

TUES., APRIL 1

REG. S680.00

...

.

Spring Valley Plena

520

BASED ON
40 SQ. YDS.

••

2h64 .................................12 .99
30r64 ................................. 13 .99
31x64 ................................. 13.99
32x64 ................................. 13.99
33r64 ................................. 13.99
34r64 ................................. 13.99
31x72 ................................. 14.99
35x64 ................................. 15.99
36164 ................................. 15.99
3h64 ................................. 15.99
52150 ................................. 15.99
35•72 ................................. 16.H
43x64 .................................16.H
46x64 ....................... :......... 16.99
47x64 ................................. 16.H
48r64 ................................. 16.99

35142 ............................... 110 •• 9
36x42 ................................. 10.99
35x50 ................................. 11 .99
36r 50 ................................. 11 .99
23164 ................................. 12.99
23172 ................................. 12 .99
27 r64 ................................. 12 .99
28164 ................................. 12 .99

LIVING RO
DINING ROOM
HALLWAY

Send spring
in a basket.

glorious Easter
gift.

~

•

Rucker enlists
Jerry L. Rucker, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Ja mes S. Rucker of Reedsville, enlisted in the Air Force
today. according to SSGT John
McGuire, Air ForCP recruiter.
Gallipolis .
Upon successfully completing the
Air Force's six-week basic milit ary
training at Lackland Air Force
Base, near San Antonio. :C'x11s.
Airman Rucker Is scheduled to
recch·c technica l train ing ln th&lt;'
elec tronics career field.
Airman Rucker. a 1984 graduate
of Eastern High School. 11ill be
earning credits toward an associate
degrt'\' In applied science through
the Co mmuni ty College of the Air
Fore&lt;' while anendlng baste anct
IPChnical tra in ing schools.

-.
•
•.-

BEGINNERS
KNiniNG CLASS ·

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Edwards of Middleport are
announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Anita, to Bobby
Jeffers, son rl Mr. and Mrs . Roger
JeffE&gt;rs, Pomeroy .
Miss Edwards will graduate
from Meigs High School cosmetology class this spring. Jeffe rs will
also graduate from Meigs whl-re he
Is in the auto mechanics vocatlonal
program. He Is also employed 111th
Jeffers E xcavating.
A summer wedding Is being
plan ned .
.

&amp;

~

George graduates from course

Edwards
Jeffers

t~t~re!_:ch:ur:c:h~lo~U:ow:ln~g~:Uhe:J~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~=====:==~
..:.' ------------------------------------------,L~awedding.

Functional elepnce at
modest cost Burma Vinyl
Blinds are made especially
for Levolor to exactin1
quality standards. I" thin
slats almost disappear when
opened yet provide privacy
when close. Easily installed .
Alabaster color.

•1" sleek-Vinyl slats
•Vinyl head and bottom rail
•Crash proof Cord Lock
•Easy to shorten
•Custom features at
economy prices

Rebecca Lym Allen
Matthew Wtllbm Cotree

1\wla lee Salser
nou.tas Dean Hunter

..

.......
,..•

3RD
DOWNTOWN HUNnNGTON
Across fn1m tht Ciwic Center

352 EAST.
lAIN ST•
PLEin OF
FlEE PAlliNG

~;,.,

8. 97~f~97

4.97

Latex Flat Paint

Sale Price Ea. llank
VMS YldtO tapes. 2·4·6
hour play lime.

Exterior, 6 year durability,
lllCitage colors only

992-2644 01
992-6291

1-120

FLORIST

525-7090

lloppin' Down

....

lfle

Bunnylal

§]

16¢

13.88

Sale Price Pkg. ·Eotter
grass. 2V•·OZ. net w1 .;
for c olortul nests.

Bubble Mower

Features control pane l,

ig nitilion key. Includes 4

lJml 4

oz.

bottle of bubbles

l'lilfer Ta
Will An

Eester

1st ANNIVERSARY
GIVE-A-WAY
YOU COULD WIN A FR

Iunny

SMORGASBORD

WASHER
AND
DRYER
By J.nt Filling In the Coupon

---

Below and Bringing It lnta Dale's

, ~~~~ -~ -~~- ..... ~ ~~~-~- - --.
I NAM E_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

Gibson®

I
1 ADDR ESS _ _ _ __ __ _ _ __ __

:CITY_ _ __ _ __ __ _ _ _ __

: PHO.NE NUMBER- - - - - - - - - - DiMw

l'lut Tax

,'

.
' ..

•"'·:

""' Jar

Away

Saturday
3 P.M.

•

SATURDAY, MARCH 29
11:00 A.M.
GALLIPOLIS CITY PARK
3 AGE GROUPS

·: .

5-8 Years

9-12 Years

Slips

'n Cream
, Haddod lros.

Gines
Jewelry

Accessories
fOI•I

Peaches

Pant its

Hlir lews

Seeks t.

GIRLS
lnants to 14

•

To Hunt!
Aided by Scout Troop 200

•
•
•
•
•

83¢

1.97 ~.~7

Wowen Baskets
Pastel Colon.

Sale Price Pkg. Paaa
egg coloring kit for
pretty Ea ster eggs.

o.. U7 ....... Small.-~ .. 1.57

BOYS

· Martha
· Miniatures
•ran's
.Cinderella

BOYS
Infants to 16

"-

Tws
lltlts
Socks

Dna Shirts

•

0... U7 ... Modiuod !ll.. 2.J7
Our 3.97 ....... l......l91 .. U7

lttrigit
Don moor

fOIIIIM

1000's of Eggs
Sponsored by the
GalllpoUs Retail
Merchants

GIRLS

•

-~

To h Ginn

•
•

2 FOR S7

5.97Can~.:.

Silk-Like Polyester
Flower Bushes

5 Gal. Gas

Flexible spout. snap
vent

Vareity of colors. 14
head s, I 7" stems.

No

Rlgistration

~

Is
Ntmsary

:
•
:

OPEtl niDAl "'Il I P.M.

)ACK&amp; )ILL'S

•
•
•

1
'

326 SlCOND Avt.

"Fa• h ion~

'

for rh• Young•
•
PIIONE4U-UU

•

�Times-Sentinel

23,1986

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va .

The Sunday

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

Style show assures spring is nearing area
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
11mes-Sentlnel staff
POMEROY -Yes, the weather
ou tslde was rrlghtful for the first
day of spring, but Inside Pomeroy's
Municipal Building Thursday
night, the "looks" of spring were
delightful!
And nearly 100 ·local models
wearing garments available from
ready -to-wear racks or hand
created rrom bolts or rabrlcs,
accessorlzed with matching shoes
and handbags , and accented with

·'•

.• &gt;

•,

. ..
.....
...".
..•.

...

)

I

....•.
.•
.. ....•....
...

!

• '

bert, Becky And&gt;rson, Jenny Little.
and Ms. Chapman.
Enhancing the spring scene were
pots and pots oh:oklrfui fklwers
l'rom Pomeroy Flower Shop. Fashions and accessories modeled
were from Chapman Sroes, Clark's
Jewelry . Dan· s of Middleport,
Dollar General Store, Elberfelds,
Hartley Shoes, K&amp;C Jewelers,
Marguerite's Shoes, New York
Clothing House, Sbnon's Pick-aPair, and The Fabric Shop.

fashion jewelry and chic hairstyles,
show runes, Kermit Watton was
put on quite a show.
. emcee, and Annie Chapman was
The second annual spring style narrator.
show of the Pomeroy Area MerAbout 50 door prizes wer&lt;&gt;
chants Association was a sellout awanled and discount coupons and
and certainly a success- In that It ravors wrnt to everyone there.
conveyed the "shop at home, we've
Rerresbments were provided by
got It here" message from the Ohio Valley Bulk Foods, ]{rogers,
merchants association.
Big Bend Foodland, and Powell's
Armand Turley entertained. Super Valu, and were served by
throughout the evening at the Kathy Malcsklck ard Gwen Hall.
organ, the Meigs Chorallers under who were on the srow planning
the direction or Gay Pippert committee along with Ann Lamperformed a medley of spring and

Vacation Bible School Workshop
WITH STANDARD PUBLISHING

AT MIDDLEPORT

--.

.·.

IILffiSOMING FOR SPRING - Sprtug 86's newest look ii jacket
dressing and here ,Jeanne Slawter soows pretty pastels In a softly
gathered dmdle skirt and blouse with a rose pink jocket. Matching
pwnps and bag and colored gemstones oompleled her ensemble.

TIME TO RELAX - For IJiose Into relaxing bt the lap olluxwy,
UJUan Moore modeled a shlmrnertnr negligee ensemble bt a luclous
shade fi peach and slllwed oil one fi the latl'llt elegant COuches, gold
nalls thai dazzled.

SOFf AND i\LLURING - Loose Wing jackets and llle - ilnpr
length , slender sldr1s are popular wtlh the YOUJIA'!f generation.
Attractive Jennifer Amold 's en:oemble was In lult8'cup yellow
IICC£Silllrlzcd with gold.

Mr. and Mrs. Hugh C. Bearh.r

•Epidural Deliveries
•Tubal Repairs
Office Noun 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. Mon., Wed., Fri.
2:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. Tuesday and Thwsday E..nlngs

Bearhs anniversary event
POMEROY - Mr and Mrs .
Hugh C. Bearhs. l.Dng HoUow
Road . Pomeroy . wil l otErrw their
~ h anniversr)' Saturday. March
29, w1th an open house rrom 1 t o ~
p.m. " ' the Senior Citizens Center.
Mulberry Heights.
Th&lt;' couple were manied on Jan.
18, 19}; at Sy racu se by til&lt;' late ReY .
L.R. Carmlchad . Mrs. Bearhs is
the forme r Louise Ha rtung . da ugh ter or the late Edward ard Hazel

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS
Hospital Supplies For Home Use
SALES &amp; RENTALS

614-446-7283

Out Of Town C

529.95

HASKINS-TANNER

Har1ung. Bearhs is the gJn of the
late Herman C. ard Dora Bearhs.
They "re the pare'lts of two
childrrn, Ronald. or Pomerov and
Mrs. Barrie rCarol r Phil Ups of
Endlcotl, NY.
The q&gt;en Jt'Ception will be rosted
~- the couple's children and their
thre~; grandchldrcn. Jill. Michelle.
and Heather Phillips. They l'l'(jues r
tha i gifts be omitted .

332 Second. Geltipolis
448 -0676

Oxygen
Hospital Beds
Wheel Chairs

~~

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

~

..... r.,

~, .

,j,,.,,

'I

,.,., .., " I""',. " ,, ,,r

II It&lt; I• ' ""' I !. '"" ~ " ,, .,
lol ,. /1 , , ,, "" ~.,~ ' ' "'·· I" , ,. ,
I" ol .j, ..,,.,.,f '"'I"' '

•red
•black
•bone
All Kidskin
Leather

,

~

\U!&lt;f ' " ' 1" ' 1 "

,

,"

/ 1 ""' ol t&lt; r

~~;;

ju l'o l i!l n't utpt&gt;l du11in~ .

SPRI NG CLEANII'iG COL'PON
Phone 1-800-325-5136

r--cm;(l. .--.,
I

3 100111 &amp;HALl

l

1

r AlliS

]

63 PINE ST .

PHAl

,,.,, ,.. ,..,// ' lu i . • ,,,.,.,, •

An ~tbinli lt&gt;~~ li

The
~Shoe Cafe

West Virginia 1·614-384-2355
I SHAP ED AN DGREAT ROOM S fi NSIOf RfD 2 ROOMS

I S99 E~ l-lt -86

GAlUPOUS,OHIO
24 Hl SERVICE

WE DEliVER

:IIHI Second Ave .
Lafa.vt&gt;lle ~I all
l.a llipoli s, 0 .

~~t9_~.!;!.!;~_j

(oil (ollt&lt;l....

&amp; Canes

RICHARD AND MARY ANN BOWMAN, OWNERS

r ll rn • ltn •r•·

STANLEY
STEEMER

.. ( rntrh.

Bowman's Home Care Medical Supply.

•~ .... . ....·u ,,.,, .,,.,, .... ,,...,," "' ""
\ ~tt

Bathroom Aids
Walkers

WE BILL MEDICARE ~nd
OTHER INSURANCE CARRIERS
WHEN EUGIBlE

with lots of wearing possibilities.
Sleek and sophisticated.
just lor your lifestyle!

CARPET CLEANING BARGAIN .DAYS
o,.jj \&lt;~I

ers Call Collect

MANY ·OTHER ITEMS
creates an influential silhouette

auditions® ·
Made tn U.S.A.

I

---------1

REFRESHMENTS SERVICE

sporty outfits never looked better than

gravy, sweet potatoes, green beans,
Easter egg, Boston Cream Pie.
Choice of mlik , coffee. tea, or
ju Ia&gt; available with meals.

Meigs County

OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY AND INFERTIUTY

675-6700

We offer complete
tuxedo rental service
to help you look your
best on that special
day. Prices begin at

jewelry to enhance.

JOHN CREDICO, M.D.

lOCATED: Suitt 114 Modi&lt;al Offi&lt;t .. iloling, at Pleasant Valley Hospit.l
Point Ploasant, W. Va. 25550

Let Us Help You
Plan Your Wedding

MONDAY, MARCH 31st -9:30A.M.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Senior Citizen Centers
announce weekly activity

~

soup Is gone.
Soup Is 50 cents per bowl, $1.75
per quart and $6 per gallon. For
take out orders, bring a container.
Proceeds will be used to upgrade
the musuem, and there will be fiw
entertainment Sa tunlay afternoon .
The museum Is located four miles
oorth of Pt. Pleasant, just dfRoute
62.

ALWAYS IN STYLE-For out on the town, or just out about town, a
!lUlls always in style. At '111ursday night's slllw, Liz Cl&amp;ler modeled a
pa!llel snit wllh a coordlnaled prbtt blouse, oonlnstlng shoes, and

SPONSORED BY

~r

Beef soup dinner fund-raiser
pklnned by W.Va. Farm ·
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va. - The
West Virginia Stare Farm Museum
will have It's sixth annual Old
Fashioned Beer Soup Dinner. Sa turday, AprU 5.
Soup will be cooked outdoors in
two large iron kettles. Ladles will
begin cooking soup at 7 a.m.
Saturday. Serving wtll begin at
12: 3J p.m .. and continue until the

CHURCH OF
CHRIST

POMEROY - The Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, has the follow·
ing activities scheduled for the
week of March 23-:18:
Sunday - Annual Easter Pro·
gram by the Senior Citizens Chorus
at 2:JJ, following the program a
, poUuck supper will be held; bring a
· • . covered dish, your own table
gervice, and 50 cents to help with
cost of ITII'at. Meat and beverage
will be rumlshed.
Monday - Blood Pressure Clinic
9:30-ll:ll, Square Dance 1-3, Exercise Class 3: ll.
Tuesday - Chorus to Pomeroy
Health Care Center at 1: 15.
Wednesday - Bingo 1-2, Exercise Class 3: ll.
Thursday - Easter Dinner at
roon, please call In a reservation for
the meal by Monday, March24, at4,
music before dinner beginning at ll
a.m.
Friday - Center will be closed
for Good Friday.
1lx' Senior Nutrition Program
menu for the week Is:
Monday - Creamed chipped
beef on tiscuit, mashed polatos.
green beans, fruit cocktail, cookie.
TUesday - Chicken pot pie,
caJTOt-ralsin and pineapple sa lad,
gelatin with fru it.
Wednesday - Pepper steak on
rice, tomato gelatin salad, orange
sauced peaches.
Thursda y - Roast turkey and

Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
menus ror the week of March 24
through March 28 at the Senior
Citizens Cen ter, 220 Jackson Pike,
are as t&gt;Uows:
Monday, March 24- Chorus. 1-3
p.m.
Tuesday, March 25 - S.T.O.P.!Physlcal Fitness, 10:3) a.m.
Wednesday, March 26 - Vinton
Bible Study , 1 p.m.; Card Games.
1-3 p.m.
Thursday, March 'l:l - Bible
Study, 11-noon: VInton Blood Pressure Clleck.
Frtday, March 28 - Good
Friday: Bake Sale, 9 a.m.; Art
Class, 1-3 p.m.: Craft Mini -Course,
1-3 p.m.: Open Activities. 7-10 p.m.
Menus consist or:
Monday - Wieners and sauerk·
raul, mashed potatoes. wheat
bread,
Tuesday
applesauce.
- Chill con carne,

ch~~ns;!~~ c~act~~· :':,~·with
:~!~~~~pbrocrou. wheat bread.

SYRACUSE- The menu ror the

week of March :M at the Carleton
ScOOol has been announced .
• It Includes:
Monday - pizza . banana. Ice
cream, sa lad , milk .
. Tuesday - (igs In a blanket,
carrot-cauliflower casserole. pears

II

~

..

apple,
Frtday
milk.
- fish, bun , trench fi·ies,
slaw, cookie. milk .

'nL
8 P.M.

GALLIA OPTICAL CENTER

to 14

BOYS
Infants
to 14

.

EYE CARE PLUS EYEWEAR
Dr. Robert Terry, Optometriat

648 Jockoon Pike, Golllpolio , 61 4 -446·1760
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9·6: Tuoo. &amp; Thura. 9-7:30: Sat. 9-3: Cloaed Wod.

D
IJ
I"' OWR
TL

JOIN
FOR

J

11 00
:

EASTER DINNER
~0

TOSSED SALAD
TURKEY &amp; DRESSING
MASHED POTATOES
&amp; GRAVY
SHERBET

~~b "&lt;'o
0~-

2

1"

'~a

~ 0 .q"8

~.•·0
- .

811 uss£l ,st~ERSE

ss .96

ALSO FEATURING
OUR CLASSIC
DINNER MENU
Reservations ·

Remember,
Easter
is

Featuring:

~

~~~~~~~~~~~S~u~gg~a~st~ed~;;;:::: ~~~

9

. •TURTLE PARFAITS '•FI_SH TAILS
•FOOTERS •ICE CREAM

1980 CHEVROLET CAMARO Z-28
Oarlt maple metallic with black interior, 350 V-8, aulo. trans., ~wer steering
and brakes, air rood, tilt wheel, cruise conlrol, AM-FM cassette,stereo. r~~
white letter radials. 'Ilia&gt; LoroUv Owru'&lt;l Trade -ln.

5

4 800°0
I

URGENT
CARE

CENTER
If your condition Is causing you
concern, you'd better not walt ...

I

SYMBOL

I-------------~------------,
- COUI'ON-

""'Y or iltitf.

1
I

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1

BUY ANY SIZE SHAlE 01 CONE.
GET A SECOND ONE FOI

1/2

PRICE

With This Coupon

I "Tr~ Us, We'll Ulct " "

Open Daily 10-6
Rt . 7 North of Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone (614) 446-4084
/J EA I . F:R PRICES ON SELECtW A 'VTIQ!'f:.~

'30.00

Compare our Pri ces!
You 'II find we have the lowest i.n town.

141.00

Piotl, yotltw, ·
whitt, W..k,

I
I

I

I
bp. 3-31·16 I

~·------------------------J

URGENT
CARE CENTER
Located at Holzer Clinic

WAS SAUL SAVED ON THE ROAD TO DAMASCUS!
William B. Kughn

When Saul u nd cr~t ood he was standing before Jesus of Nazareth whom

hewn~

persecuting. he wa s brought to a realization of his sinful actions

against Ch rist and Hi s church . Regarding himself as the chi_ef of sinners (I

fim . I: t 51. he a&lt; ked. "Whw shall f do. Lord?" (Acts 22:8. tO).
Un ...... nable AJoumpdoRI
If Saul were saved on the road to Damascus, (I)- he was not aware of it,
hc.·auw he a&lt;kcd. "What .&lt;ha/11 do. Lord'" (Acts 22:101: (2)-(he Lord did
nol kruw. he wa s sa ved. for He told him to "Arist&gt;. and go into Damascus;
r111J rlu•r,• u slwlJ bt• wid thee of all things which are appointed for thee to
dn.. (Act' 22: 10): (J )-Christ misinformed Ananias. and Ananias mi•in·
form ed Saul when he told him to "arise. and be baptized, and wush away
thy Jim·" (Acts 22:16); (4)- Sau l's saved state was a miserable one rather
thnn o jnvous one. because he was without sight, food, and water for three

from the Greek word me/to, which means "to be about to do somethmg;
in tcntir•n: unto this. for this purpose. for this intent.'' Saul was in a state of
int ention. about to do something for a definite purpose, but up to this
point. he did not know what to do. He had not bee~ told what to ~o. so hP
~ pent his time prayin g (Acts 9:1). Ananias was saytng .t ~ the praym~ Sa~
·your illlellliOtiS art good. but f or the purp~Sf' of rt'C f'l\'ltr~ ~h P forg rveru•Sl
of shu. therP is so'!'ethi"g you art&gt; 10 do. ar1.u ...at1 d bt' haptt:t&gt;d. Utld ~·as h
uwuy 1h.Y sins. caflmg 011 rhe "amt' of thf! Lord.

PARADISE

Y LUNCHEON SPECIALS
•CHOCOLATE and VANILLA
TWIST ICE CREAM CONE

A Mt•SJURe Fmm Tht&gt; Bihle...

d"~' IAci.' q:q): and.(S)- Saul was saved being pas.sive rather than active.
for AnHma s asked , And rww why tarrrest t~ou ? (Acts 22:16). Ta'!lts

and Colltct iOI~~

Sunday,
March 30

'&lt;J~

t)i

Specializing in Victorian/ Edwardian Eras

ltll, While,
Nawy or lloc•

.

"r;."
q,

when you accessorize with Auditions. These

snappy st}ies will complete your total sporty
look. The colors are today and you know
you can count on Auditions tor great fit and
comfort. Select your (a.,...,rites today!

..,~"'

·

makes happily -ever -after a reality . Imagine hav·
in g the pick of the most exquisite china, crystal
and silver patterns available. Imagine the con ·
vemence ot having your recorded preferences
avarlable to all ot your wedding guests. lm1glne
a servk:e that makes sure you'll love and use
every gilt you receive. Our-Bridal Registry makes
il a reality.

Two ObjectleRI Answered
To prove that Saul was saved on the road to Damasc us, it is . asked, ;
"Why did Ananias cali him 'brother ' Sau l (Acts 22- IJ ). and why drd Paul,
~a y. 'I was born when I saw Jesus'? '' It was common for the J e~s. to address ·
one of their own na tionality as brother , so Ananias was rccogmzmg Saul as
, Jewi sh brother. but not as a Christian brother. Paul addressed the
unsaved Jews the same way. "Men. brethren. aNd futhers, hear Yf' my :
defmce which I make now unto you .. (Act• 22:1). Paul did .~ot say, "I was .
born when I saw Jcsu&lt; ... but "as one born out of due 11me (I Cor. 15:8). ·
The \\oord " bum " is not the word used to denote spiritual birth whic h :
involves baptism. but is from the Greek word elctromu, which mea ns "an :
:1 bonion. an untimely birth; from ekitrosko. to mi sca!"'Y ·''.. Thert:fo~.
" !Jof11 " has reference to time , "as one born out of duf' /lmf'. that Is , m ·
JXlint of time he regarded himself as one inferior to the rest of the apostles, :
and refel'li ro it as an immature birth. Truly , his being catted by the Lord In ·
the apostleship was unmuural when compared ~o the ~st of the ~,t,l es in :
a&lt;.·cordin~ to time. The others were called betn.g believers. wh1le he was .
cattcct bern~ a persecu!Or and a Y&lt;ry devout Phansee (Ac!S 26:5).
·
Accord1ng to the inspired recordings of Saul's conversion in Acts :
chapte rs Qand 22 , he was not saved on the road to Damascus.
•
For Frw Bible Comspoadeo« Cou,., Wrirt ...

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Bulavllle Road • P . 0. Box :lOR
Gallipolis, Ohio HI

on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis
HOlliS:
Man. &amp; Fri.
. :30·1:00
Tuts. Wocl., lhws.
Sat . • :30-S:OO

446-5287
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Mondav-F.rlday
WHkenda &amp; Holidays
5:00 P.M. f:OO P.M.
1:00 P.M. to 9:00P.M.

to

SilVER BRIDGE
PlAZA
GALliPOliS

k\ll\t Shop

SP.lP. o

1'1~~~£ 8 p.K£05~ROU15.

PLENTY OF FlEE PAlliNG

-IDs

3

A.M. · :00 P.M.

10 ssE0~o t~P.M
pl£ GlP. ~ 0 ,-p.10

$5.95

()_,?_~,._

7:00 P.M.

Rt~BI

Britannia Bygones International
Fcaluring E!:rC'p.t?C.'! .l:'t,rni~hin~~
.

:!J

Register for FREE Easter Bunny
Given Away Saturday

t;~~::::::~~~~;;~~~~~~~~;;~~

COME SE£ WHA T'S NEW!

I ':1

GIRLS
lnfanh

Frlday-Fish,stewedtomatoes,
peas. wheat bread, brownies.
Choice of beverage seiVed with
each meal.

and raisins, milk.
Wednesday - lasagna. green
beans. bread. fruit, milk .
Thursday- polato soup. pbnmto
cheese sandwich, vrgetabll' st leks.

OPEN

SPOR'I'V FASIDON- Just right for a spring jaunt In the SIID!lane Is
this sports ensemble. Tabitha Wllllonl's modeled aqua slacks with a
pretty matching gingham blouse, wore this sprbtg's popular open-toed
pumps, Wid then added a tooch &lt;i dash with some costume jewelry.

Thursday - Chicken casserole.
tossed salad. wheal bread. orange
jello with topping.

Carleton School menu announced
.

992-2641

.

~:.

.

,,

.

.

RvtMII.)' Evrnl...-:

Wt4nl'Sday:

Wff'IIIIP 1: II

ftltllr ShldJ'
l : Np. tn .

•.

.....

"M~a11:•

r,.,. •

•

'

lhl' IUhl•"

1»11111 • W.IFJI
1:11 """·

''lht Ston lot Brldet"

•;

'

�March 23. 1986

. Page- 8-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

.:.:Beat of the bend
By BOB HOEFLICH
lbnes-Sentinel Staff

••. •

::::- One of our big Meigs County
z~ters- Mary

... -Eunice Harris of
:· l:olumbus - has
i jl problem and
::;, -we're going to
~ "1lelp her, aren 't
~ we!

It seems that
.. Mary Eunice and a classmate at
Middleport High School, Lois Bush.
~: are trying to rally members of the
:- class of 1936 for a 50th rcurtion on
: May 24. They're doing well too
- J&gt;xcept they 've lost touch with seven
: members. The seven are Rot.&gt;rt L.
: : Darst, Rot.&gt;rt M. Harrah, W.
: : Wilson Hoyt, Margaret Hanning
: Reed. Hany Kenneth Roush.
.-· Agnes Staats and Sophia Staats
: . Prambus.
•. If you have the address of any or
·• the seven would you please get in
... touch with Mary Eunice at 4155
:·: Kendale Road. Columbus, Oh io
. • 43220. Not only will you help her but
:;.. you know it' s always pleasant to
_

3

:: communicate with Mary Eunil'e

SL' Meigs Cou nt\· beautY salons
::.: will 1:&lt;&gt; participating In a hair-a-thon
- from March 24 through March 29.
. No. Bunky. a hair-a-thon isn't a
~ test of how long the rosmetogolists
:::-

: can stay on their feet. It 's a

·: money-maker for the Meigs Chap"' ter of the America n Heart Associa ~ lion. During the time slot the
:- businesses will donate a per~tage
: of their earnings to the hea11
:,: associa tion .

- Shops taking part are Top of the
.::: Stairs, Chateau Beauty Sa lon,
::; Brenda· s Boutique. For the Bot h of
: You. Headquarters Beautv Sa lon
: and Shear lllussions.
·
- A nice gestu!l'.

..

GALLIPOUS - The 0.0. Mclnty!'l' Park District will sponsor a
Soccer Clinic at Raccoon Creek
County Park, March 2i, 5 tn 7 p.m.
It Is open to players, parents.
roaches and other in teres ted
people.
Players will discuss rules, working on technique. and Instructiona l

Melva Eblin recently penned a
letter to the editor asking that you
collect newspapers, magazines,
paper sacks and other paper Items
for a recycling project being
carried out to raise funds for the
Meigs County Special Olympics.
Melva asked me to pass on the
word that the recycling center will
only take old newspapers - so
forget the rest of the paper
coUectlon unless you want to fill
paper sacks wit h newspapers .
You can contact Melva at 742 -3141
if you have questions. Pickup of the
newspapers which you an&gt; asked to
sa\·e will be held in late April.
Schools of the Meigs Loca l School
Dlsllict were closed at different
times during the year due to
weather, water and heating problems so it was impossible for aUcJ
the schools to close on the samedav
this year.
·
Supt . Dan C. Morris has an nounced the closing dates for the
various schools which are .June 3
last day for Middleport . Sale~
Center , Salisbu1y a~d ttx• junior
and srnior high schools: Jur&lt;' i , last
day for Bradbury, Harrisonville
and Pomerov: Jull!' 9 last dav for
·
Rutland . ·
These are the last davs of classes
for students in thl; IT'Spective
schools and teachers in each
lnstanCf' will be pu tting in ooe more
day immediately foUO\\·ing the final
day for studen ts. Bv tt.&gt; wav all
schools will close on Mav i!;' for
Memorial Day.
So - we' re now going to ha\·e
tcle\·isio n srts rn which we can

watch two channels simulaneouslv .
Just what we\·ea lwaysneeded. Do
keep smiling.

The Sunday nmes-Sentinei- Page- 8· 7

skills . .Come dressed to play and
• bring a s·occ.er ball if you have one.
For parents.~ches and other$.
they will learn' hand signals qf
offic ials. rule lntei-pretatton and
clarificalon and some ·technique.
For information, call 446-46J:l, '
ex tension 256.

DRESS HER IN
BUSTER BROWN'S
BEST
Girts, got a
FREE Bass tote bag
with the purchaM

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Rought

Rought anniversary is planned
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
(rl'rald Rought. 158 Lincoln Hill.
Pomeroy, will observe their 30th
wedding anniversary on March~ The couple were married In
Richmond , Ind. in 1956. Mrs.
Rought Is the daughter of Mrs.
CA'Drge Nesselroad Sr. of Pomeroy
~Uld the late George Nesselroad Sr.
Rought IS the son cl the late Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Rought of !Fsperia.
Mr. and Mrs. Rought have three
daughters, Gerri Hamilton and
KelUe Snider, Pomeroy, and Stephannle Barnett. Hinesville, Ga .
The_v have four gran!lchlldren , Jr.
Barnett. Jessica and Ashley Hamilton, and Jason Knight, and two
step-grandchildren, Oystal Bar-

of any
regular priced shoe.

nett and Brandi Snider.
Rought IS a retired technical
sergeant of the U.S. Air Force, and
is the chief of pollee In Pomeroy.
Mrs. Rought Is a dispatcher at the
Pomeroy PoUce Department.
In observance of their anniversary, Mr. and Mrs. Rought plan a
trip later in the year.

,,

Th

I

_,, , ~ii·
' ®.~ i

e
~.~ Shoe Cafe

MIDDLEPORT - Int ernational
Order of Job's Daughters will meet
at 7:30 p. m. Monday at the
Middleport Masonic Temple with
initiation to be held. A meeting of
the council wtll be held at 7.

::till St•t·ond ,\ve .
l.afavl'lt e ~I all

(;allipolis. 0 .

REGULAR S699.95

FISH
DINNER

Job's Daughters meet

-~
By the way. if you are lntert:-sted
: in having a home built in the new
: subdiv ision on Harting~r Parkway
• In Middlepon -an~ there are some
: defmite ad,·antages, likP no rea l

Three tender baked fish fillets on a
bed of rice. Served with garden green
beans, freshly made cole slaw, hush
puppies and a lemon wedge.

MONDAY/TUESDAY

contact the contrac tor which is the

TWO 2-PIECE FISH DINNERS $3.99
Each dinner incWes: two tender, golden-brown fish
fillets, cooked to perfection in the Captain's regularstyle breading, naturakut french fries, fresh oole slaw,
two Southern-style hush puppies and tarlg)&gt; tartar sauce.

:

REGULAR 5468.95

NOW

$29995

SOLID OAK

BARIN 5 STOOLS
DIFFERENT

$3.49

.. Greg Rou sh Construction Co. in
. Syracuse.

$499 95

NOW

4 Pc. Country Dining Group

~ · .,,~

~

'
, f\•t.'r .-1»-

\ _1.

:0..:..."' ~ '\\ \

•,

1

\

1l

,,

I'

~r

STYLES

SUNDAY AU DAY
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT
COUNI'RY-STYLE $3.99

-::-~

:j..

;~,.... $199 95 ~-"'
,-

REG •
S1920

.-

NOW

;; · '' 1) t.
•

/

'

. '·-"'

1 ~ , .(,,

t

• ... 1

\ ""~·\,'·\

--

1- v ·•;•

'&lt;

NOW

:ti49995

$129995
Includes: Pedestal Table,
I Caneback Arm Chair,
Cnneback Side Chairs,
and China .
Co ntemporary Catalina offers a look of
lovely arched lop ch ina features burl
engraved accents, solid oak moldings and
pecan engraved V-matched doors to give
your din ing area eye catching beauty .

Fancy-faced engrav ing and a silk sc reened
burl border enhance the beautiful veneer

A great_little seafood place.®

...

STARTING
AT

sophistication to any dining room. The ·

CaptainDs

T'

:'.':
TABLE
~.(
~
··. WITH 5 CHAIRS :.· :,.

&lt;t!. -

-;- csta tc taaxf's for 15 ~·ears- you can

As vou might haw noted in an
· earlier n&gt;port, an explosion played
:· havoc with the lives of Thomas and
' Faith Roach and their three year
·_old son. Brawn. at Tampa. Fla ., on
March 8.
• The family hJd ani1·ed in Flmida
· on March i to start a new lile and
. apparen tly ronted overnight a
: motor home and were going to took
-at a house to rent on Saturdav.
: However, on Saturctav morning the
•)notor home expl elM sendin ~ all
three members of the fdmily to the
rosp ltal.
Thomas and Faith rec~i,·ed
, exrensiw second and third degree
: bums and Brawn suffered modcr• ate second dcgroo bums.
: Thomas was burned when he
· went Into the fiery motor home to
·pull his son out. Both Faith and
-Thomas were blown out ol the
motor home by the explosion.
: Thomas rrmains in thr inrrn si\'P

w: Va.

Soccer clinic pfantted

~-~Helping a classmate

- · ,..
~ ••

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

March 23, 1986

top of the finely detailed trestle table.
Handsome caneback chairs and a func·
tiona! server complete th is tasteful group-

SAME DINING lOOM
SUITE WITH SMAUER
CHINA AND DIFFEIENJ
1 ABLE AND CHAIRS
HG. 51699.95

NOW

$99995

ing . Catalina is the perfect dining room

•.... , tastes ... affordable din ing
• · Vut:Luilc:.u
~ ARD t:N

TR A·: ·;c R

A trac tor that works as good
as 1t looks. Equipped with a
rugged 12- hp eng &lt;ne , a rotary
mowing deck with a brg cutting width , high ltotation tires
and a rel iable transaxle drive
sys tem, it can mow down a lot
of tall grass 1n a hurry

Order Now For Memorial Day

STANDARD EQUIPMENT:
• Electric PTO cl utch
• Rugged heavy-gauge steel
frame
• In sulated eng ine enclosure
w1lh removable side panels
• Heavy-duty front PTO

By

SAVE S250

.. r are unit and Fa ith is li.':ited as

"' Stable at this timr. Brawn was

', released from the rospital on
·'March lo and wilt be staying ~&lt;· ith
his grandm other. Nan Herman . in
.Midd leport. until his folks are
·better.
· Cards may he srnt to Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Roach. Tampa ('.&lt;&gt;nera l Hospit a l, DaviS Island ,
Tampa. Florida 33tilli.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
CHESTEI, OHIO

REG. S699.9S

~~

oooo~oo~oooooooeoc

~

Give Easter joy.

Regular $1125 SPECIAL $825° 0
One Of Our Many Specials
Savings Up To 30% Off

Send spring
in a basket.

CNOOSIIIOM TNI LAIGISI SIUCTIONS IN
CINIUI AND SOUTM!ASTIIN OHIO

lnlor moho n

The FTD® Easter Basket

Teleflora's Garden Pari
: Bouquets and Plants I Happy
· gifts for Easter. March 30. And
: useful, decoralive keepsakes
: year 'round
· ; We can deliver your Easler
:greeting across the crly. Or
wire il ac ross the Uniled Slates
and Canada

~~·~
The Telellora Watering Can
Bouquet! Fresh Ilowers in a
ceramic watenng can that' s
decorative and use lui al l
year long.

3'Ietenom
Pomeroy Flower Shop

992-7039

992·5721

The FTD• Glory of Spring&amp;
Bouquet.

Easter Sunday is March 30.
Call or viSit us today.

O"'OO"'OOOOOOOOQO
••

~·

l09on. Cir cleville POifiO&lt;oy , ¥in ton, f' iko!Ofl Of
W.!ltlOft loc:otlont ... Coli u1 col'-&lt;:1 o"'l .....11

MnG our
l~o~rn i ll't

r ~ounto!iwn

to your home -

Df

I&lt;H trantporloh01'1 to ond l1om ony ol

our loc:o tlon1
bolow

or l •mply moil 111 th&lt;e CO\Ipot'l

Open Evenings &amp; Sunday
By Appointment

\)TeieOoni'

106 luttemut Avt., Pomeroy, Oh.

.,. itho.,t oblliQiion ot

'..........,..'"''"c...,~•
_lilu-.111
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....... n.·,,,.,..,"'

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p

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Monum e nt

Co .

Pl ease send me detai ls about mauso leu ms without
ob ligo tion .

:Name _________________
I

1Street or Route ---------------

1City or Town
I
!Phon e

·--------------------- -------

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.
POMEIOY, OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY DISPLAY YAID NEAl
POMEIOY·MASON IIIDGE
lEE L VAUGHAN, MGI.
PHONE 992·2588

VINTON, OHIO
GAUIA COUNTY
DISPLAY YARD
JAMS 0. BUSH, MANAGER
PHONE 388·8603

•.

........,. .. -~ " ·,.;,c-.,o.~ ..,,"',

('\.,.. wio~- .... IMJIOIOOW&lt; ...... wt....

7-Pc Dining Group

$69995
$49995

REG . 11099.95 NOW
Matching Buffet/ China
REG. 1741 .00 NOW

7·Piece Dining Grou

Please send me FREE boo kl ets show ing memorials
pronted on full color with size and prices liS ted

c-..,~·~ ...._,.._

oNio&lt;ftoir&gt;'""""• lttd .. _...,.,,, .. . ,_.

i----------·COUPON ---------

IID Kindly
hove on autho rize d l ogon
repre se ntoto ve ca ll ot my home .

Got h" booklet • "' lth prlc tt ond complete

with Chatham County Dining

~~

I

CONYIMIINT CliO IT IIIMS AYAIIAIII
WI CAlli OUI OWN ACCOUNTS

Go Country

JUST IN
7f:..
TIME FOR
f._
TAX REBATE ££

REG.

S499.~0W

$28800

~~~Wlvt

�•'

Calendar I happenings
Soccer clinic
GALLIPOLIS- 'The 0.0. M cln·
tvre Park District will s(Xlnsor a
Soccer Clinic at Raccoon Creek

Coo nty Park. March 25, 5 to 7 p.m .
It is open to player s, parents,
coaches and other interested
people .

Players wULdiscuss rules, work·
lng on tec hnique, and Instructional
skills. Come dressed to play and
bring a soccer ball If you have one.

For parents, coaches and others,
they wUI learn hand signals of
ctficlals, rule interpretatiln and

clarlllcaiO n and some technique.
For lnti:&gt;rmation , call 4464612.
ex tension 256.

Sports

iimes - ientintl

Section

.

March 23, 1986

Layout of The New 18 Hole

(!)

-2u

GAGE - Pathfinders QuartPT at
Salem Bapt ist Church. Cage,
Sunday.

2

c(

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2

,....
,....

(")

I

2

(!)

&gt;
2

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs-Mason
. Girls Softball As=ia tion mePting.
Sunday, 2 p.m . at M iddlepon
Masonic Temple on North Seeond
• Ave. Anyone interest{'(] asked to
: attend.

z

G)

u
2
cr

I

New Di amond Wedding Ring ... In a
Stunning Wrap-Around Floral Setting

MONDAY
: GALLIPOLIS Elizab&lt;: th
: Chapel Church begins tl'\'i\'JI
' Monday, continuing throu~ht
: March 29, 7 p.m . nightly with Cut1 is
• Sheets speaking and t hi' Sisson
~ Famlly singing.

".,"
~

i'it' \\ t'"![ lnoh Ill dr.llllOild \\·('dding rings. Thr no rt11 .wedd11lg
Ill HI di.llll.HH .111~ \\ r.lfl.., .rround your engagement dldlllond ...
t'l~·q, mtl\ L'llh.rr lfrnq rt. 11 hloorns with countless s park le~ of

or

ll l&gt;•:.lllttt'u l dt. tlll&lt;&gt;lllh. 111 qlc.tllling white

NOW

WAS SJS9.95

&gt;

2

2

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526995

'~

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grand&lt;'
: BaSI'ball Associat ion meets Mun·
: day, 7 p.m. Rio Grande Municipal
; Building.

113 COURT

{6lOff"':{,
ih •
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POWROY
992-2054

{fjf)}P'J

2

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.,';!.

For Easter Give
and for
after. Easter
•
.• .

.,

; GALLI PO US- Rhwside Stud\
Club meets Tuesda~· . home of
Madge Shahan. Program b\ M ,JJ,.
Plymale.

·~·

,·.

,....

,....

Chevrolet Chevette

I
(!)

