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Friday. April18, 1988

8 and 40 salon conducts recent meeting
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A n\emorlal service for deceased · white and centered wlth an open
Plans for the annual dinner to be
memiErs was held p1'8ll'dlng the Bible, canClles, and a vase contain- held on May 5 at Trinity Chufth
meeting of Melg$_Coonty Salon no, lng one red rose. The CandleS were were made with Jane Willis,
Eight and Forty, Monday night at Ugltt!d by Mrs. Marshall, and the departementarl chapeeu, to IE a
the 'home ot Mrs. Ruby Marshall.
poem, "The Weaver" was read by special guest. Several .of her
Iva Powell led the service which l'l!arl Knapp. There was a also a officers wUI also attend the dinner
was held around a table covered In poem, "In Memory" by · Mrs. along with members of GaUia and
Marshall. As the names d the Vinton County Salolllj who have
deceas!d partnel'lj were read by been Invited.
l'aumonler, Mrs. 1'\iwell, white
The Salon endorsed the tubercuroses were placed In the vase by losls levy to be voted at the May
Lula Hampton, Julia Hysell, Mrs. primary. A yard sale' was ,-alsci
Knapp, Mrs. Marshall, and Flor- planned for May. ~he Ia marche
Dr. R. Hoplclns of the 648 Board ence Richards.
will be held In Springfield, July 26
and Eleanor Thomas, Melg$ · . The Lord's Prayer In unison, and 27. Report forms were fllled out
County Council for the Aged closing of the Bible and e~tlngulsh- by tht&gt;chalnnancn the year's work •.
director, talked on tl)e mental lng the candles concluded the
Mrs. Marshall served a dessert
healthleolytohevotedonintheMay memQrtal service.
course.
primary at Tueday nJght'smeetlng
of the XI Gamma Mu Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held at the
home ri Evelyn Knight.
Plans were finalized for Founder's Day 1ll be observed on Aprn 25
at the Holiday Inn, Parkersburg,
We wilt be taking our prom pictures this year in the
W. Va. A recipe auction was held
auditorium of Pomeroy Vil!age Hall, E. Main St., Pam·
and Mrs. Knight gave a cultural
report on friendship.
eroy, formerly the old Pomeroy High School, on prom

Galli~lis

the Meigs S~ial Olympics - Page B-4

MEIGS EMS MEMBERS !fONORED- Pl....t
Valley HQ8PIIalreceally honored emei'II!IICY III'J,'Vice
members aad squads for COIIIII1UDfty lll!l'VIce.
Pictured are, lront !run left, Marela milo«, kine
EMS, most nms; Craig llan!t, Mlddleporl EMS, Jmlt
nDl'l; Darlene Cassidy, chief, Tuppen Plains EMS,

TB

0
0

t he

III08t nms; Eber PlcJum, Syracuse EMS, IIXll!lt nn11;

and John BlaeUnar, cld!ll, Pomeroy EMS; badl row,
Howard B. Mullen, Pomeroy EMS, I1I08t runs;
George Cummins, chief, Racine EMS, most runs:
Bob Byer, dlrectorol Meigs County EMS and Donald
Slivers, chief, Mlddlepori EMS.

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JSease
t':emams
d
L'

Thl.&gt; tounh six weeks grading ~lod hooor
roU at the Southern Junior High School has
t;.een announced Making a grade of B or
above In aU thfrlr subjects to be named to thr
roll were:
Seventh Grade: June Beeglt&gt;, Jason Circle,

------------need the complete support of our
All turned out satiSfactory, but
By Joan Tewllllbary
rommunltles
so that histories llke
the damage to Bob's lung could
Meigs 'IB Nune
these
will
not
be needlessly reWhile It Is not practical to give have been avoided and his brother peatEd. I~ I!! Important to continue
examples of every type d tubercu - would not have been Infected If only
work In the prevention and control
Iosls cases, these two case histories Bob had listened to h!s doctor and
rt tubercuklsls.
were chosen to emphasize the taken the medicines as prescribed 3
danger of failing to take tuberculln years before.
Mary Doe, age 16, was found to
medicines properly. On~ Is an
illustration of tuberculosis c1 tJE have a oormal chest x-ray but a
JEIItrY UlCER,
lungs and the otrer siDws the positiVe tuberculin skin test when
principles apply to tubercu klsts In ll!r father was diagnosed as having
AMEIIICA1
any organ of the body. The names active tuberculosis ol the lungs.
MUfti
She was given Isoniazid (INH)
used are not those of tlE actual
tablets to take every day for a year
potlents.
... _
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Robert Smith, l5 year old student to kill the genns o! the tuberculosis
had a pain In his right chest belbre they muld do any harm. She
whenever he took a deep brm th. A took the tablets for about two weeks
dlest x-ray showed "water on the but forgot to take them with her
'right lung" and the tuberculin· skin when ·she lett for a short trip anil
lii!Ver took any mJre after that. She
test was "positive."
After examination of a specimen 11!rnalned ftll, but we know that
of the fluid lrom the chest, the tubercukls!S may go oo working Its
doctor explained that the Ould was damage without producing
a sign of early tubercuklsls, even symptoms.
So It was with Mazy, because
though none of the germs could ever
be cultured. Two tuberculin medi- when she was :13, she and her
cines were prescribed and the pain husband · were very disappointed
when Mary couldn't become Jft!:·
soon went away.
·But Bob and his family never nl)llt and examination revealed
believed he had tubercuklsls. He tuberculosis of the uterus, although
stopped the mediCines when he felt she stlll was not stck.
X-ray of ~rchestshowed a small
better and didn't return to 'sre his
doctor. It was three years before he wljte "spot" which was left by the
p-\mary Infection when she was 16.
developed a cough and began to feel
Treatment with tuberculosis meditired.
Now the chest x-rays showed cines kept the Infection from !~!!tUng
moderately advanced tubercuklsls llld and llhe and her husband
ri the lungs and the SPUtum decided to adopt a family. She stlll
regrets that she hadn't taken the
contained tuberculosis germs. His
llatlazld
tablets as prevention
yoonger brother mw sho\W'd a
before
the
tuberculin germs had
positive skin test. This time, Bob
done
their
damage.
cooperatEd In taking the medicines
The above histories are good
and his brother was also given
Our Reg, 16.88
examples
c1 human behavior probIsoniazid (INH) for a year ID
lems. In mler to continue the
prevent the InfeCtion from devaopImportant work of the clinic, we
lng In his body.

~~Nos

You Don't Have
-

To Bank With
.

Jarrod Circle, Jaysoo Codner, Shannon ·
Counts. Chris Harmon, John Hoback, Michael
~cakt, JennlfE'I' Us~. Norman Matsoo .
Che'yl Pape, Ja"'n Shain, Jiimller Smllh,
Angel Snider, Robyn Stool, Andrea Theiss,
Michelle
Winebrenner, May~ Yoacham.
Richard Deavt'l'. Roy Johnsoo. Mlcha&lt;l
RllsseU, Janelle Williams.
,
Elghth Grade: Kevin Burgess, Amy
Harrison, Kathy Jhle, Chaslty Jacks, Qu1s
Mul])hy, Sheri Roush, Jane Ann WUllams,
Ai!Tft Wolfe. Trtcla Wolfe, Brenda 2Jrkle.

OPEN DAILY 10·9, SUNDAY 12·6
SAlE STAITS Fll., APIIL 11
ENDS SUN., APIIL 20, 1916

AMERICA'S

. . . . EN CENTER·
Our Reg. 5.97

3.97

Our 17.97

12.97

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lush In AIIOifed Colors

Assorted varieties and colors.
# 1 grade dormont po"ed rose
bush. For lovely yards and
gardens. Shop and save.

Dwarf Fruit Trees
3':4' peach, pear,
apple, cherry.

Our Rea. 5.47 Pk. Rose ... lOL 3.97

1G-12" Rhododendron
In 2·Gal Containers

sac

Springtime blossoms
and attractive green
foliage. In a wide assortment of colors.

Gtra•iums
In 6" pots,
vib11nt &amp;ellniums
add color to porch or patio

.

Us To Borrow
From Us! ·

G!J

-----------;---------------------1--

,!,Sl- ~:~~
Btddina Plants

~-......_

Veptablts .and flowers
Ready for plantinc. SAVE

_ _ _..,;_;...;.;,._

7.97

WE'll MAKING
*Home Improvement Loans
-*New &amp; Used Car Loans
*Appliance Loans
*Reallstate Leans

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•••

Flowering Bushes

39SS

llack a Decker"
Weed Siring Trimm.,.
14" bUI'J)P feed

Forsythia, pussy willow, lilacs, spireas.
Choose your

Our Reg. 49.97

favorite.

string trimmer
AdJustable handle. Save!

VISIT ONE OF OUI THIEJ CONVENIENT
LOCAnONS, TODAY!

sgg

Our Reg. 997.97

S839

20-lnch Lawn Mower

Member FDIC

Peoples Bank

Wllh lkle-DIIcllarge
3-HP lawn mower with
side dfsehqrge, recoil
start engine, throttle control on handle.

MTD. Mower

Savel

11 HP riding mower,
No Rai!Khecks

M11on, W. Va.
173-6614

176-1'121

6th Street
New .._,,

mt

tmts
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9 Sectlono, 178 PogoofiO Cento

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U.S.

cJ~nies

By MAT111EW C. QUINN
·
WASHING'I'ON (UPI) :_Administration officials,
In carefUlly worded statements, say the U.S. air strtke
was not Intended to ldU Moammar-1\hadafy, but say It
was Intended at least partially to alert dissidents to
the regtme's mllltary vulnerability.
President Reagan denied reports Friday that the
raid was Intended to kill Khadafy .-He told reporters as
he left the White House for an appearanre In New
York, "We weren't out to kill anyone."
,·
But the State Department stood behind a roll)lllmt
by Secretary o1 State George Shultz that a roup ·
against Khadafy would be "aU to the good." ·
Shult2 has told reporters Khadafy was not a "dlre&lt;;t
target" of the raids, ordered by President Reagan In
retaliation for an allegedly Libyan-directed bombing
ri a West Berlin nightclub frequented by U.S.
servicemen Aprll 5.
But Shultz said, "If a coup takes place. that's all to

raid was meant to kill Kh3dafy
the good."
"The United States Is not trying to kill or werthrow
Khadafy," State Department spokesman Bernard
Kalb told reporters later. "As we have said many
.times, wearetrylngtostopKbadafy'ssupport for and
lnvolvement.in International terrortsm."
"No one has said that he must be killed ," Defense
SecretarY Caspar Weinberger said In a U.S.
Information Agency broadcast. "We weren't trying to
run !&lt;hadafy out of Libya."
, libultz said the "Praetortan guards" that surround
Khadafy w~re a target and suggested the U.S. attack
was Intended to demonstrate to dissidents in the
military - who might be expected to attempt to
overthrow Khadafy -the vulnerability ofthe regime.
Kalb saw no contradiction between the comments
. by Shultz and the administration's statement Friday
that it is not trying to overthrow or kill Khadafy. "I

think what he said was that a coup would he aU to the
good," he said.
The careful wording of the administration
statements may reflect an. attempt to stay within an
executive order signed by President Ford In 1976 and
reaffiiTned by Presidents Carter and Reagan that
prohibits any U.S. attempts to assassinate fol'E'Ign
leaders. Shultz noted the administration has a
"general stanCe that opposes direct efforts of that
kind."

The Washington Post quoted unidentified administration officials as saying Monday night's air raids on
Libya were planned with hopes-Khadafy would be
killed when his command post In Tripoli was bOmbed.
Shooting In the Libyan capital has been reported
since the raids . Admlnlstrat!Pn sources said
Thursday that Libyan army units turned against
Khadafy following attacks but were apparently put
down by loyalist forces.

By NORMAN D. SANDLER
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
shift ln emphasis from the tragic
realities of terrorism to the
back-slapping politics of the
campaign trail prompted a
sudden, If uncertain, halt to days
ri Libya-hashing rhetortc by
President Reagan.
Reagan was r_elaxing at the
presidential retreat · of Camp
Davkl, Md., Saturday after a
brief trip to New York Friday, In
which he Ignored the Libya Issue
despite Wild cheers for the blow
he dealt Col. Moammar
Khadaty.
Hints that the White House
wanted to de-emphasize the
American attack on Ubya
sharply contrasted the namecalling, finger-pointing and
threats of the previous few days,
punctuated by warnings the
United States would strike again
If provoked.
The International Ballroom d
the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
packed with ebullient Republican loyalists, seemed the perfect
place for Reagan ·to revel in the
success of what his advisers
described as a near-Oawless
rrillltary operation Intended to
teach Khadaty that his support
for terrortsm comes at a high
price.
The number of police sur·
rounding the Waldorf-Astoria

Hotel while Reagan was Inside
seemed larger than In the past,
and for the first time on a
presidential trip, reporters had
to show credentials to get Into
the hotel press room.
But Reagan did not gloat. He
never mentioned Ubya durlng a .
political speech that la\llsbed
praise on freshman Sen. Alfonse
D'Amato, R-N.Y.. and ooly
touched on lO.IIEtantlve Issues.
As AJr ForceOnewasen route
l)ack to .Washington, White
House spok~sman Larry
Speakes was asked whY Rea·
gan, presmted with a forum
tallor·made for a swipe at
Khadafy, had pulled a punch.
"No particular reason ,"
Speakes said, \"other than he
was there for Senator D'Amato
and wanted to talk about Issues
In that campaign."
The speech demonstrated the
reactive phase the campaign
against Khadafy has entered.
Having lashed out with military
force In a manner Intended to
both punish and deter, Reagan
and his advisers are watching
and waiting to determine their
next move.
Qfflclats said that could he
Influenced by any of several
factors: Whether Khadafy responds with additional acts of
terrorism, whether dissension
within the Libyan military con-

, One of the targets of the raids was the Azzlzlyah

barracks, which the Pentagon has described as the
"main headquarters of Libyan planning and direction
of Its terrortst attacks overseas."
The compound Is also known to be Khadafy's
headquarters and residence. l&lt;hadafy's 15-month-Qid
adopted daughter reportedly was killed when the
bOmbs struck the compound and two of his sons were
Injured. Khadafy himself surviVed , apparently
unharmed.
One official told the Post the administration would
have "hit the jackpot" had Khadafy been' killed.
"We hoped we would get him," the Post quoted cne
official as saying, "but nobody was sure where he
would be that night. " The newspaper also said the
administration had a contingency statement pre.
pared before the raids that would have described
Khadafy's death as "fortuitous" had It occurred .

President urges
move to decontrol
natural gas prices

Reagan declines
discussmg Libya
during N.Y. visit

w. v•.

112-2138

GALLIPOLIS- An organization
of cw nty officials has been created
to provide sell-Insurance and llabU Ity coverage for otftceholders and
their employees.
The Buckeye Joint County Self
Insurance Council, comprised of 10
county governments from Athens,
Gallla, Hocking, Ja~kson , Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross, VInton,
and Washington counties, has
elected officers and adopted bylaws
lor the new organization. The
council was formed by Southeast-

ern Ohio Management Consultants
Inc. (SEOMC) , a consulting firm
based In Ironton, which o,rlglnally
acted as consultant for four of the
counties. SEOMC has been serving
Ga llla County since as labor and
management consultants since
1984.
Each county has one commls·
sloner that sits on the council.
"Our clients 'were having a
difficult tilne In obtaining Uablllty
Insurance," said Randall L. Lambert, preside nt of the SEOMC and

Tax write-off debate
delays refonn moves

Our Reg. 124.88

2212-Jackaon Ave.
Point PlaMMt. W.

•

A HAPPY MOMENT -Sen. AlfonseD'Amato,R-N.Y., applauds
after lntroduclng President Re'IB1111 al a fund-raising luncheon In
New York Frld~cy. Reagan retumed to hack-lllapplng pollllcs and
Ignored discussing Ubyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy during
the brlel stop on D'Amato's behalf. (UPI)
~

tlnues and whether U.S. allies
adopt stronger measures to
Isolate Libya .
The officiaL' said Khadafy
was weakened by the raid last
week. To what extent Is not yet
known .'
"He's scared now, " said one
official, "and he knows that If he
goes after us "gain, we're going
10 go after his terrolist Infrastructure again. If he happens to
be sitting In the command post
at the time and place we decide

to hit, then he'll pay the ultim ate
price."
Administration offlclals refus!d to specify the circumstances that would warrant further
mllltary action. But while asserting the United States Is " not
looking for a pretext" to attack
Khadat:Y again. one official
added, "When the president
made this decision, he under:
stood the likelihood this probably wouldn't be the end of it."

By IRA R. ALLEN
WASHINGTON (UPll - President Reagan, rejecting the Idea o!
an oil Import fee to help the
heleagured U.S. energy Industry.
called Instead Saturday for decon. trol of natural gas prices.
In hts weekly radio address !rom
Camp David, Md., Reagan avoided
any mention of the week' s terror·
Ism crisis, except to note that U.S.
on supplies are far less vulnerable
to ln1ernatlonal politics than In the
past.
He aiso noted that Americans,
rapidly canceling plans for foreign
vacations, "will be driving more
than ever, going on 'see-Americafirst ' vacations," this summer.
It was the third time in recent
Saturday speeches that Reagan
took tuU credit for the decline In oil
plices from $36 a barrel when he
took office to $12 a barrel now. He
also took credit for gasoline prices.
which he said dropped from $1.25 a
ga Uon to an average of 82 cents.
lower than In the 1950s when
Inflation Is taken Into account.
Reagan attrtbuted the "oli harvest of the '!lls" to his 1981 decision to
decontrol the price d domestic oil
and called on Congress to pass his
blll to decontrol natural gas plices.
He said gas decontrol would drop
the cost d home heating oU by $451n
the first year.
"The oil price decline of Ihe 198ls
has been a tliumph not of government but a the free market, and nol
of political leaders but of freedom
itself," he said.
Recalling •·scare tact ics and dire

warnings" of decontrol opponents
five years ago, the president said,
"My rrother used to tell me It's not
nice to crow, hut maybe this once I
can't help it."
Most of the oil price decline Is
due, however, to the failure of the
world oil cartel's Internal bickering
and failure to Impose production
quot as as It did durlng the gasoline
shortages of 1he 1970s.
Reagan said mJst U.S. oil
Imports have shifted from the
OPEC cartel countlies and now
come from Canada, Mexico, the
Caribbean and Great Britain.
Noting that the "ecooomles door
oil states have cooled," Reagan
said, "While our belief In the free
market remains firm, that belief Is
not Inconsistent with a sense of
rompasslon and concern lor the
individuals who bear Its economic
consequences.··
He made no suggestion lor easing
the burden: saying, "The answer to
these problems Is not an Import tee
on imported oll. That would be a
step backward."
Proponents of such a fee argue It
would prop up prices for domestic
· producers In Texas, Oklahoma,
Louisiana and Alaska. while adding
much-needed revenue to the treasury al a ttme when consumers getting a windfall In the form of
lower pump prices - might not
notice much c:i a difference.
Rather than an Import fee,
Reagan said, "It's time to go Cor
lower prices, go llr rrol'E' freedom
·and ~ for the growth 'that wUI
follow," he said.

10 area counties, consultants organize insurance council
Our Reg. 10.97

2nd Street

Editorials ..................... A-2
Sports ................. ....... C-1-8

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GOING TO THE
MEIGS JUNIOR-SENIOR PROM?
night, April 26, from 4 to 8 p.m.
You don 't need an appointment. lust drop in during
the time slot. _
Your photos wilt be taken before a prom theme
backdrop and at the same reasonable price that we have
used for the past nine years. That is, two 5x7's in folders
and 4 wallets far $5, payable when the pictures are taken
that night. You can order several sets at the same price.
We look forward to seeing you again this year.

.C-1

Display honors t--~--=------::-------~--,--":"In...;s~id':""e-:--,--__;:~-----1
Mrs. Mcl~tyre
Dr. Clodus Smith reviews Rio Grande's
Ohio weather:
Along the River ........... B-1-8
888esement of needs A-2
-Page B-1
Buslness ••..................... D·l
wann, stonny
Comics-TV ............... Insert
Classllleds ......... D-3+5-6-7-8
-Page A-4 .
Bob Hoeflich reveals how you can help
Deaths ......................... A-5

Sorority chapter
conducts meeting

Meigs County
honor roll

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· electric start, headlight
36" floaling deck.
'

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Reagan's.t&lt;ip domestic goal of
rewriting the tax code Is mired
down In the Senate, where the
Finance Committee chairman at
least temporarily halted action on
his blll for fear It would be killed.
Chairman BOb Packwood, R·
Ore .. put the legislation Ina holding
pattern Friday after It appeared the
20-member committee, whtch al·
ready has refUsed to eUmtnate
many tax breaks, was about to
retain sensitive deductions for state
and local taxes and business meals
- the so-called three-martlnllunch.
"What I was alrald oftoday Is we
would have votes that would mean
the end of the bill," Packwood said.
'

"The way we're going, If those
votes are thrown away today ...
we're throwing away any chance of
~ reform at all," Packwood said.
Packwood's ~ reform plan
would partially trim the state and
local tax deduct Ion and the rosiness
meal provision, saving ll'Vlre than
$40 biiUon ·{n the next five years.
One of tax reform's p-hnary
purposes Is to Urnlt tax breaks 1o
raise money that can be used to pay
for lower tax rates. But by Friday,
the rommlttee had voted to keep so
many tax wrlte-offs -;- mostly for
businesses ~ that Its plan would, In
f!ve years, lose about ~.9 billion
compared to the proposal Packwood drafted .

t.

an Ironton aMorney. "Those counties fortunate to find Insurance
were finding their rates had
drastically lncreas!d," he added .
Officers of the new organization
for this year are T. Kall Burleson,
Gallla County, president; Karen
Harvey , Athens County, first vice

president; John R. Allen Jr .. Pike
County, second vice president;
Terry Null, Lawrence Coonty,
~verning board member; and
Ca rl Risch, Hocking County, governing board member.
"I believe by joining together In
this fashion the counties can have

better protection and save money.
It Is good to see these counties
working together like they are to
their common benefit," Lambert
said. "But therelsalotctwork tobe
done and some hurdles to pass,
though none are Insurmountable."
Lamrert hoped to have the

complete self-Jnsuranre program
available by mid -May.
"As far as I know, this Is the only
such councli In the stateofOhio, and
It Is being viewed closely by tl&gt;e
State Department of Insurance, "
Lambert concluded. "This could be
a first for southeastern Ohio."

�'

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·jualbq l'imt1:.. ittutiutl

' Waldheim: what to think?_

A Dlvlllon Of

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ts:m~

'qlv

,.,..,_,._...,...,
,..,....=,..,.
.
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n5 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(6U) 448-Z34!

Concerning the inatter of Kurt
Waldhelm, a iew o!Rfvatbns.
L They ask bow rome the record
d .yoong Kurt's Involvement with
the · Nazllo hasn't atfectal his
apparent standing In the Austrian
electk&gt;ns. Several eli:ptanatbns are
protfered. In order of progressive
obj~tk&gt;nabUity they are: Most
male Austrians over 60 years old
were Involved ln. what we \\llllld
property can "Nazi activity." Slnoe
the Nuremburg trials, and the
never-ending evolution of the story
ofHitler's comprehensive bestial·
lty, Austrtans have done to themselves what most human beings
would oo to themselves, namely
excuse their conduct. How? Prim·
arllyonlbe grounds thattheydldn't
really know the full story (whiCh Is
usually ·true), iind so they are
understanding toward someone of

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
( 614) 89!-2158
'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WIL'ION JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
A,..lstant Publisher-Controller

. ' · A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Assoetallon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
- LETTERS OF OPINION ar@ welcomt. They should be Jess than .nJ words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name address and
telephone number. No Lmsigned Jett@rs will be ~bllshed. Letlers'should be In
. eood,taste, addrHsina Issues, not personalltlts.

!{GC-CC eyes needs
• ;(EDfi'OR'S NO'IE: Wllh the Cl'ftllloll 11 the slate's J3lh pllbllc
,..._,erolty, hlghere&amp;tcatlon 111roughout Ohio eatersaaewera. Rio Grande

•

~and Community CG!qe Pn!sldent~R. Smllh has been asked
~ the Tlmes&amp;nllnel lo prepare a series of commentary pieces on lhe

the eminence or Kurt Waldhelm,

who says he dldn 'I know the story.
U he dldn't know It, then bow could
they he·expected to know It? He Is,

for that reasoo, uSEful.
.
Another explanation Is that twothirds of Austrians were not alive
when Hitler was, and re had, lor
them, become a remote memoryugly, yes, boit ugly In the sense that
Genghls Khan was ugly, or maybe
the dumb Germans and Aus!I1ans
wbo launc.Qed the First World wa:r
and kllled 15 mllllpn human beings
to no one's apparent advantage.
They are presumablY thinking that
Waldhelm's participation In tlllse
·events Is of primary interest to
historians, not to a people who are
being asked to .vote for one of tre
most prominent diplomats In the
world, who served 10 years as
secretary-general or Ire Unital

_.:..:.W_.:::ill=-iam_F_.B_uc_kley....;._J,__r.

Nations.
2. If we assume that Waldhelm
was Indeed conscious of what It was
the Germans were doing In Salon·
lka, that he knew the Jewish
populatk&gt;n was being transported to
death houses; that, In Yugoslavia,
he knew the partisans were being
tortqred .and executed, how do we
eJCptaln the extraordinary hiatus
between his Involvement In such
activity, and our hearing of It? ·
Simon Welsenthal must lee! a little
like Ed Koch: Welsenthal's job, at
wHch he has proved superb, Is to
discover lonner Nazis whO are
working as plumbers In Milwaukee.
To miss one who was working as
secretary-general at the United
Nations suggests something.
What? Well, It suggests collqslon In
high places In keeping the records
hidden. Collusion by whom? Cui

R&gt;flr- Gl!lll;~

·

I9&lt;JIIIImpact ol this new educational eavlnlmnent. n.e illlowmg Is lhe
so:oqnd 11 three editorials.)
'
: ;li!gher education a! Rio Grande must now enter a period of
~amlnlng Its p111pose and quality. This search tlr renewal i'l 'belng
fo)'n'd by a number of factors that are changing the educational
$vlronrnent in southeastern Ohio.
;:Those factors include the creation of a new university a mere~ miles
!rpm our campus, a declining student population and the Impact ct federal
b.Udget cuts mandated by the Gramm-Rudman budget balancing law.
:These forces are all complex; and , all cany with-them the Jl)tentlal to
li&lt;frm our Institution as Its strives to provide .quality education to the
Cjlmmunlty.
J
·'JNe must not, however, allow ourselves to be so dlscouragl&gt;d by the
111jlgnltude of these and other challenges that we overlook the opJl)rtunltles
for our college's future.
)nst.ltutlons today cannot afford to he reactive; they must take the
In~ Ia Iive by being proactive In developingtlv&gt;lr own human resources, and
ln·helping to shape their own destinies.
.
;!)ere are no easYanswers or quick solutions to the challenges we face.
The response to these must lie In tile offering of broad-based quallty
eslllcatk&gt;n - an educatkm which prepares our graduates with abllltles
urti¢rstandlng, appreciations 'and' the courage needed to thrive In ~
~antly changing job market.
: ¥ouvatlon to pursue learning In our country Is driven by real lite needs,
~ stx:lal expectations for involvement with other people; and, in some
~ ses. the pursuit of learning Is a means of contact wlfh the "outside

.

·

£1'fA
liul.ME
...

world."

; The traditional strength of our programs Is based upon til&gt; liberal arts.
IOcludlng programs In business, education, nursing and technologies.
. Excellence In the liberal arts and the humanities Is Indispensable and
should be a top priority in this technological age where historic perspective
ajld creativity are Imperative.
: Whlle our area has a great sense of oommunlty, the people do not actand cannot he treated - as a single unit In terms of education, ecoromlc
ctvelopment, socia l and personal needs. We are many publics.
• Rlo Grande, with Its unique blend of both a community rollege and
fOur: year, prlvatecollege, must continue to reach ootand meet the unique
IJ'eds of,the Individuals in·our community.
• Where do we begin? Right where we are.
: we begin with an assessment of our present personnel and ·material
!fSOurces. We recognize our responsibility to the students we row serve by
~sessing and providing services, as well as meeting scheduling and
programming needs. Then, we adjust our educational programs to
as:commodate other potential students whom we have not previously
srrved.
: To fulfill our role In the community, we must seek oot, encourage and
nyrture those potential students.
·A number of programs have already been Initiated at Rio Grande to
all dress some of the special needs of oor area.
• Rio Grande now operates a rommunlcatlons center of the Ohio
T~hnology Transfer Organization (O'ITO) . Through tl!ls computerized
~twork of colleges and universities, up-to-date research lntlrmatlon to
~lp solve technical and managemenl problems Is made available to
boslness and Industry.
;The college serves as fiscal agent lor about 15 Ohio Industrial Training
~· a l'letlred Senior Volunteers organization and other groups.
.Providing growth opportunities to talented youth In the community wlll
e!jcourage them to excei:Talented andgUted students from VInton Coonty
High School are now participating in a "TAG Program" at Rio Grande
~they are earning college credit while stU! In high school.
~An outreach office was recently opened In McArthur. Our goal Is to
e1!Bnd the services of .the Institution by providing a more convenient
source ol information about the college to the residents of VInton County.
Much Is being done. Much can be done.
'.'-major task we face Is that of gaining access to the potential student
POII\llatlon we hope to serve.
·
'file Issue or needs assessment hegins largely as a question of
l~ltutlonal mission 1 . pu!pOSe and direction of the college. The type of
ptogr'annmlng, scheduling and services clfered will shape the student body
.,(1-the college.
»sic ally, the goal is to provkle flexible programming and scheduUng.
.:t&gt;Juing this decade, while the number oilS to 24 year olds In Ohio wUI
dfel'fase, aduHs between the ages or li and 44 wUIIncrease by 00 percent.
J!ll1990, older non-traditional students- usually combining full-time
e~loyment with part-time studle5'- are expected to constitute nearly~
pe~nt of the enrollment or all colleges. Women wlll constitute a major
~nt of the non-traditional enrollment.
·
;O,ir success, like that d other colleges and universities, wUI depend upon
011t commitment to met&gt;! better the
d the students we arecurrentrly
~g and those we expect.to seN in
future.
;i'jilanclal aid, expanded and flex I Je
ling- Including off-campus
IOCJII!ons - to faciUtate commuter and tre on-traditional students and
SJ!e4lal services such as day-care are beco
Increasingly Important.
st tping root · on
;$glne Rio Grande students receive credit = u
· caQipus. They are part of a growing number alii omen d men taking
~In olf-campus programs throughout the area.
and programs
I~ to an external degree are being planned.
.~college Is challenged to be more flexible, accommodating, reaUstlc
aOOreatlve In Its response to student and community needs.
.•
Grande's public dimension today must extmd well beyond the
c~ and laboratory. As a resource hub for oor tour-county
~nlty college district, Is assumes a leadership role In area ·
~lopnent.
_
:~need to prepare Sl!ldents for positions that are avallable II' that we
aO~pate wUI be avallable In the future. At the same time, we must
sttfntjlate economic growth In the area, helping Increase jobopprtunltles.
:r&amp;e two efforts, obviously, go hand In hand.
~·rther consideration Is needed or customized, oocupatlonal and
a~~tlceshlp training programs_useful to bosJness and Industry In the

aa:

·

..

.

:w,.i must also focus on new and emerging oocupatbnal training, as well

a~ )(ograms designed

to upgrade and readjust employees working In
dJiling Industries.
linkages must be established, partnerships must be lorrnulatro and

:f'!le

n.Mirlus must be developed.

;Rle Grande today Is facing new challenges, The matter Is clear.

•Gil! either attempt to shape the environment in which wellveandWorkor

('

allo/o: the environment to shape us.
;k(thls time of stress lor Rio Grande College, providing quality student
leaiQJng may be the most Significant challenge in the next several years.
Talilng about quality wlll not he enough.
~ decisions must be made - all proeriuns and .fllnctkms or the
coGtae must be reviewed; and, It needed, renewed or restructured. .
Y&amp;lle we must not compromise the quality of a~r .wces.sfUI programs,
we rriust dfoalwlth our new realities.
. (Next: stralepc plaanlac and IJIIU'Iretmc.) ,.

"Sniff. Vetch. I think I smelled a kindred soul."
.

. .

April20,198&amp; :
• Page~A-2

.

.

April20,1986

'

The Sunday Times-SenmiJI

Commentary and ·perspective
.

.

.

tnro? as they say. Who profited
!rom the Ignorance of Waldhelm's
past?

.

The simple answer to thll;
question Is not abSOlutely self.
evident. It Is true that during the 10
years Waldhelrn was head of the

United Nations, the Soviet Union
made deep Inroads. II was durtng
that period that we clearly lost
control of the General Assembly,
and rurlng that period that we sat
by more or I.,.. helplessly as the
Third World consolidated Its opposition to Israel, denouncing Zionism
as racism. But It Isn't at all obvious
thai Waldhelm could have aJTeSied
this rrovement. UThan! was there
wren the erosion began, and the
Incumbent Perez de Cuellar can't
dl much about II. The easiest way to
put tt i'l that tre party that profited
prlmarlly from the suppression of
the record of Kurt Waldhelm was
Kurt Waldhelm, enjoying as he
palpably did his long tenure as the
mosl conspicuous ctvll servant In
the world.
·
3. Since It Is not a matter of
official Interest In America who
gets elected as president ct Ausb1a,
which Is primarily a ceremonial
role, In a country whoSe constltu·
Ilona! Indenture commits It to
neutrality, we are forming, really,
!llre!Y personal Impressions of
Waldhelm. What are we to think of
him?
He made a pretty poor witness in
his own defense when he appeared
m "60 Minutes" last Sunday. For
one thing, he has the habit d
smiling at inopportune moments. A
smile Is an Inappropriate facial
exjJ'esslon to accompany the statemmt that you did not know torture
was going on In Yugoslavia. And
·certainly Waldhelm was gullty or
evasion in suggesting that after he
was wounded on the Western front
In 1941, he was through with
soldiering. For this he apologlzed.
He was not, hOwever, Insincere (In
the judgment of this viewer) when
he said that It had been a very ugly
war and that both sides had acted
ou t ugly roles. .
·

Their own._Bitburg __--=.,Ja_ck_A_n_de_rs_on_&amp;~Jo_se-L-ph_S-2,.p_ea_r
WASHINGTON - The DemocratiC National Conlmlttee recently
committed a tmnder d ethole
proportbns. The party that has
buUt·mueh d Its rrodem success 111
sensltMty to the feelings cthyP~en·
ated Amertcans Included Mardll9,
1939, on Its ~ Etmlc Calendar as
"Siovalt Independence Day."
Despite Its mble-li&gt;undlng title,
that was the day slwtly before
World War II when Adolf Hitler set
up Slovakia as a Nazi ~URI!!! !ltate.
He incorporated Into the Third
Reich Bohemia and Moravia, the
rest of what had been the Independent, democratic republic of Cze· ·
choslovakla. Under the notork&gt;us
Catholic priest Father Jose! Tiso,
Slovakia went to war oo too side d
Nazi Germany later In 19:B.
·Tlso · was hanll€d as a war
crtmlnal In 1947. He was arrong the
vilest ct the antl-5emltes woo
welcomed the Nazis and eagerly
did their bidding during the lblo·
caust. At ooe llJbllc ceremony
President Tiso proclaimed: "The

Jew Is a boll on the body of the
Slovak nation, and we have to &amp;-el
rid d that tnU."
Tiso's metho., was brutal and
effective. His lllinka Guard, modeled after the Nazi SS, rounded up
Slovakian JfWs; the Tiso regime
confiscated !hell' property to pay
Germany for transporting the Jews
oot of the country - to the death
camps.
·
How did this ugly period In
Slovaltlan history come to be
honored by the Democratic National CGmmlttee? Ronald Szabat,
an ethnic adviser to the committee,
accepted full responsibility. He said
the mistake was spotted by Sen.
Dennis DeConclnl, [).Ariz., codlalrman ct the oommlttee's Coun·
ell on Ethnic Americans, and was
excised . from the calendar though rot oolore our associates
Donald GJ!dberg and Corky Johnson were given a copy by a shocked
source.
"I apologize to anyone who might
he offended," Szabat sald. "It

cer tainly won't be In future
calendars."
Szabat said he thought the
"Independence" date had been
picked up from an earller•ethnlc
calendar. But Andrew Valuchek, a
Slovak-American who used to be
the oommlttee'sethnlc adviser and
Is now an aide to Rep. Thomas
Foley, [).Wash., said he was sure II
had never been Included.
At least the De~rats caught
their boo-boo before too much
dam'*'e was done. We have also
learned that In 1983, a RepubUcan,
Gov .. Richard Thornburgh of Pennsylvanla, actUally declared an
official Slovak Independence Day
- choosing March 14, 1939.
On that date, "the people of
Slovakia proclaimed their lnde·
pendence as a free and Independent
natk&gt;n after centuries r:l oomlnatlon
by other countries," Thornburgh
proclaimed, and added: "Patternlng Its government after that of the
United States, Slovakia remained
!ree untll the close of World War II,

JHiaJlJ1)' Jt()tJr____________w_h_en-Jt_~_llu-oo-er-~--ru-leo-ft_he

~JVlet

Union."

HIstor1ans at Tulane University

lrought the governor's gaffe to his
attention, pointing out that Slovakia
was at least partly occupied by
German troops on Its supposed
independence day, and 1n fact was
used as a depk&gt;yment area lor the
Nazi invasion of Poland on Sept. 1,
1939. As lor Slovakia patterning
Itself after tre Ut'\lted States, the
historians wrote: "the new Slova·
klan leaders k&gt;st no time 1n
&lt;J'ganlzlng the state on the model r1
Fascist Italy and Nazi Gennany,"
An aide to Thornburgh sald the
IJ"OCiamatk&gt;n had been cleared by
an etmlc affairs aide unfamiliar
with Slovak hl.story.
In 1981, a representative of the
CathoDe archdiocese of New York
In a letter to a church official Jri
Paris, gave his approval to a prayer
tor the beatification ol Fatrer Tlso.
Auxlllary Blsbop Joseph O'Keefe
subs(!quently withdrew the approval, attributing thP mistake to a
"clerical oversl2ht."

_____

It was Happy Hour· at tre OK !Ish with a .:11? The Important thing
Corral Saloon on Capitol Hill. The to remember Is that uooer the old
pace was jannmed with Its usual 5 law yoo couldn't even bring a gUn
o'clock crowd when the tall loltlylst !rom one state to another. Dealers
with the white hat strode to tre bar were responsible for keeping reand said, "Drinks on the house for cords of who bought handguns and
ammunition. Do you know what
everybody."
Wefllled up and then turned tot he this meant for thousands of gun
·
stranger. "And what victory might shop owners?"
"what?"
we he toasting?" someone asked.
"It meant PAPERWORK. These
"Congress just said goodbye to
the l9ti8 Gun Control Act. I'm with good merchants used to have to
the Natk&gt;nal Hair-Trigger Assocla· stay up all night long trying to
tlon, and this Is a great day for ~ remember who bought a gun and
who bought anununltlon. We got all
people."
"I didn't know the hair-trigger . that red Jape eliminated and from
manufacturers had their own here ,Qn out 'you're grilng to see a·
boom Ill the sale of every type o(
lo~y. "
'Ah yes. \Ye've always had a firearm. Drink up, !rtends, the .
strong interest In a weak gun law. ConStitution Is pllve and well In the
The easter It Is tobuygunithemore halr-trtgger lobby."
"How did yoo ~! Congress to
hair-triggers we're going to sell. I
was given a mUUon doDars to make knuckle under to a weak gun rontrol
sure the people's representatives law?"
The stranger winked. "Let's Say
would vote the J\vlerlcan way. FUI
up, everybody. This Is the last of my we just sent the legislators a
money."
m~ge. U they didn't vote to
He started to sing, "a gun tor me rEform the l9ti8 act we woold send ·
and a gun lor you, And a gun to · oor people Into their di'lb1cts and
riddle ttv&gt;m with Innuendos. On the
shoot yoor neighbor, mo."
All ct us have seen lobbyists otrer hand, It they promised to be
celebrate when they got a ~ll IJ)od boys and support us we would
through, but It was notHng ooin- make a donation to their favorite
pared·to this.
JDIItlcal charity. One more for the
"How come the pollee depart- road, men. Then I must make the
ments were against you poople rounds o! the halls of Congress to
weakening the gun bill?" Tom the drop some goodies on those who
backed oor bill, and mark a red X
barlender asked.
Tlte stranger sald, "Cops don't on the doors of those whO-lost their ,
know anything about guns. AU they nerve."
The man plunked $1,000 on the
run up against are the criminal
elements who use weapons 1o bu. I mlsed my glass. "To good
sport," I said.
commit crtmes. They never see the
We drank.
law-abiding people wm boy their
Someone shouted, "Death to all
han~ to hunt and fish."
gun laws."
·
.. Fish?"
.t "Don't tell me you never shot a
Die stranger wasn't drinking. He

A~rt~B==uc~h~uo~ld

said, "We can't have that. The members that the law enforcement
threat oi stronger gun control bills prople are mad as hell at us and
keeps the National Hair-Trigger aren't going to tljke It anymore."
Association alive. Our members
The man exited through lhe
·
would refuse to provide us with swinging doors.
money It they thought tre ba tUe
"Who was that strangl'r who was
was att over."
just here•:· someone asked.
"And how do you keep the threat
"That was no stranger," the
going?" 1 asked.
bartender replied. "That was the
"By putting out ~ word to our · leader of the PAC."

Doonesbury

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

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A·3

r---Local Briefs:--. Accident injllres 4 Gallia County teens]~~
Clean Up Ohio o'bsenfance set

GALLIPOLIS- The week d _AprU 19-26 has been deslgilated as
Clean Up Ohio Week and the'GaiUa County Utter Control Program Is
assisting all persons Interested Iii cleaning up the county.
Special recognition wUI be given Ill all participants, said Utter
Control Dlrectot Carlos Wood. Clean Up Ohio Week Is ~nsored by
the Ohio DDepartrnent of Natural Resources Of~ce of Litter
Prevention and Recycling.
Answers to questions and Information on how tD participate are
available from the litter control program at 440-4612, extension 772.

Gallia road. closing Monday
GALLIPOLIS - Buhi·Morton Road wiU be closed Monday at 8
a.m., approximately ~ !eel south of U.S. :ri, to replace a
structurally deficient bridge, Gallla Coonty Engineer James Baird
said Saturday.
Local traffic can use Coonty Road 3 (Mitchell Road) as a detour.
Buhi-Morton wlll he reopened to maintained traffic tater In the ~k.
Baird said.

Centerville plans bean dinner
CENTER VIUE ~ The third annual Centerville bean dinner has
been set for May 24 by the Centervllle Volunteer Firemen's
Association.
Anyone wishing to set up a food booth or he a participant In the
parade shollld call446-3222 or !82•6347 and ask for Fred Chll&lt;rrs for
more Information.

GAlliPOLIS - A donation to the development of a oommunlty
park off MUI Creek Road, adjacent to the site of the new swimming
pool, has been made by the Toddlers to Tassels Mothers' League of
the Ohla Chlld Conservation League.
The league joined tl)e Gallipolis Emblem Club In providing
financial supporl for the neal funds necessary to match grant
money. AppUcatlon for Ohio Department of Natural Resources
tuoolng to construct a picnic shelter, tot klt, roadway and parking
wUI be made this summer by the Gallipolis Parks and Recreation
Department.
.
Any contributions made to the recreation department before June
1 can he appUed to the local share of fuoos, which can be matched by
equal money from ~ state agency If a grant Is approved.
Anyone Interested In donatllng to the park project can contact the
recreation department at 446·1789, exten sion 24, for details. All
donations are being placed in a reserve account and wUI he added to
the $~.000 pledge made by the Gallipolis Recreation Advisory B:&gt;ard
with money left to the clty'in 1984 from the estate of Robert M.
Switzer.

May WIC schedule announced
POMEROY - The May schedule for the pickup of WI Ccoupons a I
the Meigs County Health Department, Mulberry Heights, has been
announced.
Pickup days wilt be May 1. May 2and May 5 and the hoursare 9-ll
a.m. and 1·3 p.m. Those who cannot make the apJlllnted days should
call for coupons on May 12 and 19 from 9-11 a.m. and 1·3 p.m.
The health department will be closed all day on May 26 In
observance of Memortal Day.

Levy

POMEROY - Salisbury Elementary School PTO voted in a
recent meeting to endorse the Meigs County T.B. levy In the May
primary.
New officers elected at the meetin g were Rhonda Conde.
president ; Thelma Jeffers, vice president ; Becky Broderick,
secretary; and Debbie Grueser. treasurer.
The program was given by the fifth and sixth grade band classes,
directed by David Bowen.
The group voted to give $50 to each class to he used as the class
wishes.
It was announced that the annual book fair was underway.

Patrol cites driver
POMEROY - The state highway
patrol cited Juanita Lambert, 42,
Rut wnd, for Improper backing In a
two-car acciden t on Meigs County
Road 3 Friday.
The patrol said Lambert was
reportedly backing from a p1ivate
driveway, tl!ree-tenths of a mile
south of Rutland Township Road 57,
at 9:29 a.m. and collided with a
northbound vehicle driven by Ber·
nice H. Nelson, 74, Rutland .
The collision forced Nelson's ca r
off the rl,ght side of the road. There
was slight damage to Lambert's
r ar and reavy to the Nelson vehicle .
· No Injuries were reponed .

Boyd, 18, Rt. .4, Oak Hill. The
hospital had no record of treating a
fourth youth pollee said was
injured, Eddie L. Harmooo, 17, Rt.
2, Crown City.
Pollee sald the four were stand·
lng at the parkfront 111 First Avenue
at 12:50 a.m. when an unknown
southbound car swerved and struck
one of the yooths, knocking that
youth tnto two teens and thOse two
Into another of the teens, who was

forced Into a parked truck.
11:49 a.m. Into the path of a car_
The-youths were alltal(en toHMC driven by Glenn D. Baird, 67, Rt. 2. '
by the Gallla EMS . and an ' Gallipolis. The collision caused
Investigation Into the accident Is severe damage to Hall's vehicle
continuing.
and slight to !he Baird car. Hall was
In dher matters, pollee dted two cited for failure to yield.
.
motorists In separate accidents on
A car driven by Sang Ueng, 25, ·
Friday.
161 Upper River Road, was ~uth· :
round In tre ~ block of Secooo :
Officers said a ca~ driVen by Nlla · Avenue at 10:28 p.m. and report· ·
L. Hall, 29, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, edly struck the rear of a car driven ·
reportedly pulled from a private by Thomas L. Kingl'ry , 19, Rt. 2,
driveway on Henkle· Avenue at Vinton, which had stopped In
traffic.
There was moderate damage to :
Kingery' s vehicle and slight to the ·
Lieng car. Lleng was cited lor .
were Thomas C. Ho~e Jr., 18, assured clear distance.
·
Bartlelt, Ind., $43; Bruce A.
Also cited by police was Cindy _L.
McLaughlin, 30, Hurricane, W.Va., Booten, '!1, Patriot Star Route, for .
$4!; Mark A. Chatfield, 29, Colum- failure to display va lid registration. '
bus, $41; Bambi L, Price Roush, :lA,
Jailed by the state highway :
Rt. 4, GaHipolls, Sl6; Paul W. patrol tlr DWJ and failure to yield ;
Shannon, 47, Dunbar, W.Va., $40;
was Timothy W. Tarbet!, 77, ·
John A. Scott, 47, VIcksburg, Miss., Gallipolis Ferry.
·
$:11.

Court fines area man on charges
GALLIPOLIS - Ferrell A. Gallipolis, and Gerald W. Belcher,
Lamm, 32, 46 Court St., was fined 19, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Forfeiting $40 bond for Jn;lproper
$50 for no operator's license and $75
for reckless operation Friday In passing was Timothy S. Coodee, ~.
Rt. 2, GalllpoUs. A cliarge of failure
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
The court 'handed a suspended to control against Jennings R.
30-day jail sentence; $25 fine and 18 Nelson Jr., 25, Rt. 1, South Point,
months probation to Kralg W. was dismissed due to his earlier
Lemley, 23, Rt. 4, GalllpoUs, for plea to a DWI charge, ~nd a no child
driving under suspension and was restraint charge against Shonda M.
also fined $12 lor !allure to display Harris, 21, 90 Cedar St., was
dlsmtssed.
plates or sticker.
Forfeiting bond lor speeding
Fined $47 lor reckless operation
was Davkl J. Mooney, 18, Rt. 2,
Crown City. Forfeiting $4! bond rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
each lor Ull'lllfe vehicle were
Delores A. Belcher, 43, Rt. 2,

SHRED
, ... ..:"", " 1
i :-- •• •

LYNN ANGEll

Community park donation noted

Salisbury parents endorse

GALLIPOLIS- Foor teenagers
were sent to Holzer Medical Center
early Saturday after suffering
In Junes In a Jljldestrtan accident at
~ city park, GaiUpolls City Pollee
said.
Admitted to HMC lor a broken leg
was Jeffrey T. Sheets, 19, Rt. l,
Gallipolis, accoPdlng to a hospital
spokesperson. ·
Treated and released for museu·
Jar skeletal strain were Brian K.
Peck, 18, Rt. 1, Bidwell, and Bennv

Certified Public
Accountant

Memorial

Veterall8

Admitted - Vermont ·Markins,
Racine; Mabel Hetzer, Pomeroy.
Discharged .. Debra Cleland,
Lenora Betzblg, Carrie Moore,
Wanda Findling. .

Masons plan meeting
MIDDLEPORT - Mlddlep6rt
Lodge 363, Free and AcceptedMasons, will meet In special session
at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Ire temple.
Work wiU be In the entered
apprentice degree.

rl~s ·
Pro Wheels
Professonal·
Skateboards

Preparing Individual
and Business
Tax Returns

New arrivals

MONDAY 9 TO 9
TUESDAY 9 TO 5
' - · WEDIIESDAY: 9 TO 9
THUISDAY 9 TO 5
FltDIY 9 TO 5
SA1UIDAY 9 TO 1

O!ltn Daily
t:3-I:OO

1:~~

PHONE 446-8677
444 SECOND AVE .
GALLIPOLIS, OH. ·

INCOME TAX
REFUND 'SALE

NATIONAL SECRETARY WEEK

Clocks ............. 20% off
Precious
Monl,ents
.......... 10% off
)
.
figurines ......... 25% off
Timex
Watches .......... 20% off
Bulova
Watches .......... 30% off
Pulsar
Watches .......... 20% off
Lorus
Watches .......... 25% off
Cross Ptns ...... 20% off

c .. ~ :, ·~ ...;.
sc,crtO: r;, ry

_.

'

;-- . :'

'.
t'-•• .

L
S:-r: :; ~ =r ::r:- ·
S&gt;:-: ret&lt;v:-:.-s '/\•o;. e~ ~ :.,J .'r::o::
S eee ~.:m':" c \\ .,-..;- ,
s:CJrG A ~: . : 2 ~ Ca.. o·

Tawney Jewlers
424 SECOND AYf.
GAU.OUS

VIS.: _; ; :,_,.,.