2

At
7.7°/o
APR
Financing
IFixed Rate)
""

GAUIPOLIS
446 -2691

JOY.

';!.

(.)

I

342 2ND AVE.

,

2

cr
z

No Add-On Stickers
No Prep Charges

2

: LECTA - Btbl~ stud\ Tuesda\
::..uh Rev. Earl Hinkle .

-u2..

Buy Any New

&gt;

ye llow gold.

'tO! II"IK[ f'!tll INCLlJ[)[OI

TUESDA\'
: GALLIPOLL&lt;; - Ga ll i.,olis Ito
. tary meets Tuesdav. op.m .. O..J\\11
·Under.

2

.,"-

GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Kenneth
· Sanders at provident'{' MissiOnary
Baptist Church, Sunday. 7 p.m.
Slides and discussion of Holy Land
· Tour.

• POME ROY - OH KAI'\ Coin
: c lub regular bu smess meeting
:Monday even ing at Riwrboat
· Room , Diamond Sa,·ings and Loar
: co. bu ilding at Pom~ro,· ; social
; hour and trading wl!h d~al~'' will
pstart at 7 with roin auction to follow
: the mE'eting . Rrfn~s hnH'n! ~
.. Anyone iniE'J'f'stro in coins \n•lconw
: to attend.

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POMEROY - \\omen 's Auxil
lary of Veterans Memorial llospita l
meets 1; lJ p.m . Tuesda~· in the
confefl'!lce room at the hospit al
M arybd le Fr eckN . Carri• ·
Kennedy hostesses

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Garden club to llll't't
POMEROY- ll 'ild"ood r ;arde n

Club, Wed n es&lt;tt~· noon at lhf' For Ps i
Run Chu rch. !XJtluc k dinnN ,mrl
meeting. Peggy Crane will sp&lt;'ak on
ed ible plar ts and herbs.

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The Telef,ora \1\atertng Ca"
BoJJuel FtCS!' ftowers '~' o
ce •arnc watertrg ca~ Jna: s
decoraltve and JSelu, at
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VVe car oe,vet vOJr :'aster
greetr~g across I~E: C" ,
w trr ,. across ,,~, e
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Bouquets and Plants ' Happy
gtftSlor Easter March 30 And
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greeltng aCtoss the c11y Or
wt·e '' across I he Untied Stales
and Canaaa

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Aerobic Cia.,.;
GALLIPOLIS - The OJl :11c l n
tyn&gt; Park District v.ill offn nann·
aerobics at Bidwell Port er Elrm&lt;'n
tary School. Classes begin April 7.
cont inuing t hrough Ma;· 12. Time•
are 7 to 8 p.m .. fee is $111 Call
416-4612 extension 256 to t ~istrr

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OR 992 -6291

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$450,000 received thus far in unofficial pledges

Seek additional funds for public golf .course
GALLIPOLIS- Wit h $450,1lXJ alr eady received in
unofficial plt!dges, a drive is undetway for an
additional $650,00) from area residents, businesses
and industria l firms for a pro(Xlst!d $1.1 million public
golf course.
Dr . Gene Abels, pn&gt;sident of the Gallipolis Gol f
Club. said the propost!d 18-hole COut'S&lt;' w ill be locatt!d
on 170 acres of prime land loca tt!d on Mill Cra&gt;k Rd.,
just off State Rou te 7 in Gallipolis.
The Gallipolis State lnst itute fa rm was 00(.'{' loca lt!d
In that v icinity.
Land Purchased In 1983
The golf course and country club purchased th&lt;?
pmperty in Ju nP. 1983.
K idw&lt;'ll &amp; Hurd?.an, Columbus architE'Cts. haw
been hlrt!d to design and supen•isc construct ion of the

new rouf'S(' .

KYCrn - C hes hi r~ 1\qJ ttu s
tees meet Tuesday. 6 p.m. To"11
ship building in Kyger
POMEROY - Ohto Eta Pht
Sorority wUI have its ritual ri j~w&lt;'ls
tea at 7 p.m . Tucsda~· m th~
RJverboa t Room of the Diamo nd
Savin gs and Loar Co.

Layout of Gallipolis' proposed 18 hole public golf course

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Dr. Abels. said "It is the goal of the fu nd -raising
com mittee to secure the remaining money for this
m uch-needed project within 45 days." Six types or
m&lt;-mbershlps are being orrert!d.
Construct ion schedu le of the proposed pmject has
been prloritlzt!d to ensu re plannt!d dr,·elopment of
raclllties .
" lmmt!diate goal calls for an 18-hole cout-se,
something the commu nity has needed for years. On(.'{'
funding levels have been n&gt;acht!d, constru ction or a
new course wlll begin." Abels added.
He conlinut!d, "As additional funds are ralst!d , the
project will then call fo rthedl'velopme~ t of a practice
area as well as a clubhouse with a pro soop, snack bar
and locker room.
" Finally, the project would include constructiO n or
two tennis cour ts and a swimm ing pool to be enjoyed
by full club members as W&lt;'ll as social members,"
Abels contin ued .
Par 72 For 18 Holes
The fmnt ninP or " VaiiPy Nine," will be a 3,Zl.'\-yard
layout t par 36t wit h sand. water and ot her natural
hazards. This is designed to challenge the ix'st of
golfers.
ArchitE'Ct Jack Kidwell. Columbus, sa id . " Players
will have to battle a dPmanding nine hol&lt;-s car.-fu lly.
avoiding severa l small strmms and ponds that come
Into play som ewhere on each hole."
The back nine. to tx• known as theOrchardNine. is a
par 36. 3,075-yard layout.
.
KldwPI I (('{'is this is one of the most uruque nine
holes of golf in Ohio. " Built Into the panoramic
hillsides ovPrlooking the Ohio Valley. the bar k nine is
drslgnt!d ovPr several pla teaus ard around largr
boulders. he said.
Abcl ~said the OOM Mcintyre Park Dlst tie r Boa.rd
of Comm issioners recognize the recrea tional bcneftts
a public golf course has to offer .
The OOM Park District has agreed to establish an
escrow fund account to =rive donatlon.s dcsignat"'l
sttictly for the plan ning. design and constru ct ion of

Six types of memberships avail able are:
1 - Founder 's Membership. ($2i,llXl or rmre) . lt
Includes annual dues paid for life; mem ber of
honorary boa rd of governors; ruu prtv ileges of club
Igolf and social \ ; plaqueerec tt!d on specifit!d tole and
same right s as resident mem!X'r .
2 - President's Membership ($10,1lXl to $2i,llXlt.
Five-ymr paid dues- full club priv ileges (go ~ and
social ! ; plaque ercctt!d in clubhouse listing of all
president 's members and same privileges as resident
member .
3 - Govemor's M embership. ($5,® $10,00)) . It
includes one year dues with full club prlvlleges; gnlf
and social; plaque erectt!d in ciubhou SI' llstlng ail
governor 's members and same priv ileges as resident
member .
4 - Corporate Membership. (~2i.ml or morel .
Option l. Guaranteed lea gue time for five years
tr enegot latt!d annu ally\; one company outin g
an nually; discounted green fees for five years.
(league play 1 and guest card for five years (one
guest 1 - no green fees. Option II . Three deslgnatt!d
employees eligible for memix'rshlp; no initiation tee;
same dues as resident memix'r and tran sferable for
five years.
5 - I!AlSident Membership. $1,250; $1.500 after Ju Jl('
1, 1986: $1.750at timeof courseconst ructionand $2,1lXl
when course is open to play. All priv ileges of t he club
exercisable bv member and spouse and unm arn t!d
children under age 18 and dependent children 18 and
older w ho are full·lime sllldl'nts.
6 - Business Membership. ($2,500 or tro rc \. One
deslgna tt!d membership foreach $2.500dona ted (does
not have to be an employee t; annual dues sa me as
resident mem ber and formal recognit iln.
Qn(.'{' the course is open. yearly dues would be: $450
for family n&gt;sident member; $275 for single res ident
and junior adults; $..., for juniors and $100 for social
memberships.
Plan OpBJ House
On Thursday, Apr il 13, from 2 until 5 p.m .,
prospective mem ber s and the general public are
invltt!d to attend an '1JI'!l house at the Elks Lodge for a
preview of the project. Remarks will be givE'Il by
offlclais at 3; 45 p.m . Abels extends an in vitat ion to the
general public to atterd the PVent.
AdditiOnal inform atiOn pertain ing to mem bership ,
tees, addlllonal programs or other facts about the
proposed project m ay ix' obtaint!d by contacting Ron
Toler, 446-!)145; Ike Wiseman, 446·3643; Dan Davies,
446-2647. or Tom Wls.-man , 446-3643 .

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located within 30 minutes
from most areas

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Th e New
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1616 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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Tall Deductible
All donations to the 0.0. Mcintyre Park Dist rict for
this project w il l be tax dt!ductlble.
When sufficient dev.-Jopment funds are raised, the
new golf course will ix' opent!d and available to pu blic
golfers who will pay a greens fee.

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the public course.

STAR shows where proposed$ 1.1mUJlon go I oourse wlll be located on
!70 acres of lM d purchused by the golf oourse and country club In 1983.
'lbe course wUI be loeated within 30 minutes from most trl-county
eommunltles.

LSU, upset
•

wlnner over

Kentucky
ATLANTA i UPl i - Rl cky Blan·
ton scored 8 of Louisiil!Ja State's last
12 points Saturday""'''o spark the
Tigers to thelr foun h straight upset,
a 59-57 victory over Kentucky for a
berth In the Final Four.
In w inning the South&lt;-ast Re·
gional. LSU, 26-11 . meets Lou isville,
30-7, next Saturday in the Final
Four in Dallas.
ThE' Wlldeats lt!d 5147 when
Blanton, who had on ly 4 points in
the fi rst 14\1 minutes, suddenly
beca me a terror under the basket.
And w it h Don Redden gett ing the
other LSU points, the Tigers
outsrored the Wildca ts 12-6 in the
closing 5: ll.
It was the f irst time in four
mrellngs this season tha t LSU
defeatt!d the Wi ldcats. Kentucky
beat 1he Tiger s twiCE' during the
regula r season and again In the
semifinals of the Southeastern
Confen&gt;nce Tourn ament .
No. 4 Kentucky, the SEC's
regular-season and tournament
champion, began as It It would have
little trouble in stopping LSU one
more time. The Wlldcats led 11-4 in
the qJenlng four minutes.
But the Tigers rallied behind
John Williams and Redden to trail
34-33 at halftime. WUUams had 10 d
his 16 points In the f irst halt and
Redd.-n 9 of his 15.

RECEIVES CHECK - Donald Crance, right,
president of Commercial &amp; Savings Bank, Gallipolis,
presents Dr. Gene Abels; president of the Galllpolls
Golf Club, a check to go toward'i GaJiipolls' proposed

Sl.l million public golf oourse. A lund-drive

oommitwe has recei ved $&lt;150,000 bt ..,.fficlal pleqes
thus far and hopes to have the remalnbtg IQIO,OOO

l'i thln Ule next 45 days.

•
WIDS

Akron Central-Hower
AAA title with 70-44 victory
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI 1 - Akron
Central-Hower ust!d EricGienn's1.8
(Xllnts and a tigh t zone defense for a
1044 win over Columbus South
Saturday in the championship
game of the boys Class AAA state
high school basketball tournament
at the University of Dayton Arena.
For Central-Hower. which fin·
!shed with a 26-2 record, It was the
second state title in the last six
years . The Eagles also won the big
school championship in 19al and
lost in th!' 1983 finals to Toledo St.
Fran cl•.
Centrai-Hower, r anked No. 4 in
the fin al UPI Board or Coaches
AAA ratings, jumped to a quick 6-0
lead over the unranked Bulldogs,

wt\o OOwed out Wit h a 19-9 mark.
and were never headt!d .
Brad Meyer, a 5- foot ~ ll senior
guard, sparkt!d the Eagles to an
18-10 lead at the end of the first
quarter with four long jumpers .
Sout h, which was able to score
in side in Its semJfinal "~n over
Lorain Admiral King. couldr 't
penetrate the tough Centrai- Hower
zone and was unable to h;t from the
outside.
Mea nwhile, 6-foot-4 Glenn and
6-foot -5 Odd is Knox wa s hut1ing the
Bulldogs with their inside work.
Cenlral-Hower lt!d 35-11 at half.
time an d lncreast!d that margin to
53·34 at the end of three quarters.
Willi am Patterson, who foui.t!d
rut v.1th 3: 57 to play, lt!d South w1th

13 point s. while Randy Jones addt!d
12 .
South gua rd Tony Cupe, who lt!d
the Bulldogs With 19 points In their
win owr Admlral King, fatled to
score.
Sha" "D Dotson came off the bench
to score 13 for Central· Hower,
Meyer finished with 11 and Knox
v.1t h 10.
South. the 1965 state champion,
was makin g its first state tournamert appearance since 1973, when
the Bulldogs lost in the semifinals to
Central· Hower.
The loss prevent{'(] SouUl from
sweeping this year's two big school
state championships. The Bulldog
girls won the AAA title last
" 'eekend in Akron .

Columbus Wehrle captures
Class A state championship
DAYTON, Ohio tUPI J - Eli
Brewster scored 21 points and
dazzlt!d a Unlwrsi ty of Day1on
Arena cr owd \\1th his clever
passing Saturday afternoon to lead
top-rankt!d Columbu s Wehrle to a
72-58 win over Dayton Jefferson in
the championship game of the boys
Class A state high school basketball
tournament.
Bn&gt;wster, a 6-foot -3 junior guard.
scored 15 of his 21 points In the first
half when Wehrle, wh ich finished
wJ th a 27·1 record. took control of
the game. The Wolverines led 37-28
at haUtime.
Wehrle scored the first rou r
points of tl&gt;' game and went out to

an 11-2 lead before Jefferson gut
untrackt!d . The B1:0ncos finally tied
It at :!J.JJ on bark -to-bark ba sket s
by Chuck Carpen!Pr, but Brewster
led a 10·2 WehriP 11111 which put tile
Wolves back in command for good.
Wehrle, making its third consecutive trtp to the sta te tournament but
winning its first champiOnship, put
the game out o: reach in the third
quarter, with 6·1001·5 Kevin Had·
dock, tlle recipient of some out ·
standing assists from Brewster.
leading tl&gt;' Wolverines to a 57· U
lead at the end or the period.
Haddock, woo had ll(Xlints in the
semlflnal game, scort!d 11 rl his 17
(Xllnts Saturdav in the second hall .

Jeffp rson. whi ch ended it s sea son
with an 18·9 rrrord. couldn' t match
the 1·2 Weh rle punch of Brewster
ard Haddock. alttnugh the Broncos
had four pla~ ·ers score In double
figun&gt;s .
Ca rpcntPr and Rodi'U Guest each
had 14 .,oints. Na tha n Craig IQ.
Damone White 10 for .Jefferson.
which was looking for Its second
state championship. The Broncos
w on the 19 78 AA state
championship .
·
Justin Jones and Duane Phillips
scored 12 eac h for Wehrle, ranked
No. 1 in the UPI Board 11 Coaches
Class A ratings the entire season.

Louisville in NCAA final 4
HOUSTON (UPI I - Louisville
again res(Xlnded to pressure Satur·
day and thereby earnt!d a chan(.'{' to
comp&lt;'te in the biggest prcssul'!'
cooker of the m all.
The Ca rdin als spent an Intense
afternoon fighting off upstart Au ·
bum and went through a flv&lt;'·

mlnute stretch or the second haH
without scoring.
But with the NCAA West Re·
glonal titlE' on the line, one
Louisville player after another
respond{'(] duti ng the final thJW
minutes to help lh&lt;' Cardinals puU
away to an 84-76 \1ctory.

'

Eve~ memix'r of the Louisvtlle
starting lineup - freshman cedtet:
Pervis Ellison, forwards Bllly.
Thompson and Herbert Crook anct
guards Milt Wagner and Jeff Hal~
- scored in double figures and had
a key role do\vn the stretch.

.'

�March 23, 1986
March

Ohio- Po.int Pleasant, W. Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei - Page-C-3

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va .

1986

French City Run
fonns available

GALUPOUS- Pre-registration
forms are now available for the
Annual Frmch City Run. CO·
sponsored by the Holzer Medical
Center Recreation Committee and
Ohio Valley Publishing Company.
It Is scheduled for Saturday. May 3.
Coordinators for the event are
Dawn Meadows and Walt Saunders
at the IJJspltal, along with Paul
Barker at OVP.
TIJJse Interested In early regis ·
!ration may pick up forms now at
the hospital Information Center In
the main lobby, or from the Ohio
Valley Publishing Company office
at &amp;35 Third Ave. In Gallipolis.
. Within tlhe next two weeks, preregistration forms will also be

avaUable through various area
merchants.
Pre-registration entry let' Is $6.
This guarantet's each runner will
receive an official race T·shlrt In
which he or she runs. Pre·
registration en tries must be post·
marked by midnight, April 26.
Three races will be Included: a
5K (3.1 miles In length); a lOKrace
(6.2 miles In length) and a one mOe
Fun Run, caJled the Dinosaur Dash.
The registration form Includes all
pertinent Information on all three
races, age group divisions, race
times, an o[f!clal course map for
both the 5K and 10K races, and
awards, race results, and last
year's winning course times.

THE SOFT SHOE FOR HARD WORKOUTS.
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CINONNATI 1UP! l - The
Cincinnati Reds are assureJ of
having a full house for Opening
Day. and maybe the largest ever
Opening Day crowd.
Reds President Marge Schott
said late Friday that all a,·a llable
tickets have been sold for the April 7
opening day game at Riverfront
Stadium against the Phil adelphia
Phlllles.
This is the earliest that an
opening day as been a sell out at
Riverfront since 1977.
The sellout includes about 2,500
temporar~y seats which are being
used for the first time ever for an
opening day at Riverfront to
accomondate as many fans as
possible.
Because of the temporary seat s.
no standing room only tickets will
be !llld
"I was so thrilled that last year
the fans gave us a record Opening
Day crowd and now the; 've topped
that." said Mrs. Schott. "That's
why our slogan is so appropriate:
'Fans ... This Year's For You ~'"
The Reds 1985 opener against
Montreal April 8 an racted a
Riverfront opening day record
52,971 .

- advance in NIT play
COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI I Junior forward Dennis Hopson
scored 16 points and smlor forward
Brad Sellers added 15 Friday night
as Ohio State defeated Brigham
Young 79-68 ln. the quarterfinals of
th e Nat io nal In vit a tiona l
Tourna ment.
The Buckeyes advanct'd to the
semifinals of the National lnvita
tiona! Toumament In New York
City.
Ohio State. which Improved to
17·14. will play Louisiana Tech at 9
p.m. Monday In Madison Square
Garden . Brigham Young finished
Its season with an 18-14 record .
It wUI be the second - and fin al
trip - to the NIT Final Four for
Eloon Miller as OSU coach. Miller.
fired In Feburary, took his 1979
Buckeyes to the semifinals before
losing to Indiana.
Guard Ritchie Webb led Brigham
Young with 11 points while Jeff
Chatman, a 6-6sophomore forward.
had 15 points.
Ohio State led at the half 31· 26

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and quickly broke the game open
early In the second hall . A steal bY
Hopson led to a fast · break lay up bY
Curtis Wtlson with 19:31 left In the
game. Wilson then fed Sellers on an
alley-oop stuff with 17: 52 remaining
to mke it a 39-30 game.
Brigham Young could never get
doser than seven points the
remainder of the game.
Wilson , a sophomore, finished
"1th 15 points while freshman
guard Jay Burson had 11.

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COMPLETE SEASON - The Ohio Valley Chrhtlan School
Defenders volleyball team recently completed Its best season ever
with a final mcord of 1.8-2. The season mduded a 16 matdl winning
streak and extended a two-year wln.Ug streak at home. Team
IDnors consisted ol a second place llnl!ih In Cross Lanes Chrbtlan
School's Ttp-011 Toumament, a Drst place llnlsb In RaloeDe
Olristlan Academy'slnvitatlonal Tournament, Mtd a second place
finish In the Mountaineer AMociatloo of Otrlstlan School's stale
Volleyball Tournament. Susan Ardter, Cheryl Taylor, and Beth

WOMELDORFF &amp; THOMAS

Wood were cbosm to Ill! AD·Toumamenl team bt the Rainelle
Tournament and Susan was ab;o chosen as the MVP. In the MAO!
Tournament, Susan Archer and Beth Wood were again chosm to the
AD·Tournament team. Team members were, left to right,
statistician Leah Danner, Sharon Archer, Becky Danner, Marla
Roach, Beth Wood, Oleryl Taylor, Coach Jay JIII'Vb, Tract Sisson,
Edina VanMetre, Rae bel Danner, Susan Areher, Kim Black, Connie
Pearson.

TRUE VALUE HARDWARE

Third and Court
Gallipolis, Ohio
Winter Hours: 8:00-5:30 WMkda s, Sot.S:00-5:00

By United Press International
With over two weeks to go before
tiE victories count, the Kansas City
Royals and Chicago White Sox
displayed some f\re in a game
neither squad won .
Rookie borne plate umpire Del
Scott ejeeted Kansas City pitcher
David Cone after one pitch 1r1 the
lOth Inning Friday, ending a
controversial 1·1 game. Cone was
ejected after his pitch sailed to the
screen · over the head of Russ
Morman.
In the ninth, after Whit e Sox
pitcher Bill Long threw two Inside
pitches to Sieve Balboni, umpire
Dan Morrison warned both managers the next pitcher tot hrow close to
a batter would be ejected.
Kansas City pitcher Scott Bank·
head hi! the Wblte Sox's Carlton
Fisk on his left wrist with a pitch in
tbe seventh Inning.
Following Cone's ejeetlon, the
Royals were oot of avaUable
pitchers and the game was called.
resulting in the tie.
Willie Wilson, who had two
ooubles and a single, scored the
Kansas City run In tiE fourth
Inning. Wilson doubled. and ad·
vanced on singles by Hal McRae

and Frank White.
The White Sox tied the score .In
the ninth off reliever Dan Qulsen·
berry. Quisenberry walked Jolut
Cangelosi, who stole two bases and
scored on Ken WUIIams' sacrifice

fly .

After the game, the Royals sent
outfielder Gary Thurman to their
minor league complex at Sarasota.
Fla. The move left 42 players in
Royals camp.

Toronto blanks Cincinnati
TAMPA, Fla. iUPl) - The
Cincinnati Reds have to get their
bats workln~ Saturday.
Friday, the Reds manl€ed only
three hits oft four Toronto pitchers
as they went oown to a 3-0 defeat .
Jim Clancy allowed two hits in
five innings and combined with
three ether Toronto pitchers-en that
three-hitter Friday.
Clancy st ruck oot four and
walked one In his longest outing of
the exhibition season. Luis Aquino

foUowed with two hitless Innings
and Tim Hen!«&gt; pitched a hitless
eighth Inning. Don Gordon worked
the ninth Inning, allowing a single
bY Eric Davis In earning his third

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At Bradenton, Fla., Junior Oritz
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Jim Morrison went 4-for-4 and
scored three runs .

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At Winter Haven, Fla., Roy
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The Blue Jays scored twice In the
first Inning off loser Mario Solo on a
two-out oouble bY Ernie Whitt , a
triple bY Jesse Barfield and a
passed ball. Manny Lee ooubled
home a run in the seventh off Rob
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I.T.T. M(ICUIY VAPOR

~::""

Royals, White Sox display early season temper

EAST MEIGS - A softball
tournament wUI be held AprilS and
6 at Eastern High School. Entry let'
Is $6.~ and two softballs. Trophies
will be awarded to the first. second
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Paul Walker AUI&lt;~~r·rlt
DAYTON, Ohio tUPil - Dick
Koriokrax. head basketball roach
.at Kalida for tiE past 12 years.
·Saturday was named the recipient
the 1~ Paul Walker Award.
: The Walker award . given annu ·
· ally to a longtime Ohio coach who
·has made a significant contribution
. to high school basketball. is named
·In honor of Paul Walker. the
:wlnnlngest coach In Ohio basketball
;history.
• The award was presented by
allcer prior to the start oft he Class
;AAA state championship game at
•the University of Dayton Arena.
: Kortokrax, a graduate of Otto'VIlle High School and Anderson
: (Ind.) College, Is a veteran of '1:1
;years of coaching and during his
'Cal'eer at Fort Jennings, OttovU!e
:and Kalida, Kortokrax has a record
11 442· 160, Including 216-60 at
i(allda.
'
' - Kls 1981 Kalida team won the
Class A state champlo~hip.

Also acrylic wall. concrete bonom pools at wholesale prices

--- Buckeyes dump BYU;

RUNNER-UP - Jlllie Wamsley, daugllter of Carl Wam;ley and
Unda Wamsley McDade of McDade of Cheshire, was selreted
. numeJCUP m the Cheerleader ol Oteerleaders at fJJe Elghlb Annual
Oleerleadlng Invitational a1 Paint VaDey High School mBalnlrldge
. recently. Judges for the event were from fJJe University of Dayton
cheerleadlng squad. Miss Wam&lt;iley, an eighth grader al Kyger Croek
: Jr. High School, was chosen from more than 100 you~ women mthe
:. junior high division. She is active In m1111y other activities at Kyger
Creek mdudlng Builders Club 1111d gtn; softball.

Opening day
sold out at
Riverfront

thoughout Ohio. These young alblelt!i were chasm first rumer-~ allbe
Gallla County Jr. High Tournament 1111d placed third at Rio Grt111de
C&lt;JIIege, second at Ohio University, and ttard at tiE Paint Valley
Invitational a1 Bainbridge, Ohio.

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'

�Times-Sentinel

March 23, 1986

PleaSIIlt, W. Va.

March 23, 1986

Robinson's jump shot gives
Navy thrilling, 71-70 victory
By GERRY MONIGt\N

FIRST PLACE WINNER - The 'IUppers Plains
-llh grade basketball team took first piiiCe In lhe
recentwumament held at'IUppers Plains. Memhers
making up the Br!il team were left Ill right, Paul

VIneyard, Pal Newland, MlcheDe MllJ111o' and Matt
Taekett. Second "'""• IIAly lleQII, Wes Arbaugh,
Ran~ Kaylor, Buddy Kennedy, Malt Bowen and
Jamie Wlbon. Third mw, Wes Arbaugh and Dennis
Newland, ooaches.

UPI Sports Wrller
The road to Dallas went through
the heart of the Southeastern
Conference Saturday.
Louisville was the ooly non.SEC
school In act ton when the Brst two
regional finals of the NCAA Tourna·
ment were played at Atlanta and
Houston.
Frlday, at East Rutherford, N.J.,
I David Robinson banked In an 8-root
jumper with five seconds remain·
ingto give Navy a 71-70vlctoryover
Cleveland State; and Johnny Dawkins scored ~ points and No. I Duke
ended DePaul's startling postseason revival, defeating the Blue
Demons 74-67 In t11e semifinals of
the East Regional.
At Kansas City, Mo., Charles
Shackleford scored a season- high
:12 points and Chris Washburn
added!) to lift North Carolina State
to a 711-66 victory over Iowa State;
and Calvin Thompson scored 8 of
his 26 points In overtime to carry
No. 2 Kansas from the brink of
eUrninatlon to a 96-lli victory over
No. 18 Michigan State.
"They are better than we are,"

Auburn coach SoMy Smith said.
"Some people might think LouisvOle has pressure on them because
they are the favorites. But when
you are playing as good as they are,
you don't lee! pressure."
Loulsvlllf has been In 18 previous
NCAA Tournaments and are 6-0 In
regional finals . This Is ooly the third
trip to t11e NCAAs for the Tigers,
and their first to the regklnal finals .
To reach the Final Four, Kentucky will have to travel a famUiar
route. The Wildcats defeated Alabama for the lourth time this
season to reach the reglpnal final
and will have to beat LSU for a
fourth time as well to move on to
Dallas.
"It's just like Alabama," Kentucky guard Roger Harden said.
"We pretty much know what they
are going to do and they know a bout
us. It's going to come down to who
plays best Saturday afternoon."
The Wildcats beat the Tigers
54-52 at Baton Rouge, La., on Jan.
21; fil-57 at Lexington, Ky., on
March 1; and 61-58 at Lexjngton on
March 7 In the SEC Tournament
semifinals.

Columbus Wehrle, Dayton Jefferson move to title game
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) - Columbus Wehrle and Dayton Jefferson
buth made It to Saturday afternoon's Class A boys state _high
school championship game at the
University of Da)10n Arena, but
they took different routes to get
there.
Jefferson , unranked and sremlngly out of It against No. 3 Berlin
Htland when It tralled by 13 points
late In the third quarter, raUied to
whip the Hawks 63-62 when sub
VIncent Watson hit a pair of free
throws with 11 seconds left In the
game.
Watson's free throws gave Jefferson, now 19-8, Its first lead since the
Broncos were up 8-6 early In the

Auburn, 22-10, eliminated
Nevada-Las Vegas 70-63 Thursday
night; and Louisville, 29-7, knocked
off North Carollna 94-79. Kentucky,
32-3, defeated Alabama 63-63, and
Louisiana State, :IS-ll, ousted Georgia Tech 70-&amp;1.
Friday, The Midshipmen, 30- 4.
scored their 16th consecutive triumph. The 6-foot-11 Robinson, who
blocked 9 shots and collected 14
rebounds, scored 13 of Navy's final
17 points, and finished with 22
points.
aeveland State, which finished
the season at 29-4 and had its
14-game winning streak halted, was
led by Olnton Smit h and Ken
McFadden with 16 points each.
For N.C. State, the 6-foot-10
Shackleford and the 6-11 Washburn
used their height advantage-Iowa
State's tallest player, center Sam
Htll, Is 6-9 ~to propel the Wol!pack
to Its third regional final In four
years.
The Blue DevUs, 35-2, won their
19th consecutive game. The Blue
Demons fell to 18-13. Dawkins was
backed by Alarie with 21 points.

game.

Shuler warned about cycle dangers
PHILADELPHIA 1UP! 1 - Mid dleweighT conTender James Shuler.
who was killed in a motorc~·cle
accidenT hours afTer he bought a
new cycle. had been warned at:xJut
the
dangerssaofid.riding !he vehicles.
his trainer
Trainer Eddie FuTch said Frida~·
he had warn!'d Shuler. 26. laS! WC&lt;'k

~:~~ The

hazards of

motorc~-clc

The boxer died of massive head
injuries Thursday night wl"i'n 1-i'
colhd&lt;&gt;d with a 1rac1or- trailer in a
residential section of 111&lt;' ell\.
Shuler's deaTh ca me 10days aflrr
he had sufferro The firS! lo~s of his
pro boxing rar&lt;'f'r agai nst Thomas
Heams at Las Vegas. Nf'Y .

A spokesman for tl"i' Baker
Funeml Home in Philadelphia said
set-vices for Shuler would he i"l'ld at
10 a.m. next Thursda&gt;
Futch said he spoke to Shuler
at:xJut riding motot"C&gt;Cies when The
fighter ~.&lt;·as trai nin g for the March
10 bout against Hearns. In that
fight. Hearns knocked Shuler out in
the first round. taking away his
Nort h American Boxing Federa·
tion middtewl"ight title.
·· He ;Shu len ment ioned a motor·
cycle he had in Philadelphia. and
was going to sen it and gN a bigger
one:· Futch said from his Las
Vegas home. ·· J understand. from
talking to his brother. the accident
occurred an hour after hr t:xJught
the motorcvcle.
"I told him no maner ho'-'·careful

and how good yoo are 011 a
motorcycle. you ha\·e 00 rcotection .
I !old him a story about when I
u·ained Joe Frazier and rode on the
back ci Joe"s motorcycle once out of

necessltv. The Flyers had just won
their flfst championship and the
str!'&lt;'ts were blocked by celebrant s,
so I couldn't drive my car to the

MID-COURT COLLISION- Greenon's Scott RlekeUs (43) sees tlr
the ball thrown up by Claymont guard Gary SpineD (24) followktg a
mld-rourt collision with Greenon's Kevbl Tayklr (on court) during the
second quarter II a Class AA semifinals Friday In Dayton. Watching the
play Is Claymont's Eddie McCan (M) . UPI.

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win.

Heffilnger finished with 29 points
and Keller 23 for Van Buren.
Wehrle Coach Chuck Kemper
blamed a big 36-23 halftime his
tl'am had for Its second half
problems.
The Oass AA semifinal victc J
were Sprtnglleld Greenon, now27-0,
and Oberlin, 26-1. Greenon pulled
away In the second half for a 61-51
win over UhrtchsvU!e Claymont
and Oberlin, after blowing a big
s~nnd half margin , rallied for a
74-65 win &lt;Ner Ray.
Grrenon led 28-26 after a close.
but poorly played first half. Th~
Knights scored the first five points
of the second half to take control of
the game.
Scott Ricketts, a 6-foot -3 senior
guard-forward. led Greenan with 21
!Xllnts and Phil Scott scored 15.
Troy McCracken, Greenan's 6-foot9 aU-Ohio center, was held to 4.

Claymont Coach Jim Riley
agreed with Falkner's assessment.
"You have to g;ve Greenan
credit," said Riley. "They pressed
us and stuck to their game
plan .They had us tired and sucking
wind at halftime."

1986 JEEP COMAN
4X4 PICKUP

eed Something
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West Virginia
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-

(And that's just one reason
you need to start an IRA.)
Uncle Sam's giving you a great opportunity
to trim up to $2 000 a year off your 1985 taxable
income. Just put the money away .in~ IRA at
BANK ONE ... and let it start eammg mterest
for your retirement years.
There's no tax on that interest, either,
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But remember April15 is the last day
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If we're getting on your neroes about
your IRA, it's because we care. Because an IRA
is -thatimportant.

NORTH OLMSTED. Ohio tUPil
- Venezuelan t:xJwler Amleto
·Monacelli held on to the top spot
Friday night and will be the No. 1
seed for the nationally televised
finals ot the $150,000 Cleveland
Open.
The tournament Is sponsored by
Lite Beer.
Monacelll, 24, wUI be trying to
become the first foreign player to
capture a Prof£&gt;sslonal Bowlers
Association title.
He has come the closest, finishing
second three limes and earning
more than $1ll,0011n 1985.
Monacelli finished the 42- game
format with a pintail total rJ. 10,(61
- 130 pins ahead of thrre-time
champion Mal Acosta , Manteca,
Ca lif.
Acosta , who won his first title
here at Buckeye Lanes in 1981,
finished with a plnfaU total rt 9,921.
Also qualifying for the finals were
Brian Voss, Tacoma, Wash.;
Randy Stoughton, Indianapolis,
and Leroy Bornhop, St. 'Charles,
Mo.

Substanllll penally 101 t!llty WII'ICII'IWII

.•·.
. ·.
..
·.

..

..,.

Tournamenl set
EAST MEIGS - There will be a
men's slow-pitch softball tournament at Eastern High School Apt11
12-13. First. second and third plare
sponsor trophies will he awarded
with first and second place trophies
to Individual players. For lurtll&gt;r
ln!ormatloln , call 667-6417 or 614~-

Oaymont '&lt;lphomore Gary Watkins led all scorers with 22 points.
" We've got seven or eight players
and we like to pul them out on the
floor and wear people down," said
Greenon Coach Lyle Falkner. "I
think that Is what happend tonight.

........._

Venezuelan bowler
No.1 tourney seed

XT590

Nathan Craig led the Jefferson
comeback with 17 of his 19 points In
the second half.
Keith Troyer, who led Hiland
with 22 ·points, fouled out with 38
seconds to play and his team
leading 62-61. Eugene Hostetler
added 20 points for HUand.
Wehrle looked Uke a runaway
winner against Van Buren, racing
to a 15-polnt lead on several
occasions In the first half. But the
Black Knights, paced by Jeff
Heffllnger and Chad Keller,
scrapped back and finally took a
60-59 lead.
Wehrle's Andy Nowlin hit a free
throw with 26 seconds to play to tie
tie It at tnand the two teams battled
through thrre overtime periods
before the WolverineS finally won,
83- 79 1n the first triple OT In state
tournament history.
Kevin Haddock scored 32 points

and Eli Hrewster "CJ lor Wehrle,
which ran Its record to 26-1 with the

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

DAYTON, Ohio IUPII - Oberlin, paced by Rodney Cannon with
22 points, came from behind In the
final three mlnu tes Friday night
alter blowing a blg early lead to
heat Youngstown Rayen 7H5 in the
semifina ls of the boys Class AA
stat£&gt; high school basketba ll
toumatn£&gt;nt.
The win puts Oberlin, 26-J, into
Saturday night's AA championship
game against Springfield Greenon,
27-0, a 61- 51 winner over Uhrlchsvllle Claymont In the other semifinal contest.
The Indians led 36-26 at halftime
and increased the lead to 12 points
· early In the second hal!.
TraDing 40-29, Rayen, which
bowed rut with an 18-9 record, then
ran ctf 14 unanswered points to take
the lead 43-40 and the Tigers led
52-49 at the end of Ill&gt; third quarter.
. Touy Donaldson, who led Rayen
with :5 points, hac113 in that perild.
Oberlin trailed 61 -57 when 11
made Its game-winning move,
scoring 8 consecutive points to gc en
top ffi-61 and led the rest of the way.
The Indians hit 15 of 17 free throws
the final five minutes of the game.
Four oth£&gt;r players scored In
oouble figures for Oberlin. Sophomore Tim Shepherd had 15, sub
Ray Ellington 14, Kevin Steen 11
and Ian Yarber 10.
Jerome Jenkins was Rayen's
only other player In double figures
with 12.
In the first AA semifinal, Greenon, behind Scott Ricketts' 21
points. pulled away In the !lE'COnd
half for Its win over Claymont.

Model31o.&amp;

CHESTER

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C-5

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By AL ROSSITER JR.
UPI Science EditA)r
WASHINGTON IUPii - The
search for what caused the Challenger disaster has been narrowed
to a joint in the ship's right booster
rocket, and NASA engineers say
tests in the next 10 days may help
pinpoint the reason lor the sea I
failure.
National Aeronautics and Space
Administra lion engineers told the
presidential commission investi·
gating the Challenger explosion
they have cleared the shuttle's
massive external fuel tank of any
blame In the Jan . 28 accident
Appearing before the commis·
sian Friday, the engineers said the
precise cause of the failure of two
rubber 0-ring seals lo contain fiery
gases in the booster was stili
unknown.
But, they said, several possibili·
ties are under scrutiny: cold
weather effects on the 0 - rings, Ice
in the joint. damage to the seals
during rocket assembly and d!&gt;fects
In putty between theO-ringsand the

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Ironically, the Akron cllnic was II'&lt;&gt; plafntlif In
another case, which went all the way to I he Supreme
Court, lnvolving an abortion law passo:i by Akron City
Council.
The Supreme Court, on Jan. 1:., 198:!, threw out the
Akron ordinance, which required all abortions alter
the first three months of pregnancy be performed ln a
hospital: prohibited a phy sician to perimm an
abortion on unmarri&lt;'&lt;l minor under 15 without the
consent of a parent or guardian, or witoout a coun
order: required the physician to inform the woman of
the development of the fetus and mandated a 24 hour
waiting period.
The current case was assigned 10 U.S. District
Judge Ann Aldric h, but Manos hea rd arguments late
Friday afternoon because Aldrich was out of town. A
hearing on the ACLU's request for a preliminary
injunction is scheduled for March 31.

Investigators narrow cause
of shuttle disaster to failure
of booster rocket joint

Custom colors slightly hrgher

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unsafe abortions."
Named as defendants were Summit O&gt;unty
Prosecutor Lynn Slaby , representing all county
prosecutors, Gov. Richard Celeste and Attorney
General Anthony Celebrezze.
Celeste allowed the bill to become law without his
signature in December. He said it was a "misdirected
attempt" to solve a parent-child communication
problem but acknowledged be had no chance of
sustaining a veto in the Legislature.
Levy also said the law would be imJX)ssible to
enforce in many counties. The measure directed the
clerk of the Ohio Supreme Court to distribute forms
explainin g the bypass procedures to juvenile judges
In each county ,
"To date, the clerk has done nothing," Levy said.
"Some (juvenile judges\ have indicated they don' t
even know what the law says."

9

16'

4'X8'X 15 / 32 CDX APA

ACLU's Ohio chapter, said the law violates young
women's right to privacy.
The law requires the parent or guardian of any
unmarried, unemancipated woman under 18 who
seeks an abortion to receive at least 24oours' advance
notice of the procedure in person or by telepoore.
· The parents do no I need to consent to the abonion:
they must merely be aware of it.
The only exceptions to notifi cation are:
-if a juvenile court rules thai Ihe young woman is
sufficiently mature and well- iniormro to proceed
with the abortion on her own ;
-if a grandparent or adult brother or srster files an
affidavit with the court stating the young woman
might be abused by her parents If they are notified.
"It turns the doctor-patient relationship into an
adversarial relationship," Levy said. "And this
legislation will inevitably result in young girls seeking

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By TIIOMAS M. BURNE'M
United Press International
CLEVELAND - With just two days left before
Ohio's new law requiring parental notification for
: minors seeking abortions is scheduled to go into
effe&lt;:t , the American Civil Liberties Union Is asking a
· federal court judge to block Its enforcement
The Ohio chapter of the ACLU filed ~-ult in U.S.
· District Court in Cleveland Friday, asking for a
, temporary restraining order, Alter a brief hearing,
U.S. DisUict Judge John Manos said he would study
the matter , over the weekend and announce his
decision Monday.
The suit was filed on behalf of the Akron Center for
Reproduclive Health, Dr. Max Pierre Gaujean, a
clinic physician, and "Patty Poe," an unid!&gt;ntified
17-year-old girl seeking an abortion.
In Columbus, Mark Levy, acting director of the

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SEARCHING - Bernd SeDer ol NNIA's Manhall
Spa&lt;.-e F11ght Center cleans· one ol Challenger's
salt-water soaked flight recording tapEs by nambtg II

back and forth through a bath of clear, cold water.
The tapEs will then be sent lo Johnson Space Center In
Hous&amp;on lor evaluation. (UPI)

Rat poison found in Contac and Teldrin
By Dt\VID ALEXANDER
PHilADELPHIA (UP!\ - Government tests have confirmed the
presence of rat JX)ison in Sl'Veral
capsules of the popularContac rold
remedy and In an allergy medicine
just a day alter the manufacturerct
the drugs ordered the products off
store shelves because of contamlnallon threats.
John Norris, assistant commis·
stoner of the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration, said Friday ral
JXllson was found in livecapsulcs of
Contac and one capsule of Ute
allergy medicine Teldrin pulled
from stores in Orlando, Fla .. and
Houston.
He said Investigators suspected
two additional capsules of either
Contac or Teldrln from loose cities
. also had been poisoned.
Both medicines are made by the
Philadelphia -bas ed SmithKiine
Beckman COilJ., which Thursday
ordered lhoSP products and a third

drug, the appetite suppressant
Dletac, pulled from 100 market
alter a mate caller said he had
JXllsoned the brands In four U.S.
cities.
"In light of the laburatory
findings and continued lerrorisl
threats, we feel that withdrawal of
these products is required to
safeguard the public health ,"
Sm!thKIIne President Henry Wendt
said . No lnjulies were reported .
Norris said the FDA was continu·
ing to test "thousands" of Contac,
Dietac, and Teldrin pills garoered
from Orlando, Houston and the two
olher cities- St. l1luisand Chicago
- cited by the man who called
SmlthK!ine and various media
outlets about the tampering.
'"Unfortunately the caller has nol
been as speclllc as he was to a
particular store as he was with
Orlanoo and Houston," said Norris,
explaining that Ute caller named
the stores in those cities where the

poisoned proauct cou1a oe touna .
"We could go to a particular store
and clean out all of the Inventory
and that 's why we have reenabieto
imm edi a tely lind tampered
product."
"I think lor now It's confined to
the four cities menlioned," he said .
"It's hard to speculate where this
thing will head. We're hoping iI wil l
Pnd soon and lllpetully with an
apprehension of 1he criminaL"
SmithKIInP said Ihe FDA tests of
the poisoned capsules slllwed
traces of warfarin, an ingredient
used in rat JXlison , in amounts too
small 10 presen l a health haza rd to
humans. Watiarin is an anticoagu
lanl lha I causes internal bleeding ir.
rats .

" I liken this situariont olhe laking
of hostages or the placement of a
bomb on an aircraft. I'm outragrd
at the situation," Wendt said .
Conlac, a popular cold remedy , is
SmithKiine Beckman's biggesl selling over-the- count er dl-ug, with

open interior of Ihe rocket.
"I believe we have eliminated all
I he other possibilities except these
items we've just discussed ,, and
those all deal with the joint." said
Wayne Littles, chief engineer at
NASA's Marshall Space Flight
Center, Huntsville, Ala.
"In the next week to 10 days we
hope to get a significant amount of
data relative to these prime
scenarios,'" he said.
"I think that's been real progress
since the last session," replied
panel Chairman William Rogers at
the conclusion of a live-hour public
hearing at the State Department.
The commission's last public hear·
ing was held tl&lt;()weeks ago at Cape
Canaveral.
Engineers had hoped a piece of
rocket joint wreckage from the
right -hand booster recovered from
the sea floor oU Cape Canaveral
would help in the investigation. But
officials said It apparently came
from the sill!&gt; ct the rocket q:&gt;poslte
ri where the fatal rupture
d!&gt;veloped,
"In the preliminary review of
that joint there does not appear Ill
he any erosion or melting asso·

elated with it, bur thai is wry
preliminary," said Col. Edward
O'Connor. orchest raling the shuttle
salvage operations.
Salvage work was put on hold
Friday because of rough weatl'&lt;&gt;r ar
sea, kicking up waves cresting at 12
to 15 feet and wind gusts higher than
3'i mph .
O'Connor said progress should
speed up as the impact or spring
weather systems diminishes over
the rext lew weeks and underwater
visibUity improves.
The commission, which is to
report its findings to President
Reagan by June 3, has asked NASA
to complele irs resling and report
the resul ts by April lB.
Littles said extensive test ing has
ruled out the possibility that the
184-foot external fuel tank d!&gt;veloped a leak hefore blasiO!f to set
the stage for the 1ocket rupture.
The tank eventually did leak 64
seconds into the fiighl. but that was
after the bio"1orch- like jer from
the booster rocket burned a role ln
the tank, said Dan Germany, head
of NASA' s photo eva luatio-n committee. The entire tank exploded 73
seconds after blastoff, destroying
Challengf'r.

about $00 million In sales last year.
Dletac and ~ldrln had combined
sales of rome $36 milliOn last year.
Wendt said the three drugs
contributed less than 3 percent of
the company's 19&amp;i profits of $514
million.
SmithKUne said It planned to
reintroduce the drugs as soon as
possible and established a toll-free
number lor comwners SEeking
infonnatlon on the products and
how to be relmbu rsed lor them ,
He said customers could return
the products to retail stores or
d!&gt;stroy them.
"In the meantime, we wlll
continue to cooperate with the FDA
and the FBI to apprehend the
individual or Individuals resJX)nsi·
ble for lhis latest wave ct terror,"
Wendt said, - Consumers seeking Information
can call l·f00.543-3434in the continffital United States and Hawaii, and
1-tro-545-ltrn In Alaska.

Packwood stands behind tax proposals
By JOSEPH IWANOWt\NY
WI\SI;!INGTON (UP! l -Senate
Finance Committee Chairman Bob
Packwood knows he'll likely lose a
battle over a controversial bond
proposal in his tax reform plan, bul
he's not lenlng the issue rest'
without taking a lew verbal shols at
_ his crlt ics.
• · · Speaking to reporters, Pack: wood, R-Ore., refused Friday to
ba~k away from the his proJX)sal to
apply some tax to currently
tax-exempt interest on municipal
bonds.
Packwood said It had been the
Reagan administration's idea to
include It In his tax overhaul bill.
When the proposal became known
earlier in the week, It caused an
up:-oar unprecedented in it s scope
In the market lor tax-exempt bonds
and an administration sJX)kesman

said the Idea belonged to the
senator.
The sudden losses to investors
were estlmat~ to total s:ll billion, a
drop large enough proportionately
to he compared by some analysts to
1he 1929 crash of the stock market
Even lhough the retroactive
nature of the proJX)sal laces almost
certain exll ncllon when it comes
before Packwood's finance com·
mlttee Monday morning the chairman Frilay did not seek an
agreemenl with the majority of
committee memhers that opposes
II.

Rather, Packwood JX)rtrayed his
fellow senators as being Interested
In tax breaks lor the rich.
'"I would say there Is a pretty
strong feeling on the committee
that they oon't want an escape·
proof minimum tax," Packwood

live date of the new law.
Public use municipal bonds
which go I!Jward things llke highways, schools and hospitals would
remain entirely tax free .
With the bond marfQoot in chaos,
reaction on Capitol Hill was
immediate. Hall the members or
the Finance Committee signed a
len er calling lor the (I'OVision to be
dropped and aid!&gt;s said other
senators on the panel woo did not
sign the lett er also opposed the
proJXlsal.
They complained that applying
the tax retroactively was unfair and
said the provision could cause
serious pmblems lor state and local
governments that rely on the bonds
to pay lor a variety or projecls and immediate large losses lor
people and fund s which already
held such bonds.

told a news conference Friday.
The issue, he said, was not
importan 1 in terms of rmney, bul
was a fairness mafler. The commit·
tee members , he sa id , "cannol
have our cake and eat H 100."
"The most imJXlnan r it.em or
fairress is whet trr people who
have wealth pay tax ," Packwood
said.
The pmJX)sal wou ld require
wealthy people to pay an alterna tive minimum tax on the interest
they receive from now tax -exempt
municipal bonds even if f'Jrchased
before the date when the tax bill
would b&lt;'come cl!ective, JX)ss ibly
Sepl. I.
The tax plan passo:i lasl)"'ar by
the House would tax only the
lnlerest on municipal bonds floated
for privale-puJl)Osc projects such
as factories Issued alter the effec-

Reagan calls -defeat 'temporary setback'
By JRt\ R. ALIEN
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi·
dent Rt&gt;agan says he will never
sound retreat in his battle to arm
, the rebels tryJng to overthrow the _
Nicaraguan government and be·
!!eves that untU the Contras win,
"there will be no peace In Central
America."
He was expected to repeat that'
theme in his weekly radio address
today. ·
Undeterred by House rejection of
hfs $100 million aid package,
Reagan told about 200 cheering,
whistling Contra supporters at the
White House Frk!ay, "We cannot
give up. We will nevergfve up ... We
intend to bring this back to the
House as many times as it takes to

....

win: And we will win."
Reagan, SJXlrtlng a button read ing, '" II you like Cuba, you'll love
Nicaragua," posed with three
Contra leaders, one of whom Adolfo Calero - pumped his list in
the air and soouted "'Viva Reagan "
alter the president finished .
"We'll spare noellort and give no
ground ·In supporting the d!&gt;mocrat ic resistance," he told representatives of a variety of veterans,
religious, business, ethnic and
mll)ority organizations.
The White House, buoyed by
predictions of victory from GOP
leaders, Is counting on winning
Senate approval d the aid package
next week, although the Senate
version would Include as law

Reagan' s promise to the House ro
withhold $75 mill ion of the assistance lor 90days to give diplomacy a
chance to work.
The pres ident Friday began his
new round of lobbying lor the afd,
lncludh'lg $10 million lor the flrsl
military assistance to the Contras
since 1984. by quoting U.S. naval
hero J ohn Paul Jones: "We have
not yet begun to l!ghl. "
"The 1\JfureotCentral Amertca Is
oot with communism, The future or
Central America is with &lt;i&gt;mocracy
and all those who are ftghting lor
freedom ," Reagan told the Contra
supporters.
"'Until these men are successtu 1
In their lreeckJm struggle , there wm
he no peace In Central America and
1'

there wU!lx' no peace In wr !Vuls,'"
Reagan said.
A 'White House SJXlkesman said
Reagan was referring to the
Sandlnistas' "eXJX)rt of revolulion"'
as the reason there will be oo peace
until the Contras succeed .
Calling the House defeat "a
temporary Setback ... I underline
temJX)rary," Reagan said history
will provethe majority oft he Hill!se
"wrong, tragically wrong ."
"There is simply no rrore
Important foreign JX)Ucy question
before the United States O&gt;ngre5s
today," Reagan said. "We can't let
the final hope of lreeoom in
Nicaragua be extinguished while
O&gt;ngress slowly makes up Its mind
to do the light thing:·

TAMPERING - Henry Wendt, SmlthKIIne Beckm1111 preslden~
holdoi up a package ol Cootac capsules In a "blister pac" as he pobtts out
packaging makes it easy to Identify any cype ol tampering with the
t'Onlenls. 'llle company announced a voluntary withdraw! of O&gt;mac,
Teldrln and Dietac capsules becam;e of su~ted tampering. (U PI ) ·

State employees may
have to pay Medicare
payroll taxes
WASHINGTON tUPi i - Ending
a lour-month standoU. the House
finally has acceptro the Senate's
version of a $6.7 blltion deficit·
reduction bill thai would requir&lt;'
public employees hired April I and
after ln Ohio and seven other sta les
to pay Medicare payroll taxes.
The proposal, which continues
the 16-cent-a-pack cigarette tax and
releases money from ollshore oil
leases, was sent lo President
Reagan, who has said he will sign it .
The bill, approved m 154 Thursday night, saves more than $18
billion in the next three years.
It increases Medica re payments
lo hospitals by 0.5 percent and
requires ~tates to lilt their drinking
ages to 21 years to qualify for
federal highway ald.
The measure would require new
stal e and local government
workers and public school employees to pay a tax or 1.45 percent
or gross salary. The employer
would pay an equal amount.
Ohio and the other states do not
currenlly require such employees
to contlibule to Medicare, the
old-age health· care system.
The bill, which failed to pass In

thE' fi n&lt;JI d;l .\ ' ~ of last w•; 1r's
legislati\·r sPssion. figurr.'O Pmmi-

nently in plan' to cui the d&lt;'fir it th)s
year.
House Dt'mocralic k'aders sai(l
they were nor happy with the S&lt;&gt;n4tl'
bill, bu t conc&lt;'Cird they did not have
the votes ro conlinue Ihe co nfmnfa tion any longer Thr House planll{od
to start it s sprin g l't'Cf'ss t~is

weekend, and many mrmnD·s
wer e anxious to lf'avf' Thursday

night. House Republicans tooK
advant age of that 10 push lhrouQh
the vote on ac"'Piing the Scn a t~·s
version of 1he bill.
:
The cigarett e lax technlcaD:r
expired last Saturday, but lhe b!ll
makes it rctmactivr.
:
"Enough Is enough:· sa id R~ .
LyiUI Mar1in, R ill. "It' s tlmr to ~t
lthis bill I over."
The Senalc version of the blit.
which Rl&gt;agan &lt;'ndor-sed, gives lhl'
federal government more cont¢&gt;1
over offshore oil leases. The House
version, which was negotiated Gy
oil-state congressmen, would h a~e
granted morr poll'cr Ill lhc statc!AdmlnlslJ'ation offici~clb; had said ··
Rt&gt;agan would veto the billlfit W'(e
changed from the Senate verslo111

•

'I

�Page D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

March 23, 1986
- · March 23, 1986

·Millions may have been stashed by Marcos
By EUOT BRENNER
WASHINGTON (UPl i - The
foot-high stack of documents Ferdinand Marcos carried out of Manila
suggests he stashed millions of
dollars In Swiss banks as long as 12
years ago and used business fronts
to shunt money to and from his
palace.
The nearly 2.100 pages of papers
- some as trivial as gas slips and
others as potentially damning as
lists of bank accounts - were
: publicly released Thursday and
provided in their entirety to news
' organizations Friday.
The documents included lellcrs
to Marcos accompanying negotia ble cashier's checks. stock ccrtifi ·

cates. and checks from buslnessmen, with interest. In return for
sugar sale quotas. The stocks were
made out In the names of other
persons.
One document . on presidential
stationery, was a worksheet for a
loan of aoour $40 million. It listed
five foreign banks as the source a
funds to pay down the loans , and
included a reference to interest paid
in 1974 and 1975.
The worksheet did not clearly
indicate who was In debt, but
suggested that Marcos had access

listed agalnst "Banque de Paris."
$10 mllllon agalnst "Credit Suisse,"
$2 million on "Swiss Ba nklng," $2
million on "Grand Cayman" and$1
million on "Trade and n..v. Bank."
A document dlscovei-ed Thursday Us ted $88 million In accounts in
banks in Switzerland, the Grand
Caymans. California and elsewhere on the letterhead of Roheno
&amp;,nedlcto. the Philippine ambassador to Japan . That list, tilled
"summary," appears to be dated
October 1977.
Several papers referred to what
appeared to be requests for permis·
slon to sell commodities in the
Philippines i n return !o r

lo the mone\' in 1he various banks

described as "sources " !or funds
used against the loan.
The document showed $15 million

"donations."
One document was an aide's note
to Marcos transmitting "the l'IY to
cash ... check of the accumulated
donations" of 712,00J pesos from a
firm sreklng sugar sales rights. The
aide said the company president
would make another :m.ooo pesos
"donation" when the permission
was granted.
It currently takes 20.6 pesos to
equal the dollar.
Congressional sources have sug·
gested Marcos may have used front
corporations to hide kickbacks and
shunt money to his various accounts spread around the globe.
One of the documents included a

March 16, 1974, statemeu1 on
presidential office letterhead listlng
8 million pesos lndlecksdrawn ooa
series of banks with the note,
"received the following checks for
deposit !rom Philippines Veterans
Development Corporation ."
That finn and another, Herdls
Group lnc., run by close Marcos
associate H.T. Disini, also are listed
as having received loans from
Ambassador &amp;,nedlcto .
A Herdls memo tltled "international operations" and apparently
intended for Marcos. said $9.9
million was used from "Westlng·
house commissions" to finance
overseas ventures.

Other papers showed a "side
agreement" to a sugar deal in
which a royer "agreed that $5
million will be deposited" with a
Paris bank Into the "PhUJppllle
Veterans Spec ial Account."
:
Also included Is a 19'1'J receipt on
the stationery of Marcos's !ornter
military chief of staff, Gen. Fabian
Ver, with a signature that appears
to read "Michael Keen," In wh{ch
"Keen" agreed to accept 14,468
pesos "In settlement of all outstanding matters forever between myself and the family of H.E.
Ferdinand E. Marcos." There was
no tunher indication of what the
cash settlement was tor.

Central America. would not reverse the decision.
"Last nigh! , late in the night.
Panama notUied the United States
government that after serious
discu ssions, we would nor accept
former President Marcos In Pa nama." Delvalle said Friday.
Marcos, his wife Imeld a. and an
entourage of aoout 40 people were
set to fly from Hickam Air Force
Base In H.1waii to Panama Thu rsday night. But at the 11th hour the
Panamanian government balked.
In ManU a Friday, Vice Presrdent
Laurel said the Philip-

Americ a.··

Regan· s re&gt;marks wrre contra·
dictC'd

American nation lnsis rs its dffision

Fr id a\· b\· Panamanian

PrPS1denr Prc•sidenr Eric Arturo
l'X·' aile.
· Marcos wilt definitetv not

to deny entry to the deposed
Phi lippine leader is finaL
WhiTe House chief of staff Donald

romr...

Regan said in a tC'lfi'\'ision inren·icw

fi·iday. ·we·re still talking to
: Panama about taking the Marcases," but he added they are
welcome to remain in tht' United
States indefinitely
"There's silll a possibility" that

'

r»h·c~Jle

satd. " It was

decided in th&lt;' best in terests of the
r oun1ry not to ex{Xlse Pa nama to
such a thing."
Tht• Panamanian president sard
thC' d('(' ision to dPny Marcos asylum
was made for S('CUtity reasons and
tha t P anama, a close U.S. ally in

.

~
.
'I~

•..;

pines would cut of! diplomatic
relations with Panama if It accepted Marcos. U.S. officials said
they do not expect Marcos to leave
Hawa ii any time soon.
Regan said that "a t this parttcutar moment " no countries other
thanPanamawereheingcontacted
about accepllng the deposed ruler,
who has been living In exile in
Hawaii slnce fleeing the Phillpplnes
Feb. 26.
State Depanment spokesman
Charles Redman said S&lt;'\lerai
countries had' been contacted by the
administration at Marcos' request.

By JACK BEARY
CHICAGO (UP! I Soviet
schoolgirl Katerina Lycheva wlll
take time out from her five-&lt;:ity tour
for peace In memory of the late .
Samanthli Smith today to meet
Ronald McDonald and eat an
American fast-food lunch.
Katya, as she Is known to her
friends, requested that she he
al lowed to set aside her peacemakIng duties to eat at a McDonald's
restaurant.
The !ifth-graaer from Moscow Is
scheduled to visit a children's
career fair in downtown Chicago
before walking to the restaurant.
Katya, 11, Is being accompanied
by her mother. Marina , Star Rowe,
10, of San Francisco. and Patricia
Montandan. founder of the Children
as The Peacemakers Foundation.
on her trip, which Includes stops in
New York, Los Angeles, Houston
and Washlng1on, D.C.
A delega tion of the Soviet peace
committee is a lso makln g the trip.
Katya's trip Is In memory of
Samantha Smith. the Maine school·
girl who vis ited the Soviet Union in
1983. Sama nlha died in a plane
crash last year with her father.
On Friday. Katya ate a breakfast

,j

a•

grammar school Friday
teacher Kevin McCann
gives a malh lesson. Katerina Is oo a two-week peace
tour of the United Stales. (UI'I)

Judge receives 12-year jail
term for court corruption

and PX tort ion la st .Jul\. was thr fLft h

r;;aid thf' r ase• "niPs, I thi nk. for a
stiff ~f· n tPnn' ...
" :Yl r. 01:-.rm s~m s to IF a nicf'
rn &lt;:m. Rut h(' suC'CumiX'd to wea kiwss. and l' m surf' that' s truf'."
n:os?knw&lt;;kJ &lt;;;Jid. ··But in no wa~·
r&lt; ln .r ou justify 1~ conduct or Mr.
Olw n.
He has disgraced all
ruur1s b~· his co nduct."

fo1mrr cirruit ju dgt • to
·l:J:' corwirt rd in Grr.vlonl. r\ tol&lt; l l of
::-.o Jl''Op!P. including nine juclgos

Olson plra drd for lrnirncy 'I
ha,·c had 1IXl sleepless nights, " he
saicl. "I ha,·e to start bv apologizi ng

: h;wr· l)f'('n i ncl ictrd so fon ·

to

WJ~ ·np

\\ . Olson was ..,.-.nrrnC'f'd tu

12 yf'ars in p rison . onf'nf !h(' '-l tfh ''-i

scntt•nrrs handr d •..lrm11 ln tilt'
federal OP&lt;•ration Cn•.\ lo rd prolr
of ruun rnnuption

Olson. ol who plrarl•'tl gu ut)· to
c har grs of m&lt;Jil fraud, rackc t('('ring
.currr nt or

..l.ttnmr.v .lJmcs .J.

Cosll ·l l•~.

·11.

:v.-ho admrrrcd givi ng at Jc•.ISt &amp;l.IH•
·in kickbacks to Olson. rccrin'CI o~n
· R-~'f'&lt;lr S.f'nl f'ncr Frid a.\ following

J

·day long hea ring heforr 1j S DLs . trict .Judge Stanley Roszkowski.

~nu c~nd

al l the ot tl&gt; r judges and

.111 rlx · other hiiiY&lt;'rs for all rhr
discrrdir I havr brough t on you
I don· r have words sufficient
f'nnug h to lf'll ~ou how so rry I am ."
Olson was also S('fltrn(."('d to fin•
\mrs ~mbatio n "nd finrd $:11.001.

Cosiello was sentenced to fiveyears
probation with a stipulat ion ro
undergo psychiatric treatment.
Prosecutors had asked Rosz·
kowskl to impose a minumum
sent ence &lt;i 11 years on Olson and a
substantial prison sentence for
Costello.
During a two-hour presentation
that Included a lmost JJ minutes of
excerpts from more than 200 hours
of tap&lt;' recorded ronversations, the
government outUned what II called
"the worst klnd of official corruption" In Olson's rourti'OOm .
The secret taping of conversa·
lions in Olson 's chambers ar
Narcotics Coon is believed toherhe
first time in hisiOJ'Y !hat a judge's
chambers had been bull!led .

:Captured neo-Nazi accepts
:. extradition to Seattle

•.
'.
By RENEE HAINES
. SAN ANTON IO I UPI I - Kl·
·chard Scutarl, described as one of
:the top leaders of the nl'O-Na? i
,: group accused of murdering "
:· Denver radio persona Itry and

con-

·:splring to overthrow the U.S.
:: government, has passively agreed
:- to be extradited to Seattle.
·: Scutarl, 3S, who was arrested
··Wednesday at the Brake Check
· :shop where he had worked since
-': September, was ordered Friday
:·held without oond until his cross·:country transfer.
· Scutarl, who was placed on t.hr
::FBI's 10 most wanted list in

•

'

Y.premlx&gt;r. told authorities after
his arrest he would h11 ve preferred
to dir In hart Jr.
" I lound a letter recently written
b.v :vlr. Scutari !hat said he wanted
to die for hi s beliefs as an Aryan
wa rrior."· Parrick Webb. a Sa n
Fra ncisco FBI agent. testKied
Friday. The lett er was found in a
search of Scutari's San Antonio
apartment.
"Following his arrest Wednesday, he Informed the agents here he
would have preferred to die In a
~n fi g hl. " Webb said.
~ut ar i did not resist when

'

Athono-13-0.00 on S. R. 13
in Athens. Gallia. Hocking.
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
NoiM, Vinton end Waahing-

He said, "our conversations "1th
these countries wlll continue," but
declined to identify them.
The Asian Island nation of
Singapore has been mentioned in
some news reports as one possible
destination. But officialS said Frlday It was vei'Y unlikely he would
move there. Spain publicly rejected
asylum for Marcos this week.
Marcos and 88 others flew to
Hickam aboard a U.S. Air Force
jet, following the dramatic collapse
of his 20-year-old regime. President
Reagan afered Marcos safe haven
to avoid' bloodshed .In the

By T.R. EASTIIAM
WASH INGTON tUPi i - Fed era l R('S('rve Board Vice Chairman
Preston Martin told reponers he
was resigning from the central
bank for personal reasons. nor
because of a dispute with Fed chief
Paul Volcker, and said he believes
the ooard retains "a high degree of
crrolbillty."
A highly publ icized conflict over
the Fed's lates t cur in the discount
rat.&gt; - In which four Reagan
appointees led by Martin at first
voted against Volcker to cut the
ra te - "absolutely played zero
ro le" in his departu re. Man in said
Friday at a news conference.
Eventually the discount rate the rare the F'ed charges commercial ba nks - was lowered by a 6-0
vote, after Volcker had arranged
tor West Germany , Japan and the
Netherland s to do much the same
thing fi rst.
Martin . 61. said he made his final
decision to resign !rom the board,
effective the end of April, earlier In
the day . He said he was returning to
San Francisco and a private
practice in !he area of financial
services.
President Reagan wa s informed
by chief of staff Donald Regan . who
was to ld by Man in helore tlx' late
afternoon news conterenre.

Philippines.
"He's st ill a guest of the president
of the United States ln this
country," Regan said. "We promised him safe haven and we're
going to abide by that, as bng as he
wants."
Since then, however, Marcos's
tar-flung wealth, es timated by the
new ManUagovernmentatup to $10
billion, has become the subject of a
congressional investigation, S&lt;'\1·
era! grand jury inquiries and civil
suits.
As a result , the Marcoses have
said they want to relocate.

.,•

Project length - 0.00
leet or 0.00 milo.

· M.. Ohio Stondord Time ,
. Tuosdoy, April 8. 1986, for
improwementa in :
Gallia . Hocking, Meiga.
Monroe, Morgan, Nobht and
W11hington Counties. Ohio.
on warioua routea end IIC ·
tiona, the City of Mariette

· ond t!. Villogea of Botto Voi~Y

and Clerlngton, by herbicidalaprayiilg.

Work longth- 0.00 mltoo.

"If God wanted us to live
within our means, he
wouldn't have given us
credit cards."

"The date Mt: tor completion of thia work aha II be 11

101 forth in tho bidding pro·
poul .u

Eoch bidder shall bo re quired to file with his bid a
certified check Of caahier'a
check for an amount equal
to five per 01nt of hla bid, but
• In no event mort~ thin fifty
-:Jhou11nd dollara. or 1 bond
for ten per cent of hil bid.
pay•bla to the Director.

Biddoro mulloppty, on tho

proper forms, for qualiflcationa at le11t ten devs prk,
to the date set for opening
bida in accord1nc:e with

1

Card of Thanks

The family of Roy Ellis
would like to thanll
neighbors and relativts
lor their eiipressions of
sympathy at our loss.
Also Mluld like to
thank Velllrans Memorial Hospital, ~willl FUneral Home and the
Rev. Kemetlt Wilkinson.

M1111ret Ellis
Ann Ward

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Fra..:es

Spri•r wishes ID ex-

tend their ptitude and
tltarts to all those family, frieoos, ,.lhbm
and others who JIIOvided food, support,
pr.1yers, floweiS, financial assista..:e, et. dlfil1 our time of sorrow.
God richly bless
~u all. Aspeeiallovt m
the nurses in ICU at
Holzer Hospital, Addison FWB Ch11th, Good
News Baptist ChtJCh,
Rodney U.M. ChtJCh,
our pastoiS, Fred, JCIIn
aoo Gene Wood, nl
Jean and Bill llaiT.
Thank you from
Clarence, Edward,

. •Y

and Martln said he had not
recommencrd one.
··; believe the functioning of this
l:oard continues with a high degree
of credibility," Marlin, dressed In
banker's gray. told reporters in the
Fed 's ornate board room.
Martin said he had been assured
by Reagan administration officials
that the president wanted him to
serve a second tenn as vice
chairman but did not say whether.
Volcker had asked him to ~ay on.
"''m not going to comment on
that," he responded. "You can ask
the cha!Jman ."

ud Eric Sprinltr
and Faye Goody.

Public Notice
Chapter liZ&amp; Ohio Rtvilld
Codo.

Plena end apecifications
•• on file in tho Doportmlllt
ofTransportetion .ndtN of·

fico of tho Diltrlct Deputy
Director.
The Director raurvea the
right to rt;ect any end all
bid I .

Worron J . Smith,
Director

March 23 and 30

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE

TN- of Guy., To..,.
!hip wll .• ..,.a.t inti II tho -!hip
fire doport·
"*II.

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
March 14, 1986
Controct Sotoo
legit Copy No. 81·3tl
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sutod propoult wilt be
received at the office of the
Director of tho Ohio Deport·
ment of Tranaporte1ion. Col umbus, Ohio, unti110 :00 A.

2

In memory of
my husband

IVAN FIFE

"Lord, it's me apin"
So11111tintts he'd sit
down 011 a 101 or lettn
1pinst 1 ITN , but normllly u I ttcall it, he'd
pt down on one kMe.
And how Istillllllltlll-

ti""

ber tilt
en my s•in
1s Did would 1lwlys
start his pra)'lr witll
"Lonl it's mt qain."

Dnt

)'Ill,

ltn:h 22,

hiS piSied Inti lOIII

••Y·

since Daddy wwnt
wou now J still miss the
tllincs he uStcl to do 1nd
say, but I c•ss Ill is
hi~ in I hit IIIW iloftlt
hu found with 111 the
••Is · sincinc close
I fOUnd.

Someday I'm &amp;oinc to
mttl ltim in thlt pllct
tlt1t's frtt from sin, 100
it's 111 because our
Daddy prawd "lord it's
meapln.'r

In 1ovin1

I

We espec ially would like
to thank the followlna:
, The dedicated TIIISIS
. and nurses aidn al Holz~r
HoSPital (4 East) and of Pr·
TMCriSt Care Ctnter (Znd
floor).
1llt ltiiiiJ Piston of the
CorttmunitJ IIIIo ..., 10
WIY faittrfUl - tlrt run.
lltt 11111ir prareri al the
•~thtrs end Sisters In
Christ.
· 1llt lltendinJ plr,siclans,
Hpecially Dr. Gtnlld Vallet,
'. ;ritnds. and
Neipbors.

RESIGNS- Federal Reserve Board Vice Chalnnan P!"eTTIGn Manil
oald Friday he wn.• leaving the board at the end of April ilr [lei'IIOnal
reasons and not because of his recent dispute with Fed chief Paul
Volcker. (UPI)

'

Wt would also like tontend our dtlptst hHrtfelt
· apprteiatlon for all !holt
friands and nei&amp;hbors who
sent ftowtrs and foo~.
Her family,
Kly Bmer,
lttty Adkins,
r Cr~~~t~ns

memory-of
Calvin (Shorty)
Caldwell,
who ....
. ued away
,...
one year aao.

March 25, 1985.

A sad aoo lonely y•r
his plsstd, since our

1,.. 1 sorrow fill,

The shock we received
....1 ~.
1111
""' uoY, we I It·
nttmbtr Will.
Ht bore his p1in in silenca, Yet we know lit

suffered SO,
And knowlnc tlltt madt
it usier. When ..
hid to see him co.

A ha pP, dhOllltH

..

one•,

tnJOJI , OW SWH
th• memory still.
!kit dtltlt htsleft I lonel·ness tilt -rid Clft

~VII flil. ""

Yurs co on, mttltorIt 1
linpr, Always tender,
fond 100 true,
Thtrt Is not 1 . , dtlr
lovtd one, thlt WI do
nottllin• of ~ou.
We ftiOitm for htm In siltnct, No t)'ll can
see us Wltp,
1411 Mlny ulltnttNr Ia
shtd,wliiltothtrstrt
ISINp.
Sadly missed by
wl ft, faMily lnd

to the date set for open itg
bids in accordlnCI with

Chlptor 5525 Ohio Revised
Codo.

Plena 1nd specifications
••on fila in the Department
of Transportation and the offica of the District Deputy
Director.

The Director reaerves the
right to rejec::t 1ny end all
bids.
Warren J . Smith.
Director

March 23 end 30

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
VILLAGE OF CHESHIRE
ANIMALS AT lARGE. No
person being the owner of

oontrol of the same. lhlll
permit such animal or fowl
to run at large in any street,
lene, elley, market place or
public ground of tho Vi liege
of Cheshire, or permh &amp;lch

Athans. Gotlto, Hoc:lllng,

3 Announcements

ANNOUNCEMENT

In Memoriam

tiona at ..1st ten deys prior

improYemente m:

Tilt . .111 Httlth llotnl of
Gollia, JocUoo. l Mtip Coun1111 Ml attnooiiCfll it Is lltl·
iftc " - ' ' for tilt prowbioo
of _ . itllhh..icts it tilt
-to Corrtrlcb
Mrlled
-•oitywll....llo.
cits llho will lfl'owido ... 01
"""'of tilt fofiOIIIOIUrYicts.
l. Coonulina/PsychotherIPI Strvict
2. Oi~postic Asstssment