'

...

Order Your Prom Corsage
and Boutonniere Early

PARK
TOURS
You are cordially invited for

a ta!le of

;jTeleflota
Phone

']h#tdt(iij, FLOII~T

romance' and adventure.

DISCOVER AMERICA 1986

446-9721
Gallipolis

LOCALLY OWNED IY JOHNNY HOOD &amp; MillE ALLEN

ANNUAL TRAVEL SHOW
H~liday

Inn
Gallipolis, Ohio

'

Thurs., May 1, 1986
7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.nt::~~

CD'S COMING DUE?
YOU DONT HAVE TO SETILE
FOR THE LOW RATES BEING OFFERED.

INVESTIGATE AI,I, ·

1st ANNIVERSARY

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

......- ·

--·---

mE ALTERNATIVES!

G'IVE~A-WAY

SMORGASBORQ

YOU COULD WIN A FREE
.
WASHER
AND
DRYER
By Just FiHing In the Coupon.
Belqw and Bringing It Into Dole's

~-~---- ~-- . ..!!!!! ......~ - - - - - - . . .....
1
1 NAME
I
:,

Gibson®

I
1 ADDRESS

I
I
I
I

I

I~

: PHQNE NUMBER

:
F " ••

... - - - - - -·- - - - - - :-:.:·;,:;~..r.:::..;;,:-

rou May Alto l~t~ister
In Our Store

l""h
Plu1 Tax

SILVER
BRIDGE
PLAZA'
NO
NECESSARY
PU~CHASE

Several attractive alternatives exist. These alternatives range from
direct investments in U.S. Government securities to portfolios of
government securities mil!laged by professional money managers.

If you would like to explore all your options, call o~ write today.
Our account executives will shoo you why you don't have to seltle
for less.

r-~----------------~0
I Pleuo 10ad me ~" Jn(...-Jon about CD ahernatlvu.
I
I
I
I Nam&lt;
I
IM~
I
I
I
--~----State
_
__
_
_
Zip
·
1
I Cily -

IPho~

l

I My Atcounl Executive (If my! 11

I

L------~------------~

�.

'

- ·Page-A-4-The Suildev r~Sentinel

. ·

NATIONAL ~EATHER SeRVICE

.

.

·

7. AM EST •·20-86

.•.
...

..... .

lf~IEifrD----

[\ :~­

UPr WEATHIA

a:2)a.Owna... ~:w

'OTOCAST ~

WEA'l11ER MAP - Durlng early ~ lllDmlng,lluJTies are
lorecaet lqr portions of the mnhem Plalas 1111d upper Millllsslppl
Valley repms. Rain and showen are lorecut lor portio• of the
lower Great Lakes, Ohlo-1'enne!!flee V IIIey, middle Hhrlesfrlpl
Valley BDd east and wes&amp; Gull Collli ~~~~~. Sclllteted thuDIIer
s00wers are forecMI lor ponlo1111 of lhe ew and wes&amp; Gull Coast
repons. Elsewhere, wealher wBI be lair. (UPI)

Ohio extended forecast
M~

through Wedllesday
Chance of showers Monday and fair Thesd:iy and Wednesday
Highs will be in the mid 50s to mid 60s Monday and Thesday and i~
the 00s Wednesday. Lows wUI be in the 40s Mlnday and In the mid lls
o low 40s Tuesday and Wednesday.

•
•

.•

State zone forecasts
Central Ohio:
Showers and thunderstoJTRS developing today and highs 1n the mid
60s.
The probability of precipitation Is !II percent.
Ohio Miami Valley:
Southwest Ohio:
Showers and thunderstorms today and hlghs between 00 and 65
The probabUity of precipitation Is !II percent.
·
East Central Ohio:
Showers and thunderstoJTRS Hkely iixlay and a high between 65
and 70.
The probabUity of precipitation Is 10 percent.
Soutb Central Ohio·
Showers and thunderstoJTRS likely today ~ith highs In the mid 10s
The probability of precipitation Is 00 percent.
·

•
•

•

:i

Tornado devastates
. Texas town

.·.

By United l'res8 lnternallonal
A tornado ripped through the west Texas town of. Sweetwater
Saturday, Injuring at least Dl people, leveling houses and knocking
down telephone and power lines, authorities said.
Authorities In surrounding counties said Sweetwater and Nolan
County officials requested emergency a·sslstance and hospitals were
put on alert.
"They said they needed all the help they can get," said L.C.
Devorce, with the Mitchell Coonty sheriff's olllce In Colorado City
about ll miles west of Sweetwater.
'
At least :nl people were reported injured, Ilev&lt;I"Ce said.
"There are houses down. They are taking victims to the hospital. I
' ' don't know how many," said Karen Counts, a dispatcher In nearby
Flsber County "There Is sketchy information. AU tbe phone lines are
down. We have radio contact."

FULL' SERVICE
CLINICAL LAB

.

'

BERLIN (UPI) -Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev has reitewed
his call lor removal of medium·
range atomic missiles from Europe
and added a proposal for "a
$lgnl!lcant reduction" in conven·
tlonal forces .
In a speech Friday to the East
German communist party con·
gress, Gorbathev also accused the
United States rl. pursuing a "mlllta·
rlstlc and aggressive" policy tha't
threatens world peace.
Ticking off the bombing of Libya,
threats against·Nicaragua and \\Iva
recent U.S. atomic bomb tests,
Gotbachev said: "It must be
clearly understood ln Washington ·
and the European capitals tha 1
such actiofts damage Soviet-U.S.
dialogue and the overall East-West
dialogue."

Tlie text of Gorbachev's speech

was released by the of!lclal East
C*rman news agency ADN.
"The Soviet Union proposes an
agreement~ a significant reduc·
lion of all components of the land
to~ l!lld tactical air forces of the
European couritrtes as well as the
corresponding European-based for·
ces of the United States and
Canada," Gorbachev told the party
congress In East Berlin's Palace of
t~ Republic.
He said h1s proposal covered the
region "tram thi! Atlantic Ocean to
the Ural Mountains" and included
certain tactical nuclear and cherrit·
cal weapons. The disbanding or
removal of. units and destruction or
removal r1 weaponry could be
monitored by OD·the-spot lnterna·
tionallnspections, he said.

1917, : f ; • I " • I
Rev. Elbert McGhee
death.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
· · GALLIPOLIB -The Rev. Elbert i Charles (Betty) Hall of. Columbus;
D. McGhee, 85, 655 Buhi-Morton •
Road, Galllpolls, died at 1: ll p.m. . a sister, Nellie Bowyer of GallipoFriday in Scenic Hills Nursing lis; and three grandchildren and
three great-grandchlldren.
Center.
Services wUI be held at 2 p.m.
Bon\ Ju!y 17, 1900, in Southside, Monday
in Paint Creek BaptiSt
W.Va., son of the late Charles and Church, with the Rev. Grover
Lou Briggs McGhee, he was a
Turner otflclatlng. Burial wlll be in
minister in G.qlllpolls for many Pine Street Cemetery. Friends may
years and operated a grocery store call at McCoy-Wetherholt·Moore
at Third Avenue and Pine Street.
Funeral Home, Galllpolls, from 2-4
He married Wyona Borden In and 7·9 p.m. today.
.
.
f "

destroyed In Ule flrst instanre by
the t~ harmful atomic explosions
In t)]e Nevada desert," the Soviet
leader said. "This applies as well to
the U.S. aggression against Libya
that contributes to a serious
deterioration in the world
sltuat ion."
Gorbachev said: "It Is obvious
Washington has decided In Its ~ual
way to teach . tbe Arab world a
lesson that would force It to give up
Its struggle for a just settlement of
the MJtklle East conflict.

"This comprehensive proposal
could make possible the untying of
the knot that has gotten tlghter and
tighter over so many years at the
Vienna conventional arms talks,"
·
. Gorbachev said. ·
The State Department said It
would study the Gorbachev propos·
als ''and would welcome clariflca·
tlon of the details of his proposal."
· Gorbachev said proposals he
made,la.St January, including remo·
val of medium-range nuclear
rockets from Europe, stlll stand.
He accused Washington of
. "charting a course that actually
undermines the C*neva accords"
and of "actions that turtber compll·
cate the already tense world
situation."
"The unique opportunity to begin
a true pr~ss of disarmament was

..--~-------­

::Soviet speaker criticizes raid
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - Pres!·
· dent Reagan's revenge attack on
· :ubya was "short-sighted" and wlll
·obscure chances (or [eal gains, a
:Russian expert on the United States
: believes.
: Speaking to more than 200
· participants in an Ohio University
:·conference exploring solutions to
·the Cold War, Vladimir Pechatnov
, said Friday the attack is one of
· several post-Geneva disappointments for Russia.
Pechatnov Is a specialist on
American lns\ltutlons at Moscow's
Institute for the Study of the USA
and Canada. The institute monitors
American behavior for Russian
leadership.
"C*neva evoked a sense of
hope," Pechatoov said. "We
thought the )X"esklent was commit·
ted politically . to Improving

Fire guts Crown City moitile home ·
CROWN CITY - A .blaze that
gutted a mobile home here kept
volunteers from two area fb'e
departments occupied for more
than three hours late Friday.
A spokesman for the Crown City
Fire Department said the fb'e
began In the kitchen of the mobile
home, located on Cemetery Road,
when a pan of grease on the stove

The

apparently ignited the Interior.
men to the scene and Guyan
moblle home was engulfed when Township Volunteer Fire Depart,
firemen arrived, the spokesman ment sent two trucks and H men.
added.
Together, they kept the blaze from
Crown City was called at 9:20 spreadlng to · other nearby
p.m. and was assisted at the srene structures.
by Guy an Township Volunteer Fire
"We pit a lot of water rnlt to keep
Department. Crown City Fire Chief It from catching on to tbe other
Don Rankin said the village bulldings," the spokesman said.
department sent two trucks and ll
Rankin said tbe mobile home .
which had an atklltlonal room and a
roof, was tenanted by Tony Martin·
cak and owned by Paul Stanley,
ral Resources employee, and Crown City. Estimated damage to
Brenda K. Kingery, Rt. 4, Galllpo- the structure was S:ll.&lt;XXl, Rankin
lis, vetetlnary assistant; Mk:hael said. Village firemen did oot return
K. Morris, 32 , Gallipolis, coal · to the station untll 1: 15 a.m.
miner, and Glenna K. Sanders, 25 , r;:Sa:tu=rd:ay:,:he=a:dd:ed=
.
Eureka Star Route, bank em· 1,
ployee; Roby Roscoe Moore, 24,
Thurman, landscape, and Janis K.
Frelrelch, 29, Thurman, unem·
ployed; Charles E. ,Wolfe, 39, Rt. 1,
!USP liHtOI
Gallipolis, sell-employed ; and
Published each Sundl y. 825 Third A'o.'t".,
Thelma L. Cox, 38. Rt.1, Gallipolis, . Gallipolis,
Ohio. by !he Ohio Valley Pub·
nurse's aide.
lis hlng Compa ny/ Multimedia. Inc. Se-

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

Couples file for ·marriage

GALLIPOI.:IS - The following
couples filed for marriage licenses
In Gallla County Probate Court.
Ted L. Stinson, 39, Bidwell, deck
engineer, and Rayanna Sue Cole,
28, 520 Spring Valley Drive. person·
nel assistant; Duane E. Abshlre,19,
Rt. 1, Gallipolis, laborer, and
Tammy L. Thompson, 19, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis, armed services; Ste·
phen L. Hays, 23, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
unemployed, and Tracy L. McMa·
bon, 19, Rt. 1, Bidwell, unemployed;
Dwayne, A. Caldwell, 20, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis, Foodland employee, and ·
POMEROY - A marriage II·
Melissa A. Holley, 20, Bidwell, cense was issued In Meigs County
babysitter;
·
.
Probate Court to Donald Gean
Thomas L. Kingery, 19, Rt. 2, . Jones Jr .. 22. and Sherrt Lynn
Vinton, Ohio Department of Natu· Lawson, 18, lxith of Reedsvllle.

ll•••llll

===:::::;~

Hospital Beds and Siderails
Quad Cans. Walkers
Overbed Trapezes
Portable Commodes
Slant Pillows
Porta lifts
Mastectomy Products
Squibb/Hollister Ostomy
Needs
Urinary Products
Surgical Dressings
Skin Care Products
Wheelchairs several styles
Bathroom Safety Atds
• Underpads
· Incontinent Wear

Member: Unllro Press International,
Inland Dally P ress Associat ion and thE"

Ohio Newspapt&gt;r Assoclallon, National

Advertising Representative, Branham
NewspaJl("r Sales, 733 Third Avt&gt;nut&gt;,
New York, Nf'W·York 10017.

The Down Under Restaurant
offers incomparable "Start to Finirh" dining
with a glass of our re/ected Fine Wines
French Onion Soup Au Gratin
Roast Prime Rib or
Fillet of Sole Almondine
Vegetable or Potato
Salad, Freshly Baked Bread, Beverage
Sherbet

1895
~ ReJen•alion! Suggetted(6141 446·2345

Certified by: U.S. Dept. of Health and Human
Services, CLIA and Ohio Dept.of Health ~ Approved for Medicare &amp; Medicaid.

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION MT~
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Wef'k ...... .. ....... ............. 50 Cents
One Year ................................. $26.00

SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Sunda y ................................ 50 Cents

No

~uMcrlptlons

town s

by mall permUted In

where motor ca rrier ~('rvtce

A
.
SWIMMING P

Is

I

The SuAday Times-Sentinel will not bf'

•

pa y ml'fll ~

made to ('arr'lers.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunday Only

One Year .... ...... ....................... $26.80

111•1111• Inc.

Sl)l months ........... .................... $13 .00
Dally ..d S•nday

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Iukie Ohio
52 w..ks .................................. $58.24
26 Woeks................................. . $29.t2
13 WPeks ................... ... ............ $14 .5-6
Kal es Outside Ohio
S2 Weeks ........................ ......... ~9 . 80
26 Wt'{'ks .......... ..........
.. ... $31.20
13 W...eks ... .. ..... .... .
... $15.60

D. Dillon, RN

448· 2206

Give your

Frum 'fh•· IJihle...
ARE YOU TO BAP fiZE IN THE NAME OF JESUS ONLY?
William B. K1Jgh11

SPIIIG VAU.EY PUU

529 Jacllso11 Pike, G•pel1, 011.

6U-446-0353

Served Monday. April 21 Jh rouRh
ThNrsday, April 24
) P.M.· /0 PM.

.
Ill

"Thtm PetPr said unto.the_m. Rrpem, and be baptized ellt.'ry one of you
th~ "'"!'t! of Jesus Chr~st }or the remission of sins. Ulld ye shaft receive

..,, 5 T-BIRD
. ................. S4999s
.,7 4 CHARGER............. S395oo
::.'79 NEWPORT•••••••••• S2695oo
'.'·80 PlYMOUTH •••••••• s2195oo·
:'86 COLT 3 DR................. $699500
~;'84 DODGE PicKuP.:....... s7 69500
.·:'84 ARIES 4 DR................ $549500
';:'79 HORIZON 4 DR...... $289500
..:'81
.ARIES 4 DR................ $419500
..

HUNTER
FOR

.

"THE DO IT ALL DEALER"
. .'

WE SEIVICE WHAT WE SELL!

COOPER

: Ghrysler•Plymourh•Dodge, Inc.
;: OIKlSUI

·: . .

· 399 S. Third Street
Middleport, 0~ 45760
(614)992-6421 .

E!!i!_
-

future . .

- URGENT
CARE CENTER
Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

S29.t5

HASKINS-TANNER
332 Second. Gatlipoli1
446-0676

Are you skilled at producing handmade articles that are:
unique, useful or decorative?
·
.
:
Do you fashion quality art objects?
'
Would you like to opim or expand the mai'Xet for your work?'
We are currently conducting astudy of the tY.pes and qual-;
ity of products, handmade by individuals in Meigs County,.
to be ·tncorporated into acatalog, for nationwide distribu..:
tion and sales.
·
:
To be considered for selection, products must meet the:
following criteria: · ·
:
1. Must be produced by a Meigs County resident
2. Must be unique and be of excellent quality
3. Art objects must have high aesthetic value
:
4. Must demonstrate the individual pride,you have in your:
work.
;

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Weekends &amp; Holidays
Monday-Friday
1:00
P.M. to 9:00P.M.
5:00 P.M. to 9:00P.M.

Se'nd a photograph and written description of your pro-:
duct. price per unit, an es)imate of the number of units you:
can reasonably produce overt he course of one year, along:
with a self-addressed sta~ed envelope to:

MJIGS COUNI'Y MADE
BOX 346
PO.IOJ, OHIO 45769

1--------------------=:...:=.:...JJ~!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!!!'!!!!!'!!~~!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!!~

.

OWNERS
SALE STARTS SUN., APRIL 20-ENDS APRIL 22, 1986

Give your
secretary
. thanks by
the
bunch.

APlU
7l

•

78C

Malted Milk Balls
13 oz. ~arton net .wt.

100 Paper Plates

OPEN SUNDAY 12-6; DAILY 10-9

Handy 9" size: gtl!at
for microwave oven.

.
Name Denotet Authorll) ·
1 he, word "name" has reference to "aut hority und power, " including

m hts name, . (J)-ro whom it was to be preached, ''among

ult~ations"~

'

Send the FTD'
Secretaries Week Bud Vase.·
Secretaries Week

exclusion of th,· Father and the

Holy Sp111t," not m keepmg w1th the gospel!
For Fm Bible Cornopondmce Coane, Wrlt&lt;.,,
Bulavlll~

Gajllpolls, Ohio 45631
S~dayl:v~lnl 1

S•ndaJ Momln1z
BlbM ShHiy 9t30
Wonllp lo.JO

. '
.~
. .· . ~. ,
... ....
. ..

Wenhlp 6z00

.

I

· Wedn.;.dty:

Bible St•.dJ
7z00tJn.
Rtdlo
"A. MeuattF,....

TheiJWe"
DaUy•W.IEH
11 155 a.m.

Watdl "111e BlbleAni.,.."•WO.WK·'n' IJ•S.nd.y 7z 30 a.m.

POMEROY
FLOWER
·SHOP
PH. 992-2039
106
Ave.
Or 992-5721
Wt

luHtrntlt

,_,,,_ OH.
All Major Crtdlt Cn1 &amp; WIIS flowers h11·vwllll'li.

Our
1.77

Gallon size.
75 bags, l11'2xlZ '12.

Latex Interior Paint

so•

87&lt;

20-lb. bag of all-purpose
potting soil.

Food Storage Bags

5.48~~~97

~

1.37

Potting Soil

1.1 7

Flat ........................;..... 5.41

Road • P. 0. 1111' :ltiK

Rebate

·

Our Weatherigh! .

. Chapel Hill Church of Christ

Afllr

Henri's Dressing

Give your
right hand
a big hand.
Send the FTD®·
Secretaries Week
Bud Vase .
. Secretaries·Week
starts April 21.
Call o~ visit us today.

Sale
Rebate

1.00~A7
16 oz. salad
dressing.

visit us tuday.

. Ke~p in ~ind that the "name of Jesus " ~eon s by "Hos .authoriry.uml..
power. It bemg,.by ·His·aulhomy and power 11 embraces. His commands
Matthew records the Lord's command in the great commission, "A ll
power .ts g1ven u~t? me tn h~aven and in earth . Go 'ye therefore and teach
all nauons, baptl~~ng them m-the nam~ of the Father . .and of the Son and
of the Holy ~.host \t-'t!. 28: 19 ,2~). No~tce !hat Jesu s does not say "names''
(plural) but name (smgular), 1mplymg 'by the aurhur;ry" of the ..
and who/~. (co~plete) Godhead' " When one is baptized in "rhe nam~'~{
the Lord, he "baptized by the aurhoriJ)I ofthe onr 1md whole (complete!
Godhead. the Father.the Son, ~nd the Holy Ghost. accepting Jesus as His
Sav1or. Lord, and Kmg: en(enng the Christian profession. to render a
devoted and faithful servtcel

tO the

Send the FTDW
Thanks • Bunch" Bouquet.
Secretaries Week starts
Call or visit us.today.

starts April21 . Can or

and (4~w~ere 1t was to begin to be preached, "at Jerusalem . .. When 0 ~
IUrn ~"the second chapter of Acts. you see the instructions of Jesus bdn
.
carr~cd ~ut. ~t was 111 Jerusalem on the day or Pentecost. Peter exattJ
ChriSI as havmg been approved of God (Acts 2·22)· as hav·1ng b e
·
h ·
'
· •
e nhcrucr·
. d (A CIS 2'23)·
.
• as avmg been raued from the dead (Acts 2·24)·
·
f If
aswrded to heaven to occupy the promised throne (Acts 2·J0) ' ~sh ~v~ng
come both Lord and Christ (Acts 2:36). Peter convin.,;d th:"Jew: th~;
Chmt was Lord, and being Lord, He had "all aurhorirv'" The 1 be'
converted, "pricked in rheir hearts" (Acts 2:37), wanted to know :sat t!::.g
must do to be saved from their sins. Whar do we see Peter
h' ~
"Repe__11tancf and baptism."' To whom did Peter dirert his 0 dpr;a~Ewng · ·
.r
, .. (fh'- h
.
w r s.
""'Y
one o, you. . IS 1ll reference to the Jews who had been converted.) B
whose autho,~lly were they to repent and be baptized? 'Jrr lhe namt Jt·
~esus Chrut .. For wh?t P.~rpose were they to repent and be baptized·?
For th1• remMswn ()! sms.' Peter was doing what he was told to do in Jeru -

To ~i~d ,the t~rm " Je~us o~ly''

~

·

we recogmze and acknowledge the Lord's a,uthority and comm~nndsfPII.Im, .
Chrbt Hu AU Authority
Luke, the author of Acts .. penned these words of the Lord, "And thatre· .
pe~tance an_
d rem1sston of s1ns should be preached in his nam
1 .
nallons.
begmnlng
at
Jerusalem"
(Lk
24
·46
47)
(I•Jes
e among. a I
h
1 h
· · • · r
us was mstructmg
t ~ ~pos~ ~s . w (ubi to . pre~.ch and for what purpose, "repemance andre· :
1
~~~!.uu~u OJ sm~. apllsm) ; J2)-by whose authority it was to be reached .

salem . ~Jrcuch ret~en.tunc''. ~11d baptism of the uutlwrin• of' J,•sus (iTJ His
nunw)jur tlw rt' fPIISSWil vj .uns!
·
Namo Embra&lt;ea Commando

•Attorney, age
•Graduat~ of !he Plains High School in Athens County,
Ohio Un1vers1ty and The UniveiSity of Toledo College of
Law.
•Member, Ohio Bar Local Govemment and La.bor Law
Co!"mitteas: Municipal league, Municipal league Labor
~~ Comm~nity and Munlcipallaague Attorney's AssoCI8tl0n; Ohto School Boards and School Boards Attor·
nay's Association .
oMe"'!b'!r, The Plains' United Methodist Church; tha Board
· of Otre~tors of the Salvation Army: and the Public Policf.
Commtttee for Central Ohio Cyatlc Fibrosis Foundation.
•Elected Athena City Law Director In 1977, 1979 and 1983.
Garry Hunter believes it is time to elect a State Repre·
18ntetive who will listen to the concerns of Southeastern
Ohio. A'*eiSing local economies In need of revitalization
to provide jobs and job security 1111 high priority with Garry
Hunter u ia thl effective delivery of heath care servicea,
· primary, aecondlry and higher education, tourlam and
tranaportltion facllitiaa:
l'lld for bj HIJI!tll tr State Rll)l1esentative, E"ren Ridge Trenurer, 22 s. Ma1 Ave.,
Atheo1 Ohio 45701.
·

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

'

446-5287

all God &gt;.commands. Repentance and baptism are commanded by the au-

IT'S

Let Us Help ~o'
Plan Your We •• hig

rhe gifr q/ rhr Holy GhoSI .. (Acts 2:38).

thorny of ~esus and promote the cause of Christianity on earth 1 b

DEPENDABLE CLEAN
USED .CARS and
TRUCKS

For those times that you can't foresee the

on all your pool supplies this season. Order your supplies at
grMt savings. This is NO GIMMIC, just buying quality
merchandise at law cast lly tNminating the frilh that cost
you IIIGIIIY· Example: 4# chlorine mnisttr (fits E-2 dar &amp;
othtrsl. Rtt. Pritt 121.95, Your Cost 113.80. Ssnd S2.00
1f.tuntlablt with your first ordtrl far s.nplt price list and
onlaring information to:
·
National Swimming Pool WhDIIsaltrs '#23
lox 27
Ohio 45701

right hand
a big hand.
300 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

would always know, in advance , when you
would need a doctor.

·- ~~~~

Manager
666 Jackaon Pike
Hillcreft Plaza
Gallipolia. Ohio

.

nel, who spent a total
of 100 b:Jurs on tbe ocean !Ioar.
.
'

'

If you could look into your crystal ball, you

- · SAVE MONEY

available.
responsiblE' tor advan('('

URGENT
CARE
CENTER

.

SUPPLIES

mailing matter at Pomf.&gt;roy, Ohio. Post

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d.l~v~er~s~,mo;;;s;t~o~ft~he~m;;N~a~vy~pe~rso;;;n;;1·

.

RIO GRANDE -Anewofflcefor more convenient souroe of.lnfom\a ·
Rlo Grande College and Commun· . !ion about Rio Grande Colleges to
lty College was leased from the the residents of Vinton County."
The administration hopes the
Vinton County Junior Civic Club
office
wW provide Vinton countlans
and will be opened in mid-May at
with
opportunities
lo increase their
the Memorial BuDding in McArthur
[Ertlclpation
In
programs and
oo first floor north, 108 N. Market
services
available
at
RGC·CC.
St:
According
to
tbe
announcement,
Colleges President Clodus R.
the &lt;1flce will be staffed two days a
Smith announced the opening to week,
TUesdays and Thursdays,
"extend the services of this Institution Into Vinton County to )X"ovlde a from 8:00a.m. to 4:30p.m.

HEALTH CARE

Office.

as recent U.S. nuclear teSting and
rejection of Soviet proposals for a
nuclear test ban BJJd anns control,
to eliminate the Jx&gt;ssiblllty of a
summit anytime soon. he said.
Pechatnov warned against
stretching the Omits of Soviet
nexlbutty and said that flexiblllty
should not be confused with
weakness.
Responding to previous confer·
ence speakers, who said the Cold
War cannot end as long as Soviets
o&lt;X:upy central and eastern Europe,
Pechatnov called the view "ex·
tremely one-sided ."

CAPE - CANAVERAL. Fla . and they ~ ldthalthey'veldent~led
(UPI ) - Remains of all seven . all seven .of the. astropauts," said
Challenger astronauts have been Marvin Resnik of Akron, Ohio.
ldentlfled, a family member said father of astronaut Judith Resnik.
Saturday, and NASA called off the
He said the remains wlll be
search for crew cabin wreckage, turned over to the famlll~. possibly
closing a heartbreaking chapter In In early May, after they are flown to
the shuttle saga.
a government faclllty In Dover,
"Remains of each of the seven Del., for · cremation or other
:space Shuttle Challenger crew treatment.
"There are no bodies mind you,
members have been recovered;'' a
NASA statement said. "Final fore· there are just bits and pieces," he
nslc work and future planning In said. "I don't know how· I can say
accordance with family desires is that nicely. Even trough the cabin
expected to be completed within I be was partially Intact, the crew was
.next several days and wlll he oot. They reallywerebldwnapart."
announced when appropriate."
Rear Adm. Richard Truly, assoThe anoouncement Saturday elate administrator for space Hight
came six weeks to tbe day alter and chief of the shuttle program,
Navy salvage divers working from said In a statement Saturday that
the USS Preserver first hauled up "recovery operations centered
twisted crew module wreckage around the retrieval rl. Space
· from Its resting place on the seabed Shuttle Challenger crew cabin have
about 16 miles east of Challenger's been completed."
empty launch pad.
Eight ships participated In the
"We talked to NASA yesterday salvage operation along with 50

RGC-CC plans
area office
.

HOME

cond class postage paid at Ga llipolis,
Ohio 45631. Enterl'd as second class

relations."
.
Pechatoov described the u.s.
attack as producing "rather shortsighted gains, which tend to
obscure tbe chances for real gain."
The Libyan attack has combined
with &lt;iher disappointments, such

.

Times-Sentinei- Page- A-6

crew cabin search

Area deaths

Gorbachev renews :anns. reduction call

·The

Pomer,oy..,-Middlaport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

April20, 1986

. April 20, 1986

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

Weather:

'

PA~KS

$1
~~~
Btddlng Plants
Vecetables or
flowers.

-·-

.

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·~ r., ,_

-

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lraco Stereo System
\11/FII stereo radio . cassette.

and 3 band araphic equalizer.
with 2 slimline speakers .

�...

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01

'

Ohio-. Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Tmes-Sentinel

..

1 Mei~ Countians ~swer ·child support charges· .RE~I~A
FIRST
BAPTIST
.

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.

' ·r.
.
·..". HOUSTON '(UP! ) - Pollee say
they have jaDed a woman accused
of tossing slx of her young children
Into a bayou, drownbtg''one daugh.' let&gt; and crltk:ally Injuring a son,
· ~ause she dld. not want them "to
go tllrougli \Ills wprld."
A city employee who heard
screams Friday ,and saw the
worilan.struggllng with the youngs·

CHURCH
6TH &amp;PAlMER ST.

Sale confinned

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

· !·

.

GAJJ..IPOLIS - Alan Ferguson
of Patriot was honored as GalllpoUs

student of the quarter during recent
graduation ceremonies for the
Soutl)eastern Business College
schoots at the Jackson branch of the
Ohio Agricultural Research Devel·
cipmental CentPr.
President Sam Blackburn pres··
ented degrees and ftiplomas to
Debra Johnson, Scott King, Dale
Thoene, Robert Thompson and
Jackie Vlllars.

·r'

,.
·~
··~

REV. CHARLES SIMON .;
APRIL 27-30
·"
7:00 P.M.

992-2156

GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth L.
Lewis will speak at the annual
Gallla County Safety Awards ban·
que! Monday, AprU 28, at the
Holiday Inn at 6: lJ p.m. ·
The event Is co-sponsored by the
IndUstrial Commission ot the Ohio
Division of Safety and Hygiene, In
cooperation with the Galllpolls
Are!! Chamber.of Commerce.
Lewis was lt)vlted to speak at the
earty morning sesstlns at t11e
National Safety Congress In both
1!81 and 1!m. Durtng Ills 40-year
career at the Generai'Motors COrp.
In Anderson, Ind., Delco Remy
Dlvlsiln, he received the "Safety
Fellow" award by GM. . The
National Safety Councll selected
Lewis to receive the "Diiflngulsbed
Service To Safety Awarq," the
council's hlgi'iest honor to an
Individual.
Rese!'vations ilr the banquet are
due prtor to Aprtl 23 by contacting
the cliarnrer ctCommerce office at
4&lt;16.ffi96.

Act Now and Save!

Absentee deadline set

Area student honored

Chamber sets ·
gtiest speaker
for banquet ·

~

DAILY SENTINEL

POMEROY - Meigs County's
three local school districts received
$::00,1~. 35 as their share of the
AprU State School Foundation
subsidy payment of $144,883,289.16
paid throughout the state.
Amounts received by the three
local dlstricls following deductions
for retiremenl Included Eastern
Local, $111,118.81; Meigs Local,
$282,607.28, and Southern Local,
$115,382.26. In addition. the county
board of educa lion received a direct
allotment of $27,104.67.

GALLIPOLIS- AbsE'ntee ballot·
lng for the May 6 primary has
begun at the GaUia County Board of
Elecltons. Written requests for
absentee ballots must be received
prior to May 3.
In order to be eligible to vote an
absentee ballot, voters must be
outside the county on election day,
hospilall7.ed, 62 years of age or
older, Ul, disabled or In jail awaiting
I rial. Absentee ballots in order to
count mus.t be received by the
election board before 7:30 p.m.
election day.

Kenneth I. Lewh

FOR THE SYRACUE ARIA
IF INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL

ON NEW 1985

Payments issued

THE NINJAS
STALKING YOU.
WAS S4599 NOW
1985
1985
1985
1985

$3 700

OTHER MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM
KTX TECATE Racing Wlwtllr WAS 12275 Now S1799
KX80
WAS 11010 Now 5925
KXSOO
WAS 12699 Now S2250
VULCAN 700
WAS 13295 Now $289 5
ON TIE SPOT FINANCING
EmA. EXTRA LOW MONTII.Y PlYMEJitTS
FULL UNE OF 1916 . .ES 1111 STOCII
AND USED . .ES

Full Unt of S or 4 Wheelers &amp; OH tht Road Riding Gear

J&amp;R

!?

SPORT
.SHOP
Pomeroy
741 East Main
992-2114

Matched Stereo Rae~
System Slashed '400
System 600 by Realistic®

'

HALF
PRICE

Reg. Sepilrate ltema !298.95
Low AI S41 Ptr Month
On CltiLino•

~er~ency

• IIA·· •·Will Anlplller'
•Til·•
All/Fl..,.
•ICT·•
C Ill Dick Willi
My"*l ...... Raduclan

IBMrrM International Bus;.

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a ._. """-

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'45 WATTS P£R CIWtHEL, MINIMUM AMS INTO8 OHMS fROM 20-20.000 tiJ,

DWP 220 by Radio

WTTK

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g
goo
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3

Save '200 ~~==:J

'j"""" 1.... Q911 THO

''TM DolbY llboralorin LictrtSir!O Cora (131·1100. U0-1100, 142-1tOOl

questloned. "From what we gather
there were extreme domesUc
dtfflcuHies."
Qiris · Swret, a public works
employee, said he heard screams
and looked up to see the woman
struggling with some children by
the bank' of the bayoo with water at
least 10 fret deep In parts. He ran to
the bayoo and dtsrovered six of the
youngsters In the water.
•'As I looked I saw tbe mom grab
the children and forcibly.toss a child
Into the water," Sweet said. "When
I ran down there, they were In lhe
water."
Sweet said he jumped Into the
hayw and regan pulling out the
you~sters. The dead girl and the
boy were found eight feet from the
bank In about 10 feet of water.
Authorities said they had been In
the water for at least ll minutes.
''I tried to corral them and take a

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPil American Electric Power Co.
Friday reportfd first qlJilrter net
earnings ct $12&amp; mlllkln orffi cents a
share, compared with$148.7million
or 78 cents ·a ,share for the same
quarter In 1985.
For the l2 months ended March
31, AEP earnings were $.ll5. 9
million or $2.06 per share, repres·
entlng decreases o1 19.3 percent
compared with earnings of $490.7 or
$2.63 a share for the same period a
year earlier.
The decline In earnings per share
reflected both tbe decrease In net
_earnings and an ,increase in the
average number of shares out·
Standing. That Increase was 1.9
percent for tbe quarter and 3.1

nms

couple at a time and •tried pu~lt .
them toward the bank and then
grab a couple more," Sweet said.
The 9-year-old girl managed to
run to a pollee station for help.
When poliCE' arrived, Sweet and the
security guard were pulling child·
ren from the water and giving them
mouth· ID·mouth resuscitation.

Rlwdes proposes
reorganization
URBANA. Ohio (UP!)
Republican gubernatorial hope,
ful James A. Rh&lt;:&lt;;les said
Saturday that, If elected, he will
reorganize theOhio Department
of Development.
Speaking at a fund·ra!Sing
breakfast, the former governor
charjFd that the department
has become "fat and unproductl·
ve ...a Mickey Mouse cperatlon"
under the administration o1
Democratic Gov. Richard F.
Celeste.

•w

TAKE ADVANTAGE
OF OUR SPRING
ON OIL CJI'ANGES AND BRAKE
.....--·AT SPECIAL VALUES TO
Bring these coupons
In today.

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LUBE _; II' ro s· ars. 'on
GM CARS ONLY

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Loog bed, black with red interior, v~ engine, ~utomaoc ~ns.: IJJWer steering,
power lnioes, PJii radio, rear step bumper, swtng·lock mmors alii Just 16,800
miles'

Smi!b Nelson Motors

bp. 4-10-86

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is the
deal.
in GallipoUs.

Low AI 120 Per
Month on CltiLtn..

Go cordless I 32-numbar dialer.
Touch·Tone/pulse•. #43-551

3-Way Speaker

HALF PRICE

Rate

Our MasterCard has an annual
percentage rate of 15%. The lowest rate
in Gallipolis.

Big 10' woofer, 2' I•'
tweeter, 4' mid·
range. Walnut veneer. 23'11•' high.

14().:4()33

Low A1I20
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On CIIILino •

EUREKA

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Reg, 199.95

UPRIGHT

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combines powerful canister suction with
upright ca rpe t c leaning action .
• ROTO-MATIC Power Nou:le automatically adjUitl to deep c!et n carpets

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Reg. 139.9 5

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mighty mltel111

The Commerdal • Savings ·Bank

Member FDIC

34.95

5995

•t

Priority Switch lets you instantly
go to Emergency Ch. 9 or High·
Ch. t9. *21·1511
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Novae·52 by Realistic

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fold to fh In
pocket! '/a" plug.
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n1 COIIIfiiiiiOIIIIIMcoo. ICC fio91o1nd. W. MM:e ""'' we sel
•C~iline rMMna credit from Cltiblnk. Payment fTIIY vary !iependii'IQ on balance.

AOIVISIOH OF TANOY COOPOAATlOOI

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•l'fiOGilAMMAillE TOIXH-TONEn'UI.SE pi,.n,. wort"'"""" IDnlnl fllilt hi. -·~.,..""""'..., tUoo(rolary~a~ lints, YQOJ Clnsftl
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• 7·J)c toOiael...'opUonal ttloulder 11r1p
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Chronomattc-·248 by Re-listic

The C&amp;S Bank's annual fee for MasterCard is
$12.00, also lowe~ than any one else in town.
And i1 you pay off your old Visa or
MasterCard with a new C&amp;S Bank
MasterCard we'll waive your first year's
annual fee.

Sliver Bridge Plaza

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My name is Lue Wroten. My wile,
Norma and I live in Glenwood, West
· VIrginia where Iam a ~tor for Mt. Cannel
Church on Mill Stone Road.
1 was helping my wife take down the
curtains !o wash when a pain hit my leg
and knocked me off my feet. " kept gelling
worse so we called the hospital, !told the
doctor what happened and told him about
my medical history. He said Ishould come
right on in. My wife and my neighbors took
me~ ttie hospital at 11 o'clock.
W·"n I got to the Emergency Care
Center, the doctor took nie straight into
the room and gave me a lui~ examination.

He knew right off that there were blood
clots in my leg so he gave me medi~ine
right away.
The doctor took the time to explain my
condition and Iappreciated that. He called
my family doctor and said I needed to slay
in the hospital. Everyone was just great to
me.
As a minister, I've been to all the hospi·
tals and Pleasant Valley Hospital' is my
favorite. This is the only hospital I'll go to

tobedoctor~

w~

No matter the degree or nature of your emergency, you will always be.treated with the
courteous and professional, 24-hour service you have come to apprectate at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. ·

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Daisy Wheel Printer

Pollee U. Sandy Blelstein said

the woman "seemed luck!" when

AEP earnings decline

J?QMERQY - Three calls were
answered by local units Friday, the
MeigS County Emrgency Medical
Sezylces reports.
.
At 3: 22 a.ni., Syracuse took
Vermont Larkins tram Maplewood
Lake to Veterans Memorial Hospl·
tal~ Rutland at 10:15 p.m. took
Raf!nond Riley for the ,statiln to
v~ Memorial, and al10:27
p.m. Pomeroy took Mabel Hetzer
from: the Pomeroy Health 'care
Cet\ter to Veterans Memorial.

Reg. 781.00

Low AI $20 P1r Month
On CltiLlne•

IBM® PC compatible!
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ters pulled the six chtldren from Foster, of the city homicide squad.
Buffalo Bayou near ·downtown , ,Three girls - ·ages 4, 3, and 1 Houston wtth the hi!Ip o1 a securlty weretaken toBenTaubHospltal for
guard from the HOQston Co~, observation. An U·year-old girl and
a seventh chlJd, a 9-year-old sister
police said.
,
A 5-year-old girl, Identified as ·who managed to ~ape her
Juana Leija, died Friday ,illgb( at mother, were released · to the
St. , Joseph's Hospital and her cuatody of chlld welfare authorities.
&amp;-year-old brother was ln critical · The mother, also named Juana
condition, said police Sgt. Brian Leija, 29, was booked Into the city
jail on suspiCion of murder and
.
attempted murder, Foster said.
She speaks no English. The names
of .the other chlldren were not
released.
Leija's husband, who lved with
the family, was expected to talk to
pollee later bday, Foster said.
percent for the l2 months.
When questioned by pollre, the
w.s. White Jr., chairman o1 motrer "just broke down and told
AEP, ex[ialned that the earnings the officer, 'I pushed them in," '
and earnings-per-share figures for pollee Capt. MOton Simmons said.
the 12-month. period IWUld hav,e
"She said she didn't want her
reen $475 miUton, $2.47 per share, chlldren ID go throogh this world.
without the effect of a write&lt;ff In She was going to follow them In
connection with the Zimmer Plant when she got them all pushed ln."
and a provlsiln !Dr loss relating to
an Investment by Columoos and
Southern Ohil EleCtric Co., a
subsidiary, In Its Poston plant.
White attril:N t.ed the firSt· quarter.
earning decline to fewer heating
days durtng the winter and the
continued weakness In the economy
In tre AEP system's seven·state
servlre area, resulting In redured
sales ooth to Its retail customers
and to other utilities at wholesale.

:·. during·first quarter ·

CARRIER NEEDED

CLEARANCE PRICES

7

'Texas mother accused ·_. . drowning her daughter19

.

Lauder'mllt, Dana R. WIUiams, paying support as stated In his posted a $500 bond with the oourt to
Vineyard and Jenkins emphasize
Dennis McKinney, James E. Husk current court order; Morrow was Insure payment of futu re support that the court and the depar1ment
and Franklin Laudermllt. .
also continued for review; McKln- payments.
of human services, together, are
The court has found that Allman ney was continued to May 5 for a
Jean ·VIneyard of the Meigs more Interested In getting current
and WIUlams are eligible for possible modification of his order; County Bureau of Support and support payments. They advise
unemployment benefits and are to and Husk was continued for two David Jenkins of the Meigs County dellnquent parents to come Into the
assign thOse benefits to the court for
weeks upon a motion from his Department of Human Services, bureau of support and begin paying
child support; Daniels was ordered attorney.
points out that this Is the first time the current payments.
to enter into a wage withholding
AUman also appeared with the court has requested that a oond
"Then we wUI work with you to
arrangemmt and Is to propose to counsel.
be posted. They note tbat In cases sch8lule payment of lhe arrear·
the couri a schedule for paying the
Two men, Archie Jarrell and where a parent Is self-employed, age," VIneyard says.
arreatage; Hale was ordered to Ralph E. Rose Sr. faDed to make.. lxlndlng may be used more often.
"We'd rather not have to bring
enter into wage withholding but his their court appearanres.
Authority to request a lxlnd of not these parents Into court or have
Richard Kevin DaUey also faUed less than ;iOO nor more than $1001 them sentenred to jall," she adds.
POMEROY - Entries confirm· arrearage amount was not d.eter·
lng sille of properties has been filed mined slnre there were periods of to appear. Dalley's notiCe of the was given the court In 1984 " lf they're wDtlng to work with us,
in Meigs County Common Pleas · unemployment during the time he hearing returned to the court r•IE'gls~l;;:at~lo:n;;:b~y:the~s:ta:te:.;;:;;:
. ;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;we;;
're;w;U;IIng==to;w:o;rk;wi::th:t;be;rn:·~"~
Court In foreclosure actions by was· not peylng support; Franklin unclaimed.
George Z. Stitt, who was Ill have
Diamond Savings and Loan Co. Laudermilt's and Evans' cases
were
continued
and
attorneys
w~re
,
......
'appeared,
brought his child supagainst Richard M. DeMoss, et al,
appointed
by
the
court
for
bOth
!XlrtS
current
prior to the cou,rt date
and Federal National Mortgage
men;
Ronald
Laudermllt
was
and
was
therefore
released from
Association against Carl Schultz
continued
for
six
months
for
a
appearing.
Jr.. deceased, et al.
Stitt, who is self-employed,
In other matters, Llnda Kay review and was ordered to begin
Young and Darlene Kimes have
been discharged from probation.
Ricky L. Johnson and Pattl Kay
Johnson have been .. granted a
dissolution of their marriage.

POMEROY - Eleven men w~
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Wednesday to answer
charges of falling to pay chUd
support
Appearing before Judge Charles
Kn ight were Llnden Scott Allman ,
Df.nny Carl Morrow, JE'flrey Earl
. Daniels, Jerry Hale, Ralph E. RoSE'
Sr. , Terry G. Evans, Ronald E.

Th8 Sundly

W. Va.

pomeroy-Middleport-GalipOiil, Ohio-Point

Located at P'easanl V*f Hoepltal, POnt Pleasant. WV

�'
·page A-8 The Sunday Tmes-Sentin&amp;t

Ple!llllrt. W. Va.

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio- Point

April 20. 1986.

theri er.
'

By ALlAN GRE_ENBERG
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE
BASE, Cam. (UPI) - Defense .
-experts say America's ability to
keep tabs on Soviet military movf'S
. may bave been badly crippled
: when a Titan rocket believed to be
: carrying a spy ~teillte blew up
. seconds after llftoff, lnjurtng 58
people.
Friday's explosion was the se~cond straight failure for the Titan
·34D rocket. the largest space
' launcher In the Defense Depart·
: ment Inventory. Another of the
: triple-barreled rockets failed last
August.
: The blast, three seconds after
~aunc h ,
released an orange,
:mushroom-shaped toxic cloud that
', -drtlted off the central California
· :coast and prompted the evacuatiOn
· of nearby beaches, but officials said

seq-

y.

Damage was limited to the
Immediate launch pad area near
the southern border of the 100,®
acre base. The Incident was some
distance away from a launch
fa cility buUt to handle future space

CONTINUES MONDAY
9:30 lO 5

SUPIIIOI

n oz.

IIG •

ELBERFELDS

CHUCK ROAST

11. $129

CUBE STEAK

11. $159

II.

ION IllS$

ENGUSH ROAST

•.

tn-·ienlind ·Section l.tS3
-

.',

,

.

II.

SUPEIIOI

JUMBO BOLOGNA

99C

IPAU

FREE

IN POMEROY PARKING

$129

.......

SAUSAGE

89C

11,
WHOLE OR HAlf STICK 99 1

PEPSI
MT. DEW
DIO PEPSI

$199
BACON

PORK CHOPS
CENTER LOIN
LOIN END

fla.•s

$119

II.

......s

BREAD
2ooz.

lOAf

'

..

VAWY E

'

1

BUnERMILK

99C

4GAL

69C

D&amp;n

BAR·B-QUE SAUCE

~~~~$129

~----~~--~~~W~E~
MT. YIIIION

$1 .49

20fo MILK

•• 01 YIUOW DIUCIOUS

YElLOW

APPLES

ONIONS

c

~~

POTATOES

1011.$149

lAG

...

COLUMBUS - Included In the exhibit, "Memorable Dress- OhiD
Women" at Ohio State ·UniVersity; openlnJ MQ lP, are:
,

~'

l

BEFORE APRIL 2·~, 1' 986~ )This is a ·
NO GIMMICK promoti.on - It df)es
no't '. affect your
purchase price.
.. .
CASH REFUND ·will ·'be given on.
.deJivery 1and may be used for
down payment! ·
c.t.\"
.

§ § § 1986 BUICK FULL LINE

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Rauh, 1881. Lent by Lawnfleld ColleetiDn, WeStern Reserve .
Historical Society.
Wine velvet evening dress with fitted bodice, lace roDar ruff, long
fitted sleeves and fabric gathered above pleats to resembfl bo\W.
1881, Lent by Lawnfleld CollectiDn, Western Reserve Historical
Society,
.
Dagmar Cele!lte (wife of Ohio ·Governor Richard F.o..Celeste):
Gown of pale gray lace over satin, designed~ Mrs. Celeste'siJI)ther
and worn when she was presented at age 16111 VIenna. 1957. Gift of
Dagmar Celeste.
Llllllin Glab (S~ alid screen actress, born Springfield, Ohio) :
White chiffon evening gown with beaded bodice. Given to Ulllan
Glsh by Elizabeth Taylor and wol'ilatMonarodlnnerglven by Grace
Kelly durtng filming of "The Comedians." Dlor, Paris, l96l Lent by
Theatre Collection, 'l'he Museum 11 t~ City oC New York.
Gray wool flannel suit and ~sian· lamb triWimed hat. Stage
costume from "Uncle Vanya." Fanla Mlndell, 19ll. Lent by·Theater
Collection, The Museum r:l the City of New York .
Indiana Locl«e McKee Earl (re!ident of Columbls and ·Naples,
Fla.; editor of Naples Today and member r:l·plannlng rommlttee for
Columbus' Thurber House): Wedding go~m of bias cut crepe-back
champagne silk satin with buttons and loops at wrists and center
back. Worn at marriage to Frederick Eckley Craig In 19Ji. Madame
Frances, New York, 1936. Gift of Mrs, Dean Earl.
Suzanne Farrell (Born In Cincinnati, joined the New York City
Ballet In 1961-62 season; 'named principal dancer for tile rompany at
age ~): Costume and headress wom In the Balmlchlne ballet
"Jewels." Boned, champagne sDk bodice and tulle skirt trimmed
with jewels and gold ribbon . Karlnska, 1966-67, Lent by New York
Qty Ballet.
··
·

..J(leibacker:

ssoo
~:~:
leSthte Regs/

COLUMBUS - From Cullman,
· Ala., to fashion df'Sign In Paris and

Centu,g

1'186 BUICK fUll liNE

Up to 60 Months To Payl

Onlg At YDul BeHel Bug Bul~k Des/11

SMITH BUICK- PONTIAC
1911 EASTERN AVENUE

GALLIPOLIS,· OHIO

'446-2282

'

Lucretia Rudolf Garlleld (wUe 11 President Jalhil A. Garfield) :
Royal bluesllksatln fonnal evening dress, nuw:le~MadarneB. Van

•

.

By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlmes&amp;ntlnel Staff
COLUMBUS - Exhibiting clothln!( that projected Ohio women at
their very bf'St, "Memorable Dress
.:.. Ohio Women" will open at the
Hoyt L. Sherman Gallery, SuUivant
Hall on the Ohio State University
Campus May 19, The exhibit wlfl
continue through June 29.
Included among the44ensembles
tha t comprtse the show are three
which belonged to Gallipolis native
Maybelle Mcintyre. Mrs. Mcintyre
was the widow of syndicated
columnist 0.0. M~ lnt yre, and she
died Aprll 27,19lri in Pt. Pleasant, at
the age of 101.
The show spans al most a century
In social and fashion chan!;'!;
Including clothing of First Ladles
Mrs. Benjamin Harrison, Mrs.
William McKinley and Mrs.
Warren Harding. Also represented
In the exhibit will be OhiO First
Lady Dagmar Celeste, actress
Lllllan Glsh, art collector Mrs.
Harvey S, Firestone Jr.. comedienne PhyUis Diller and columnist
Erma Bombeck.
.
Charles Kelibacker, former Pa·
rls and New York fashion designer,
and resident designer for the
Department of Clothing and Textiles In the College of Home
Economics at ()hio State, curated
the exhibttlon.
The collectio n from the university will be complemented by ottl&gt;r
garments loaned by the Cincinnati
Art Museum, the New York City
Bailey, the Western Reserve His·
torlcal Society, the Ohio Historical
Society, the Museum of New York
City and Miami Un lveristy.
Maybelle Hope Small Mcintyre,
tX&gt;rn Feb. 9, 1884 In Gallipolis, was
the wife and business Manager of
Oscar Odd Mcintyre, journalist and
syndicated column ist of "New York

POTATOES AND

$149

GAl.

Exhibit to show Ohio women at their best

$1 oo,ooooo AVAILABLE TO BUI( BUY·ERS!

Your Better Buy Buick D~ler's
Advertising Association has
allocated a Special Fund from
Unused Advertising Reserves to
ive Smith Buick buyers CASH
ACK on all new Buicks DELIVERED

undl\rdress~black.sllt

Dill'S PII-SlKID

CEJilll Ill

P,OII REAl
~. $149

'

OVER

niSH

ION ILlS$

.WIENERS

•BIG SAVINGS MONDAY ON MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR
-WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR -CHILDREN'S CLOTHINGMISSES AND JUNIOR WEAR. FURNITURE AND MORE.
•THE SALE PRICES ARE UNUSUAL - THE SELECTIONS ARE
EXCELLENT, AND WE'j.l GLADLY HELP YOU SELECT THE
SALE ITEMS YOU WANT FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY.
I

..,

and satin, by Balenclaga, Paris,
from tbe 19008. -(Photo cOIIriesy
of Ohio State University) At
rigid, Mn. Me~ Is wearing
that dress at a Chamber ~
Conunef!JC banqUet In elt~r
19'75 or 19'lli. She Is pictured wlh
Mrs. and Mrs. Bob Howsam of
tbe Cbtclnnatl Reds. (Tribune
me photo) The dress was ;;tfted
lo the exhibit, curated by
Charles Klein backer ol OSU, by
Dr. Betty Kratz of GalUpolls.

TO C tiUR C II [V[RV S UNDAY

Sl

1..-. "'

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wm

GROUND
CHUCK
~~~~~u11.
39

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., .