.-

Smict
3. ltdicltiool!SMitic Tr•t·
t~Sawtt-

TrUtllllll {Pirtial
H..,itahzation)
I. Illy A&lt;tivrtiH Strvico
7. Hotlioe Smico
!.

~~~~

a. r..,...., s...~c.

9. hsulontial Tr•lmeot
Scfvlct (ioctudinlsllort/lonl
ltrm)
!0. ••-ill S.pport s•.
w1ct (ioctodi'l liC, hs~tt,
fostw Cn. Crisis. Suptl'lised
Apts.)
I ~ .I
II. CotrurounitJ ......,,.
Strvict
12. lliiMitilltioo Service
13. Case lan11t11111t s...
vlco

.

.

14. Caosoltllloo Service
15. hrtlal Htalt. Edut~·

tloo Sorvict

har·

Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio, to sell tor cash the fol·
lowing collateral:
1978 Toyota , Mfr'a. aer~l

Give piano leuona in my home
to adult students. Also te.ch
c:f:lording and tran~ . C1ll
614 -992-MOJ .

raiS...ict
ll. F01101ic IWIIuation Str·
viet

Priority will bo liven to thou
.,.llcMts wlloll/oposols
ld&lt;l1111 tile otHI
"IPICiai
clitftt potNIIIioa" 01 llho
wil •lrwr llfYicts in undtr·

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

anirnel or fowl to go t410n or
enter any prNate yard, tot or
enck:Jsure. Fellureto comply
with this tow It &amp;~bjoct to o

penalty.

Wlhor S. Lucu.
Mayor,

Vitlogo of Choohlro
MARCH 23
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Special mooting of tho VI·
loge of Choahiro, Cheohiro
T - i p .,d Addlton Town·
ollip wift be httd

- y.

March 26. 1911&amp; 117:30 p.m.
ot Cheohlro Vlttege Hon to dit·
cua ch.,goa In cable 1V rt•
tom.

lolo M. Snyder,
Cterk-Tr•surer

Villege of Cheshire, Ohio

MARCH 23

3 Announcements

•rc

ltortally Dis·

1111.,.

GOLF GRIP
SPECIAL

Rubber Golf Grips
teplaced $2.00 each.

=1M

............. I0 t~
....
critlria.--•

IIWiwfY

~;',.:,":.~..~~
-.~ Olllllitutect

~
'1
~~
lrtr·'--......
. istdt~ ~••to,

~

..,.

... ....

Ohio.
Tilt Apncy thttl edllttt to 1t1
Ftdtral ud Stat• Laws ond
...
iltloosM•ltrillrollw
u Iitty ''ply 10
facli~IH.
OP ·
11111oos ""' -111 lttoith
~u:r~t~: tncJudJ••
""11- 1
'"" EoopJo, .. nt Oppor~~~.. •acistration, Ctrt"i·
cotioo tod Lktosuro o1 Proltnioftal Stiff and flcilitits
Sbtt 1' 1111111 c..,

=

~""":.,.. tts·

••
~lllity;

11st..,
tNtl-*
.ail

=

til ft.
rlports in......,,.
• ......, ~ '1
:Z....
l.OI ..POII' .. ..

will

be held

no. TE51640760.

The Farmers Ban it and
Sa wings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio reserves the right
to bid at this sale, and to
withdraw the above collateral prior to aale. f11ther,
the Farmers Bank and Sav-ings Company reserves the

LAWN MOWING. quality. de ·
pendlbleatfVice, klw ratn. call
614 -446 -0684 ..,enlnga.

right to reject any or all bids

21

FinanLJd I

submitted.

(3)

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAllEY PU8USHING CO . reconvnends thlt you
do bulin•• with peopl1 you
know. end NOT to Mnd money
throu~ the m1il IM'ttH you haYe
lnv ... igated thl oft..-ing .

23. 26. 27, 28 , 4tc

Announcemenl s

11

--------The family of LO . " Dee "
Hartinger wi1he1 to th11nk ev•
ryone for the aympethy and
IUpport extended to ua 11 the
time of hia duth. Specillthanlu
to : The Thomas D1rat F•mily.
Mtddlepol1 Emergency Squ.t.
Rawting1-C011u Blower Fun ·
eral Home, The AmeriCin Le·
gion, Rev . AI Han10n and T~e
Middlepon Church of Chrilt.
-loWe would like 10 eX1end our
sincere gratitude to everyone
who hat helped in 10 m1ny ways
sin ce our ho me was destroyed
by tire on M1rch 1at. A 1pecial
thank you to Mother, who look
ua in wh1n we hid no horN to go
to . Thank• again and may God
billl YOU all. Kelth, Gloria,
Kevin , 1nd Loren• Oiler.

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and l fMiflg machine
repair, pan s, and aupptln . Picll
up and deli11ery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner , one half mile up
G110r9" CrMk Rd . Call &amp;U -

446-0294.

If this Is yesterdays ~-. vw
may be too late to join the niW
Slim Up and Uve program
Umlted space avalllble. Call

9

e1•-&amp;s&gt;-411ez. t1&amp; .oo ....

We pay tllh tor late model clean
uaed can.
J im Mink Chev .-Oids Inc .
Bill Gene John ton

614-.. 8-3&amp;72

WANT EO TO BUY used wood &amp;
coal heatert. SWAIN'S FUANI·
TURE , 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Ga lt lpo ·
lia. Can 814·"8·3169 .

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer uaed can; . Smith
Buick -Pontiac. 1911 E11tem
Ave .. Gatlipotia . C11ll 614-446 ·

2282.

Buying daily gold . silver coina.

ringJ, jewelry, Jterling ware. old
colna, large c urrency. Top ptl·
tH. Ed. Burken Berber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 61 4·

992-3476.

Went.:! old pianos. Paying
&amp;20 .00 and 140.00 each . First
flo or only. Write giving directions. Witten Piano• Bo11. 188
Sardis. Ohio 43946 . Call 614 483-1606.

- - - - ----·lc-

Wooden filing cabinet and de~k .
preferebly olk. also 1n oak
dining room .,11e . Cell 614 -

948 ·2093 efter 6:00 or enytime
WHkendJ.

4

Giveaway

304-675-1604

JOIEOU.l9r.
V'-·'SOI4'
AEJriTAi. U3l..OS

..... Cin&gt;lno .....

""'*'- ~- ­

"-"-.:: Clll br 111st Ol dea.~!. tiv:l
ol r..-lhlt

'"*

meet~

sp&amp;c1iled '*Ids

0.0...

Clll l - 800-~·8521
HI00·~ -&amp;420

In NC call

1"--------"t

ACK Regiltertd Engliah Sprin·
Spaniel to good horN n
r;ountrv with rvom to run. For
intormatfon call 614-388-9904 .

ger

Fr'• houae broken kitten e. 7
months old , co me1 co~letely
fumiahed with litter tray, ltter
and c at food . Call 614-245 -

6320.

Female Cocker Splnlel. Whtte
and avocado . Wormtd and
lhOtl. Chtrlll Aelker . Call 614 ·

992·3894.

1111 year old, full bloodtd male
collie. Black-white·tlll . Need•
room to run. C.ll 614 ·742·

2386.

Old

pickup

8832 .

truck .

The

HOW DOES A MONTHLY PAY·
CHECK . 8ducadonalauiattnce.
life in•.~rance and ratirement
benefita .o und7 Where else but
the ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
can get e part time job with 10
many lull time benefita1 304·

&amp;76 -3960 "'1 -800·M2 ·3819

br111d ltdi• . chlldrlftl , meterrity. lerve sire or comblnMion
app1rel store. Min Ohio will
J*SOnllty api)Rr at ~r grand
opening! 114.176 to 121.175
co~lete . Call anytime 1 ·404·

469· 4438 .
Will place cig.-.tte machines
Good commiuiona. Call 304·

n3-68&amp;t.

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS · Refin~ce to
low fiud rate. Uaeeqt.~ity for an-v
p..npoH. Leader Mona~ge Co ..

614-692-306t .

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

23

Need baby sitter in my home.

Professional
Services

19 37.

Wanted reliable baby sittltf in
He nderso n area, needs own
transportation and have fle•ibl e
hours . 304 ·675 ·4436 .
To 1811 Avon in any
304-675 -1429 .

PIANO TUNING AND R!P41R .
red itco\ter your plena's beautiful
tone. call toda¥. Wsrds Key ·

board, 30•·17!5-5600 or 675 ·

382• .

area. Cttl

Real Esi&lt;Jit!

18 Wanted to Do
31

EmpiJJyJIIen l
St&gt;r vJce s

Will de telephone -Jork . buline11
end res iden1 11a1ellation or repalr. heve experience 1nd rater·
HOM . Call 614 -446 -7782 eny ·
time . Also will (t) odd [Obi .

Help Wanted

11

MAK E MORE MONEV I Earn
weekly co mm inio ns with our
pro fitable lin e a f advertisin(l
calanders, pens . caps. and
jackets. Halpful aala ~811 , a
Toll -Free Menage Center. and
other greet Hl1ing tool1 . All
while being your own bou. No
Investment. No oollecttona. Full
or pa rt tima. Our 77th year.
Wr it e Kevin P111k1, Newton,
Iowa , Oept. 0 1726 , Newton,
Iowa 60208 .

Galllpo1il Ferry area , 304-675 -

The lzaek Watton Club will have - - - - - - - - their annual members and feml- AVON c1llfor information about
lty covered plate tupper Mon - aelling Awn products, eam up to
day, March 24th 11 ?p.m. Bring 50% profit. Call 614·446-21 66 .
awn drinks and eating uthMIJ.
Club will furn ish baked ham .,d Need babylitter: metu111 &amp; decoffM. We will also heve our pendlbla. Call 814-446 -013 7
annual fun auction afttf supper. lf11f5PM.
All members are urgtd to bring
·"';::"..::..:'
'" •:.:;"_U
::_I_o.:.
b•:_•:_•.:.••_ro_ntd
-- off. Brick &amp; black maton'a expe·lc- rienced . Ctll 1514 -BJ&amp; -15333 tor
lat ua calor your Eeater egg1. hterview.
Call Burlingham Church l.ctiel
AUitilllfY 614 -992 -15316 or Cerataker wanted for apt .
81•·698 -1366 .
co~lex · 10 ~ve in . Call 304&amp;75-5104.
Singlet introduction a. fr•appllcl1ton , Peraonat Touch tnttoduc- Will do blbysitting in my home
tk&gt;n, P . 0 . Box 6636 , Charte•- tor working parents. Call 814·
t on , W . Va . 25 302 , 387-7873.
SINGLES: largnt clu b tn W11t
Virginia. Statewide. All liVes .
Almo tt all counties: H.H .C .• Box
81 . lelv11y, WV 2687tl .

Lat Mill Ohio end Martanna
F11hlons help vou op., a top

Help Wantod

Wanted To Buy

614 -256 -1772 .
The Confidential ConnectkJn , a
professionJI datmg registry . At.
3, Box 21 3. Athena, Ohio .

Business

Opportunity

Ftlrther, the above collateral will be sold in the oondltlon h is in with no expressed or implied warren·
tin given .

lfOW THRU !lARCH 30

I
3. s.-strroca Abu""
"
MAKE MORE MONEY!
.,!-.Victims or o.....t~ VioEem wMkly commiNions
1
wkh oor Profklbte line
5. oNer Ado its
of Advortiolng Colendllro,
I. MJIU oo
Pena, Capa. and Jeckttl.
7. Vtttrrr~l
Helpful uleold11o. o Toil·
1 ,.,..m
F,... Mtl&amp;lll Center and
Appticotiofts .,., bo Mtrrintd
other grMt llillng toolt.
IIJ tiore by CIIIIOI (614) 446A'tt whila being your own
J021 "' NyiN picttd up 11
bou. No Investment . No
1ttt loardoftice1t 414 Second
Coltoctlont. Full 0&lt; Port
.,...,,, ..... 202. Gallipolis.
nme. Our 77th Vur. Wrhe
Olrlo.
Kovln Petko. NEWTON
MFG. COMPANY, Dept.
lo tceordlllet with our 8oant
POiicJ, I!IPiiclliona •n bo
01198 , Newton, IOWI
,_to
or·
50 2 0 8
poiallolll structwt. Gtlll'at·
1..._ _ _ _·
procuds:• lftd

spocl•....,.

lic sale

1-304-727 -8-&lt;3 • .

Gel on our list now•

!Ptcial Cli"t Populstions111

Notice Is hereby given that
on Saturday, March 29.
t9B6, at tO :OO a.m., 1 pub-

bouring or hawing cherge or

11. Pmtrttioo Service
17. JolorNtion snd Rsfar·

dtllrllll a :
t. Sevmiy

CARD OF THANKS
llte family of MIINTA
AVANELLE BALL (llho llf·
fered from an txtendtd II
ror illness) would like to
thank and uprHs tan
sincere apprttiation to all
tho many aenerous peowho htlptd htr and
PY·t u• support in 10 many
•rs durin&amp; these rears.

at 105

Spring cl11r1i'lg time agiMn? FuU
or Plrl· time fur homeoroHict. 1f
you ere Mtting relllbilhy, ho·
nasty , end llllparielllce. C1H
614 · 441 · 8201 Of 614· 258 ·
1869 . Days or w.nings.

PU BUC NOTICE

Biddero muotopp!v, on tho
pr-r formo, for quolifico · 1 Card of Thanks

any animal or fowt, or

Wodc-v. Mordl Zt,

MAACH 23

Work IAngth - various
feet or warlout mile.
Pavement Width- wariea.
"The date aet for completion of thit work ahlll be •
set torth in the bidding Pf'O·
pout .''
Each bidder shall be re quired to file with his bid e
certified check or cashier'•
check for an amount equal
to five Per cent of hit bid, but
in no evant more than fifty
thouNnd dollen, or a bond
for ten per cent of his bid .
peylble to the Director.

M.. Ohio Standard lime,
Tuoodlly. April 8, 1186. for

111:00 a.m.

Sadly missed by wour
wile, Outer Inti
Childrtn

New prison planned for
Cincinnati suburb
ClNClNNi\Tl !UPIJ - A $14
million state prison to house
inm ates In their final six weeks of
captivity is being planned for
subu rban Sharonville.
It wou ld Jx&gt; one of four so- called
"pre- release prisons" In Ohio. The
other three are operating or being
oollt In Cleveland , Columbus and
Toledo.
The Ohio Depanment or Corrections is negotiating to buy 20 acres
of farmla nd - lust east of
Interstate 75 near the ool'der of
Hamilton and Butler count Jes- for
the prison.
SharonvUle Mayor John llowlln
wasn't happy when he heard aoout
the state plans.
"It 's within a ha lf mile of a
residential area," he said . "But,
l'm listening with an open ll"Jnd."

offtcers arrested him A "cham·
hered and CO&lt;'ked" automatic pis tol
was found in his car at the shop,
agents said.
·.. In h(l; apartment were three
sub-machine guns loaded. an un·
loaded rifle, a loaded and cocked .45
by his bed and a loaded .308 in a
dresser drawer, " Webb said.
At the hearing, Scutarl signed a
waiver clearing the way for his
transfer to Seattle, where he faces
federal charges of conspiring to
violate anti· racketeering Jaws ,
transpo&gt;11ng stolen money across
state lines a nd harboring a fugitive .

There was oo word on a successor

Faat Dry paint for center
linn and adge linea.

Sealed propoul1 will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Department of Transportation, Columbus, OhHJ. until 10:00 A.

of bacon and eggs with 25 pubUc the message In the exhibits.
school students before visiting the
" It's about the work tor peace,
city's Peace Museum ·and the and how women work for peace,"
LaSaile Language Academy and said the Moscow resident, In clear
m ee t i n g Mayor Harold English and without help from her
Washing1on.
Soviet Interpreter.
Katya presented Washington
Then, through an interpreter,
with a drawing done by her Soviet Katya added, "l thlnk K oomeone
classmates on the theme of peace made a ca ll to all women all over
and mayor gave her a bracelet with the world, l 'm sure everyone would
a tiny repUca of the Chicago come (to see the museum) and
Picasso statue and a Chicago Bears there would be no more war."
teddy hear.
The musuem's curator gave
At the language academy, Katya Katya a T-shlrt reading "Give
visited several classi'OOms and sat Peace a Chanre," and explalned
In on a social studies class.
the lyrics came from a song by the
She told the children she wants late John Lennon.
peace for the entre world and sa id ,
Katya was presented with a
"I wish to he friends with all people talking teddy bear at breakfast and
in the world ."
spoke of her dream for peace
Katya sat wide-eyed as students between the United States and the
thumbed tlu·ough a history text Soviet Union.
took. Through an interpreter she
"I'm very glad to come here,"
said , ")must co nfess. I don't know Katya said. "I wish you blue sky,
that much aoout America, but I bright sun and peace."
hope to learn much ."
One student, sixth-grader ReShe then joined her new class- becca Black, 11, said she hoped the
mates for hot dogs and potato chips trip would bring the countries
in the school ca feteria .
closer.
Katya seemed impressed by the
"Maybe ooeday we'll set Ue oown
exhibit s chronicling the efforts of and he friends," she said. "It'$
worldwide peace activists a! city's impressive that they would send a
Peace Mu seum.
girl from the fifth grade to
She !old reponers she understood represent their country."

"The president accepted the
resignation wit h regret and ex pressed apprf&lt;Ciarion tor a job well
done ." said spokes man AI
Brashear.
Volcker, reacting to Manin 's
resignation. said the vice dlairman
"Is a man of strong and independ·
enr views as befits the l:oard .
"He has pJ ayed a leadership role
in many aspects of the system's
work. " Volcker said . "His contributions willlx• missed. but we are glad
he will be av ailable for m unsel In
the future ."

ton Countilo. by applying

Legol Copy No. 88-328
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

Fed Vice Chairman Martin resigns

in srntrncing Olson , Roszkowski

Monroe, Morgan,
Noble. VInton and Welhington Counties, Ohio. on

Contract Salea

18 Wanted to Do

Public Notice

Meiga,

Columbua, Ohto

•

HOCKF'ORD. Ill 'L'Pl 1
F'umwr Cook Coun t\· Circuit Jurlg&lt;'

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Russian schoolgirl visits States

.L

RUSSIAN GIRL - Katerina l&lt;fcheva. ll, (right
foreground I sits in da.o;s with student• at the LaSaOe

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by

LAFF-A·DAY

Public Notice

March 14 . 1986

Pana ma will accept Marcos. Regan S«id on ARC's "Good Morning

The

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

Panama insists decision to deny Marcos residency is final

By United Press International
Reagan administrat ion officia ls
say they are pressing Panama ro
grant asylum to a restless Ferdi·
nand Marcos. bur The Central

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Gll1ipolia Parkt Dep1rtment

will be liking applic1tiona for •
2:5 week JNIOnal park malntan·
enCII worker, minimum wage.
Applicants mu•t be over 18
v-ara. hold valid driven licente
and t..ve bale akilla in uae of
hand to ols 1nd equipment.
Apply 11 tha City M1n11gers
Office. !518 Seco nd Ave. E.O.E
The 0 .0 . Mclnty'te Park District
ill r-.wacceptlng 1ppllcetions lor

Summer Recre1tlon Leldltl' and
Aide po1Hion1. Con teet the Park
Diltrtc1. tlr lt ftoor of the courthouM. 01' by Cl111ng 614 -448 4112 , llll. 2156 .
Full time RN position IVIilable
oontec:t Plnec:r81t Cere Centar,
5515 JackiK)O Pike, GaHipoli•.
Oh. No pbone calla plene.
Country n~.~ slct_.s w1nted for
country bind. Cell 614 -387-

0213.

AVON Sell Avon 11art up fee
FREE . Limited tlme . Call 814·

304-876· .. 8-3368.
11$.040 1158,230 - yr. Now Hiring. C1tl
Government Joba .

801 -e&amp;?-eooo Ext . R-98015 tor

current federal list.

8

Homes for Sale

6 room. blth. utMity p.ge,
cantril heat. window atr condi ·
lion . Cell 614 -992 -5204.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, MARCH 29, 1986
10:00 A.M.

Located 22 miles South of Gallipolis and 19 miles
North of Huntington on State Route 7at Crown City,
Ohio.
We are not qu itting. we aro sellina the followina items to
make room fo r our mnding business:
Ford 2610 d1esel PS. 130 hrs .. k&gt;o:led , MF240 dresel loaded
w/eltras Ford 4000 d1esel: Ford llOO d1esel
JO 1050 MFWO w/#75 1oade&lt; &amp; #1550 backhoe, JO Jl8 1awn &amp;
ga~den tractor w/ 46" mowe&lt; . 16 HP Annen s lawn &amp; garden
tractor w/snow blade &amp;54" mower. new 8' bush hog d•sc, 3Cub
Jractors. Pony tractor w!S' belly mower. N: "G" tractor w/ Cullr·
vators. new bush hog wood splitter. new r+dmg lawn mowers, a1r
compressor. 2 Salamanders, dn ll press. electnc wetder. acetelyene ga uges . 2 barn lans. forge. several hydraulic jacks, hre
change&lt;, t•re balancer. Porta Pt&gt;wer. 2 banery ch a~ge&lt;S . bench
v1se. well pump s w/tanks . 2 mgme analyzers. electnc motors,
d ~ner bell. auto-body eQUip ment, 1mpact wreodl , tap set. 2
practically new electnc hmst. cham tw:ust . electric dr1lls. wheel
pullers, parts washer. lo_gcham s, one lot cl new (I I ti~ers and

shock s. some ca&lt; parts. 55 gal drums o! 10 '''"gilt or!. drums of

grease, wheel we1ghts tor Cub trac tor . cham binder. top tmks,
tractor pulleys, new caburelors, grease ~ns and hoses, PTO

guards. complete break ourl~. new truck lights. tract01 tool box ,
eau•p menl cham, tuel tonk 011 runners. la&lt;ge lot ol used hand
Jools. and many other m1scellaneous 1toms
Terms: Cash m Checll with ldentffication. lunch

::,

RUDOLPH WEBB, OWNER

•'

lee JohnsonAUCnONEER

'1!/"--:J
~.,...{
/..J

Ctolll! City. Ohto
Pirone 256-6740
Not Responsible for Accidents or loss of

Ragltttrld black Codltr Spa- Eeay A••mbly World 1600.00
niel . needs home with ldulta,
f* 100. GuarantHd payment .
30•· &amp;76-1573 .
No e111perience·no 111... Oatlils

6 lost and Found

Enterpriaa Rd. Ft . Pierce. Fl
33482 .

FOUND Puppy short black hair.
white paws-tip of teO , Next to EIIV ADimbl'( World 1600 .00
Charm Beauty Shop. Stltl St. per 100. Guarenteed payment.
No 1111perienca-N o t el ea. O.ttllt
Cell 614 -446 -3703 . ·
tend self· lddre..ed namptd
envelope: El~ VIlli · 7U, 3418
Enterprise Ad, Ft . Pierce, Fl.

------11
•---------...:--------""1ICar
3 Announcemenu

BLUEGRASs c0 UN TRY
MUSIC SHOW
Ba
Where: Patriot
Auction rn
PATRIOT, OHIO
Wh en: March 28 7 30 p.m.
1

:

Band: John Steel &amp;
The Hill Climbers (from Kentucky)

33.82.

, Strvlce
Technl·
clan , Mltmln
for G.M.
Dealenhlp
In

Southeootom Ohio . • , . _ lind
aox16P• .,...,

O:":&amp;t;tso

A dlNblld laclv would like a

mlddlo·ocrtd lldv

to

live in

permen~ntly . Do cooking ,

light

:~"':.~~-'"!::·~z,.~oo:::

eouthw•t .,., or Columb,..
corr 8tc-986·3&amp;81 .
Someone to llve · ln 1nd c~re for
embulatory pe tle nt . Room ,
board, good Nlary. plenent
anroundi'lgs. tight houaektep·
ing end cool\lng. C1ll 81• · 992 ·

5H3 "'61•·992·3271 .

WILLIE APPEAIIIIG AT A LAlli DATE:
W. VA. CHAMPION CLOGGER
WORLD CHAMPION CLOGGER
SOUTHERN CHAMPION CLOGGER
LIVE BLUEGRASS BANDS EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT 7:30 -11 P.M.
Admlulan: 13.00 12 yn . &amp; up;
t1 .11011 -12yro.; Under6 -FREE

PUBLIC AUCTION

eend self·lddruaed stempld
enve'ope: Elen Vltel-5847 :M18

SATURDAY, MARCH 29, 1986
10:00 A.M.

To seltle the estate of the late Ruth L. Maag,
located at 485 Lincoln St .. Middleport, Ohio.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Sewrng ca bmets, ch rn a cabrnet, table &amp; 6 charrs. bullet.
servrng cart. desk. w•ng-back cha11s. w1cker corner shelf.
van ity dressers. chest of drawers. bed . Indian doll and old
doll. game table. the Eldgm treadle sewrn g machrne. dropfea t table, green, pmk vaselme d1she s. sooonholder.cylorrde
dresser set. w1cker Hower ~and . trunk. roc kers. and Jots

more.

'AUTO"
1949 Chrysler Win dsor. two door. app&lt;Ox . 61.000 act"'l
miles. excellent condition. Sharp.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Recliner rockers. RCA color TV. White sewmg machrn e. le·
n1th radro &amp;record player, serv1ng cart. ~am less steel Japa nese tableware set, Nort ika china , end &amp; corner tables. misc.
charrs, !lower stands. m1sc. tables. vaOily dresser, oflrce
chair, desk. lots oll amps, lots of figurrnes. costume.iewelry,
lot of nice curl31n s. table cloths and all kmds !mens. mise fur
~eces .

•

IS•

retirement. and meny
mare. 304-8715 -39150 or 1 -800·

..2-3819.

&amp;omiDrlvm. 2vemoverrotd
.....~on ... ••• ,.., fl11 btd
e11pertence, 23 vetra ot ege 01'
older. curren1 mldtcor cord. colt

L----__;f.:.;rit:;n;.;;d:;s'..J•, L·____..._,_..J IIL.,!Inf~o~:~!_!!~~~~.!;:!!!;~~!!..-Jilo•-273-93&amp;1 .

'MISC .'
File desk. mrsc. eye &amp;ear rnstru ments. lid eyeglasses, cab•·
net &amp; Instruments from Or. Miag's oflrce. ~ce . dryer. small
Frigidaire refrigerator, misc. garden &amp; yard tools, bird cage,
lawn ella irs, fold ing chairs, fans, Christmas decoratrons. luggage and lots, lotsmore.

OWNER: JACKIE E. MENCHINI
Eats

Positive 1.0.

Cash

DAN SMITH - AUCTIONEER
"Not responsible for sccidltlt sor lou of proptrty."

'

�~""'-D-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
• 31
4

Homes for Sale
b«lroom

51 Household Goods

:---:-::------

Rent als

: 7 room house, O't'trlooking Oh10
Rtver in Addison . Newly remodeled, 3 b.drooms. 1 beth,

pertlal buem.,t. cerpon, ce41ar,
2 hteting systems, vinyl sidmg.
On 'h •ere ltnd f215 .000 Ctll
SU--367-0447 or 814 387 04&amp;6

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

41

Houses

for

Rent

5 Court St 3 bdr . Kitch~t~~
h.Hn!lhed, no pell , 1260 mo .,
P'us utilitin , merenc.. &amp; depoatt Call 614 -4t&amp; -4928 or
614 -446 -9680

70x1 00 lot. 1 If.. story houae 3to
4 bedrooms. d11hwesh•. double
range nove. fully cerpet&amp;d,
wood and coal burning stoYe
Close to school end hoapnel
126.500. Cei1&amp;14-992-&amp;080.
• b.clroom houae, fire piece, 11.!
b11ement. tn Racine. Make
orter . Cell 6U -949 -22 93
·IIYininga
, To Mil ntete. 1 floor home.
..... umlnum tiding. nW~ roo1,
carpeted. formal dining room
..Loc:ated Mar PomMoy Elemm:
tery Aslling undlf 120.000
Cell 814 -992 -5322.
A..tored home. 'fine Str"t

R1cine. 3 bedroom . beth, car :
pettng, well coverings, drep.rtll
tncluded
New kitchtn
135.000 Cell 6U ·9·9· 2540
after e weekdeya, lnytim•
weellends.

3 to 4 bedroom h"me. in
He"ieonvtlla. 18500 or ttadtclr
or truck of equal v.lue. Call
614 -992 -2772
Two bedroom home reedy for
occupenc::y Equipped with kitch.-. renge. refrigenttor end
cabinets. Completely cerpeted
134 ,900. Located m Generel
Haninglf Sub. in Middleport.
Re .. "tate tea ebetement pro gram in effect for 15 ~an Cell
1 -614 -992 -6782 betwean BAM
end 4PM dat!v
Lerge 2 1tory home Full bile·
ment. wood turnace end fual oil
furnece, treJitr hook· up Approa
1 2 1cre1. CklHIO M11g1 M1nt1.
in Deater Priced to Mil CeH
614 -742 -2832

-:---- -- - --le-

For rent or ule on land contract,
l bedroom twme located al405
.Spring AYe , Pomeroy, Ohto.
1200 depo11t . 8275 pet
month. Ceii814-753 -485B
live tn one, rent the other. two
'b«troom house and two bed
room mobile homa Call eher
5 ·00 p.m 304-675 -6483
For 1111 or rent New Heven , 3
br 2 beth, f1replace, gerage
&amp;38 .600 Rent $300 month
plus deposit 304·273 -2471

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES . 4 Ml
WEST GAlliPOLIS , RT J5,
PHONE 814-.C•&amp;-7274
1973 Bucceneer mobile home
Cell 614 -446 -41 1 3

3 bdr houae. furnished llttchen
Cell614 -446 -7026
2 bedroom house with garage.

carpeted. curttms. dtshwesher .
rehig . 106 Klneon Dr (near
new- city pool) rent t300 month
Dep required Call 814 ·.C•6·
4463 or 814 448 -4347

3 bdr Portsmouth Ad . City
1chool1, dbl cer gerege no pets
dep required , t326 Call 614·
448 -1134
3 bdr . beth . utility room, mce
cleen Call 814 · ~46 · 3607 o r
614 446 3611
Fum house on Blldln
Mercennlle Rd Second hou.e
on rtght from Rt 7 Call
814 266 -1462
4 bedroom, fireplece, 1250
month . plu• daposH end utilitiet
C1ll 614 -949·2293. Evenings .
Beeutlful new l or 3 bedroom
hou~t Alao naw one bMroom
furn1shed epertment In Mlddl•
port Cell 114 -992 ·5304 or
114-992-8516 .
For rent with option to buy . 3
bedrooms. built in lutchen . 2 car
g1rage. 1220 00 month . dep·
Olit, New Ha\'en, 304-882 ·
2688

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furntshed . ceble, b.. uttful rl\'tr ·
vttw, 1n keneuge. no cttv ten•
Fo1ter1 Mobile Home Perk C1ll
614-.W&amp;-1602
Totti electric two bedroom•
iurni1h1d Adults ontv. no pet•.
T\1 cebl• 1veileble C•ll 614 367 -7436
3 bdr.. fumlshed . ell utiliti11
Pttd. no pets. nc dep. •420
mo 2 bdr , furn11htd , ell utlllt1•
paid , no pet•. tltc dep , •345
mo 2 bdr · lffurnilhed. no pet•.
sec. dep . PlY own electric.
S276 mo Cell 6U -446· 1 385
efter 5PM
Newly remodeled 3 bdr mobile
1\o me. 121166 turntlhed or unturm•ked 8u le\olille Rd Call 614
44e -OI527 1fter J ·OO
In Eureka n1 ce &amp; ciMn. part
furn . adult a only , no peta. S1 80
mo Dep req. Call IS14 -256
1636 or 614-256-1291
Two bedroom 12ft wtda mobilfl
home tn Bidwll No pets Minimum Wltlf futnilhed Cell
614 -388-B548

1973 N&amp;W Moon 12a66 , 2 bdr .
woodburner ceiltng fan . Itt
cond , porch &amp; underptnnmg
C•ll 814 -256·9381

2 bedroom. Rac1ne area Call
614 -992 -5868

1972 141170 3 bdr home good
condttton, b11t offer Call 814446 -7545

44

1.CJ:70 all electr1c 2 bedroom1. 2
full bttth1. centre la•r appliancn
1ncluded , 111 .500 Cell 614 446 -3243
19799 14•70 mobile home with
7a24 eapendo. Central air lo·
cat841 on '11 acre lot Free neturel
gu. In Kyg&amp;r Creek School
Di1tnct Cell 6 14-U&amp; . t 637 or
eva 814-44fi .J437
For aale or rent one 14a65 2
bedroom mobile home. c1ty
..::hool• Call 614 379-2659
Vtndele mob1le home 15 .000
Cell 614 446 -9286
1981 Shultz mo bila home
14•70. totelelectn c. 3 bdr . mce
cerpet•ng, curtein1. ref &amp; renge
rent atr cond , elre&amp;dy under
pinnld , 1et11ng on rented lot
Price t12 .500 Call 614 367
0147
1982 Nuhue 14JC6f' . 2 bed·
room , dmingroo m. garden tub ,
ellg11 Call814 -367 0 251eher
4 30PM
' 1980 l tbertv 14•54 2 bad : room. unturnllhed , vmvl under
pinning in cludad Mu1t Mil Call
304-n3 -S873
1975 Cem.,on Mobtle Home tor
ae:e 121160 Call 614 992
1824
· 1976 Southwtnd Mo to1 Home
Cornpletetv seH contatned low
miles. Mull tell Cell 6 14 -992 · 5906
' 12al0 PMC hendy mens spnctel
· e2960 12180 Aquar1ous 2
: bedroom. All electric. Sale lor
14600 Call 614 -667 -3870
1974 Cast le. 3 bedroom. 1 h
·bethl. electric turnece. set up for
wood -burner, 14ft porch Good
condilton Celll14 -985 · 3960
Spnng Spedel-1982 141152 2
bedroom. vlnvl underptnning, tie
·downs, 1~1110 porch , and elect ·ric entrance Hrvice EJ:callent
condit1on C1ll &amp;U -992 -.'!772
1983 Skyline Jtv. 2 bedroom.
_gil. very n1ca . 111 ,000 Cell
814 -949 -2963
MOBILE HOMES MOVED . inaured . rusonlble "'"· Cell

'30~ - 171 - 2338

J t70 1 :Zil86 three bedrooms.
.11-i ~ethl , utility room , under·
.pinned. Cell 304-6715· 7963 or
-304-175-3797 .
'1873, . 141170, pertly fumhlh.cl
'on on• 1cre, phone 30•·871·
~791 ,.

~878. 141170 mobile homt, 3
btdroom, appll~nc .. , AC, un·
dtrPennlng , nice . 304 -875 ·
14181912. 14a48 mobile home,
furntlh'td. IIIUmt to..-,, PlY·
menu t1&amp;2 .00 month, 304·

Apartment
for Rent

A package
deal

Vallev Fumlt\lre. new &amp; uud
Large uctlon of quellty fum i·
tu re . 1211 Eutern Ava
'
Galllpolie

+uz

You were fortunate that the same de-

WEST
+51

• to 8 81
+106

+KQH8

MoUoh1n Furnltura &amp; Applie'n -

EAST

cee. At. 7 North , kan1ug1. Oh.

+878
.KJ9
tQH7
+A to 7

Cell 81• · ol48 -7444 . Credit
terma evaillble
Sofa, chelr, rocket. rachner
cheir, hide-e - bed. Msyte9
wuhar , Tappen microwave
oven, queen ab:e bedding Cor·
bin II Snyder Furniture. 966
S~C(&gt;nd Ave., 814 -448 -1171 .

SOUTH
+AKQJ!O

.A2
t A J4 Z
+61
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

Pass
Pass
Pass

I NT
3+
Pass

East

Pass
Pass
Pass

Wh~rlpool

Wllhtr 176 . GE
w11her 11150, Mavtag dryer
•as, Wntlnghoult dryer t96
rafrig . . tor fro1tfree '125,
frigeretor 1vocado 1m1ll t96 ,
cAMt freezer 195. 30 ind't gea
renge 176. Skaggs Appliances.
UpparAiverAd . 614· 448· 7398 .

,.e.

Soutb
1+
!+

Pidtens UMd Fumiture. Good
quelity ustd fumitutt Op., 9 to
6 or cell tor appointment
304-676-8483 or 171-1450 .

u

Openmg lead: • K
54 Misc. Merchandise
diamond length. but you still gave the
deal the best play After all, some of
the time West might hold the heart
kmg, in wbich case your fourth diamond would go on dummy's queen of

hearts.

: :;:;~:-j
r;;f:en:d:e;r:w:h:o:h:e:ld:th::ree::t:rum1~ps~a=lso=h~ad::;;;:;;::':'MI::N:L:-WtSI'~APER;;~EN'IUPRISE;;;:;~ASSN~~
44
44

Apartment
for Rant

JACKSON ESTATES APARTMENTS (Equal Hou1inG Opportunity ) monthly rent 1terts at
sns tor 1 bedroom end f212
for 2 bedroom. deposit UOO,
loceted neer Spring Velley Pla11
end Foodland. poolandCI~tTV
evailable. cffica houn e1 po11i·
bit 10 am to 4 pm ~nd7 pmto9
pm Mondey- Fridey, Call 814448· 2745 or leave m"11ge.
N•cely turntthed mobile home,
eff apt . central eir end h..t in
City, adults only Call 614 -448 0338
Redecorated apt.. 2 bdr . 1176
ont-,- Call 304· 675 -6104 or
304-675-5386
Furn apt 919 2nd Ave Galli·
poltl ahere b1th 11ngla mele.
1150 mo., ut1ltttes peid Call
4'.6 -441 6 tftet 7pm

Apartment
for Rent

46 Space for Rent

1 beclroom unfutmahed apt.with
nove, rat.. w11her, dryer All
utiiti11 pd except eltK:tric. Quiet
country 11tting 12 mil11
northwest of Pomeroy on U S·
.33 .Cell 814·992 -2807 after
6 :30p.m.

APARTMENTS, mobile homes,
houtes . Pt. Pleuent end Gelllpolls. 614 -446·8221 .
APARTMENT FOR RENT -

Now accepting eppllcetiona for
rentel ep1r1ment1 in Meeon
Apanments limited. Two bedroom epenmentl It $~99 . 00
per month. Rentel ratn may be
hightr depending on income
Houling wiH be evailebleto each
lplltclte rttatdl. . to their rtce.
color. religion, ux or netural
origin lnterauad epplicenU
thoukl cell 304-773 -!01 1 or
contect DaniH Str.. b or Weltw
Justice It the Main Offlct. 1676
Brice Rold . Raynoidaburg, Ohio
4308B or c1ll 814-863·4514

Furn 3 room• &amp; bath. up1teirs
clean, no pets. edults. ret. &amp; dap
req Call 614 -446 -1619

Potnt Pl111ent ept for rent.
304-8715 -4024 or 676 -5648

2 bdr . near Silvar Bridge Pleze
N1ce carpeting, water &amp; gertb·
eg~ pa1d. Clll614 -446-7025.

Apt 3 rooms &amp; b~h. no pat• or
children. Cell •fter 4 00 n!IW'Iy
remodeled 304 675 -3449.

Unfurnished 2 bdr in Crown
City Call614-256 -6620

402 2111 St Fumilhld 2 bec::lroom lpt up1tair1. clean
Adulla ontv. 1196. • month
Heat end weter peid. Rtf. •nd
Oep. 304-675 -2661 .

Ntce 2 bdr apt .. 4 mi from
G111ipolis, etove, retrtg. &amp; weter
furnished, 1200 mo , no peu.
Cell 614 ·4•&amp;-803B .
Up1t11ra unturniahld ept . Clf·
peted Utlllthn peld, no clllldren.
no pat• Cell 614-441 -1637
2 bdr IPt CIOIII tO town 1245
mo ., dep &amp; rtf raq Cell
Wisemen Reel E1t1ta , 614 -446 3644

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent SIMping Rooms and
light house keep ing rooms . Park
Central Hotel Cell 814 -t41 0756 .

46 Space for Rent

J bdr Honevauck le Hills wettr·
.ewer-trllk 11rvic11 provtdld,
no peu. dep reqUired . Cell
614 -U6 -113.t Equel Hou1ing
Opportunity

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk,
Routt 33, North ot Pomeroy.
lergelou. Call614 -992 -7479

2 bedroom ept 1n New Heven .
W Va Newly remodlled . In
town Cell 6 t 4 -992 7.t81

Treilor lot for rent in Middleport
Cell 814 -992 -7853 or 814·
837-3614

1 bedroom apt. for rent Bille
rent starts S216 a month that
1nclud11 111 ut illttM. Otpolft
rsquir.:l ol t200 Contect Vii·
lege Me nor Apt M1ddlepor1
614 -992 7787 Equ11 Housing
Opponun1ty

Trailer 1p1c11. 1m1ll children
accep1ed. Mwer end weter
furnished locu1t Rd. back of K
&amp; K , 304-676 1076

11

Help Wanted

J-11-M

• Q7 ~!
t K 5!

Here is a deal with the theme of
combming all your chances in the best
way. You arrive at four spades, and
the defenders play three rounds of
clubs at you. You will certainly need
the diamond queen to be onside. but after the successful diamond !inesse
you will have to concern yourself with
your fourth doamond. There are three
possibilities. (t) If diamonds are divided 3-3. the fourth diamond is a winner.
(2) The queen of hearts could be a winner on which you could throw a diamond. (3) The last diamond could be
ruffed in dummy if the defender with
long trumps also holds length in
diamonds.
After ruffing the thord club, lead a
heart to the queen. That loses -to the
king. Win the return. cash two rounds
of trumps. then play a diamond to the
kong. a doamond to the jack. and play
the ace of doamonds. Although East
has four doamonds to the queen. he
also has the three trumps. so you are
now able to ruff your last losing diamond with dummy's nine of spades

Help Wanted

Furm1ked
epertment
, uttlttCall
ll l l , = = = = = = = = = :
paid 106 Vine
St 1235
614 -446 ·9244 between 9 00 ·
• 00
WRITERS WANTED!

11

NORTH
• g! 2

By James Jacoby

2 bd r f um goo d loc eho n.
ut1httes pttd Call 614 -446 1457 after 4 30

2 bdr . up1tei11. newly rlldeco ·
r.atad p•y own ut ilittlll , 11 76
mo Call 61 4 ·446 7644

County Appli1nce. Inc. Good
usld eppliences ,.,d TV 1et1
Open BAM to &amp;PM Mon thru
Sat 614 -446 -1899 . 627 3rd
AYe G•lllpoli•. OH

James Jacoby

8 ecres. 3 barns, septic tank and

lis, '29,900. CtH dtYI l14 - county w1ter Finencing av1ile·
441-1e15 or nlghto 114-441- ble. Cell 614 -379·22158.
1244.
2 acrtl ground with 1962
2 bdr. 5 yr home, mint condL· mobile home. 8x20 room edded.
tion. Rutricted subdivision 9 Well with new pump. garage.
mil.. from GelllpoUs. Cell &amp;14- 17.000.00. 304-678-2736 .
256-1200.
1'h aer11 Broed RunRoed, New
7 rooms &amp; beth. 1 acre more or Heven, W 'Ve Her~• •had end
' " " carpeted throughout llinyl add· on bldg , for mobile home .
skiing t26 ,000. 12 N t.hin St
Good weter well. "Ptic tenll ·
Chnhlrt. Cell 814-446 -3793 · leach bed . N1ce spot for building
or mobile home . 304-nl-9586
fOf ..,, or rent 3 belt. tlouu In or efter 5 00 304-773-9125
Eureka with l2 ecr• On At 7
, 011 h..t. county weter Cell 2 4 acre building lot. city
. IU-445-2205 .
school•. 18.600. Cell614 -379·
2855 .
'
~· Llur.. Rench Styta, 3 bdr &amp;
• OlriQe. on large lot in Addison
•• Twp ., 9WK fixed 30 yur FHA
• loan eveilable. Call 614 -446 - 0722

t7S -t782 .

56

35 lots &amp; Acreage

house for nil.

flrtplece. 3 mi. lOUth of GtJiipo·

March 23. 1986

March 23, 1988

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

New publication needs fiel oon, recipes. art work.
Open poetry contest. $2.00
per poem. S.A.S.E.
SYLVIA'S
Itt 4 Bo1 106. Gllle»olt~. on ~lt

Immediate opening for Psychology
Assistant with a Master's degree in
Psychology/licensed Physical Therapist II with Ohio license. Will consider new graduates. Salary according to state scale. Excellent fringe
benefits.
Con tact: Personne I
GALLIPOLIS DEVELOPMENTAL
CENTER. Gallipolis, OH 45631
Telephone (614) 446·1642.
EQUAl OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER / AFFIRMATIVE ACTION

11

Mobil 1\ome kit for r.nt , • • 1t
Mowr•v• Upholstery, M11on
County Feir Grounds or phone
304-175-4154.

Merchandi se
61 Household Goot:ls
Good Ulld IUtO Wllher f40 .00 .
304-895-3854.
SWAIN
AUCTION flo FURNITURE 62
Ohve St., Gallfpolie. New &amp; ull!ld
woocl -coel ttovtl , 1 pc wood LR

tuite 1399, bunk bed• 1199,
entron ,.c11n . . 199. niiW &amp;
used bedroom IUitM, range1.
wringer w11hers. &amp; tho• . New
Uvingroom suit" t199 -1599.:
lemp1, elso buying coli S. wood
atov11 Cell614-44&amp;-3169 .
LAYNE '$ FURNITURE
Sofu end chairs priced from
and
t2B&amp; . to t896 . Tebl•.
up to 1125. Hkfe-e·blds , l390
1nd up to 11560 • 10fa beds
t148 . Reclinen, 1225 . to
$375 . lamps from 128 . to
1125 . pc. dinettes from 1109,
to 435. 7pc. 1189 111d up . Wood
t1bl1 with alx cheirs 1285 to
1746. D11k e125 up to 1375 .
Hutch11 , '660 Bunk bed complete with mettreun. 1275.
lnd up to 1396 . Beby beth.
t110 . Menreu11 or boa
aprtng•. full or twin , tU .• firm ,
t73 . end ee3 au... 1.t1.
1225. Btcl frtm•. t20 .•nd
126., 10 gun - Gun cllbintta.
t360. G.. cr electric rtngn
1375 Beby mettriiiiS, •35 &amp;
146. bed ftemu 120, *26. &amp;
UO, king frame UO . Good
••iiiCtion of bedroom 1Uite1.
rochrs . meWI eabinlts, hudboMdl f38 &amp; UJl tO 165

•so

Used Furniture -- Ortsaer. a. bed,
Trundle bed , metal office deakl.
3 miiM out Bulavlll1 Ad . Op ..
9am to 6pm. Mon thn.t Set.
814-448 -0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waal'ler1 , dryers, refrigerttora,
r1ngu . Sk.aggs Appliencu,
Upper Riv.r Rd be•kt• Stone
Crnt Mottl 814 448 -7398

Calllh~n'e

Uled Tire Shop Over
1,000 tirn, sizes12. 13. 14.1 5,
11, 18 .6. 8 mll11 out At 218
Cell 614 -2!8-82151 .

Electrolux vaccuum cleeners.
A- 1 condition -atttchmenu .
Av•illlble
11 112Cell
.00 .81•·
Caah246or
terms erreng.t
91115 or 304-875 -6799
Double bed·menre11 &amp; II) ring•.
10lld wood head board. uc .
cond , 8126 Dollhouse7rooms
17&amp; Call 814· 245 -5417

HALF PRICEI Fl11hing arrow
ligna •2991 Lighted. non -errow
12791 Nonlighted 12291 Free
let1et1l Only few left Set
loce_ ll~ . 1(800)-423 -0 163 ,
enyt•m•

Some Important tects .and dates
in US . History by Leon Putt.
now eveileble, 304-676 -1444
Prom dr111 with hoop, site 9 .
whrte and pink. Ieee and utin ,
t100 .00 Phone 304 -676 ·
2034

19n Mopal , 769 actual milea.
axe cond, 30•·676· 1298
HALF PRICEI Fleshing •rrow
signs 12991 Lignted, non-errow
12791 Nonhghted U29! Free
letter1l Only lew l1tt SH
locelty . 1j800 )423 -0183 .
anytime.
Ch•t type Pepai pop cooler,
16915 .00 . Phone 304 -676 ·
2814.
Surplu• · Denim · Army. Rental
Clothing, Shoe~ Boot• ell sites,
111 Yflr Heavy Cloth ing . Sem
SomarviUe' s, E11t . Ae...,ens·
wood, JunC1ion · lndependeence Road - Old Rt . 21 , Fri.
Evenings. Set., Sun . 1·00 -7:00
p.m . (Discount Political Adver·
tiling Specialties at Fraction
Origlnel Coat 304-676 ·33341
Half Prict f Fluhlng 1rrow slgnt
t2991 ~hted, non ·IITOW 12791
Non llghted 12291 FrM letten1
Only few Lett s.. locellv 1
1800) 423 -0183. •nvtime
-lc-

54 Misc. Merchandise

Help Wanted

REGISTERED NURSES

Pleatit ci1tern 1t1te eppro\oltd ,
pl ..tic septic ttnkl. plattic
culverts. mtlll culverts, aH cap•.
Ron EvensEnterprisn. J..:kson,
Oh 114-261·5930 .
BliCk POWdlf 16 .9&amp; , capl
*2 00 Kotbals, Mill Creek Ad
Hrs. M-F, 6· B. Set. 1·5 C11l
614 -446 -2316
Wtnchester model 12 stlotgun
16 ga., 28 in. full d'loke berreU,
1460, wtrv good cond Cell
614 -445-8407.
Rack 1terea. AM · FM radio,
cassette. record pleyer , old
comic boolldetingback to 1966
Cell 614 -448 -7081 ll'lvtime.

Building M•teri•ll
Blodl. brick. IIIW'er pip•. wkl dowa. lnttll. etc. Cllude Win·
tll't. A~ Ortnde, 0 . Cll 114·
246-5121 .

Lu,.,

Kentucky lu.... Ohto
Ohio Stokor. Yltd or dollvory,
cement block• .and buldlng
mat..-ial. Oelipoll lloak Co.,
Pine St.. GeiMpolla. Ohio Call
814-441-2713.

Bloc*, brlcll;, mortllr •d mt·
sonry IUpplltl. MounQtln Stttt
Blocll. At. 33, N.w H•"*'· W.

Vo. 304-SS2-222256

DB · meple bed, dresser. nj,ght·
tt1nd 8160. Di•hwe•her 160
79 Chevy Monu 1600. Cell
614 -246 -9497 or 814-«6 ·
4269 _

Oregonwvnd Cenery Ktnnt4.

MiJCed hardwood •ltb• 812 per
bundle, contalntng appro a. 1 Yl
ton . F.O .B. Ohio Ptllot Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio Ctll 614 -992 841t
Quell, Deb11kar. Quell pen1.
wettr heeling pads, weteren,
feeding treys, incubatofl, metal
cattle rack Cel161 4 -986 -4403 .

f

For Hie:
acre lot. Leiding
Cntall Rd 1964 Ford pick -up .
C.all 614 -992 -7486 .
Used wood frame 2 pen• win ·
dowa. 2 siztt. Good condition.
Cell 614 -986 -3942 .

CONTACT TERESA COlliNS, RN

VnERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Bunnitl and chic*• .,. hire.
Ducks will enhle Mondey. 10
gel 111 up 114.99 . Fllh Tenl.
2413 Jeckton Ave .. Point PleiNnt. W. Ve . 304-1711-2013

46 Space for Rent
Brookside APirtllltnts
Pltont 446-3003--446-1599 •
44'·3474

~

Dlle -

Shawnee Mental Health Center. Inc .. a com pre·
hensive community mental heal1h center serving three counties in southeas1ern Ohio is seek .
ing applicants for M.S.W. Outpat1ent Therapists
who will serve as members of our clinical team
Posi1ion respona ibilittes include provis1on of
therapy to varied client populations , but also allows for growth and experience in more special ·
ized interest areas. such as treatment of child
sexual assault and family therapy Opportunity
to provide consultation and educa1ion services
t~ comm~nity agencies . This area ia noted espeCially for 1t1 wealth of outdoor recreational acti vities, but also has many cultural events availa -

ble. Salary is competitive and negotiable. The
benefits packag' Ia exceprional. including fully paid family health insurance. aux -shelrered an ·
nuity program, and an incentive program . Con·
tinued profuaional growth lo encouraged. Assistance with relocation posoible.
Submit re1ume or contact:
Donald G. Miller. hecutive Director
Shawnee Mental Health Center, Inc.
2203 26th Street, Portsmouth, Ohio 45682
&amp;14-364-no2.
.lN EQUAl OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER. M/ FIH

English
Sheep~. femMe. 8 montl'll
· old. ctn )04. 773· 5783 01 n3.
1718.

- - lith

lid lra1h 111'1icts pooNtd.
Quiet Alii

68

EPPIR
1

Fruit
&amp;. Vegetables

ule. Cel111'·317·7230

Ftentt bttf cut. wrtpped end
frottn . cart klnnelrd. 304·876 ·
4112

11 S,qJ pl ll~'

rJ

62 Wanted to Buy

I KX (]

Kenn~ec potato• &amp;1Uritay 's tor

IBAFLED I tJ

Wl-iAi ii-i£ C'ENTI:ST
Wl-iOS! INCOME
I!IEHINC' HI'S

t:'eCit:'O.c::&gt;
Ht:.'t:' HAVE TO c::&gt;O.

Farm Equipment

u.s.

31 w••. Jackaon, Onlo.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprrse answer, as SIJQ·
gested by the above cartoon

t14-211 ·M11 .
M•IIY Fqu.on. Ntw Hollend,
Buth Hog StiM. Service. 0Yet
40 ueed 1hctofl to c:h0011 from
a co,.tete Un1 of 11M' &amp; used
equlpnwnt. Urgn1 11lection in
I.E. Ohio
rltlgt, live hydFIUiiCI, IX!rl
dMft, MW ftlbb .... t2960 . 2
bottom p&amp;owt, *291. 5 ft . Ford
luah Hog. 1350 . 2 row cultiVI·
tor, e19&amp;. ett. new&amp;lidlt'Biecle,
0111 . loom Polo,
501
Ford Mow~t, t4&amp;0 Call IH·
211-11122.

Olilo . CoM t14-441·9777. on
• 11•·441-3592. Up front tree: tore with wenenty over 7'5 used

1980 John Deere 4440Trtctor.
clb, H-A W·tKII duels and 16
Frt Wgts, JO 220 Foldup Oi•c.
JO 300 Backhoe. JD 2010
Bulldoler. lendoll 7 Shtnk Soil·
mut1r. Cell614 -949 -2014 .

Linda L Rilfle
IEAllOR
Home Phone

11020 John Deer• Dieell with
cab. Muat see to appraciete.
16996. 15 Bottom lntemetionel
Ptows. 14915 . 10ft. B•rch Wheel
Oiac. 17915 . TO 30 Fergu10n
Trttetor. t1995 . 3 point Ferguson AM•. 1 ..95 New Holland
H Beier. t!iiiSO . Extra cieen 2
row M11sie Ferguson Corn
Plentlf. U815 M11sle Ferguson
Mow.r. 16915 Cell 814-2866522

992-3535
SAVE S$S ON THIS ONE Beaulolul older home on Pomeroy Emllenl neoghborhood. close to lawn. I ~
baths. 3 bedrooms low 30s
BEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM
BRICK close lo Mergs mines
oflers I ~ baths. Ia moiy
room . bu1ldon gs, 4 acres
$50s.

Reel Eltate General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
Geo. S. Hobstetter. Jr.
Broker

POMEROY - Brock, two
bedroom home. Large livr1g
room w/lireplace. dmflg
room. kitchen. full basement
with shower room. Garage &amp;
carport. Central aor and
heat
CONDOR ST. - Foame tour
room home. partoal ba semen!. gas he't. Ask1ng
$7.500.00

Fender ..................s3900
Door .....................sa5oo
Rocker/Panel .......s1aoo
Grille ....................S25oo
Front Bumper ......S6SOO

COUNTRY LIVING - Momdem ranch oome. lhree bedrooms, large hvongroom,dm ing and kitchen comb. luH
basement and garage. Swommong pooL Reduced to sell

NEW FORD TRUCK

PRICE REDUCED - oo this
loVely IWo story cedar home
Four bedrooms. 2~ batlls, lormal lovong room wrth foreplacte. formal dormg room. recreation room. lamoly room.
custom made kotchen , drapes,
Clllltral heat and aor _F~I basement. Sits oo three acres. oH
Roule 7.
VELIIA NICINSIY
Assoc.
!'Ilona (614) 742-Jl92

1973-79 Fender ..................S4()00
1973-791 Door .................. S10000
1973-79 Radiator S~rt ...S1()000
1973-79 Grille Shell ........ Sl oooo
1978-79 Grille lnsert .........s3900

TEAFORD(H
Real Estate

1uuo1

MOBILE HOM£ ON 4?.
ACRES - Has VIew ol
woods and surround1n g
h11ls. 5-acres lenced. pond.
larm equrpmenl oncluded
Proce Reduced $45.000.

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
~ - (61 4)-992 -3325

+

ACREAGE - 50 acres vacanlland Buolding site woth
• free nalural gas lor home or
trailer. Asking $22.000

NEW CHEV. TRUCK

1979 Pontiac LeMan•. eac.
cond. new t1r11 . Call 614 -379·
2120
197B linooln Continentel Marh
V, 25.000 mi .. green. good
eond . n .ooo. Call 614 -448 111!115 or 614 -.W6· 1243 .

1981 Cemaro run• good. e.ttc.
•hepe Cell 614 -446 -0069

1971 ford Galaa 1, 49.000 actull miles , PS , PB, 11r con d., Vlf'Y
ucellent condit ion , ••k•ng
1750 Call 814-388-9744

1978 MonteCerlo 1974Chevy
Both good cond Cell614 -446
1622 ~ 614 -446 -7672 .

1978 Ford F-160 hplorer. 6
cyl , 3 speld Call 614 -446·
0662 etter 6:30PM .

614-992-2104, Ext. 204

Ctlarolls bull end Poll&amp;d -scura,
14 mos old , 960 lb. Cell
614 -379- 2597

NEW LISTING- 4 85 acres
near Burlingham 2 BR
l?.x65 trailer . Woll sell for
ooly $16,000
NEW LISTING - Busoness
&amp; bldg. Plus 4 rentals 111 Po·
meroy at a very reasonable
proce
RUSTIC HILLS - Nice
ranch 3 BR home on Ig. klt
Don111g, lo,er. woodburnong
unol. modern kolchen . ulolity
room and a«ached garage.
$42.000
BRADBURY - Handy &amp;
comlortabte 4 BR home woth
nice furnished kilchen . Gas
furnace . level lot &amp; garage
$28.000.
REMODELED - One lklor 5
room home wrth full basement garage and lg. lot
$39,!KJO.
SYRACUSE - Beong remodeled os thos 3BR home near
the school. 2 level lots for
ooly $16.000.
CHESTER- 5rm. one floor.
new ~tchen new ~do ng, basement Near the lo re statoon 3 BRs $30.000

Turkey•. 2 hens, 1 tom, &amp;30 .00
lor all , phone 304-675 -5043 .
Baby goat• 110 .00 and up, elso
1 milking galt, phone 304 ·875 ·
5043

446-4206

WASHINGTON EL£MENTARY- Modern bi-level.
lo see lh~ lovely home. Formal l.ong room Formal donon&amp;
modern krtchen w/ new ranl(e and d~tr.asher. 4 or 5
bedrooms. 2~ balhs. ~ rge famoly room Home MS all new
carpets. 2 car fin~hed garage w/opener. 2 ~ts Some truot
trees Th5 Ea home y(ll v.uuld !J; proud to call home. Many
edras Call lor appt. today'

Fine bred pigs , suitable for Fatr.
304-875-:1308

Blg round &amp; square bales Call
614-245 -6410 .
Large round balaa of hay . Can
deliver. UO Cell 614 -992 7401 .
'

KING 0KUTTER, INC.

We have immiKhatt openinrs 11 our Gallipolis.
~hio manufacturinc flcil!ty for two lanuhcturHII Enc1nttrs. Tbtse positions art chllencinc
and oHer arowth pot•ntial within an innovative
otmriSphero. Both po1itions requoru BS 11t1rt1ln

11533

LOTS OF SPACE FOR $26.500 - JUST OUTSIDE CITY 3
BEDROOMS. EQUIPPEO EAT-IN KITCHEN. STORAGE BLDG.
FULL BASEMENT. GARAGE BETTER TAKE A LOOK'
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS
Cool and refres~ng
on-grour~ pool v.ith landscapm~ Large patio and upper deck
area New fence made of treated luorller. Bi~evel home
featur~g formal entry, LR and dilrng room w/1~ ~iding doors.
3 bedrooms. 2~ baths, modern and complete krtchen v.ith bar.
Most all new carpet and wallpaper.Lg.laundry room. Fon~hed
2 car garage. Central ar Nice level lot Priced on 00s

SUPPLY &amp; DEMAND RULES
THE MARKET
Mortgage money is being used up
by homeowners refinancing their
homes.
So, new home buyers. don't wait
too long to buy your home because
money will be in short supply and
interest rates will go up - not down
- as you are expecting.
9'12% FIXED RATE
VA NO DOWN PAYJVIENT
3% -6% DOWN PAYMEN!T - F.H.A .
9'12% FIXED 5% DOWN
CONVENTIONAL

3 BE DR II. BI-LEVEL HOllE located along Georges Creek

Rd Kyger Creek School Dist Cent. AIC. wbfp. only 7
years old bcellent co ndotoon Buy now for $55.000.00

We H1ndle Your Sollin1
Problems.
Clll 992·3325

Ho u s;n g
Headq uarte rs

ment , One ~sit1on is tntry Inti. requ~rina 0-3
years upeuence . The second requ~rts J-5 yens'
erpertence .

RUSTIC STYLE HOUSE IN COUNTRY
W1lh 2.6 acres. more or less. 5 rooms, plusmodern bath. modern krlchen wolh donong room. Nol loo old, a real buy at
$27.500 See it now
#648

GORRELL REALTY

fed•r~ l -Mocul of1trs its tmployus an attract1ve
benefit prackqt and compttitrve salary We are a
succ:usful Fortune 500 comp1ny with multi-nl·
ttonal optrttions which •nufacturt and distrib·
ute 1 wide varttty of preelsion p1rts tor tht ct·
neral 1ndustn11. ttrospace. f1rm and constructton equip11ent. truck 1nd 1utomotive industries.

24741 Hill Road, Racine. Ohio
Yirginlna D. Carroll, Broker
Tal: 24 7·6644

An Eq"l Opportunlty/ Afflroutlvt Action
Employtr

--

Till FINEST IiiAMI IN REAL EST ATl

IDEALLY LOCATED wothon the VIllage of Vonton 3 !J;drm.
mobole home. wrth buoll -on gao age Buy now $30.000 .

OUI 21ST

Kin1lutl•1"s ~ pectall y dts11ntd hitch allow s ont St~ oll he mowe1 to tltst lo 1 he1tht of ~plo 16" 11~ 5
while !he other 11dt rem11ns on l~e gr ound Thts spec tt~ l lulurts leis Ihe FA[f FLOATIIG FIN·
tSH/NC MotU follOw !he contour ot Ihe groullC. even II'P1tle rome. tnto or oul ol dtiCbK

·'••

lliniKUrttf's new FRU FLOATING FINISHING IIIOWU comes tn • .. S', ana 6 S11e1

'•

KING 0KUTTER, INC.

•

•

•
•
•

COIIIIERCIAL PROPERTY located at corner of Second
Ave. and Sycamore SL Call for more onformatoon
•

•
•
•

COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING Iocaled along Court St. on Galli - •
polis _3,500 $(1- tt. plus 1,200 sq _It apartment Call for •
more onlormahon. PRICE REDUCED.
•

•
•

FOR RENT - Two 2 bedrm. apls. 2nd lloor near golf
oourse. $175 and $200 plus deposot. ADULTS ONLY 11

•

SEE THIS MOWER AT

Jim's Farm Equipment Center

Rt. 35 West

SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS.. ___

CALL AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SALESP.ERSO

Gallipoli$, Jhio

•

2. APPIOJIIATELY 140 ACRES IOCATm AT PORTLAND,
OHIO- No bulldine&lt;, excellent huntila area. IOO'Ii mineral
righiS Jill with propefly. Aboul \!of tciNie is pesture, bal·
Illite il wooded!

MAKE US AN OFFER! - (}oner needs to sell. I.S!KJ acres.
more or less. 3 bedroom ranch. 2 batl!;. formal Irving room.
formal drnrng room, famo~ room. 1.920 sq ~- 111ovong space. 2
largl! COY&lt;!red paloos City schools Priced at $38.000

NEW USTING -2 bedroom home sotuated on approx _I
acre wothon the coly of Gallopohs. Formal don1ng rm..
cherry paneled famoly room 20 'x l:J' shop . otheooutbuoldongs. $55,000.

.;

fo receive confidtnt!JI consideration for one of
these posttions , submit rtswme includinc salary
history and requirtmlflts to:

I'Vo o,rt ncc t&gt; •. ple o••·

MILLS VILLAGE -lJlts olfklwer;, shru~.largl! pone trees. plus
a very 111!11 designed home Features a formal IMng room.
lam 1 ~ room. 3-4 bedrooms. 1\\ batfE. complete k~chen v.ittt
d~hwasher, stove and relngerator. Fin~i'ed basement
w/carpet 2 car
and separate woodsoop_A large
covered back
heat Washington Elementary

Reel Estate General

derrH ~)

-

Good tleyiorule. Call614 -992·

UADINGHAM REAL EST An

lech1111cal EnclnHrmcwrth manutacturinaenti -

Peraonnal Monogor
FEDERAL -MOGUL CORPORATION
Precision Forged Products Dlvlalon
21 80 E11tern Avenue
Gallipolis. OH 45831

ill

A HOME FOR ALL SEASONS! FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AND WOODBURNER FOR NOW AND A 16x32 IN
GROUND POOL FOR NEXT SUMMER. 10' DISH SATELLITE
FOR YEAR ROUND ENTERTAINMENT 3 BEDROOMS . 2 ~ ()IR
GARAGE EASY MAINTENANCl BRICK AND VINYL SIDING
EXTERIOR GREAT LOCATION ON BULAVILLE RD $58.000

SOLO FARM Mu1t 1ell 800
bal.. nice Orchard Grau·
Timothy Hay . 81 . per bale, S.90
i'l lots of 500 or more lasher
Ferm Rutlend All w11ther
ecc.,, CeiiGoebeiAngusFarm.
Coolville, Ohio. 614· 667· 3838.

IT'S TIME FOR YOUR DREAM
OF HOME OWNERSHIP TO
COME TRUE!

9~%Rates
..
5% down
----

For mosl homebuyers roortpge lo~s are now available .
wilh 1%down payment and 9\1% iltemt rate with 15 yur
term or 9 ~% rate for J) jtlr term. Plus points and closing costs
WOULDN'T YOU LIKE TO STOP TfflOWING THAT RENT
MONEY AWAY EVERY MONTH' TI£N THINK ABOU THIS
NICE RUSTIC RANCH STYLE HOUSE WITH 3 BRS. BATH,
KITCHEN. LR. l CAR GARAGE AND A BACKYARD THE KIDS ,
WILL LOVE' THE PRICE -ONLY $29 ,000
.•
WOULD YOU BELIEVE YOU COULD BUY A RANC!i SlY If :
HJ"" CLOSE TO TOWN WITH 3 BEDROOMS. I ~ BAHlS. EATIN KITCHEN AND A NICE FAMILY ROOM AJR $30 000 1 CALL
MARY FLOYD FOR AN APPOINTMENT. LET HER Sf()W YOU _
.THIS UNBELIEVABLE G!EA T BUY 11
GONE FISHING! IF YOU 'VE GOT THE riME WE 'V(GOT THE .
PLACE. PRIVATE LOT &amp; 14X70 MOBILE HO"" AT lYCOON
LAKE BR &amp; BATH ATEACH ENO. ALL KIT APPUANCIS, SOME
FURNITURE. WASfER ' DRYER &amp; 4 STORAGE BLOGS ALL :
YOU NEED IS OUR FISHING 11JLE 1 SUPER PRICE $19.9:!0 -

•
'

IS well as replacemtnt marhts. lh1s Ntw York
Stock Erchlnco firm operates 40 pltnts. IIIOrt
thin 50 lfistribution centtll and 5rnu reh fKili ·
tteS

A HONEY FOR THE MONEY! 2 BEDROOM FRAME HOME f'A S
BEEN REMOOELED ONE OF THE NICEST HOMES WE HAVE
SEEN ON THE MARKET AT $20.000 FEW MINUTES FROM
CITY ON RT 218.

Hay &amp; Grain

54

OPEN MONDAY T..U SAIUIDAY
0:30A.M. TIU 5:00P.M.

New from

HOMES. FARMS &amp; ~IIMERCIAL PROPERTIES
21 LOCUST STREET. GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 41621

110.\1111£ STITES - BROKER
)1 ·\'1 SH TES - REH. TOR

DARWIN, OHIO
614-992-7013

MANUFACTURING
ENGINEERS

446-3636cA~

STUTES REAL ESTATE

n. 681 wEsr

Equal Employment Opportunity

Realty

Real Estate General

Whaley's Auto Parts

East Memoriol Drive. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Real Estate General

livestock

4 registered polled
bulls. Enforcer 107 H blood
hnes . Cell614 -742 -2763

Real Estate General

For Month of March

Autos for Sale

Autos for Sala

4 veer old regtsterfld Sorrell
Ouar1er Gelding 90 dey profe•·
1ionel training Regi1tered 10
montn old Ouertar Colt. Good
confirmation . W111 setl Repona ·
bly . Cell 614 -2B6 -6622

86 Ma...y Fergu10n 240 di.. al.
2 epd n1ns, live power, sp1n
out1. power -'Hring . Cell614379· 23&amp;4

1r1ctors. 1000 tools

Spring Speeial

71

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page:::o-5

SONS

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 315 W . GolipoUo,

54 Misc . Merchandise

63

Pleue hor11 . gelding , will work ,
1300. Call 614 256 ·6280

61

CROSS.

Wanted to buy , milk cow Cell
614-992-5916 .

N!I(!;H!IIO~~

'~ LIVI:SIIIC k

Mln,..ott&gt; Molino. 1916 71
HP . w.t• hon1 end. 3 pt. hitch.
U500.
Col It
-992-11137.
..::..:..:..:_.:..:_
_4 _
_ _ lc_

Special Spring and Fall Rates Aveilable
New condominium overlooking ocean in N.
Myrtle Beach. n86r 18 beautiful golf courses,
calabash and "'Restaurant Row". 2 bedrooms,
sleeps 6 with king size bedo, jacuzzi in mester
bath. outside swimming pool. 826.00 discount
if bookings made prior to Marth 31st. 60% of
rental fee required at time of achedutlng with remainder due prior to occupation.
For details and rental fees, call:
The Medical Shoppe. Inc.
565 Jackson Pike. Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
At 614-446-2206.

Ferm «!uipment. All11 Chalmera
tlay baler, Mauev Ferguson
front end loeder 304 -468 1917

A N.C . ragiltered Old

•u.

lUIS,COIIoWy
~~~ltyfOOM_
-·
IIIII,--