ON EXHIBIT - Three
dres8es whlcb belonged lo the
late Maybflle Mcintyre,
bf
· exhibited at Oblo State University as part vi . "Memorable,
Dre8a - Ohio Women," May It
IJirouglt JIUie 2!1. At left, a
manikin ~ a abort, '!ibeatb
overdreM of 'black lace , and

FRESH
'' .

LII .••·""• i t.~·::·.:··~

.

all those injured were on the
Vandenberg base.
Officials at the base said 44
armed forces persoMel and 11
civUians were treated for skin and
eye lnitatlon after the 1: 45 p.m.
EST blast. Base spokeswoman
Patty McCoy said another three ·
people - all members d. the
mUitary - were hospitalized for
possible eye bums.
There were no Immediate reports
of civilians having been treated
outslile Vandenberg, 40 mUes from
President Reagan's mountaintop
ranch In Santa Barbara Count

r,o

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I

New York, with careers In journal·
Ism and show business along the
way, Charles Kleibacker now finds
himself a professor, designer-In·
·reSidence, and ov~ of a_@OW·
lng coiiP.Ctlon of valuable clothing at
' Ohlo State University, where he has
curated Memorable · Dress-Ohio
Women, an exhibit par~g notable
fashion with significant women
from Ohio,
Ha lied by fasplon authorities for
·his Individuality and fine workmanship and known as the "master of
the bias," the New York designer
got off to an unlikely start Arter
graduating In 1943 with a bache. , lor's degree in journalism from the
-. University of Notre Dame, Kell·
: , ·backer took a job as a reporter for
: the Birmingham (Ala.) News.
Arter two years on the beat, the
. ; lure of New York· City became
; Impossible to resist Kellbacker
, • moved to Manhattan, where ·he
: · .wrote fashion copy a Glmbels for
the famed Bernice Gltz-Gibbon. In
• her book, "Macy's, Glmbels and
' Me," Fitz-Gibbons ranked JOel·
backer the desl$lner "right up there
llext ot Norman Norell, maybe

d~signer,

the history and role of couturier
design Is being publ ished. It will
Include essays by Barry Bradley.
curator of costumes at Western
Reserve Hlstortcal Society: Frederick Eberstadt, New Youkfashion
collector and June WeUs Dill,
former fa shion
riter for the
Columbus Dispatc ·•.
There will al be a series of
special pr
gtvlng perspective to fashion's lnfiuence on
society, given by Kleibacker on
May 21 at noon In the gallery.
Lectures spons,ored by the University Gallery's PUblic Programs
feature Northwestern University

professor Chuck Klelnnans' exam·
nat iOn r1 Images of hlgh heeled
shoes in the mass media and Diana
Elkins, curator of photography for
Conde-nasi's fashion magazines,
who wlll examlne the role 4
photography in rilagazlnf'S such 'as
Vogue, Mademoiselle and Harper's
Bazaar,
The Hoyt L. Sherman Gallery is
located in Sullivant Hall, 1813 North
High Street at 15th Avenue. Hours
are Monda y through Frtday, 9a .m.
to 5 p.m., Tuesday and -Thursday 6
to 8 p.m.. Saturday and Sunday,
noon Ia 5 p.m. Admission Is free.

collector, professor

right alongside Norell."
While still In his 20s, he met
nightclub singer Hlldegarde, woo,
Kelibacker says; taught him all
about great clothes. Eventually
hired as Hildegarde's a~ance
man, Klelbadller learned abOut
rashlon nrst-liaild In The shOW
rooms of the great Parts designers,
where Hildegarde selected her
wardrobe.
.
In that fashion capital during the
early 1950s, Kellbacker discovered
"that certain somethlng.of intrinsic
quality, not just sUiy fad," that Is
Inherent In the hest couture clothing. "I knew that clothing design
was What I'd always wanted to do,"
he said. "I began to apprectlale the
Importance of englneer!J\g - wha)
cut and gr$ and construction are
all about. •:
Returning to Parts In the mid·
1950s with oo rontacts and Uttle
knowledge of the language, Wt a
determination to work IIi a great
fashion rouse, IOelbacker "just
po~ on doQJ!I untll I got a place
In the design studio at Lanvln," he
said.
•
In 19!K), Kellbacker retui'ned to ·
. New York where be set up a small

.

Day by Da y. "
Following her husband 's death In
1938, Mrs. Mcintyre spent parts of
the summer at Gatewood, the rome
on State Street In Gallipolis 0 .0.
Mcint yre bought and renovated for
her. The brick home belonged to her
grandparents, Capt. and Mrs.
James Gatewood .
In the late 1900s, Mrs. Mcintyre
returned to make Gallipolis her
permanent home. Mrs. Mcintyre
kept their Park A venue apartment
until the 1900s. She spent summers
In Gallipolis and spring in Europe,
winters In New York.
The Mclntyres traveled in high
social circles, including polltclans,
movie stars and other celebrities.
Following her husband's death,
Mrs. Mcintyre placed lit a book the
:!)().plus telegrams sent by celebri·
ties expressing their condolences,
Hanging In Gatewood were dozens of signed photographs of the
Mclntyres with people like Jack ·
Dempsey, Charlie Chaplin, Will
Ro!;'!rs, Sinclair Lewis and William
Ranoolph Hearst.
Maybelle Mcintyre had a prefer·
ence for suits by Chane! or
Balenciaga, and collected art nouveau, Parisian fUrniture, wood
carved ornamental designs and
tar~ mirrors.
Garmen ts of Maybelle Mcintyre
included In the exhibit are a short,
sheath overdress of black lace and
sequins, underdress of black silk
satin, (Balenclaga , Paris 19ffis, gift
of Dr. Betty Kratz\; a black and
pink silk sat in charmeuse dinner
dress (Ca llot Soeurs, Paris, 1!ms,
lent by Charles Klelbacker); and
an ensemble of black wool jacket
with whit e silk satin and black wool
drf'Ss (Chane!, Paris, 19005, lent by
Charles Klelnbacker\.
!It conju ntk&gt;n with tiE exhibit at
Oh io State, a C"dtalogue featuring

ready-to-wear line lor Bergdorf·
Goodman and Henri Bendel and a
business In cus1om·made gowns.
For 23 years, he had a workroom
and studio on West 73rd Street
w~ere .he made one·of·a·!Vnd garments for clients Including Dlahann
Carroll, Mrs. Nelson Rockefeller,
Ftrst Lady Patricia Nixon, Hilde·
garde, Mary Travers, Rebekah
Harkness, Mrs. Irving Bertin, Mrs.
Walter Hoving and Mrs. Alfred
Drake,
Consultancles at various colleges
and universities, and frequent visits
to his workrooms by formeer
students, prompted Klelba cker to
begin a study collectlon or his own.
His collection of 200 twentieth
century couture gowns and period
.accessories row fo rm the core of
the Historic Clothing and Textiles
CollP.Ctlon of the College of Home
Economics at Ohio State,
His interest In preserving excel·
lent examples of state-of-the-art
constructl:m finally overtook the
design business.
"It started me thinki ng, 'Am I
really going to oo another expen·
Slve dress tor a woman who's
already got a lot of them? Can't I
broaden my field?"'

Klelbacker believes in the power
of clothing to make a person feel

more. attractive, rather than just
look good. "A woman wearing a
wonderful dress, not tbe dress
weartng her, ls a wonderful ac·
compllshment," he said "lthink the
'worla ofi.en I:Jses sight of t~ fact
that such an accomplishment Is
attained through dlsclpUned, dedi·
ca ted work.
"These clothes play a significant
role In historic documentation. The
difference bet ween engineered
gowns and ordinary clothes ls that
couture degls n has a certain
wondertu I timelessness that has
oothlng to do with fashlons, fads or
furbelows, That's what the dignity,
the Importance and the whole
quallcy of fine clothes are all about
and why they should be preserved,"
J&lt;Jelbacker said,
"The clot~s we're exhibiting are
ol slgnlflcanre to the women who
bought them because they projP.Cted her at her very best" ·
Memorable Dress Ohio
Women will be on exhibit May 19
through June 29 In the Ohio State
Untverlsty Ga llery's Hoyt L, Sher·
man Gallery In SUllivant Hall,

OIUO WOMEN AT THEIR BE'!T - 'Ibis dinner dress, black and
pink silk !t8i1n channeuaelll by Callot Soeurs, Paris, from the 19klt Is
one .. three dltllle8 owned by the late Maybelle Mcintyre~ GaD!polls '
lncluled In ''Memoi'Uie Dress - Oblo Women" at . Ohio !!late
Unvlenlty bepniDc May 19. Accordnl lo curator Oalll'les "
Klelnbacker, lbe are slplflcant to the womeo who bought them because
"they projeded ber u her very best. " (Photo cowtesy of Oble State
UQlvenlty)

�Ohio-Point

20, 1986

12th
We Reserve

Limit Quantities

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.

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PRICES _EFFFECTIVE THRU SAT., APRil 26, 1986

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Becky Jo Eichinger

James R. Smllb

Terri Rotish

~

Boldmanand RioRoush
Grande College. She Is a

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$

FRESH PORK BUTT

Steak/Roast •.••~~ .••
·MIXED
••••••••••••••
Frver Parts .....~~..•• 49(
U.S.If.A. CHOICE
$
t2 Years Of
Round Steak •••~~... 199 · Ser~ice To Oar
$

WPmOR

Lunch Meats •••~~... 129

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Chuck Roast •••~~ •••• 89&lt;
Ground Beef ••••::·••• 99&lt;
KAHN'S BEEF or REGUlAR
Wieners •.•••••••••••L:~. $1 59
KAHN'S
sr1ce.d ao- ~ ogna.....
oz. ~KG. S1 29
_

Customers.-..

We Would Like
To Show Our
Appreciation.
SIGN UP
AND WIN.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

••••••••••••••

1.

12

GALLIPOLIS - Announcement
is being made c1 the engagement
~ and forthcomlngmarrtageofPaula
• LyM Boldman, sro Spring Valley
;· Drive, Galllpolls, and Robert CUI: ford Roush, also of Galllpolls.
She Is tile daughter c1 Harold and ·
. Irene Boldman, Rt. 2, McDermott,
· Ohio. He Is the son of the late
- Nicholas and Hattie Roush c1 New
• Haven, W.Va.
·
The open-church wedding wUl
take place May 17, 4: ll p.m. at
· Grace Unltro Methodist Church,
' Gallipolis.
Miss Boldman Is a graduate of
Northwest McDermott High School

~

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WHIRLPOOL
CLOTHES
WASHER.
DRAWING APRIL 26, 1986

Eichinger:Smith

cost accountant at Robbins and
Myers 1n Gallipolis.
Roush Is a graduate of Wahama
Hlgll School and 1s a member of
American Legion Post 23 and the
Loyal Order of the Moose In Pt.
Pleasant He Is employed by
Appalachian Power Company In

RACINE -'- The Rae~~ United
Metmdlst Church was tre setting
for the March 21 wedding c1 SheryU ·
Lym Russell and Michael Scott
Mlller.
The bride Is the daughter of ·
Wayne Russell, ·Portland Road,
Racine, and Sharon Roush, Syracuse, and the groom Is the SQI\ of
Mlck · and Elaine Miller,
Middleport.
.
The Rev. Roger Grace performed the double ring ceremony.
Organ music was presented by
Bonnie Fisher. Pastel flowers
decorated ihe church.
Given In marriage by her father,
the bride wore a lonna! gown of
lace, fashioned with a sweetheart
neckline with pearl accent, with t~
flared skirt Oowtng Into a train. She
wore a pearl necklace and eanings
and carried a lxluquet of silk
carnations and roses In green,
yellow and white.
Lori Adams, cousin of the bride,
Racine, served as maid of honor
and wore a yellow tea length dress
\\1th a lxluquet matching the
bride's. She also wore a pearl

j;b~&amp;~klnh;~ se;;:;for seniors
GALLIPOIJS - The Job Bank
locatrolntheSenlorCitlzenCenta-:·
220 Jackson Pike Is a free employment service to assist lxlth appllcant and employer.
.
The Job Counselors Interview
persons, 50
of age ir older,
who are
employnlent and
refer
to prospective

Potatoes ......... ~s.~~.
BROUGHTON .
0//0
GAL
••••••••••••••

2 -M-Ilk .

129
.

99
(
_Cott age Ch eese ••••
BROUGHTON

.24 -0Z.

MR. P

- Bishop

CLEAN UP~OHIO WEEK
April19-26, 1986

.

: POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. .
: Bobby Roush are announcing ·the
· engagement and approaching mar:rlage of their daughter, Teni, to
~Tim Blshlp, son of Mr. and Mrs.
,,Allen D. Bishop, Harrisonville.
: The open church wedding wlli be
held on Saturday, May 24, at 1: ll
,p.m. In Harrtsonvme at the Zion
;:Church of Christ. A rreeptlon wlll

SAU

ARGO PEAS
1.oz.

4/$_1

Until I Per (111to11111
Goell Only At PowtA't S.. tn110rl&lt;tt
Offtr Expirtl Sot. A,f. 26, 1916

TOILET TISSUE
8 ROLL

S··109

Limit I Per ulfomtr

o.IMI &amp;fy AI Powtl'1 SofHIMrktt
Offtr "bpirt1 S.t. A,f.
26, 1tl6
. .

.

""'!...

MAXWEU HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE

.•• ,... u oz.

$"C99

limit I P!'futtomor
GeM ONy At Powtl't 5oftn110rktt
Offtr Exlrtl Sot. A,f. 26, 1916

MAXW£U HOUSE

MASTER BLEND COFFEE
39

oz.

,...

f\i:&gt;'

~

',

.

"f .

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Scott Mil/.er

v.
·'ve b een t o-~••0 u
·
·

other tabrl·c sto~es
tor prl•ce
1·

Jo·Ann Fabrics
for fashion,
quality &amp;
savings too!

"t..·

Jams

'

reg. price

From Kodak
Processing Labs.

IN OUR STORE
Limit 1 of any item
INo clgartHes or anything
else exempted by law)

DAILY
DRAWING
FOR CASH
REIMBURSEMENT

,

~

Poster Print

2 MINUTE
SHOPPIMG
SPREE

$ · - MORTON •·
. $
Alarm Clo(ks ••••••• 499 Pot P1es •••••..!~;... 4/ 1

GENERAl Ei.ECTRIC

VELVET FAMILY PACK

.

~follow In tile church social room. t;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;:=d

has

F.rozen Pizza •••~!~!·•• ·S9(.

·Pinto . Beans.!!~::~ .. S1~ 1.9 -·

),
'(~

.

Now shop

2.

••••••••••••••

PEAK

.

fjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii._

POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Max
: A. Eichinger, Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement and
· approaching marrtage of their
'daughter, Becky Jo, to James R.
(Rob) Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs.
: James R Smith, Thwers Plains.
. An open-church Wedding will
• take place on July 12 at l :ll p.m. at
· St. Paul Lutheran Church In
Pomeroy.
· The bride-elect Is a graduate of
' Eastern High School and attends
: Rlo Grande College, majortng In
business education. She Is em: ptoyed part-time at VeteransMem' orlal Hospital.
·
:: Smith Is a graduate of Eastern
: High School and also attended Rio
; Grande College. He Is employed ·
: with General Engineering, Charles.· ton, W.Va.

~ ~Roush

J

••••••••••••••

$
$

Ken McCullough was best man.
Ushers were Mark Russell, Racine,
and John McClintock, Racine. The
bride's mother wore a gray ·suit
dress with a maroon blouse, the ··
groom's rmther was In a blue and
white ensemble.
A reception honoring the couple
was held In the church social room.
The bride's table featured a tiered
cake decorated In yellow and white,
and was flanked by floral arrangements and candles.
Assisting at the reception were
Sarah Wlles, Becky Evans, Rebecca Wiles, and Renee Russel~.
Melanie Ad81fls opened gl!ts, and
Holly MUler, sister of the groom,
and Debbie Wyatt registered the
guests.
The couple reside a1 Racine.
The groom attends Rio Grande
College and belongs to Second
Baptist Church.
The bride Is also a student and is
affiUated with the R,eorganized
ChurchctJesusChrlstctLaterDay
Saints, Racine. Among the guests
were Donald and Margaret Dalley,
ChllllcotiE.

employers.
The Job Counselors work within
the county area to develop jobs for
part-time or lull-time employment
by telephone, correspondence or
personal contact.
Contact the Job Counselors and
discuss your employment needs
with them.

'

U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET

-The Sunday

Sheryl! Lynn Russell becomes
.bride of Aficha~/ ~cott Miller

.•
•

Anni.varsarv
Sale!

Ai&amp;hl To

-"...'
"'
--

W. Va.

$699

limit 1 Ptr (uttomer
Good Only At Powtft't S•trmarktt
, Offer Expirtf Sat. Apr. 26, 1916

3.

Whatever Your
Purchase Is
We Will
Refund The
Money!

AL FABRIC

Saw now on big, beautiful
Poster Prints from Kodak's
bwn labs. Just come in
and pick up a coupon .
Return it with your
favorite 36mm color
negatives, color slides, or
color prints. Save three
dollars on 20"x30" Poster
Prints and two dllllars on
· 12"M18" Poster Prints.
Don't weitl Order your
big, colorful Poster Printl
·
today.

fi

HANG.TEN

Remember, always ask for
processing by Kodak.

in dots
&amp;
•
str_lpes

20"x30" Poster Prints
SAVE

$300

12 "x 18" Poster Prints
SAVE

$200

Offer effective thru lily 16, 1986

:Tawney Studios
'

422 Second
Gallipolis
·'

330-Second Awenue
Ohio

.

. ~

,ABRICS
Where Fashion and Quality Make the Difference TM

Silver Bridge Shopping _C,nter
State Route 7
Gallipolis

�.
Page-8-4-The Sunday Tmea-Sentinel

Pomaroy-Middleport...o...Galllpolie, Ohio-Point Plea..-.t W. Va.

Meigs
Bookmobile
route set

Beat of the bend

·:Aid Special Olympics
By BOB HOEFLICH
'l'lrnfs&amp;nllnel Staff
How would you like to help out
with the Meigs
_County Special
Olympics
program? ·
You can do this
very easily by
· .s aving your
: ·:hcwspapers- ty: ·-lng them in bundles or putting them
;Jnto grocery bags. The newspapers
-_wUl be recycled with proceeds
going to thE&gt; Special Olympics
:program.
: • The collection date is Friday,
; ,O.pril25, from 9:30a .m. to 2:30p.m.
- and on that date you are asked to
. tal&lt;e your newspaper collection for
the program to the Carleton School.
U you need any information call
; 742 -3141 in the evenings. Melva
• Eblin Is the Special Olympics fund
: chairperson.
Meigs County's eldest citizen
: must be Mrs. Maude Bailey who
: will observe her 103rd birthday on
· Tuesday, April 22. Mrs. Bailey has
: been a resident of the Pomeroy
: Heal! h Care Center for the past 6\S
• years. I am told she would enjoy
: nearing from friends and relatives
· on her anniversary.

·'

: . Mrs.- Thomas Ables of Pomeroy,
- and her grandson , Agustin Mon: tanez, a senior at Ohio Unlversltv-.
· Athens, spent a week In N~
: Haven, Conn., visiting Carolee
: Montanez, a freshman at Yale.
•· · Agu stin and Carolee were both on
: spring breaks and Carolee had just
• returned form Puerto Rico where
. she did recrulting work for Yale.
Mrs. Ables and Agustin enjoyed the
. outing to Connecticut taking in a
· number of places of interest at the
University and visiting the PeabOdy Museum.
Incidentally, Agustin and Carolee
are children of Mr. and Mrs.
Agustin Montanez of Arec ibo,
: Puerto Rico., and Mrs. Montane-t is
the fanner Carolyn Allman of
pomeroy.
Time is running out if you are a
golfer and interested in playing in a
Tuesday or Wednesday evening
l.eague. You shouidcalltbeJaymar
Golf Club at 992-6..112 or Bob Freed
· at 992-2044. The Tuesday night
' league will start on April29 and the
Wednesday league on. April :n

~

. - KindE'rgarten registration of the
; Southern Local School District has
· been set fqr Friday at the district' s
: kindergarten facility in Racine.
; Hours are 8 to 11 a.m. and 12:30 to
• 2::Jl p.m.
' Parents registerllig their child·
ren ' should take birth certificates,
' records of immunizations which
should Include the DPT and
• booster: polio and booster; mea: ~Is . mumps and Reubella plus
proof of a recent skin test. To enter
kindergarten this year, children
. must be five on or before Sept. ll.
Rev. Earl Edeh, pastor of the
· Middleport First Baptist Church.
· tells me that Rev. Charles and
· Chris Simons wlll be returning to
' town the end of..lhis month.
Rev. Simons !sa former pastor of
the Middleport Baptist Church and
will be returning to conduct !l'llival
services at the church April Z7-ll.
and undoubtedly to see many old

April 20. 1986

Every now and then a Utile
prpblem keeps coming back like a
song- so ooce more I'll try to get it
right.
The name of JOSt'Ph Taylor,
Grove City, a brother-In-law. was
unintentionally omitted as a survi·
vor from the recent obituary of
Waid Leonard, 66, of near Tuppers
Plains.
There!
Everyone misses Martha Howell.
Martha Is employed in the dfice of
Middleport Mayor Freel Hoffman.
You may have beard, Martha has
had some he ail h problems and has
undergone open heart sw-gery at
University Hospital in Columbus.
She remains confined to the
· intensive care unit for such patients. However, cams can be Sl'nt
to her at Rhodes Hall and cards are
perking her up, I'm told. - Plans are being made lor spec Ia I
hooors to be afforded residents 90or
older in May when Senior Citizens
Day is observed.
The group working on the IJ"Oject
needs more lnfonnation on Ora
Artx, Helen Douglas, Ada Gilliland,
Joyce Hines, Lawrenre Howard,
Bertha Jamie and Martin
Moiiahan . .
II you can help, please given
Wanda Vining a ring at the Senior
Qtlzens Center, 992-2161.
Are the old -yearbooks geMing in

your way?
II so, perhaps. you'd like to
donate them to the library of the
Meigs County Museum.
The
museum Is open all day on Fridays
and Tuesdays and oo Saturday
afternoons. So W you want to pass
along the yearbooks to posterity.
this Is your chanoe.
ThE:&gt;rE:&gt;'s much to be said lor
timing. At the end of summer the
Ice cream freezer AND the lawn
mower both conked out. It' s been
great and went right along with my
procrastinating nature - haven't
had to face the problem formmths .
Thursday night the furnace took a
dying gasp - good - with a little
luck I won't have to face that untU
the taU .
I alSo llke the way the junk mail
works out. The postal people beat a
path to the door bringing it in- and
the trash man beats a path to the
door taking it away. Do we ca ll this
"checks and balances" er what ? Do
keep smiling.

Quote of the day
Chicago Mayor Harold Washington on President Reagan's pro·
poSed cuts to federal aid to cities:
"The man Is lgilorant. HE:&gt; talks
about cities as though they are
diSI'mbodled things he's never seen
before."

•

Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Hollar

Eva Wheeler exchanges vows
with Jeffrey Hollar in ceremony

(Pool), 5:50-7:20.
Bookmobile Schedule for Wed·
nesday, April 23: Baum 'Addition,
2:10.2: 40; Keno (No. side of Keno
Bridge) , 3: 00.3: 30; SUccess Road
(near 39000), 3:45-4:1!1; Long Bot·
tom (Post Otflce), 4: 25-~: 55; Reeds·
ville (Reed's Store), 5:05-6:05;
Tuwer's Plains (Lodwick's), 7:057: 50; Baum Addition, 8: 01&gt;8: 35.

LIMA, OHIO - Eva EUzabeth Isabell Morgan Wheeler (de Wheeler and Sgt. Jeffrey ScaM ceased) and Hubert Ewell Wheeler
Hollarwereunltedinmarri•-Oct.
-..of Lima, Ohio .
H, 1985, in the church of Jesus
The groom Is a graduate of Lima
Christ of LaMer Day Saints: Bishop Senior High school and SErving in
Frank Heiser of Van Wert, Ohio' the u.s. Anny.
dflclaUng. Parents of the couple
The couple will reside In Augsare.Mr. and Mrs. Ivan E. Wheeler, burg, West Germany.
Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. Terrence ,-----------~
Hollar Sr. of Lima.
Given In marriage ~her parents
and escorted to the altar ~ her
father, the bride wore a floor-length
gown and veil fashioned by Irene
Golden or Bath Township, 1lle
gown was made of Sophisticated
satin overlayed with lace, bnglace
sleeves and cuffs. The neckline was
gathered lace with a satin ribbon.
The veil w~s gathered lace on a cap
attached to a beaded incandescent
braid. She carried a bouquet of
white roses and mint green carnations. The groom wore his Anny
dress uniform .
OUI PO.IOY
Honor attendants were Peggy
Green and Lesa Say. friends of the
bride. The bridesmaids wore mint
green noor length gowns and
carried bouquets d mint grren
Cljrnatl&lt;ins and baby's breath. 1lle ·
groom's brothers, Mike Hollar and
Terry Hollar Jr., were groomsmen.
They wore grey suits with mint
green boutonnieres.
---....
Soloist was Oleryl Jones, accom. pan led on the piano ·by Cathe~e
Heiser of Van Wert.
A reception was given mllowlilg
the wedding by the bride's sister
POMEIOY, 0110-IMIGS COUNTY
and brother-in-law, Janice and
Dl$f\AY TAll NEAl
Greg Bayliff of Lima. This was also
POMIIOY -MASON .DGE
the Bayliff's seventh wedding
liO l. VAUGIWI, IIIGI.
anniversary. Table helpers at the
I'IIONE "2·2511
reception were 'Janice Bayliff and
VINTON, 01110-GAUIA COUNTY
Irene Golden. Rice was distributed
DI5PlA YTAll .
by the groom's sister, Dawn.
JAMES 0. lUSH
.:p.e bride aMends Lima Senior
MANA GEl
Hlkh School. She Is the grand:laul#lPHONE 311·1603
ter d the Ia te Eva Cham per Barcus
and Wyman F . (Pal) Barcus and

A,UTO TRIM
.CENTER.
1637 EASTERN AVE.
GAlliPOliS, 01110
446-1968

SUNROOFS INSTAU£0
-CAll FOR PRICES...:

WINDOW
TINTING SERVICE
. SPECIAL
TRUCK PRICES
Compads
Full Size

$6500
$7500

CALL FOR APPOINTI'tiNT

MONUMENT

invites you to see
their display of
monuments at
AND VINTON LOTS

Logan

Monument Co. Inc.

SHEAR ILLUSIONS
STYLING STUDIO &amp; TANNING CENTER

20

o~

ALL
HAIR COLORING
&amp; HIGH LIGHTING~_ _:::~~:._.,.,
APRIL 14-28rh IT

ON COMFORT.
There's never been a more
comlortable sandal thin
Dexter Plus.s Its sole is
contoured to fit the naturl
shape of your toot. Yoo'll
love the soft, colorful
leathers and the bouncy,
flexible bottom. It comes
in sizes to fit everyone 111d
in thrH different htel
heichts to fit any style.

DIXIE

$3100
Made inU .SA
HOURS:

Man. &amp; fri 9:30-1

---

12 SESSIONS
.

(

$3200 ~===

FREE Bortle of Lot ~
Wirh lsr Session

SHEAR ILLUSIONS
STYLING STUDIO &amp; TANNING CENTER
S. 2nd Ave.

992-2550

ot!ers a full-day kinder- .
garten program. They offer a
phonetic approach to reading along
with the D'Nellan writing program.
Other sublects taught are Bible,
numbers and math, science, music,
and artwork. Chapel progr~
creatively challenge the young
people about spiritual and rroral
values as taught by Jesus Christ.
AU teaching Is evaluated and taught
from the Blbllcal perspective.
The wll)le program seeks to
complement the ea,rly years of
training the parents have done and
to aid them In the Biblical mandate ·
to rear a chUd in the nurture and
admonition of the Lord.
'The school also has grades 1-12.

Middleport

BRENDA JANEY - MANAGER
SUSAN SISSON,JENNA PAULEY and CARLA DAVIS

Janice Hampton of LangsvUle, of Ewlngton. They have fou r
Route 1. wlll observe their 50th grandchildren and two great- ·
wedding anniversary at an open grando;ons. Friends and relatives
house on SUnday, April Z7, from 2 to a re cordially Invited to call during
5 p.m. at their hol'l}e on Hampton the open house hours.
Hollow Road, just off Route 124

Cpmmuntiy corner

son of the late II
Wald and Eva Campbell Hampton
and Janice Cleland, daughter of the
late Floyd and Neva Romine
Cleland, were married on April ll.
1936 at Pomeroy .
Mr. and Mrs. Hampton have
three 'children, twins, Muriyn at
home, and Marilyn Hampton Pea·

It's nice to report that Tom and
Faith Roach and their son, Brawn,
injured In a camper explosion In
Tampa Fla. on March 8, are now
out of the hospital and progressing
nicely .
Tom whO went back Into the
burning camper to get his stepson
and was the most seriously burned
is Improving but stU! faces a long
recovery time. He and his wile are
staying with a relative, Dale Miller.
and cards may be sent to them in
care of him at 4611 Wishart Blvd.
Tampa, Fla. 33603.
Three-year-old Brawn is cur·
rently ·in Middleport with his
grandmother, Nan Hennann, but
will be returning to Florida once
Tom and Faith are able to care for
him.
The !amUy Is grateful lor the love
and t'Oncem during this trying
time.
Some ci you may remember Dr.
Scout Lee, the "master of playfulness" woo was in Meigs County last
summer lor a festival r1 run on the
Young !ann near Rutland. She's
been around the world (well not
quite) since then, but has oow
returned to Ohio and wUI be in
Columbus next weekend.
She's heading up a Festival of
Peace to be held at Big Bear Fanns
on Powell Road up near the
Columbus Zoo, 10 a.m to 5 p.m.
Scout will be joined by the Cloud
Breakers Medicine Show supported
by pertormances from Ohio's
. musical and creative talent .
This Is an ail day famlly
. adventure filled with creative
· activities. Interested? The number
· is 882-1765.
Sev eral Individuals and
· members of local churches are
joining In the Hands Across Amer. lea lund raiser for the hungry and
homeless on May 25.

•

Meigs senior activity set

If you would like to be a part of the

human chain which wUI pass
through 16 states and the District of
Columbia, a distance ri rmre than
4,IXXI miles, just call the Columbus
office to reserve your space.
224-HM'D. Part.icipants are asked
to donate at least $10.
In Ohio nearly ~mmo people are
to be a part of the national line
covering 599 Ohto miles through ll
communities. Columbus Is the
closest. A goal of $50 to $100 million
has been Sl't .
Hands Across . America is a
project of United Support of Artists
fo r Africa, the non-partisan and
non-profit organization formed
early last year to produce "We Are
the World."
Locally the WI C \Women, Infant s
and., Children! nutrition program,
Debbie Lavalley, project director.
has Issued a resolution of support.
The Plain Truth magazine condemns the Dush toilet and says it
"may turn oot to be one of the more
harmful devices InDicted on modem !Dclety" becauseo!theamount
of water it wastes.
Now I'm great for conservation,
but.. ...... .

r;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;::;;:;;:;;;;.

ahove
Mine One.
Hampton is the

Clyde and janice Hampton

By CHARlENE HOEn.JCH
11mes-Senllnel Staff
Five of the 75 tfullts which were
displayed at the
Senior Citizens
Center a month
ago have been
selected lor the
traditional quUI
exhibition to be
held May 3
through June 15 at
Barn
Southeastern Ohio Cultural Arts
Center.
Two of • those selected were
exhibited by Gloria Riggs, the
others by Maxine Goegleln; Ada
Titus and Delores Cleland. They
were among 70 selected for the
display from more than !iOO viewed.
by a judging committee.
·
For those interested in traditional
quilts, both old and new, the exhibit
will be 'open seven days a week, 11
a .m. to 5 p.m.

LOGAN

IT'S OPEN

Hampton celebration sc~eduled
. LANGSVILLE - Clyde arid pies or Westwego. La., and Rlcbard

ovcs

GALLIPOLIS Ohio Valley
Christian School has"anoounC'ed Its
' loth year of l!lndergarten registration. The 1911;-87 school year will be
the loth year of educational ministry for the school, associated with
First Baptist Church, Gallipolis.
Plans are being made to celebrate
nils de&lt;;ade d development.
Parents Interested in kindergarten should contact Dr. Fred
Wllllarns at 446-0374 to secure all
application: After application ,has
been made, the school will arrange
an appointment to register the
students. Parents should bring their
child's birth certificate and immunIzation record with them. J{lnder·
garten students must &lt;be 5 years of
age by Sept. ll.

Quilts are selected

TINT AVAILABLE IN
4 SHADES

The .Sunday nmes-Sentinei-Page-B-5

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea..-.t. W. Va ..

OVCS sets registration

POMEROY - Bookmobile service In Meigs County Is brought to
you by the Meigs County Public
Library under contract with the I
Ohio Valley Area Libraries. .
Bookmobile Schedule for Mon. day, Aprtl 21: Carpen)er (Laura's
Store), 3: 10-MO; Dexter (Church),
4:1().4:«!; DanvUle '(Church), 5:205:50; Rutland (Civic Center), 6:307:30.
Bookmobile Schedule for Tuesday, April 22: • Portland (Post
Otflce), 2: 1().2: 40; Letart Falls
(Ellie's Restaurant), 3:05-3: 50;
Racine (Bank), 4:35-5: 35; Syracuse

!rlends rrom his days in the
community.
He was quite active while here
and probably a lot of residents wlll
·want to visit the church during the
revival to see him. Judging from
tre pooto I saw, "Charlle ain't
changed".
However, It could be an old
picture, but you wtli get a cllance to
check that out.

April20, 1986

POMEROY - Meigs County
Senior Cit izen Center, Mulberry
Heights. Pomeroy, has scheduled
activities rorthe week d May 21 -25:
Monday - Square dance, 1 to 3
p.m.; exercise class, 3:30 to 4 p.m.
Tuesday - Choru s, 11 a.m.;
nutrition si te council rneeting,l2 :15
p.m.
BtoooBlngo,lto
pressure
wednesday
cUnic,
9: 30to11 -:30a.m.;
2p.m.; exercise class, 3:30 to4p.m.
Thursday - Ceramics, 10 a.m. to
2 p.m.; Athens Kitchen Swingers
will be at the center. 10:45 a.m., for
musical program before dinner .
Friday - Bowling at Pomeroy
Lan es. 1:30 p.m.
1be Senior Nutrition Program
menu lor the week..ls:
Monday - Hamburger, baked
beans, cole slaw, pudding.
Tuesday - Baked fish, spinach.
tosSed sal ad, rice pilaf, peach
halves.
Wednesday- Meat loaf, mashed

jX)tatoes, green beans, hall a
banana.
Thursday - Soup beans and
ham , broccoli, fruit cup. ,
Friday - Chicken and noodle
casserole, buttered peas, orange
sections in gelatin, cookle.
Choice d mllk, coffee, tea or Juice
with meals.
·

Get away-CAll or
For FREE Catalog

DRIVER EDUCATION
CLASSES

Grand Ole Opry
foat..-ing: lht General Jcxk10n
ShowbiXII, Opryland, USA

MAY 5·8

3 Days

GALliPOliS &amp; POIIIROY

Aprii 25-27 lftlt. "·21 Oct. 24-l!l&gt; I

PHONE 446-0699

•

Kentucky Derby
"the

a... for the IOMs"

3 Days

I'fi~~m~ii:rm:i'~~iliiiViiis;~~i~l

May 2·4

.Harpen Ferry &amp; the
Bavarian Inn
2 Days

May 6-7

Holland at Tulip Time
3 Days

May 24-26

Diny Wattd

sUnn.r bpi•

''lht Vaamon llargain of tht Ya"
6 Days . June 16-21 Aug: 10-lS

NoYa Scotia &amp;
Prince Edward hland
14 Days

111M 111·29

Super Nashville/Memphis ·
5 Oays

.June 25-29 ·

Grandfather lltn. Scottish
Clans Htrilagl FIStiYal

1986

.----------....:..--1

Have a nice week!

1986
Legendary
Vacations

EahlbiHng a ..ttlng
Tht Workl ot aomt ,

noo'floo»

of Amtrtc1'1 t1n11t

FRI.·SAT.-SUN

1he Stephen Fader Story
July 12·13

2 Days

Canadian •tro Cities
July 21·A"'J. J

California

Cralltmtn

&amp;rtiUIO
f£S'r1VAL

July 11·14

7 Days

&amp;rttuno a

crafts

Jl..

4 Days

Our 18th Veer

24 Oays

August 2-25

Chautauqua Arts

Country Kitchen

4 Days

f11turlng trediHon1l

A"'J. 11·9

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mountetn toad a

5 Days

lht mu1tc ol

Aug. 17·21

Elegant Opryland Hotel

Robbie Herrle

3 Days

Aug. 22-24

l¥ake Reservations Now and

COLO\) ·
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HOURS : Thurs. April 24 , 4·10: Fri. April 25, 11om- tO pm
Sat. April 28 ..1I am-tO pm: Sun. April 27. Noon-6 pm

GOLDIE HAWN

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Spon1ortd by: Huntington Civic Center &amp;
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ON£ EVENING SHOW AT I PM
SUN. MAl. ONE SHOW AT 2 PM

wtththllld

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JOHN CREDICO, M.D.

PAll lOURS

ADMISSION:

1

wam

David .. ,,.,

I

Rt. 3. Box 346. Gattlpotis. Oh . 45631

:

"~· ----------------­

I

Address - --------- - Zip __
City

J

)

OBSTEOICS/GYNECOLOGY AND INFERTILITY
•Epidural Deliveries ·
•Tubal Repairs
Office Hours 10:00 Ut-5:00 P.M. Mon., Wed., Fri.
2:00 P.M.-1:00 P.M. Tuesday and thursday Evenings

675-6700

lOCATm: Suitt 114 Mtdi&lt;al OHi&lt;t luiiding, at Plu10nt Valley Hospital
Polnl Plea•nt, W. Va. 25550 ·

T!lls., Wed., Thurs.

Sat.

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The. Tnple -A Travel Ag•ncy is plea sed to o ff.e r
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7 -night cruise with plenty of sight ~eolng ~ n o;~e lf~~-lu de s o full
other choice Is o 6 -night · land tour plus o 2 - n igh~ ~ m _c rory . The
of the "love Boots "". lSoth tours include two
ru• so o n o ~ e
Vancouver to vl~lt E;~~;po '86 .
c ompl e t e day _
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WEDNESDAY &amp; SATURDAY
AnER 4 P.M. IS

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MOVIES

Flowers add that special
touch to any prom. And
we'll individualize the flow·
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Gallia County Dmlion at
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m. ti I p.m.lo..... piO·
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FRI. &amp; SAT.
11 A.M.-12 MID.

A

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GALLIPOLIS, 441 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, (614) 446·3832

.'I

�•,

_ Page-B-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

''
April 20. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.
, 0

Pre~registration
GALUPOUS- .Interest Is buDd·
lng In the annuai ·Frmdt.City Run,
to be held tiE tlrstSaturdayln May
and pre-registration is $6, ciolilng at
mklftight, April :li.
According to .Dawn Meadow.;,
Holzer Medical Center Recreation
Committee, co-sponsoring the run
with tiE Ohio Valley Publishing
Company, now Is the time to plan to
participate
City
Run. in this year's Ftmdt
Mrs. Meadows said three ·races
are planned: the Dinosaur Dash,
one mile in length, starting at 9:45
a.m. on Saturday, May 3, and open
to all age groups, with or without
running experience; the 5K race,
(3.1 miles) to begin at 9 a.m, with
age olasslflcation; and the !OK, (6.2
mlles) main evmt, beginning at
9:30 a.m., also according to age
classification.

0
0

.'

members Allee Lukac, executive director al FAC,
Saundra Koby, graphics designer a1 Rlverby, Jan
Thaler, coordinator of the Festival and Lakslunl
l'rlyanalb, committee member.

PLANNING COMMrrmE-Work.lngon plans lor
the local Festival of India, slated lor May at the
French Art Colony, Galllpolls, are rornmlUec

Riverby features India in May
GALLIPOLIS - A Festival of
India, an associated event of the
nallonal Fesllval of India, will be
held in Gallipolls throughout May.
It is sponsored by the French Art
Colony, with support from the Ohio
Arts Council and the Ohio Humani·
ties Council, accordlng to Jan
Thaler, .program coordinator and
exhibit curator at Riverby.
For several months, a committee
has been planning the exhibit and
acllvltles. The committee Includes

a number of area residents who are May 1.
natives of India.
The first class will be at Riverby,
The May exhibit will reflect the 5lJ First Ave., Gallipolis, with the
life, art and culture of India, and others at First Presbyterian
both galleries will feature items Chu!t'h, on State Street In Gallipoloaned by the families, Mrs. Thaler lis. Oasses will be7to9p.m.,May 1,
said. The Items ate to be broughtto · 8, 15 and 22. Cost Is $4 per class, or
the gallery April 'l1 at 5 p.m., or no $15 for the series of four.
later than April 28.
Featuned will be entrees and
Of interest wUI be a series of four snacks (May 1); breads and rice
cooklng cllj.Ses to be taught by the
(May 8); curries (May 15) and
women from India, set for consecu· desserts and beverages (May 22) .
live Thursday evenings, beginning
Reservations to attend the cook·
ing classes are limited, and should
be made not later than April 28, by
calling the French Art Colony,
446-3834.

Gallia Senior Center
activities announced
GALLIPOUS - Activities and
menus (or the week of April21 to 25
at the Senior Citizen Center, 220
Jackson Pike, are:
Monday - Ceramics class, 9:30
a.m. to noon; chorus, 1 to 3 p.m.
Tuesday - STOP-Physical Fit·
ness, 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday - Vinton Bible
study, I p.m.; ca rd games, I to 3
p.m.; American Literature Class, I
p.m.
Thursday - Bible study,ll a.m.
to ooon; Vinton blood pressure
check.
Friday - Art class, I to 3 p.m.;
craft mini-course, 1 to 3 p.m.; open
activities, 7 to 10 p.m.
Menus consist of:

Monday - Sausage patty, seal·
loped potatoes, cooked cabbage,
wheat bread, applesauce with
cinnamon.
Tuesday Spaghetti with
cheese, salad, French-Italian
bread, fruit cock,taii In Jeil·O.
Wednesday - Roast beef \llith
gravy, mashed potatoes, green
beans, rolls, pineapple slices.
Thursday - Hot dogs, potato
salad, pickled beets, wheal bread.
ice cream.
Friday - Fish fillet, au gratin
potatoes, cole slaw, whole grain
bread, lemon refrigerator dessert.
Choice of beverage served with
meals.

-GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARD
,.
,.
,.

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•

of the race which began In
September 1978. Along with the
winner's plaqu·es , these case
awards provide an added'lncentive
for runner's to compete in the 1986
French City Run.

vlded by the merchants, to be given
away following the awards P!e&gt;~en·
tat ion. Winners plUs! be present in
the City Park to accept their prizes
from the merchants.
Those who do not meet the
deadline of April ~ for pre·
registration may reglsteratthecity
park ar~a on the morning of the
mce, but the Jee wlil be $7. The

Another special feature of the
1986 French City Run will be the
p.rtlcipation oft he Gallipolis Retail

r~M:er~dt~an:ts~.~Prizes~~ar~e;be~i~ng~p~ro~-~~~~~~w~i~llop;en~a:t~Sa~.m~.

GALLI A OPTICAL· CENTER

Age groups will apply to the 5K
and 10K races. They are 14 and
under; 15-19; 20-24; 2i·29; Jl-ll; ·
PLUS
35·39; «1-44; 45-49; SJ-54; ~-~;
Dr. Robert Tarry, Optometrllt
00.64; and 65 years of age and over.
648 Jockoon Pike. Gallipolis, 614·446-1760
The Dinosaur Dash will d be
Mon. a. Fri. 9-5; Tu 11 . a. Thuro . 9· 7:30; Sot. 9-3; CloHd Wed.
divided Into age groups, but wlll ·be ~~~~======:=========~­
open to au ages.
Just announced for this year's
French Oty Run are cash awards
for first and second place, male and
female, in the !OK race. First place
winners will each receive $100 and
second place winners, $50 each.
This wlll be for the first two
finishers, male and female, but not 1
according to age groups.
As In the past, plaques will be
(J'esmted to the first two male and
female finishers in both the 5K and
10K meter races, and medals to the
top t110 male and female winners of
. each age group. Special participa·
lion awards will be given to all
entrants in the Dinosaur Dash.
The $300 t&gt;r cash awards is bj!lng
made possible by Dr. Ch.arles E.
Holzer Jr., who was the originator

EYE(ARE

EYEWEAR

•No Gimmicks
•No Giveaways
•Quality Tuxedos
•Expert Fitting
•Great
Selection

S30

SUNDAY
RIO GRANDE- Galllpotls area
Jaycees Fishing Derby, 1 to 3p.m.,
Bob Evans Sbeiterhouse pond.
Youths under 12 begin registration
at 12: 30 p.m.

..._.,_

CENTENARY- Centenary Unl·
ted Methodist Church begins rev!·
val Sunday, 7 p.m. with Bennie
Stevens.
GALLIPOLIS - Grubb Family
Singers will be at Bailey Chapel
Church, Sunday, 7 p.m.

meets o p.in. Monday at the club.

•
TEXAS COMM.- Revival at Mt.
Hermon United Brelhrm Churcl),
Texas Community, Monday
througlt April 'l1 · with Rev. Rey
Deeter, Coolville, speaking; servi·
ces at 7::ll p.m. Special singing,
with tbe Victory Quartet singing on
Saturday night.
RACINE - Meeting for parents
of eighth graders in Southern Local
School Dlstric~ M&gt;nday night, 7
p.m., In the }11gb school cafeteria.
HARRISONVILLE Meigs
Coonty Men's FellO\whlp meets
Monday, 7 p.m., at Zion Olurch cl.
Cl!rist lor rev ivai services.

GALLIPOLIS - Revival begins
TUESDAY
Sunday, 7:Jl p.m. at Prospect
GALLIPOUSRiverside Study
Baptist Chureh: In services will be .
Club
meets
Tuesday,
l p.m., oome
Danny Pancake and David Shugg.
r:l Grace Bradbury . Program by
PORTER . Oark Chapel Elaine Rnush.
Church has thf' McDaniel Trio In
LEerA - Rev. Earl Hinkle leads
services Sunday, 6 p.m.
Bible studay at Walnut Ridge
GALLIPOLIS - Gailla County Olurch, Tuesday.
Historical Society meets Sunday, ·
GALLIPOUS - Gallipolis Ro·
board meeting, 1 p.m., general
tary
meets Tuesday, 6 p.m., Down
membership 2:30 p.m. at St.
Under.
Peter's Episcopal Chu!t'h.
GALLIPOLIS - Revival servi·
ces begin Sunday, continuing
through Friday at Salem Baptist
Church. Services 7 p.m. with Rev.
Jackie Clark, MUton, W.Va. Special
music nightly.

CHESHIRE - Cheslire Chapter
OES meets Tuesday, 7: 'jJ p.m.;
rehearsal lor officers, regular
meeting.

RI.JTI.AND - Zion Church of
Christ revival begins 10:30 a.m.
services on Sunday and continuing
with 7 p.m. services each evening
through April 25. Philip H. Ling Sr.,
evangelist.

MONDAY
CHESHIRE - Registration for
kindergarten at Cheshire-Kyger
Elementary will be Monday, Sa.m.
to 3 p.m. Bring birth certificate and
shots record.

GALLIPOLIS - St. Peter's
Episcopal churchwomen meet
Monday, noon in the parish baD.
Lucy Earwood to speak oo the New
Gallipolis Developmental Center.

Finished in sand beige with matching ckrth intErior, equipment includes air
cood., t:lt wheel, crutse control, AM·FM stereo, rear defogger, !XIwer windows,
power mtrro~ &amp; sport wheels. EXTRA Cll1A Nl

•9,20000

To qualify for the Golden Buckeye Card,
persons must be 60 years of age or older or
totally disabled. Be sure to bring proof of
age, or disability•
Vergie Roberts, Gallia County Liais~n with
the Ohio Department of Aging, will be at
the Dr. Bossard Memorial Library, 651
Third An., Monday, April 21 it from 9:30
A.M. to 12:30 P.M•

.