Transportal ion

114-511·1120 .

100 Ford Tractor, htgh end low

neennc txpentnc• in a metal workin&amp; environ-

OUTPATIENT THERAPIST

K..n• . ~~ breed ckl9
Obedience treirllng
inatructlon. AKC German wire·
helrtd POinttf' puppl11. Cell

I ,ol
CFA Hlmaltyll'l, P. .len '"d
Siem•• krtlen1 AKC OhoW
puppl• CeY US-31U lhet7PM .

71

Hay &amp; Grain

Mi11ed hey larga ~quere bales,
S1 .60 . 304-676 -6579

groo~ .

Pats for Sale

RENTAL SPECIAL

1973-80
1973-85
1973-85
1975-80
1973-85

64

Tlekt~

.

56 Building Suppliel

1978 Modtl Dodge Colt end
baby ga.tt . Call814- 446-0159
eher 6

2 formals sir:e 7·8 wom one
t1m1, 150 tlctl Call 514 -448 ·
3204 or 614-317-7106.

Chlhuehue'• puppl• end 1 melt
dog, will hold for Elstlf . CeM
114 -381-1532

1 Mit-propelled lewn mower tor
1111. 1100 CIIII14-H2·H11.

BIG VARITY OF USED AUJO PARTS:
Motors, Transmissions, Rearends,
Rotors, Radiators, Sheet Metal
etc. on Domestic and Foreign Cars
&amp; Trucks.

IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR REGISTERED
NURSES OR MEDKAl SURGICAL UNIT
AU SHIFTS, EXaLLENT BENEFITS

115

W1terb1d · kmg•ine . lighted
headboard, chltlt of drewen ,
hangtng m1rror. fJOO Cell 614448 -7e79

12 hp Bolen Llwn tra ctor with
mower and snow blflde. 304·
67&amp;-4437 or 675 -3354 .
1.200 Jem81t o wn Colonie!
Bricks. cell after 5.00 , 304 -676·
3784 .

Farm Equipment

Pet1 for Sale

54 Misc . Merchandise 54 Misc . Merchendiae

Nerurel honey 13 00 1 quart .
Melvtn 8ercu1 268 -&amp;268

TO NV' S GUN REPAIRS . hot dip
rebluelng. ell typ111 of gunsmith
wortt. tast JeiVice. 30-t-876·
4631 .

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

· (,til \\'1111d Rt•.tll\
\.'

1

'

11

l '.1

l n1

lo.1il1!''"

·l·lh 1()hl•

e
•

•
•

MODERN 2 STORY HJIIE - 4 bedrooms. LR. FR. modem
k~chert , 2 hreplaces. Moslly all carpeted !torn. 6acres.more or
~ Good crt~~land . large barn. storage shed. granneoy,
garage tobacco house. SllllkehOUse and cellar 800 liE.
tobaccO base. Owoor .wid consider helpmg v.ith filancong.
NlW usnNG - 29 acres. more or~ 3 bedroom home. 2
balhs LR FR w/ \\lllldbumer. rmdem krtchen. all f1 good
condfut.·New 24x24 )llrage ar1d asmal barn ~Ill fertced .
Garden area
!l:hoois_Priced at $32,500
NlW USTING - 8.40 acres. more 01 less. of vacanl ~nd,
located in coty school dEtnct.
9 ACRES more or less v.ith nu 2 story country home. Str.age
builrffl&amp; cel~r. cat11e « horse barr. mostly flat Severallru~
trees. City schools.

iiiiiiiiiiii

INVESTORS - READ ON ' HOUSE IN TOWN ON 2ND AVE .
POSSIBLE LAND CONTRACT - 3 BRS. BATH. NICE
BACKYARD. LISTED AT $20,000. TERMS . $2.500 DOWN. _
BALANCE AT 12% FOR 20 YRS TOO GOOD TO PASS UP 1
$10.100 WILL BUY THAT LAND YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING
FOR IN THE COUNTRY. 40 ACRES. MOSTLY WOO DE DHILL
SIDE. LOTS OF ROAD FRONTAGE
EXCELLENT BUSINESS LOCATION - COURT STREET DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS - 3 STORY BRICK BUILDING.
3.480 SQ. FT EACH FLOOR. PLUS I STORY CONCRETE
BLOCK AREA $85,000
NEAR £NO - NEARLY NEW 3 BE ~;rM. FORMAL DIN-.
lNG FULL BASEMfNT i"iif_tl\)\I'Q FAMILY ROOM, 2
BAT,HS. OVER ASM-~ J.,,.t~ WILL CONSIDER MOBILE HO"" TRADE -IN. OVER AN ACRE 154 .000
THE HI -WAY INN IS FOR SALE' THI S RESTAURANT HAS
BEEN AKANAUGA LANDMARK FOR MANYYEARS GREATLOCATION ON THE CORNER OF RT 7 AND BURNETT ROAD.
WITH GOOD ACCESS TO ROUTE 35 LARCILOT WITH AMPLE
PARKING. HOME AVAILABLE WITH RESTAURANT JUST
LISTED'
EBENEZER CARMEL ROAD - APPROX 31 ACRES. $1 5 500
GREAT LOCAHON IN RACCOON TWP
$25.000 NICE 2 STORY fRAil'~ BEDROOMS. LEVEL LOT
HAS NICE GARDEN SPACl SQlu 'lENT LOCA TION IN CITY_
BETTER MAKE AQUICK L""' · IT'S PRICED TO SELL FASJI
LAND - APPROX 160 ACRES, GUY AN TWP SOME IlLLA'
BLE. ROAD FRONTAGE. $50.000. OWNER WILL SPLIT LAND
AND SELL 77 ACRES FOR $20.000 OR 83 ACRE TRACT FOR
$30,000 .
FARII - ROUTE 218 - APPROX. 82 ACRES. 2 BEDROOM
ffiAME HOME, PLUS MOBIL£ HJME HJOK·UP. BARN. OTHER
BUILDINGS. TOBACCO BASE $39.000 .

(.i)
.......
~. "

.

.

IB:

AUDREY F. CANADAY, REALTOR
IIARY FLOYD, REALTOR , 446-3383
•
2S LOCUST STREET. GALLIPOLIS. OHIO '""'"'

�March 23, 1986
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
7t

71

Autos for Sale

.... ..:,1979 Pontile Grend leMena,

Autos for Sale

-,.¥ ~PS.

1978 Dodge pickup V-8. auto ..
topper, U,695 . 1919 Dodge
Amni 4 cyl., auto , 4 dr., only

.:;.:·11 ,380. Call 814-388-9744.

31 .000 mi . 11 .996 . 1978 Ply mouth Voleire. 2 dr., tuto ..
ft5915 . 1982 Ch.vy Chevatte 4

PB. elr cond., deluu inte·
oc•"' rtor, goad tlr11, exceUent condi · ~ ~ tlon , 85 ,000 mil ... atklng

:;;: 79
&lt;l

Ford Pinto autometic
..~11 . 200 . Call aher 4:30, 814-

:.•:~ 307-0290.

...

:

~- !

1971 Chevenelooks good. runt
· good, good tlrN . •soo firm. s ..
., u 2179 E..tem Ave .. Gallipolis
... •· or Cllll 114-448-97 44 after
". IPM .
~

1982 btiga Ctuwene scooner
.-. &amp;0.000 mll11, tunroof. •2 400
:.:· Cd IU · 441· 44&amp;3 .

,

.

:. •For Mle 1 977 Mercury
...,. -~ Gtti~; v-e. 4 ~pd .. v~try
"" "' condition, n.200 or but
;: · : caH 114-317-0102 altar

:::~ ~ 18n Cobra Multlng 302 4

*'

&amp;Pd., extre clun . Cell et•-441 :::: 4171 after IPM .
::
...._
~.·
..,

81 Monte C~rlo , power neering ,
powtr br~k• . 1ir, crui11, 30&amp;
V-8, 0\lerdrive trent , sterBO . Cell
114-379-2364 .

:;

~~:o~~T0~::og1~~~ -~::~

._, 9102 .

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.
71

1984 Ford

bcort, 2 door.

lrtanderd, AM -FM radio , 32 ,000

milea. $5200 . Call 614 -949 2963 .

1975 Dodge Oart U50 . 30 4895-3638

cyl ., 4 IPd., 12.8915. 1977 Ford
LTD only 74 ,000 mi ., ciMn,
11 , 59&amp; . Mike'• Auto S.ln,
Mon.-Fri. 9 to 5, Set. 9 to 12.

1975 Ply , 4 door. 400 engine.
AC, PS , PB, crulll, eJ~c cond,
call 304-nl-8303

Call &amp;14 -441-2900 SeiMmln
~hrll

Autos for Sale

Seert•.

1975 Corvene, T· top, two tone
buroendv. 4 at:~Md . 350 engine.
Pw, AC . n .soo.oo. 304 - 875 -

1983 Ptymouttl Turisrro 2 dr .• 5
l pd .. 37.000 miles. Call 814379· 2721 .

459&amp; .

For nlt 1977 C1m1ro . Ct ll
114· 2118 ·6278

'75 ToyotJ Celcia Md '78 Ford
G r~nld a. 304-675 -4014 .

1878 Monte Car1o 306 motor .
02 ,000 . Calll14-446 -9266 .

1982 Ford EXP, ~ . ltd , loaded .
k&gt; w miln, 61 4 ·446 -0365 .

1985 Chevy Chev.na, 1uto, 2
dr.. powet St..ring. AM-FM

1979 Chevene. 2 doorullafter
5 :00 , 304·896· 3867

redio. with 5.500 mit11. excel·
IMI cond., price •&amp;.700. Cell
FDf ule or trade, 1988 Dodge
Colt . Will consider tr.:le on
1 979 , 1980, or 1981 . Call

CHRISTIAN'S

1976 Chevy. 19n GMC. Cell
614 -446-3243 .

cor,~:•!c!f.9"
SCH~U::IG ~ JOt,

1988 Chevy 2 WhHI drive. YJ
ton pickup . E11cellent condition.
Cell 614 -992 -5138 or 614992-311 2.

va

1974 chevv
pickul)
. vy euto
..
spoke
wheels
, h..
duty
tl)ringa . Runs good . tate. or

trlde. 1967 lntemation1l Cub
Cad et with cutttvetora. Motor
co ~letely ttbuilt 2 veer~ ego.
Good condition. * 495. Call

614 -247-4292 .
'73 Chevv truck . standard. run•

REESE EX

111

lENNY'S
"Yur Alii

S,16llllltl"
Brakes, Oil , Lube

Citeion 4 cyL

Autoi'Nitic. A.C. AM -FM radio .
42 .000 low mil111 . Call 614992 · 3703.

1971 CJ 5, jeep with htrdtop.
304·175-1003 .

I]

57fl-2953

TITIJ! na sllf!d tedroo-ns.

.1-g illlhs

baths. coo~! kitchen . d~ru'lg
lfld lrmg r1m1 area Two car JJ~rage

large hrruly room

I~

.... a~roved e~t.fl kltchlfl

wrtn carwrt, Two sb'age OOtkltnr; -'II
on I ~:re. more or less. ci la'ld "!J!;"R

new caroet

$59,11){)

1321

l1111tasbc ~fllr (j ltf rrvtl NICE shady
Ia "' n runs to tre r1ver /f"Sh 01 luve ~ boat
OOc~ f1 yrur !Min front yifd) In town
bcatl:ll\ .-e-ry qu~t 1ml pP.acetul
1wroo00 11 ~ S75.!1X)

~nd landstJp1n~

nne ~tutmd o~e~tnR tluck

ilr!Ol

[l ]lld

pncN rt]h1 d1 $69 !nO

Cl'-ec~ •u!tl

REDUCfD!!! - Bnck ln·levet. 2'1 acres. 3 red rooms.
lamo~ room. 2'.1 car garage, heat pump,
central aor
#1070
2·3 ACRES MORE OR LESS trac~ rj v.ooded land.
E&lt;cellent for moble home or buildong sites.
#1024
PUMPING GAS WELLS - 2 wells fi 11oducoon 26
acres. Addison Tw p.
#1062

2 balm,

Omj ~11

1980 K.wnakl440 Hd. blacll&amp;
c::hrome. mint condhlon, will
taka tr~e . C.l 81 4-441!1 -3031 .

RON ' S Telnlaion Service .
Hou11 calla on RCA , OUIZit,
GE . Specillii)G In Zenith . C11l
304-&amp;78-2398 "' 814-448 ·

conditktn . can 814 -992-6138
or 81•·992-31 12.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

S25 000

VACANT LAND - 97 ac res more or less,

#1008

MOVE IN NOW lo th~ rEW 31l!droom. I'&lt;baths. ranch
horne. C.lllor more detarls.

#2008

Peru

tor ula

Ron Sheets

814-2&amp;8· 1·84 after li :OOPM.
181 440-.080 over platona 11 .6
· to 1. C21 Holley matchtd set of

eao·.

with •ir ctaanars. (21)
Mectric fuel pun't)l. (11 fuel
llr•sure reguletor. (1) •40 ttul
crenll 11d .. (1) Oant 80 rearend
4:10-14 10n, 121 from • rNrend
•~~• 2'h ton, (1 1 203 trans,_
c::aM {Dodge). 181 440 rods
rMized
6 tirH. Mounted on white rima.
Size 12J~15 LT , 8 pr,, 5 holt.
Came from 1979 CJ 7 . Call Btl
Wood at 814-742-2710 efter-

2:00.
1974 VolklwtQon Blade for
111a for pans 1200.00 . Phone

ACIES OF LAND IOOi lll'rth 4 Y"

stlfy. COUntry tune IS !tJSI ~~ kJI
the t.wge l~"v 45lal~ Efh. 2 1l!ths.

-

rn.

old rn:rern home. Partlalbasene11• 1th
wax! sttwe. 3BR extra nu krtdlm. bt

1983

ot

l)eelai" ~Rn

~•hf)'

~ llrage

space Front.,!! slOt oorch

tan lro1 patiO T'fl(lSDI~bulk!ngs
Oay gradE Wto'JI. crty h!Jlh school Just
cM'I I'll' bP,.at for fit pnu of$)).~
1!1]!

11 elem:. lid

IQt:hl!fl

Four 1h38x115 Grend Prix tires.
with Of without 8 holt aluminum
1to1 whHia end 6 inch lift kit tor
Chwrol-. 304 -882 -3571.

1/"ISutafe(j, ct'ni"al ar On IIICt 12D~ 120
bt w1th ubll~&gt; ll pl&lt;!(t 1nclr.JI1111g rural
wa1er On ~ Rt 1'5 ~J r Sruth'llt'Sttm
H~ n &amp;1'1001 iwutgrl:le sctlool Prml11
$26JK)O Or dl Wrukl sejl ~te

•317

11 ACRES ARE INCLUDED MTHTIIS SMART BRICK
&amp; FRAME RANCH - 3 spacilus bedrri&gt;ms, 2 lull
baths. 14'x22' l~rng room. kichen ~eludes
dishwasheo. countertop ran ge, lrrep~ce, lulllllsemenl,
attached garage paiMJ. woodburner f'lllfl! on~ 5 yrs
0~. $59.900.
#2002

WANT AR£Al WJIIE INSTEAD OF JUST AHOUSE.If so. take notice totlis 2 story, 4 bedrooms. 2 baths.
lormal dinong room, ~. room. plus a I~ mooe.
#2024

NEW
baseme1t 3 BR. 2 baths. Special feai\Jres are
hardwood fkxl~ . gas heat. approK . 14751Q. ft. rj living
space. Good locabon.

2 new beige bucket MStl
110.00 . 1 red budl11 Met. like
N.w . •15 .00 . 304-876-1326 .

77

#2026

r•

done to vour lltiattctlon.
ctiw 10 p.- cern off •nv job

BRICk RANC!I g~ thts lnmt le iS ci

IMMACULAH

rAM ILl DEliGHT' -Heme tuft wrth
W ... role 1am11'!' 1n ·nu'ld fe~turesvl'fy
~ble Ffl ~ liChen .J'd tlreakl&lt;lS1 l()()lo

FR 0vl'f 1400 !ill ~
ol ~VIng Sp;IU' Jlso l'lCWfS 3)Jtr 'Oil'
~and 2 sp.u kllng bath!. R ?Stll ~ o~ d
0.66 ..: ill wrth ac:XIIOOnal 16 l" l"';i
pluS 10rm3l OR ard

nlllalje

(/eat trOIIIIT'Il'l

&amp;Jyer"'s PYoteCOOn Pl.f"'

•.

.,

ro t,..n
P,~· pd

1r

'"'"' $64 !100

~

(MN£R OWNS TWO HOlli ES - LD1 ~ ~ ~
tM QUaktv UJ1Struc1ftl h&lt;Jll! ana ~!'!' .1
vw dgree that '' f5 d pfl1!c1 ] t1 4
bt&gt;llroom r!m1h llomt ~'~ ,. ;rr
e •rel~n t

II)'

~ oomood

cM dr!'n

Was/llngr:oo C1ao~ &amp;hool and ClOst' 1c

Owrer;

~a..e

1LC ~ IT'()n ~
id l ~l'

niCP

~ tt-e 1 th111 ~ !h1S tll.&amp;s a
l~m l f\'
IOOttl 'II'I!M a
.,~

-oo.1Wr'f'!

&lt;,pil'Ou~ ~\dlffi

3

)'d r~

!T'Qi dl}

l

;;t~fai!P LOCJ1l'IJ

wrie Will bvto.

b!!~ ~ n d d

i

•216

FAMILY ORIENTED - $6UJO - 4 ord 51l!droom
trrlevel. appro• 8 year.; dd. 3 baths. 2 car garage,
lamo~ room. lorma l drn~g room Srtuated on 41cacres
#1065

s oc.arM CJ' a tlea u ~\J II an!&amp;l[lf,(l '()1

WIOO
•HI!

Don't Wait
To Buy!
STARTER IIIME INTIPTOP SHAP E~

c.aroet lrloleurn

morf rrldloe

Interest rates
ore the lowest
in years. We
con help get
you financed!