Custom

Drapery Sale

i

/Jig out that scrapbook

Mlllllc Jambol'lll'

trustees meet Tuesday, 6 p.m.,
townhouse, Kyger.

RUTLAND - Sons ct the Antert·
can Legk&gt;n of fll D!nilloll Post 4il7

HARRiSONVILLE - Senior Ci·
tlzens Oub meets 7p.m. Tuesday at
the Harrisonvllie Town Hall . ·

are sponsoring a nualc jiunooree
Sunday, April '!1, at the (lllt home,
Music wW begin at 1_p.m. Admis·
sion $3 a person. Provldinll enter·
tainment will be Lone Wolte Band,
Mud River Band, Old MIJWau~
Band, Olarley Lilly Band, and
others. Everyone weloome.

RACINE - Racine ~e 461
F&amp;AM meet in special session
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., t&gt;r annual
inspection. Work will be in the EA
degree.

MIDDLEPORT- OAPSE Chapter 17 meets at Meigs Junior High
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .. for election of
dficers.

Slnll&amp;ht-I!Uer - -

Revival begins
.
CENTENARY - Revival begins
Sunday, Centenary United Metoo·
dis! Chureh. Services at 7 p.m.
through Satuday. Evangelist Rev.
Bennie Stevens; special singing;
nursery.

Menu planned

GI\LLIPOUS - StraJ&amp;ht-Baker
reunion, June 1, Raccoon Creek
Coonty Park sbelterhouse,. beginning lO a.m.

POMEROY - Menus for schools
the Meigs Local School District,
in accordance with the unUonn
lunch policy, have bem announced
Monday, com dogs, peas, oat·
meal cake, and mllk.
Smorpsbord
Tuesday, chill and crackers,
WILKESVILLE - A smorgas· peanut butter sandwiches, cheese
oord wUI be held Saturday, from 5 wedge and mllk.
to 8 p.m., at the Wilkesville Pythian
Wednesday, spaghetti, oot rolls
Hall. Dinners will be $4 !or adults and butter, jello with fruit and mill&lt;.
and $1.50 for chlldren 12 and wtder.
Thurday, sloppy joes, Ctlm, fruit,
Everyone welcome.
and mllk.
Frkiay, cooks' choice.
In

· 8)' J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - Somewhere in
the recesses of your family closet
it's probable that you have a
scrapboo}lluU cl. dippings, and one
of the clippings may be from the
Gallipolis JOIJmai back in !Sffi.

would like It"
Mercy Marla told her chlidrm
that they were descendants of
Abraham Clark, a signer of the
Declaration of Independence, but
the family does n't believe she
would have said it were II not true.

'l1tat one clipping is suggested In

a letter from Rilger Morgan, 162i
Leisure Drive, Bradenton, F1 a.

33507. Roger's great-grandmother,
Mercy Maria Clark Bovte, died ,
accordllng to a grave marker, 2.1
Februazy, 184i9, in Gallipolis.
Roger dlered to oome from
Florida and do the required re·
search. "I know this kind of
research is tedious, but If you have
the Info, I would be gloo to come to
your
and do 11
If r
could
on her
.r

Roger Morgan says that · if
oomeone " in your sta ff" would be
wilting to do som£ di)Wng for him ,
he - Rn~r r - wou ld be gloo to pay
for the time required and offer an
additional S20 bonus lf the volunteer
researcher comes up with an obit
lor each of them: Mercy and
Frederick Bovle (not Fred M.
Bovle, son). Fred died May 9, 1B72,
and both are burled In GaUipolls.
Roger sent along a self-addressed
envelope.

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SPAS With Healers, Fiten, $1cirt rtady to utt, as lo!' as S1575

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Alao acrylic won, concrote bonom poola at wholoulo prlctc

HOURS 9:30·5 MON.-FRI.: SAT. 9:30·2

HOLIDAY POOLS - Ph. 304-429-4711
2973 Piedmont ld., H•tlnatwn, w. va.

.

•

THE HATCHING OF SKYHAWK.
The Butck Skyhowil.

entov tnE: sportv

ltneup was otreaav
tmpres.srve. But now

SODhiSitcotton
ol Skyhowk

lion I DJO&lt;&gt;! 5eat~
to 'he l!t t uo ho tcr.
Wtln OVOI IOb le

the addition ol a

hot c hoo c ~

hotchbock mOdel

the aeroavnamtc

ana dE'C it 1r1 mr.:,,,•·r

PtOIItdes an even

front end wtlh

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mora IDCtfing
selectton. You will

conceo1ea

S~yi, OWk

headlomps to lne

soar

11om

lo.;vc:t ed

ScRupLE.~
SCULPTURE WAVE

us ShOw yuu o
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present s the taming of

the shoe. El egant
alligator-print
leather ..,su smart for

The Unpermed Look

Chsrm
Sleutg Sbop

·day into ev~ ning .

Handbags

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COME SEE WHAT'S NEW!

Britannia Bygones International

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WE WANT YOUR TRADE-IN

26 $/fll $11UI

446·S701

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Wouldn't yOll
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SEE US AND YOU WIU SEE

LIZA

Taupo, Ill&lt; .. Alolloutar

The
Shoe Cafe

:liHJ Second ,\ ~e .
l.afa.1·ette Mall

GalllpoHs, 0.

"We Hete ,., k•r• to • Betler Oul"

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

580 UST IIAIN ST.

992·2174

Collecd/JIJ~

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Advanced Cleaning
Service

Open Daily 10-6
Rt. 7 North of Gallipolb, Ohio 45631
Phone (614) 446-4084'

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DEAl. Ell PRICES ON SELECTED AIV.TIQUES

FEATURING NORMANS DRAPERY

WHY IS ADVANCED CLiANING SERVICE #1 IN CARPET
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4. Certified 3M Scotchgard Applkator
S. Authc.rized Applicator of Sylgird-Antimicrobial Carpet Treatment
6. Train_ed In All Areas of Pre-spotting &amp; Conditioning
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OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 30, 1986.

SHOW

Functional elepnce at
modest cost. Burma Vinyl
Blinds are made especially
for levolor to e:1actin1
quality standards. I" thin
slats almost disappear when
opened yet provide privacy
when close. Easily installed .
Alabaster color.

'

35x42 ............................... S10.t9
36x42 .................................10. 99
35 150 ................................. 11 .99
36150 ................................. 11 .99
23•64 ................................. 12.99
23x72 ................................. 12.99
27x64 ................................. 12.99
2h64 ................................. 12.99

2h64 ................................. I2.99
30x64 ................................. 13.99
31 •64 ................................. 13.99
32•64 ................................. 13.99
33x64 ................................. 13.99
34x64 ................................. 13.99
31x72 ................................. 14.99
3Sx64 ................................. 1S.99
36x64 ................................. 1S.99
39x64 ................................. 1S.99

52150 ................................. 15.99
3Sx72 ...........................,..... 16.99
43x64 ................................. 16.99
46x64 ................................. 16.99
47x64 ................................. 16.99
41x64 ................................. 16.99

WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET
AND BLIND 763SHOP
liD AVE.
614-446-7441

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45 STATE SfREET-GAWPOI.IS
HOUIS 10:00 A.M. TO 6:00 PJI.

704 GRAND UNTRAL AVl.
AND DOWNTOWN HUNnNGTON
VIENNA, W. VA.

295-4532

HOURS: M-F 9-9; Sat. 9·5

Across

fn~m

the (ivi&lt; (onlor

525-7090

AND OVER 130 COMMERCIAL ACCOUNT CUSTOMERS
ELEGANT SHEERs
REDUCED

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BEDSPREDS
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FURNITURE

GAUERIES

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Decorative glass control panel
Clock with four-hour timer
Ll ft 'N Lock® top
Porcelain burner box
Black glass oven door
Glld&amp;-out broiler
Adjustable porcelain broiler pan
andlnsert
,

MODElS STARTING AT ~399

otNTERIOR DESIGN
•CARPET
oANE FURNITURE

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Any treatment you have seen or can imagine
Tope's has the means, ideas 11n~ installation profesionals.

1ije) .

POMEROY

i 'll F~aturing
EnrC'p!~~ !'1•rnis~ine•
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KYGER - Cheslire Township

POMEROY- The Meigs County
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day, 2 p.m., at the museum on
Bu ttemut Ave. In Pomeroy.

VINTON - North Gallla Band
: Boosters meel Monday, 7 p.m. at
; the school.

19.85 FORD THUNDERBIRD

PEEPS: A Gal.lipolis diary· ,

Communtiy calendar / area happening.

LECTA- Walnut Ridge Olurdt
wUI have Rev. Earl Hinkle In
services Sunday.

. STARTING AT

SIGN UP SITE
...

for Run.closing

The Sunday nmes-Sentinei- Page- B-7

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- Point P111U11t. W, Va.

April20,1986

,,

CORfJIN &amp; SNY()ER
fURNITURf:
CO. Ohio
·
•

�April20,l986

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Braves blank.Dodgers
CINCINNATI '(UPI I - Phil
Garner doubled In two runs and Bob
Knepper notched his 100th career
victory Saturday to spark the
Houston Astros to their lourth
straight trtumph, a 4·3 decision over
the Cincinnati Reds.
Garner went Uor4 to give him 11
hits In his last·18 at· bats, with 11
RBI.
Knepper, 3-0, surrendered four
hits over 5 1-3 innings, with four
strikeouts and two walks. The
left·han&lt;ler, who improved his
career mark to 100.106, had a
two-hitter going through five in·
nlngs, but ran Into trouble In the
sixth -and was relieved by Charlie
Kerfeld, who gave up two unearned
runs In 2 2·3 innings. Dave Smith
pitched the nlnth to pick up hfs rifth

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leiter of lntenllo attend GlenvDie Slate CoDege oo a
track scholanohlp, captured tile boys 1986 scoring title
with 38 out of a poll81ble 40 points, losing only to
GaUipolls' Clpis Tawney In the long jump.

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Logan,
Marietta
cop titles
RIO GRANDE- Logan's boys
and Marietta's girls captured the ·
1986Galllpolls Rotary Relays Satur·
day at Stanley L. Evans Field.
The Chieftains finished with 114
points, 21 ahead of defending
ro.:hamplon Point Pleasant. The
Big Blacks tallied 93, led by Cliff
Simpkins' 38 points.
Simpkins, this year's Individual
scoring champion, just missed
tying Brent Saunders' 1975 perfect
mark of 40 points In a meef when he
finished second behind Chris Taw·
ney In the long jump.
The PPHS ace captured the 400
meter dash, WO meter dash and
triple jump.
'
Point Pleasant's Kelly FU!fle
claimed top hooors in the two
hnrdle races; "1B)gs'· llaggy won
'tlie. ~ inet~ run; Gallla's Chris
Howard captured the high jump:
Jackson's Griffith clalmed·the 1600
meter run and Ironton's Kellogg
zoomed to victory In the 100 ITL'ter
dash.
Champion Logan captured fivt&gt;
firsts - Skinner, shot; · Hurst,
d!SaJs; Barrow, pole vault; Mor·
ton, lllO meter run and the 1600
meter relay squad.
Marietta, also a .mem!Fr of the
Southeastl'l'n Ohio LeaguP, de·
throned Gallla Academy's Blue
Angels. The Tiger girls finished
wlth1D8 points. GAHS finished With

99.
Athens was third with 57~.
followed by Logan with 54. Hurrl·
cane had 42, Meigs 41\lz, l',flami
Trace 33, Point Pleasant W,
Nelsonville-York 21, Wellston 11
and Jackson 0.
CaHla's Kim .Taney won the long
jump. The Angels 1600 meter 4 by
100 relay squad, and 4 by lllO relay
squad all captured first place wins.
Point Pleasant's Hussell won
both hnrdle5 . races; Meigs' Ste
phanle English won the :aJO meter
dash.
Marietta captured five firsts
during the day·long l'Vent.
Nelsonville-York's Dixon re·
pealed In the high· Jymp. PI
Hlrjerman, Logan won the 800
meter run and 400 meter dash.
Here are the boys results:

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SIIDI JU - Sklll..,r,l.qi!:an. Jl9. '
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011c.w - Hurst Logun , lJii f('('t 11tocm .

· • • m8fr rm - Crltll!h, JadiiOfl, 4: raR ~.

fliP Jump -

Chrl~ Howard. t.n tllpoll~. 6 frl•l . ~

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1 by JW rep~~)!- Won by Jronloo. :-14 .7.
P* V•l - Barrow, Logan . 12 fc:oel . '
• l1llfiw ..,.. - Cliff Simpkins, Pl . P~a!.lnl .

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..... lllnkll - K&lt;'ll;\' Rllrl&lt;', P1. P l rw~am , :J9.i .

111 "'*"run - Morlon . Lo!lan . 2:00. 1.
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rrw.t.tor dMh - ~l mpldn s, Pl . Plt&gt;aMnl, :22.7.

Mmfter MI - IWRJt\', Mrl~.t. ~.~ &amp;4. 1 .
'l'ltl* Jump - SlmpktAA. PtJinl PIC!IIWII , 42.:.! and
ol"f'·lounh.
IW lllftH n!lay- Won by Lott;an. :l:J.'\.6

Continued on C·2
I,
.

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.,l·~·.u.. . ~ ~.~.ill•i , ..'.

.,

. April 2011986

Astros top Reds, 4-3;

0

"" ...

Section

Lllol-

l

Kerfeld pitched 2 1..3 innings
before having his 25-inning score
less streak, which dated back to last
season, snapped . .
Cincinnati starter Tom Brown·
ing, a 21J.game winner as a rookie
last year, lasted only one-third of an
innlng in losing hJs first decision. HI'
faced just six batters and gave up
five hits and four runs.
Houston's four·run first lnnlng
began with singles by Bill Doran
and BU!y Ha tcher. Both scored on
Gamer's double down the left field
line. Garner took third on a throw
home and scored on a sacrifice Oy
by Glenn Davis. Kevin Bass
foUowed with a homer to left , his
second d. the year.
Cincinnati scored two runs In the
eighth. Eric Davis walked, stole
second. went to third on a wild pitch
by Kerfeld and scored on shortstop
Dickie Than's throwing error on
Nick Esasky's ground baiL Esasky,
who took second on the bad throw,
scored 'On :a single by Tony Perez.
The Reds made It 4·3 in the ninth
on Eo Dlaz' second homer of the
year, off Smith.
Mets edge ~hlls
NEW YORK (UPI I - Gary
Carter's RBI single In the bottom of
the eighth scored Kevin Mitchell
from second base with the go·ahead
run to lift the NewYorkMetstoa 3-2
victory Saturday over the Philadelphia Phlllles.
Dwight Gooden, 2-0, struck oullO,
walked two and allowed six hits In
going the distance for the second
time this season. Shane Rawley,
1-1. went 7 2·3innlngs, leaving with
men CJ\ first andsocond with oneout
In the eighth. He allowed six hits,
walked one and struck rut two. He
r etired the first 12 men he faced
before Carter walked in the fifth:
With one out In the eighth,
Mitchell singled. One out later ,

Keith Hernandez singled Mitchell
to socond . Stl'Ve Bedrosian re·
placed Rawley and yielded Carter's
single to right center to give New
York a 3-2 lead.
The Mets tied the score 2·2 in the
sixth. Gooden led off with a single
and scored oo Mitchell's double.
Philadelphia had taken a 2-11ead
In tre top of the sixth. Second
baseman Tim Teufel botilled Milt
Thompson's grounder. Thompson
stole socond and went to tlilrd on
catcher Barry Lyons' throwing
error. He scored on Von Hayes'
single.
The Phllllcs went ahead 1-0 In the
first. Gary Redus led off with a
double. After Gooden struck out
Thompson and Hayes, Mike
Schmidt reachal on an infield
single, sending Redus to third.
Glenn Wilson's infield single scored
Redus.
·
New York tied It In the lifth on
Lyons' RBI fielder's choice.
Braves blnnk Dodgers
ATLANTA (UP!) -Zane Smith
fired a too-hitter and Terry Harper
drove In two runs Saturday to lead
the Atlanta Braves to a 3-0 victory
over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Smith, 1·0, struck out five and
walked four to go the distance li:lr
the third time in his two- year
care't. Bill Russell' s single to left
field In the second Inning and Enos

Cabell's ninth· Inning single were
the lone D:lq:er hits.
The Braves picked up two runs In
first Inning. Dale Muf1)hy drew a
two-ru t walk off Dodgers starter
Ore! Hershiser, 1·2. Bob Homer
followed with a single to center and
Ted Simmons walked to foad the
bases. Harper then drilled a single
to lclt field to score Mu11Jhy and
Horner.
The Braves added a run in the
sl'\lenth. Rafael Ramirez singled
against Hershlser, Mulllhy fol·
lowed with a single to right to JI'V)Ve
Ramirez to third, and lmock out
Hershlser. Homer then lifted a
sacrifice fly to center against
reliever Ken Howell to give Ire
Braves a 3-0 lead.
Toronto 6 KC 5
TORONTO !UP() -Doyle Alexander scattered three hits &lt;1o1er 71-3
innlngs and Lloyd Moseby drove in
four runs with a two-run homer and
a bases· loaded single Saturday to
lead the Toronto Blue Jays to a 6-5
victory over the Kansas City
Royals.
Alexander, 2-1. struck out eight,
walked two and twice struck
George Brert with a pitch. II was
the first time in Brett's 13-year
career thaI he was hit by two
pitches In the same game. Tom
Hl'nke worked the ninth for his
SECond save.

ASTRO RUN- Houston's leltflelder BDiy Hatcher slides saleb' Info
home plate as Reds catdler Bo Dlaz watts for the late I !row wring the
first Inning of Saturday's gnme at Riverfront. HOWJton scored all four o1
Its Mlll'l In the first then held oo to defeat the Reds, 4-3. UP!.

Suspense, strategy expected
at 29th NFL player draft
NEW YORK (UPil- Suspense, said Ernie Accorsi, the Cll'Veland
strategy and quarterbacks should Browns vice president of football
operations.
·
r!'tum to the first round of t he Aprtl
Still , qu anermcks will take a
29 NFL draft aft er a two·year
back sea t to running backs and
absence.
The suspense will come with the offensive linemen . Jackson Is rated
a can't-miss superstar and Davis,
first pick, which wlll be Auburn
running back Eo Jackson. ,The Byars. Cary James of Louisiana
State. Neal And&gt;rson of Florida ,
Tampa Bay Buccaneers own that
pick, but will entertain trade offers Reggie Dupard of Southern Metro·
HOLLEY CROSSES FINISH UNE- Angle HoOey, final leg of GaiUa
right up until draft time. The dlstand Ruehen Mayes of Washing·
ton State could go In the first mund .
Academy's
meter relay squad, came from behind lo defeat Athens
Buccaneers already have received
"Bo Jackson is a higher echelon
numer In the 28th annual Rotary reiiiYS Saturday at Stanley L. Evans
offers from at least five teams and
than the rest, but there are eight to
Field, Rio Grande. GAllS won the event In 10:27. Other GAll&gt; rumer.~ • interest shou ld Increase hefore the
10 guys capable of ga in ing J.OOJ
were Jolalne BarUmus, Krls carty and lloDy Cannan. MllricUa won
draft. Tampa Bay coach Leeman
the girls team title wt!h 108, points GABS ftnlshed second with 99.
Bennett said he wants two defen· yards In the league," said Dick
slve starters and a first rou nd draft Steinberg, director of pi ayer devel·
opment for the New England
pick for Jackson.
· .Jackson's signing Is also greatly Patriots.
Of 'the " special case" backs,
anticipated. since It will set the tone
for the salaries of all first·rounders: Davis soould go late In the first
In the last two years, the threat of round and th'l! others later. Davis'
tht&gt; USFL signing players resulted
status should not be affected by his
in the first pick of lhe NFL draft
being dismissed from the Texas
sign ing weeks before the draft.
Christian team for admllting to
Jackson, a pro baseball prospect . accepting payment from boosters.
will probably walt for the major
Byars' broke his righ t foot twice
In his senior season and It has not
league baseball draft In June to help
his bargaining position before
healed well . He would be a sure
signing:
·
Jlrsl·munder If not for the In jury,
The strategy will come In how
but some team will !J'Obably take a
teams deal wllh players who have
rtsk within the first thrre munds.
McCallum, who is committed to
tested positive for drugs In testing
the Navy for ftve'years, "might go as
combines, and four "special case"
high as the fifth round. Dupree, wbo
running backs - }{elth Byars of
Ohio Sta te. Kenneth Davis of Texas played only one season In college,
Christian, Napoleon McCa Hum of· already has parts of two seasons of
the USFL behind him, but those
Navy and Marcus Dupree- whose
were ln jury·fllled years. Dupree
status Is clouded by injurtesorother
off-the fleld factors.
relnjured a knee less than two
weeks ago and q&gt;inion varies
At least 'two quarterbacks, Jim
greatly among NFL ta lent
Everet I of Purdue and Chuck Long
of Iowa, should go in the first round . evaluators .
They wUI be lbe first quarterbacks
"If Byars Is healthy, yoo have an
taken In the first round since 1983, excellent crop of running backs,"
when six passers went In the first
Dallas head of player personnel Gil
round · - including Dan Marino, Brandt said. "This Is not llke the
John Elway, Tony Eason and Ken
Marino draft In thattherearenotas
many All·Pro ty(J('. players, bu t
O'Brien .
down the line there Is talen t.
Other possible first round quar·
CHANCEY GAINS FINALs - 1\Celp' lianoout athlete, Mike
especially ol!en.lve linemen."
terbacks are Jack Trudeau of
Chancey, reached the fbials ol the llhot put eveat SaturdaY In the 28th
Quarter\&gt;? ·.«s and ru!Ullng backs
Illinois and Rotille Bosco of
annual Gllllpolls Rotary Club Relays, held at Stanley L Evlliw F1eld,
should •~· . c-ount for at least seven
Brigham Young.
·Rio Grande. Mark SklDner, of champion lop!!, won the ftnala with a
flrst·round picks, and the picks at
"It's a real good quarterback
loes.of 110 feet,
In~ Chancey nru.tJed flfih ~h a tOM of ee~.
these posltilns could soowbaU J!ke
crop, nothing Uke 1983 but good,"

:mo

..me

In 1983. There should be more
surprising first -rou nd picks than
the past two years, when clubs went
for "safe " picks whom t!I&gt;y were
confident of signing.
The blue chip group of offensive
linemen, Is highlighted by tackles
Brian Jowzlak of West Virginia,
Jim Dombrowski of VIrginia, Doug
Williams of Texas A&amp;M and James
Fitzpatrick of Southern Cal , guards
John Rienstra of Temple, Jim
.Juriga of illinois and Will Wolford of
Vanderbilt, and center Gen e Chil·
ton of Texas.
"I never rn:all a year as good as
I his for offensiw I !nomen. " Accorsl
said. " These arc big strong guys
who could play."
However. praise of the offensil'!'
linem en pros pec ts is not
unanimous.
"People talk of th&lt;' year of
offens ive linemen. but theft' are a
161of good playprs and a lot of fa ke'
guys who donit always block, " .Jets'
director of )X'rsonncl Mike Hickey
said . "I don 't think lhCJ1''s an
{(ntony Munoz in this draft. Tiwr~
are guys as bi g but wh&lt;'n you say
'Year of the Offcnsl'e Uncman'
you expect some 12 to come in and
be entf('nched for 10 to 15 yea rs. 1
don't think that's thl' case with a lot
of these kids."
Among wid&lt;' nwlvers, Tim
McGee of Tennessee, Walter Mur·
ray of Hawnii , Mike Sherrard of
UCLA and David Williams of
Illinois art' possible first-rounders.
Defensive line Is another strong
area. The Atlanta Falcons have
declared they will take Oklahoma
nose tackle Tony Casillas with tre
second pick. Jon Han~ of Alabama,
LesUe O'Neal of Oklahoma State,
Tim Green of Syrdcuse and .Jerald
Wllllams of Auburn could go In the
first round. Other possible first·
fiund defensive players are nne.
backers Kevin Mu11JhY of Okla·
boma, John Offerdahl of Western
,Michigan and dclenslve backs
Vestee Jackson of Washington and
David Fulcher of Arlwna State.

�••

Page-C-2-The Sundey Tmet-Sentinel

:.i -Uf'ln

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LONG .a llll' - """"· Goi\IPJIIo, I&amp;&amp;

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Mark'tla . .. .. ..... ..... ... .... . ........ , .......... ......... SJ

IIIG.I&amp;IaDUIB - H. .U. Point Pkellllt, :f9.1
U... :tll.7.

M_,..IIVN -t~Mn~n,

Allilt&gt;ns •..• .... ..•. ,...... .. ....... ...... .... ....... ... ... , •.•. •. :1&amp;
J.:k.lon ........ ' -·· ··· .......... ' ... '......... . . ........ .... .fi

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Nontl C.llla .. ............................. ... .... .. .. ...... ..... 2 •
Ncl110nvUJp. Yotk .. ...
.. ........... ............. ... l

•

4:23.1.

ME'IDt. BFJAV - Won by O•lllpolls 11

Big 10 vote
expected in June
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Presidents of Big Ten schools are
expected to vote in June on a
proposal that would change the
conference status to a corporation
!ip the presidents would have more
power over lntercolleglatl'"
athletics.

DIICUS- Barrows. MariPt~. llt,JO.
11108HVIIP- Dixon. Nf'l!onvlllf.Yorit,. s..t

t liJ • ._. - Won by Gllli:dls In 10: fT
LOW llt.I8DU8, ...... - Point Plfasant, : 10.2.

Mexico's ;Barrios considered dm,~gerous ~e~ ·
BOS'roN (UPI) - one of tile confident ~ his finishes," said de
most dall&amp;erous l'llllllers in Mon- CasteUa.
day's Boston Maratmn wiD be a
Barrios willingly a~ts that
Mexican who has never run the despite belna one of.the favorlleS,
grueling dlstance and wOITies that he !ears he may mt finish.
be may not finish.
"I don't know lf I can go 26.2
Arturo Barrlosol Mexico City has miles; I don't know What to expect,
never competed in a 26- rnlle, butl'mrunntngweU and this Is the
385-yard race, but favortte Rob de right tlmetotry.l'mgolngtotakett
·Castella expects Barrios to finish easyforthellrst14-15inllesandsee
second.
how I feel " he said
"He has a very high level of
Barrtos: lack ol ~alhon expefl~. that Is his greatest strmgth rtence Is eXpected to determine his
right now," said the Australian of straleltY.
hls 23-year-old training partner. •
"I expect him to just stay with
Ban1os has won three road races me," said de Castella. "And when
this year in convincing style, there are 10 kilometerS left he wtn
including setting a wortd 10- be aU 11e1 bec~IISe he
how to
kilometer l'eCQrd March 1 ln run that dlstance," ·
P~.
·
Pete Plltzlnlll!r. wlnnl:r of the
Also, ~ has . a lot of 1!ll4 Olympic Trials, saki, "I would
"self-control, he s relatively light · put a lot li: money m Ban1os
which Is good for the hills and he's latching ooto de Castella very

early. 1 think~ WW.be a very
smrt ,cord between the too li:
them."
When a top diStance runner
moves up to a longer race, Ills not
unknoWJl for him to win a major
title .In hls 'f!rst marathon, as Steve
Jores did in Chicago.

ROCK SPRINGS - Belpre took TVC while Meigs falls to 4-2-1 and to
over sole possession of first place in 7-4-1 overall. Belpre can win the
the TVC's Eastern division baseball TVC playoff berth against the
race with a 1().3 win over Meigs here Western division winner If they win
Friday.
· their final six league games. Belpre·
The Eagles laced five base hits and Meigs do not play again in loop
sandwiched around three Ma- action.
rlluder errors and three base on
Chrts Newberry went the disbaUs for a game-deciding eight-run tance for the Eagles, fanning eight
second Inning.
and walking five while allowing the
The win Ufts Belpre to &amp;-1 in the hard-hitting Marauders only six

"But Bosllln could .be ' more
dltllcult .for saneone t1 win mhls
first marathOn," said Pfltzlnger,
''ADd' the reason lsi the hills. A
runner must be strong between 17
and 25 mlies and have mough
strmgth to llnj$h the hills."

STEWART-TheFederalllodt-: Wolfe In relief of starter Jamie
Hensler and Kelly Grueser sufferal
non-league baseball loss here the loss.
'
Thursday evening.
Tom Welch. had .ihrre hits
Federal Hocking broke a 5-5 tie Including a home run, while O.rls
with a run in the bottom o( tiE Frashier had too singles.
fourth frame after leading earlier &gt;, Brtan Freeman and Scott Wick·
4-1. A three-run home run by Tom .'line had two hits apiece, while Ryan
Welch In the llflh Inning broke the Oliver doubled for the Tornadoes.
game qJen.
••
Southern Is 7-5-1 overall and
Keith Barnhart in relief of nm Federal HOCking Is 4-9·2.
Creger posted the win. while Jim

Wildlife

hits. Shawn Baker started for
l'rfeigs, was relieved in the second
by Chris Hanning, and Rick Wise
came oo in the fltth. Both Hanning
and Wise hurled three Innings each.
They combined for four strlkeouts
and four walks, permitting nlne
Belpre hits.
Chris Kennedy had two singles
for Meigs while Donnie Becker
trtpled, M!J&lt;eBartrumdoubled,and

thankids.

Dave Hendricks and Mark Corbitt
singled once apiece.

Russ Logue Tlwor Poole

.

Whe!!J&lt;ids pJ.y in Reebol&lt;,,they'~ playing in Comfortable,

and

Russ Logue led Belpre with a single
and double each while Newberry
helped hls own cause with 1110

1•

dtuallie, lilng-lalli&gt;g shoo. ~bok sboeo .,.. made "'8·
&lt; gecfwith noil-markirc ouiiOitolor rough 'n w.nble kids
• onthearow.

:·,.,'!vi

The
ShoeCilfe

"~

singles.

The Marauders travel to Alex-.
ander Mooday,
at Trimble
Wednesday, host Logan Thursday,
and travel to Miller on Friday.

are

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Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4511

1985· BUICK RIVIERA

stel'8o. pow8l' steer1r ~g. 'brakes,l!tft seat, door
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Monday.

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engine, automatic overdrive trans., klade:l with options including JX)wer seat
power door locks, JX)wer windows. air cond .. tilt wheel, cruise cootrol, de~y
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with a triRie. me better .. walked,
Ani!Jurgey !lellled doWn to allow
LewiS had a triple and slilgle to·
Simpson singled, and Chrls Crab- just one more run the duration ol lead Oak Hill, wbUe ~rlcklant'l ·
tree singled.
· the game, while SHS added single tripled, and Chris Crabtree singled .
Southern carne right back in their runs In the llflh and sixth Innings.
thrre times.
· ,
half of the-tnnlng on two walks, a
Southern pounded out 14 hits led
Southern travels. to Eastern lo11
Ryan Oliver ·single, a Todd Adarm by Freeman with two triples, the SVAC championship game on
stngle1 a ~run triple by Brian Bostick a triple and single, McCoy Monday.
·
Freeman, and a Jay Bostick triple, two singtes, Ryan Oliver a single
Llnescore
making the score 5-2.
and double, Todd Adams two
Oak HID edged closer with single singles, Kelley Grueser and Sean Oak Hm ...................... OZI 110 ()- 5- 7-J'
runs ln the third and fourth frames Grueser each a double, and Eric !ixilloern
... .. ...... ....... .. . 1m 311 •-lJl.Y-l
Batt""': Amburgey {WP) and Rlfllo,.
to make the score 5-4, hoWl'Ver, the Milliron a single.
Er1&lt; Korns i lPI. Copas 41h and IMr)'
decisive blow for Co~h Mlck ---,:-----~----Adklns-_
. ~...:..-~~--+--'
Winebrenner's Tornadoes came In ,.
the fourth canto.
Ryan Ollver led ctf with a walk,
Todd Adams singled, Frreman
again unleashed a run-srorlng
triple, Jay Bostick singled, ljlld
Barry McCoy deUvered an lUll
single for an 1&gt;4 srore.

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By !!!COTI' WOllE ,
'l'luce ! 11 'I ellilafl
RACINE - 'I1Ie Southern Tornadoes kept 'JIIQ .with their winning
ways Friday evetlng by defeating
vlsllln&amp;' Oak Hlll 10-~ to rematn
po?rfect at 7-0 In tile SVAC dtarmnd
race.
The win booltl Southern'soverall
record tO 8-5-1 overall.
Sopho~mre standout David Amburgey wmt the clstanoe tQ pck up
the win, registering 11 strlkeouts
and sevm walka.
Eric Kern IIUtfered the loss with
relief pltchln&amp;' from Tbdd Copas.
The duo combined tlr 1 strlkeout
and three walks, Yo'Nie giving up 14
hits to the talmted Southerners.
Oak Hlll took a :M lead In the top
of the IECond when Lewis led ott

LIMIT
20

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10~5

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Excludla1 Yora1er and lmp·ort

.'

1986

Fishing notes

By Tom Jlelvlle
Special Col'l'espondent
GALUPOUS - With ftshlng
season u pon us It Is tlr sure nuiny
contests and tournaments will he
tqklng place throughout the area.
One such big fish oontest which ·
should be of In teres! to area
fishermen Is one held annually by
Timber Woolf Bait and Tackle of
Gallipolis.
· This contest requires no en try
fee. There are two categortes:
catfish and lar~mouth bass. Any
fisherman who catches a lar~ !Ish
of either species need only Ill tak e It
to the Timber Woolf fishing sho p to
enter. Ca.&amp;h prizes of $100, $$1, and
$40 respectively for first, second,
and third place will be awarded In
each of the two categories.
The baste rules of the contest are
as follows: 1) All largemouth bass
or catfish caught from rivers, lakes,
ponds, and streams are eligible. 2)
Fish must show signs of life to be
eligible. 3) All fish rrust be weighed
at Timber WoolfBaltandTackle. 4)
•••
Jim Poston of Huntington, who
Timber Woolf Bait will make all
decisions which will be fin al. 5) sponsors several tournaments each
nmber Woolf Bait also reserVes year, will be having a bass
tournament at Summersville Lake
the rtght to Inspect fis h entrails fllr
foreign objects. 6) No purchase Is on Saturday, April li. This tournanecessary to enter. Of course, ment Is a buddy type tournament
commercial fishermen are not with a 100% pay back of entry fees In
prizes. For rmre ihformation coneligible for the contest.
Last year three area fi shermen tacl Poston at Village Marine In
took top honors In the Tim ber Woolf Huntington.

No one plays harder

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- C~3 .

Southem nine tops Oak Hill Oaks,

Lancers hand SHS
12-5 non-loop .defeat
lng Lancers hailded Southern a 12-5

kno,.,;

Meigs in first all alone in baseball race ·

'

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

April20, 1986

April20, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallfllolla, Ohio-Point PleeBMt, W. Va.

OUR SALE PRICE • • • .•$1.99
MAIL-IN REBATE • •• . •11.00

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OUR SALE PRICE• • •. .16.99
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$399
NO. 215

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1986
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Aprll20, 1986
ApriiZO. 1986

Pomeroy-Middlaport-Gallip(llia, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

S~ott

.

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Mike
Scott, Houston's wlnnlngest pitcher
•.. last season with 18 vlctortes, got off
: · · to a roclty start this season. But he
• finally got rolling Friday night.
:. . With hls spllt-!ingered fastball
; •. tooling hitters, Scott struck out a
-: career-high nine batters to lead the
: ; : Astros to a 6-1 w1n INer Cincinnati.
: ·' "It's about lime I started contrl·
. butlng thls season," said Scott,1·2.
.. · "My first two starts just weren't
~.: very good. It really feels good to get
· _• that first win. I'm just glad It didn't
~-: take any longer than this."
:• In hls first two starts, Scott lasted
· ~ · a total of only 10 Innings and gave
:: . up 15 hits. His earned run average
:-, jumped to 7.20 and hls record
·: · dropped to ().2. •
:.: But things were different In his
: :: third start Friday night . Scott
•: · surrendered only six hits and one
~· . walk over 81-3 Innings.
"I finally got In a pretty good
· · groove tonight," said the G-foot· 3
• • righthander. "My !orkball (split·
• lingered fastball) was moving good
and setting up my fastball. "
Ctnclnnatl's Dave Parker, who
' came Into the game hitting .448 but
: had only one hit In four at-bats oft
· Scott, agreed.
"Scott had his split·fing~ered pitch
. working tonight," said P-drker.
. "That's a real tO~Jih pitch to hit."
-.' Scott's pltching'was backed up by
. Houston oome run power. Alan
:. ,Ashby slammed a t~ro-run homer,
. while Denny Walling, who went
· ·.: three-for-four, and Phil' Garner,
:·· who has nine hits In his last 14
· :· at-bats, hit 9010 homers.
;. : Walling also m""e
a .,.,;u
o~sational
ca.&amp;
:· .catch In the bottom of the ninth to
. ;. preserve Scott's .vlctO"'.
·"
: . : Houston took a G-2 lead Into lhe
.' ;ninth, but with one out, Parker
• : •Singled and Nick Esasky followed
:0 .With a two-run oomer. Scott was
: : relieved by Dave SmJth, who licked
-: up his fourth save, OOt the first
• Buddy " -)1
baltersmlth 1'aced
'
•
"" • : smacked a liner to left that Walling

41 ¢

Attermlr's
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Sale 66C, Reg. 94C, limit 20

63

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Resistor
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1.19,1imlt20
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1.99 ~;~.

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Maintenance Fluids

67¢

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caught six Inches above the top of
the wall.
"HI hadn't have caught It, It was
going to be a home run," said
Walling. "I only got to It because I
had been playing baCk 10 feet
deeper than nonnal. Wllh 11 being
the bottom of the ninth, I was
wUling to give up a single, but rot an
extra base hlt."
·
. Mario Soto, 1-1. the Orst of !our
Cincinnati pitchers. ·lasted five
lnnlngsandgaveupslxhltsand!lve
runs.
Houston, tralling2·1, took the lead
for good by scoring three times
after two were ou I In the fourth.
Kevin Bass singled, raced to third
on a single by Walling and scored on
a passed ball by Bo Dlaz. Ashby,
woo gilf · hi play only because
starting catcher Mark Bailey
siralned his knee In the first Inning,
hlt a two-run oomer to right, his
first of the year.
Garner hit hls third tnmer of the
year In the first Inning, Walling
slugged hls first t1 the season In the
sixth and Glenn Davis crllvered a·
sacrifice Oy In the fifth.
Cincinnati, before Esasky's two·
run tnmer In the ninth, managed
only a run In the second on a
sacrifice fly by Dave Concepcion
and a run In the lhlrd on an RBI
single by Kal Daniels.

By SCOTI' WOLFE
'nmes Sentinel stall
MERCERVILLE- A big four·
run first lilning powered t~ red-hot
Eastern Eagles to a 7-3 SVAC
triumph INer" t~ Hannan Trace
Wlldcats Friday evening In area
high school baseball play.
The win boosts Eastern to 1().3
overall and 6-11nslde the SVAC.
Hannan Trace fell to 8-4 overall
and 5-3 In the league.
Eastern's bats came to life early,
getting to HT starter Phil Batley
who allowed four first Inning hlts.
Bryan Durst led cit with a single,
Ed Collins reached on a !Ieider's
choice, and an error allowed Durst
to trot home with the game's first
run. 1·0.
Kevin Barber dropped a double
down the right field line to keep the
innlrig alive, srndlng clean-up
batter Brrnt Bissell to the ~ate for
another RBI double. Sopoomore
Steve Horner lined another RBI
single for the game's fourth run,
whlle the crafty Bailey settled oown
ID retire the side.
Eastern's Eddie Collins got the
start and went the distance to pick
up the w1n to up his personal record
to 5-1. Collins allowed just thrre hits
in the first slx Innings of work,
pitching very well In addition to
getting several big plays from the
EHS defense.
Bailey retired Eastern In order

L\'NE
CEIRFR
l{;IIEDUIE
wen.
ci ~prO :11, IIIII
Date-GynliiM!um
Apr. ZJ-12·3 p.m. Open Rcc. ..................... .. ................... .... 12·3

J'!&amp;:. r~leg~ R""

: :

:

::

........... 715-815

the next two Innings untll t~
Eagles plated a single run In the
fourth with t)VO ~t. Jeff Caldwell
walked, stole second, and trotted
oome oo a Jell Johnson single, the
score 5-0.
·
EHS added t.ro Insurance runs In
the fttth as Durst walked, Collins
doubled on the hit and run as hard
throwing Deke Barnes came on In
relief.
Kevin Barber singled, Brent
Bissell doubled, and Steve Horner
singled to Ioree In the two EHS
runs, the score now 7-0.
The Wlldcats, one rt the toughest
teams In the SVAC, plated thr~P
runs In the nnallrame when Steve

J arrell- singled, Ri chard Stilt
reached on" a fielder 's choice, Cline
walked,andBradCremeansrlpped
a three run home run INer the right
field fence, the final 7·3.
Eastern was led by Brt'l1t
Bissell's t.ro doubles, Kevin Barher
a double and single, Steve Horner's
two singles, an Ed Collins double, a
Bryan Durst single, and a .l&gt;ff
Johnson single. .
Mark Jenkins had a lead-of!
triple, Steve Jarrell a double and
single, Sean Colley a single, and
Cremeans a home run for HT.

NEA's

MUSHROOM COMPOST

Whaley's Used Cars &amp; Auto Parts ... . 157

...... 156

Powell's Super Va!u ........... ......... ...... 131
J &amp; T Suppliers ....... .......................... 121
Galley Hair Art s .............................. .. 106
JE."ffers Trucking &amp; Excavatln2 Co....... 99
178;

Rae Hicks 176 ; Fona Taylor 173.
mGH IND. SERIES: Fona Taylo r 4!!6;
TEAM GAME: Robbins &amp; ~y ('rs 614;
Whaley's Used Cars &amp; Auto PartS 62t; Ca ·
sry's 605.
TEAM SERIES: Whaley 's Used Cars &amp;
Auto Parts 1779; Robb ln s &amp; Myer s 1172:
Casey's 1759.

Pool

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AND

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lapco Spark
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lapco Distributor
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19.88

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MODEL

SAVINGS $559

Jt1SG

..

... , .. ,

262 Third Ave.

CHUCK·COLLIE-R
.SERVICE STORE
Phone 446-3314

Gallipolis

CARROLL
NORRIS

MIKE
NORTHUP

DALLAS
WEBER

TOMMY
SPRAGUE

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YOUR CHRYSLER-DODGE-.PLYMOUTH DEALER
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Miglltr l.itt
Gas Filled Lift
Supports

C•rRamps

=..8.88

one year free replacement

DODGE

flit. 1.11 &amp; 2.25, .f552V. 5J6Y

•-o-20.00

~~~-.. Guardian New

with OICh1119' fllg. l.ll!i

6.8°/o
ON

Ideal Heavy Duty
Fl•shers

Rog. B.95.i2251WB·2

E~~Pric:t

Dodge Caravans and Plymouth Voyagers
· Excluded From Program

Euroframe
ll.ice•~se Frames

polr

*2352 Ev.rydly Low Price

lof moat import opplicellono

Powerful 8 Horsepower
28 • Mower
Electric Slart
Optional Bagging System
The Prolessional's Choice

~~1.25

Enerflizer Halogen Flashlights

Relined Brake Shoes

•
•
•
•
•

flog.4s.aa S.woe.oo

I

WAGONS

MODEL 829

39.88

Everydly Low Price

repi~tment

and

. 32.88
From2.95 Ro!I.:Jua

,

C. Doncn VOlt, •E93BP·2. E95BP-2. S22BP

Guardian Disc
Brake Pads

VANS

$1,099

•

AA, Rog. 3.39 #E91BP-4

6.88

FULL SIZE

SALE -PRICE

J•ck Stands

.

6.8°/o
OR
$1,000

16 6S

' 7.88

~

•

CASH BACK

Eweryday Low Price

2.49~:
.
Energizer' Batteries

Rog. 12.95

From

OFFERS

d'CHRYSLER
~ CORPORATION

Aog. 1.79, #51120

3.00oH

limo. Stridciy OrgcriL

ODOR FREE
WEED FREE

~ACATION

:.~p~r~~~~ rw,t;::

U:ll-12:211 Fltne"Closed
Swim
'~~" · :1148 p.m. College R&lt;'C ...
.. ..... ... ll:ll-12:211 Fll ness Swim
6·8 p.mCollege Swim
Apr. ~8 p.m. COttege Rec ...
. ...... 7:15·8:1 5 a.m. Early Bird Swim
11:lJ.12: :.ll Fitness Swlm
~8 p.m. College Swim
Ap&lt;. :!148 p.m. College A«.......... ... ..... ...... ...
.. ...... ti::IJ-12:211 FllnE5s Swim
6-8 p.m. College 9Nim
All". ~8 p.m. Open Rec ................... ..... ....... .. ..... : :15-8: 15 a.m. Early Bird Swim
11: lJ-12:211 Fllness Swim
6-8 p.m. O~n Swlm
Ap-. :a;..I.J p.m. Ooen Rec................. . .... ........ ..... .. .............. 1·3 p.m. Open SWim
Apr. 27-12·3 p.m. Open A« ............. ....... ...... .... ........... .... 12·3 p.m. Open SWim
6-8 p.m. College A« . . .. .. tic)m; ' .i:i~.ok ·E:~;;;;,;· ......... .. 6·8 p.m. College SWim
SUn., AprU :ll- Basl'ball vs. W.Va. State; 1:00 p.ml dlublf'lleader
TUes., April 22 - Baseball vs. MI. Vernon Naz.: 1:00 p.m./doubleheader
Wed .. April Zl- Softball vs. W.Va. Tech.; 2:00 p.m.ldlublellrodor
Sal .. April a;- Baseball vs. Wa~h; 1:00 p.m.ldlublelleader

•

LOADER ON DUTY
WE LOAD AT NO COST

Chris Balll'y 481; Janet Duffy 478.

p.m. open Swim

OHIO

c,......lod of Storiltod
Hone Man,.t, Ptol Moo~
........ Grain. Gy........

CURRENTLY LOADING AT NEA'S COMPOST SLAB ON
OLD ST. RT . 124, 1 Mi. OUT OF CORP. LIMIT.

Redman Inn .. .... ... .. ........................... ..92

ll&lt;&gt;lley

JACKSON

AYAILAILE IN BAGs,
PKM·UP TRUCKS, DlfiiP
TRUCKS &amp; SEMIS.

Casey' s .......... ....... .. ....... .... .. .. ..... ...... 156
Robbins &amp; Mycrs............................ ,.. 150

Engine Stop Leak

lapco 011 fiHers

~;;;;;;·ies:.. iiaiiey.i i:Pi~aa::!

Jenkins, Collin s tWP I and Bissell .

Rtgular Hours: Mon. thn1 Sat. 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.

Pto

TEAM

HIGH IND . GAME: Chlrs

~

PHONE: 286·1322

MOND.U NITE OWLS
April 7, t9116
Pharmacy Norlh ... .. ......... .

.,

NOW AVAILABLE FOR PICKUP OR DELIVERY

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

Rog. 2.39,,M51:M5

-

Bailey sulfered t~ loss· in
four-plus Innings ot Work, Mill; ·
Barnes came on In relief. ~
rombined lor lour strikeouts tli4
thr~P walks.
• ·. •;,
Collins earned the wtn with f~r
strikeouts and t~ro walks.
:• : •
Eastern hosts Jeague-lea&lt;fi¢i
Southern on Monday, then b$11
Fort Frye Tuesday.
:: ;:
Llnescore:
•: •
•
Eastern ........................ 4oo 120

.---------------------+::-

Local bowling

Applications

fill. I 5.115

'

Reg. 2.49

friction Proofing

lllf.C.ft,MCOI

one year free

The Sunday limes-Sentinei-Page-C-6

14 01. size, 4'0514

~~og. 2.69, #64SM

Westley's Bleche
White, •;. ••'·

"'""

'

All"

.

Eastem Eagles stop"Hannan Trace, 7-~l

fans · nine; Reds
beaten by- Astros,. 64 ·

FOR BETTER MILEAGE TUNE WITH CHAMPIONS.

.

--*'4-

'
•I

..

GALLIPOLIS

~----------~--~---.----~ -

�.

Ohio-Point 'Pleasant. .W. Va.

All-American stunt team to appear at track
By SOOTr WOLFE

' .
MINERAL WELlS, W.VA ' The All-American AutoStuntTeam
of Winston-Salem, Nort~ Caroline
has slgnoo with West Vlrglnl .. j
Motor SpEedw~ for a !p!Civ!
presentation of its eliciting autco :
thrill soow to be held at tre ··
speedway Sunday, June :12. .
Sponsored by Beechnut O!ewlng
,.

Toba,cco, the AD-American Auto

Stunt Team wtll feature several
death ~ acts and high speed
auto thrills.
The June :/2 attraction wtll be
held In oonjuootlon with a very
special event as It joins the

nationally reknown "Dirt·Roc",
Race of Champions, wll!ch features
eight.NASCAR Winston CUp Orlv·

Scoreboard ...
; .........., ...

Fridays
linesrores
By Ulletl PftM latta

~

~ 1.

···1 -211

Thdor . Wof"''t'll 1' 1 and Hf"ath: Hnke!h.
191 and Nieto. W- 1\JdOr ll{)l . L-

ro.h HRs-SI:. Loots.

""nf rl'a l.

Heath 0 1:

S..US

na~~·~n 111

. -·--111
~
Rllodf"fl, GUll.ntl•

Km~ :

11 1, C'lt.' mt'fll§ 18&gt;. Winn
,9 , and Prna: Sutclltfr. Rulh\'ffi 1111 ar~d

and

(71

Garrtlts andBrmly. W-Gam&gt;lts ·

r2-1J . L-'I'tlunrond rl·J l. HRs-&amp;n Dll'J!O,
Km~·

IJa\'Lo;. W-RhOdcn (2-01. L- Su td ifff' IQ...ll .
HR - PIUsbl.if"Rh. Mormon il l . - Ptdla _.. • • - !5 I
NV ~ --•• - ue

Ill: Saa Fl"&amp;&amp;ndsco, Leonard !~ \.

.4nwlc• ~lfllle

t•

Nl'
- ·~~·-II•--L I 7t1% I
Mhrlle 1•
Rasrnuwn. Scurry j7), FI!!IK&gt;r !11,
Shirley 181and HaiiW')'; Wt&gt;glT\M .Pk&gt;sar 161
and CcroJI.&gt;. W-Pk'sac {1.{)1 . L -F'lstl! r

Carlton 'f'f'kul\•p !i1. Carnutn 181 and
Jtut.St'JI: lllrllnli:, QI"{'JSC'O illl ancl ('artrr
W- Darin~~: 11.01 . L-r arlton 10.21 H~ ­
Phllilldetphla. Thorn~n 1l •. Sl'hmldl 121.
~

•••I-LSI

--·· - 1111

~
Thunmnd, Walter f21 . Stoddlml

PWqh . . . .10 - 411

LA

Sml!h (91 and Bal~ . Ashby; Solo,

Tem· 16!. Prtl' 181. Power (91 and Dtu~
\\'- Scou U-2\ . L-&amp;lo (J.JL HRs
-Houston. Alhby rlL CarnPr (31, Walltna
Il l; O ocln111U. Eaasicy (21 .

••tt•t - 411

Heskl!th

""""'''

"--- •m•-n•
•u••-•u

h**'

NMa.l Lel[llle

lUI~

'

0 ·,11. HRs-W ~. MarahaU !l ~;
Atlanta. Mui1JhY (3). H~ Ill

FrtdQ'• ~ l.elfl'lt . . . .
St. Lou
Mntr1

r

t()..IL

•1•11• - su

KR-M~·au!F.t',

{)[t(&gt;r

(ll .

Otba; 111•• -L :II

AUuua az • • • - I II t
~ Val.,nzUl"'a, YI!Jid(&gt; Bl&gt;rJ! 111ancl SciO!l('la :

"GOLDEN'' UUULTS
SII}'[R SAVINGS. '
ftcutl••sWn "11~11' 'khM.ilf lb.

'""• "'•
I

I

500

Round

'12

IEMOTE

SYLVANA 19" DIAGONALSll'lllSET

Model RX3178WA
ONLY $398

IEMOTE

SYLVANIA 25" DIAGONAL

~

which can be

lEBCD.

NEW
MOUNT
BOX

'100 Rebate

•

SALE

99 '19"

'39

'16

10· ,,, 1· i'
r - - - - ·- ·-

:

,..
Tht P~trand Efficiency leader!

SERVING ltiiGS, 'GALUA
&amp; MASON COIINnES

''" S..H U

28 lb. Thrust

'179

99

,

'14" lfter

'99

l'llllte

..••.

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
915-3307

1986 SUMMER LEAGUES

7 PIECE
SCREWDRIVER
SET

PANELS

WEDNESDAY 12:30 P.M. MIIOI PIOGWI

7:00 P.M. ·MIXED HANDICAP

IHUIISDAY

7:00P.M. IADIS HANDICAP
7:00P.M. MEN'S HANDICAP (lrio)
9:00 P.M. OtUIIOI HANDICAP

.

FIIDAY

.111117
MAYI3
MAY 15
MAY 15

7:00 P.M. SCIIATCH lmtn &amp; wo01onl .. Mlv 16
7:00 P.M. IADIS INDUSTIIAl
9:00 P.M. FOOD IIAIIDUIS

SAMDAY

7:00 P.M. SfNIOI CmZENS

SUNDAY

7:00 P.M. MIXED HANDICAP

MAY 17

WOOD.
TOILET )
SEAT

MAY 20
MAY 20
JUNE U .
MAY 21

MAY 22
MAY 22
MAY 23

White

Pne Piece

Molded Wood

•'

•••
•n

~

•

••.

...
•

.. ,•.

·•'"

FortW1ed lightweight acrylic panels are wPather
resistant and fade proof. ln While. Green.

ROYAL

MAY 12
MAY 12
MAY 12

.. •.
••
.••
.•.
."
•
.•••

,, .....

Corrugated
Fiberglass

$3''

STAIT

- ......

$549

""'

•

.
••

SPECIAL CLOSEOUT PRICES
Regular Price

8 ft.
10ft.
12ft.

5.33
6.69
7.99

..•.•
..••
.....
....
••.
•
••
•.

SALE PRICE

•3.99
•4.99

ADDII£55: __________;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

.
•

••

Offer Good While Supplies Last.

·~~·------------

ASIC ABOUT OUR SUNDAY FAMILY SPECIAL

675·1160

.~ Store Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.,

..••
••
.•·

..

'

I

'

••

•

.,••
••
•

...."'
~

'

.

PHONE 446-6225
1885 EASTERN AVE.

,'

~~

.•

...

·'

GAlliPOUS, OHIO

.'

"THE DO IT ALL DEALER"

:Around On
In-Ground Pools

'.

WE SERVICE WHAT WE 51111

CoopBr

..
-

.'

ChryslerePlymouth•Dodge, .Inc.
399 S. Third Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760 .
(614) 992-642 I

CHIII5UR

-·

l

185 New Chevrolets
.'

.CQ

.

'#,'

:!!

i::I

-·
ca
n

::::1 .

.

Ariens 8 hp riding mower now
carries a low price tag and a
Btries of high performance
features to l!.eep your lawn in top
shape. Including:

~

.

.

'

.\

.CQ

:1

n

.

Delta 88

.CQ

stick~rs!

No ·-:Add-on

~

Financing on
all Chevrolet
Chevettes

(I) •

'#. :~
""' '~

-·ID •
~
•

::J

.n-· .•.
...

'•

.,

:I :·

ca .•

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•

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::s
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-·::s

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
. c•nao•o .

.,,

::I

,.

.

-....I ..:

-·

-· . No Gimmick .Sal..es! .
•::sn •
_,.
: Just Gqod.' Ol·d~ · ·
::s
;'
.,.., . .
. I
. Fa.shioned T~~desa ..

.

•

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ca

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10

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'
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Optloaal bqger 1bown.

·.
I :..,

.(I)

'T1

• 30" F1ex-N -Float mower deck
• Bagger.YacTM Collection System
vacuums.up to 3.9.bushels of
grass clippings and leaves
• 6 forwi!r'd speeds and reverse
• Wide, pneumatic tires '
• Local service' and parts .
• Electric start

I=
.

:1 .:

'#.

·• Durable 8 hp engine

., ...

(I) ' •

'#. '•

&amp; Oldsmobiles -· .
ca

. Jt

r

~

-·

.NO-WAITING TO ORDER
i

.

::J .'' .,
ID

THESE ,UNITS AlE P~CE· PROTECTED - YOU :WILL NOT PAY
. ·' GENEbL MOTORS' PRICE 'INCREASE EFFECtiVE 4-14-86
ON tHESE UNITS..•,
WITH INTEREST UTES AT
IN ALL TIME LOW,. AND
THE BIGGEST INVENTORY
AROUND, WE CAN OFFER
6.90fo)
YOU THE BEST DEAL BY FAR
Financing on
THAN ANY OTHER DEALER.
all Olds

::I

ER.-..

,.

'

4.

t

....

,.

::I
ta

LOW ,.: ·

of Models in Stock!

::J

. ,
-·
•n
-·
.

Selec~ion

.Big

::I

'

~

Point Pleasant, wv.
Sat. 8 a.m. to 12 noon

0

••

CAROLI·N A LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY COMPANY
312, 6th Street

I

I
.;

MAY 24

N~' ------------------------------

: "MUNCHIES"
•
·: DOOR PRIZES
:FUN · .
SECRETARIES· - Bring Your ooJ•u

~

"•...

'·' •

.

~

NATIONAL SECRETARY'S DAY
WEDNESDA 'Y, APRIL 23,· 1986
,.

w

•5.99

West Virginia
Electric has it•••

~

J

•i

Will

MAYI3
MAYI3

Recognizes

"AFTER .5:00 SECRETARIES P,ARTY'

';•

.

6~.9%: Financing- &amp;.9% Financing- 6.9% Financing ~6.9% Financing- 6.9% Financing!

In the Dining Room for Lunch:
Free Carnation' for Each Secretary
,
, . BOSSES - Treat our
. Secretary to Lunch!
.

•

'

.:
WESCO
POOLS
~~~~~~~~==;:~E~V=D=·=N~G~S=·~FR:E:E:E:ST:tM~A~T~E=S~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ·

The Down Under Restaurant

•••
•

-

••·So111ethtng
Electrical?