Beaut!IIJI

v!!!lUI blind!. dlll

t ~ J i:l?gi'1M ~ tl r~Am

3 ~ r.lflch ..,,ttl\ tl~ \ h&lt;
Gfl'f'n &gt;dl ~ Good n{'!j1!11))11U)C1 ~~~ ~
3 n-.les rrom towf\ s.J Os
Cantlr~tlil'

OOUIOI'r COMFOA1 AT ITS f1 NES1 4 6R t &lt;~"dl l ~r~ enoLJt!lliOI' it'l ~ '&lt;I~
tam1fy Ow-1 liOO 'll ~ nt l r.1n~~ ~ P&lt;!Ce
~ n c \ rrif&gt;~ brmal 1nl'1e W~!h ~l t! l'jOO&lt;J
~~~ lat ~~ d ! lfl i ~Cill&gt;f\ W I!I' ~r'O!:'ftP .'

fu ll tla!llS. ~ \l flO 1001" M1/l l1f "{{ l,!( ~
Plus 0\1('1 !~ ~ I! l ~rt~al ~ hn ~'"ffi

basene-11 wrtr 1nottFr

~t i l

lani!l~ 0011 0 w".rf"1

I

tAi h

~v

i.H ijl r,t ~~

.- ra{l ·arnul\1 well , ~rou lll1 oocr ·
ar d Plil rtrnuM HOOIIII ~OtJ!.f "' '~" ll
it( f f",

rj 'M)('(h $96 )(){) lll ~11
rr'u~ ~ and l .._ ,~

1}1

BULf!IFUl llJtlDINC lOT - 01¥rl
l,)r; Hrll-&gt;

l d~e

&lt;.ur ltll.inQ fl ~

I ~till ~

ct~ r ~eru·

~nrJ ~rt n .:

l a~l c&amp;.JOI&gt;'

o l l ~ WOOIP C C' .w ·!h 1/N B!l'f'at"UWo
l;&gt;r , n et ' II' I 1Jf ;{)Jr biJ ,IOfl~ piafl'

!)

I! :' OJ()

•W

S86 :ilO~~

CJJ ~ ot 1 ~ ~~~
tlu~ ~ on lhf l'!l.l i ~M ~ clds.src: tu-it&gt;vt&gt;l fl

S2S000

lo.Jtr:hffi oo Jrd "ve

hatldscmt' kltrhPtl

t1~ 1n g

31Pa oo!IO

rl r ~ ~ "fl" "' •rrt .'
f'rOfllt&gt;
r .:C• &lt;'
concliOOfl - ln nro um mafl lt'IIMJn• fPC

lltllh

IO(lf!l litf ;,&gt;

an

ru ~ ~no.r ~: lll' il! h l:ot~

io!Ch61.J1C j rnr n~ trea 1an'tll'ldf1d rer

room rM I tl'!!T' ' ana ~a· .-:e 0Yo!'fr
h~s

n-.:Jved CJU! ol 'i.t'f Must &gt;efi rn

60 dar;

rtr~

tllll\ Nut ~&lt; ldll \
ITl,lr •"t SIH XJO

·' " ~' •: )~ !0\1d ~

-'I 17

SUPER lOC-aTION TO SlAIIT - • t
~n t r,o w mo~ "'tt 'hr-, 1BP .,,._..,~ ... ~-~
i1\W11l'ndllfl 1H'f S il!f'~ G r ~JI ~ IW ! ~

11·;011 l1 lt.e t!'i' fCir.Jn tr·• tour n1, ,.,. ..,.,. 1'~"'
N'f2hi:D"~ NICP klctwr• I c11 oi!'"-'t'
r«;p tlal ~ .mJ U9 900
~

EICHUNl INV£STMENl PROPERTY 1
~ (}ljnef) II!SielenCf' D'I!S

7 1111101&lt; )I

rent all 3 Br 1c ~ tw1n SI081P - I &gt;ll e n ~s
3 BRs. LR ~ K1!Cht'fl if1il1Mth ft,~
bi!~!!ll.

otfl&gt;r s 'l ~ M\ l AR~ . R

krlehf'l'l N1il bath 7 svrv lrdmr w~h )
IJh krtc!\erl ~nr1 !JJth 0Arwr ,..v tlt:'t'
lf1 ,;r1(1' 1

n ~,·

155 ~

•II&amp;

rar li!J.W' lhl',

lo..,.

"l BR&lt;.

1ng 1-m '11~111 1ff1 ,tll'f' lr f'f' u1yl ~..:111~
dn d E • tr~ r1SU!.!tn1 IOC.Ited on
I00.. 120 tlt lJ ~I oft lilDI'r Rlvtr ftlad
~ 1 :(1 1)

"10
lliUIE J 6£0ROOII Bo.o£V£L IN Ill
COUHUI'f - \'t&gt;t\1 llct ~ 1rrlldes
~ure1 hltmer wr!fl a ~ 111' e •n a~ Lrmg
room (JinllR Jrl.'il ana larf' ramt-. room
Ma ~te-r

tl!oroo-n

~~ !J~~ ar e~ ~nil

ll:tlh IIIIth 1lylrgfll

2 Gil !/II it&amp;t! ! 1: 1e

~ ~lM'd 0 111f1'f "M II IrW
n.:tT~e

or rilublt&gt; ~

tm rmt.le

illld "11"11 em~

linJnCiflR c~~ !or IT'()fe I~IOimarm

0220

- ~ l.!r~ pr~t~ hornP ~ 1 l11SI d d'i.'
nlvt"''tmPn l ~ , d 1e51dence ~oo I havP
' ~ 111 11 ! (J"m

!ilflljiV rtlM1 loonAI dfl&gt;O(

~r•'' ld(~•'!l : tlt!l "6 ~ !fdfOOIT'
[l,.j.,pmf'I11JIIi1~M cl(t ~ ~ 11(1 11l~f&gt;'} tf'1 ('r'

110.110 ll,j~~ 2 l'f'f) ~I(P 'Olr'fl
~D.ll"tlll llll~ J "' ' n11 ~ 111 hi'IJJ~tt\1 \ 111.
~ flU

·null!

~~~~f'll(:

r•r '&gt;!'1 AI

tll~ !I'll~ 1~,,

(IOPffi\- \If~&lt; [)('!'!"' .11 SIIJI))(t l'lo'
o,.,t,er "'dn~ ! 10iC df1t1 t.~ no.... A ~ l tl ~

1'9!100

•10!
OJU NTY LOCJTION- /)J ~t 13.: U
lawn ~ilfdrn ~nd ~m.J il AII111Uk J I!R
I\(JT1P ( !lat hS ! 7•70 11VII1 RICO!l ImP
'.,1\'111~ I.Jtcht'O f'II!J~ I ll'at dfli:l M
Pnpr!(v ••ff~:lf'!llt ~ew ~rrP i JJ}j rton ,1
c ~1 g.lr~gt-a~hf'd Xlo l" 3d!lt(rl no!
hn 1~ 1n&gt;Kie W111 hn1~h tlJ ) L.If ~ y~1

rcr cost ol rnatet•AI

~k1n g

S59 000

I!TOJ

HISTORICAl BRICK HOMf -

1J ACR!.S 1J YM:AIO lAND " " 1 ·
mtles 11Qr1t\ rJ RIO Grande 1~1 cit

relln~ lf1Sd e lrmled~te p~essron

Pledsant Valley Rd Mos!y tree rO¥t rl'd
Qxx1 mad lr011tage Co-rntv w~tf'f

Hoktmg at $49.000

•309

AWOODED lOT -

,.nllYl( 1 ~ 1 1"'~

on 7 ac lollfl Green

StiH"llll Drs!rK"! ~art ml~ .lOOu! 3 null's

trom tCM n Ma srer lled10011 •IXitlck's
wa'lo ., C{)Sr\ anr. tu~ t)atfl l 011"\at
dlfl•l'~ t~mll\l mQff\ l.llgt'

f ll~

m 1ld~ A9; 1n~

SJS.I)))

NEW LISTING - SUNKIST - BRICK RANCH - 3
bedrooms. 1'' baths.d~'"i ooom. 2 rnr tli"aie. washer
and dryer oncluded . Mom wrll love the nrce
ne1ghoorl'ood. Pnce&lt;l lo sell
#2037
VACANT LAHD - 97 acres m01e or less 125.COO
#1008
FARM LAND - 62 Acres d lone cEan land 2 oonds
N10l6
HAPPINESS IS FOUND THROUGHOUT THIS
IMMACUlATE HOME - 3 bedrooms, lvong room.
format dmrn~ 21ull oot hs. krtchen onc~des appl•nces.
baseme1t. garage. Oak trrrn tiToughout In tow n
locat~n"' walkrng dotance to oowntown area C. II lor
an appoonlmenttoclay.
#2025

11f"Pi.£t&gt; 1n

l t'- ol UDfltt 111 Hchen

111Yrnl'l1t ~ ~ gt~~JIYI ~w-1 r&gt; tlld

Woodi'.\Jfll€1 hOO~f'd ntl ~~~ duc!5
l(N. IUEl BLLS 11 1C5 IIIII rv&gt;'-'fr J'l
~rP(] or {Javf' , r 111' ~v ~1 !'d pi,n
rw 11.N' 01\trl'd 41 ~ 9 9:()
1

.11))2

INVESTIIENl OPPOITUNIT'f - Thrt!f
~en ~! unt:i 111 Dt, I 1110 ''c1u~e5 ~s
~ar age ~oar1ment TliiO SDI'Y 01 ~
~ ve to'ne has 5 ~s . 1 lBtt6 ~ rout!
t:f- dfw'Qed Srigle 5D1 1St ~W! !'(~me IS
rn:xlem 2BR. hr~ . fR ;md [fi Gas

heat Gar~~ aoartnl!fll has ({ Ci r~
?4.)4 OOwn lll4th lb24 - . .trY!
u~!riv ~1m Uooer are~ rvs tro&lt;l!'m
~ 1tchen Wit~ r&lt;Jl~

and ltfrflllelaklr. I
BR klr""' LR Nl Ri!~ brtf'd it~ wth
cen~~l ~~~ Call lclr s ~m~ M1d
ad.:l1M~al 1ntormati(Jn

ooomo

HOMI - Nf.,.,.

oar~

jjumOO.g, 1001

lb'l1
1mprt)\lemen!S
Ll1Rf' llal ill 14•.ll 5Ul arat~ btt~ld.lng
FrH!II«!IIlSide swtatllt 101 ollce Also
Ol'f' t~ r g;u~gP located IUS! otf :i Rt
1Ell 4 m1ies lroo1 Hoi/1:'1' tbipfal
A."&gt;kll11! ~ 3 1 'liO

O]lJ

WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE
446-3644
Clyde Walker .... 245· 5276
B. J . Hairston ... 446 ·4240
Dave Wiseman ... 446·9555
E. M. Wi seman - Broker

, 21reptaces, frn~hed
air and more.
#1012

62

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth 1nd Pina
Galllpolla, Ohio
Phone 114·4•5-3888 or 814 448 -4477
Cltrk Plumbing and H11ting. 18
yetrsercperlence, unstop drains
New -remodeling -repair worll
Phone 304-882-2012 .

83

Excavating

Good-1 E11eav1ting. b11em.,ft,
footef'l. drlv.ways. Mptic tanks,
lendaceping. Cell anytime 614·

4•5 -4537. J1me1 L. Davison.
Jr. owner .

86

General Hauling

7911 .

Of

fl7fi·

B7

MOBILE HOME FOR SALE -14•70 Fleetwood
Broadmore. 2 BR. 2 ooths. kichen with range
and relrrg., carpelon&amp; 10•11 metal ~ora1e
bldg. Coli for more detai~.

OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL- HAS REDUCED
THE PRICE BY $10.000 - 132.9 ocres mil rn
Walnut Twp., l'h ~ory home has 3 BR. bath.
42&gt;94 barn, large tobacco base. Coli lor an
appoontment.

CENTRALLY LOCATED - GREEN TWP . 22.11 acres mil with !rootage on St. Rt. 141
and Neighborixlod Rd. Also ad~ins Sande~
Holt Sulxl~. Owner f~ancmg available. Coli for
more details

GREAT LOCATION - REDUCED PRICE. NICE
NEIGHBORHOOD - All tlese tl&gt;ngs descrrbe
this all bric&lt;. ronch style home 1usl dl Rl. 35
This home offers 3 BRs. 1'.; baths. IR. FR,
equipped kichen. lull oosement. coveoed
paliO, .n~e f~tlenced backyard. C.llloclay.

00 YOU WANT LOTS Of ROOM PLUS THE
CONVENIENCE OF LIVING IN TOWN? - Tho
home offer.&gt; both. located on·Second Ave., ths
home has 3 or 4 redrooms, LR, din~g room.
large ~!chen wih pantry oft kitchen. small
back porch. large Iron! pooch, lull bt wrth
p~nty ol room lor garoon and &lt;OJ~ gas heat
unattached one car garage. Colt today lor an
apporntment.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING - PERRY TWP.NEAR CORA -!lJOO sq .ft.steel bldi.. rdeal tor
anyone in truck~&amp; drrllongor mrn•g business.
O.ner may consider teasrng or lrnancing. C. II
for ooore inlormaoon.

end gravel deltvery
· Call 304·178-3190.

-

CLOSE TO TOWN - Nrce one slory home
fealunngkrtchen, LR larno~ room .dining room.
full basement. carpetin&amp; gas leal. coty water. 2
car unattached bbck gaoage.

ADDISON TWP. - Possom Trot Rd. - 93
acres mil, all woods. Old barn 011 iJoperty
$21 ,900.

Coel, limeatone, gravel. 11c.
Delivefld 1 ton end up. Jim

Ume~tone

acres woods. Comfortab• two story home
offers 4 BRs. bath. klchen. hvrng room. family
room. two lorepoces, barn , 2 ~ rge screeened
porches. lovely qu•t sening

IDOK AT THIS! 10 !(RES M/l ONE YEAR
OLD RANCH - $39.9:l0'- Th5 i'&lt;Jifl! offers
1584 sq. ft . 4 BRs. 2 baths, krtchen, lamily
room. 12x24 lR. drnrng room. carpelm&amp; etec.
00 heat. Ande~en thermopanes.county water,
'iNI school d 5tr~t. Call tooay and make an
appoontmentto see tho !l1e.

Jamn Boys Water Servi~;e . Alto
pools filled . Clil 8t4 -258-1141
or 814·446· 1Hii or 614·4411 -

$17,900 - 32 VINTON STREET - Older
home offer.&gt; lR. klchen. 2 BAs, bath, 1 car
unattached garage, 40K I50 lot
QUALITY IN EVERY DEJAIL- 3or 4BRbrick
horne ofte~ a 20•40 lamily mom, 3 balm,
lulchen "th OW, displ., m(rOIIave and trash
compactor. donlrg room, inlerrom system.
central aor. 2 car garage, deck and a 20•40
pool. Over $100.000. Colt lor appointlfl!nl

200 ACRES M/l FRONTS ON RACCOON
CREEK - ApproK. 65 acoes tillab~ and 135

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

: detliling end some mechanlcel
. wortr.. tr• Ntimat11. Call fof
appointment 1-304-875-2tl3.

FIRST TIM£ FOR SALE -Custom b.roHbflevel on I 'II
acres • Green area. 3 bedroom. 'M balh,lamoty room.
woodburner, 2 car !li"Se. w!Jkshop and much ooore.
#1094
CAN YOU BEAT THIS! - Wasll!r. d~r. refrogerator.
stove. tabf and chm.sola. twor:eolrng laos.curtaons,a
real and c~an 60'xl2' ooobrf tolfl!. and lots more.
$7,250
#2006
THIS PRICE IN SIGHT - Nrce ~rmal ranch. 3
bedoooms. bath. large kichen , lovong room.
lo
town, coty schools. $22.COO.
#1068

aose

TEXASRD. - SIS.COO - Mo~le holfl!.lurnrture. I
acre more 01 less, new sephc system City schools.
#1088

Uphol1terv

GENTLEMAN SFARM - 35 acres mil, mos~y
tillabE, 3 miles north of Rodney. Sprin&amp; well
and county water. lenced and cross fenced.
tobacco base. Very nee 3CJ 4redroom ranch
style home wrth kichen. LR, balh. breezeway .
woodburnong foreptace. Call lor an
ap~ntment

MlRTH GALLIA ESTATES - Morgan l wp.
100Kllfl lot. Alkrng $1900. OwrEo .ill
consKier lrnancrng.
24 ACRES MI L HARRISON 1"111' .•ClAY UCI&lt;
ROAD - Ronong l111d,well on property, barn
and
. Call for more details.

COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL - lh• •ne
room two story holfl! features two ooths,dinong
room, krtchen with new cab~ell . disl!.vashtlr.
carpelin~ lirep~ce. lull basement gas heal.
bock 3 car garage, onyl Sid fig. l evellol Vo\th
hoghway frontage on Upper Rt 7.
GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres more or less
locatoo south of flercervil~. Appro&gt;. 20 A.
tillab• . Balance woods, tooocco base. (}.vner
will help lmnce.
;OMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL- RESIOEN·
IIAL - 50 acres. more or less. vacant land
~eat lor on vestment or any type devebpiTI! nl
!bad lrontage on U. S 35 and Michell Road
EDGEMONT DRIVE -CLASSYCAPE COD IN
PERFECT CONDITION - Ths holfl! offer.; 3
BRs. krtchen " th OW, d•pt., range and refrig.,
doing room. livong room with woodbuonrni
frep~ce. famrly room. woodburner,two ooths.
Ioyer, gas heat, cent. arr . maintenance tree
~dm&amp; garage, almost noo roof. rmmed~te
posses~on .

103 ACRES MI L. SPRINGFIELD TWP .
ApprO&gt; . 96 A. bltab~ . older home has 5 BRs.
bath, LR. klchen. county water, 40K!ll pole
bldg., 40x60 tobacco barn, vanous othtlr
oulbuoldings.
ATTENTION INVESTORS!' RENTAL INCOME
OF $485 PER MONTH - ASKING PRICE
$29,900! - 1.5 acres m/ 1. 5 rooms and bath
holfl!. 12x65 mobile I'&lt;Jme 01d mol&gt;~ horre
pad. Colt lor mooe deta r~ today.
$8,COO - ll ACRES - CHESHIRE TWP.Vacanl land. SepiJc tank 011 iJoperty. C.lllor
more onformatoin.

•

EDGE OF TOWN. RIVER FRONTAGE- Th~
home leatures LR eal·rn krtchen. nee famrly
room with hearth ol I'IOOdburner. balm , gas
heat. large unaltlched garage.crt'! schools. C. II
lor an appoontment.
YOU CAN OWN AUTILE BIT OF COUNTRY5 acres m/1, on St. Rt. 141. Nrce one story
home has alamrly room Vo\lh woodbumer. lull
basement , heat pump cent. air. cotern. well
and county water (}een school . Call lor an
appoinlment.
GREEN TOWNSHIP - 150 ocres m/ 1.appro&lt;
40 acres trllable, tobacoo barn.drrvethrushed,
metal cattle barn. appro;.; 1 ~ acre lake oo
property.
BRAND NEW DUPLEX- Greatrnveslment lor
the buyer localed on GrahamSchool Rd Each
unrt oiler.&gt; 2 BR. lrvong room. bath. lolchen 01d
stove. relng., OW and dopl . laundry , ooge
carport. central atr. and storage area.
THE FAMI LY WILL IDVE IT HER£1 - Ths
home offe" 172B IQ ff., 3 BRs. I'" baths, ~us
shower rn basement. galley kotchen o
completely equooped. LR. lamrly room. drnrn1
room, carpet111g. centra! a1r /hea1 pump, rear
deck overlooks Raccnon Cree&lt; Colt lor an
apporntment
WANT TO DO A UTILE FARMING THIS
SPRING? - We have a new lstong woth 11.4
acres mil, small tobacco I:Bse. noce ranch style
home offers 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. ~'if LR.
krtchen. lull basement. hardwood lbors. front
porch and reao patoo Jusl off Rt. 35. near
Rodney.
VACANT FARM lAND - Morgan Twp 84
acres more " E5s. Level and r~hng land.
Appro• 33 acres tolla b• Rernarndeo v.oods.
RACCOON CkEEK HOMESITE - Offers
swommon&amp; boahng and lshon~ lDI srze ~
HXIK600 and has electrrcot'i, water tap and
sepbc tan~ Coli for ooore detarls.

ITS UKE ASTEP BACKIN TIME - When you see tho
IP•cous home. Fealures charm. beaulfullj derooatoo.
4 bedrooms. formal en~y woth oa&lt; "ndrni starrcase.
Lots more too numeroos lo mennon
112018

mo~te

VACANT LAN 0 - 7 acres more or E5s located rn
Green Twp . 'I moolrom 141 frontoys flat ,.th bile&lt;
wooded. Rural wateo avao~b•
#2021
COMMERCIAL - forrrer~ RC Bottling Company
Corner lot. 3 offre. large garage ·door. ely water and
~er 12.448 IQ . ~ .
#1060
COMMERCIAL BUILDING SITES - 6.94 acres. close
to St. Rl. 35.
#1092

RIGGSCIIEST ADDITION - Awox two
acre I~ all he end of the skeet ilr IJ'~acy
and tall trees cover part of the 1~ . ~ 8
room ranch wilt1 brick fT!Yll wrth fami~
room.format dll~g ooom. dinette. 21JIIhs,
3
and OOR'(lletely caTpeted.

NEW USTING - MIDDLEPOIH - Nrce
Iitle house with many leai\Jres. t.\Jst be
seen. Gaoage, baseme1~ I ~ baths.
i all rn !Pod oondrtiln. $23,900.

acres land with a l\\ll story house.
bedrooms. 2 ooths, 2 kitchens ~ruse asa
dup~' &amp;cellenl rondrt~ n Insulated lor
heatong economy, oncudes 2 ca r garage
wrth
. other bur~•~ GlEAT

NEW LISTING - LETART AREA
Approx. 2 acoe m~i larm wrth smal barn,
fenc~g to the sheds. ~us a 1978 modu~r
unrt with 3 bedrooms, salellie dsh. 2 g&gt;od
garden areas. !)!lied water ,.,II. $29.!00.

: - - r l - - --....,

~1 036

1984 TRIUMPH II - I4K70' kJwmus custurn made
home on 96 acres. woollefl and wluded
located al SR 325. 13'•22' l.,ng room. hretrl1lul
&lt;nchen, garden lub
#7015

BUILDING LOT - Close to Raccoon Crf'f'k .,lhlot~n g
and cam~ng prov1leges Nrce corneo ot klclted on
Oearv~ Estates. $5.500
#1()(6
S20,COO - 5 acres more or less. 4 ll!droom oanch.
Oin~g room. gas ll!at. 2 mrles ~I Rl. 554. Kyger Cree&lt;
schools.
#1084

ON THE RIVER - Nrce big Iarm house. 7 acres more
rt ~ d rrver bottom. lm rj road lo011tage on SR 7.
#1087

SCENIC VIEW - 2.8 jCres 3 bedrooms. 2 baths
!ami~ room wih trep~ce. lull hn~hOO bas.men(
dec~ scenoc view.
#1010

REDUCED TO SI:Lt - Noce 2 bedooom horoo. orge
IWOded ~1. f•epoce. backup heahng syst!m, spacoous
2 car garage woth room for workslllp ~. 900.
#2012

BRICK RANCH - 73 acre lot. located on Add15011
townshop. 31l!drooms. bath. 1cao anached garage. lull
basemen~ 24xll unanached garage. Central aro
Pooced rn the 50s

ff l099

IIIDOLEPORT - Beautiful older colon~l
with an IMdem features, including
in.grouoo prol, firepla&lt;:e, central air.formal
d~~g room, 2 balhs, !ami~ room and
more. $40.900.

(l l98U Ce ntu r) l l Real £slate CorJ)IJration as truslt'e for lhe NAF'. ® and""- trademarks of Centuey 21 Real !::state Corporation Printed in r.S.A ~:IJUa lll uU~IIllJIJIIJIOrtunJt\ (i)

EACH OffiCE IS TND!PINDINTLY OWNED AND OPE&amp;ATEO.

Real Estate General

WANT A RIVER VIEW AND A SUPER lOCATION! Two trac~ ol vacant land. 5 acres on each. Purchase ·
one 01 both. Slrrveye&lt;l i}.vner l~an.crng possob~.
Wolhrn 3 rnrles ol Gallopolo. Dty schools system
#2019

55 ACRE FARM. STATE ROUTE 141 AREA
Oooblew~e horoo with 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. IMng
room. krtchen "lh dnng area. covered patoo. Barn, 2
sheds. land most~ pa~ure. Includes o&gt;nge. relrog.,

BRICK &amp;FRAME BI·LEV!l - Crt'! schools. natural 1as
heat. Ne&lt;rls a lottie tendeo lol/ong ca re. Owner want; a
deal.
#20 13
THIS BEAUTY - (}.vner.; gave th~ one the golden
touch' 3 bedrooms. 2~ baths. lamoi)lfln .. lormal fi~ng
and dfing room. plus est·on krtchen. Holfl! has all the
extras.
#2014

Real Estate General

SUPER STARTER OR RETIREMENT HOME - One
lkxlr plan, 2 bedrooms. utilrt'i room. maontenance-free
~nyl sdon~ located on Crt'! Agood buy at only $29,000.
' #1013

PRICE REDUCED- $21.900 - OWNER WILl HElP
FINANCE th" 12'K65'. 3 bedroom mobrle horn&gt;
located at SR 160. 1.4 acres. rmmedrate DOII""&gt;Ion

#1096

Uph0111rld.

COMMERCIAL - INVESTMENT - Commercral
bur~~g and 40 acres more or tess. ~cate&lt;l SR 35 and
SR 7.
#1027

VINYL SIDING RANCH - I yr old. 3 bedoooms. I
baths, krtche1 wolh eatong area. ivong room. utrlrty
room, FA etectroc htlal. n&lt;e I~
#2004

CllY LIVING -large ely ~1 . n(e remodeled holfl!.
new roof. wondows. ~drng and htlalong system Gke
new. excellent care
#1089

A I. M Furniture Manuhrcturing,
St. Rt. 7 . Crown City . Oh. Call
8U-2&amp;8-1470. call Eve. 114441 - 3438 . Old &amp; new

NEW LISTING - LOVELY COUNTRY HOME - 3
boorooms, modern equopped krtchen. All on ashaded
e•lra l a~ge lot.
#2039

TOBACCO FARMERSTAXE NOTICE -Ill acres more
CJ ~s. Tastelu l~ decooaled rmbr~ holfl! Remarkab~
gorxJ tobacco barn
#2022

unrt

1919 utt contained

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
114 -441-7833 or 614-US 1833.

Real Estate General

COMMERCIAL PROPERlY - State approve&lt;! melal
buoldon~ concrete l~or . heate&lt;l. water. restrooon ot
soze 55'' II O'.l ocated on aly hmrts Presenly Uled as
garage and wrecket serv1ce . Ext1a lot ~t10na1
Nl003

a1r

. 441-1751 .

cemplf, ••c cond. must ....
01 .100.00 304-675 -1148 .

3 ACRES LOCATED ATTHE EDGE OF TOWN -Septrc
system, coty water and natural !liS aready onstalled .
Ideal lor yoor new hoort i}.vrEo financong avarlab•
#2017

wmdow

1983 Shtnnandolh travel trail•
32 " · bn. btr•. AC , awning ,
· ful rlfrig ., combo bath &amp;
shower, exc . cond. Ctll 51•·

' 17 ft.

CUSTOM SlAUGHTER HOUSE- ApprO&gt; 2 yea" ~d
BurN acoord~ng 10 state code. slate onspecte&lt;l Incudes
all eq uopment. mo~~ home space i}.vner fonancrng
possrb~ C.lltooay
#1048

•l&lt;J
s ~ stf'f'l ,
cov~nng. ~lichen

area On 65x 125 kll $rooms OOwn arl(l

!JIIh. 3 rooms up and I:Bth RecP11U~

(lit

f !\.r ~f i'O'TI '( il il111 ' 1 ifllt' ~tlell

.wrooc le,JOC

Con·.-~

rtl€0110ta00fl to 5Ch0ot and d(llrfntown

HIODUI MfAY

,.,.,~ r (ftl'

N!W USTINC - HEAfl ASlHPEA

IN TOWN LOCATION - 2story holfl!, 31l!drooms. I ~
ootm, lamr~ room , nai\Jral !liS lt!at. Priced rn the 40s.
#1073

~ME -&amp;&gt;! ~ l 1r; toccu~ n t ol
I IllS :160 '(J 'I ranc~ Allh 3tr\lroom ~

0

1 b11r.&lt;. •I!L"I'If'l1 .,...T'l Od ' rnllmets
~f\M l -v&gt; '"&lt;ll1lll ' liH1 ·asTetu l c.1 1 ~

room.
basement. deck.
Mobole holfl! space.
#1063
UNMATCHED VIEW - love~ vrew olthe rNer, 3
bedoooms, 2'? baths. attracbve oak film . 2 WB
loreooces. central aor $69.500
#1043
WAITING FOR YOU - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION fiVe rooms, bath, encklsed sunpocch. lull basement
one car garage. located upper Second A10. $36,500.
#1067

N£W LIST ING IN TCM'N - Ren tal
2 8R hem~ w® IN 10011 DR

~P'!'t-1

tURfS ASlHPEA AmtACH'I'[ BRtOI RANG~ - f.r\
SchOO Dt; trrfl
Cb.rtll&lt;' '0' r· • 1 1 1~ lo&gt;n!
lll'll:h1XJr l';)()&lt;1 ~PI t'l.ifl)\t": : tr 1
room ~ Willi 1
b.J!h&lt;, lu "(J I ~ L· ~

Rotary or clble tool drilling.
Mott wet11 compl--" 11meday.
Pump ulu end 11rvioa. 304695 -3802 .

YOU'LL LIKE LIVING HERE - 3BR ranch1us1
mmutes ITom I~W~n on Rt. 141. Other lealures
onclude knchen ,;th range. relrig, OW, dopl.,
and oven, LR with !replace. bath. lull
basement. deck. fencell backyard. iii heal.
central air, crty school d•tnct

COH

f69 500

R-ICe&lt;! to :ll~a OR Jt

su [ll"fm ar~ ~na o~ Sf'IJ PI)r\11.
~ ~ k.lrmiiJ l!l!JanCP ¥1 C jlrlflll..
f~mtl&gt;! l'l))'ll ollllh tuep~e 3 t:lil!~
rf'Cr ea!'IOn htlllf a~d ;; ::.11 gillilgt Y~ry
~

rave ro oo d thing

THIS COULD BET HE ONEFOR YOU! -love~
brick ranch offer; a 14K24 LR. klchen viJW.
displ., eye&lt;evel oven. counter lop range and
breakfast bar. dinette. family room, 3 BR1. 2
baths, lull basement, paliO, 2 toeplaces.
attached 2car garage wrth eectrrc opener.&gt;, ia5
heat. central aor. palil, onteroom system. Just
minutes ITom I!&gt;'In on Debby Drove Call lor an
appoinlroont.

RINOLES'S SERVICE, e11periencld c:tf'l).,ter, electrician.
maton, painter. roofing Hncludlng hot tlr appiiCitionl 304115· 2088 .. 871 -7318 .

Lanier. 304-8715 -1247
7397.

1n a " elll.mdscapeo '()l

1cr ell lfll&lt; ltcl'lef\ .nJ l ~r!lf' oaserr tf'll

Yw OOfl"t

removal. Clll304-676-1331 .

adltduted belw.an now and
• Mey ht . lnaurence claims,

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

~rmU.

f1

can
with 79 acres or 2 acres. lh5 ~vely home
oilers 1800 sq ft. 4 t»drooms. 2 oolhs, county
style eal-ln krtchen . dm~g area. 12x24 lovong
room. •ood stove, carpelrn&amp; lull basement
cent. arr/ heat pump and attached 2 car
garage. There rs a 42x54 ba rn on the pmperty .
Call lor an appo•trrent

Feny Tr.. Trimming, stump

n41 night or day.
Auto ptN1tM1g end body wortl ,

DANVILLE AREA - C~se to Meigs Mines 67 acres m/1. lice horoo offers 3BRs. 2 oolhs.
&lt;i chen w/ DW, dispt., ooubte oven , elec
furnace. wpetin~ Bam on pmperty 24x30
will loft Call tooay too more intormabon.

2464.

Ken 's Water' Service. Wells,
ciat""''· pools filed . Phone
814·387 ·0823 or SU -387 ·

Auto Repair

1
RESIDENTIAL - CO
- Very noce brick horre
al225 Thord
St. has had eKcel~nl care and offers 14241Q
tt. of l•ong area with a lull partially finoi"Ed
basement. ~so leatures a carport. worksl'&lt;lp
and a 28x38 concrete bbck oommerciallyfl'
bldg. woth 3 bays forlfl!r~ used as an
automotrve reparr shop Coli lor more

~formation .

304· 882 ·2747 .

THE HOI£! HAT lf,SIV!R'ITIIIIIG 0\lltrtef, charm. and presige. T~ 2
den. !J1 .Jid D)rtlal ll.lSlf!lt.'fll
Encklsed swmmlflg ~ . tnge ~~a~
illd wul\sl'ql 15 ac lor &amp;nO?n ~maH
crop a1d utile Qul!!t 5£ef\IC brJOOn
lll9.llXI

PERRY TWP. - 21.8 acres. m/1. dder holfl!
oilers 2 BRs, LR, krtchen. bath. lull basement,
st!l'mwindows. well, rural water avaoobte. Coli
lor more details.

St.rk1 Tr11 end Uwn Service,
llndtciPI"'! . 304-67&amp;-201 0 .

rMr whHI drive. Tran1mi11ion
kits 6 torte converters. Alt tYJ)411
lif COf111NIIOfl 1 to 50 HP , 6
HP -2 11~e 11 ,296 . C1ll 114379-2220.

#1078

Repair Service Home.
butin•• &amp; auto. Selling, Mon .Sit. 8:00-8:00. For deteits call
Henry, 114-379 -2530 or 614 -

_pelnt1ng . Call304·713-6131 .

All typ11 uud a. rebuilt
transmittions- transfer Cll"
too . Overdrive. front wheel &amp;

$48.500.

Vin~l

buys. can 814-448-0848.

76

PRIVATE LOCATION - 10 yr od mulh level horoo, 4
bedrooms. 92 acres. barn, ceHar. tobacco base.

tom trim . 17 vetra tMplrilflCt.

Ctll 814·448 -9467.

0 . and M. Contr1ctors. Vinyl
liding; rel)ltcemenl windowa;
insulating; roofing; niW, rtmod~ln¥ ; conCf"ltl; inside, outside

eond, 304·e'71S -5433.

388·8155
379·2184
446 -0458
446-7881
388-8826
446-2230
675·3968

Dtvt't Home Improvements.
Vinyl, slumlnum gutters &amp; cut·

1981 Hondl e50 custom. 1981
Suzuki GS 850 G tully drtated .
19&amp;3 Hondt
1100 F. like
niW. only 1,100 mM11. brgein

1980 KIIWINki LTD 1000 . IXC

446-6610

llCEI'llliiAI.LV Will DECOIAT!D o
u~ Amerun diann 3-4 b!drooms.
beau~fullrvrtg room wrtll trepiKe and

BASEMENT
WArERPROOFING
Uncondilionll llfltime IIUiftn·
tee . loo•l rtferenc11 furnlltt.d.
FrM •tlmttn. Csll collect
1-814-237 -0481 , dey or night .
Rogers Basement

1982 Hondt XA80, tac. cond.
Cell 814 -446-288&amp; .

126 Suzuki three wh11l1r
1800.00. Ub . , ., 30· -676:
2334.

SOUTHERN-HILLS R.E ., I

Broker
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor

Home
Improvements

Landscaping: Shtlde &amp; fruit tree~
12 ln. vew• '9.50 etch. Gotden
Junlptrt *4.60 uch . Mulch.
Cell 814-448 -441-9846.

1978 Kaw11akiKX80. Excellent

I

Judv DeWitt
J. Merrill Carter
Becky Lane
Jim Cochran
Virginia Smith
Phyllis Loveday
Liz Long

B1

379-2831 .

Motorcycles

ca

II I deellion you can really live with

~replace).

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

=:-7:--:-:---- 5

REST.

BUYING REAL ESTATE

CHECK lllllf - it yoo are lootinc
forlholfttWitll. ...
4 sp«OJS beOrooms

73

74

II

JUST UltE 0 -Cualfty built e•ce!·

te5o.oo.

304 -891-3138 .

REAL TOR®

lent slate of ti!Oir ol 19 ·yr. dd hOOle
rtM tlssnEJII I'" ftlrsted wrth

74 Chevv '1\ ton 3&amp;0 lutot'nlltic.
powlf 11Hrlng- brekes , elr,
topper, good dr".
304 ·115· 1326 .

'78 FOfd 4a4. 304-876 -5327.

90 Ch1mp , front wheel drive.
auto . air rtereo . * 1950 . 304 -

oh

Trucks for Sale

1975 Ch•vv Bluer, 4 wh"l
d ·IVe. 1871S .00 Cell sfter IS ·OO,

367-0317

'74 Oldt Cutl111. 4 door, euto,
PS , PB. wry good con d . 82 .000
m1let. 304-676 -6876

The Sunday Times·Sentinei- Page .....

Wetefl)rooflng.

FREE ESTIMATES

446-4514
or 446-4841

good, body rougtl, 304 - na5244.

72

LARGE OR SMALL JOBS

CaH t.clar""

24 Hr . Wrecker Service
HOURS : 8 to 8

G

DOZER SERVICE

"Roofing "Siding
•continuous
Guttering
"Fenolng
"Remodeling

~~~~~:~n

V

675-3378 .

814·992· 7401 .
Chevy

Trucks for Sale

1981 Ford Mu1tang. 4 cyl auto ,
PS , PD. AC . rear defroster , "~~•rv
good cond. 12 .900 .00 . 304-

114·317·0147 .

1982

72

March 23 1986

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

.

...

pi.Js ~bow room. A
neat spirt level home with 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, fA etec. heat with heal purr(l,
central air condrt~n~&amp; s!or~ge buitd~gon
2.36
. Make an ..,!ll~llfl!ntlo see
this

REEDSVILLE - Country estate and a
rabM hunter's paradis~ Nice 3 bedroom
ranch
home with a full basemoot.
acres of ground ~us 1ree" gas.

POMEROY - Secluded and private. 11h
strty 3 ll!droom holfl! on larl!lllol. Gas FA
heal, also insulated. Palil. $29,000.

•'

�·~4~:au!•~go~-8~~~JS~u~nd~a~y~TI~•me~s~-Se~n~tin~e~I========~Pome~~ro~y~M~idd~~~~rt~G~a~I~~-~~~~~.O~hQ~~P~~~nt~~~~~~t~,W~-~Va~-======================~M~a~~~2~3~.~1~9~86

U.S. jets moving near libya's 'line of death'
. By RICHARD C. GROSS
. WASHINGTON (UPIJ - The
United States, pressing Its military
manuevers near Ubya, told the
North Atrlcan nation that Navy
warjets will start exercises Saturday In the region that Includes
Moamrnar Khadaty's "line of
ciPath."
Pmtagon spokesman Lt . Col
Gene Sands said the United States
flied a "ootice of Intent" late Friday
telling Ubya that U.S. jets will

begin flying In the Tripoli Flight
Information Region at 7 p.m. EST
Saturday.
The notiC(' is in effect until 6: 59
p.m. EST April 1, Sands said.
The previous notice of Intent
explred Thursday night. While the
notices are not mandatory, they
have been sent prior to other
military flig hts In the TrlpoU FIR.
The Tripoli FIR includes the Gulf
of Sidra , which Khadafy claims is
entirely Ubyan ten-itory. In Janu-

ary, he drew an Imaginary boun- Pentagon officials said.
dary across the IDJuth of the gulf,
Sands would not say If planes
calling It his " line of death, " and from those flattops would be
warned American ships and planes conducting the latest manuevers In
to stay out or risk confrontation.
the Triooll FIR.
The United States does not
All· three earners routinely
!'€COgnize the claim beyond a launched their jet fighters and other
12-mUe International limit off the aircraft In standard operations
Friday that kept them away from
Libyan coa,st.
The U.S. aircraft carrters Amer- the Libyan coast.
ica. Coral Sea and Saratoga were to
State Department spokf'sman
meet in the central Mediterranean Chartes Redman refused to comfar north of Ubya Saturday, ment Friday. saying "We don 't
discuss operational details. We
reserve the rtght to conduct
maneuvers In International waters
and airspace anywhere In the

General Assembly moving
towards spring break
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS. Ohio iUPI I
State lawmakers return to the
capital Tuesday for thelr final week
of work before a spring recess for
prtnlary election campaigning.
The legislators plan to finish up
Thursday. and adjourn for the
month &lt;1 April, when some of them
will be answering to the voters in
their respective parties back home
as they try to get re-nominated .
One major unresolved Item of the workers· compensation system - may still he
unresolved until at least after th~
primary.
Legislative leaders from both
parues and Gov. Richard Celeste
had hoped to enact a bill by this
week and putt he issue behind them.
But prtvate talks between Rep.
CUlton Skeen. D-Akron. and Sen.
Ric bard Finan, R- Clncinna ti. ha vr
yet to produce a settlement on the
controversy between labor and
management.
Labor prefers no change in the
current setup for insuring workers
on the job against injuty. except for
Improved safety in the workplace
But the business commu nitv has
convinced Celeste and l&lt;'!(isiativr
leaders thatoome alterations need

re!onn

slnce Thursday , when hf' wa:-.
rushed to the hospital from his

prison cell in what doc to1-s ca llf'd an
"Irreversible coma:·
Sindona's heartbeat had ix'come
continuously more erratic slnC!'
late Friday, hospital officials said .
Monitors registered no bra in acti1
lty Friday night, they said.
Slndona 's wife. his brothe r. his

force owners to get tuneup;. That
proposal was defeated in the House
on top of \\'Orkers' com}X'nsat ion
late last year.
awards.
The Senate Highways and TransThe Senate is to complete action porta ton Committee is to give first
this week on an auto ex haust hearing Tuesday afterroon to
emissions chPCkup program for the House-(18Ssed leglslatiJn making a
Cincinnati and Cleveland arm s.
sq&gt;arate crime of misconduct on a
The House pusS£-d a bill last week public tran sit system.
prov iding for ,·isual inSP&lt;'Ciions of
Since the bill cleared the House. a
pollu tion control equipment to see bus driver for the Central Ohio
that it is in place and operable, and Transit Authortty shot and se-a litmus test to ensure that riously ·woonded one cl severa l
PROGRAMMER - Stephen
unleadf'd gas IS bemg used
F. Kline Wll'l recently hired by
disruptive youths on his bus in the
Th~ Senate Energy. Na tu ral
wake of a string of offenses by
Federal Mogul ll'l a proHesouret?s and Environment Com- youthful passengers on COTA
grammer anaylst I. He wm be
mittee is scheduled to hear the routes.
responsible for the Installation
House-passed measur!' Wednesday
The House Finance Committee
and lmplemenlatlon of manumorning and rell'r it for a noor 10te will meet Tuesday alterroon to
factured software. Kline, a OU
Thursday.
consider Senate-passed legislation
graduate, Wll'l employed as a
There should be little r!'Sistance. appropriating $21.2 million to help
computer operations manager
since the U&gt;les te admin istration is the Ohio Department of Mental
lor McNai.tv Pittsburgh, Inc.
backing the plan in the lace of a Retardation and Developmental
tlm•al IJ,· the U.S. Environmenta l Disabilities correct administrative
Prot!'&lt;'! ion Agency to cut off deficiencies and assure proper care
highway and wa ter and sewer In community homes.
tr-.-atment funds from the affec ted
The Senate State and Loca l
areas unless ex haust emissions are Government Committee may vote
controlled.
Thursday on House-passed et hics
The latest plan is milder tha n the legislation forbidding, among other
miginal proposal to set up inspec - things. the personal use of camtion stations throughout five coun- paign funds bY candida tes and
ties in the Cleveland and Cincinnati officeholders.
87 Pollute
ACROSS
areas, perfo1m chemical measufl:L
89 Bog down
The House convenes TUesday a t
ments on ttx&gt; Px haust fum£&gt;S and 11 a. m. and the Senate at 1: :.J p.m.
90 Tell
1 Gain
92 Snare
7 Separates
94 Distribute
12 Sun-dried brick
95 Silences
17 Aroma
96 Gat up
21 Reject
97 VIndicates
22 Macaw
99 Obtain
23 More crippled
tOO Jargon
24 Ten-cent piece
tOt Contest
25 Faeroe Islands
102 South African
whirlwind
Dutch
26 Skin of fruit
103 Harvest goddess
son. Marco. and Marco·s !ian('('(' presence of a poisoning. We will do
28 Belonging to
105 Expel from
them
were at his bedside in the lntensiw an au topsy as soon as possible."
country
30
Ten-year
period
care spetion of the \'oghera hospital
On TUesday. a Milan coun had
107 Compass point
32 Babylonian deity
when he died. said Dr. Francesco sent meed him to life Imprisonment
109 Parisian summer
33 Work a1 one's
Nicrosini, dir('('tor of \ 'oghera after Slndo na was convicted of
t 10 Venturesome
trade
hospital.
paylng American gangster William
t
t \ Bridges
35
Walk
Anoth£'r ~ind o na son. Nino . told Arico $50,00) to murder Milan
t
13
Classify
3
7
Capital
ol
Oregon
r·epo11crs shoJ1 ly before hJS lather lawyer Giorgio Ambrosoli in July
t 14 Guido's high note
39
Light.
pink
wine
dtro tha t thr fa mill plann&lt;'d to bury 1979.
t 15 Fulfill
40 Sick
him in a Milan cemetery where
Sindona had been extradited
t 16 Pulverized rock
41 Gt. e.g.
SPveral of his r-.-Iatives are interred . from the United States to Italy in
t 17 Nahoor sheep
43 Juncture
The gray-haired financial " ;. September 19&amp;1 to face trial for the
t 18 Devoured
45 Heavy volumes
zard. once ca lled .. the most suC&lt;'ess- fraudu lent financi al transactions
120 Tellurium symbol
47 Myself
ful llallan sinC!' Mussolin i. .. swal- that led to the collapse of his Banca
121 Verve
48 Stalk
lowe-d the cya nide Thursday Privata Ita Iiana and the murder of
49 Country of
122 Skidded
morning while drinking a cup of Ambrosoll. the lawyer appointed to
123 Antlered animal
Europe
t 24 Become insipid
52 Formally precise
liquidall' his crashed Italian bank.
coffee.
!26 Staid
54 Retreat
The poisoning cx-c uJTed despilt•
Prior to the extradition, Sindona
128 Swindle
56 Red vegetables
the far! Sindona was undPr 24 -hour
had been se1ving a 25- yea r jail
t30 Helical
57 Ground hog
guard a! \ 'oghC'ra . a prison for sen tenC&lt;' ha nQ:od down b)· a New
132 Shower
59 Join t
woml'n .!i miles south of Mi lan. He York court in 198J lor fraud in
t34 Apportioned
6 1 Small am ount
wa.s lhf\ onl~ · m alr inmatp His connection with the 1974 crash of the
135
Dickens' Uriah 62
English
baby
meals were prepare-d under police Franklin National Bank. which
136
The
two of us
carriage
supe1vision and ser'\rd in sealed Sindona had bought two years
137 Nerve networks
63 Skin ailment
r ontainers.
lx'fore. lnvestigators laterfoundSll
139 Tidy
64 Latin contunction
"1\'r an· still at thr initial phases million was lost in foreign exchange
141 Neon symbol
66 Pitching stat.
of the lnn:'Stiga tion," Assistant deallngs .
142 Wooden vessel
67 Spelling contest
Stale .-\!!orne)· Gi01·anni Simoni
At the time. Franklin was the W! h
143 Bundla
68 Fall short
sa id. ·-we still have toaccenain If it biggest bank in the United States
145 Hinder
69 Near
is a case of suicide or homicide. The and was the largest federally
147 Food program
71 French plural
only crr1a inty is that wr a n? in lhr
insured bank ever to fail.
149 Stitch
article
t52 Sun god
72 Stull
153 Commands
74 Chemical
155 European finch
compound
157 Fat ol swine
76 Eat
159 Roman tOOt
17 Music: as wri tten
the beatings happened behind told him they were taken Into a
160 Merry
78 Place of the seal:
dos.~ doors and it will be our word
)XlliC(' room at the hospita l. handt62 Boredom
abbr.
aga ins! thf'irs."
cuffro and slammed against a wall.
164 Severity
79 Earthquake
The guard said he and ottw:-rs had
Caner said the abused patients
166 Driad grape
81 Auricle
r('maim'&gt;d quirt " until \\' f' just got freq uently were mentally ill or
82 Shut up
168 Ms. Ferber
sick and disgustf'd with it. "
169 Leaks through
indigents who had argued " i t h
83 Footwear
170 Scorches
84 Chlilr
The head of the\'.-\ hospital has hospital staff.
17 t Besmirches
85 Make lace
tunwU ow•t ttw ~rso nnc&gt;l rtlCO rd ~
" The one thing we are told wh&lt;•n
of all\9 S«'Ulilv guards to the FBI. we sta11 worklng here is that you do
However, the FB I hasn't !Old him not abuse patients." said Caner.
" We are here to help them . Even if
wha t thc&gt;v 'rc&gt; looking for .
" I rraliv don't knowwh al till' FB I they spit in your face. you do rot hit
1-" imf~1igating." said hospital
them . You may uscforrP to restrain
dirrclor non Zirgrnhom .. Tnrv them. bu t never. nrwr hi t a
patient."
h:1\·r tx'f'n \'C' t~· non-s!Jff'ific ."
L.onnir Cart Pr. president of a
The hospital tn•a I' about 10.roJ
loca l union rl'prcsenting hospital pati£&gt;n ts a yC&gt;ar.

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. Two fanner Marshall Unlvl'rslty
students - one a 1900 Point
Pleasant High School graduate who have achieved success In the
business world , have contributed
$100,00lto Marshall's new Society
of Yeager Scholars program.
James E. and Verna LeMasters
Gibson of Bexley, a Columbus
surburb, are the la test major
contrtbutors to the Yeager Scholars
project. according to MU Foundation President William F. Agee.
Mrs. Gibson, who graduated

RIO GRAND E - On Friday,
.Ja n. 24 , two members of the Rio
Grande College S.i.F.E. Team
(Student s in -Free En terprtsel ,
went to speak with administrators
of the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources . The tw o S!F E
members, Lori Bodnar and Valerie
McElroy, have been focusing their
project towards the lit ter prevention projects that have been ti\king
place in Ohio.
Gary Liss. National Recycling
Coalition (NRC I president sa id the
biggest problems facing recyclers
today are low pliC('S and lack of
market for r&lt;'Cyclro materials. In
the past eight years, these markets
have been some of lhewOJ'SI. On the
other hand. recycling will be
successfu l if the cooperation of the
public is obtained. It is in everyone's best Interest to recycle.

gh ·e strong consid('ra tion to rC'in ·

stating Metzger· A loUJ1h board
member. .Jrn;.· J.awson. df'C llned to
SBV how hr would vote.
" I don 't know what issues a re left
to ta lk about." Rhodes said Friday
night. ··Clearly the grand jury
thought that she was vict imized
enough to where It thought ro crlrne
was committed . l don't think we
should second-guess the grand jury .
I know I woo ld put my kid in her
classroom:·
RudY said the board should
"serious l y c o n si dl'r"
reinstatement.
"It appears there are facts about

'

the happening that were not
ava ilable to us in our prPVious
rl iscussion," Rudy said.
Brown said the board's dccL,Ion
to suspend M&lt;•tzger was "deliber ated with ca ution and concern" for
the teacher and for the students
where she worked.
" It was a difficult decision for al l
of us:· he said. " I think we did not,
a t tha t time. ave e nough
Information."
Three members could not be
reached for comment. One &lt;1 those
three, Virginia GrlfOn, Is not
expected to be in townforMmday 's
meeting, school administrators
said .
The board suspended Metzger for
five days without pay from her job
at Rockdale Elementary School.

invested and annual proceeds will
be used toflnan a&gt; theJamesE and
Vema K. Gibson Endowed Sch~larship In the program.
Twenty of the nation's most

March 23, 1986

outstanding high school seniJrs will
he selected each year to receive tbe
Yeager scholarships, named In
honor c1 aviation hero and west
Vlrginia nalive Chuck Yeager.

The program will pay all expenses ror the students who will be
given the ClJportuni ty ~receive an
enriched, Intensive education at
Marshall.

to

Some advantages of recycling are
that it saves disposal cost, landllll
space, energy and natural resources and It also creates jobs.
A national study found that 34
jobs are created by recycling 10,roJ
tons of solid waste compared to only
10 jobs In disposing the material.
There are five general steps to go
about how to recycle materials:
- Find the phone number and
address of the nearest recycler.
Look in th!:' ~·eHcw pages under

recycling scrap and waste or call,
loU-free, recycling information 1-

800-282-00W.
- Call the recycler and ask If
they recycle the Items you have;
ask when they are open; and ask if
and how much they will pay.
-Begin saving. Glass containers
should be cleaned, all metal
removed and sorted by color.

79 Plague
t Support
2 Walk unsteadily
3 Derived from
4 Animal coat

5 Egyptian goddess
of motherhood
6 Temporary
shelters
7 Pennsylvania:
abbr.
8 Skill
9 Cheers
10 Handle
11 Seaman

12 Indian mulberry
13 Father
14 Hebrew measu re

t5 Happen
16 Expunge
t7Poem
18 Roman gods
t9 Egg dish
20 Domains
27 Profound
29 Recalled
31 Prefix for down
34 Long fOf
36 Recreation area

38 One's profession
40 Newspaper
paragraph
42 Buffoon
44 Underground
excavation

45 Location
48 Fasten
49 Lillie
50 Walks with
measured steps
51 Japanese drama
53 Simple
55 Concerning
56 Kind of cheese
58 Cylindrical
60 Comfon
62 Gasp for breath
65 Scottish cap
68 Keen
69 Coral island
70 Units of Chinese
currency

72 Wooden

container
Spotted
75 Youngster
76 Strikes out
77 Auxiliary varb
73

80 More unusual

82
83
84
86
88
89
90
91
93
95
97
98
102
t04
106
t07
t08
110

Heaped
Chore
VIscous mud
Chinese pagoda
Haze
Begin
Ranted
Muse of poetry
Disseminates
Tallies
Frfgld
Health resort
Tie
Type of cookie
Vessel
Writing tablet
Diminished
Badger
It I Trapped
1t2 Heavenly body
114 Raises the spirit
of
116 Strike
117 Mix
119 Verve
t 2 t Paradise
122 Search for
123 Spanish: abbr.
125 Prevaricated
127 Printer 's measure

128 Accuse
129 Harbinger
t30 Goddess of the
moon

13 t Liquid measures
133 Metal fastener
136 Walks In water
138 Eagill's nest
140 Alps
143 Bromine symbol
144 Sea eagle
t46 Capital of Latvia
t48 English streetcar
150 Arabian

Aluminum cans should be rinsed
and separated from other cans. Use
a magnel to Identify those containers with steel. Other cans should be
cleaned, although be sure your
recycler will accept them. News·
papers should be stacked and tied
with string or placed in paper
groc&lt;'ry bags; the shiny color
Inserts should he removed. If you
want to recycle other it ems, ask
your recycler how they want them
prepared.
- Take the recyclables you have
collected to your recycler when you
have rnough to fill the trunk of your
car.
Why should one recycle? Ohioans
generate a staggering amount of
waste - nearly seven million tons
per year. Each resident contributes
nearly four pounds per day . Over a
tuettme, thllt adds up to a t least 600
times the average adult weight in
waste.
At the same time Ohio Is
producing massive amounts of
waste, it is faclnh a landfall crisis.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency es tlm ates that within
20 years , the state could run out of
areas to bury its wastes.
Keep. America Beautiful, Inc.
(KABI, was foundl&gt;d In 1953. KABis
a natiJnal. non-profit public service

NEW MANAGER - Johnanna Shuler has been named the new
manager ol Ohio Valley Bulk Foods, Main Street, Pomeroy, a business
of Annie Chapman. In llddltion IAI the extensive Hne of bulk food
products, the store Is now leaturlng homemade candles and all ollbe
suppUes to make your own.at home.

By FRANK KELLY
UPI Ilu*ess Writer
DALLAS (UPII -Government
leaders must give long- range
thought to the nation's trade poUcy
to curb the cyclical fluctuations
which trtgger devastaling "ups and
downs" In the agricultural and
petroleum induslrtes, Chrysler
chairman Lee.Iacocca advises.
Business leaders can plan for 10
to 15 percent changes In the
economic structure ol thelr lndustrtes. but wild swings such as oil
prices plunging from $34 a barrel to
$12 and the cost of farm operations
whipping past crop values Is
beyond anyone's forecast ing. he
said.
"Why are we so cyclical all of a
sudden ?" he asked, noting the
heaviest fluctuations appeared to

Crowe elected McWhorter VP

commander

GALLIPOLIS - Jesse L. Crowe has been elected Vice President
of McWhoner Advertising, a 59-year-old organlzati&gt;n operating in
Ga llipolis and parts of West Virginia. Kentucky and Ohio, accordi ng
to Robert D. McWhorter , President and CEO of _the company.
Crowe worked for Smoot Advertising In PortsmJut, which was
acqulred by McWhorter Advertising in 1963. He received a Bachelor
of Business Administration Degree from Ohio University In 1968
He has worked In all pha ses of the rutdoor advertising business
and has been the sales manager since 1976, a positiJn In which he will
continue.

Woomer new Columbia Gas rep
CHll.LlCOTIIE- Susan M. Woomer of Lexington. Ky., has been
named marketing representative lor Columbia Gas cl Ohio. She "111
work out of the Chillicothe Division Headquarters, which serves
Gallla, Meigs, Jackson and Ross countJes.
She will coordinate Columbia's various r!'Sidential and
commercial marketing programs with appliance and heat ing
dealers and Individuals In those counties tohelppromotetheelflclent
use of natural gas.
A Livonia, Mich., native. Woomer joined the gas company in 1984
as a marketing trainee at Lexington. She has a Bachelor of Science
Degree In Business Administration from the University of Dayton.
She has also earned a certificate In the Entree Program at the
Katharine Gibbs School In Boston in 1984.

Landis completes training seminar
GALLIPOLIS - Mark Landis of Gallipolis has completed an
intensive training seminar qualifying him to conduct nine-session
Slim Up &amp; Live dieting classes.
Sponsored by Shaklee Corporation, Slim Up &amp; Live classes utilize
group support, goal setting and self-discovery In comblnalion with
clinically tested products.
For more informatlon, caU U-1772.

Waugh named assistant cashier

Susan Woomer
Feature Syndica te

orga nlza tiJn dedicated to prevent·
lng litt er and encouraging indlvid·
ual in volvement in environmental
improvl'ment. Since 1976, the program has helped makecllles, towns
and counties in ll states as much as
87 perC('nt cleaner.
Like Ohio's litter contml program. KAB emphasizes changing
litter lx'havlor through education
and awareness. improved contain·
ment and vigorous enforcement of
Iiiier Jaw.;. Unlike Ohio Littl'r
Control, KAB also promotes beautifica tion projects.

home In Bexley In appreciation of theoouple's$100,000
gift to MU's Society ol Yeager Scholars program.
Mrs. Giboon Is a 1900 grllduate ol Point Pleasant Wgh
Sehool.

To join the KAB system, local
governments must submlt a letter
from the chief elected official
en~rslng the application and a
brief l'Valuatlon of the current
lilter-solld waste situation. A commitment to meet local program
costs and a KAB serviC('s fee are
aiso required .
Each community selects a threememi:1'r project tea m to a ttend
KAB training on program implementation. To keep track of
pmgress, they conduct a Photometric index three times a year. The

lndex Is a method of measuring
litter by counting pi!'&lt;'es of litt er in
photographs of selected areas .
Each new index is compared to a
baseline index taken before the
community started its KAB
program.
KAB has films. handbooks and
other materia is availab le for com
mu nitics' use. ln addit ion lo it s
initial n·ainlng on implementing
litter coni mi pmgrams and gaining
loca l support . KAB holds na tional
works OO ps so communi! ies can
sha re ideas.

surface about every 10 yei!rs.
It is nol a ma tt er of "right or
wrong" on the part of industry
leaders and it is "ridicu lous" to
suggest that a farmer. banker or oi l
producer could plan lor "swings of
50 to 100 percent," he said.
"He'd have to be an idiot to plan
that way - that's the essence of the
problem, " sa id lacocca, who was in
Dallas as par1 of a 10-city tour
prev iewing Chrysler products.
Inaction by the government to
remedy the problem is reflected in
the nation's pll'sent trade policy, he
said.
He praised Treasury Secretary
James Baker's efforts in closing the
currency gap wit h foreign countrtes. saying the previous administration subscribed to "acne eco-

nomlcs" on the theory that nothing pretty damn silly."
could be done.
Baker has shown "that when
In the past, the response was you've got a problem. yru 've got to
always the sa me: "Don't worry, do something to solve il. You don't
you'll grow your way out of it," he sit on your hand• and you don·r just
said.
sit around ta lking about it.' ' he sa id.
That a llit ude should be applied to
"The best news to us as automotrade policy, lacocca 'uggpsted.
bile people of course Is the change,
the dramatic change, in the value of
the yen versus the dollar. It 's all the
-- For the most part. trade po licy
way down to 180 against the dollar. in this cou nt ry is still in a
"That ol course, in one swoop, is shambles." he said . citing the
beginning to level this playing field recent announcement by J apan
for us and all I can say Is It 's about that it would hold car shipment s to
time. For four long years we heard current levels as an exa mple.
lectures coming out of the i'l rmer
"The Japanese made a prophet
secretary of the treasury thai out of me. I sa id at the Los Angples
absolutely nolhing could 1:1' done trade show 60 days ago that the
about currency among nations."
Japanese would absolutely freE&gt;ze
He said that approach oost a lot of shipmf'nt s at the curren t level.
jobs in the United States while They'r&lt;' not foolish and they're
maklng "the whole country look never dumb."

----Local business.·--------------___,

151 Emerges
VICtOfJOUS
153 Room In harem
t54 Dine
156 Neither
158 Expire
161 Article
163 Exists
t65 Rupees: abbr.
167 Every half year:
abbr.

® 1986 United

SHOWING THE FlAG - MarshaD University
President Dale F. Nlll.'!Chke (left) presents a
Ma rshall Oag to James E. 1111d Vema Gibson at their

Iacocca urges change in trade policies
to eliminate devastating cyclical swings

workr rs. :-.a id Sf'\'t•ral pat ients had

Thursday after a llfand iul'\
refused to indict her.
Board me mbers \' irg ln ia
Rhodes. Herbert Bro• 11 a nd .Jac k
Hudy indica I•~ thrv Jl least would

from PPHS, was named president former students have so much
in June 1985 of The Limited Stores, affection for their school and are so
one of the nation's largest women's Interested In helping lito grow and
apparel store chains. More than Improve," Marshall President Dale
10,00) people are employed In the F~ Nitzschkf' said. "The Yeager
chains 600 stores. An Elkview, Scbolars program has been desigW.Va., native, she attended Mar- nated for 'only the best.' It Is
shall from 1900 to 19£2.
approprtate that Jim and Vema
James Gibson. a Huntington, Gibson wbo have proven themW.Va., native, who attended Mar- selves be among the best In thelr
shall from 1958 to 1961. He Is the field are supporting this program
owner of the J. Duffy's designer In ~ch a significant way."
home accessortes shops In ColumMU Vloe President for Institubus and Dayton.
tional Advancement Keith L. Scon
"It is gratifying when a couple of says the couple's gift will he

DOWN

Cincinnati teacher may be
CINCINNATI. Ohio fUPl t- Th e
Cincinnati elementary sc hool
teacher who was accused in the
shoOting dea th of her ex-hu sba nd
stands at least a 50 percent chanrP
· &lt;1 being reinstated . school orficials
· have lndlcated.
At least hall of the Cincinnati
· Board d Education members who
; Monday will decide the fa I&lt;' uf
: Karen Metzger's teaching career
· have said they are leaning in her
: favor . Metzger was suspended
: March lOth alter being charged
-· wtth the March 5 kUling.
: Metzger sald her husband had
; hamlssed her for years and had
· threatened to kill her and her son.
~ Pollee said Metzger chased Ronald
' Metl'ger for more than a mile In a
·.car before shooting him several
_tinK'S- . Charges were dropped

'iim... -

SIFE concentrates on state
litter prevention projects

SUNDAY PUZZLER

FBI investigating VA hospital
C!NCII\'NATI I UP! I - The FBI
Is Investigatin g allegations that
securtty guards abused patient s at
the Cincinnati Veterans Admini.s·
!ration Hospital.
The FBI Is checking charges that
15 patients wen' beaten a nd abusro
by thf('(' guards. Fellow guard&gt;
sought the investiga tion.
A guard who askro not to be
Identified publicly lor fear of
retribution , said he and fellow
guards had known about !he abu sP
lor a year. but didn 't report it lor
lear of retribution
"We struggled with it for a _n-ar
and now we've d&lt;'CidPd Ia put our
heads on tbc line. " he sa id . .. A lot of

moving east together ln ·two task
forces and were "way up" north of
Libya, Pentagon oources said. The
Amertca and its escorts were
headed eastward toward the other
two earners but still were In the
western Mediterranean, they said.
"The earliest they could link up
would be Saturday." one source
said, speaking on condition of
anonymity.
The arnval of the America wUI
bring to at least 30 the number of
U.S. warships in the central
Mediterranean and will be the first
time s!nC(' November 1981 that
· three llatt(lJS are In the sea at the

same time.
The current U.S. exercises began
in January as part of PreslciPnt
Rf'agan's retaliations for what the
administration says Is UbYan
support for international terrorism.
The manul'Ver-s - and an
economic boycott that has drawn
less than enthusiastic support from
U.S. allies -came after the United
States charged Khadafy wtth aiding and abetting a terrorist groups
that took responsibility for the Dec.
27 attacks at the Rome and VIenna
airports.
In August 1981, two U.S. Navy
F-14 Tomcat fighter jets shot down
two Ubyan MIG jets In a dogfight
over the Gull cl Sidra.

to be made to cut down on
unpredictable. expensive lawsuits

Mastermind of bank failure
dies of cyanide poisoning
VOGHERA, Italy 1UPI1 - Mi
chele Slndona. the mas1e1mind of
the biggest bank failure in U.S.
history and the man who shook the
Vatican's financial empire. died
Saturday three days after swallowing cyanide in his prtson cell.
Officials said it was st ill not clear
whether Sindona kilh:-d himself or
was murdered.
Slndona. 65. died from cardiac
arrest between 2: 10 p.m. and 2: H
p.m., hospital officials sa id . The
medical certificate listed the cause
of dl&gt;ath as "cardiocirrula tory
arrest consequent to anoxia l!otal
ciPprtvation of o x ,. g e n 1 from
poisoning." An autops)· will he
conducted .
The 65-year-old Sindona had hel'n
kf'pt alive by life suppor1 51·stems

world.' '
The Coral Sea a nd Saratoga were

~.uti...t Section ~
Ex-students give $100,000 to scholarship fund

Business

GALLIPOLIS - Donna M. Waugh has been appointed assistant
cashier at The Commerdal &amp; Savings Bank cl Gallipolis, according
to President and CEO Donald L. Cranoe.
A Kyger Creek High School and Century Business Olllege
graduate, Waugh has completed several courses with the American
Institute of Banking (AlB ) at Rio Grande College.

She began her career with The Commercial &amp; Savings Bank in 1973
in the bookkeeping department. Waugh was transferred tot he Silver
Bridge Branch as a teller and was appointed manager ol the Sprtng
Valley Branch In 1981.

Morrow new marketing manager
GAJ"LIPOL!S - Mark A. Mon-ow has been named markf'tlng
manager of Va lley Diagnostic Laboratories In the Spring Valley
Shopping Center and Portsmouth.
Valley Diagnostic provides medica l laboratory services for
Individuals with out of town doctors and physicians. clinics and
nu rsing homes in the tri-sta tl' area.
A University of Cincinnati graduate, Morrow also has a Masters
DegrC&lt;' in Labora tory Management from Central Michigan
University.
Prior to joining Va lley Diagnostic, Morrow represented Malcolm
Laboratory Supply, was a medical technologist at Licking Memorial
Hospit al in Newa rk and was Laboratory Manager at Mount Ca rmel
Medical Center In Colum bus.

GAC promotes Blakeman

Dotu1a M. \\'a ugh

PIKETON- Irma L. Blakeman has been promoted to supervisor
for personnel and EEO at the Goodyear Atomic CorporatiJn.
She joined Goodyear Atomic In March 1977 as a stenographer In It s
purchasing department and has served as acting supervisor of
personnel and EEO sine&lt;' March 19&amp;'i.

VA loan program to continue
GALLIPOLIS - The Veterans AdmlnistratiJn will continue to
operate It s home loan guaranty program without restrictions until It
reaches the loan commitment limit mandated by 198i deficit control
measures, according to Gallla County Veterans Service Officer
Dovel Myers. VA olflclais said the current $11.5 billion ceiling on
guarantees could be reached by April 1.
The demand for VA-backed loans rose drama tica lly In the past
year. which saw the interest ratedrop Hve llrnes to 10.5percent - the
lowest since 1979.
The VA has also wllhdrawn plans to Impose oertaln loan
Umitations scheduled to go Into effect Marcl1 1. These Included
denying requests for refinan cing and lor restored or partial guaranty
entitlement , as well as setting a $ro,rolloan llmlt.

Mark A. MoJTOw

�March 23, 1986

The

March 23, 1986

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

Times-Sentinel

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

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

ALL WEEK
MARCH 23
THRU
MARCH 29

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, MARCH 29, 1986

limit
20

$

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

Chuck Roost •• ;~ .•••

9
4
1

Coupons
--·..... -·-·- -

Chickens •...••••• ;~..... 49(

0A

$

BUCKET
GRADE A WHOLE

U1

'------199
Cube Steak •••. !~ ....

OLD KYGER - SevEral feet up
on the front part of til&gt; Old Kyger
Free Will Baptist Olurch near
Cheshire, one will ootlce a small
marker that tells that In 1937 til&gt;
fiaod waters reached ro that point.
Lost In the fiood of 1937 was most at
the chu rch's records and consider·
lng that this chu rch was organized
in June S. 1940, this was a
co nsiderable loss to the communi·
ty's recorded history.
The first building that thi s
congregallon worshipped in was
erected In 184.1 on a hlll about
one·haH mile from the present
structure. In l!l8l-tlte church moved
its sanctuary down 111&gt; hill to ils
present location when the church
they ' now occupy was completffi.
The pastor in l8!ll was W. J. Fulton.
Some of the names prominenl in
the early history of Old Kyger wa s
Jonas McCartv, Paul Darst Elder
D. C. Topping and Rever~! Levi
St eadman.
The 1937 flood wa s officially jusl a
fraction of an Inch less severe 1han!
he 1913 flood but in ooth noocts
Ches hir e Town ship suffe red
gn&gt;atly.

The Cheshi re correspondent to

with little sickness and one death
(Mr. Thad Las ley)."
Mr. Lasley was found dead in a
chair at his oome wll&gt;n&gt; the Door
had about two inches of water oo It.
Neighbors also found near Lasley's
home two cattle who were starving.
Mr. Lasley, who Uved alone, had
kept the pair of cattle for nine years
as pets and together they weighed
4Z70 pounds.
The W.P.A. was responsible for
cleaning out several of til&gt; churches
In the area so tha1 services could be
held after almost a month of
inactivity due to Impassable roads.
Wymond Bradbury woo ran a
store In Kyger had gone to Atll&gt;ns to
get his son, VIctor, who was a
student at Ohio University. When
Wymond had trouble getting
through and did mt arrive at
Athens in time, Victor startffi out
walkin g. By rail and road Victor
made It to Wilkesville. Traveling up
hills and down dales In a circuitous
course, Victor arrivffi al Kyger In a
most tired state. The mall did not
get through to Kyger for over two
weeks.
Another article from the Che·

the Gallipolis DaUy Tribu ne wrote

after the 1937 flOOd : "The January
1937 floo&lt;l has gone leaving behind
damage and loss which can never
he replaced. The destructiVe wa·
lers were In every house In
Cheshire proper but til' oouse on
the Bush farm that was formerly
Watson's Grove. The water was on
the second floor of lhe properties
belonging to Neal Rife and E""'rett
Watkins. Mr. Rife' s barn left Its
foundation and floated to the fro nt
portion of the Buzwell Roush and
Adam Fife property. In Ill' 1913
flood this barn then belonging to
Dave Thomas, floated to the same
spot."

"When water had surrounded Ed
Swisll&gt;r's barn his stock was tak en
to the Baptist !Cheshire) church·
yard. There a small calf In some
way got Into Mrs. Rilla Ely's ba m
and as the water rose It climbed
stair steps of the second noor when
it was rescued and tak en to til' hills
\\ilh Its mother. In this community
about 58 autos were under water.
Ouislde of property loss our
community has fared fa irly well

GALUPOUS - Dovel Myers . ' mallo n on emerging scientific and soo n as space In til' GSA-controlled
Gallla County Veterans Service engineering issues in the rehabUita· building Is rEnovated .
Officer has announced til&gt; Veteran s lion field an d publlsll&gt; s the "Jour·
VA's ac tion to consolidate these
Administration will consolidate it s nat of Rehabilitation Research and
rehabilitation research activities Ls
nat ional program for developing
Development" the leading medical an effort on the part of til' agency to
and testing prostll&gt;llcsand rehabili· journal in the field. Approximately Improve the effectlvrness and
tatlo n engineering &lt;lJUipment in 60 VA scientists and other medical quality of these progra ms and to
Baltimore, locating In one place speclallsi' \\111 he h eated at til' . respond to concerns ex pres sffi by
some of Ill' world's leadin gtechnol· Baltimore remer. The consollda· veterans service organizations.
ogy assessment personnel and
lion Is expected tn hf' mmpleted as
equipment.
Dr. John W. Ditzler, VA Ollef Jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii---------"fi
Medical Director, said consolida ·
lion will bring togetll&gt; r three key
un its of the agency's pioneering
programs In til' research. develop·
ment. test ing and dissemin ation of
information on artificial UmtJ; and
otll&gt;r aid s for the disabled . "The
location sun&gt;ly will become rEL
mwned as a center for excellence in
this fiel d," he said.
The three units Include :
The Prosthetics Assessment and
BLOCK ONE:
lnfonnatlon Center, which evalu·
May 27-June 27
April 14-May I b
ales commercially available pros·
thetlc devices and disseminates
Shorthand
Typing
infonnation about tll&gt;m to VA
Resumes/Interview
Office Machines
clinicians and researchers:
The Technica l [)pvelopment and
Bookkeeping/ Accounting
Personnel Management
Evaluation Units of VA's Rehabill ·
tallon Research and Development
Service, which pertorm technical
"BRUSH-UP REGISTRATION DEADLINE"
and clinical ev aluations of newly
IPR'L 4, 1986
developed research products and
techniques and help advance these
devices and metlllds Into commer·
.
rial production, distribution and
use: and .
Th e office of Tec hnology
Transfer, which disseminates lnfor·

,.

Leg Quarters ••••••••
. ...••... $1 39
·)/t4 por k Lo1n

-,..

·;....

LB.

Ul

'

"II

0

~

m
,..

0A

LB.

$

2
9
Lunch Meat •.•. !~.... 1

,..

Ill-

CALL SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS COLLEGE
AT 446-4367

15 UNIT·S IN STOCK
8.775% 8.50%

~ .

Et)i•rtiti'Annua/ Yidrl

-;....

•

Tomatoes ...•.•• !~ .....
BROUGHTON'S

9
4
2°/o Milk ••••.••• ::~ ••• $1

Jumbo Eggs ••••••••••
JENO'S

10.1 1o.8 oz.
89
Pl.zza •••••••••••••••••••••

(

Catsup •••••••••••••••••• 89&lt;
ZEST A
LADY BORDEN
•
99
79&lt;
SaIt 1nes ......•.••.••••••
Ice Cream •••••• ::~!L~. $1
to

LB. BOX

.. . .
.... ..
•·····couPON·······•
COFFEE

~A~s

$899

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's S~~&gt;rtrma1rlc• 1
Offor
Sat., Mar.

••

•

• MAC. &amp; CHEESE

t,. oz.

7

5I Sl

Limit S Ptr Customer
Good Only at Powell's Suptrmarlctt
• Offer bpires Sat. Mar. 29, 1916 STS

-..... ................ .
~

~-

~

,..

~

Ill
)It

-1
)It

I""

·&lt;
-

~

z

,...0

1986 CHEVETTE 2 DR.

Cl

Ill

"tt

0
2

PER MONTH
Sale price $6699, trade
equity or cash down
$800. amount financod
$4799, 60 monthly pay·
ments of $99, B. 7%
Annual Percentage Rata.
GMAC Fixed Rate Fl·

$1 .00 .

DOZ.

PRICE SAVER

-1

0

•The total value of the dou ·
ble coupon may not exceed

GRADE A

FOLGER'S

0
0

•Any manuf actu rer 's cou ·
pon greater than 51¢ will be
.redeemed at face value
only .

ONLY •••

nancing with approved

credit. Taxes and title
faea are extra .

•Only one manufacturer's
coupon pe r ite m .
•The total value of the dou ·
ble manufacturer's coupon

ca nnot excePd the purchase
price of the item. Mone y
will not be refun ded .
•This offer does not apply to
Powell's Supe r Vatu Co u
pons. free co upons, or any

competitor 's co upons .

PRICE SAYER
.

CHEER DETERGENT
147

oz.

BLEACH

$4 99

limit 1 Ptr Customer
Good Only at Powoll's Suptrmarlctt
offer b!lirts Sat. Mar . 29, 1916 STS

0

•

•This offer &lt;&lt;Xc ludes ciga .
rettes , or any other items
prohibited b y law .

59&lt;

•Offer is o nly good for P•v·
duct on hand . No Rai n·
checks .

Good Only at PowoK'• Supormart&lt;ot
•
Offet Expires Sat., Mar . 29, 1986 STS

•1 .:ere is a Iunit of 20 cou.

GAL.

Inilia/ Raft'.*

Insured by the Federa l De posi t lnsuranoc Co!1)0rnlmn.

;....

FRESH

oz.

TRUST

.

,.

32

SURROUNDED BY WATER - The Old Kyger FreewiD Bapllst
Church was surrounded by water up to liE top 11 its win do"" during the
1937 ftood. The present churdl building dates to 1880. The oongrEKatkm
was organized In 1840 and from 184.1-1880 worshipped in a church atop a
hiD about one hall mile away from the churcb.

DON'T MISS IT!

II

HUNT'S

shire correspondent In January of
1937 recorded: " Before t IF crest of
the Dood arrived both churches In
Cheshire were fllled with catt le.
There was oo other refuge near. But
the wa ter kept rising. The churches
were flooded to such an extent It
became necessary ID move the
cattle. "Cowboys" In hlp i:x&gt;ots
instead of chaps and In row boats
instead of on mustangs took the
cattle to Gravel HW toough the
animals had ID swim most of the
way, a distanre of a mile in a
straight line.
"Above tll&gt;re cattle and other
animals he longing ID the residents
ol Carlton and "Pity·Me" found
refuge in the hills nearby, rut they
failed to lind food . Their bawUng
could be heard for miles. It Ls said,
So hungry did they become that
they ate dried and rotting leaves
and anything that promised a little
nutriment. "
One home nea r Cheshire belonging ID Ed Bing had water 212 feet
deep on the second floor.
In order to save their automo·
biles, some people tied ropes
around their cars and hoisted tll&gt;m
up into trees.
Lastly In regards to an lmals,
another Cheshire Towns hlp res I·
dent reported that some horses
nd cows tried to force t heir way
Into doors an d windows to escape
the high water.
By James Sands

BLOCK TWO

CHICKEN

SUPERIOR

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page E-3

Small marker designates spot where 1937 flood
hit windows of Old Kyger FW Baptist Church·

Veterans Administration consolidates
rehabilitation research programs

FRESH PORK BUn

Steak/Roast .• ;~ ••••• 99(
USDA CHOICE
$
7
9
Round Steak •••.• ~·~. 1

Pome: :&gt;y-Midd18DOrt Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Limit 1 Ptr Customer

pons you may rede e m .

I

308 f. Main St.,
Pomeroy, Oh.

PH. 992-6614
OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 5

HOUnl&gt;;

Mon .. Wed .. Fri. 8:30 to 8 ;
Tues. &amp; Thurs . 8:30 to 6 :30
Saturday 8 :30 to 4

your IRA reached.
Which means you'll automatically lock in our highest rate for the
remainder of your IRA's term.
What!; more, there's no mini·
mum deposit to open a One-Way
IRA. And additional deposits can
be made any time during its 12month term.
So open your One-Way IRA
before AprillS- because that's
when this offer expires.

Many economists expect inter·
est rates to rise in 1986.
Which is why we've created a
special, limited·t1me offer :* *our
One-Way IRA.
ItS a one-year variable rate
IRA that can only vary in one
direction. Upwards.
So if rates go up, your One-Way
IRA goes up, too.
And, unlike other variable rate
IRAs, the One-Way protects you
To meet all your needs, Central
against possible rate declines.
Trust also offers seven other IRAs.
Because even if the economists
Our: popular Double.Your-Money
are wrong, youre still guaranteed
IRA, for example, where you deposit
our generous starting rate, 8.5o/o.
anyamount over $500 (up to the
maximum allowable contribution),
10U'RI GUIIIAIIIB'III and
we pay twice that amount at
IMI&amp;TRIIEOF111YEAR. maturity.
Or our Flexible Money Market
Your One-Way IRA starts at