CALL 446-0498

,·•

·•

RAM WAGON or· RAM VAN

IIRk fill with 1111d 1nd 111 plumb·
·in II Yt". Schldult 40 PVC. ·

••

99

........

clrclE:d the seven other horses In the
field to' wtn Friday night's featucro
trot by a length at Toledo Raceway
Park.
Vanllla Boy, last In the eight·
horse field at the half-mile pole,
defeated V. Anna Trk:k with Cagey
Brady coming In third. Dunton
drove the winner of the mile In 2: 03.

POOlS

•

Fairr..nd!

~

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)- Vanllla
Boy, driven by Randy Dunton,

•AHY SIZE • ANY SHAPE •

•'•

STilllf lOllS: lion. 111u Fri. t.)0.7f
Sal tl0-5:00: Sun. 12:00-!:00

......

Toledo race resullll

'

l
••

•••

STOll lOIIlS: ... 1llu Fri. t.!0-700
Ill t:JO.Mit s.. tJG.~

6.8°/o APR

FIBERGLASS

': ·:: ' PM SU NDAY

LocUI nat Ill
Poin!P.... W¥

GO S1 ,000 CASH REBATE

Intent to play with Marshall
Urilverslty.
-- ,
· Marshall Coach GeOrge Chaump
says Eric lbnat, a &amp;4, _l!lt).pound
. tight end Is his latest recruit.

~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----t r
GALLIPOLIS STOHF NOVv ()I&gt;UJ ., ·,ll A r.1

Lou•

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UP! I..,.
~ Columbus (Ohio) Watterson
loot baD player has signed a letter of

IN THE LOUNGE:

PHO. 446-1362

TUESDAY

. 02~

•

mod·· ' •"II IOI'I, cor..,.·c•ll curnml 10 :.!0,000 pu h l"&gt;
p~r ~econd. lncreo\11 rvnn ong time 11/l to 5
ti~t per charge . Reod ·oul ~ hows rciT'Ioinin'l

•

MAY 5

5 .4M2

46

•

Eledroftlc Powtt Conlrol
Solid uore eh!ctroniu ones puhc .,.,,.rj1h

440ar460
'5.00 Rebate .
SPECIAL ' ]999

S138

5 ~TEAM HANDICAP
IADifS HANDICAP (trio)
MIXED SCOTCH DOUIIIS

t

Toron10

•

ABIJ.Matic·

$698

IIEGINNIIS
IIGINNIIS

5 ...u !

Lo

514-W&amp;o23!5
Rt 35, ~- SIIDIIPill Pllll
Gllipolis, Ollio 45131

SKYLI.!~. !!!~J1 INC.
1:00 P.M.
7:00P.M.
7:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M.
9:00 P.M.

'MIlv'.....
""

t

\'

•Lower Prices
•Blended to
Your Needs
•Plenty of Spreaders
•All Kinds of Stock
•Bulk or Bogged

SYLVANIA STEREOS

MONDAY

'5~' . ""
Ill
~~~

lloo10•

••.

MAXIMIZER

WIIH REMOTE

MfmNG
Al'lll 29
Al'lll 29

W LPd. GB
6 3 .W76 • .EIIl
~

''•

··~-

25 IN. REMOTE SUPERSU

CHESTER

4

..

for .racing fans

111811 racln~ call1&gt;8illn.
lights In the future.
the racing programs to a Wide cross
· .G\Irrently a &lt;XInteltt'to moose · Another h!ghJisht of WVMS _that section of t\Je country, better
Mill West VIJ]IIn!a·Mota' Si&gt;Eed· lsqulcldygalnlngm:llnentumlsthe lni&gt;rmtng the rac.lng tan and
way Is In the wWka f!Vf!rY 'l'bursday newly fol'IIIEd WVMS Auto Racing ' promotlng the sport d ra:lng. This .
evmlng from S.lO p..'m. In the Network. The network has already network alld Its plans are quickly
calabash
of' the Parkers· signed several radiO stations to becoming a reality ' under the
burg,llollday lim. TwO Winners are mrry all races at the speedway direction of. Mr. cart Clovis. ·
chosen each week with all Winners live.
·
Stay tuned for IC)COmlng an· ·
to appear 'In a tina! contest to re
The final plan calls for a united rnuncements aboUt West Vlrgln!a
held next month. Flve,hundred network of radiO statiOns to carry · Motor SpEedway.
.
dollars
In cash
w1ll go.to the winner. r.-----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiii~
Perhaps
· one
of the biggest
announcements, and me date to
look forward to Is the running of tiE
July 4-5 "Fitecracker Tw1n 50's",
.
.'....
OR·
schedilled to be nm at night under.~
UP TO 60 MONTHS
]llrtable lightbtg systeilr.
The success or this expertmental
CHIYSLEI CIEDIT
prooedure could signal many dra ·
QUAUF.D BUYERS
inatlc changes yet to come,lnclud·
lng the Installation of permanmt

Selects Marshall.

WITHOUT RIMOTI

Ridenour

.m

after rebate

Model RLE3 35PE

STAII'ING AT

8

99

miRDKDTA
.. ......

I

NY
DPiroll •
Htmr

'

SYLVAMA 25" DIAGONAL

STEIEO SOUND

......

c11ttnt '''lem

992-2111

FARM CITY INC
POMEROY , OH
8,. ·9U ·l1A1

WITH

~

ln!; Af9ft 11 Adanla
St. Loldlat Molltrfal
PhlliOflpNa at New York
~w.ton at Clnclnrlltl
Pltbb.llih at Chlt110
Saa ~. at Sail FrandK'O
AlfDI[.V( lEAGUE
BJUIIIIeclrr.la&amp;at Jl u1

• Cut br~u pinion~.,
•lnliii'ChlngNble randlt

FISHING MOTORS

ONLY $458

$52 8
Onlr $4 58

........

-·-

,,

Model CLE2 3 SPE

Onlr

3 5 ' 315 2¥,

'

San Fruclleo •· San 0\{lgo 1

• Ntw c1m cllt cam ectu•ted

With plastic
carrying case

~~

4 4 .500

......

%
\II

PlttllbJ!Jh 4, Cbkaaoo
New York~. PhUDJphla 2
Hw~ 6. a~nnau 4
Allaftta 6, Loa Aneeiet 3

·~
•
SPI~NING REELS
l

ZEBCO ELECTRIC

COMPLETE LAWN
.&amp; GARDEN
SUPPLIES
•LAWN MOWERS
•TILLERS

, • .0))
7 · ~ .583

Sl . l..ouM t, MoftU'ttJ 2

COlor·C·Lector
meter with a
mounting bracket

mounted in
several poaltlons.
Meter snaps In and out.

6 3 .661-

Cncnnu

.

.

SJ999
POMEROY

-......

.. Hwllorl .
SlnFron

LA '

'?

MGM Farm City, Inc.

~

'11.99

•69

99

'~

MAGNUM
·;
TURKEY LOAD ;..

99

Brick

81.·992·2181

ONLYi3 .6 8

WnH

Model60
.22 Autllmatic

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POMEROY, OH .

Model RX3167WA
WRH

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FARM CITV INC

SYLVANA 19'' DIAGONAl Sli'E&amp;T

By llOO'lT WOlFE
MINERAL WELlS, W.VA The first special eventofl986tlrthe
. all new West Vlrglnta Motor '
Speedway is rapidly approaching,
profi!PIIng~peedway miiJiagement
to !lnlllizl!laeverat tniportant aild!, ·
tlons to ·1'];; •ultra·rnOO!m racing
facility and Its sdlooule.
One such addition IS the compJe.
tlon of a second access road to illld
trom lhe track to accommodate
racers and race fans. A new
sixteen-foot pre-cast concrete
bridge from the back parking lot ·
has been lnstalloo to connect the
facUlty with an existing seiV!oe
road .
This Installation iJ'ovldes two
ways of access to tiE speedway and
hopes to el!m!nate a bottleneckthat
developed on the single, narrow
access route under Interstate 77:
Plans for yet anotiEr access road
are still In the (ianntng &amp;Uige,
Including a direct exit from Inter·
state 7/.
Owners Jim Weigle and Dr.
Rohert Azar, MD have also an·
rnunced plans to reshape the
speedy, nlnety·foot wide turns to
provide more exciting racing action, moving the banking away
trom the Inside rail andfurtiEr bttb
the turn.
According to PromotiOnal Director Dave Ashley, plans have heen .
announcoo tor a Ford Thunderbird
give-away sometime during the

. FOR
.
EVERYONE

St&gt;awr and 9t~!W'r ; Hurst and C'.cd'nan.
W-H\JBI (1·11 , L -&amp;&gt;aver !1·21.

CLEARANCE SAL
ON SUPERSRS

'S~nd · acees8 road being oompleted-

SOM~tHING

er.s In dirt late modelS.
.
.Severa! top syndications have
exP'essed an ltterest In televising
thls eilent, alth\ugh none have yet
been s!gnoo. Negotlatkms are stUI .
In progress.
Another positive aspect has
several major sponsors exiJ'esslng
an Interest lri race sponsorships tlr
· the Immaculate 518 mile c1~. oval ,
Including McClinton Chevrolet,
U.S. Tobaccco, Skoal, Coors Beer,
Ptzza Hut, and 7· Eleven stores.
Negotiations to secure race spon·
sors are also In progress.
WVMS opensltsgates brthefirst
time this season oo May 31- June 1
for the National Truck and Tractor
Pull sponsoroo by N.T .P.A.
The first racing event IS slatoo for
Sunday, June 8 when the STARS
late models Invade the West
Virginia hills llr the "First Annual
Mountaineer Special Olympics 100''
paying $5,1ID to win.
ThiS race drew a record crowd
last season when It was run at the
speedway as the "Hlllbllly 100".
West V!rglnla Mltor Speedway ls
a beautiful, spacklUs speed plant
with hillside seating for 12,11Kl and
pre-cast bleacher seating lor an
add!ti:mal 4000.WVMS IS located on lnterstate·17
at Mineral Wells, W.Va.

....... •tollh- 1.. 51

PalrTil'l'", Agrnltlllrhl'!" (71, Sutl('f (!1'1 11nd

7.

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

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446-3672

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~Financing -:-. 6.9% Fi~ancing •

6.9% Financing I

6.9% Financing - 6.9% Financing ·- ·
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times- Jentinel

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Section
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D.

' April 20, 1 80

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·~iser

CHARJ.,ESTON, W.Va. - Kaiser ~- &amp;· ·
"i believe fabriCated aluminum prices bottomed
Chemical Corp. reported net lncomeofS'I.2"1!1Jlon,or
ollt In the tlrst quarter," he said. "Increases already
· ; i4 cents peroommonshare, !lueto redUced aluinlnum · effective In the marketplace will Improve fabricated
: ·Production rosts and · Jncome received to( Its
product realizations 1n the second quarter, and I'm
::agreement to cancel an energy suppzy contract.
confident that we'll see additional gains In the second
; : ~factors together more than llftllet a stplflcant
haH d. the year because at a better supply-demand
year-to-year decllDe In talirlcatal aluinlnum prices.
balance 1n the Industry."
Mater said he continues to believe the aluminum
• · The compariy had ,a.net 10!11 ol S25,51Nlllon 91' 00
·.. cents per share In W ftrst•quarter ollll85. ·
, · diVIsion will return to profitabUity this year and that
• Sales rose to.$5.1&gt;.7 mllllon ln1the lliMquart«trom~
the ·
1o
·, . $4
. 72 nillllon In the same period last """""··
.
corporal n as a wbole wlll report a profit In 198l.
,_
"We are continuing to make good progress In
· : Chalnnan Cornell C. Miller said tb&amp; ahunlnum
reducing aluminum operating costs, aided by the
diviskm reduced Its ·prt-tax operalkl~ 'bas to $22.1
company's renegotiated contract with the United
•: million In the !l.rst quarter Jnxn S6&amp;.2 inllllon tn lbe
s
rke
: ·. year earlier quarter, even ...,,,.. there wa$ a nlile
teelWQ rs of America and joint management• ....,...
' labOr effects to lower expenses beyond the savings
· : percent year-to-year drOp tn,abrlcated product price
provided by the new contract," he said. "The division
:: realizations. ·
·
·
,
Is illso benefiting from higher production volume,
·

·EmpiM, ''"' ~ 73
geet1, 11 11111 the
~slue lutlsl' in

·

repiitts sales increase in 1st quarter

Noms ·Futnllbln 1 in
lhe OhiD Vel 1g
Tti·Countg ''''·
Ws 'ts ptorlng ·it
•l•:ln -in .Aptil wilh
ftsmendoul bltgslnt

proved an agreement allowing
Wilbur H. Boyd, n of Bradenton
Fla., to acquire the mJ1)0ratkm for
at least $4.9 million annual
shareholders.
John E. Arnold, president o!
Greater Ohio Corporation, said less
·. than tw9 perceqt of the voting
shares were voted In opposttkm to
· thetermsofthemergeragreelnmt.
Arnold said that both parties
must now await approval of !hi!
. agreement by the Federal Home
• ; Loan Bank Board and the Federal
. · :;.tvlngs and Loan Insurance Curpo·
~; ration before continuing with the
: : ~reement. He said he expects the
: ~eement to be completed at the
:: md of the first month folli?wlng
. : tegulatory approvals.
• : Under the terms of IIi! agree·: men!, Boyd will pay at least $4.9
:;.fnllllon tor the corpqratlon. Share· . lnlders wlll receive $1.00 per share
. . in cash, plus a simultaneous cash

end duli.·

Income, 11 any, for the period !rom
Oct.l,l985througlltheclostngdate,
lip to $10l,!MIO In the aggregate. This
could Increase the cash payment up
to $1.633.15 per share.
Greater Ohio Corporation reported net Income of $155,11ill, or
five cents per share, for the. l!rst
quarter of llsml 19&amp;; which ended
oil Dec. 31, 19&amp;'1. Arnold, In Ills
remarks to shal'eholders, said he
expected !¥'rations llr tile second
quarter of 1986, wli(il mded on
March 31, 1986, to result In a small
net loss
so thi! corporation wUI
be marginally profitable for the
!lrst half ct llscal198l.
Sharebo~ were wid that
either party may terminate the
agrecment, 11 tb&amp; merger Is not
dlmpletlll by July, 3l. Arnold said
he hopes regula!Dry approvals can
be secured In time to meet that
deadlllie.
Greater' Ohio Corporation Is

and

GALLIPOLIS - ·Dick Ro!Prta,l\22 Ja,y Drive, has qualified fort he
Vernon Co.'s sales lncentlile tJ'Ip to Kaual, Hawaii.
Since joining the Newton, Iowa·based asWCialty advertising firm
In 1976, Roberts has earned three incentive trips. He reeenUy
qualified again by Increasing his sales volume by aspecl1led amount
during a 12-month contest.
Roberts and his wife, Sally, are parents of two chlldrm, Larry and
Richard,
·

Plartt honors veteran employees
·,

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CHESHIRE - Stacie L. Arnold, unit supmotsor, and James D.
Reynolds, rnalntenahce rrfthanlc·A. both~ at Ohio Valley
Electri~ Corp.'s Kyger c,etk plaltt; received IIM!Iversary awards
·
' for 00 years With the coniJjaJ\y, ptaDt o!flclillllllld.
Arnold joined OVEC !II April 12, 19!56, as a laborer In the
labor-janitor department. Heworkiedfor a slnrt tlmeln the~tdand
maintenance departments aild In June 1958 was promoted to
auxiliary equipment operator In the !¥'rations department.
He was promoted to equipment !lX'rator In October 1971 andtounlt
supervisor in January 1!177. Arnold and his wife, Marda, and
daughter, Jennifer, reside at 43815 Forest Run Road, Racine.
Reynolds went to work tor OVEC as a laborer In the labor-janitor
department on Aprtl 12, 1956. In January 1957 he became a
maintenance helper In the maintenance department, where he
became malnterumce 'mechanlc·A In October 19'18.
Reynolds and his wife, Csrol, reside at 2.ll4 Mount Vermn Ave.,
'
Point Pleasant.

Marketing instructor retiring
HUNTINGTON - Dr. Wllllarn F. Ashford, chairman of the
Department of Marketing at Marshall Unlvetslty's College of
Business, wUI retire at the end d. the current acadel'nlc school year.
A native of Green Bank, W.Va., Ashford earned his bachelor's
&lt;k'gree In business administration In Nand his master's degree In
education 'in 1952, both frofQ West VIrginia University. He receival
his doctorate in business adminiStration In education from Ohio
University In 1970.
He worked In business and indusiry for 12 years before joining the
staff at West Vlrglnla State College in 1961. He Ilea mea memherct
the MU faculty In 1970.
.
Active In the Huntington Shrine Club and with MU athletics,
Ashford was selected as tea~her c1 the year twice and has bft&gt;n Ustw
in "Who's Who In the East"
In "Outstanding .Educalurs In
,j\mertra ."

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New business enters center
ATHENS - SpeciaUzed Timers Inc. moved Into thl' Ohio
University Innovation Center durtng April. Owred by Dr. Robert
CurtiS, associate professor.of electrical englnrerlng, the new film
wUI develop timers for a variety of heavy duty tnduusll1al uses. ·
, The company will conduct early-stage feasibility resrorch,
utilizing laboratortes and equipment In the new Stocker Englnrertng
' Center. Specialized Timers Is expected to call !II marketing faculty
and students to determine thl' market feasibility of its products.
"We're very appreciJtiYt o! tile coopentk&gt;11 we've had from
', , throughout the university in getting this started,~' Curtis said. The
• , firm was chartered as an 0lllo COJ1)0ratlon'ln November 1985.

..

Yeager prugram wins gift
HUNTINGTON - A Charleston oosinessman has contrtooted
• •
· • $5,!XXl to assist in establishing Marshall University's !'oclety of
Yeager Scholars.
Raymond H. Gibson, owner r1 A·1 Rental, wUI be used tohelpwlth
start:up and ~ilting costs for tile Yeager program, said Keith L.
Scott,' vice pres\dentJal for Institutional advanrement.
Gibson earned his bac~'s ctearee In bu~ from MU In 1962.

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License ·tax

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reven~es

are set

COLUMBUS- Ohio Bureau r1 Motor Vehicles Registrar Michael
J. McCull!on said dlstrlbutkill c:i March ilcense tall revenues totallng
$:al,338,198.65 to local governments has been set.
.
Warrant requests in this amount have been sent to thl' state
auditor's office tor preparation. It's anticipated these warrants wUI
be ready for mailing to each county auditor by Monday.
McCuUion noted that Ucense tax funds are a primary source ct
funds for local road lmprovm~ent projeCts.
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.t.
lnuslng market that is being stimulated by lower
mortgage interest rates.
:
Operating results from Industrial and specla~
ch~mlcals exceeded the year-age level, and Mater
sa1d he expects this diviSion "to have a hetter year
than In either 19!fi or 1984 because Its plant ~rating
efficiency is Improved, energy costs are reduced,
International sales and profits are stronger, and a ne~ ·
calalyst for petroleum refining that we've introduced '
has been well accepted."
;
The company's aluminum shipments In the firSt:
quarter of 1986 totaled 205,400 tons, 22 percentabol(e ·
shipments of 168,500 tons In the same period last year.
Shipments in the form pt fabricated products made up
94 percent of the total, about the same percentage as .In the flrst quarter of 1985.
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,_~t~~~~.g~~:.r~~~·~ :·~~

:-Business Briefs:___,

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better product quality, and greater efllctehcy at our
modernized Trentwood rolllng mill; from production
costs that are below the market price r1 aluminum;
from Increased primary metal ootput at oor
cost-effective Valco smelter In Ghana; from bwer
energy costs; and from a program ·to lower Inventory
levels and thus reduce carrying costs."
In consideration for the cancellation of a long-term
gas supply contract; the company received $32.5
mUllan In cash in the first quarter and concessions on
the gas It will use in its Louisiana plan durtng 1986.
Kaiser Development Co., thl' corporation's rea l
·estate subsidiary, recorded a small, pre-tax profit tor
the quarter and Is expected to have good earnings this
year. The subsidiary's residential projects In
southern California and Hawaii are benefiting, and
expect to continue to benefit, from the favorable

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Savings Bank of Tilfln and Findlay.
Arnold told shareholders that
Boyd ~lans to continue to operate
OiL Savings Bank as the primary
subsidiary of the new corporation.
In other octton by the 'sharehllders, thrre directors were
electw to the board for terms
s_(ileduled to run until 1988. They
were Arnold, WUUarnT. Fitzgerald
at Findlay and R. Scott Spriggs of
Columbus. Remaining on the board
of directors are Ralph E. Carmack
of Uhrichsville, James C. Koehler
of Findlay, ' D. Scott Owens of
Canfield, and A.G. Spriggs of
Ironton .
Following the shareholders meetlngthe board of directors re-elected
thefoUowtngo!!tcersofthecorporatton: Arnold , president; Robert K
Johnson of Findlay, vice president;
Ralph C. SCheffer Jr. of Findlay,
.vice president; R. Scott Spriggs,
secretary; Ronald W. Lang of
Findlay, treasurer, and Lana E.
Hutson of Findlay, assistant secretary.

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·NEW LINE - Intemallonal Business Machines
Corp., mired In lite slualsh llllll'kel for makdrame
computen., has unveUed a portable midget penonal
computer, sellln~ for $1,005. 'Ibis new IBM PC

''

Cllllverilble is described as a small, powerfu~ •
easy-t4Hlarry personal computer system ilr people :
requiring fuD·functlon compullng both at and away ;
from their desks. (UPI)

Computer match locates best investor

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By RENEE HAINES
SAN ANTONIO tUPI\ - A
computer matchmaker is wedding
Ideas to dollars on a nationwide
network designed to link entrepreneurs to Mr. Right investor.
Delaine Haskins &amp; Sells, an
lnternallonal accounting and con"
suiting flim headquartered In New
York, recently set up the Capital
Connection. drawing on Its network
of contacts with ventul't' capitalist
and other Investors tllroughou t the
country.
DH&amp;S officers know what kind of
investments these parties want.
Enlrepreneurs who sign up submit
business plans detail ing projects
and how much money they need.
The lnformaiion Is Instantly dis·
patched via computer links to more
than a&gt; 6fflcesacross the country to
see If It comes up a match.
"An enttrepreneur In need of
financing wlll come to our o!!ice
and tell us what kind of financing he
will need," says Judy Shields.
financial consulting manager for a
DH&amp;S office In San Antonio plugged
into ll)e network.
"He might be best suited for
venture capital, or he might want a
leveraged buyout. He might just
need a working capital loan. We

be In San Antonio oc New York, but top of hiS head ," Whitmarsh said: •
"What we told htm Is that before~
there may be such a company in
you
go any further, sit down and• ·
California," she said.
prepare
a business plan," he said.; :
Duane Whitmarsh, partner In
For
a
fee. DH&amp;S will help ~ •
char!J' of the San Antonio DH&amp;S
prepare an exacting- ·
businessman
office, said each office Is responsifor, " she said.
plap
,
but
that
Is not a rondltton
DH&amp;S officers plug that Informa- ble for knowing Its potential
gaining
access
to the network. •· :
tion Into their computers, relaying Investors . .
A
businessman
who walks In wlttt :
"For Instance, here we are
it In a matter of minutes to every
.
a
sound
rosiness
plan can patch' ;
other DH&amp;So!fice using the Capital visiting with the ven ture capl\ai
right
In,
Whitmarsh
said. No ~ ~ ,
Drms to ftnd rut the kinds of
ConnectiOn.
char~d
the
source
d.
capital. • .:
The main networking centers are industries they're Interested in, If
Shields
said
there
are
no Umlta~ :
they have spectftc geographic
In Atlanta. llo!;ton, Chicago, deve!Ions
on
Ideas
"high
tech, Jail.- ·
land, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, . Ioca lions they would or would not
tech
and
no
tech"
are til!{
consider," Whllmarsh said.
Houston, Los Angeles, Miami,
categOries.
•~ :
"TIIere are all cypes of lenders
Minneapolis, New York, Pitts·
Whitmarsh
said
the
fees
are
burgh, San Diego, San Jose, Seattle, looking tor specific types of deals,"
Washington D.C. and Orange he said. It costs the emerging based solely on consulting time, noi .
business a flat $500 feetobe patched on any Jll!rcentage d. any deal. : ;
County, Calif.
Othl'r DH&amp;S o!!Ices, su(il as the In to the network; rut there Is a . "What we lnpeto get rut of this~
the long-term relationship with tlli,
one In San Antonio, .have access to screening process.
company.
Every big com~ ..
"We met with a fellow three
the network through these centers.
started
rut
with an emerging:
"The l;lher offices routinely scan weeks ago woo has an Idea that
company.lf
~·re
theflrstaccouni~
it, like a bulletin board. fou can do sounds good. But at this point, it's
lng
firm
to
·
p-ovlde
professlonllit daily, but Ill a weekly · basis not much beyrnd the idea stage. I
servlces,
we
may
very
well have~:
partners In&gt; offloet. review the asked him how much he needed. He
continuing
client,"
he
said.
output and review t~tr sources In said, 'I'm not sure, maybe a couple
their city. You can visually see the of hundred tiDusanddoUars,' off the
two match up," she said.
"Say It Is a medical equipment
company. Sc what we 're looking for
now Is a company interested In
acquiring a medical equipment
company. That company may not

help him prepare an estimate of
how much he needs and with that
information we can prepare an
outline- his company, the Industry
he's in, the financing he's looking

,or:;

Area personnel file

Steel plant thrills
West Virginia city
which we have a ~1eel employer
coming to our town wanting to
provide new jobs. Where else in the
northern tier I of the rountryl is a
steel employer creating new jobs?
"We'll be getting$1mUHona year
in UDAG funds, that especially In a
tJme when thl' federal trough Is
running dry," DeFebbo said in
reference to the end o! federal
re:venue shartng funds.
Additional growth Is expected If
Nisshln - m~jority owner of the
facility - decides to locate its
rorporate headquarters In FoUans·
bee. Such a decision, expected In
about two weeks, could s por growth
In musing sales while having a
great cultural Impact .. he said.
"We'd be ina nogrowthsltuation
wlthlut the new mill. We'd be
fightin g just t&gt; pay our bUis."
But DeFebbo notes the situation
has lis Ironies.
Wbeellng·Pltt, stilt in reorganilatlonal bankruptcy, owes Follansbee
at least $00,000 in delinquent
Also helping struggling city property taxes and $15,000 In
coffers wUI be an estlmated$126,000 ,delinquent B&amp;O taxes tram Its
In business and occupation taxes
exiSting mill.
durtng thl' construction period and
"It's funny on one hand. We have
Increased revenues from utlllttes. the certainty of the UDA6 money
That money can be used to repair a but we're hard hit right now
deteriorating lnfrastructure and to becauSe Wheeling-Pitt Is In bankadd to services. the city manager ruptcy and can't pay their property
said.
taxes.
"In a time when the tnfrastruc"We're walling tor the IDnanza to
lure of clti!s nationwide Is falling come. We're pretty gu~ ho about
apart and they are having a difficult
It," DeFebbo said, not meaning to
time repairing that; we have t~ make a reference to the current
UDAG fUnds to upgrade and even
mov~ comroy aboui American and
add," he said. "We:re p-obably one Japanese cooperation In an autoof few cities tiJ the Untied States In . mobUe factory.
toLLANSBEE . W.Va . (UPilGroundbreaklng for a .-&gt;5 million
steel coating facilit y is less than two
months away and there's a sense of
excitement rippling through the
small northern West Virginia steel
town, City Manager Kevin De- .
Febbo said.
The facllity represents the land·
mark joint venture of WheelingPittsburgh Steel Corp. and Ntssh!n
Steel Co. of Japan. The plant,
expected to garner nearly $14
mUllan a year for the steel partners,
IJiltlaUy wUI employ 100 workers
and Is expected to generate an
addltlonal200 jobs a t Wheeling-Pitt
!¥'rations In Allenport, Pa., and
Steuhenvllle, Ohio.
About 200 workers wUI gain jobs
through the two-year construction
project and Follansbee will gain
about $1 million a year through the
life ct an $8.7 million Urban
Development Action Grant, DeFebbo said.

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Dr. Mark Chrlslopher

Paul Saaders

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Mark G. completed a l~&lt;u -year fellowship
Christopher, a specialist In in gastroent~rology at the lnspi- .
internal medicine and gastroen- tal. During his fl'llowshlp at St.
terology, has attained diplomate Mary's, he also served as
status In the subspecialty d. clinical Instructor .
gastroenterology from the
GALLIPOUS- A new sa lesAmerican Board ot Internal
Medicine.
man has joined the staff of Stutes
ChriStopher, a member of the Real Estate, 510 Buhl·Morton
Holzer Clinic Ltd. staff slnoe . RoB!~.
Paul San!Frs, a 1981 graduate ~
1~. has been a diplomate with
the boal',d since 1982.
r1 Hannan Trace High School,:
has completed courses at Rio •
A native ot Madras, India, Grande College and Community •
Chrlstophl'r received his medi- CoUege and -the Ohio Institute r1
cal degree from the University Career Technology. He Is presor Madras and wmpleted his ently enrolled at · Marshall '
Internship at the Government University.
He also works with his father
General Hospital In Madras.
He had Ills residency tn 1979-82 Clyde San!Frs, a carpenter. ~ _
at St. Mary's HOilPftal, Roches- and his wife, Lori, are both '•
~
ter, N.Y., and subsequently members of Mlna Chapel.

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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis; Ohio-Point Pleaalt, W.Va.

April 20. 1988

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- D-3

April 20, 1986

Page-D-2

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Tribune- 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675.;133-3

rrhree Meigs dairy herds among four in
Ohio accepted for _federal buy-out · plan
BY CHARLENE HOEF1CH
·'11niM&amp;ntiDel Staff

POMEROY - Three Meigs
County dairy herds are among the
484 In the State of Ohio and 13.~
across the nation accepted in the
recent $1.8 billion federal wbole
herd buy-out plan to cut the USA's
mUk su!1)1us by taking dairY
farmers out of production for the
next t!ve years.
. In Meigs County the herds
accepted In the buy-out program
were those of George and Harry
Holler, Racine area, John Colwell
!( the Vinton community, a ~d
Sherman Henderoon of near Alfred.
As explained by John Rice, Meigs
Crunty Extension Agent, the program will send about a million
dairY cows to slaughter thereby
~clng the mUk surplus by taking
12 billion pounds out of production
each year.
"By 1991, we need to have 25
·percent of our datrymen go out of
the business. Because of new
technology with a resulting In·
crease In production, and based rn
the consumption of milk by the
,-Amerk:an public, we will need this
•to control over production and
~surplus," Rlce said.
: He explained that two technology ·
~ factors are In the picture- one an
.enzyme In the stomach which wUl
:Increase mUk production, and the
a growth hormone which Is
!just coming onto the market. Rlce
'Said that with these two factors It
looks Uke milk production wlll be
)ncreased :YJ to 40 percent on every
~a.~ cow.
• · So with the Increase In producpon per cow starting to go up, we
~ to lose some dairy herds," the
agent said.
: Rice said that the government
noqulres that the cows In the herds
~ccepted In the buyouts must be
branded on the jaw and then sent
~or slaughter.

:second

About .18 percent d the cost d the bid because
ted
buyout wtll be covered by
•
we wan togetrutot
ments Initiated by the 1985a s : the dal!y business anyway."·TotaJ
btu. The other 62 percent d the cost . :;:~t te~ will receive In the
will rome out of the us Tn&gt;asury $2S
aton program Is
but the~ is expected · t~ be some
,OOJ since at the time their bid
balance since without the government buyout, mUk price support
payments would set a record this
year, farm economists contend.
Government purchases of dairY
surpluses a!"!' also expected to be
reduced.
"The baste purpose," according
to Rlce, "Is to keep the price of mUk ·
up by getting some of the cattle out
of production. Once a dal!yman 1s
By SONJA IDLLGREN
accepted he has to stay out of the
UPI Fum Editor
dairy business completely for a five
WASHINGTON
(UPl) - The
year period. That means he cannot
Agriculture
Department
quickly
use his facilities and he cannot
complied
with
a
federal
court
order
permit anyone else to use his
barring
hot-Iron
facial
branding
at
facili ties for dal!y purposes. " Other
dairy
rows
bound
for
slaughter
or
fanning operations such as raising
beef cattle and crops for sale are export under a program to trim
dairY SU!1)luses.
not affected, however.
'
Daniel Amstutz, undersecretary
Acceptance Procedure
of
agriculture, announced eomTo get Into the buyout program,
plllance
Frklay with a prellmlnary
Rlce said (lal!ymen entered a bld
injunction
against requiring hot.
with the USDA. Atotalofl3,988b!ds
Iron
branding.
It was opposed by
ranging from $3.40. to $22.50 per
animal
welfare
advocates
who took
hundredweight of milk per year
the
Issue
to
court.
were accepted.
The annourx,ement said, "The
Asked whether this was a highly
amended
brahdlng lnstroctlons wUl
profitable situation for dairymen,
allow
producers
to choose the
Rlce explained that for some of
alternative
ol
freeze
branding."
them, especially those dal!y
Michael
Fox
of
the Humane
farmers who were planning to go
Society
of
the
United
States said,
out ol the business anyway, lt really
"This
Is
one
of
the
things
I've been
has helped, and suggested that the
pushing
for
the
last
six
weeks."
thl"!'e Meigs Cowlty farmers might
· Fox said another alternative,
be considered in that category.
Indelible
dye, would be less costly
Asked about how bid prices were
and
easier
for farmers, but he said,
arrived at, Rlce described 1t as
"fl'l'("Ze
branding
Is intinltely
"!"!'ally a gamble." He said dal!y·
humane
than
hot-Iron
branding."
men had no Idea of what kind of bld
to put In and that his office advised
On Wednesday, U.S. District
them to consider their net worth Judge Michael 'felesca, In Roches·
and loss of Income In setting the bid. ter, N.Y., Issued the InJunction,
The Halters said that their bid saying the government lalled to
was 9.99 per hundredweight ct mUk consider less painful ways to brand
that they didn't put In a "great b~ l.ffi mlltion cattle to be slaughtered

' mUking
accepted they wete
only 24 cows, having earlier been
enroUed ·1n a dal!y diversion
program which had already reduced their herd. The dal!y has
Continued on D-8
w~

Public Notice

11 Help Wanted

mor:

..

... to

Pllrt-tlme. f\111-tlml repr .... tl·
1tv1 nMdld. Educetlonellllll.

Coli 304 ·882-2488 for
.polntrr.nt.

P.-ttlme lll"tllmii'IIO .....-nbll
tnd ._.II e 30 b l!iDn for hlrrn
tuppt, tlor1. 404-818-9948 or
write Ptnny Shephard. 1322
Colony OriYI, Mtrlenl, a•.

30017.

You'll Find C04~1 ....vin
In The Classifieds

I

BRANDED- Georce and Hany Holter !tand with~ row rrom their
Hol!teln herd which bas been branded on the jaw marking it for
slaughter. Aooonllng to rules rJ. the buy-oot dairy program, this mllltlng
parlar cannot he use,d for five years by tile Hollers or anyooe else.

9

Will tenninate rule in August
WASHINGTON (UPil - A
federal rule that can lbnit the
amount of red tart cherries sold
commercially wUl be terminated at
the end of August because a slim
majority of growers voted to end lt.
Agriculture Richard Lyng justl·
fled his action last week because 51
percent of growers voted last
month to end the federal marketing
order established In 1971 under
authority of a 19371aw that permits
farmers to set rules for marketing
crops.
The order authorizes an annual
lbnit on the quantity of cherries that
can be sold. The remainder of the

$AVE

Sharp drop in

crop Is processed as fi'07.en cherries
and set aside In farmer- financed
pools durtng overproduction.
The order regulates cherries
grown in eight states. The prime
growing states are Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and New
York. A smaller number r:i growers
live In Ohio, Virginia, West VIrginia
and Maryland.
Termination will be effective
Aug. 31 "to avoid undue disruption
and provide the Industry with the
opponunity to phase out · the
program through the current growIng and harvesting season," Lyng
said.

.lelephone calls wBI be aecepted. AU contesl entries
should be llln¥ld In to the newapaper ~ by f p.m.
each Wethsda,y. In case of a tie, the lntlvldual whose
leiter has the earlle!ii pot1trnar11 will be declarftl the
winner. Next week, a Gallla County fann 11'111 he
featured by lhe Galla SoD and W_. Com!erva&amp;n
Dlsirlct. Willner of the lint conteal
lS Will Lym
Rees, Rio GrMide. 'l'IJe 11\)'stery !ann bl 'o8ged to
Carl (Stub) Winters, located near lbe lntenecllon of
State Route 3il and Rt. 5M In Raccoon Twp.

Apro

~g leader promises
~.2.5 million for plan

•

:: wAsHINGTON (UPI ) - A
promotion to help restore fautng
~ports of canned frolt is · the
Agriculture Department's fourth
export Initiative unveiled last week.
· Agriculture Sec!"!'tary Richard
~. before departing on a ,
tpur-day trip to France to get
acquainted with European Community offlctals, said promotion of
CJmned peaches and fruit cocktail 1
would help counter subsldlzled EC .
!)icports to Japan and Taiwan.
'
.; Lyng promised $2.5 mlUlon for '
ihe plan -to be carried out by tre
Agriculture Department's Foreign
~iculture Service with the Call·
temla Cling Peach Advisory Board,
liihlch bas cooperated with the
!l(lVemment on export promotion
pfOgrams since 1964.
this week, he announced
PJUffiOUons lor California and
Arizona citrus, raisins and walnuts
•4 counteract EC trade policies.
• Lyng said exports of canned
j.(oaches and fruit cocktail were $31
fQDilon In 1984-85, Ies s than 40
~rcent of the level five years
efl'Uer. He said the promotion
~ld help U.S. Industry regain .
SIIIJie lost sales.

:Also

~~~~~~-~ r. r" ''
Hilmi•

RIVER
•

FARM SUPPLY
GAIWGliS

8 A.M. TO 6 P.M. MOliDAY THIU SATUIAY

. •YIINI GUll

unn t~Di'a·,
. - "UU. POl__.___.
"SERVICE TO THE TAt-COUNTY AREA"

12

Situations
Wanted

W~nted junk 1Utos. C1ll 114-

388-9303 .

Buying delly gold, tllvtf coiu,
ringe. jewelry, n•llngwlfe. old
coln1, lqe currtncy. Top ptl·
oes. Ed. Iurieen Barber Shop.
2nd . Avt. Mkldlepon, Oh. l14-

II'* hoe work. '25 . per hour.
Enquire 11 •ttlon ecrou from
M110n Chy Fire Dept.

Unci f~htqueriumlftdacc•.o ­

Wented to do • odd jobs. IIWn
ft'l)wtng .,d ttc. CtM 304·875-

Will do blbylittlnt In my horne .

992-347e.

CoD 114 -882·11121.

rl•. Coli 114-941·2903 .

11119 lfter
.,.,den,

llliPIOYilll'lll
S1:rV 11:1:s
Help Wanted

f~m~l• Cock•

to uivo - .. .,

Call 114-812·

Model417·8

4 pm. Ask for

YOU GOTTA GET A GRAVELY!
Now every Gravely 8000 Se1ies riding tractor and ·
5000 Series 2·wheel tractor comes with SQrnething
extra: A 5-YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY.*
Gravely engineering makes it possible. We
build tough tractors with all-gear direct drive for
non-slip power and the full selection of versatile
attachments you need to take on the
biggest lawn and garden jobs. For the professional look you want ·- and the longest
warranty available ·-- you gotta get a Gravd j.
~~~~~

I

GRAVELY SYSTEMN

"I'm part of the system. I make it work7'

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE.
MAiliNG IOUSH-OWNEI

204 Condor Str11t

Po1111roy

992-2975

Buaine•
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY P\JBLISH·
lNG CO. rtCOrnntendl ltl1t you
do bulin•• with peoplti vou

know. 1nd NOT to Mnd money
throuF tht mtll ~til you heve
invlltlgat.t the offering.

Optn I dacount t.dllt epp.r.t
lforeaelllng , 1000 top bnnds 1t
20% to
btlow regulll' retail .
•21 ,!175 ~cllld4o fllloiOI, inwntory.
Rlppll•. and
more . AU merchandil• Ia currtnt. first ca~lllty . FrM brOctlurt.
Ctll Bob WtiYif' 1 · 404· 418-

eo"

••ln-.g.

Wonderful il· horM CAf'MI'. No
6nv ... ment . Call collet 304-

CARD OF THANKS
The ft1111ily of leoN I. Stelllrt wolild like to express
our heartfeH thinks ., all
of our flmily, friends end
nli&amp;hbot1 for all of 1111
Pf1Y"S, kind WOlds. flow.-s, food.' cards, and other
expressions of love durin1
our time of sorrow.
Special thanks to Rev. WilliiiQ liddleswarth. Ewilc
Funeral Home and the pallbearers for their help and
kindness.
God bless each and every
oneof you. You will never
be foraot1en .
Oau;tter, liula Stewart;
sister and brother-in-law.
Leola and Jol\n Keek.

CARD OF THANKS
We, the family olllarjo·
rie K. Sa111tlers, wish to
thar* ill whd helped in
any way d11inc ow time
of sorrow. 1he food,

rials and .lhouchtftJ.

S6Q0
OFF

21

.,J*Yiso,..

flowers. cards, memo·

UP TO

f tlldi!Cicil

menege toy demonltretort.

ness were aN appre·
cialld, alii especially
the pn1)'81S, both dill~
her recent illness and
her death. A special
thar*s to De111y Cobtrn
for his comforti~
110rds and also to Freddie and J~n Wood for a
~ice 581Yice.
God Bless You All.
Jim Sa111dtrs

Sue Jeffers
ind
Evelyn Smith ·
and Families

731·1330.

Moving Selt: B' tofe. tnd tlblll,
11mp1. boOkCIH, bldfoom ..,.
he, 1 full-llze bed, 1 twin bed.
dinette w·lllf I•• thtn 1 y.,r
old, 19" Z.ntth color 1V (Peel·
ltnt condition), 10 drtw'r
dr••• chlld't ''Utde Tyk.•"
piCJttc teble tncf dde, Cere l•tr

blcydo II", 1\o\'Chllotmootroo

33482.

1""" 1 tlmo). 2'14" 11'"· For

C438.

The Down Und• R111lwtnt It

tilling eppticationt for
u:per..,Cid full service welAppty In penon whh
ofjobhiltcry. PI••· I'D
phone calla.
-,-------Euy Al•mbtv World 1800.00
per 100. OutrMtNd peyment.
No •PtrltnOI-NO ..Itt. 0.11111
und ttlf·add,..lld Nmpld
tnvelopt: Elen VItal · 711, 3418
Enterprise Rd. Ft. Pierce, Fl.

now

tr•-·
,...,me

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS·Refln.,ce to
low fixed rttt. U1tequttytor1ny
"upou. Llldlf MOMCIIDI Co.,

814-592-3051 .

32 Mobile Homes

.................... --- ... ....... .
FIN M1rkttlll Curl-r"e bwn, 2
miJII out Sand Hill Roed . Mey 3
111d • ·· Wilt t1k1 1nd went
con,.nrnents. for more intor·

-EA_S_V_A_B_BE_M
_B
_L_V_W
_ O_AK- t

Window Tinting . Auto.

mollon ..n304-S71·3128 oltor

1:00"" 304-tJ75-3815 .

Coli 814·441-8341.

Wanted To Buy

UMd cars.

Jim Mink Cttev.-Oktt Inc.

,

8111 Oen• Johnton

B14-44e-3172

2

In Memoriam

Wright Well SMYice . WtQUiran·
... w1ttr or no cast to you. Catl

114·742-2141.

1-105-i!B7-eooo e... R-8805

for current fld•ellilt.

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,

WANTED :

rtd ilcoVIf your plano 'a bell.l1tful
tant, call todey, Warda Kty-

Prior Mllltory SOIVIco

1-1100-142-311'9.

9

OPENINGS AVAILABLE lOlling
Merrl Mec's guerentltd toyt.
glft1 tnd hom1 dlcor hltma. No
lnv•tment. diiN.,ing or col·
tlctlng. Ycur own houra. Cal

304-tJ75-,tl758 "' 1-100-!513·

110n.

·

~~f~

304-S75-t5100 or e7., .

SHELTON POOL CO . . Swim·

mlng Pool S1in · ln11elletlans -Repelra . Your lrlllftdly pool
bulld•a. BuHeto. W . VII. 304-

837-2471.

Hou• Painting, indoor or out·
door . NUonlble pdcM, Phon•

304-S75·1242 or. 11f,J193'
N03.

Rr.;1l Eslole

3 Announcements
31

-NOTICE-

BOB BILL LEE

On His Birthday
1will aiwllys rtmtmbtt you.
You helped 1111 in monr woys.
You wtt'l thtre to moh me
happy
On nry sad, lonely days.
1will aiwlys 11mombt1 you.
And tht Frlondship that we
· sllarad.

MEN&amp;WOMEN
17-82
TRAIN NOW FOR
·CIVIL SERVICE
EXAMS

Homea for Sale

4 bedroom hou ... flrepiKe, 3
mt eouthoiOallipoUt. 129.900.
Cell d•v• 114-441·1115 or
IYtnlnll' 814·441·1244.

7 ooomo ll both. 1 ocro mooo or
looo. coopotod thoouahooL vinyl

skiing •21,000. 12 N. MtlnSt.,

Choohl&lt;o. Collll4-448·3793.
G.ED. A•allable If Needed Qovorn-t homoolrom 11 . tU
Positions Start As High As ropolrJ. Aloo doliqoont "'poop·

$9 :22 HOUR

.

Those lona summer days,
And how duply you coiod.
1 will alwlrs remember you
In 111 thotl do.
Forthe&amp;ood times we've hod
And all we'vt bton thfouch.
1 will alwlys r1111111btr you
l'tnlllrt by 111wall can 111.
1111111 YIMI ID IIUch ,
You Ml'l 10 IIIICillto me.
Renee' Russell

cO nvner-

clll. mldentlll. 1 ·u trtlrnatll.

Government Jobt. •18 .040 •e8,230-yr. Now Hlllng. Col

Memb.-a. The Army Ouerd
nHda yourexperilnot. Join nDW
for 1 Pl11-tlme tob wfth btntfltl
lltl1 retlr~m~nt 1nd lductdonll
••l•t.,OI. 304-175·39150 or

1 POST OFFICE

• CLERICAL

..GH,.-41112 too inlormotlon.

C1ll 801·117·4000 ext.

8p1Mus 4 bedroom In 1own,

• MECHANtCS • INIIPECTOiai,,l 2\-\ bet.h , gen~~~~e•• much mote.

____

__

Coli 814-448-2174
... 184,100.
1ft
...::__
AIHomoFol--lfr-1
or 8:00 Wllkdi!Y•·
w

~--

"..,~Joe

·...,...,...

3.04-896-3363 .

REDUCED EXTRA NICE HOME
- 3 bHrooms, retctv to move
Into . Centre! air, pool-dsck,
chain 6nk fence, garden plot.
Lots of extrsa. Call afler 5 p.m.
and weekend•. 304 -176-72111 .

7672 tiii:OO 01 e14-448·1122 ·
oltor 1:00.
1Y, atorl ... 4 · 15 bdu, 2 btith1.

flroploco. lull booo'l.14o20 bldg.
with Jar1g1 Of'l 8 .1 ICNI.
LoCIIt
i1 Rio Orenda. Cal
1114· 2415-15197 lftet" 15.

•ft•

New, never occuplad 3 br, 2 ful
b.tha, flllllly roam, 2 CIJ uereu~.:_
No mlln11n1nce. lrlcb &amp; vinyl'
uterior.CA. Gu hMt. leroa
shaded lot w -pl1r1ty ot privacy.
Circle Drive nqr Holrer Hospl·
tal. All for 1159 ,000. 814-445·

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALEI. 4 MI.
WEST. GALUPOUS , AT 35.
PHONE 814·448-7274 .

1979 14a70 Schult wtth p .
pando, 3 bedroome, 1 111 bltha.
fireplace, · hilt pump, dedi.,
ewnlng , undlflllnning.
814--

C."

241-titSU.

·

1-'•70 F"tW1I, 2 bdr ., 2 fUll
blth1, Iota of closlta, utility
room, AC . Call 114-«8-11241
anytime.

Mobllt· Manufactured Homn
For 1111. Consider 1 r•clalmld
hcn.I•&amp;OOduwnendtalceo'llef
peymtnta. Daliw•red he. "IU
Pttrlot 1 4JCI8 thr. . bedroom
1187 per month . W1haY1mor.i
Mid Ohio Finencllll llf'VIce.

800·821-0762 .

Two hOUIII, on1 extra lot.
Reuonlble. 3711 Bitch ·Strut.
Middleport. Ohio. Call814-992-

3227.

Good lot, 3 bedroom, In Pomeroy. Carpeted, A.C ., n•mode4ed,
beHment, 9 per c..,r finance,

2967.

8o Auction

025.100. Coli 614·992-2602.

Jey Dr. 3 BA ; LA, kitchen·
dlnlng, 1 111 bath , UT RM . 2 ear
ger~ge, gu hlet, CA . 814· 441·

II room with bllth on N•laon Ad.
Rutland . Out of high w•ter.
Quiet 1r11. Reidy to move into.
Cell Bill Williamson 614·742·

. 2007.

B11utlful brick ranch. 3 br's. 2'11
btthl, flmlly room with flrt·
plact. 2 ear g~ragt. 8 mil• from
town. Cell lt4·"8·0388 .ttlr
B PM .

12 year old I room hauM with
d•dl: , ebove ground pool, IIIII·
lite dlah, woodburnar, aconomi ·
cal to heat. 2 Plua acr11 naa1 to
Sheds Rivlf' Fomt, t36 .000.
514-887-3278 tf1tr 8 :00
pm.

Stttlt 111111. 3 BA rtnch, 2
bath, flr-,lacl, lllriQI, D11lra·
bl• Gellipollt 1111. Walle to
school or town. Hilltop view.

c.u

Llree 2 1torv home. Full beH·
ment with wood fum ace and fuel
oil furneca. ctrport, picnic 1hef·
ter, trailer hook -up. Approx . 1 ·2
ICrll. In DtliiJtr, '28,600. Call

ThrM bedroom hom~ . Lergelot.
Price rtduced . Csll 814-441-

611·742-2B32.

7 room hou11 In Ch11ter, Ohio.
Prlct reduced . t28.600, Call

vinyl aiding, lnauletld, fenced-In
bid&amp; ytrd , 11.orag1 building,
clo11 to achool1. Show by
eppointment only. Call 814-

814-986-3571 .

Ou1lnt older home on Vine St . In
Recine . 3 bldroomt, beth. li'lling
room, dining room, n.w kitchen,
appillnc:et Included, new csrpet,
wallpaper . curt1in1 . Pric1 :
t315,000 . Phone : 614 · 949·

4 bedroom home torula. Good
Hunting tnd good filhlng . Ctn
be negotil1ed wlth ownlf". C•ll

2540.

614-985-4382

8

Public; Sale
8o Auction
111~---...:======;;;;;;;;;;;...

~···FARM

___

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

From Gallipolis, take Route 141, tum left onto
Route
turn right onto Patriot Cadmus Road .
Watch for stgns.
looking for merchandise? Try the Patriot Auction ·
Barn! We have all types of new and used merehan· ·
dtse :-appliances. furniture . antiques and collectors 1tems. Something for everyone!
SAlE EVERY SATURDAY at 7:00P.M.
.
.
Door Prizes Given Weeklw
.
Cons1gnmtnts accepted from 1:00-5:00 p.11. on Saturday.
Have something you want to sefl7 Cootact ll111in Welle- ·
meyer. Auctioneer. Atraneements for pickup service available.
·
·
Barn and Auctioneer available for Public Auctions oo con- .
tract. Contract includes hauling and transportine all
merchandise.
Resident and Business Auction Service also milable.
Ma~1n Wedemeyer-Auctioneer

ns ..

614/245-5152 -- 614/388-8249
OTHER ACTIVITIES:
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT, COUNTRY IIUSU~ SI«&lt;W
ClOGGING &amp; SQUARE OANC£
APRil 25 , 7:30 P.ll. 'FEATURES:
Jill RHOOES &amp; THE MOUNTAINEER BlUEGRASS BOYS

'"'1

AUCTION
SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1986
10 :OO A' M'

location: Cornina !ram Po ~~~troy. OH. turn rich on Georces
Creek rl&amp;ht before Green Gables. Sale4\\ mi. out 111 ri&amp;llt.
From Holzer Hospital. take 160 toward Gollipolls, tum left
on Bulaville Porter Rd., 2 tni. ri&amp;lll 111 Georps Creek, sale
I mi.
OWNER: HAROLD FUNT (llttirina from flrnine Business)
Th• followina will 111 sold atauctlon: Massey Ferguson 175
diesel tractor in ~cellent condition, 165 Massey Ferguson in
good conddion, M.F. No. 12 hay baler, 9 ft.lransportdisk,lntemational manure spreader, hay rake. N.J. one row cornpicker, J.D. hay wagon lactory built wagon bed , M.F. 2 row
corn planter, 12 inch post hole di~er, 3 Jt. hitch seeder-sp·
reader. 2 botlom turning plows, like new 1 ft. Rotorie hay
mower · mowed 4 acres, NEW 3 ~t. hilch wood splitler.
McCulloch chain saw, B H.P. rototiller, J.O . corn chopper
(needs repair), weed eater, western sadd~ . dishwasher, very
litlli misc. items.
BE 011 nME, TWO TO THREE HOUR AUCTION
(All machinery used last
yur and field rudy). Not
~esponsible lor accidonts
or loss·of property.
Terms: Cash or Approved
Chock
Auclioneer-Lon Neal
614-li7·1101 .
ht Thursday Eve .. 5:30 p.m.
Safe, Rt.
mi. from Porter, Oh.
3, 1986 Sat.. 1:00 P.ll ., 75 Cars &amp; Trucks to be
llonacmtry, W. Va.
17th Sat., 50 Cars &amp; Trucks to 11ctionat Dunbar, W.
misc. items, Clllrles Ave. (Now bookina sales for

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1916

10:00 A~M.
located 5 miles west of Centervilt (Thurtnln)and 3 •
miles east of Oak Hill on State Route 279. 1he fol·
lowing will be offered:
5 room lrame home with ba th and full basement, forced air
fuel oil furnace, with one acre mil, 300' road frontage
dr illed well and paid water tap. Also 9 acres m/1 with a 29:
right-ol-way will be ollered if house and lot are sold . The
property will be sold subject to owner confirmation. if both
properties m confirmed sold by !he owner separately, then •
the two propert ies wrll be offerrlf as me un it and then sold •
whichever way yield the g1eate1 returns. Termon the prop- :
erty are 10%d~wn and balance rue upon delivery rJ deed.
Th e property Will oo sold at approximately 11 :30 a.m. Please
contact the owne1 for an appointment to •iew the property.
FARM MACHINERY: 8 N. Ford tractor (good con d~ionl. 5'
K rn ~ Kutter bush hog, MF 1' mowing machine, 024 Stihl
chatn sa w, western sadd le &amp; !Jidle, 5 HP tiller, lawn Boy
weed eater, deh orners. clamps, corre-a-longs, lumber
socket set. R.R jack, pulleys, paint sprayer, one large lot,;
good hand tools and many other good farm items.
HOUSEHOLD: Refrigerator, deep freeze picnic table table &amp;
chairs, and m1sc. items.
'
'
Terms: Cash
.
JUNE HUFF. OWNER - 682-6944

Auction conducted by: Cantury 21 , Southern Hills Roal
Estale. Inc. l' •..,.••

•..

. ~,

?

~-·"""

tjj

Not

Lee Johnson
AUCnONEER
Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740
lor accidonts Of loll of

Setvic;es

....... PfPieiilii.nf .....
&amp; Vicinity

Profe~sio-nal

23

Information 1&gt;41111 cal lob at . 1714.00 ptr 100. Ouertntlld
114·318-1400. ~~~- 8·9 Poymonl. No o-. DotoNo.
PM.
hnd •.mptd envelope: Elen·
8847, 3418 Enterprise, Ft.
Piorco, Fl. 334a2 .

We Pl'f cPh for le"' modtl clttn

'5-yeor au:Jmut/y applits Wwll~rl''"' ' 14M' only. WarronJy may wry dePtndJrtg 11'1 tquip mct~t p1m hu.'o~rl tHt J

~:t,n:;,E..=~ ~:ll

Dret m Job tor mothlft ,
INCh . .. perty pl., dl..lf't,
Hou11 of Uoyd now hiring
to ldvertil1, hlr. . nd

....... Giil1Tpolis......... .

Smell dawn peyment. will alii on
ltnd FonlriCI:. Call 814-4411·

992-2012.

wll .... f ..

Quality built 11/t 1torv Tudor
1tyle home on l5 wooded Ktll,
10 minutn from Point PleiUnt,
Send Hill Road. tea.ooo.oo.

5 roomt, beth, utility garage, 4bedroomhouae, 1907N . Maln
aluminum aiding. 1torm win · St. 2 bedroom haute. 2207 Oak
St., 4 bedrocm house 2324
dowa. doort. centrel heat.
Uncoln Ave., Point Pluunt, W.
condhlon. 114-992· 5204 .
v•. 304·87Pi -2130.
MUST SELL: House, 17 acn11.
tJCtrll on outlldrta of Rutlend . Nice two 11orv. 4 bedroom , 2
Will negotiate . 114 -742-3006 . llvingroo ma, kitchlen , dining.
bath and car port. Rtclne, Ohio.
3 bldroomt , 2 full bath•. 032,000.00. 614-247-3622 .
equipped kttchen. 2 Clr carport.
In SYrecute. Clll614 -992· 7286 , VJ a1ory hou1e. Fl11rock ., ..,
30't . 304-676-4008.
4:00.

3 bdr. In town, good locttlon.

Dot10n Tr11 Service, fr" nti·
mltll . 304-&amp;78 -2897.

114·448·!11135.
un-.,.... snw• 111-o Ill&lt;&gt;- .,;d lown
mo- ropol•. 304-875-1513.

4 -215 -81. Equel Opportunty
Employtt.

Chester, Ohio -:- (614) 985-3301

114·3B8·B477 or 114-388·
8515.

17 Miscellaneous

::n
,. . .
:'::;!r•.

45840. Doodllnolor Ifill._,..,

BAUMLUMBER

Govemment Hom" from t1 (U
rtP~~ir) .
Also delinquent C.Jl
property. Call 1 -805·887 ·1000
EICt . OH-9805 for Information.

In Middleport, 3 t.droom remodeled hoiN. Air condttlonld,

Anne
1114·448·
0820 . MH
Ret•HeHI'(.
, referenoea
on

Eby, BockoyoCommunltySorvl·
coo, P.O. a.. eo4.Joo:koon, Oh

Check wl th us ~fore you buy anywhere t

2 or 3 b.clroom IQ. Ieitch., S.
livlngroom. CJII hill a wood
burning ltove, 3 11or~ge build·
lngt. located 1 city block from
niW' city pool. 1crott atrHt from
lite of new golf courH. CaM

2897.

,_,IT'll

We oHer no fancy giveaways or gimmicks, /ust ci
great product of a good honesf prfcef

9248.

Coiii14-441·03BB oltor 5.

Going IO'"'PIIce1 You go· I'll to
my ln your hOme or dropi1 dllty
to t.ed your pMI, Wllr pllntt.
tet new~pep•s &amp; m.U. C1ll

Polltlan avellable: Twa perttkne positions htlllble It en
lnt8rmldlete Cllfl fecillty for
-p-toHy d-lod "'""'
in CllllllpQ!Is. loth positions
,-.quirll!l e high IChool dtgr•.
we lid drtv_. a H&lt;*'• 1r1d aood
ctlvlng record; mutt be teH
motlvetld end hne good
problem-aolvk'lg tkllla, good
writing tWill• .,od intlrp•IOftll
oldlto Md good hooooiiMPinl
1111111. Ablltty
wort
vlt.t needed; upertence in
worldng wtth per10n wtth mental r ...rdltlon 1nd dwllopmtntol lloobiNtl• p-ofo.,od.
(1, Conwnunlty Service Worker:
35 hollro·wook: IPM · 12
midnight, Sund.·ThuN .: lelary:
14.21 tl:lur.
12) Rollo! Hcxt~omoo"'l"' 34
houri-week; IIYI In, Wllktndl:
IPM Fridoy-tiPM Sllf\doy; So·
lery: •4 .10 hour.
Stnd
lndlcadng whk:h
polltion opplylng lor to: Robin

eo

70a100 lot. 1!h ttoryhouae. 3to
4 b«&lt;rooml, dilhwasher. double
rtnge 11ove. ru•v c1rpeted.
wood tnd cotl burning ttova.
Close to school and hospital.
t25,500. Col 514·992·6080 .

Urge 3 bdr. hou11. 3 milt from
town, 2 full b ..ht, CA. gu hut
prl~ reduced. Cell 1114-245·

3427.

.10.00 ,., .... 38B-8810.

1 Card of Thank•

FEATURES INCLUDE:
t7 HP twin--cylinder Kohler
engine • 8-Speed Uni-Drive ·•
transa•le • Tach-a-matic ·•
hitch system • Eleclric anachment lift • Chrome hubcaps /
.muffler • "Go" indicator lights •
Halogen headlights •15 amp
Charging system • 15" Steer·
ing wheel• Delu•e seat •
Hourmeter • Voltmeter •
Structural steel frame
• Pinion &amp; sector steering

$425

CAll SIIVE AIL YOUI Gilli-G _.S

304-S75·C438.

Wanted : 1 goat, willing to pay

Allllll llll l:l' IIII! III S

With 48" Mower Included!
(42" Mower Available)

5

BULK SERVICE NOW AVAIL~Bl;E'

llby stn• nlldtd Hendenon
•11, flutble hour~~, phone

22B2 .

ourr•t flderellilt.

Gravely's S·~Year Warranty
is Just One of M-any Reasons,

ONION SOS - SEEDS
FERTILIZERS - EARLY PLANTS
FULL LINE OF. FEEDS
BAG &amp; BULK

Wom1n to lwe In wlth eldlriy
!my. Som1 cooking end light
hou11 keeping. Carl for ttml
in'lllld. Out of town rwkl~ct .
Smokers ntld not apply. Mud
hav• V)od rlfenncet. ltnd
r•ume to Bole 18, c . . Point
Pl,eunt ReglltM, 200 M1ln St .,
Point Plllt.,l W. V1.

18 Wanted to Do
B05·1117·1000 oxt. A·45S2 f0&lt; J-- - - - - - - -

SEED POTATOES
PONTIAC
$
KENNEBEC
~:350
so11.' uG

304·175·3214 o«or 5:00PM.

Ave .. Ollllpollt . Cell 114-441-

[II

~THE

COBBLERS

Pl1111nt. Fl1xlbl1 wHkday
hDur1, rM'IrlriCII required . CAll

Wanted To Buy

11

$3599

fanners expenses

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mv~tery !ann,
; fealurecl.by lhe Melp SoU and Water Conservation
: D111rict, is localed somewhere In Melp Qlunty . .
• _Individuals wishing lo )IBrilclpate In the weekly
come.~ may do so by gu1.'88111gthe !ann's owner. Just ·
.:.mall. or drGp oil your guess to the DaJI,y Smtlnel, 111
~:Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45'781, or to the GaUipolls
;..T rbme, 825 'l1llrd Ave., Ga!Upolis, Ohio, 45631, and
··YOU can win a $5 cash prize lrom lhe Ohio Valley
:J.'uljl8hlng Co. Leave your name, address and
;::telephone nember with your card ..- letter. No
•

•

Blbylinlf nlldld In our home
tor I Ytlr Cltd girl In Pofnt

TOP CASH paid lot '13 moHt
lfld n.-vtr UMd can. lmhh
Buick-Ponti-c, 1911 hattm

ONLY

prices might cut

~

Ull lutOITIItiC mmti'lg

milCh-. •• II dlya week, live on
preinl._ or nMr by. Appty In
,..,..,.., Pt. Pit. Job Service, 220
Shlth 8t, Po-.t PIHt.,t, W. VI.
NO PHONE CALLS.

&amp; Vicinity
'~

Hames for Sale

for Sale

GOYiml"'''lnl jobl •111,040 ·
•&amp;9. 230 yr. Now hiring. Call

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Asharp
drop in oil prlces might cut
fanners' expenses by $1 billion to$2
bUllon this year.
The Agriculture Department, In
Its monthly agricultural outlook
summary ~ued last week, based
the small bit of good news In the
midst of the !ann crlsls on a
proJection of a 20 percent to 30
percent decllne In gasoline and
diesel prlces this year.
The summary said farmers spent
$7 bUilon, or 5 percent of their
product!on expenses, on fuel and au
last year.
The department said a decline of
5 percent to 15 pe~nt In prices for
· feed grains, wheat and soybeans
would reduce expenses for livestock and poultry producers. But net
returns are still below levels of the
1970s.
Feed accounted for 20 percent ol
cash costs ol producing grain·
fattened cattle last year.

31

Homes.for Sale

Bomeon• to Cite for uttl1 tnd

Agriculture officials
rescind hot-iron facial
brand requirements
or exported.
Telesca said the government was
arbitrary and capricious 1n chaos·
1ng hot-Iron branding because
branding by freezing a mark on the
skin causes less pain to cows and
would accomplish the government's objectives.
The case was brought to court by
the local Humane Society.
At the hearing, Justice Department lawyers argued hot-Iron
branding was the ooly way Agrlcul·
ture Department oft!clals could
make sure cows destined for the
slaughteroouse or export are not
sold to other milk pr-oducers.
Amstutz said the government can
no longer noqulre hot-Iron branding,
but If a farmer chooses that
method, he should use an electrical
thermostatically controlled brandIng Iron tn reduce accidental Injury
to animals.
Amstutz extemk&gt;d the deadline
for completing branding until May
6.
The dal!y program stUl faces a
court challenge from beef producers, who argue that slaughter
should be staggered to ease a
negative bnpact on beef prices. A
hearing Is set l:lrTuesday In federal
court In Lubbock, Texas.

31

Write &amp; Include Pho'ne No.

II acrea. 3 br. brick home.

Notioool Troioitla SIAico, loc.
lOX T.33 ln.Ca;,; of•
.•
GaiNpols Daily Trllt11e
125 Jrd bL
Gc!INpolls, Oh. 45631

r. Kvuor Croolo School
Dlotrlel. •49.000. Cotl e14·
31?.:?231.
3 K-. I belt., firoploco. 247
:.:r.'fa~ Rd. Coil 114·
locoood

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, APRIL 26r 1986
10:00 A.M.

This is the personal property of the late Theresa
Fisher.loc:ated east of Pomeroy, Ohio on St. Rt.l24
in Minersville, Ohio at Ashland Bulk Plant, take Mi·
nersville Rd. (Co. Rd . 403) to first road on right
(Dutchtowli' Rd .).
.
'ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
1865 Victorian walnut dresser w/mar~e insert · lruil leal
drawer pulls &amp;wishbone mirror , Victorian hand carved over
7' high back bed , 1920 laney apple carved dresser. 1930
complete smoking stand w/5 ash pieces, lot rJ Fiesta ware,
round table, misc. Carnival &amp; cut glass dishes, Me~a china
tea set. quilting lrames, stands, !!lise. glass baskets, chest
and othe ritems.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Unico relrogerator, Frigidalfe electric range, Kennme dryer.
concltiJ, Zen ith color portable TV, rocking chairs. stands,
kitchen table &amp;misc. chai rs, Hoover 111rtable washer,lamps,
pictures, dishes, pots, pans, all kinds ol eleclrical app li·
ances, dresser, chest ol drawers, bed , coHee &amp; Bld tables,
Sil verstone med. ~ ze cord organ, electric sewin gmachin e,
misc. lawn cha1rs. lu ~~&amp;age, and lois more.
"REAL ESTATE BY PALMER REALTY"
Situated in the Township ol Sutlon , County ol Meigs and
State of Ohio, con taining 63/100 acres, more or less. save
and except the coal in and under all~ said premises, and
the right to mine the same together wit~ all rig~ of right of
way along and all min eral seams, also excepti a 1i1ht ol
war to and lrom the wesf a~dofsaid lot fiJ ml!r ol the Vii·
!age of Minersville. Reco rded in Volume 34, Page 464, ollhe
. Records ol Deeds of Meigs Co. Ohio, Relermce Deed Volume
235 Page 275, Meigs Co. Oeed Records. 20%Down day of
auction. bal. due on deliverz ol Deed . By Atly. c. Crow.
.True Tax Value $8, 20.00 on Resl Estate
Cuh

OWNER: JAMES P. FISHER

Elll
Positive J.D.
DAN SMITH - AUCnONEER

949·2033

0(

992-7301

"Not Responsible lor Accidents or loss of Property"

~

AUCTION

TRI-GREEN
~
INTERSTATE EQUIPMENT, INC.
7 miteo north ollondr&gt;n. Ohio al inl..-n off·70 t•ll
79)andU.S. ROU1o42; 12m..woota1CotumlluL 19
..... of Springfield &amp; 40 mileo .... or Doyton.

Thursday, April 24, 1986
9:30a.m.
&amp; """" !arm &amp; lnrU1riot

oqu~

of o1

~~I

IC:omtfgn....,,b !rom -orot locot larmo ond do...,., IV
It ablokne auction.
ottond !lis 111clion • buyar - .... • llloltor.
&amp; inruslriat rolalod equip,_

:~~·
Illr,du,;lnla

"""""'mont•

J.D., Ill .. Cas&amp; MJ .. Ford. !tt.

makes &amp; models to choose from 25 to 150 h p,

equ1pment and salvage tracto rs l1ll age equ1pment.

1-7 bonoms . D1scs. f1 eld cultivators. oackers. etc.
I Gnncler·,,.,,., round &amp; square balers. rak.es &amp; mONers o f all
Tools and OQu10ment 10 sun 1•. "mres needs

LUNCH SERVED

TRI-GREEN
INTERSTATE EQUIPMENT, INC.
1499 U.S. Route 42 N.E.

London. Ohio 43140

.

(614) 879 -7731 • 879 -7732 • 879-7649

IP1111l
Dick Gl88n o Juflv Green o Cmnle Balllh
Mlr!ilorl Cl'Aipott &amp; Motels reorb¥
lileltsa:! &amp; Ilonded in ll'lot d the stJte of Ohio
NOT mi'OIISIBI.£ RIR ACCIOOII'S
TIRIIS: Casll or Clllcl. w/P'IIf* 1.0.

�Pomeroy-Middleport~Gallipolis. Ohio....,.Point

Page-0-4- The Sunday Ternes-Sentinel
32 Mobile Horne• ·
for Sale

32 Mobile Hornea
for Sele

3~

197! Richwood 14a80 2 br., 2
b..tl . C•ll 114·U8·48151 or

014-387·0397.

1980 llbttrty 14xiS4, 2 bN·
room, unfumlsh.t. winy! under·
pinning inctuHd. Mul1 Mil. Cll

304-n3-5173.
1982

14x52 . 2

bedroom.

Gtrdlfl Tub, SIOvtlnd Reff·tt·
ator l•lmond), vinyl undllfPin·
nln~. tie downs, 1lx10 porch
arid electric: entflnct Hrvict. tlr
condltkmer (1 1h yu . old). Elcctl·

c,u

ltnt condition.

114-992·

8UV . 1olx70. 3 bedroom mobUI
homl, sitting en 1 tot rudy to

move hUo, t22I.OO down
azoo.oo month. 304-712·

2221.

1114 Mtntk»n mobil1 home.
loceted on lot 4 of 2 e·, Trell•
Park, Camp ConJ.y. Centrtl -'r.

dllhwelfl•. eppNen•. eota
wfth metddng chllir tnd tllbl•.

vlnyt 1heedng and mtt.llltol'l91

build.,g. Coli 304·178·1108.

33 Farms for Sale
1- -- - - - - --

Mini f 1nn 2.215 tcr~~, modem 5
room houu, 350 tt. rotd
fTontlge, 1 ml• from Pt.

3888 open ':v.rv dey.

Ploount.
Coli between
1·9. •11.000.
304·175·72111.

8.';".!.,'::;:;:"!.·~1~81. ~ 4~73E8·:

.

11

..

Help Wanted

'

Lot 11 Ct11rolall HUll, 300x110.

Coli oftor 0, 814·241·8129.
Lot. 4 mlltl from Holler.
ecre~ with

IIPtlc 11nk

hytnJmIIMhl
For old qult1, 1ton1
loto
biuo _.,,, toyo • old

4~

l wetl

fumllu ... Col 11 4·317·0138.

wet•. C1ll 814· ...1·3131 or

814·448·2200.

66 Building Supplies
O.r.ge door for ule, 10 ft .,

1100. CoN -"'go Ol'lly, 114·
441-1243.

- ·· Coli 01 4·888·3194.
11 KNI, loc.ted In Rutland on
BMC:hgrove Ad. New g11 nd oil
well, all mtn•el righta. uc-'lent
hunting, ucluded ane .

Rotottfltr 2 ,... old , good cond .
3 -31x115 rnonater m.Jddll. dr•
• 12 " whhe I poke rlm1. Even·
lnga 814·317·7277.

114.000. Coli 814·992-3901
after 0:00 pm.

Pi.no 6 btdro0'm tuh for Nit .

Cell 814-441·0314.
~

Rl•ll l.ils
c.--c=---.---,;:--:41 Houses for Rent
2 bdr. unlumilhod houoo rof. •
dop roqulred. Coli 114-448·

Immediate openin&amp; for individual t&amp; assume
responsibility of AIV equipment and CCIV system
at Holzer Medical Center. Prior e,.urience desired.
Apply: Personnel Department.

..

HOLlEI MEDICAL CEIITEI
385 J~ekson Pike
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
(614) 446·5105
An

EOE!Affirmahve Action Em~oyer

AnENTION: WOMEN AND .N
SAlES MANAGE-NT TRAINEES
If you Willi an opportunity IIIII comes rarely in a person's
lifetime then you owe it lo yorustlf to inmtipte.
I. If Y'"' art 1 aood c0111111unicator/CAREU MINDED.

2. Neat appun~ca/HIGHLY IOTIVAIED.

"There, that didn't take long,
did it?"

44

Apartment
for Rent

9188.

61 Houaehold Goods
UMd furniture, 10f1, ch ..r. ful

Oo1Mpolio.l14·44e-1408.

Flent, leul, l1nd contnct. 3br"•
Rodnf'V Vllltgtll: 2 br'I·Eureka;
3br Evan• Htighta; Depo11t •

ref..-.n011 requi,.. , Rledlburn

Roolty·I14·448·000B.

1 bedroom hou,. In heart of
Meaon, •"•llllble M.y 1. Het

electric cook ltow. 1121. pw

monlll. Coli 114-992-7352.

Fumilhed or unfumilhtd 3
bedroom houM fOf rent In
Mlddlaport. Cell 814· 992·

6084. '
ACT NOWII 10.5 porcorll APR

to ~1ltfled buyer~ . Announcing
the klwesllnterat nte in
Why PlY rent. when you cen own
for
Lit one of our houalng
coniUitlntl lhow you how. TRI

v•••·

I••·

ina(solos) experience or calloco rltarot.
6. lust bt Dlit of town 6 nlghll per wook .
Nltlanol corporotian his l11mtdiat• o11111inp for ..tvre. prafn·
Siallll SIIH·Orl•nttcl WOIItn lftd ll'ln !hit nMd to earn
115.000.110 and up por y01r. (SIIory ~us a111111ission). $200.00
per .... while in train incwith motel e1penses. urJIIowlncelnd

corp. bonefils.
. Retail. jewelry, cos..tic, t•lophono sales rr mamtinr/teochina
blckaround helpful. GREll CARRR RE-ENTIY OPPOllUNTY!
For porsonol intemew cell John C. Hall's afflco TOlL FRR at: I·
800-523·1514. londay throu(lllllursday b1- 1:00 a.m. and
7:00 p.m. ONLY! Pluu call 011 cr llllor• lllursrlty, Atril 24ttt
. E.O.E. M/F

ATTENTION
REGISTERJD NURSES

·.

' •.

FULL AND PART· nME POSinONS
AVAIABLE FOR:
•MEDICAL/SURGICAL
•OBSTRIICS
•IC/CCU
•EXTENDED CARE

...•'
·.'

...."
.

~
·
;
'

.

CONTACT PLEASANT VAllEY HOSPITAL
PERSONhll DEPAII'I'IINT
1304) 675-4340 Extwion 307

•.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITl EIIPIOYER

, ..----------...
.

-.

TECHNICAL TYPIST

University Personn11 Services is Clfrtntly seek• in&amp; a hichly skilled Technical Typist in the atta of
medical transcription -full·time/pe11111nent position for the Coli•&amp;• of Osteopathic lhdicine/Ptr·
sonnel &amp; Central Services.
Job Duties: Transcribe hiehly confidential medi·
"'.· cal dictation; Proofreadin&amp; transcription/complet·
:· in&amp; individual production reports; Removina tapes
· ••· from Sony Dictation Unit and loginc in receipt.
--:.
Qualifications/Requirements: Experience/edu·
• •· cat1on in medical terminololy; Surcical procedures.
medications. medical/surciCal instruments; Diac·
nostic tests; Excellent typin&amp;. spellinl and proof·
reading skills; llastety of the Et~llsh lat~uap ; Ex:-~ perience in use of transcription machinery with
~· ability to interpret, translatl and edit medical dicta·
~ tion for clarity and cootent.
••
Sbutinc hourly rate of $6.31: Excellent benefit
· ~ packap. Make application to: Uniwrsity Personnel
-:; Services. 44 University Terrace. llckM House.
•
Athens; Ohio 45701.

STATE HOME CENTER, 1·84
Nitro Ellt . 304· 785 · 01 B1,
OPEN EVERY DAY.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

•lz• hid•t·bed, 'Pl. . . . . .,.,.

2 bedroom fumlshed tp.~rtment
tor rent in Mlddl1p0rt. AH

1 btdroomfumiltlld aplftmenl.
ldtel for worklno couplt. No
pet1. Depollt requl..d. C.l

814-982-2937.
APARTMENTS, mobile homoo,
houMI . Pt. Pl ...ent end Gtlllpo·
Ill. 114·448·8221.
One bedroom apt,

cowr~ltnt

iocotlon. 304-175-2441 .

For rent Sleeping Room• end
light hou11 kMping rooma. Plfk
Ctnual Hottl. Call e14-441·

0788.

\

46 Space for Rent

..

•

OHIO UNIVERSITY

: ...
--;.
•~

Athene, Ohio
An AfliiiMtiYe Acllon/ Equal Opportunity Employar
AIIPiication Oudlin1 is April 25, 1916

814·441·7545.

Po11 Ollico. AI utl~iCoiii14·843·118B.

In Eurtklnlc., cletn, pert. fum.,
Mlultl only, no pits, f180 mo.
D•p. ~ · C.ll814·251·1131or

Trtller IOU for ,.,1 an TountNp

2· 2 bdr. mobile !'tomes on
Bulaville Rd .. e200 mo. plua

2 bedroom mobUe"home. Ne ...
Recine. C1ll 514· 912·158158.
2 bedroom In Syracu•. Furnlahed. O..,Osit reqund . Cell

814·89z.?UO.

..

. University Personnel Services is c~trently seek· ·
••• ing a full-time/temporary Pro1r1mllltr Analyst II
- ~ (appro~imately two years) for the Colle&amp;• of Osteo·
pathic Medicine/Basic Sciences.
Job Duties: D1wlop scientific computer pro·
arams interfacin&amp; microcomputers with scientific
instruments; Maintain. dew lops and modifies oper·
' tional
proarams: performs administrative tasks;
Train scientists in various computer appliutions.
..
Qualifications/Requir~ments :
Blc:helor's de·
.. creel
equivalent in et~ineerin&amp; or computer science
preferred with some biomedicalerperience; Famili·
arity wit~ scientific pr0111111min&amp;: Microcci11puters;
• Hieh level assembl~ and buic lat~ua.-s; Experi·
' • e'nce on Apple and IBM - flmillarity With BS/DOS
and Apple DOS based micros; Must be able to IIOrk
SU"IIYision.
.· withStartlnmimal
inc hour y ~tl.of $8.79;. Exc~llent benefit
• pecklp. Make awhutron to: Untwrsrty Personnel
• • Services, 44 Uniwrsity · Terrace, MckM House,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
~

..

OHIO UNIVERSITY

Aold 87. School bu1, weter,
efectrk:, tel.hone. 1 mile from
Memofill Gardena Ctmttarv.
C1ll Merion RIYnokll It 114·

885-4329.

47 Wanted to Rent
1 to3bedroomttomen•llkln
or Polnl Pl ....nt for 28 yr okl
Uf!gle mete with dog, former
MVII offloer. e300.00 ranee.

304·111·2081.

Moba. hornet for rent in Atdne.

Mr: rcII clllllr se

Coii814·307·714B.

F...,lshld l bedr~ Mobile
ho .... Washer Mld "ilryer. No

poll. Coli 01 4·849·2253.

61 Household Gooda

818·2135.

1973 Kerwood, edd on room,
c..,ttal llr, with o• without
fumiturt, On• acre lend. nlld
off•. 304·171-3030 or 171·

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofoo ond clo . . priood from
*285.10 NBI.Tebioo, taO .,d
up 10 •121. Hldo-o-bodo.l3110.

end up 10 fiiO ., 10f1 btd1
f141 , Recliner~ , UU . 10

3431 .
0370 .. Lompo from 128. 10
112&amp;. pc. dirltftM hom 1109 ..
1974 Hoi~ Porto mobHo homo. to43S . 7pc. f118 endup. Wood
A·1 condlt6on, cemrel air end
extr1s, 304-1715· 3030 or 8715·

3431 .

43 Farms for Rent
34 acrt cropllrtd, 60 ecrts
pMturt • tob.cco elotment.
Ctll304·11715·15104.

Apartment
for Rent

table whh tlx chllin UU 10
0741, Doolt 1121 up 10 1375.
Hutdl•. tiiO. Bunk bid complete with mtttr....., t271.
end 14) to tlll. ltby bld1,
1110 . MlltfeiiU or box
~pring~ , full Of twin, M3 .. flrrn.
t73. 111d *13. OuMn 1111,
t22S . Bed frem•. 120.end
Ul., 10 gun · Oun alb~et 1 ,

1380.

0338.

2 bdr.• nMr lltvef lrkltt ptaze.
Nice Clrpttlng. Wllltr gerlb·
eo• paid. c111 814·4411·702&amp;.
fof rent. QualttY-..1...
BR . 2 bath apartment In prime
downtown kx:atton wtttl off·
atrMt periing. Kltchenfumilhld
with refrig.. Hlf·dllft own,
OW, Qll . dl1p., hookup for
Wl~hll" / dryer. FCM non·lmoltlng
linGle Of couple. No ch ildren or
All1lectr lo. lneludn water·
/ uw./trllh . A ontYur 1.... i•
required . Ctll 814·448w11114

9AM to 8PM.
Furniohod opt •• 1 bclr.. 701 4111
Avo .. OoNipolio. 1231 mo. ul~l ·
till p1kl. Call 441 -4411 aher
7'pm.
5 Court St. 3 bdr. l 'i.l bath. 1250
mo., plus ut:llltiH, rtfltfenCM •
no pets. C1t1 814·448-4928.
Fumlthld Apt. 2 bdr .. 11111
mo., Wlttr pel . 1131 2nd. Avt.,
OtlllpoMs. C1l 114-441·4418

ottor7PM.
2

bdr. apt .,

304·178·&amp;104.

f91 mo. Call

Naw 1 bedroom epartmtnt. Ctll

e 14-441-0390.

1 bedroom "f,· ro• r"'!· Bnlc
1: !~"~~.":""~,.'!0~
...,uired ol 1200. Contocr VI~
roo• Monor Apt. Middlopon.
114·892·7787.
Equor Hou•"'a
Opponunlty,

;.:t,.l'.!"'.

ono bedroom offici....,,,....
Athena, Ohio
mont fully tumllhod . Two
An AffirmetiY• Actlon/Equl Opportlrn""
bedroom
Opt , -•ly romo·
"' E11pt~or
.,
d-.
Above
K"'11.... PomoL.--O:.App:::;;;;liC;;,II;,;;io;;;n,.;Dt;;;td;.l;,;;in;;,l,;;
·is~Ap~ril,.;25;;:,~1;.;,916;;__ _... 1 roy. Col 114·112·1211

Norge Eloclrlc Rongo,
"'"' Frigldolre Electric:
Rongo. 110. Bolli good condl·

tlon . Whirlpool Automatic
W•her. 1315 . N11d1 repllr.
Aluminum ltorm door witt.
tcreen•. 131. Maytag Electric
Dryer, 110. NHCit minor rtPalr.
All me~ epp•renot tnd aood
condition. Call B14 ·E2-7188.

241·1121 .

BulldiRg mltlfiela. cement,
blocllflUJtrel, yard Of dellnry.
Galllpola Bkldt Co., 123V. Pine
St. , 01lllpolla, Ohio Ctll 114·

441·2183 .
RAILROAD TIES · B~ . •10 ... •
8tt.lln. ta.oo ,., tie dlllvtrld.
Bill Block 114·892·2219.

oond. eon 114-441-2111.

Siam111 klttena . AKC Cl'wl~N
puppl11. New puppiM &amp; kitten a.
Cell 468·3844 1ft1r 7PM.

au he f391 , bunk btda · 1118.
1ntron reclin.. fll , nwt &amp;
LIMCI bldroom IUhM , rtng...
wring" Wllhera. • lho•. New
UvlnGroom tuhN f111 · tlll,
ltmpt,
buying coli • wood
•ow•. Call 514-441·31151 .

•*'

VIII~

Fumltur•, MW Ill uald.
LA"it• a.ctlon of quality fuml·
ture . 121 I Eutlfn Ave ..

Oollipolio.

High pricw got you down?
Chedl Ul aut. Mollohln Fum . ..
Appl. Glblon. Kelvtnltor. At:.,

bottom, complete 1et of btH1,

0••

or lfec1tlc r11ngea

MHMY Ftrgueon lawn mowtf.
31wlncft Olt, hydfo •ltltk: trtnlo
B HP , snow ~tde. Ctll eftet I

114·441·1783.
01...

a chro.,. kltch., ttble, 4

wick« blck chllr1. Good condl·

tion, •eo. 114·441·8300

ltomoo f20, 128 . •
uo. k"'O frame no. Good

MIICtion of bedroom eJitM,
rocken, metal ctbinet1, hHdbolfdt f38 • up to MI.

Coli 814·M2·2311 .
40 ln.- · Stool 8uo. P.T.O.

O.lllpolie. OH.

Hound

puppy. C1ll 714· 537 -18•3 01
wrhe 10812 TMI Dr., Gerd811
Orovo. CA 92843.
3 yilt Okllflhtn hound, female
IPIYICI t50. AKC bttek Germa~
Shepherd, UOO . Cllll14-446 ·

7432 or

~4 - 7&amp;7 - 8183 .

64 Miac. Merchandil8

Canaday Realty

NoChodco.Cctfl114·892·2101.

Mlx.ld t.•y llrg• 1quere
•led. *300.00. 304·881-3430. 01
.211 . 30.4-111·1179.
'

Hoftond.

luth Hot I.._ A IIIIYial. Ow'er
40 •Ill tNOitlrt to ClhooH from
• CDfrltlet:eiiRa of new • uHd
oquipmoot.
U . Qhlo ,

62 Wanted to Buy

Attention erN Fsrrnertll 011
your Deblb ned corn In G1ll1
co. trom Tim MMale. C1ll

Now buying lhell com or ,.,
corn, C1tl forlttlltquot••· River
City F1rm Supply, 814·441·

New lne of ltwn mowert end
tllan. TroyiMh dll••· Mtinllne
tlltf1, MTO mowers. Snapp•
mowera. ltelnll' D'ICtoll tnd
lmplementa: lwl•h• l'"ple·
mant, U.• At. 7, GtHipoh,

buy

oi

20

tleld com Dtkelb tnd Ktn·
worthy. Phone 304-1715w1ISOI
aher8:00 PM.

30

clliclcono. Coli 814·441-7941.

\

Musical
Inatru ment1

63

I

Autos for Sale

1183 Dodgo Chorgor. 12,000.
mil... Alldng ... ice 13200 .00.
2111·1719.

19U ptymouth Rtlltnt • dr., "
----------~---Mlto, 23,000 mi., PI, PB, "AC .

1982 C.mero V-1. air, twtop. · Clll 114·378·2721.
good cond. Cllll14·441 · 2310.
1t7• Volbwegon lqUift t.ek.
1914 Pontltc T•JI1)•t. Good IIUto. f41!1 or but oHtr. 114work
ell', f2IO .OO.C1II 1!114- _..:.:.
l41·9138.
241·1115.
__________
1983 Plymouth Rellllit ltetlon·
wagon , IU10, 10,000 mi .. PS,
PI, AC , nice &amp; ciNn . Cell

814-379-2128 .

Llveatock·

1178 ChiVY wan 380 1nglne.
~erh1ul. 12.818 firm.
1974 OIIYV IJifV good work elf.
••78 . Call 81•· 379-2233 or
111 It comer ~ Petrl01 Cldmul
Ad . • lt. Rt . 141 .

new

Stud pc:iny IIddie &amp; bridle. 180.
Cell 1114 . ~11 - 7941 .

ES REAL ESTA

Fender Squire Str1t gulttr, h1rd
ahlll ciH 12&amp;0.00. Music has
H0130 tubll 1mp hMd. en.
cond. *200 . Hondo 12 •ring
gulteir with ct. . eeo . 304· 812 ·

BONNIE STU TES - BROKER
JI M STUTES - REAL TOR

323e.

4-46-4206
JACKSON COUN TY BRANCH
Fruit
&amp; Vegetables
moww, *391. Garden tr•cwr

Gem• Gresnhou• , le11rt , W.
Ve. 304·891!1·3400 , flower11nd
vagetable plantl now tweillbll,
whol .. ale end rltlll .

69 For Sale or Trade
lift.

n.v 38 gumbo mudd . .. art rd.
llghte, chrome whe..l , 14300 Of
trlda for trtnl ·lm or Z· 21 of
equal nlut. C1ll 114-"1·

nM tlr•. run1 good, whtl
mower 11t1dunent, plows. di1c.
cultlvttor, M'ld hlrring •291.

Coli 8,14-281·1122.

T030 Fergu10n triC1or ••c.
cflln, t1.810 . NIW polt hOII
dgger 1271 . N.w I ft. tdjuste·
ble grader bled• •1715 . Boom
pole 141 . 1 bottaw pow t191.

·con 814-211-11122.

730 Celt ditl .. good rubbtr.
good ptlnt. c:teen. U,HO. 3
bottow Mauey Feruuaon plow•.

CENTURY 21
~

~

rtbk.lelng, ell type~ of gun1mlttl
work. flit urvice. 304·1715·

175 M•sey F•guson d i•ll
fl .a&amp;o. No . 1 2 M•n•v F"ouaon bill• •1 ,2911. New e ft.
drum mow11 e1 ,475. New
rotary tldder win rowwtr 10ft,
1bt working width 11 ,885 . Cell

114·281·1122.

'

J.D. 4440 W·Cob. J.D. 2840
W·Cob. J.O. 4020. J.D. 4010.
Landolt Soiluwer, J .D. 2020
Centerfold Oltc. 0161hlm HartiQI10r, lntemttkJnal•oy bun tnd
corn pf~nter, Blue Anhydrou•
Appllcttor. 71 lnternattonal
Cargo Sttr 18 ft. Flat Dump,

1881 Suukl 210. J.D. 7000
1350. 9 ft . tronor&gt;ortdioc. 1595. Con...-wetlon
W·Row Pltnter.
Ctlll14-949 -2014.
114-211-11122.
I fl. Woods bulhhOSI Ull . Call

IN Ford tnctor. A· 1 condltkm
CoM oltor 4:00pm. 814·111· ind'
~ulpment . Call 114w251·
4382.
11114.

Httf Prlcel fl•hlng lrtOW lltlnl
t2111 Light... non-enow f2711
NonUghted 12281 Ff'tl l11tter1l
Only low loh. SH locolly.

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

Pole Buikllng Spec:itl. many
colors end ti1•. ctll tor klw
pricoe . 814-241-8141.

CENTURY 21

CONGRATULADONS!!!
CHRISTIE HILL

1980 Long 810 4x.4 64 HP . Ex .

oond. 1!114· 2'!·1667 .

Reg . POA mere.' re.dy 1D foil.

3020 John D•r• Tt ~etor . Ex.eellent condftlon, 2 ••In low boy
tr1iler. Call 814·992 -7401 .
Allis Chalmert 7030 trlctor.
130 hp, 17,900.00. Bu1h Hog,
1600 diiC like new. l2 ,600 .00.
Bielen EQuipment Co. 304-675·

7421.

Oeutl trtctor. Plf'tl tnd llrYICII
et th1 belt price, Slder1 Equip·
m~nt Co. 304-87!-7421 .

18 hp Rop•• llwn tr1ctor with
plow, wallet', 42 In mower 1nd
snow blede, duel wheel• end
chlins. Hi La 19ted trtnmlnton .
t1 ,100 .00 firm . 304-882 ·

Reg . ••Ilion. yurHnQI. 6 2 yr.

814-448-2222.

. Qentll 10 ye1r old Stlndlfd

Bred Mere. 59 r.. 1360. Saddle
and brldlt lnckuled . 10 yaer old
Ttnn•IH Wtllclng Hor11. 13