IRA. Or our Fixed Rate IRAs with
8.5% (which is the guaranteed
minimum for the 12-month term). terms of from 12 to 60 months.
Then as we adjust our rates
each month, you may get a higher VISIITIIE
rate. Maybe 9.0o/o. Maybe 9.5%.
For more infom1ation on our
Maybe even higher.
One-Way IRA and other lRA pro·
And if rates subsequently fall, grams,Gill or visit the Central Trust
you'll continue to get thehighest rate office near you.

TRUST
Makes Things Happen.
'TAt 8.5(A mit i.~ rtml/'011~ qtNJrttrly 'al'ld C'Qif /trtJdJIISII'd ""m lltly Tltr EfJf'rl llr Arr•uol hrld rtf~ ii.5%a.N mr:- rro ,llflll &lt;lm• •1/ 1r1 Ill• mr/1111rrlf• ,'1/1~,1!/tl/t,i ! :
"'/rYes/ pntalty {llrf'D 'IY II 'ttltdmu~l • '!11 ordn lnqiiQfij\'/M lltr (JIIr Wo\' IRA . wru 11411.1/ of'!'" 11 fr..· ,;1pn// ,'i. J.«Hii
• ,

�March 23. 198

- Miclclleport- GalliJ!olil. Ohio- Point Pleelll'lt W. V1.

Plg1 E-o\.-~ Sunday Tlmu S1nli1el

GM engineers working on futuristic a~!~'""'"""''"

County Agent's Corner

Farm Flashes

Contaminated
wells,
nationwide
concern
Renewed interest
in gardens, lawns
Contaminated wells are a nation·

\\idP ronC't'rn.
Th~

spring nooding season is a

good time to become more awareof

By ED VOUJIORN
Couriy Extension Agent

Agrlcu•ure A CNRD
One rithe sure signs r1 spring
Is a rmewed Interest in lawn and
garom care. Word is that Gallla
County moles sta_rted the season
hungry and are causing a lot of
damage to home lawns. The
mole has a diet of mainly insect
laiVae. They seloom feed on
plant material.
In the spring I he mole bu rrows
In the lawn in search of food.
Oftm times mounds of soil are
pushed up to the surlace. A
long-term control measure is to
use a pe;tlclde to control grubworms. Call the County Exten·
sian OffiCE' (446·7007 1 for a copy
. r:J. the "Fact Sheet" on cont rol·
ling moles In the home la\&lt;'n.
Several copies of the 1986
Garden Ca lendar are still avail·
able at the County Extension
Office. This bulletin selVes as a
guide to timely gardening actlvl·
. ties. The cost Is $2.00. BulMin
'lfr/, "Home Vegetable Garden·
ing" Is a 30 page guide for
persons lnexpertenO'd in Home
Vegetable productl:m. A dia·
gram of a sample layrut for a 25
foot by~ foot family garden has
: rem used by many beginning
gardeners.
ATTENTION YOlJI'H WITH

DAIRY PROJECTS~ Several
training mee tings "111 be held
during the coming weeks. Addl·
Ilona! j))ints will he awarded In
the Junior Fair Dairy Sweep·
stakes Program to those in
anenda nce at the training meetIngs. The first meeting has been
planned for April3. 7:30p.m., at
Mill's Hannan Hill Dairy. Janice
Keene. representing the Ohio

the j))SSiblllty of well water contam·
!nation. Accordi ng to an agrtcultu·
rat engln~r at The Ohio State
University, run off fro m spring
rains In crease the chances of

GuerllS&lt;'y Association. will lead
the discussion on "Selecting and
Judging Dally Projects". These
training sessions are being put
together through the efforts of
the Gallla Countv Dairv
Committee.
·
·
We are now into the spring
feeder ca H marketing sea son. A
market trend seems to be
establishing which puts a prt'mium on light weight calves
suitable for going on a summer
grazing program.
Cattle feeders remember the
summer of 1985 and are keeping
the price of heavlt&gt;r feeder cattle
close to that of slaughter cattle.
Current slaughter cattle price
makes last fa lls'. feeder calf
priCPs look ~- According to
onp economist. ff'f'der priC'E"s arE'
expPCted to average $7 -$ll per
hundred above 1985. Those
number reflect a gambling
impression. Financial records
stU! pointing to a loss of more
than $100 per head for Ohio
cow-calf operations.
A spPCia l thanks to the Gallla
Soli an d Water Conser\'alion
Dlstrtct for putting toge ther the
March 18 No-Till Meeting. Ohio
now rank." nu mbPr 1wo in ttF
natio n In the number of acres of
no-till crops. Some 31 per cent of
the nations cropland ac res now
USf'

mnta min &lt;:~tion .

"SutiacP watt~ r thllt gets Into a
well or spring often carries wastes
from liwstock. pl'ls. wildlife or

,\'OU

water contam ination is bf&gt;&lt;'oming a
conC't"m na lion wide .

There are thousands of undrrgmund steel gas tank.' and buried
conta iners of chemica l waste that
are stariing to mst through and
leak into the water supplv. Et·en
simple lawn an d garden pesticides
can

gPt

into ~·'OUI' water su pply and

cause problems. Misusing the
appllcatlng equipment or the pes ti·

Certified Public
Accountant

Monday 9 to 9
Tuesday 9 to 5
Wednesday 9 to 9
Thursday 9 to 5
Friday 9 to 5
Saturday 9 to 1

ti ons )X'rmit . The~· nf?tld to rsta blis h
s~·st pm to suplX)r1 foliagr
dr\'PiopmPnt. SprLng winds and
warmth may desiecatr the plan t if

a roo t

cut canPs bac k to li\'r wood .
Rf'mO\'f' 1hf' Wl'akt'l' nf t \\'0 crossing

-Prum• IJush ·IY'lX' lOst~. Rr ·

bran ches. Sllapt' th&lt;' plan t b)'

timr.

runing the strong

ran~

cloudy or hHs a bad OOor. suspect a
~'O ur munty

contamin ation and call

health department fo r a wotrr
purl!)• check .
It is Important to ac t quick it so no
one gw:&gt;ts sick from rontaminaled
wa ter.
Sandy soils and a ground \\'&lt;Hrr

fire . srh9.&amp;i. $1590.5.1 . $23,73.~1;
cemetery. $1981.35, $$7.82, $280.:19:
wa ter , $69.947 .11, $2(),197..31,
$19,761. 38: St'Wer, $13, Jl!.86 ,
$75!8.26. $!8)1.36: guara ni)' meter.
$JO . ll2 . ~ . $7:.0. $7:.0: · utiiiW
$21,486.62. no r=ipts. $2846 .41; '"IP
of building. Sl63.19, $:182.-!5. S.'l8~A5:
perpetual carP. $1~.89. no rc·
celpts, no disbursements: cemr
tery endowmen t. SJ: ,R2512. no
receipts. no disbu rsements; poilu•

pPn.~ ion .

$900.ti9:

$!W.h~l .

no

rf'CPipts.

building fund. $700.:!0.

$TI7 . ~. no disburspnl£'nts; n .\' H '(.I ·
tion fund . ~'ltl5.16. $17:.. no disburse-

•Wa11..e r of Premtum
for Dtsabthty OpfiOn
• 'Good NetgfltxJr Sef\ltce

SNOWDEN
417 Second Ave.
Gallipoli!r. , Oh.
Phone 446·4290
Home446-4511

S t,o lt'

r ,,,,., l

•I•• on.,u •.tnct• Compil"l

H ,,...,,~ol! •o· t'

lJ L&lt;'( UT1or&gt;tji •Y1 III&lt;HJ•~

•

to a

@presents

uniform hrigllt - lR to 2&lt; inches if
bPcomes

•Comcemtve Rares

•Guaranteed L1let,me lnr.ome

Sl i!l t&gt; ' · ' ' ,.. ' , .,.,. ,..

Job related moving ex·
penses are deductible .

mo\'r all d&lt;'ad and spindh gro"1h:

Wf'll. they may· stav th.:'r"E' a long

sudden l~v

state Farm

! ,.o p d ,J&lt;O.'l fl 'lP Q r&gt; l• •

PHONE 446 -8677
444 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, Oh.

an undrrcrl'rloprd mot S)'Strm

arP VC'ry toxic and ha\'P a trr mrnd-

that much cane is alh·C'. Don't
pnmP climbing I'OSf'S until aftrr

"Supet Savin11"

the)' bloom.
- Prune tr&lt;:'l'S. Rt' mOI'e all dead.
dcseasrd, and brokl'n brancht•s, tht•

upright gro111 h. including wa1er

Special 20% ·Additional Discounts
available on TWA Ultra
Super Saver Airfares

sprout!' and growt h thai t:'."\cludrs
light from thf' CPntrr of the trO" .

Ti ckets must be purchased by March 27, 1986
Travel applica ble thru December 31. 1986

weakt1 r of two crossing branchrs

that arr tubbing together, and
drooping branchPS that interferr
with traffic or m owing. RPmo\·r

\\'hrn rPmodng or cu 11 ing back
bnmchrs. a lways try to m aintain
tl'lc' natu ra l gmwt h pattPrn of thr

Rest ri ctio ns apply . limited space available .
For more information. ca ll ...

~®

lt'C&lt;'.

GALLIPOLIS
'T'Trawel Agency today at 446-0699

Be super careful working in or
if larh{' branchrs or

;uuu nd trN•s -

ments; bond l'('lirrmrnr . Sl2.4HI.Ill.
no l'fX'&lt;'ipt s. no disbuT'Sf'm cnt s:
ll'H'nU(' shLJ ring. :\1940. no J'f'('f'ipt s.
ro disbui'SC'mr nt s: prrmissiYr tax .

SlOS.'lO, no I'('('C ipts. rol.Cl\.
Rrcrip ts for thr tm nth totaled
$~3 .~66. 97 . Dis bu rsrm"nt s
arrounr ed to Sf&gt;!\.~5.23.

The Commercial &amp;
Savings Bank
Gallipolis. Ohio

41233m
I

(
I

I

MasterCard

2 2(,

'

R

'

JOHN DOE

Look what a C8rS Bank

MasterCard cc••' do
for you.
TeUertflc. ..

Tractor

Compact

Buy a B Series Kubota between February 1 and March 31, 1986,
and get a check direct from Kubota. The rebate will be S400 if
you choose a hardworking 85200 or 86200. A check for S500 will be
yours if you choose a larger
87200 or 88200.
Financing is available to
qualified buyers at 8.5%
Annual Percentage Rate
through Kubota Credit
Corporation.
Feature packed tractors
from 12 to 19 horsepower
have 2 or 4 wheel drive,
power take off, gear or
hydrostatic transmission.
Nothing works harder
than a Kubota B Series
tractor.

~KUBOTA®
Nothing like it on earth'~

SHINN'S TRACTOR SALES

240 Upper liver Rd.

Gallipolis, Oh.

446-1044

Rutland
resident
proposes
discount
•
senrtce

Check with

CAROLL

Preparing Individual
and Business
Tax Returns

quirk!) as \\'Cather and soil condi·

m nnot pro\·idP adrquatP rnoi.sturP.

If your watrr

IRA?

lYNN ANGELL

rosf's or shrubs. (;c.t tho se plant
matr ria ls int o thf' g-round as

ridP itst"lf can make things f'\'Pn
worsC'. And hard J)('Sticidf's. such as
those tL~fld to f'xtrr m inate lrrmitrs.

ously lo ng lifr - if t hct grt into tou ,.

44&amp;-7007.

Pesticide Trainin g and R£&gt;cprtifi ·
cation - Tuesday, March 25, Gallla
County Senior Cit izens Center at 7
p.m. Pesticide Trai ning and Test ·
ing- Tuesday. April I. If you need

AND SO IT GRO\VS.-As the
weather warms up. so does the
garcrner's Pnthusiasm . It 's a good
thing. too. because March brings
many gardening chores . Ja mes
Ca ldwell . Ex1ension norirulturist.
The Ohio State Uni\'rrsity , offers
this "to do" list:
-Plant barrroot and pac kaged

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) Roger B. Smith, chairman of the
board of the General Motors Corp.,
says GM engineers are looking Into
the 21st century but they won't Jet
him take a peek.
Smith told reporters Thursday
that General Motors researchers
are engaged In a $100 million
proj&lt;'Ct to design a transportation
vehicle for the mld-19!()s to :nll.

to attend either of these meetl!fgs, ·
please contact Ed Vollhorn at,jhe
Gallia Count)' Extensio n Offl&lt;.ll. -

sOOuld

ronstruclion also helps avoid ronlamination problems .

says Mf'l·

Pomeroy village funds at $168,620
POMEROY - All Pomero)
VIllage funds as of Feb. :!8 totaled
$168,6~. 79 Clerk-Treasurer Ja ne
Walton rej))rtS.
Receipts, disbursement s and the
end of the month balance. respPC·
lively, in each of the funds making
up the total include: gt&gt;neral.
S22.SI4 . ~. $9137 .89. $18.~5 . 72 :
safety, $4895.26, SllO, no disburse
ments: stt'fet, $7217 .56.56. S3l&lt;JO.()l.
$12.lOG.tJl; stale highway, $413.$,
no receipts and no dtsbunements:

cont aminate thf&gt; water.

and !raking wa str dumps ran also
makP wPil watPr urto;;afp fo r home

s~·stf'm~."

More than two million people in
Ohio's rural and subu roo n communities depend on wells. cisterns
and springs for drinking water. And

some form of conserva tion

nation. The well needs to be \oca tro
at a sit r that drains well. will not be
flooded and is away from chemical
or sell'age sou1ws that cou ld

villt&gt; L. Pa lmer. "Cht&gt;mical co n·
la minatio n h·om pest icides. salt
brines. gaso linl'. or fuel oil spills.
USf'.

tillage.
Remincrr: Pesticlcr Training, March 25 and A!J' il I. 7:00
p.m., Senior Citizen Center:
Ga llla County Tooocco Meetin g,
March ?7. 7: 00 p.m.. Hannan
Trace High School: Beef Cnm·
mittee. March 31. 8:00 p.m ..
County E.&lt;tt'llslon OfftCP.

lions in protecting II from ron tami·

also take care to select 1·eputable
well drillers and make su re they
use good materia l and construction
methods. Protecting and maintain·
ing the well properly after its

home SP\.\'age

the tree Itself needs to be removed,
hire a professional. Tree branches
are extremely heavy and. If
Improperly han dled. can damage
buildings and Injure workers .
-Serv ice gardening equipment .
Get the laun mower ready - be
sure the blade Ls sharpened and
mounted securely. Clean and
sharpen hedge sbears, edgers,
spades. hoes, pruning and other
gardening too ls.

supply that i:; not t•ery deep make
contamination more likely. Shallow
sp1·1ngs and dug wells are also
easiN to contaminate than deeper.
drilled wells.
The locat ion annd constmction of
your well are Important conslcrra·

When you have a C&amp;S Bank Checking accoW1L you can
request a tree TeUen.!Jc cmd And by adding a C&amp;S Bank
MasterCmd to your TeUentlc. you can gel cash advances tram
over l 400 automa1lc leUer machines m the TeUerilic and Money
Statto n Networks m OhJO. West Vugirua Kentucky and Indiana

Convenience...
A C&amp;S Bank Master Card otters you I he converuence ol shoppmg
by mrnl or by phone

Cc:Jsh Advances...
Wtlh a C&amp;S Bank Masler Cmd you can gel cash advances
thousands ot !inandal institutions mound !he world

at

No Finance Charge on Purchases...
U you pay your entire pUichase balance each month you W1ll not
be chmged a finance charge

One Cord for Everything, Everywhere...
Master Cmd IS so worldly and so welcome because it is
accepted in over 4.0CO.OCO places in 150 countries

One Monthly statement...
You can pay tor all ot your monthly purchases with one check
per month

Vacallon...
Use yow C&amp;S Bank MasterCma to finance yoUI vacation.
gumanlee reservations or rent a em.

MaltezCheeldngBy having a C&amp;S Bank Checking and MasterCard AccoW1\s. you
can apply tor MasterChecking. which provides you Wllh overdra!t
prolection on yow peiSOnal checking account MasterChecking
also allows you lo give yourseU a cash advance from yow
Maste!Cmd simply by writing a check.

cars Bank
The Commercial • Savings Bank
25 Court Str"t

Siver Brid91 Plua

Spring Valley

Member FDIC

The Sunday Times-Sentinpl-Page-E-5

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

March 23, 1986

RUTLAND - Rutland area
resident Lane Daniels Is In the
process of surveying. various busl·
nesses In Meigs County to deter·
mine the Interest in a discount mall
se!VIce. Daniels would like to start
such a service In the county to allow
bu sinesses with large first class
mall volume to send at a bulk j))Stal
rate of 18 cents per letter Instead of
the regular 22 cents.
Daniels was at Wednesday 's
meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners to explain his proposal and see if the courthouse
offices would he interested In
co ntractin g for the discount
service.
Daniels would receive 2 cents for
every piece of mall handled. This
would bring the client's total cost to
20 cents per letter, a savings of two
cent s lor each letter mailed.
Daniels has already talked with
numerous businesses In the
Pomeroy-Middleport area. Some
have shown great Interest In the
mall service and have written
lt&gt;ners of supj))rt which Daniels Is
using In his continuing survey.
As explained by Daniels, he
would pick up mall for his clients on
a daily basis, Monday throu gh
Friday. at a specified time each
day. He would then meter the mail
himself and sort It according to zip
code, or the client has tile qJtlon of
metering his or her own mail and
keeping accounting sheets.
A combined total r1 ~pieces of
mall from cllentswouldherequired
to qualify for til? bulk rate each day.
Client's would have to keep an
accounting of how many len ers are
to be re malledona daytodaybasls
and provide Daniels with that
numtl&gt;r when he picks the mail up.
Also, a certain numrer of letters
mu st be going to the same zip code
in crder to qualify for the bulk rate.
Any letters which do not qualify for
bulk rate due to not meeting the
minimum requirement are stU!
mailed by Daniels but at the
regu lar first class price.
He said there could be days, due
to a low mall w lume, when the bulk
rate could not be secured for any of
hi s clients. However, he thought
this would be rare.
The post office would be supply·
ing Danit&gt;ls with the -essay
supplies to maintain the small
bu siness venture which would be a
family opera tion Daniels said.
The commissioners shOwed Inter·
est In the service, but questioned
whether nlnt'-dlglt zip codes wou ld
he required by the j))St rifi&lt;'&lt;' for the
bulk rate system. U so, this would
presrot a problem because the
courthouse computers are set up
for tbe flvt'-dlglt codes. Daniels said
he wou ld re going by the flvt'-dlglt
codes so this would not IX' a problem
for the court rouse.
He said this is still a tena!lve
business and until he completes his
survey to determine if the venture
wouki be profitable, he would IX'
unable to specify a starling date.
Discount mail service Is also
being tried In other loca l areas,
including Mason County.

Couples end maJTiages
POMEROY - Susan M. Sanders
has been granted a divorce In·Meigs
County Common Pleas Cou rt from
John A. Sanderson grounds of gross
neglect of duty.
John Clyde Ingels and Carolyn E.
Ingels have been granted a dlssolu·
tlon of their marriage. Carolyn
Ingels has been restored to her
fmmer name Neece.
Deldra Kay Cross, Langsvllle,
has flied for divorce from against
Amos Boone Cross Jr., Langsville,
cha rging gross neglect of du ty and
extreme cruelty.
Brenda M. Hysell, Pomeroy, has
flied for divorce from Thomas
Hysell. Pomeroy, charging gross
neglect of duty.

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses
have been Issued In Meigs County
Probate Court to Daniel Joseph
Carson, 24, Middleport, and CbrlsUe Lynn Staats, 22, Mason: Michael
&amp;-ott Miller. 23, Middleport, and
Sheryll Lynn Russell, 18, Racine;
Dorsa Emerald Parsons, 66, Ra·
cine, and Mildred Mae Searberry,
66, Pomeroy; Richard Douglas
Darst Jr ., 24, Cheshire, and Denise
Lambert, 23, Rutland.

Smith said the "Trilby" project Is

so secretive even heean gel past the
"Keep Out" signs on the door.
He said the engineers are under
orders to redesign a car from the
wheels up for the world 's transpor·
tation needs in lhe 21st centu ry.
"We don't know whether it will
have no wheels, one wheel or two
wheels," he said.
Smith explained that the basic
design of an automobile, with a
driver steering, accelerating, dt'pressing a clutch and brake, "Is not
a very good system. "
He said a fururtstlc system might
have an engine running at a
continuous speed, with generators
storing energy on downhill runs for
use on grades. Braking might he

done by reverstng the generators.
Smith said tile reduction in
interest rates and the price ri oil.
and the surge In the stock market
portend "a Vf!IY good year for the
tot.al market" of GM cars.
He said the strength of the
Japaneseyenagalnsttll? American
dollar Is a "tremendous break,"
noting that Honda has Increased
prices by 17 pecent and Nlssan by
18.4 percent.
"Our cars haven't gone up that
much In three years," said Smith,
predicting the Japanese "are going
to run out of market pretty soon."
Smith sa id GM plants must be
competitive with the wond market
In cost and quality , and resj))ns ive
to the demands of consumers for

better fuel mileage and high·tech
options on their cars.
He warned that the 4,00J autoworkers at the GM trlm manufac·
turing plant In Columbus must
increase their production to he
cost-competitive or they run the
rtsk of a shutoown .

Smith, who met earlier With Gov.
Richard F. Celeste, had high ll'aise
for the business .chmate in Ohro,
although he sald 11 could be retter.
. He sald he urged t ~_goveroo~ to
· tak~ an actlv~ part '" changmg
OhiO s workers compensatron law
to reduce costs to manufacturers.

Ohio plans new state prison
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A $14
million state prison to house
Inmates 1n their final six weeks of
captivity Is being planned for
suburban Sharonville.
Jt would he one of four so-called
"pre-release prisons" in Ohio. The
otrer three are operating or being
built 1n Cleveland, Columbus and

Toledo.
The Ohio Department of Correc·
lions ls negotiating to buy 2ll acres
of farmland - along Crescentville
Road just east of lnterstate·75 near
the border of Hamilton aod Butler
counties- for tbe ptison.
Sharonville Mayor John Dow lin
wasn't happy when he heard about

the state plans.

.
"It's _within ~. half·r':Ilc .?f a
restdentlal ar~. he sa1d. , B~~·
I'm listening WIIh an open rrund.
Corrections officials said the
prison, which wou ld offer a vanety
of services to help Inmates prepare
for therr move back to open ;oc1ety,
wouldn 't be much ria secunty nsk.

.
:

:
.

Giant Sure Stillrtl
Batteries

Kendall
10W30 Motor Oil

40 month, Reg. 31 .88

32.88
39.88
52.88
Savage

alter 3.00 mlr's rebate when you buy 12
Sale 74¢, Reg. 94¢,1imit 12

54¢

the General Assembly and Celeste
has taken no public' role In the
discussions.
Smith said Ohio's educational
system Is "tremenoously lmpor·
tan!" In whether a business wants
10 locate or remain in the state.

50 month, Reg. 38.86

Your Final Cost
after 3.00 mfr's rebate
when wou buy t 2

60 month, Reg. 45.88

10W40 Motor Oil
Sale 79¢, Reg. 99¢, limiU 2

74¢
Valvoline
10W30 Motor Oil

72 month Batteries

Reg. 59.88

Your Final Cost

1.88

Non· Resistor

Sparlc Plugs

afler mfr's 1.50 rebate

Reg. 99¢

Zerex Antifreeze

9.7¢

Sale 3.38, Reg. 4.19,1imit 2

69¢

ACResistor

Sparlc Plugs

· Antifreeze Tester

Reg.1.29

Reg. 99¢, # 20·102, AT501CS

~. . . . . . . . . . .roirifDrlftOit

14.88

Cyclops Collision
Avoidance Lighl

Windshield
Washer Solvent

Att. 19.95, #'6100

Reg. 99e

9.88

Beam Headlamps

Lan-Lin Hand Cleaner

Gunk Engine Brite

Reg. 1.29, NM10.66

Reg .1.95, MEB·1

Reg . 2.99, 11 4000, 4001 , 6014

3,99
5.88

Aeg.5 .49,

Reg. 1 s .ts, #6200

88¢

Sylvania Sealed

CD·2 Oil Treatment
or Oil Detergent

~ " 4651 , 4652

Reg. 2.51, .U t01, 4111

Reg. 6.88 1 N6052

I!WPI~

Save2.00
on TRW Parts

, _ .·

From9.95

Idler &amp; Pitman Arms

Valvoline Transmission Fluid

Reg. from 11 .95

Type FA or I ·C2·D Reg . 1 .09, limit 12

2. 75 Cobraline Transmission Filter Kils

From2.95

6.88

Rod Ends and Sleeves

Reg. from 4.95

From 7.25

EZ Rider Heavy Duty
Shock Absorbers

ITiimi'ngGears &amp; Sprockets

A ~ g.

Reg. lrom9.25

9 .95

From10.95

11.88

Reg . Iram 12.95

Monroe Van
&amp; Truck Shocks

Timing Cfiains

From11.50

Timing Belts
Reg, lrom 13.50

18.88
Traction Bars

From

Reg . 15 . !:1~

Variable Rate.Coil Springs

R•l· 29.15, # T22025

Sale prices in effect

209 UPPER RIVER ROAD

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

20 through March 27, 1986.

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Store hours 8:30 •• m. to 8:00p.m. Monday through Friday,
9:00a.m. to 6:00p.m. Saturday and 10:00a.m.lo 5:00p.m. Sunday.
We reserve the right to limit qu~ntitie s .
Re9 . Pri ces
wary due to loc•l competitiOn.

.
•

.•

••.•

�The

W.Va.

Times-sentinel

'TRUC LOAD SAL
EN®

e
Vot.36, No.238
Copyrighted 1986

•

at y

en tine
2 Sections. 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. March 24, 1986

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Parental notification abortion bill becomes law
SPEAKER UVESTOCK BUYER - Chamber of
Commerce -mh Annual Banquet speaker Stanley E.
Harrison, Is sb&gt;Ml wring the 1985 Guilla County
Junior Fair, when he ~rdla.•ed the Rffierve
Olamplon Lamb. Shown with Harrison (I), are Lovel

CLEVELAND (UP! I- A U.S. Disllict Coort jud~e
today refused to grant a request for a temporary
restraining order, thus allowing Ohio's new law
requiring parental notificat ion for minors seeking
abortions to go into effect as scheduled.
The Ohio chapter of the American Civil Liberties
Union filed suit Friday in federal court, seeking to
stop the law from going into effect today.
Judge John M. Manos scheduled a hearing for a
preliminary injunction before .Judge Ann Aldrich
March 31 at 9: 30a.m.,saidLinda R. Sogg. an att orney
representing the ACLU.
Aldrich was originally assigned the case, but is oot
or I0\\11 this week attending a seminar.
"The new law is in effect. Young women who are
pregnant ," Sogg said, "must have a parent rotlfied or
secure a court order to go !orward with tre abortion."
Attorneys representing the Ohio Attorney Gener·
al ·s office and the Summit tounty prosecutor's office

Forgey (c), who raised lhe lamb, and Mlti Gallla
County, .Jo EDen OUver, (r). Ms. Forgey Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hank Forgey, and a
member of the Qmterville Young Fannel'!i.

Dinner reservations still available
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Area Chamber of C'.ommerCP 49th
Annual Meeting will be held in tl1e
Dining Room of the James A.
Rhodes Student Center at Rio
Grande College and Communi ty
College, Rio Grande. Ga liia Countv
native, Stanley E. Harrison. Is tnP
featured speaker. The dinner will
be held on Thursday evening. April
3, at 7 p.m .

COMPLETE M

c
----J
w
Ill

::I
It)

•""

Harrison. President and Chief
Operating Officer of the BDM
Corporation. has achieved a most
distinguished career and is r({'og·
nized nationally.
All Chambe r of CommercP
members ha ve roceived notice of
the meeting by letter. and reserva·
lions for the dinner are due no later
than Monda)'. Mart'h 24. in the

Chamtn of CommerCP ctfice at 16
State Street in downto\\11 Gallipolis.
Local arrangements for the 49th
Annual Meeting are being made by
the Chamber's Banquet Commit·
tee. Further Information on the
meeting or rrservat!ons are ava ilable from Thelma Eliiott. Chamber
Exf'('utive Secretary, by ca lling
446-ffi96.

HANICAL SERVICE - CALL LARRY CASTO, 446-2282 •

m

1954-1986

X

598 69 Each24210W

25°/o OFF
25°/oOFF
SCREENS &amp; GRILLS
30°/o DEPQSIT
WHEN ORDER IS PLACED

ll
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Step-by -stc:p demonstratiOn
!&gt; howmg you how m:
• replace wmdows m
your home
• install Ande~n· windoW\

wtU ·tnown window

• install Andcr;en ratio

A~nttw:nnt

d&lt;&gt;n

brtnd all over
America. Come YIYI

834

~A and cumtl"lt

• install Andersen

•n

window blinds

Andtnc:o' window 111
patio door. Yoolhec

that when it OOQ'IC510
quality. Andc~Yo r.
Amenc.~ 's

An Andersen representative
w.lll be on hand to answer questions from 6:00 till 9:00p.m .

frame ()('

rtfcrencc.

S14,270UST
FRIE AIR
- 7 50 CONDITIONING
-1 2 50 !llliTH' I DII&lt;OUNT

Come hoole to qualit)L
Come home to Afllleoot'

1986 PONTIAC PARISIENNE

Date: THURSDAY
MARCH 'l7

"FULL

Time: 7:00P.M.
Location: \ 'i\ LLEY

$12,27000 SALE PRICE

tD

....

FF:\TIJRII\'C AMJF..RSIN \\'1:\/DO\VS.

It's Andcrxn. the
windowl. not J\6(
lhrouah them Tht
windowmaker w~
bcalutirul cnfl*·
!TIIhhip arw:i qUCII ror

Ill

&gt;

REPlACEMENTCLINIC

windowmakt'r who
UIU&amp;IU ~to klOk II

:3

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ct

fREEWINDOW

ALL OVER AMERICA
ONE NAME MEANS
WINDOW QUALilY.

IL
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INCLUDES : '5 .0 Liter V-8 engine
• Cruise Control
'Ti lt Steering
• 55 / 45 Interior
' Rustproofing Included
'Free Air Conditioning

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• Automatic Overdrive
' AM / FM Stereo
• Delay Wipers
'Tinted Glass
'17 City-25 Hwy . E. P .A.
' 9 .9 % Financing
Availabla Tool

•

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WE GM \00 MORE

c

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lliAN A MFRE

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Come hom e to Andel'!ien «~&gt;. IV
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$2 SQOO EACH
'Includes 24210W window, labor,
and all miscellaneous material
needed.
•Normal installations.
'Slightly higher if less than 5 windows per house.

SMITH Buick-Pontiac ~ V

~
!l\t30

1911 EASTERN AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OH.

N

31SV~ONOH - S301~d M01 - 301t\~3S 31BVON3d30 :tO Sl!V3A

Register for 1 FREE
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with the abortion on her own;
-if a grandparent or adult brother or sisler flies a n
affidavit with the court stating the young woman
might be abused by her parents if they are notified .
Named as defendanls were Summit County
Prosecutor Lynn Slaby, represroting all county
prosecutors, Gov. Richard Celeste and AMorney
General Anthony Celebrezze.
Celesle allowed the biU to become taw without his
signatu re in Of'('ember. He said it was a "misdirected
attempt" to solve a parent-child communication
problem but acknowledged he had no chance of
sustaining a veto in the Legislature.
· Levy also said the law would he impossible to
enforce in many counties. The measure dlrected the
clerk of the Ohio Supreme Cou rt to distribule forms
ex plaining the bypass procedures ID juvenile judges
In each county .

lronicaliy, the Akron clinic was ttK&gt; plaintiff in
another case, which went all the way to the Supreme
Court, involving an abortion law passed by Akron City
Council.
The Supreme Court, on Jan. 15. 1983. thr£'W out the
Akron ordinance, which required ali abonions after
the firsllhree months of pregnancy be periormed in a
hospital; prohibited a physician to periorm an
abortion on unmarried minor under 15 witoout the
consent of a parent or guardian. or without a coun
order: required the physician to inform the woman of
the development or the fetus and mandated a 21· hour
waiting period.
The current case was assigned to U.S. District
Judge ·Ann Aldrich, but Manos heard arguments late
F riday afternoon because Aid rich was out of town. A
hearing on the ACLU's request for a preliminary
injunction is scheduled for March 31.

Large quantity
water usage
permits being
filed in Racine

Fonner city manager
charges interference
led to his dismissal

BAY &amp; BOW WINDOWS

lemainder to 1M paid upon Nceipt of 111aterial.

"'I

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-a:

-As Low As

m

ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATION

.

ANDERSON SUGGESTED LIST

declined comment following the meeting in Manos '
chambers.
'
The suit was tiled on behalf of the Akron Cen ter for
Reproductive Health , Dr. Max Pierre Gaujean, a
clinic physician, and ' 'Patty Poe" and "Rachel Roe",
two unidentified 17-year-oid girls seeking abortions.
In Columbus Friday, Mark Levy, acting director of
the ACLU's Ohio chapter, said the law violates young
women's right to privacy .
The law requires the parent or guardian of any
unmarried, unemancipated woman unde r 18 who
seeks an abortion to receive at leasl21 oours' advance
notice of the procedu re in person or by telepoone.
The parents do not need to consent to the abonlon:
they mu st merely be aware of it.
The only exceptions to notification are:
- if a juvenile court rules that the young woman is
sufficiently mature and well· informed lo pr'DC('('d

FREE REFRESHMENTS

GALLIPOLIS - Foliowlng his
dismissal as Gallipolis City Man·
ager Saturday, Alberl R. Pierce
released a statement on the city
commission's action to terminate
his contract.
In his stalement, the former city
manager alleges certain members
of the commission had unduly
interiered in day·to-day operations
of the city during his short tenure as
chief municipal adminstrator .
Pierce Is known to have "unoffi ·
claliy" resigned on two occasions
betWI.'I'n January 7- when he was
sworn-in - and March 22. 'Those
resJgna lions came during the period when the city was in the
process of furloughing some one
dozen municipal employees.
Pierce said Friday the reslgna·
liOns were spurred by undue
interference on the part of the
commission in " perso nnel

matters."
In both cases, Pierce withdrew
his "unolflctal" resignations once at the bidding of the commis·
sian: the second time. upon hls own
init ialive.
Pierce's s latement reads, in full,
as follOws:
"This will advise the citizens of
Gallipolis that my services as city
manager of the city of Galllpolls
have been terminated as of March
22. 19~.
" I attribute my termination to the
fact that i have slrongly oblected
from time to tlme to th,• involve
ment of the members of the city
commission, particularly Richard
Moore. president of the commls·
siOn. in the administrative affairs cJ
city government .
" It goes wltoout saying that in tbe
commlsslon·manager form of go·
vernment it is up to the city
commission to set the policies that
the cily government is expected to
!ollow and to leave the administra ·
tlon of trose policies up to the city
manager. This Is the procedu re
followed by commission-manager
cilles across the nation.
"I also wish to ·mention, at the
same time. that I feel in the short
pcrild o! time that I have beenctty
manager of the city of Gallipolis

o I will attend.

I

01 will try to attend.
01 can't attend but please send me
more information on Andersen.

I
I
I
I Name ______________________

I

A d d r e s s - - - - - -- -- - -

1C i t y - - - - - - - - S t a t e - - - 1Zip------ Phone - - - - -- - - - - ~----------------------

PHONE 6 14-992-6611

&amp; SUPPLY CO.
555 Pork St.
Middleport, Ohio

President puts pressure on Senate

"In closing.! wish to reiterate my
feelings that ~Richard Moore, and
certain other members of the city
commission, would have left ttK&gt;
administration of lhe city up to tl1e
city man ager and concer'led them·
selves primarily with I he setting or
JX)licy , that we would continue lo
make rea l progress that would have
been of tremendous value to ttK&gt;
Gallipolis city government In the
future
"As I take leave of yoor lOvely
French City, nestled In the foothills
of Appalachia, IJ?slde the beautiful
Ohio Rlver, I want the citizens of
this community lo know I leave
with malice toward no &lt;Ill' and with
charity toward aU, and I wish the
cit izens of this city the very best
today and for all days to come."

WASHINGTON tUPI1 - Presi·
dent Reagan , decrying "scurrilous
personal attacks" on his motives,
trained his powers of persuasion on
the Senate today in hopes of
reversing a setha ck to his cam·
paign to arm Nicaraguan rebels.
Showing no loss of zeal after a
defeat last Thursday in the House,
Reagan demanded action from
Congress In his weekend radio
address and lashed out at oppo·
nents of his $100 million aid request
in a New York Times intervil'w.
Today, he planned to lobby
senators for votes he wlli need lo
puU off a victory In the Republican·
controlied chamber at midweek.
White House officia ls believe a win
would ensure event ual approval or
some. if nol ail. of the aid he has

DEMOCRATIC SPEAKERS - Ohlo Altomey
General Anthony Celebreew, Jr., was principal
speaker at the 111nual bean dinner of Meigs Coonly
Democrats held Saturday night at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Cen~r. Celebreew related aspects of his
office in working with oonsmner affairs and
hazardous waste laws to conserve natural resources
oltbe state. He also touched upon the advantages of

support of a slate Democratic ticket. Also !ol~Caklng
were Jan Long, ClrclevWe, fonnerly of Middleport,
who Is a candidate lor the district seat on the !Ute
senate 1111d Rep. Jolynn Boster, who Is seeking
reelection to the house of represestlallves. Shown at
Saturday night's Junction are Ling, Celebreew,
Boster and Henry Hunter, Meigs Crurty Democratic
Chairman.

requested.
Reagan, pledging "an aU-out
effort to get this passed," displayed
little interest in compromise over
the weekend, despite predictions in
both Congress and the White House
that he will forced to accept
compromises on any military
assistance approved for the Con·
lras fighting the Marxlsl-led Sandi·
nista government of Nicaragua .
The $100 million aid package
in cludes $'ill million in milit ary
assista nce a nd ~ million in
non-lethal aid .
As Reagan focused atlention on
the Senate, the confrontational
tactics he used In the House- tot he
apparen l detriment of his causecontinued to dog I he debaleover his
public call for secret military

assistance to tiw rebels.
House leaders described the
222-210 defeat last week as r€PUdla ·
tion cJ an inlense admin istration
hard sell assailed by [)&gt;mocrats
and some Republicans as "red·
baiting" and "McCan hyism."
But Reagan lold The New York
Times Ihat loose denouncing "shrill
rhetoric" from the White House
were JX)inting fingers "in the wrong
diff'('tlon ."
"I'm not impugnin g motives at
ail ," he said . "But some o! tbe
qJponenls of oor progra m engaged
in some of the most scurrilous.
personal attacks against me , for
example, tbe most dishonest use of
dlstonions and oulright falsehoods
that I have tK&gt;ard In a legislative
batUe."

Packwood's tax refor1n faces first test

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that we have made considerable
progress and a few of the accompiislunents made over the past few
m:mt Its foUow:
-The dty has a balanced gt&gt;neral
fund rudget tor the current and
fiscal year, which started out with a
deficit o! approximately $215,00&gt;.
-The water department has
tl&gt;en put on a sound financial
footing a nd Is now able to cover Its
q:&gt;erating costs and bonded indebtedness from Its operating
revl'llues.
-PersoMel have been removed
from lhe various departments of
the city governmenl wiD were
found to be in excess of the needs ci
lhe city.
-The way has been cleared for
the widening and paving of:Eastern
Avenue and this projects Is ex·
pee led ro go ID bid next July for
con\pletlon early In 1987.
-Constr uctiOn of the new
S'r.Al,OOJ (440,1m gallon I swimming
pool is underway and It is expected
that It will be completed and ready
for use by July or August of this
year.
-Bids have been tentatively
awarded for conslructionof the new
$6.2 mllllon wastewater treatmenl
plant and this major capita l
improvement facility should be
ready for use in the early part of
1987.

PROPOSAL FORCFl! Val'E Sena&amp;e F1n111ce committee
chalrmall Bob Packwood's tax
relonn plan hall forced a vote
1oc1ay on the proposal evm
"thouJh l'ackwood, above,
co.-Is the plan Is In Jeopardy.
UPI.

WASHINGTON iUPII - An last Tuesday night , had by Wednes·
uproar over Senate Finance Com- day paralyzed the tax-exempt bond
mittee Chaitman Bob Packwood's market, but It later recovered.
tax reform plan has fort'ed a vote
The proposal, which Packwood
today on the proposal, and even said the administration requested,
Packwood concedes the plan Is in would require weaitey people who
jeopardy.
have to pay . an alternative min·
When a portion of Packwood's imum tax to Include as taxable
tax overhaul proposal virtually income the Interest they receive
brought the tax- exempt bood !rom normally tax-exempt municl·
mark(&gt;! to a standstill last week, pal boods, no matter when the
evl'llts ovenook the chainnan's bonds were Issued.
tlmetable and forced him to make
The tax pian that the House
the matter the first Item on the passed last year would include as
committee's Bgl'!lda today.
income only the Interest on newly
After all opening session last Issued municipal bonds used to pay
week in which there were no votes, tor private projects such as hospiPackwood, ROre., planned to have tals and factor ies.
the conunlttee cast ballots this
Other municipal bonds used for
week on a few non-controversial public purposes such as schools and
Items in hts plan txofore Congress highways would be tax-exempt.
begins a two-week Easter recess
In response to the market
Thursday.
upheaval, 10 of the committee's ~
The provision, which surfaced members told Packwood In a letter
only when complete detalls ci last week they wanted the provision
Packwood's tax plan were released immediately reversed. Other sena-

tors who did nol sign the letter also
opposed the trovision, aides said.
The critics charged It was unfair
to pass a law that would change the
tax treatmentof exlstingbondsand
speculated that the alteration&lt;;
could make it more dlfficult for
state and local goverrunrots to pay
for projects.
However, outside of agreeing to
bring the matter up, Packwood
refused to try to meet the lawmak·

ers' objections.
Friday, he conceded that he
expected to lose the vote today, but
he tried to paint the other senators
as being too concerned with
wanting tax loopholes for the
wealtlzy.
The proposed tax change, hesatd ,
would not bother middle class
investors because they are not
subjected to the alternalive min·
imum tax.

•
•
River traffic movr,ng agar,n
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio (UPII
Traffic on the Ohio RJver is moving
once again, now that repairs on a
Gaiiipolis locks and dam gate have
been made.
Twenty -two towboats were
moored along the Ohio RJver
between Tuesday and Friday after
a tug with a string of 10 barges

struck the locks. Repairs were
completed Frklay, a day earlier
than expected.
After repair crews !inlshed replacing the hlngt&gt; on the ln-ton gate,
the first through was the "Allied,"
an Ashland Oil Co. towboat ~siting
10 barges !IUed with petroleum
products from Westwood, Ky., to
Pittsburgh.

Applica tions and permits for
Racine residents using large
amounts of water are now available
a t the Village Cut Rate Store.
The Racine Board of Public
Affairs reports quantity water
usage materials are available and
that the clerk will he sending
notices to pool owners reminding
them that special water fees are
due.
Council has sent a letter to the
Racine Gas Co. requesting a
meeting concerning reduced gas
rates since the cost or natural gas is
going down .
Council also discussed insurance
on the fil'l' trucks and equipment
and the possibility of IDiding a
meeting wilh an insurance agency
representative to evaluale the
current coverage.
The board of affairs was autho·
rlzed to ~rt'hase chain link fencing
from Sears to go around the aerator
building. Revenue sharing funds
wlli be used to pay forthe ~ rt'ha se.
Da le and Kathryn Hart and Dick
and Charlotte Wamsley were
named as additional members to
the Shrine Park Board. Councilmen
Lany Wo~e and Robert Beegle
were apJX)inted to a committee to
draft a use and user fee schedule for
ttK&gt; fire house annex . Councilman
Carroll Teaford will check the
operation of a nasher light at the
elemental)' school. Counctlman
Wolfe reported tha t parldng of
vehicles is blinding drivers at
intersections. He will check with thf&gt;.
village solicilor as to wha t steps can
be taken to prepare an ordinanre
prohibiting such parking.
The nexl regular meeting Is 7
p.m. oo April 7. Attending the
session were Councilmen Frank
Cleland, Dick Wamsley. Wolfe,
Beegle and Teaford: Clerk Shirley
Evans: Street CommissionerGieM
Rizer; Fire Chief Robert Johnson;
[)&gt;puty Marshal Joe Kirby and
Jack Wolie.

Elderly man
found in ditch :
An elderly man was found
Monday morning unconclou s in a
ditch on Vanre Rd . in Scipio
Township. Thc88-year-old man was
discovered by a school bus dri\w.
The bus driver notlied the Meigs
Coonty Sheriff' s office and a deputy
. was dispatched to the scenP.
Rutland EMS transported the man
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The matter is under investigation
by the stK&gt;rlff s deparunent, how· .:
ever, It is believed that the man ·
accidentally fell. A sheriff'sdepan·
ment spokesman said the man may
have been outside on the ground all
night.

WIC coupon pick·up
dates are announced
The schedule for the prkup of .
coupons by residents participating
in the WI C program is announced ·
by the Meigs County Department &lt;i :
Health.
:
Pickup days are Tuesday, April
l; Thursday, April 3, and Friday,
AprU 4, with times on a Uthree days
to be !rom 9 to 11 a.m. and frorn \ w,
3 p.m. Those unable to mak~ . ; :
designatro schedule can p i coupons on April 7, 14 and 21, 9toll
a.m. aM 1 to 3 p.m.

:

.

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