ln ., bleck fll50 . Siddle 111d
bridle included . Oentl1 2 v..•okl

Arobion

6691 .

Ooldlng. Coil 81 4-892·

Polled Hereford Cow with Be•
falo Haifaf Calf. C1ll 114·742·

)121 .

CENT URY 21 CENT URY 21

1986 JACKSON COUNIY APPLE FEniVAL QUEEN!

old1. Pair of t.v mar11 , WHt..-n
IIddle, brktl•• AH.. hitch. Ctll

3114.

Baby I]Oits •nd milklfl. 304·

875·0043.

CENTURY 21

CENTURY

Put Number 1 to work for you:

-"'

1::

.:=
·.&lt;
·w

4131 .

-

'18 four whe .. ~~~rift J•P· 8 ~
Arlena and 11 hp W•tem Auto
rtdlnglewn mowert. 11 In gDod
cond. cell 1ft... 1:00. 304·171-

2010.

REALTOR®

Book "'The Otntretion" liat1
MMOf'l County hiatory tnd elffy
flmiHtl 120. .,.... t3 .00 po•·

II

lOgo • hondl..g. Lettie Oilllor&gt;io

WtinlJeru, 11391 Ktnt Ave.
N.E. Htrtwlll1, Ohio 44132 .

~~IWY~ SCH~~~ ~sP1WfAo :~ c~ssEvl~l N~~E
0

1

0

LIVELLOTWITHFRAME RANCH. 3 BR'S, 1\l BATHS,
BIG FR WITH FP. POSSIBLE OWNER ANAN ClNG. DON'T WAIT
- CALL NOW! ASKING $42,000.

.

VIII., P111a, OaHipoN1, Oh6o .
Gw.a, Archlrf, TICkle. 114·

•31.; Roneon elec. lhlver
18 .; Pol1roid Clm. . . caM ·
t10.; Re•
mirrvn 12 "
15.. 10" N. Auto mtk1-up

v...,

LOOKATTHIS GREAT BUY NEAR RIO GRANDE. NICE 3 BEDROOM RANCll HAS EAT-IN KITCHEN, ATTACHED GARAGE.
ABOVE GROUND POOL PRIVACY FENCE, AN ABSOLUTE
STEAL AT $30,000.
OORGEOUS SETIINGI RANCH WIT HOVER 3 ACRES WITH A£:.
CESS TO RACCOON CREEK FOR FISfiNG OR BOATING. 3
BRS, 2 BATHS.LR AND FP, OR, FR WITHWET BAR AND BIG
GARAGE WITH ~ BATH. WELCOME SU MMER IN STYLE.
PRICED TO SELLAT $59 ,000.

I

SOUTHERN .HILLS R.E., INC.

LAR~

&amp;lht btut with Ieee. prom drtla.

~

~
oj

446-6610

1::

:=
&lt;

Broker
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor

Judy DeWitt
J. Merrill Carter
Becky Lane
Jim Cochran
Phyllis Loveday
Liz Long

OOER MUST SELL - $32,000. Areal buy on tlis
modern 3 llldroom ranch oo Georges Creel&lt; Road off
Rt. 7. Electr~ heat, garage and over 14 acre. ·
10052

~

~

!j

1984 TRIUII'H II - 14•70 tu•urilus custom made
~ mobi ~ home on 9.6 acref wooded and secluded.
:= Locate:! at SR 325, 13x22' ~~~ g room, beautiful
..: ktchen, garden tub.
w
112015 .

WAIIURIVERVIEWAIIDSUPIR IDCAnON - Two
&lt; tracts ol vacant ~nd. 5 a:res n each.Purchase one or
~ both. Suf\JeYed. !Mner lnancing Jmiib~ . l'llthil 3
miles ol Galipotis. City schools system .
Q
112019
2

oj

1::

:=
&lt;

~

-

..

w

('I

!"

!!
~

:=
&lt;
w

OWNER NEEDS TO SELL AT
OIICE - Three bedroom
brick in good rondrtion,
clean, lots of charm in tllod
neigllborhood. low 30's.

~
-! THIS PRICE IN SIGHT - Nice kirmal ranch. 3

AIIO FRAIIIE BI·LML- City schools, natural
,.. gas Ill at. Needs a lltle IB!der loving care.Owner wants
a deaL
~
N2013
~ bedrooms. bath, larfl! klchen, livng room. Close
~ t~n. ely schools. $22,000.

COUNTRY ELEGANCl - WATCH SPRING UNFOLD FROM
THE REAR DECK OF THIS BEAUTIFUL BRICKRANCH. 4 BED·
ROOMS , 2 COt.flETE KITCHENS, FAMILY ROOM AND REC.
ROOM. FIREPLACE PLUS WOO DBURNER . OVER 16 N:RES

Rill Estate General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

WANT AREAL HOME INSTEAD OF JUS! AlllUSE?
- Ifso, take notice toth5 2story, 41Edroom,2 balhs. (')
lormal di'ling room. rec. room, and a Itt more.
112024 ..,

3
1::
NEW LISTING - 5 ACRES IIORE OR I£SS - 1969 =
&amp;llun mobile home, well. garage, s11111 bam, aM 1n &lt;

to

'"'
N1068
w
"' COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING SITES - 6.94 acres, ciQse
~ to St Rt 35.
~

Kyger Creekschool system.

.

lllOIIS AIID BATH IN CITY - City warer,
1:: THREI
sewer,
gash~.
storm window~ ~nyl ~dng, 40ft. by
:= 120 ft. kit. $11,000.
~
IM7!

IN TOWN LIVING - REDUCED - $49 000 - Wlhin
walkng diltance to SOOPiiin~ The s~eofthis llll/sewil
surprise you! 31lldrooms, huge back yard. Call,come

IT$' UKE ASTEP BACK INTIIIE - When you see this
spacQIIS home. Features charm, beautifulydecoratl!d,
~ 4 llldrooms, formal entry wrth oak v.indingstai'case.
.-'J Lots more too 111merous to menliJn.
1::
112011
~

:=

&lt;

GET READY FOR SUIIIIER! lHS HOME HAS ABEAUTIFUL
16X321N-GROUNO POOL. NICE FE NCEDBACKYARO. 3 BED·
ROOMS, FAMILY ROOM. 211 CARGARAGE. 10' DISHSA TEL·
UTE SYSTEM. GREAT LOCATION. KY GER CREEK AREA:
$58,000.
GONE FISHINGIIF YOU 'VE IXJTTHETIME, WE 'VE OOT THE
PLACE. PRIVATE LOT &amp; 14X70 MOBILE HOME AT TYCOON

EXECUTIVE HOllE - Four
bedroom, 2\l baths, all cedar home, with large living
room, large lamily room.
equ ipped kitcheo. lull base·
ment. Cenlfal heat and air,
custom made drapes. Price
reduced, $125,000.00.

~~EE ~SR~IT~Jt ;ls~~H&amp;~~~E~lu~~or~~~~~~~:
All YOU NEED IS YOUR FISHING POlE' SUPER PRICE
$19,000.
OON1 smLE FOR JUST AWOODED LOT! FOR ABOUT THE
SAME PRICE YOU CAN GET APPROX.40 N:R ES Of WOO DS.
UNBELIEVABLE $10,500.

RUTlAND - Modern ranch
home llilh three bedrooms,
living 1oom, kitch11111ddin·
ing combnatioo, full base·
ment, 16'x32' swimming
pool. PRICE REDUCED.
NFf LiliA RD. - One acre,
with 1~ story frame, three
balrcom home, lui base- 1
ment ooe car 11111geands1Dr· .
aee bid~ Askng $26,000.00. · 1

I

TOBACCO FARIIERS YAK ENOTICEI - 10 acres m~re

~ II' less.Tasletuly decorat!JI rrobi~ home. Remarkab~
~

tobacco barn. .

Buift accordilg to slate code, state inspect!JI.Includes
~ all equipment, rrobi~ oome space. OrYner financ11g
~ possib~ Call today.
NI048

CAN YOU BEAT THIS?- Washer. dryer, refngerat~r ,
stove, tab~ andchars,sofa,twoceiling fans,curtains, a
neat and clean 60'x l2' rro ~~ home a1d llis more.
$7.250.

EXCELLENT LOCATION·- Brickranch with 1.25 acre
lawn, 3 llldrooms, ~r&amp;!l bath, I car attachoo ~~i

NIW LISTING - $49.000 - love~ 3 bedroom ~
ranch. full finished basement. family room withBuck ~
stove. Ful~ equ~ ped k ~ch en , ely schoo~.
'"'I
#2049 1::

:=

TEXAS RD. - $15,000 - r.tibi~ home, lurniture, I ~
acre more or less, new septic sy~em . City schro~. N
#1t:lll ...
~

~ 39 ACRES - Okler Uory hOme be~g remodeled. 6

~

LOTS - I acre~ klcatell atAdd iion Twp.Situate:l in
a wooded area vith restrictions.
#2059

IIOVE IN NOW loth ~ new 3 redroom, I~ bath ranch w
ho100. Call for more detai~ .
'"

IIERCERVIUHOX ROAD - Md a few lllisling
touches il make thii a beautiful A-~arn8 home. 3
..: llldrooms, living room, kitchen, ulilily, l\IJOdbumer.
N r.tibi~ home includ!JI. r.td lit
...
N1074

BUILT FOR AFAMILY - 4 a 5 llldroom tri·level, 3
baths, 2 car garage, lamily room, flliTBI dilllg room
pkis a who~ Iii more.

WOODED SURROUNDINGS - 31Edroom home wrth
living room, dilllg room, family room wrth fi'eplace. ~
On~ $39,000. ~ mi~ from city.
~
#2041 :=

~

~

m44:=

&lt;

#2008

8

&lt;

~ l91J6 Ct!ntury 21 Rul Estate Curporatl on n trustee for the NAF ® ;md'• - trad ema~ksofC.rnlur y 21 Real Estate Corporation. Pr intl'CIIn U'.S.A. Equal Housi ng Opport unity &lt;it

N

EACHOFFICE iSINDEPENDENTLY OWNED ANDOPERATED.

"'

t:"l

~ RY 21

·

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21 CENTURY U

CENTURY 21

·

·
CENT URY 21 · CENTURY 21

. .ACRES, IIORE OR LESS - 3 bedroo mI'll me, 2 baths, LR, FRw/ wood burn er,
kitcheo, all in good condrtion . New24•24 garage and a small barn. All1s lenced. Garde n
City schools. Priced at $34.500.

-

NIW USTING - VACANT lAND - 52 acres Awr011. ttl
1 mi ~ ~om Tycoon Lake. Wooded wi1h some :Z
markelllb~ tim~r. Ideal Ill huntng illd rocrealiJn. ~

~

'

1~.~~~~;~!~~~. Owner needs tosell. l.!ilO acres, more or less. 3bedroomranch, 2 ba
II.
room, formal dining room, family room, 1,920 sq ft. ol hvmg space. 21arge
. City schools. Priced at $38,000.

COUNTRY LIVING - 25 acres m~re or less, tobacro
base, barn. Plus 3 llld room hOme with large lilng
room , dinllg room.
#2058

!j

j

,,..,101

NIW LISTIN'G- AROIITECT DESIGNED ~ Quality
buil 3 llldroom brick and cedar home. Excellent
design, inckldes INilg room,equipped ktchen,formal
dill!&amp;heat puflll and overs~ell garage. There~ mucll
rrore to see. $79,!Xl0.
#2061

'"'I CUSTOII SLAUIJITIR HOUSE -Approx. 2 yea~ dd.

FARII - ROUTE 218 - APPROX. 82 ACRES. 2 BE DROOM
FRAMl HOME, PLUS MOBILE HOME lilOK-UP. BARN.
OTHER BUILDINGS. TOBACCO BASe $39 ,000.

·m
LD

SAFE NEIGHBORHOOD - Brickan dframe lri-level. 3
llldrooms. 2 baths, 2car llilrage, rami~ room.$59,!1l0.
#1057

,

~

N new rooms, bath ufller construction. 30'x!lJ' bkJck
... oo ild~g.
#1051

AUDREY F. CANADAY, REALTOR
IIARY FLOYD. REALTOR , 446·3383
'::"~.·· ·: : 25 LOCUST .STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Nltll9

~

LAIID- APPROX. 160 ACR ES , QJYAN TWP. SOME TILLA·
BLE, ROAD FRONTAGE $50 ,000. OWNER WILL SP LIT LAND
AND SELL 17 ACRES FOR $20.000 OR 83 ACRETRACTFOR
$30,000.

,(i

see now'

&lt;

COUNTRY AlA - 3 bedroom lrame home, eat-in w
kHchen, INing room , bath , utility, attached garage. "'
· large lawn. $36,000.

N2022

('I

!:i

~

~

..

NFf USTING - ST. Rl143
- 211 acres wrth nice IIYee
balroom HI baths, A·hme .
home. Lart~e lamily room,lti·
ily room and sfllt'J! lllldllg.
$32,000.00.

112040

VACANT lAND - 7 acres more or less located in !"
Green Twp., \1 m1~ from141. Front ~ys llat wrth lllck ~
wooded. Rural water availab ~.
~
#2021 :=

oj

N

Geo. S. Hobstetter
Bmker

upper deck area.
dining room w/lg. ~ i
bar. Most all new carpe
. Nice level lot OVIN!r

:=
&lt;

w

PRICE REDUCED - Farm
with mobile home, 42 acres
partially fenced, pond, bm·
ber, fa1m equip. 41l,OOO.OO.

. BULK OR BAGGED

oj
~

BUILDING LOT ~ Close toRac00011 Creek with fishilg ~
and camping priv 1~ges. ~ce corner ot ocatoo 1n ~
Clearview Estates. $5,500.
:=
#1046 &lt;
w
QGOOD QUIET PlACE TO LIVE - H arne v.ooded ,..
setting. 3 llldrroms, I ~ baths. woodburner. Priced at (')
$24.!Xl0.
ttl
.
#1115 ~

::a

NEW LISTING - NICE DEVELOPMENT SITE JUST OUT OF
CITY LIMITS WITH OVffi 7 ACRES. CITY WATER AVAILABLE.
BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGSITE. PRICED RIGHT AT $2t,500.

!i

!"

1::

NEW LISTING IN CHESHIRE -VERY COt.fORTABLE 3
BEDROOM, 2 STORY. HAS FORMAL DINING ROOM, HAROWOOD FLOORS IN UVING ROOM. SMIU DEN, GARAGEHAS
WORKSiilP AREA. EXCELLENT BUY AT $32,000!

('I

COIIIIERCIAL PROPERlY - State apprwed metal ~
bui ~il~ concr~e Iller, heatoo, water, restroom. bl N
s~e 55 by II 0. Locatoo mcity ~ mils. Presently Llied as garage and wrecke1service. Eltra Iii 'l!liJnal.
#2003 (')

COIIIIERCIAL - INVESTIIENT - Commercial
buildng and 4ll acres more or less.Located SR 35 and
f'l
917.
. :z
oj
Hl027

NDA RIFFLE,
REALTOR
HOME PHONE
. 992-3535 .
105 HIGH STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

~

PRICE REDUCED - $21,000 - OWNER WIU HElP
FINNIC£ - 12'165' 31lldroom mobi~ home klcaled
at SR160. 1.4 acres, immediate JX1Sse&lt;.lion.
#1036

!"

-

NEW LISTING - ONLY MINUTES FROM OOWNTOWN.
FRAME RANCll WITH ALUM. SIDING. 3 BEDROOMS. NICE.
DINING AREA. BEAUTIFUL CAPETING. DECK, GARIIN
SPACE. I CAR ATTACHED GARAGE. NICE PRI CE $37 ,500.

388 -8155
379-2184
446-0458
446-7881
446-2230
675 -3968

UNlATCHED VIEW - Love~ view ol the river. 3 ~::
boorooms. 2•n baths, attractive oak Iller. 2 Ytll :=
frep ~ces, central air. $69,500.
..:
#2036 !::::

('I

ACREAGE - 50 acres on
State ,Roule 143, with bee
gas and minerals. Call for
details.
Vtl1111 Nlclnsky, Atm. 1
Phone 614·742·1!92

71

e14-441-4307.

2885.

Wtntld to

b•ln.

66 Seed &amp; Fertlllzar

Lorvol1 10loctlon In

Oh. 114'841·0471.

1979 Dodge 4•4. 1 11cll

992-2801 .

WofNft 2fl ind\ blcycl•. Excel·
lent condhlon 110 . Call 114·

FREE 100 UNCH PINS WITH PURCHASE OF
150.00 &amp; UP

Poodl11 end Mlnllture
&amp;chnau11r ~PPI• . C11h only.

N8 Trec:1or, new tlr... I ft.
grtdw bled• Md trelter. For All
or kedtfor Chtv. orGMC 1NCII.

EVANS ENTERPRIIES, Jock·
oon, Oh. 114·281·11130.

UP FRONT TRACTORS WITH WARRANTY
OVE~ 76 USED TRACTORS
1000 TOOLS ·
M FUSED ·
lll·30·36·66-136-118·240·271-240.278 GAS, DIESEL
FOR OS-USED
8N ·9N·8e0·:II)OQ. 211 10-30011-41100·11000·6100·71100
..... DEXTORS- GAS &amp; DIESEL
JOHN DEERE- 620 - 2010 • 2030
FARMALL- M - H - A · CUBS
2 AXLE TRAILERS
NH - GRINDER MIXERS 362
BAILERS - MF1680 ROUND MF #3
J .D. 24T • 336,, NH 273 • OLIVER 820
BACKHOES AND DOZERS
NEW KING KUTTER FINISHING MOWERS
GRADER BLADES- 6, 7, &amp; 8Ft.
ROTARY CUTTERS 40"
4. 5, 8 &amp; 7FT. - BOX BLAD.ES - DISC
PLOWS - 1 llo 2 BOTTOM
CULTIVATORS ~ SEEDERS
DOZER, CAT 7-F MODEL
PICKUP TRUCKS • CARS
ROAD TRACTORS • TRAILERS
PARTING - FORD. FERO.• I. H.. and Othera

R~~gltterld Cocltlf' 8p1nlel, T~

03&amp;2.

Plattlc ctt1tm 1111e approved.
~..tic ~eptlc ttnlll, piMtkl
culverts, mttel culvtrt1. RON

PH. 614-446-nn Day- 614·446·359! Ewe

1-11 -2U·1271 .

Forgu.,n,-

MIIIIY Ftrguaon rkUn~ ltwn

911&amp; or 304-115·1119.

S. I. 35 W., GAlliPOliS, OHIO 45631

lafiH. Stud Mr'Vicl .

b.

6B

Electrolux vecewrn d-.n•1.
Aw1 condltlon·attachmtnll.
AvaUIItlt et ·n2 .00. CMh or
terma lrtlftg,ed . Cal 114-241-

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT CENTER

blood .....

Mt~~~oov

, For lilt new horH drawn bob

71

286-4496,64 CHURCH STR EET
FR ED &amp; ALI CE HILL - OFFICE MANAGERS

Solid olk door. 31ht70~e1% .
f221. E•ctUent condition. 403
lult¥ St . Pomeroy. C1l 114·

mirror U . 304-178·4083.

IIOMEROV
992·2181

AKC~. clo-lon

1ro ns por latt on

Hay &amp; Grain

Pure bred Engllah Angora reb·

742·2088.

C1lllhtn '1 Ulld Tlrt&amp;hop. Over
1,000 tl,..,li1n 12 , 13 , 14 , 11,

MGM farm City

Chow-Ghow pupplet allvtr blue.

Wt buy . ..u.tradevuher~ . Dale
Stndera. PhOne 441· 2049.

buy Fox

HOliES. ~~K.Ir&amp;"tll1111ERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45621

Drtvan, never uaed . f3000.
Phone 114-742 -2825 or 114-

q1,

WANT THE BEST
FERTILIZER AT
THE LOWEST
PRICES?
BLENDED TO
YOUR NEEDS
PLENTY OF
SPREADERS

•

W.-.ted to

446·3636~

Blu• prom dr•a with hoop,
'-turtd in levent.., mllliJuine.

64 Miac. Merchandise

2371 .

114·218·1417.

84

Farm Equipment

·cROll. SONS

u.1, 31 W•t J•clclon. Ohio.
1 14·211·841 1. .

614-388-8720 .

R11l Estate General

1713.

den •200. HNYYC.-.micjlf15

Tobacco baler &amp; mile. lttm1.
nM condition. C111 114· 4411·

Ret Tarrier pup1. wormed,
standard '1111, 1tlo Aultralllf'l
llue · H....,, female, 2 y·,,

61

niclco • rock . Ping piing toblo

noo. Col 01 4·441·8303 or 448-2331.
114-441·8312.
Itt a 4 ltool• fur recreetlon or

112·2428.

'N' CARLYLE

..... 304·875·5043.

8 ft. pool tlble, 1M Inch lllte

· Notth. OoMipoMo, Oh. Colll1 4· _., .....Sl.. 7...o. 304·878·
..... 7444 . Credit ev1illb'- to 318e.
quaNfled ~ra.
UMd bricf&lt;l, 10c ooch. 304·
418-1811.
53
Antiques .
Tri County Sport Shop. Spr..g
Antique mantel 58 n. wid• by
72 in . hlah with bewelld mirror.

P.att for Sale

67

118001423-01 13. onyUmo.
197e Dodge Plck·Ufl, 8cylinder.
MOO. Two 210 gol. ructf oil
304·171·3320.
tenk1, 121!1 . ••ch. Pl1tform
ocoleo. flO . 114·881·3313.
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12 TONY'SOUN REP AiR&amp;. hot dip
Olin St., GaHipolls. New. uaed
WOOd·coallto\1., I pc wood LR

66

w:va.

Ohio- Point

nckfilkt !(ennels. All brMd dog
grooming. Obtdlen01 tr1inlng
in •tN'1'kln . AKC Germtn wire.
h1lrld Pointer puppiea. Cell

Uvingroom 1Uhe, only 8 rmnths
okl , moving, 1800.00 firm,

Ml, bod

Avo.

Fum. apt. 919 2nd. Ave. Gtlli·
polls. share blth, alngll male,
f136 mo., utiUtin ptld. Ctll
441·4411 tfter 7pm.

40 lndl
118 . 40

U711. Baby mtttr•"'· Ul a

' UaedFlafllfurt ·· o,....,.• bid,
JACKSON ESTATES APART· TNnciJt bed, mettl office delka.
MENTS !Equtl Housing Oppor· 3 m/111 out Bull\lille Rd . 0p.,
runtty) monthty rlnt 11arta 1t hm to &amp;pm, Mon. duu Sat.
• 171 for 1 bidroom tnd f212 01 4·44e-0322
for 2 bedroom, depo1it *200.
loCitld near Spring VtUey Piau OOOD USED APPUANCES
lftd Foodllnd, poollndCableTV w..h..... dryen, rthtQWiton.
1vebbl1. office houn 11 poni· r1nge1 . 8lregg1 Appllanctt,
ble 10 1111 to 4 pm ~nd 7 pm to I Uppll' Rtwr Rd . betide Stone
pm Monday·Fridty, C1ll 114· Cr•t M01e1. e14w441 -7318.
441·2748 or IMW m~n~oe .
County AppW•ce. Inc. Good
Nfet~ly fumilh-.1 mobile ho~M. Ultd applltn._ tnd TV Mtl.
etf. apt .. centNI elf 1nd h..t In Optn lAM to 8"ft1 . Mon thru
citY, adults only. Celll14-441· Sot. 114·441·1h8, 127 3rd.

Aptrtm~nt

Building Mtterltlt
ltoc:k, bride . .ew., pip•. win·
dowt. . lnt~s. etc . Claude Wln tet'l, Rio Or1nd1, O. Cell 114_.

Drqonwynd Cett1ry Kennel .
CFA HlmtiiVIn, Persian •nd

18. 11.1. 8 ml1oo OUI Rt. 218.
Coli 814·211-1251 ,

TqHw tor rent, rtftrM1C.I end
deposit, you pay utUiri•. 304·

..•'
~.~~-------------~·
... PROGRAMMER ANALYST II .,.t•.
~

hook·

UPI evalllble. t70. p.- month.

d-oh. Colll14·448·9204.

Mobile Home Cell 114-441·
0608 aftar &amp;:00 PM.

old. Cltll14·912·&amp;350.

304·178·1483 or 171-1410.

2 trlflw Iota in Portttncl. n. .

814·211·1291 .

Dryer. Electric. Utlteover1 y11r

Picken• UHd Fumtture. Good
qutlhy used fumhure. Oplll 9 to
I or cell for if»POintl'l'llnt.

FJlr lilt or rent, 14a70, 3 bclr.,
1'JII blth,
to town. Cell

ckJ••

•
Snyder Fuml'lurt. 981 laoond
Ave., 01lllpolls. Cell 114· 441·
Montgomery Wtrd Wuher 1nd

1 bedroom apartment 1t 402YI:
Twenty Fourth St .. Pohtt PINAnt. C1ll 1 ·304·1711·4024.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Pork.
Route 33, Nontt of Pomeroy.
Lorgoloto. Coli 114·992·7478.

814·441·1802,

trtll and boJc 1Pring1. Corbin

pold. Coli 114·892· 1171.
- - -- - - - --

util~ioo

8014.

Furnilh.:l. cllble. bti.utiful river·
view, In KIAIUQI, no dty 1aXII.
Fostlft Mobila Home Perk. Cell

44

r

I~;:~~~~~::::-r;;;:;~;:;::;;::;;=:;:::i 10p,1a fll. Col oflor I 114·441·

3. ~rnSIYe with outpina porsanolity.

4. P~tftr o&gt;tr 22 (or rtspo01lbl1).
5. Hipschaolaroduote mini~um. with fiMir yms full time work·

,.

2 18434 a.pty b'ector tl,.., 1
New kiM 1-row 31 () com
picker. 148 John Oooro 4·
boHomtrector plow. AI In good

Peta for Sale

Stove, r.trlgerator. lvlng room
1111te. drtl.., end bed. 1984

ao..u• Plymo,lh 114·241·

2 bedroom. new ClrPII. AC. In

AUDIO. VISUAL
TECHNICIAN

locolly . 1iB001423·0113 .
onvttmo.
66

8e57.

1·1 ICNI,plrdllty woodtd loll
n•r 1pprowd IUb·dhliaion. T.P.
and C. wtttr and approvH roed
to eodl lot. R-nollly priced.
will flftMct wtth 10 p..-eent

2772.
MOBILE HOMES MOVEO: In· 142 ICNI with hou ... b11m1, 2
lUred . r...on•bt• nu... C1ll lge. pondl, lhTW~tone. CaU 814·
304-578·2330
241·9241.
Now diap)eying our MW IPring
model• in 1lnglt 1NI doubiM"kte
t10m11 It reduced pricll. Wt1t·

71

66 Building ·Supplies

Btodl , brick, rmrter 1nd meRtfriaehtkln • Appl.tca l11· HALF PRIC_!:II Fl•hlng trrow ' IOnry IUPPiill. ,Mouiitlill Stltl
eilins
12881
'llghtld.
non
·1rrow
wtoe. 'lll brincl1 ulld tppiiiiOH•
Block, Rt . 33 , !Qew H1ven , w
p. .o. Lltlio'o Rolrtrr . • Apt~l .. 12781 Nonllghted 12281 FfH ·v•. 304·192-2222.
·
ttne,.l
Onty
ftw
_
left.
SH
Cheohlro, Oh 114-317·0440.

114· 1~7 - 108)

or 11 • •oM8-23'11 .

llnoloum. •2.000.00. 304-171·
IIU or 171-21U.
FOR RENT WITH OPTION TO

· 64 Mlac. Marchand ill 54 Mlac. Merchandise

A. Hllttop lpt, Lincoln Pllce6

8oggo Rd. Col

1 M4. 1Oa51 V1n Oytle mobil•
honw, Z. bedroOm, lhiing room
wtctl tip CUI. ntw ~ .,d

LAFF-A~DAY

36 Lou &amp; Acmge

20. 1986

A'pril20. 1986

Pleasant. W. Va.

PROPERTY - ONLY S!S.OOO - Nice modern 4 bedroom ranch.
, ivin room, new back patio built out of pre-treated timbers.

�April20, 1988

Ohio-Point· Ple811nt, W. · Va.
71

Auto1 for Sale

74 Motorcvcles

11·71 M!~f't' Mtrquls 4 door,
302, a"uiQ, poWIIf, ACr' good

James Jacoby

dtln condition . Ctll 81•·,.7·

7217.

8ublnt nl~ 11.•710. 71 T·blrd

11.295. 81 DodQo Dmnl
024 ohorp 11 ,885 ..71ChWINY
oleo

*1 ,400. 78 Dodgt custom wn
*,1.«)0. BaD Motorw. 4 mi. N.
of Ho.l ler•. jhwy teO). Ctll

d14-448-7322.

1171 Ford 0 r~r~ade , good condl tian . Ctll t14 -446·8024 lhtr

. ,oo.

82 Chevy Ctv•ll.,, 2 dr. 1uto.
ill.ooo mi . n .aoo 814-379-

2182.

h

Ctuwtne Auto . 24,000 mi.
U ,OOO 814·379-2882 .

U72 Pinto . Runs good. t200 .

,.70.

Colored 'TV. 176 . Coli 814-258Jl81 Plymouth Horizon TC3

12800 614-448 -8390.

11n

Ctmtro LT. PS. PB. AC .

Coli Mon .-Fri .. 8·5. 814-448)173 .

1979

B~ck

leS.bte 4-dr , one
owner , loaded . new tirn.
82000 . 1983 Chevy 4x4
thortbed , tir. 11 ,700 m iles.
Blut &amp; white. 41idl ule f4600.

!;oil 114-448·1019.

i977 Tt-tunderbird . PS , PB. AC ,

good cond . 82100. Ctlt BU..

445·0924.

1873 Capri y. 6 lor aele or trade

fvr aocc or liggerlin b;ke. cen
814·387-7850.
1979 Chovetto, no "'"· good

tlrll. OOod ' k'lterior. autolnltic
•anamislion . 1900 Calf 6, 4·

448-9160.

duome. 78,000 miln.
Celt SU-6&amp;8-1028 .

n .ooo

78 Ftlrmont . good eond .
• 1200. 87 Chevy pickup, good

cond. t700 . Cell 814-268 -

1487.

1979 Mustang Cobre. PS, PB,
AUto tuns .. 302 VB . 5!i.OOO

.ctual mll81 . Alkinlll2196. Call

814-448-1724 "'vtlme.

1977 Chevrolet Cemero Reily
Sport. Auto, bided, feir condition . t1200. 080, Call 614982-31 33 or 814 -992 -3781
.tter 9:00p.m.
· 1878 Ford Elite. PS. PI, AC .
ExctH .. tcondition. 11700. Cell

814-988·4440.

1984 Escort GT. PS . PB. AC .
AM·FM. Iow miluoa. allverwi1h
bllck ~~toilers . Eltcellent condi-

t)on . Call 814 -992 -5747.

NORTH

1-11-H

tK
'IKQ62
t A J 10 4
tKJ64

By Jamet Jacoby
Three n&lt;J-tr4mp looks easy on today's deal. There are eight tricks off
the top, with a ninth trick available if
the club queen or any diamond honor
' is in the West band, or if the heart suit
divides 3·3. But bridge is full of sur·
prises, so when you play the hand wonderin&amp; how many overtricks you will
take, you will lind that you d011't even
make nine tricks. How sad to fail in a
three no-trump contract with 29 high·
card points in the combined hands, not
to mention a couple of 10-spots.
·
Spot-cards - these are the key to
safely making your contract, and
spades is the key suit. No,lice that
South holds the I 0-9-B· 7 behind the
ace. 11 declarer can make three spade
tricks to go with his three heart tricks,
ace of diamonds, and ace and king of
clubs, be will have nine tricks without
having to take a single finesse. En·
tries, however, are a serious problem
unless declarer does a seemingly gen·
erous thing. He must sacrifice his
spade king, guaranteeing the contract.
So'declarer wins trick one with dum·
my's heart king. He overtakes dum~
my'sspade king with his ace ~nd plays

WEST
tQ6 2
., J 10 u

EAST

tJS 43
97 3
t K Q9 8
+Q98

tes

• 10 7 3 2

SOUTH

•As

71

Autos for Sale

Wagon Rabbit •
spe.ct . e&amp;ISO . Call 614·992·
Volkl

7403.

78 Ptymouth Voltrt Wagon .
Auto. Low miiNgt.

814-992-7403.

•eoo. c,u

1972 Ptymouth Fury 3 . Dependllble work Cit. f400 . Call

814.742-:zen.

1975 Dodge Da rt

896-31538.

72

Nortb

East

South

Pass

It
2t

Pass
Pass

3 'I
Pass

1•
2 NT
3 NT

Pass

Pass

1978 750 ·Honda. Excellent
condition. low rnlle,a, 3300
niles. e1200. Call 14-9921983 Suzuki RM e126. Ws1tt'
cooled, COI'I'CIMte new' top end.

the 10 to drive out an nonor. Next, de·
clarer takes the heart ace and forces
out the remaining spade honor while
he still bas the club ace as an entry to
his hand for the established eight and
seven of spades.
1tll NEWsPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .

Trucks lor Sale

79 Dodge Club cab 4x4 &amp; snow
plow. 60,000 on 380 ang. auto.
PS. PB, lir. new paint. tirta.
IPOk• WhNII, brek•. gurs,
lock·CRJtJ, tl.200, with plow
e7,200 or e,.t offtr. Alao 78
Oodg• 4x4 auto, PS, PB,
18 ,000 oo 380 -'U·· new paint,
etoile whll.ts . t4,950 or bast
offer, trade for boat. R.V. sporta'
car, pl1ne or lend in Gellia or
M1son Countv. Private owner.

73 Chevy 'II ton truck, nma
good. body rough . Evenings

72

Trucks for Sale

1984 Ford truck. with 1983
Shennandollh traval tnllor. Call

1977 Chevy truck. low mileage.

oaoo. Coli 814-a49-2644.

1981 Chev Dooley 4 wheel
drtve, 35 ,000 miiH. Excellent
condhion . 304·882·2887.
'81 GMC 1 ton pickup truck,

exc. cond. 304-982 -3238 or

6 whola ultra terrain v.t.icle,
good condHion. 304-882-2987.

72 ;ord PU -exc. cond ., 3 utUitv
bid tool boJtn. Call 814-...-8·

73

trans., 1l Rdll redial tirt1. Cell

814 · 248 - 9587~---

77 Ford F-100 with topper. Call

814·448-418a.

Huge Dut(h style bam,
oxe~lltnt lakt side and
farmland pasture and
wtads. Asking $400 ptr
aut. For qui(k salt. Adja(tnl Pomoroy.

2 BUILDING LOTS
1 ACRE PLUS

SPRING STREET

304-1112-2195.

1978 C-0 Freight llnlf. Cummins engine. 38 rtlrl. 8 tplld

130 ACRES

14,000 CASH

814-387-7277.
9418.

Real Estate General

814-448-1766 ,

1722 .

87 GMC2 ton v .e englnet&amp;OO.
1918 Subaru 4-whHI drive
station WIQtn . 304-458· 1566.

814-387·0407.

t700 . Coli 814·11'9-2903.

:-=::-::--c-::-:-- --

71 Corvette, good condition .
Restored . 18.000. Call lfttt' 7
p.m. 30•· 876-5798.

1981 Honda C~ 21!10 A RICe
Bike. Never b"" raced. Brand
naw condhion. Must •II. C1ill

3192.

Opening lead: • J

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

1·- - - - - - -- -

216 E.

ti&amp;O. Coll514·388·!1351 .

218-1202 . .

West

••&amp;o. 304- Coli 814-448-2748.

1988 Ford LTD, red four door.
fulyequlppad , 7,000mil81. taka
OVItr pl'fm'"tl Of Hll, 304-468·

1979 Honda C-X c:uJtom 100.
good c:ondhlon, low mil~~ge .

6 ACRES-S6,000
15 a&lt;res wooded land,
h,.o poplars, mollont
timber, sceni(. Wright
St., Pomeroy.

1980 Ford van 4 etd .. 6 cyl.,
urp.t. bw mlleege, eh1rp,
13.299. John's Auto Sal11,
Bulaville Rd .

MONTGONERY
REALTY

1984 GMC 11arc:fltt conversion
van , low mileage, mint condi·
'
don . Clll814-446-6338 .

Collect Calls Accepted

614-385-7419

11 toot boat. w"ttla about 80
lbl. full floltltlonL t175.00 .

304-852·3371.

10'-'i! ft . tNCk camptf Ill Mtf
contained, lhow.-. commode
and rtfrloer•tor . 304 · 882 ·
2887.

76

camp•. IINPI 1bc. tltC Cond.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accauorias

diamond ET unllug
m1111 whH~ wllh two now 70
tlret. 12110. Call 814 -441 -

Phone

81

•23.

-

NEW LISTING :... 148 acres
in Bedford Township with 2
old houses, barn &amp; other
building. All minerals in ·
eluded . $50,000.
NEW LISTING- Old hard·
store lot in Tuppers
' ·"''" "' on Rt. 7. Good com·
mecial location.
NEW LISTING - 2 story, 8
rms., 4 Brs., gas F.A. furnace. basement. lg. yard,
garden space, Sy racuse.
$25.000
NEAR BURLINGHAM - 4
acres, more or less, in the
woods. 2 Br, trailer, I ~
baths, l.P. gas lurnace ar1 d
buildings. Just $16,000.
SYRACUSE - 7 rm . ran ch.
fam ily rm. with lireplace,
carpeting &amp; garage. In Rus·
lie Hills.
BRADBURY - Good 7 rm.
brick, gas lumace, cook &amp;
bake units, fi replace, 4 Brs.,
2 porches, garage &amp; level
lot. Reduced to $28,000.
SYRACUSE - Want a garden or playground? 2 Br.
one floor home wilh new
kitchen , new range, new relrigerator, washer &amp; drye1.
Askin g $39,9JO.
CHESTER.- New ~nyl sid ing, new I.J ichen. 3 Brs.. carpeting, gas heat, basement.
Nice lot near theschooi.J ust
$30,000.
BUSINESS- Are yoo ambiltous for your luture' Good
opportunity plus 4 rentals.
etc. Let's talk on lhts one.
Only $40.000.
Selling Problem7
Call 992·3325

OR
About fish ing, boating,
by Blue Lake and Raccoon
tic system , electric and a ca
and move right in.

pop ~ up

304-871-5212.

biiC~

FiVe

1-(614)· 992 ·3325

~

83

79 Motor• Homea
&amp; Campe11

1882 Coachmtn

Coil 814-387-7170 otter_ 4PM.

18 82 Hond1 CRoiBO Motorcy·c:te. Good condition . Call 111•·

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

11

1990 K.wa11kllTD 1000. Exc:

&lt;XInd, 304·878-11433 .

1181 Hartev Oevlcl10n low rldar.

.,,..., 1800. 1879 CR 280
.1700. Coli 814-387-7880.

'A 54
t732

Pass

t800. Coiii14·2U-53a8 until
5:30.

1984 CR 80 wfth new Nbuil1

• AI0987

Pass

.rest , crulie c~ntrol. two
hetmatJ, ~ellent condl(ioli,

B01t1 end
Motort for Sale

1878 Mlol Ho.,. only 17,000
'7&amp; Toyote ·Cellu OT, 4 IP•d.
""'"·
o- mov
lJ 10 Moplo Avo.. 304-878· ftn"'couo,eoo.oo.
f!tht porty. 30'·488·
4014 .
1885.
.

1181 V•mlha 810 IPtclal, good
cond .• asking 1800 . Call 814441-(1127 aft., SPM .

t::;::::;:::;:~~=-r,~~~~~~;;~t~=;F.:;~~~~~-1
78

19150 Ford . NIIW palrlt, new

1978 Honda Hawk 400 motor·
eye .. · with vett• QU lckallvtt

fetrlng . IUfllllgl rack • beck

Generosity
pays off

79 Chevy Nav1, 1uto, u.w nice.
tl ,'ISO. 80 O.ovy Mon .. 1800.
81) AMC Spirit I 1.295. 80

76

Real Estate General

Home
Improvement•

H1rdwood Floors. Binding &amp;
rrfinlshlno. P.... lt and touno-&amp;
groove. FrH utlmltll, refll'en·
OM IVaitlblt. Willard • Dtvid
Bltnktnehlp, 114·441·0211 m
614-441·4047. Commerdal •

1974 Stln:teft foldout C:lmptf',
aleep1 B. COflllletl with 11ove,
ice bOa, lights&amp; aink.exc. cond.,

Ctl 014 -388-9751!1

r•kt~ntlel .

~erePM .

24741

RON'S Telavllion Sarvlca .
HoU11 calla on RCA, QUiur.
GE . Spoclollng in ZonHh. Call

f 974 C1mper self conteWIId.

Vlrglnlna D. Carroll. Broker
Tel: 247-6644

Fibergl11s blat with 150 HP
EwnNdttngine. All for e1 .59&amp; .
1978 Fill 1898. Coil 814·288·

304-578-2398 or 814-448·
2454.

.22.

THE FINEST NAME IN REAL ESTATE

Fetty Tr.. Trt"""'"g· 11u.,.
removal. Call 304·17 -1331 .

Motor honw 1971 Kavot 22'
long . 311 Dodge engine, HH
conttlned. very nlca, te.OOO .

81 4-245-5529 .

1974 Hollv Pork 12•58 &amp; lot. 3 881·3802
br'l. AC, Vlf'Y, very niCI. Call
814 ·448 -4788 ..... 8:30 Richard and Sons. interior tnd
~11imii · WHkends.
exttrior painting and wlllpaperlog, phone 304-875·7"7, Rl·
c:hlt'd 0 . Purdin•.

1972 Tag-A-Long 18 ft . trail.,.
Very good condition . n491!1 .

Clll 814-882·8173 or 814- 82
912-820&amp;.
1981!1 SUnray ,,...,.1 Trail• f28
If.!. Ful~ equipped. UHd 1
n\Dnth. Cll 11• ·982·8192 or
304-882-2230 WHkends.
C~tmptt .

Phone 814·"*8-3888 "' 814448-4477

•fl• 1:00.

Housing
Headquarters

Real Estate General

Vi,.gillla

£ Smtih

Your Listings In
Fr• MDrbt

ootstandilg lealures inclode ffi w/IJ~k
firep~ce, IR w/fieplace, 3 BRs, -2 bat1'6 ,
format dnilg new~ remodeled ktchen,carpet
throughout, electr~ lurnace, cen~al al, 2 car
attached garage with openers, satellrte dish,
fenood back yard, nice garden space. Let u;
sin¥ )l)u thii home today.
·'

RIVER FRONTAGE- lh~
, eat-n kitchen, nice fami~
room wnh hearth tl1&gt;00dburner. bat1'6, gas
heal. ~rge unattached garage,city schooli.Call
for an appoiotment.
•
24 .ICRES. 11/LHARRISON TWP .. CLAY LICK
MIAD - Rolling land. Well 011 property, barn
and tobacco base. Call f11 m11e titaib.
WANT TO 00 A UTTU FARliNG HIS
SPRING7 - We have a new isting with 11.4
"acres m/1, smallloblcco I:Bse, ni:eranch s~e
home ~er.; 3 be:lrooms. 2 baths, larJ! IR.
kitchen, lui basemen~ hardwood fb&lt;n , froot
porch and rear patio. Just off Rt;, 35, nea r
Rldney.
EDGEMONT DRIVE - ClASSY CAPE COD IN
PERFECT CONDITION - This hotre offer.; 3
BRs, klchen l'ith DW, displ., range and refng.,
dililg roorn, livng room with woodburning
freplace. fami~ room. woodburner, two lith&gt;.
foyer, gas
. hea~ almost new roof, immed~te
possessiOil.

.

MOBILE HOME FOR SALE - 14x70 Fleetwood
Broadmore, 2 BR, 2 ooths, klcllen oith rant!!
and refri&amp;. carpetilg. IOxll metal stiJ'age
bkjg. Call for more details.
GREAT IDeATION- REDUCED PRICE. NICE
N!IGHBORHOOD - All these thngs descrire
th~ all br~k. ranch style horne ju~ df Rt. 35.
This home ~er.; 3 Ills. I\! bath&gt;, IR, FR.
equipped knchen. lull blsement, coveroo
patKI, nice l~t i!nood blckyard. Call today.

200 ACRES MIL FRONTS ON RACCOON
CREEK - Approx. 65 acres tilable illd 135
acres woods. Comfortable two ~ory horre
offer.; 4 BRs, bath, kitchen, livilg room, filll i~
room, two firep~ces. bam. 2 ~rge screenoo
p11ches. lovely quiet setting.
YN:AIIT FARM lAND - P/Qrgan Twp. 84
acres more or llss. Level and rollilg land.
Approx. 33 acres til~b~. rernailder 1&gt;00!11.

STARTER l«liiE OR RENTAl INCO. $19,9JO - 3 BR home ~ers IR, klchen,
bath, 2 car unattached garage, lenood yard.
Call for informaoon.
QUALIIY IN EVERY DUAl L- 311 4BR lr~k
home ~ers a 20x40 famiy room 3 baths
Mellen with OW. diipl .. m~rawaveilld trash
cotrj)actor, dinl&gt;g room, intercom system
central air, 2 car garage, deck and a 20x4d
pool. Over SIOO.COO. Call for ap(X)ilttrent.
WlU'LL LIKE LIVING HERE - 3 BR rillch tust
milutes from lawn on Rt 141. Other features
inckide IQtchen with range, relrig, llW, displ.,
and oven, LR w~h fireplace, bath, lull
basem111t deck, lenood backyard, gas heat,
central air, city school district.
NEW USTING! WA1NUT1WP. -28.8..CRES
M/L- Nice home offers 4 BRs, baih, kichen.
livingroom, dining room, frepoce and covered
rear porch. Tobacco· base, barn, sll!dl and
garage. Owner may cor6Kler filancilg Call lor
rmre details.
6100 9J, FT. BUILDING - Solid oor&lt;rete
walb, 200 ft. !rootage on SR 7 il Crown City.
Formerty used as lnnilure factory. Ideal for
retail sa~ or manufacluring bJsiness.
THIS COUlD BE THE ONE FOR YOU! - Lovely
br~k ranch offers a 14x241R, kitchen w/ llW,
displ., eye-level oven, counter IDp range and
b rea kfa~ bar, dinette. lamily 100111 , 3 Ills. 2
I:Bihs. lull basement, patio, 2 !replaces,
attachoo 2car garagewithelectricopeners,gas
heat, central air, paiD, mleroom system. Just
mil ules from taw non Debby Drive. Callfor an
appointment.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING- PERRY IWP. NEAR CORA - !IIOOsq.ft.steel ~.ideal for
any011e in truckilg, drilli1~ or mililg IIISiness.
Owner may consider leas111g or filancing. Call
for, more informatim.

18.000- I!"ACRES- OIESIIRE Till'.Vacant land. SeptK: tank oo tJC.Perty. Cal for
more inlormation. .

BEAUliFULIIIICK RANCH can 12 tlllrcllased
with 79 acres or 2 acres. Th~ kiv~ home
offers 1800 SQ.It, 412drooms,2bllhs,county
style eal·in krtchen, dililg area, 12x24 living
room, wood ~"''· carpeting. full basement,
ceniral air/ heal pump and attachoo 2 car
garage. There~ a 42x54 bam onthe property.
CaH lor an appo•trrent.
ADDISON IWP. - Possom Trot Rd. - 93
acres m/1, all woods. Old barn on tJoperly.
$21,9JO.
GENflEMAN'S FARM - 35 acres m/1,mostly
bl~ble, 3 miles north ol Rodney. Spri1g. wei
and county watet , fenced and cra;s fenood,
toblcco base. Very ~ce 31J 4 redroom ranch
style home wrth krtchen. LR. barn, breezeway,
woodburi1tng firepla ce. Call for an
appoiltment.
COMMERCIAL &lt;XI RESIDENTIAL -!hi; line
room two story horre features two blths,dll ing
room, krtchen with new cabllets. carpeting.
fireplace, full basement, gas heat, bkick 3 au
garag~ Yin~ ~dll&amp; lfvel Ill w~h highway
!rootage on Upper Rt. 7.
ClOSE TO TOWN - Nice ooe story horre
featuring kitchen,LR, fami~ room,dning room, .
fu ll basement. carpeting. gas l'eat, ely water.2
car unattached bb"" Ill rag~
DO YOU WANT LOTS OF IKIOM PLuS THE
CONVENIENCE OF LIVING IN TOWN! - lh~
home offer.; ooth. Located on Second Ave., thii
home has 3 or 4 red rooms LR dilng room
large IQtchen with pantry off imchen, smali
back porch, large froot porch, full lot with
p ~nly of room for garden and ki:ls, gas heat.
unattached one car garage. Call today lor an
apP!Jintment.
YOU CAN.P«N ALITTLE BIT OF COUNTRY5 acres m/1 on StRt 141. Nice onestory home
has a famiy room with woodburner, lull
basement, heat pump, cent ar, ciitern. well
and counly water. (leen 9::hool. Call for an
appoillment.

--

THE. KIND YOO HAVE IN liliNDI - BOO&lt;

Weke1111

Analysis

ranch withil walkng d~tanre tl school; and
downtown shoppilg. 3 BRs, bath, LR, klchen,
dil11g room w/butn-tn ch•a (3bllet, fam• ~
room in oosement, gas ll!at,firepoce,attached
garage.

Mowrey'S UphOIIIIring Mrving
vtarJ. The beat
in tumiturl uphollterlng. All
work guarent•• vilh our mod·
•m shop 11 M11on . County
Fairgrounds. Phone 30ol-876·

RACINE - Have yoo been
looking for acreage wrth a
nice house? This 3-4 bed·
room ranch is right for yoo
and your family . 4.Qi acre
tot gives yoo space. Home
has full basement. linished
!amity room, nice workshop,
electric 88 heat. Make yoo r
appointment. $39,000.00 .

.,.,lority in 1111 bids. Bids wiM.bt....,... frorntliotftlllldplrlill, lndlilioW--]IoiiiC)'.

indMdoots nt innstn.· HltlllltOS'WU.~. IIITIR.ID M$111 Ofl THE HIGHEST NET 110 TO
HUO. PROPERTIES ARE SUBIECI 10 PRIOR SAlE. fiiJYEIIIUSI .-rAIN OWtl FINAIICING.

COMMERCIAL PROPERlY - locatoo at corner tl Secord
Ave. and Sycamore st. Call'lor more mformation

ATTENTION INVESTORS!! RENTAL INCOME
OF $485 PER IIONTH - ASKING PRICE
$29,9JO! ..;.. 1.5 acres m/1, 5 rootns and bllh
home, 12x65 mobile home illd mobile lllme
pMI. Calll11 more details tod!y.

MIRTH GALLIA ESTATES - Morgan TwP,.

I001ll0 lot. Ask~g $3.9JO. Owner Mil
consider fmncing.

•
·•

COMMERCIAL BUILDING fo(3100 a~ng Court St.in Gallllol~.
3,500 sq. ft. plus 1.200 SQ. ft. apartment. Ca ll for more
inlormaoon. PRICt REDUCED!
PtitCE REDUCE!f oo th~ beautitul Co~nta l Dutch hlin ~
'llcated across hom the nlffl cou~house. Central AC. wblp,JJI~
linished basement. $73,000.

. ::• : :·
• • .:
•
·
'
•

,

•

.;

FOR RENT - Two 2 bedrm. apis. 2nd lbor near !J)ff coorse. • •:
$175 and $200 plus depa;rt. ADULTS ONLY!
•
FARM - 150 acres. Green lwp. $79,000 Tetms.
•
'
. .
SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS..... , . •
CALL AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SALESPERSON
-

ADD.
Box 92 Rock St.

CITl!TOWII
(Coolville)

LISTING

BRS PRICE DEPI!SIT
$500
2 $10,800

GALliA CO. AS-IS
Rt. 3, CroUII Beck Rd. (GIIIipolls)

MEIGS CO. AS-IS

• 127151·203

212 Rock Sl.

, (l'llntlroy)

3

$28,500

1500

3

$21 .000

1500

"TO SEE AND / OR BID ON ANY OFTHE ~!lOVE PROPERTIES YOU MUST ,
CONTACT A REAL ESTATE BROKER OR REAL ESTATE SALES AGENT
OF OUR CHOICE.
'11/P APPUIS OfiiY 10 INSURED PROPIRTIIS.

.

- 25 IC!el ~ SIIKius
modern tfi.level
. lnclodes 3 llflll! bedl OOflll, 2
full baths, fully equipped ktl:hen with dilng n ,
living room and l;rge unfnisted lmsement Ptenty d
sll1age in 211 car )flrage Ntce Quiet locatiJn just~ fl
160. S79,9ll.
11224

FOR ADDITONAL INFO.
CONTACT: MR. JIM MISSOURI
814/419-2232

'

,,

IIU nMl. - Jl ac. i1 al Crop ar111, IIISilre. trees.
f)OI1d. DAic. quiet beamn. Energj elfi:ient 4 IJ!
home, flil blsel•811. 1arae prage. bam.StRt 325 3.5
mies E. d 'fttloo. lei IIi s1tow you this !Pod part-tirre
farm and f*lte uni. Priced at $65,(0).

1312

This is absolutely tht best time.
Wltlt lilt lew interist rates, we
.......Jlln couint out of tht
w1Uwllk. Clll Galia
lealllr for 43 y~ars.

c..._'•

·. WIS.Atl IS A
SOLD WORD
-lOlSE
.,
diUIUIIIIG SITI IN GAWA COUNIY -Located
il Gotien Ttlllllllip on !l Rl.!il811ss than 4miles from

1o1m. Ylllllill!l Sill! the view tl believe it.land cooiists
rJ 85 mt. about Jl tl «l tl whi:h are c!JMd with
10-yr. old !Iiies. The ballnc:e ~ a haidwood illest.
lnt:lttda 1 ,1.-m flOOd and at least elltt four·leiged
delr. 1:111 besdd 10 5tr more acre tracts 11 al inone
trac:t. V.U tim, fitd 111¥1hilg to mall:h it
1125

NEW LISTING - THE PERSONAliTY l«lUSE WRH
· POOL - Sttre there are many homes fo! sale, bJt
OONE just like this 011e. Avery conortable tivilg room
wih woodburning frep~ce. nice kicllen with 11111111!,
dishwasher and refr~ator, dinilg area, 3 rice s2ed
bedrooms and a fillliy room. lrclides II\ baths 1nd
garage. This Ill 1e has hMI excelent care. OONJS: a
beautiful, sparklilg 16x32 11·gr~nd jX)(II. Excelent
neighborhood-Sprng Va~ . $67,!i10.

.U9

year ad
ranch pertectty p~ood on a knoll. bng slop~g froot
lawn and ideal garden area in rear-seen( country
~lffl! Located on a hardtop roai, ckise to HPIC. home
has 3 bedrooms, !ving room, bath, I ~ krtchen. d~ ~ g
area and garage. $45.000.
11413

SCHULT MOBILE l«lME - 1983 14xill, 2 killllths
special design quality kitchen, all efeclric. wet
tnsulated, central.air. On nice 120x 120 kit llifh utilities
~ p~ce includW!g IUial water. On st. Rt 32S near
Southwestern High School_,d grade school Pmd at
$26,800 kir all. Woo~ sell separate.
*317
DUTCH COlONIAL- 2~oryhorneon 15 acresoo~ 1
mile .from hospital. Beautiful hotre ~ very pd
cond~lln 1nchJdes 5 BRs, 2 blths, living room, den illd
much OliJe. 40x50 metal b~' •contails ilifQUnd
swimmilg jX)(II, bath, and ~arages 2lll~ . Resting on a
grassy kOilll with outstand~g vrew and privacy.

SCENIC HILlS &amp; VALLEY ARFA - 158 ac. m/1 d

. mostly pasture land. lots d road !rootage abo&amp; r~
area wnh seveFalgoodbuild•~sites. Has 12x9l rroble

home with 12x37 Mldiim g!r11g IIi blih, 41J!s, nice
family ro0111 with wood sllive and amost I18W Wths!
cabilets. Has barn and two ~her buildil&amp;l nclJdilg
old log house. Askilg $70,000.
·

'

*306

TYCOON !AI(E - 24x48 bklck build~g 011 011e-thi'd
ilcre 1~ by Ihe lake: Good locatiOil for bal ~kle stllp.
lnclodes diiplay cases, ~rre tackle 11d fsltilg IMI'·
OWNER WANTS IT !nlD! Was $20,000, Now $15,1110.

ftl7

..

4 ..CRES MIL - lnckidilg convenient rrodtim,
energy elfi:ient homa. Good prden afl!ll, IIOOds,
JJJsture.•Priced to sel at $24,!110,

THE
OF HOUSE BEAUTIFUL- Truly a
near ~rtect llltre that oill saliify the "hard toplease"
Gorgeous living room with marble lacal firepoce, deep
~~ carpeting and glass patio ooors to a tar!!! screened
porch. You11 lreath a ~ill (Jf r~~l when yoo see the
~ of the 3 ~rge bedrooms and 2 gleam111g ceramic
bat1'6 . Kitchen tnckJdes range, oven, dis !'washer and
large eatilg area with leis tl windows and view t1 a
Y!OOded ravine. The !ami~ room incudes bJit-in
bookcases and corner oindows. Checkthe qualty ligflt
fixtures, drapes and shades. 2 (3 r garage and
basement. Located in town oo a lar~ shady . well
landscaped lot at the end ol the street.

GmT ~ lnE - Ranch style 3 lfllllme
with W I!Mnmt oll!n iarll!! INing room. eat-in
~. 2 l'llths and CIIJIOif. Very easy ID heat and
maillllt llitll vil~ilJ Wvx·2 a: res d groord.
Just ~ a..vHie
. $48,ll0.
11238

EASf 1D AliUME 10M -Starter Ill me with 10\l%
filed rflla ISSUmabla to.t. lbne ~elides 3 BRs INing
room, b!tli. eat-in kilthen and l-ear garag~ targe 1
acre I« i'1 flmly oriented neiihlxlrrood. Affordab~
PIYIT!Ills II $44,000.

mo

WIIAT Al£111 OOOS....of lildilga 4 yr. dd IOOdern

home lor $36.900? EJ«:eeent ~ yw cal today Ill th~ 3
BR with pal1ill basemfnl. Extra ilre kitchen, wood
stove, 2 SIDfB&amp;e b.tildilgs and 2 a:res. Just can I be

beai!

11311

.I

SUPER NEW LISTING!! - Don, wan ll'ltils11•gon
this home because it win sell ~ore them. Attractive.
well kept 4 red room b&gt;level home offers ~540SQ. ft.of
l~mg space. Includes 2 ~ baths. INing room. d ~~g
room, ~ree fillli~ room, fu l~ equipped eat-in k~chen.
plus ~rge 2 car garage. Nice location. Quiet
neighborhood wnh pool and ckJ bhoose ;1ivtleges.
Pnced to move at $69,9JO.
#236

Thinking of Selling?

me

ATHENS CO. AS-IS

111692·203

N

WI.liED LISftNGS!
WI liED LlmNGS!

DESPERATE - Owners riled to sel ths 311ldniom
bi.Jevei. Will consider any ~r.lncildes 311drooms, 2
baths, tami ~ room w~h chmney lor OIJIXI)umer and
garage. Large eat&lt;n k«cnen. ll!l acre groorxl. 5
rrinutes fnrn hos~. Kyger Creek s:hooli. Was
$49.~. now $44. .
.
il235

SINGLE FAMILY ACQUIRED PROPERTIES

CASE#
122929·203

THE AMERICAN DREAM co•IIUE -.Just imlei1e
the pr~ home in the loveiest smmg Ihal )QU_'ve
ever seen and th~ home vii t~ it. l'!lfect seltittg
(trees, small pond, hugeboulder.&gt;) fo! a very handsome
br~~ 1~ storyoverklok•gtll! r~. 48Rs,largeflmly
room, 2 firejilaces, forn~~i d~ilg, 2 bat!ls, iniJOIIO(I
pont. Owne1 has rmved out of tate, 1111st sel.
$129.000.

Henry E. Clel1111d , Jr.
992-6191
Jon Trns111 ..... 949·2660
DoHi8 Turnw ..... 992-5692

' HUO trllt*lits n Mllillblt for Silo to lit~ r...,... 11 ra. color, flliCion. sn. nl¥i1al
stotus, or flltlonlt Orip. HUD - l i l t ""'lorljlct Ill' or II bids, tOWiivuny lntomiality or

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING WITHIN THE CITY but witha
country atmosphere?? Approx. I ac re, located Inside cily
limils. 2 nice outbu ildings, garage and carport. Excellent
con dition. Buy now for $55,00e00.

CHISIIiR£, OHIO

POMEROY - Small bu ~·
ness located in town . Garage
and land ideal lor mechan tc.
$10,000.00.

IllS IICDVID ~ 4:1 S P,M. 4/30/86 NOIIH llill SJ~ 7TH FLOOI
.S 0P91D 10.00 A.M. 5/l /16.I'IIOPEIIY DISPOSIIIJN 16141 4694906

IDOK AT THIS ONE!!! 10 .ICRES M/L ONE
YEAR OLD RANCH - ·$39;(i)O -.· lh~·torne
~ffers 1584 SQ. ft. 4 BRs, 2 baths kkcllen
fami~ room, 12x24 LR, dinilgroom,carpeting
elec. BB heat, Ander.;en therrropanes. county
water, SW school d~trict. Calltooay and make
an appointment to see ttis ooe.

-------

can't do this- HELP HIMSELF

E. M. WISEMAN; BROKER
Clyde B. Walker, 24&amp;-6278
David Wiseman, 448-9665
B. J. Haireton. 448-4240

POMERO.Y,O.
·.- ~?Nm
ST. AT. 143 - A newer 3

LIVING

•

PfRRY lWP. - 21.8 acres, m/1, dder home
offer.; 2 BRs, LR. klchen, bath, lull basement,
siiJm w~dow s, wei( rural water avai~ble. Call
for more detai~.

IF NO ANSWII CAU:

367-7560 - 367·7671

Cal,...,"''
446-4514

IS

E.M•itoWIII

AFFORDABLE

BRICK RANCH -ROUSH LANE- Thii love~
home offers 1378 lq. tt. plos a full basement.
Three be:lrooms, LR ~ L~hapoo with !replace
and dilng r00111, woodburning ~ove in
bastmen~ l'h baths, garage. Call br more
information.

367-0317

446-3644

THE FAMILY WILL lOVE IT HERE! - Th~
home offers 1728lq.ft.. 3 BRs. I\! baths, ~us
shower in basement, galley kitchen 5
oomptete~ equipped, IR, fam ily room, diling
room, carpetin~ cenlial ar/heal pu~ . mar
deck overlooks Raccoon Creek. Call for an
appointment today.

•

Guttering
*Fencing
"Remodeling

REAL ISTATE

Rul E1tata General

OWNER ANXIOUS TO Sfll- HAS R£DUCED
THE PRICE BY $10,000- 132.9 ocres m/1in
Wa.,ut Twp., II\ story hmre has 3 BR. baih,
42x!l-1 barn. large tobacco base, Ca)l for an
appoiltment.

An swer: A kleptOmaniac "helps hlmH!f'' bteauu

LANGSVILLE - 6.35 acre
country estate. Barn, shed~1
two ponds, and a nice I ~
story home 1n good repair.
Etec. heat plus a woodburner for cheap heat
$43,000.00.

SECLUDED LOCAnOit ·
·10 acres, m/1, wooded paradise w/stream. Some
·land cleared for new home site or mobile. 33 tons
of gravel in drive, approved aeration septic system. Rural water, electric available . Owner will
trade or sell.
.
96 ACRES
aeautiful tract of land, can be sub-divided .
located at Wilkesville, S.R. 160 and 124. Pond,
barn and older buildings.
OLD FASHIONED CHARM
Suburban living will be great in this exceptionally ·
smart 4 bedroom home. Very large rooms to place
your antiques. Family size kitchen loaded w/ca binets. Basement, rural water, garden spot and
much more.

FAIRAELD N:RES - $37,9JO - 3 8R
ranch, k~chen, iR. dinette, bath, attachoo
garage, n~e yard, utility bklg., \\OIIId be agreat
starter home. Call tooay.

HAREM PLURAL SAFARI

FREE ESTIMATES

'CentlnUOUI

==========];!!i]!!!!~~!!!i!t~==========~!!I]!~~~~!C=========:

trl countY area 21

POIIERQY - Stately 2 story
home in town. 7 rooms. 3
bedrooms, I ~ baths, base·
ment. nice froo t setting
porch. S25,9JO.OO.

388-8826
Professional Strvic;e
Makes tht Difference.

PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP -Love~ home ofters
3 BRs. 3 bllhs,equipped klchen, l4x441ami~
room, dilette. !Jepbce, 2 (3r attachoo gan~e.
20x40 pool and satell~e d~h. Call for an
appoiltment.

tAn,_a Monday)

...

Uphostered.

NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT - Completely remo·
deled 3 bedroom horne . all
in ~od condition, tented in
yard, many nice features.
$29,000.00.

REAL ESTATE

TJaS l«liiE DfiiMDS ATTBITIOII!- 1.86
acres, m/( 2,024 lq. ft. .- tNing space. Other

814·218-1470, Clll Eve. &amp;14·
8t,
Rt. 7. Crown
City, IIOh.new
C1ll ·
44'1·3438
. Old

Now arrange the circled letters to
f01m the aurprtee tnswet', aa fUQ1 gesled 1&gt;y 1110 abcml car1oon.

SOIDUII NOW .fOI:
*RoOfing *Siding

booroom ranch home, 2
baths, equipped ~tchen , 011
aPfJrox. 2.35 acres .. Includes
chicken house. ~orage build·
ing, garden space. Pritt reduced. $31,000.00.

Plumbing
&amp; Heeting
CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pin•
GoMipoh. Ohio

Sloopo e. 1900. Coii814-H7·
3170

R • M Fumtture Manufecturlng,

Yesterday 5

Aot.y or ceblt tool drilling.
Most w.lla COff1JI.ted eameday.
Pu.,., Ill• and ..-vice. 304·

OD"tllned. 1514· 388·9833 .

Real Estate General

814-448-7833 o• 814-446·
1833.

CONSTIUCTION

. I Jumble" LEECH

IM!docaplng. 304-178-2010.

oov.,, tub &amp; shower, Mlf .

1971 Palomino tent

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11111.3 Sec. AVI ., Gdipolia.

,, ,,,.,

SEWERS • BASEMEjlls
WATER UNES • SEPTIC
TANKS · Cl!EEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS · MOBILE
HOME SETUPS • ROAD
BUILDING , FOOTERS· LAND

Stlrka T,... 1nd Llwn Service.

23 Y.t ft . "•vtl trailor. AC, TV
anttnna, ewnlng, spare tire &amp;

OHIO - No buildings. excellent huntin garea. 100%mineral
rights go with property. About ~ of acreage ts paslure, bal·
an ce is wooded '

t
J rJ j

~YEMINT

"PO· 415,,

19110 19 ft . Prowlar air c:ond.,
MC. cond. tiiiPI I . C1H lfttr 5,

2. APPROXIMATELY 140 ACRES tDCATED AT PORTLAND,

•BULLDOZING •END ·
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING ·
•CRANES oORAGLINE

RINGLES ' S SERVICE.
rienctd carpenter, tltotrioltn,
me~e~n, palnt.r, rooflng (lnctud·
;ng hot tor oppllcotlon) 304·
875·2088 or 875·7388.

Co11814·448-2077.

- Has six room house. three barns and corn
crib. 45 acres ol bottom land and river frontage! Call now!
Th1s one has its own ga s well'

Jam• Soya WMar S.vice. Ailo
poole flloct . Coiii14-2U· 1141
or 114-441-1111 or 114-448·
7811 .
I

7397.

Real Estate General

GORRELL
REALTY
Hill Road, Racine, Ohio

85 . General Hauling

814-387-7741 or 304-8781247.

875-2837.

new.

Jr. owner.

Co1l, llm•tone, griVel. ate.
D•llv..-td 1 ton end up . Jim
Lanier, 304·111&amp;·1247 or 876 -

79 Motors Homes
· &amp; Campart

Business Services

Good-1 l!xtiiVetirlg, ba..m.,..ta.
foot~. d!fY•~s...p~i~ tanka.
landacliplng. Cli11 anytime 1111444111·4137. J~m• L. Dlviton,

Ken's W•m Service. Y/alla,
ciltema, pools and waterbedJ
fllld. Call 1114-387-0123 or

1974 Chw Vega, t90.00, for
p1r1s (not wracked) call 304·

Hkt

Excavating

N338

NICE caoP IMD AND WOODED MEA- 9J ac. m/1
il al Racom Creek to the sooth, State Roote to the
north. tpld farm land aast and west. ~ buildng~.
Good tocdon to bdl. All milerat ilckJded. Priced at

$11,!00.
STAII[I !bilE Ill GIEEII SCHOOlS - Ca!y B!
sllry homl on al~t kit i1 Centenary offer.&gt; 31Edrooms,
nkefy d!bd kill:hen, living room with IJI!IIIace,
betflliid ft!l!._t let 111 show )'llU ltJw easy I is
ID llirll $33,000.
11240
20 11:10 WEL.MD- Elcelent buildilgsle near
1&amp;1 Glln1le liid SoutiMestlm High School. lnckJdes
~ lltld ltld woods wtl1 p1ettty rl aood roai ~IJI!age.

$17,1Dl

-..uu ~IIAI. -

1140
n.tstanditg ~~eror.mg illd

W1l trm ttis 4 8R Cape Code. 1.3 acres d
111111i:uiW lawn heed down to the rive!, private~
~

loclllid 011 the • ol tiMfl Beautilul fornlll dililg
"l:ourlry' kkhen, 2 lntllul baths and
ful '-nlnl. OWner loolt~&amp;.lor smaler residence,
have reMed IWice to $75,1Ul.
NIOJ

100111, ell-it

COUNTRY COMFORT AT ITS FINEST - 4 Ell IJ~k
ranch ~rge enough 111 any size famiy. Over 2500 lq.
ft. of livingspace inc~des lormald il ngwnhhardwood
lklors. large eat·in toitchen with dilette, 2 luU baths,
livilg room with frep ~ce. Plus over 1500 SQ. ft.
!llrtial~ f., ~hed blsemeni with an~her lull bathand
lami~ room. Over.&gt;~ed 2 ca r garage, wrap-aroond
porch, in-groond pont. 7 ac. ol jiaygroond aroond
house with 33 acres of woods. $~.500 for all. 11
$86.500 lor house and one acre.

#113

OHIO VALLEY FARM - 153 acres - Approx. I'OO'
of Ohc River ~oota ge. Also, road lrontageon bothsides
ofRt. 7totalilg approx.4,000'. 140ac verygoodcrop
land. !II ac. JJJsture. ba~nce tn wooded area and 1111SC.
acres. 8uild~gs consist ol two houses w~h modern
leatures, JI)OEI barn for tobacco, large da ry bu•ld•g;
with !DO liee stalb, leed~g a rea and storage. Two good
concrete stave ~tls w~ h over 1200 ton ~orage.
Harrilgbone milk111g parkir. 6m a sde. wnh overhead
feed storage and convenent mtlkhouse. Farm now
used as dairy q~eratK! n but very sortable as ~rer l)'t:f
livestock or cashcrop operatm Also. upland area very
su rtab~ lor hotre sles. Pr(ed to seD at $200.000.

~329

IDEAL smiNG of 6 ro0111 modern home on I ac. of
mostly t1at land very sutab~ lor )flrden andlawn.Nee
shade trees. wood stove in blsementabng..;th luelotl
lorced air lurnace. Oay Grade School and Gallipol•
If~ School. $39.800 .
N34 1
IIOBILE l«liiE AND LOT &lt;&gt;cated '" 8:1oma Tratl
Subdivision near Tycooo lake ~rre tS IOx!ll 1963
Fleetwood. Re-insulated. rew.. cart:et 1n '85. sol~
foundation, all in very good condrtcn. Includes gas
range, refriger•IIJ (2 yiS. ~d ) and other good
houseflold lumture negotiabe.Lot has ~ own good well
and also county water avai~ b~. 16x20 g::reenll:l·tn
bJildilg with corcrete lbor and ba rbeqve br~k til
· near. Also 12xl2 storage bUtldng. All priced at

$12.000.

#307

LARGE FAMILIES WILL LOVE! HIS ROOM41R HOllE·
with awrox. 1800 SQ . ~ . oiiNing arel. Feawes llckide
larae toyer, LR.DR, den, knchen with plenly d cabilets,
2 fiep~ces and utility room. Huge storage room, ~e rJ
clo6ets and 2 car 111rage.Snuated on tree shaded 1.5
ac. kit with r!rer ~ew. Pricoo at $84,500.
1100

•

-·

�'•

Page~D-8~The

Pomeroy-Middleport-GallipOlis. Ohio~Polnt'Pieasan~.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

w. Va ..

April 20. 1.9 86
.,

Meigs ·c.onservation officials say
county has more ihan 30 ·soil types
By Nit'Dooley
SoD c-\oatru!UI
. Melp Olunly
POMEROy -Meigs Cou~ty has
more !ban ll d~rent son types,
each with specific charactB'Istlcs,_
according to Gordon GUmore, SoU
Scientist In MelliS County. Great
dltrerences In aoU cllaracterlstlcs
and properttes can occur mer smrt
distances, GilmOre adds. The aolls
of . Meigs CountY are · presmtly
being Interpreted lind mapped by
Gllrmre and Dean Bottrell of the
u.s,D.A. SoD Cooservatkm Servlre.
Tlte Investigation will 1'1!5ult t1 the
publication ~the MelliS County SoU
Survey.
. The SoU Survey will rontaln a
complete set of soU maps for the

HERD TO GO- 'These Hot.teln cows remalnmg In
lhe mlk production herd of Goorge and Harry Holter
wll be plllg lo slaughter lids week as a pan of lhe
Hollers' Plll'ilclpallon In the &amp;l)venunenl's $1.8 billion

-

-

whole herd buy-out dairy .reduction program. A total
of 14,000 dairy fanners, Including 48t mOhio, and
tlree In Melp Counly, are going out ol production for
the ned nve years.

Ho~

~. roundgpon Paae3

.

cow wetghs a thOu sand pounds, and
most are heavier than that, the row
would sell for $.1Xl. But a good dairy
cow, and I'm heing conserva tlve
here, iS worth $700. Once that bid is
accepted, ho\vever, the ·animal
must go lor slaughter, regardless&lt;t
the price."
Complaints to the subsidized

Wild turkey festival

scheduled May
McARTHUR - Altoough Benjamin Franklin's efforts nearly two
lrundred years ago to get the turkey
declared the national bird were not
successful, there remains great
admiration for the wild turkey.
Vinton Coonty, has bts of turkeys
- wild turkeys, tbat Is - and the
Vinton County Travel and Tourtsm
Committee Is planning the serond
annual Wild Thrkey Festival for
May 2 and 3, l!l!G, on the streets of
the rounty S€8t, McArthur, to
commemorate the esteem In which
many prople oold this Mighty Bird.
Located In southeastern Ohio's
hill country, Vinton County possesses natural scenic beauty and
reSources and qJportunitles tlr
outdoor recreation, many assoctat61 with Lake Alma, Lake Hope,
and Lake Rupert. Springtime Is an
especially lovely time or year In
Vinton County. The !J!od paved
roads at the county's highway
system make drtvlng through the
county to enjoy "Nature at tts Best"
a leisurely experlenCI'.
A "country festival" parade wDI
kick off the second Wild Thrkey
Festival on May 2 at 6: 30 p.m.
through downtown McArtlrur. It
will be followed by a concert
featuring McGuffey Lane, a
nationally-known count ry-rock
band, wrose appearance Is being
. made possible through the courtesy
of the Vinton County National
Bank. This will occur on the stage In
tronl of the courthouse beginning at
8 p.m.
Saturday's events will get underway at to a.m. with lively music on
the stage at the courtoouse. Local
and regional musicians will be
performing throughout the day for
your enjoyment - oountry, bluegrass, old-time, and gospel. Groitps
will Include: Mountain Top Gospel
·singers, Carol Goodman, champion
ftddler Kenny Sidle with Troy
Herdman, Hart Brothers, Sonshine, Country Comer Gang, Revelatbrs, Back-up Stars, Hawkeye
and Mountain Man and Company,
Atkinson Ridge Boys, Roger
McWhorter and Rebound , and

Signup May 5-16
for 10-year proj~t
WASHINGTON. (UPll - A
---- · second round of bidding next month
will give farmers a chance to Idle
highly erodible cropland for a
decade under a far -reaching new
conservatiOn program.
AgrtcUlture Secretary Rlchard
Lyng said Friday farmers will be
able to sign up May 5-16 to begin the
10-year effort either this year or
next year.
The Agriculture Department ac·
cepted only 838,356 acres on IO,JJ'l
farms , Lyng said many bidders
asked "unreallstlcaUy high rompensation," but he pred !cted
farmers will have a better under·
standing of the program during the
second round .
Accepted bids ranged from $5 to
$90 per acre a year. The average
was $41.82.
The plan has a goal of taking 40
mnnon to 45 mutton acres out of
production In gradual Increments.
Called the conservatiOn reserve, It
was Included In the 1985 nve-year
farm Jaw and described as -themost
important conserVation Initiative
since the Great Depression.
O&gt;ngre5s set a minimum goal for
enrolling 5 rnllllon acres this year.
The goverrunent also will pay halt
the cost o1 planting trees or grass on
the Idled land. ·

2~3

Sweet Mountain Sounds. Bring
along a lawn chair to enjoy the
music In comfort.
An Intermission from the music
will occur at 5 p.m. when the Wild
Thrkey Festival Quren Contest wUI
occur ~o select a person to represmt
the festival and county.

Farm flashes

NBA playoffs on Page 5

Photo on Page 10

By United Pl'e8l! lnlemallonal
A possible tornado touched down in a mobile oome
p~rk in northeastern Clark .County Sunday night,
lnJurtng six people and causing extensive damage.
Several mobile homes at the Brookside VIUage
Mobile Home Park near Catawba In Clark County
were damaged, said a spokesman for the Clark
County Sherifl's Department.
Catawba Fire Chief Don Heffner said he believed
the damage was caused by a tornado.
'" All thej rallers just blowed one way- blowed to
the east. Yes, It had to be (a tornado) lhe way It
twisted the traDers up."
·
However, National Weather Service riflclals said
they could not confirm that a lornado hit the area.
They said thedamagecould have been caused by high
winds.
Initially, all residents of the park were evacuated .

into ·Ottawa River

1 Figure of speech
7 Scottish cap
to Satchel
13 London's river
19 Mocked
20 Fuss
21 The sell
22 Caroused
24 Growing out of
two pair of wings of equal length.
25 Thai thing
Ants have a thin waist while the
27 Latin conjunclion
waist of a termite Is thick. If you are
28 Concerning
still oontused, we will send the ,_ 29 Math term
lnsoct to Identification Clinic at
30 Expunge
O.S.U. for the official I.D.
3t Not early
Heaving of allalfa was a serious
32 Above and
problem this spring. Don Myers,
toU&lt;:hlng
Extension Agronomist, suggest
34 Be Indebted
that producers walk their alfalfa
36 Bark cloth·
fields to appraise the degree of
38 Heraldr.y: Qraited
heaving. There Is oo way of
39 ·South:"1
Indian
pressing tbese plants back Into the
40
Bishop:
abbr.
!Ill!.
41 Amanuensis
Cult!packlng merely Increases
44
French article
injury to the plant. In stands where
46
Plunge
heaving has been a problem, a few
47
Perform
days delay In harvest and cutting
48
High mountain
slightly higher may salvage the
49
Weight
ollndia
stand. FertUizlng following this first
50 Foottike part
harvest wlll help In maintaining the
51 Collection Oil acts
plant vigor.
53 NIKIII symbol
Due to several prOblems, seeding
54 ,Teutonic detty
ri alfalla back Into alfaHa to thicken
55 Baker's products
a stand Is usually mt practical.
57 Blushing
·
Severely "heaved" alfalfa fields
58 Beast ol burden
may need to be plantoo to com for a ·
60 Arabian garments
year prtor to seeding back to
61 One
alfalfa.
62 Recommit
64 Penned
The Outstanding Young Tobacco
66 Walks weatlly
Farmer Awards and Recognition
68 Veneration
Program wiD be conducted again
70 Checkered cloth
this year. All active tobacco
72 Artlliciallanguage
farmers under the age of 35 may
73 Mortification
apply. All nominees must receive at
74
Arlicle
lea st 75 percent ri their total income
77
School
ol whales
from farming and must be actively
78
Duty
required
Involved In tobacco production.
80 Barite, e.g.
ApplicatiOns may be picked up
82 Broadca91
from the County Extension Office
83 Spoken
and soould be returned by May 12.
85 Merchant
Call if you would like ar appUcatlon
86 Mariner
or want to oomlnatesomeone. State
87 Pintail duck ·
winner will receive a substantial
88 Electrified
cash prize, a plaque and an expense
particle
paid trip to the awards and
90 Nahoor sheep
Recognition Banquet In VIrginia.
91 Legal mailers

99 Wire measures

101 Changes
104 Finish
105 Gal. ol song
107 Baseball stat.
108 Biller vetch
109 AI'(Or . in Spain
1tO Expected
111 Satdownlo
dinner
112 Hike
114 Roman official

116 Former Broadway
play
117 Airline info.
t t8 Right·hand page
ol a book : abbr.
120 Brad
122 lndl~: poellc
123 Sailors
124 Exists
125 Similar
127 Italian river
129 Guide
131 Vowed
133 Spanish article
134 Therefore
136 Radium symbol
t37 Flap
139 That woman
140 Shoemaker's toot
141 Astan o•
142 Negative prelix
143 Unit ol Siamese
currency
145 Range of
knowledge
147 Part of airplane:
pt.
151 Encountered
152 Music: as wr itt en

153
155
157
158
159
160

Tie
Actor Danson
Lilted wllh ~ver
Church bench
Stupefy
Los Angeles:
abbr.
t81 Guldo"slow note
163 Squander
t65 Sharp repty
167 Mother
168 Sliver symbol
169 Babylonian hero
171 lroquoian Indians
172 Habituate

at y

en tine
/t Section, 10 Pag01

Ohio, Monday, April 21. 1986

because of leaking natural gas, but many of them
were allowed to return home after the gas was shut
off. A Red CrOss official said 23 evacuees spent the
night at nearby Northeastern High School.
The Injured people were taken to Community
Hospital In nearby Springfield. Four were admllted
with multiple Injuries and two others were treated
and released, a hospital nursing supervisor. Th:lse
admitted were In stable condition.
James Lannon, a resident of the park, said te sky
became very dark just before the storm hit about 7
p.m.
"All of sudden it started to rain. The wind was
blowln ' and It sounded like a traln.I had my family lay
down on the noor and It was over just that last. It
lasted only about 30 seronds." said Lannon.
· The sheriff's department spokesman said about tO
bomes In the middle of the park suffered ··extensive

25 COf1tt

A Multimedil Inc. NewiP8Pir

damage," but he was unable to provide a damage
estimate.
Thunderstorms accompanied by hJgh winds also
swept through nearby Union County. causing
property damage and downing utility poles and trees.
Four barns and two houses were damaged and a
tractor trailer was overturned, but there were no
injuries reported, said a Union County Sherlff's
Department spokesman.
The National Weather Sel'lllce Issued a tornado
warning for Crawford and Richland counties late
Sunday, but no twister touchdowns were reported.
A cold front that touchedoffthestormsalso brought
significant amounts of rainfall to many parts of Ohio
Sunday.
Most Na tlonal Weather Service sta lions In the state
recorded an Inch or more of rain during a ZA-hour
period that ended at 7 p.m. Sunday.

Showers posslbl.. mixed with snow were In the
forecast for today.
Temperatures today were expected to drop from
the mid and upper 40s early In the day to the lls or
lower 40s by evening .
Scattered snow flurries were forec ast for eastern
Qhlo tonight, with snow flurries ront!nulng In
northeast Ohioan Tuesday. Lows tonlghl wUI be In the
:!ls, with highs Thesday ranging from the mid JJs to
low40s.
Fair weather Is In the forecast for Wednesday and
Thursday with a chance ofsoowers Frtday. Highs will
be In the upper 40s and the 50s Wednesday, in the 00s
Thursday and in the upper 'titls and 70s on Friday.
Lows w!ll be In the mid :Ills to mid JJs Wednesday , In
the mid 30s to mid 40sThursday andthemld40stolow
50s Friday.

Missing bomber, bodies found
173 Join
175 "" Lohengrin··
heroine
176 Tears
177 Chemical
compound
178 Erase: printing

DOWN
1 Lawmaker

2 Angry
3 Small amouhl
4 Cyprinoid fish
5 Football pos.
6 Redact
7 Tantalum symbol
8 Fruit drink

9 Engine
t 0 Brimless cap
11 Mature
12 Proceed
13 Stumble
t4 That man
t5 Hail!
t6 Simple
t7 Alrican antelope
t8 Poem of six
stanzas
23 Make more

obscure
26 Hurl
29 Remunerates

32
33
35
36
37
40
42
43
45
48
52
56
58
59
60
62
63
65
66

By Unlled Press International
An F -1ll fighter-bomber - the
only U.S. plane lost In last week's
air raid on Libya - was recovered
form the sea off the coast of Libya
and sent to the Soviet UniOn for
technlcallnspectlon, the Al·lttlhad
newspaper reported.
Libya's official Jana news
agency said Libyans were volunteering to serve on suicide squads to
avenge the U.S. raid, and a West
German newspaper reported Libya
was recruiting suicide commandos
In prison and through advertlsments In Europe and the Middle
East.
Al-Ittlhad, published In Abu
· Dhabi In the United Arab Emirates,
quoted Libyan sources Sunday as
saying the missing U.S . .F-111 was
found off the Libyan coast and
salvaged. The newspaper said It
was sent to the Soviet Union.
A Pentagon spokesman said he
had no Information about the
plane's fate and refused to commen! on the Al-lttlhad report .

7t Distend
73 Complications

75 Hasten
76 Belore
79 Cesium symbol
81 That is: abbr .
84 Parcel of land
87 Drunkard
89 Aerie
92 Wild plum
93 Edible seed
94 Emmet
95 Mend with cott on
97 Equallo 100 sq.
meters

98 Lowest po int
99 Pinochle term: pl.
100 Anger
101 Goals
102 Wheat track
t03 Ocean
106 Meadows
109 Undercooked
1t3 Neighbors,
collectively
1t5 At home
116 Clayey earth
119 Choose
121 Condescending

The F-lll. a technologically
advanced plane, Is presumably of

Proved atlractive
Equal
The two of us
Three, In Spain
Native of Mobile
Lighter-than-air
cralts
Ship's
complement
Part ol church
Glossy paint
Mimic
Snake
Traps
More arid
Tiny particles
Macaws
Balance
Couches
Hypothetical
Ioree
Subjecls of
discourse

67 Sudden flights
68 Time gone by
69 Armed conflict

123 Hauls
124 Kind
125 Fillor p1ow1ng
126 Surfeit
128 Shade tree
t30 Ejected. as tava
132 Gatekeepers
133 Dine
134 Locate
135' Fruit
t38 Wager

PICK UP PIECES- Ruby Cooner and her hutlbllnd, Eddie, pick-~

/"

the pieces of what was once their home and heJon&amp;liqtl &amp;UJ!IIaY after a
ldller iomado cut a two mile I!Wath tlrour,lt the 111uthealil seetlon of
Sweetwater, Texas early Saturday. An 117-year WI m~m waaldlled and
9% poople Injured while 1,500 m~ldellls were left homelelis kllhe we81
Texas iown. UPL

141 Evergreen shrub

144 Theron symbol
146 More recent

148 Frock
149 Roman gods
t50 Uncanny
151 Distance measure

t 52 A-U link age
154 Presses for

payment
156 Challenge
!58 Unadulterated
!59 Rat ional
t62 Chinese pagoda
!64 Transgress ·
t66 However
167 Mire
t 70 Indian mulberry
174 Negative prolix

A LINK TO 'QIE PAST- ~Hkllln Ita tndllloaal Wll)'l, lhe
Bob Evan a FUm m.IDUihelll ado provldel a memorable
link to oor rural herilap for )'UUJIIMd old alllr.e. Well illlown tor evenla
sucll as the AD-American WDd Bone 1111d lkno E"Jh4•·~ lllld lhe
International Chlckm FJ.rm1 Mid, the F11n11 welcomes .-ly llO,OII
vlflllors annually ~ elllre In dd.faljoned, EarJ.v American
No admillllon Ia cluu'led.
1100-~re

ae«vlltel.
@ 1986 United Feature Syndical~

request a second strtke If thl' BUd, In a report attrtbuted to
European Community foreign min· Israeli, British and Lebanese Intel II·
isters endorsed powerful measures gence sources, said Libya was
·recruiting suicide commandos
to contain Libyan terrorism .
The Libyan news agency Jana, from Its prisons and was advertismonitored In London. said Sunday Ing overseas lbr mercenaries lbrits
Libyans were cabling Co!. Moam- army.
"People woo committed serious
mar Khadafy volunteerlngtoserve
on suiCide squads "lo destroy crimes are released on the condieverything American" in revenge tion they are wUUng to take part In
suicide missions ootslde Libya,"
for the raid .
Libyan dficlals put the death toll BUd re[)orted.
"Khadafy has a ~w tactic. He Is
from the U.S. altackat 37, including
Khadafy 's adopted 15- month-old hiring mercenaries for terrortst
daughter, but Western diplomats actions through advertisements In
believe as many as 100 pro pie may English, Arab and Moroccan media ," It added.
have been killed.
Repercussions of the U.S. attack
Jana said local Ubyan Peoples
Congresses met across the nat ion forced the evacuation &amp;tnday ri
this weekend to discus&lt;; the "failed, Americans and Britons from Beirut
treacherous Amertcan. aggression and the Sudanese capitaL of Khartoum. Anti-American demonstraagainst Libya ."
The British foreign secretary, Sir
"'The masses confirmed their tiOns were reported throughout
Geoffrey Howe, In a televisiOn complete readiness to confront the Western Eruope.
Interview in London Sunday, Indi- American aggression," Jana said.
More than !lJ pacifists were
cated Britain woold not ruleoutthe "In cables sent to the leader of lhe arrested In a series of antipossibility of allowing U.S. jets to · revolution they confirmed their American demonstrations at miluse Its bases In future strikes readiness to berome suicide squads itary bases In Britain Sunday.
against Libya.
In order to destroy everything Other demonstrations were held In
But he Indica ted the United American."
Belgium. Wesl Germany and
States would he less llkely to
The West German newspaper Spain.
Interest to Soviet weapons experts.
Libya Is a Middle East ally of the
Soviets and an arms recipient.
Al-Jttlhad also reported the bodies of the plane's two crewmen,
Capt. Fernando L. Ribas-Dominici,
33, of Puerto Rlco, and Capt. Paul
F . Lorence, 31, of San Frahclsco,
were recovered and sent to the
Libyan capital Tripoli.
The report on the recovery of the
F-lll- the only plane unaccounted
for alter Thesday's raids on Tripoli
and the port ofBenghazl-cameon
the eve d today's Eureopen
Community foreign ministers
meeting In Luxembourg. The meet·
lng - the second since the U.S.
raids and third In a week - was
called to consider steps to comhal
Libyan terrorism._

McDonald heads Rio BOard of Trustees

look

19 Mislead

.

.

SUNOAY PUZZLER
92 Soak up 93 Gasped for
breath
96 Baseball's Musial

•

· Pomeroy~ Middleport,

New plat books anive

Most local farmers ready to
start planting '86 com crops
By Edward M. .VoDbom
Coumy Extmslon Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GALLlPOUS - Spring planting
season has started throughout Ohio
with the Ohio crop report estimatIng me per CPnt of Oh.lo oom
acreage planted as or April 13.
Most local farmers are waiting
unttl Ap~ll aJ to begin com planting.
Only 55 percent of the Ohio tobacco
beds were reported seeded. Southern Ohio was reported as.the dryest
area of the state with rainfall
ruM ing at only 47 per cent ri
norma! for the season.
·
The 10 year Conservation Reserve is expected to have another
bid period which will run from May
5 through May l l This Is a new
program of U.S.D.A. this spring
and It is administered by the local
ASC Office. For calculating a bid,
consider alternat!ve useforthe land
and come up with what rental rate
will be necessary to tie up land for
the 10 year period. The top dollar
accepted durtng the prior slgnup
period for our area of Ohio was $10
per acre.
Records of O.S.U. Entomologist
Indicate that over the·last 25 years
the first 10 days of April is the perkld
of time·when termites are swarmIng heavily. Ants swarm too. and a
lot of people can't tell ooe from the
other.
I often have trouble telling the
dlfferetCI'. 'The winged forms are
the reproduct!ves and they are the
ooes that will start new colonies. To
become an Instant expert compare
some of the Insec t features. Ants
have elbowed antennae while antmnae areoot elbowed on termlles.
Ants have two pair of wings of
unequal length while termites have

Wooden Rolls Royce

Twister hits Clark County mobile home park

Landfills leak

ACROSS

Dogs to adopt, .photo on Pap 8

Celtics dump Bulls

Vol.35, No.258
COJ&gt;vrlghted 1888

TOLEDO, Ohlq ~UP!) - A ell)
engineer says Nedo will have to
- - - - - - - take corrective action to stop two
old clly landfills from leaking an
slaughter are coming from the
average
of 00,00! gallons of polluNational Cattlemen's Association
tants
datly
Into the Ottawa River.
who contend that meat on the
Service
Director
Eugene Kasper
market from the dairy cows has
said
the
cleanup
could
cost as much
resulted In over supply and plumas
$15
mUUon
over
a
tO-year
period,
meting beef prices. To solve part &lt;t
although
he
recommended
that
the
that problem, Rlce says, the
city
take
a
shon-term
course
by
government has agreed to buy up
spending
DJ.'l~
to
cover
the
area
quantities &lt;t the meat rorthe armed
with clay and Improve the dikes
forces, school lunch and other
along
the river.
programs to help stabilize the price.
The
money also would cover
Still the charges continue from the
further
testing and varlus landfill
cattlemen.
projects.

GALIJPOUS - New GaiDa
Coonty plat boob have arrived
and are avaDable at the GaDia
SoU and Water eo.-vatrun
Dilltrlct ol&amp;e, ll29 Jaebon Pike,
Room 1)8.{;, GaDipolls Ohio
45831. 'Ole 0081 l!i Sll.
'
.

'

a home

.

e

.Three Meigs. ·~---__:C:.::on=tln:.::ued=fro=m~D-=--2
always been their primary source
of Income.
With the Hollers. RJce explained,
they did not consider loss of lnrome
but only net worth since they
wanted out.
"The dairy cattle going to
slaughter are selling now for about
ll cents. a.pound."
. Rlcesald, "so if a

Looking for

1

age to slip hazards to depth to
bedrOck. The decision on landuse
remains the responsibility of the
property owner.
According to Bottrell, the soil
survey Is neartngthe halfway point.
A1l additional 50,000 acres will be
mapped this year.
The Meigs County Soli Survey is a
cooperative efort of the Meigs
County Commissioners, the Meigs
SoU and Water Conservation District and the U.S.D.A. Soli Conservation Sel'\llce. Fo,..more Information, call the Soli Conservation
Service at 002-6357 or 002-6647.

county printed on ~ current aerial
pooto base. Physical, chemical and
mineral characteristics~ the soli In
the county will be Included In the
published survey. Technical and
easy to understand llescrlptlons of
each soli found In the county wDI
heip landowners recognize the sons
m their property. SoU lnterpretatloi!S for various farm and ronfai'IIJ use will help lanwwners
decide the best use for their .land
based on soli type. Recommenda·
lions to overcome llmltatklns &lt;t
certain soUs are also Included.
Umltatlons range from poor drain-

Astros win again .

Tornadoes level ·
Texas community
SWEE1WATER, Texas (UP! )
- National , Guardsmen stood
wa lch today over the ruins of oomes
and businesses blown to tangled
havoc by tornadoos that k!Ued one
persgn. injured 92 and left 1 .~
homeless In a town already gloomy
from fa rm and on losses.
About 600 houses were damaged
and more than halt of those were.
destroyed by the two twlslers that
converged on the town Saturday
morning, causing damages of about
$15 million to $:!l miiUon, Mayor
Rick Rhodes said Sunday.
·
·"This is an eronomlcally depressed area anyway, with oU and
farming. We had a lot of prople
unemployed.'' Rhodes said. ~ This
Is the worst disaster ever In our

who rode rut tbe storm with his wife
and t\IO yoong ehlldren, found little
left to salvage Sunday.
. "I had just got caught up with all
my bills and had bought a
CadUlac," he said. "I don' t have
any Insurance, and somebody even
stole my dog. He was tled up In the
backyard and made it through the
storm, but I think someone came
along and got him."
"Most of the stuff we've found
isn't even ours," said Walker.
While most of tlte streets had
been cleared and debris picked up
by Sunday, there were stU! cars
protruding from homes and a Irash
dumpster In themlddleofone h:mse
that had lost Its roof.
.
'
GObeli Gerst, 47, worked In his
town."
A 7:30 p.m. to 7:00a.m. curfew roo0es5 Irick home, which had a
neighbor's van sticking through Its
was declared for a second day
front
wall.
today and National Guardsmen
"I'm not going to be able to save
ordered In by Gov. Mark White much, but at least I' ve got
patrolled the streets.
Some looting was reponed Satur- Insurance," Gerst said. "We're
day morning !rut no one was lucky to be aUve." ·
The twisters conveflled just
arrested and the plunder stopped
before
touching down about 7 a.m.
when the 115 guardsmen arrived
CST
SabJrday,
ru ttlng a 2- mile
Saturday night. pollee said.
path through the !llutheastern
White toured the wreckage Sun- section ~ the West Texas town,
day. At Sun Village, a musing located 215 miles west of Dallas.
project for the elderly where the . Nlnety·two people were Injured,
body of Henry Earl Tatom;87, was and l5 remained hospitalized Sunfound , White said he was stunned by day night.
More than 100 repairmen worked
the destruction.
"l don't see how anybody could Into the. night Sunday to restore
have lived toough this . It'sas bad as electrical service to lia:ked out
I've seen," he said. "We easily areas of the city, oot5to 111 perre"nt
could have seen 100 to 150 Uves of the city remained wltlnut
service, said Otarles Crain of
lost."
Some 1,500 prople In the town of Texas Electric Service Co.
While promised lo p-ess for a
t2,IXXI were lett homeless.
One of them, 3ohn Walker, 24, federal disaster area declaratkm.

,,

.

RIO GRANDE - William C.
McDonald has been appointed
chairman ' of the Rlo Grande
Community College Board of Trustees and Carl G. Dahlberg has been
named vice chalnnan of the RJo
Grande College Board of Trustees.
McDonald, a 1951 RG Cgraduate,
earned his master's · degree In
business from Marshall University
in 1961. ·
Prominent in furthering public
education In southeastern OhiO.
McDonald was a past president of
the Ohio Education Association and
the Ohio Department of Elemen·
tary School Principals. He served
as vice chairman of the Ohio
Teacher's Rl&gt;ttrement System and

as execu tlve secretary of the development. In 1978 he was
Southeast Ohio Education Associa - appointed Ia assistant to the
tion. He was also an officer and president for external affairs.
During his RGC tenure, Dahlberg
member of numerous other profeshas
been Instrumental in Increasing
siOnal organizations.
the
amount
of private and governThe first recipient of the RGC
mental
liUPport
that RGC has
AtWood Achievement Award and
received
over
the
years.
Jackson County's Outstanding CitiDahlberg iS recognized as the
zen In 1981, McDonald was also
architect
of the RGC Free Enlerawarded the Ohio EducatiOn Assopr!se
Program.
Winner of the
ciation Human Relations Award In
Valley
Forge
Honors
Certificate,
1982. He has been the recipient of
the
program
teaches
high
school
many service awards from such
students
about
tlte
worldngs
of the
groups as the Ohio Senate, Ohio
American
economic
system.
The
House &lt;t Representatives, National
program,
held
each
summer
on
Education Association and Ohio
campus, has grown to the point of
Educatkln Association.
Dahlberg joln61 the RGC staff on hosting more tban 100 youths and
July 1, 1900, as vice president of teachers, conege clf!c!als said.

Another one of Dahlberg's
achievements clled by officials was
his obtaining the grant from the
Appalachian Regional Commission
that allowed the construction of the
. James A. Rhodes StudentCommunity Center.

$350,000
sought in
Meigs suit
A $.1i0,00l judgment suit has been
filed tn Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Christina Cooper, a
minor, by her mother, Clarinda
Cooper Theiss, Racine, against
Belknap Inc. , Louisville, Ky .. and
Thomas Theiss. Racine. ·
Tlte action stems from an
accident on April :!l, 1984, In which
the child was Injured while mowing
the family yard. According to the
complaint, the defendant Theis~
ordered the child to mow the yard.
She slipped on the grass. catching
her foot in the mower blade.
The complaint alleges lhat the
accident was caused by the negligence of Theiss, because the rea1'
safety shield guard was not on the
mower.
Plaintiff requests judgment of
$250,00lln joint and several llabl!ty
on all five causes of the action, with
an additional award of punitive
damages of $100,000 fiom Belknap
which made the mower.

Free trash pickup
ends in Middleport

TEACHER HONORED - Ml'l!l. Mae Voq, a
teacher f~r U yetll'l(, 2t of which have been at
Pomeroy Elemelltary School, W118 mnored al a
dinner 'nlunday by lhe Melp l.oall Teachen
Aaloclatlon. J~k Slavbt, ~MOCiatlon vice prealdent,
presented a plaque to Mrs. Young, center, In

rooognltlo!l of her eervtce and upcoot1D1 nilremellt.
Looldnl onla Rep. .Joi)'Dn lla8ter woo 11p0llil on IIChool
lePtlaiJon In educallon. Ben Gerber, from Unl-eerve
alteoded •. A plaque Willi also pre!M!IIted to David
Bowen M UIOCialkil) president for the past year.
J

Middleport mayor Fred Holtman
reports the free pickup of trash In
the vUiage ha s ended. Residents are
urged to not place brush and debris
In the village streets. Such action,
according to Hoffman, causes
problems with the stonn sewers
·and Is against village regulation•.
· The mayor said the village has
crllnances forbidding t~ placing
of delrls In the !treets. Violators
will be cited Into court If t.he
practice continues. Any hauUng
done by the village willbed:lneonly
atlhe usual charge &lt;t $20 per load .
Mayor Hoffman requests the coop. eratlon of residents In maintaining
clean streets throughoutthevlllagc.

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