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...

'·&lt;: -

• . '.

I

Page-12-The Daily Sehtinal

Friday, May 2, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Jobless rate down
Jarne11 P. Roberts
James P. Roberts, 89, of 35957
Long Hollow Rd., Pomeroy, died
Thursday afternoon at the Pome·
roy Health Care Center.
A retired coal miner and blacks·
mlth, Mr. Roberts was born March
14, 1897 In Calhoun County, W.Va. to
the late George Washington and
Rosy Bell Riggs Roberts.
' Survivors Include his wlfe, Lola
D. Whytsell Roberts, Anstead,
W.Va.; twosons,AdrtanR.Roberts
of Pomeroy and.CIIU !!· Roberts of
Mechanicsburg; nine daughters,
Eunice Rose of Birch River, W.Va.,
Glenda Poole oC Toccoa, Ga.,
Earlene Facemlere of Tesla,
W.Va., Iva Jean Rose ot Birch
River, W.Va., Evelyn Dr3ke of
F1atwoods, W.Va., Ruby Cutlip of
Erbaron, W.Va., Bonnie Litton of
South Vienna, Maxine Hubbard of
Haymarket, Va., and Loretta Col·
lins of Moundsville, W.Va.; 48
grand c hildren ; 30 g reat ·
grandchildren; ooe great· great·
grandchild; three brothers, George
Roberts of Bashan; Victor Roberts
d Birch Tree. Mo., Hubert Roberts
of Ashley; one siSter, Esta Roberts
of Pomeroy; and severa I nieces and
IV2pheWS.
Besides hiS parents, Mr. Roberts
was preceded In death by one son,

&lt;Gontlnued !rom page 1)
Total payroU jobs Increased by
some 200,10) In AprU, the Labor
Department said.
Overall, 60.4 percent of the
clvUian populatiOn was working about the same ftgure as In
February and March.
The ftgures sh&gt;wed that 8.3
mllllon Americans are out of work.
About 13 percent d the total

three brothers and four sisters.
Services will be I p.m. Sunday at
Ewing Funeral Home. Burial will
be In Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday.

G. Pauline Hester
Gladys Pauline Hester, 64, New
Haven, died Friday morning In
llolzer Medical Center.
Born Dec.~· 1921, In Science HID,
Ky., she was the daughter of the
late William F. and Vesta C.
Yankee Morrisette.
She attended New Haven United
Methodist ·O!urch and was past
president of the Federated
Women's Club oC New Haven.
·· SurviVIng are her husband, Eugene Hester Sr.; two sons, Eugene
Hester Jr., Ocala, Fla., and Ronald
K. Hester, New Haven; four sisters,
Helen Price and Lillian Carpen,
both of Cincinnati; and Margie
Wrtght and Juanita Castelli, both oC
Hun I In g t o n ; and four·
granddaughters.
Funeral service&amp; will be at 1: 30
p.m. Suooay In Foglesong Funeral
Home with t!J: Rev. Jolm Campbell
officiating. Burial will follow In
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
hom~ from 6-9 p.m. Saturday.

Fonn corporations
Articles of Incorporation have
been flied with Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown In Columtxts by

Backstreet Video, Inc., of Pome·
roy. Incorporator Is Frederick J.
Simon while Paul Simon Is the
agent. Papers were also filed by
M;odern Court Reporting Servlees,
Inc., with the Incorporators helng
Corol A. Cuundiff, and Crystal L.
Whitlatch. Whlllatch, Rt. 33, Pome·
roy, Is listed as the agent.
AFl'ER ALL TIIESE YEARS - Melp County l'EIIdenl Sarah
Caldwell hold81he same turtle on which her husband, Garillld Caldwell,
carved his lnllals, GRC, and the date, Sept. 10, 11142, whell he found II
moving about on his !ann near Allred. When lhe Caldwell's neighbor,
James Roillon, foond the turtle INs pu&amp; Saturday, It was &amp;«U!
maneuevering about on the Caldwell farm. Sarah Caldwell 1-eports that
Robson doesn't even know why be bothered lo pick up the turtle. She
says her husband was suprLoled lhe turtle was sill around after43years.
(Hard lo tell how long he wasaroond before 1942.) And nowtbathe'shad
his picture In the paper, It's back to lhe woods for this old turtle.

London

number of unemployed have been
jobless ilr six months or more.
More than 4J percent lost their jobs
1n April. The figures are all
relatiVely consistent with the levels
of the first four months of 1986.

Presenring
area heritage
-Page B-1

Veterans Memorial

Vot. 21 No. 12
Copyrighted 1986

By BOB HOErucH
'Ilme&amp;-Senllnel SlaJI
POMEROY - While Meigs
counttans have no local races for
county posts In Thesday' s election,
there wUI be several races for
central committee posts In voting
precincts for both the Democrats
and Republicans.
On the county level, there are two
IXJSts open this year and the
Republican Incumbents have !Ued
for them.
They are Manning K. Roush,
rounty commiSsiOner, and William
R. Wickline, rounty auditor. Wick·
line will be unopposed In the fall for
re-election but Roush will be
opposed for · his commiSsioner's
seal by Melinda Jane Thompson of
Pomeroy.
COnlnl commlltee races
Republicans have eight races In
varklus precincts for central committee posts. In East Letart and
Middleport Second Ward there are
three-way races for the one post.
Candidates In East Letart are
Dean V. HIU, Clarence 1. Norris and
Joyce White, whUe ilhe three
candidates In Mlddl£1lQrt's Second
Ward are Richard B. Bailey, Fred
L. Hdfman and Sandra K. Janna·
rella. )U,pubilcan races for •centnal
committee In other precincts Include: Rodney G. Chevalier and
Wllllam Pooler Jr., North €hester;
Gary R. Dill and DavldJ. Koblentz,
South Chester; Ann Barrett and
Leo B. Morris, West Rutland; Lola
E. Clark and James R. Sheets,
Harrisonville; N. Darlene Cassady
and Roger A. Spencer, Orange; and
Phyllis Baker and Fred E. Smith,
Minersville.
Other )U,publican central com·
mlttee candidates, all unopposed,
are James H. .Quivey, East Bed·
ford ; Brenda S. Roush, West
Bedford; Virgil Windon. West
Chester; Harry Hill, Letart; Dorsel
E. Larkins, Long Bottom; William
A. ConooUy, Ollvedale; Alvin Reed,
Reedsville; Elizabeth Hohstetter,
Rutland.Village; Florence Barrett,
East Rutland; Jolm F. Colwell,
Salem; Ruth Powers, Middleport
First; Betty J . Fultz, Middleport
Third; Dorothy L. McGuffin, Mid·
dl£1)0rt Fourth; George Hicks.

Invites You To Attend

FAMILY SUNDAY
May 4, 1986

9:30 A.M.-Church School
10:30 A.M.-Morning Worship

Seven calls were answered by
local emergency units Wednesday
ilhe Meigs County Emergency .
Medical Service reported.
At 9:51 p.m. Middleport was
called to an auto accident on SR 7.
Russell Bailey was laken to Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
10:54 p.m. Bailey was taken by
Llfefllght to Grant Hospital In
Columbus.
At 8:44 a.m. Pomeroy was called
to Burdette Road for Nellie Cox who
wasdeadonarrlvalotthesquad; at
2:02 p.m. Pomeroy to Pomeroy
Cliff Apartments for Bertha Diehl,
taken to Veterans Memorial Hasp!·

Check accident
The Meigs County Sheriff's IJe.
partment !nvestlga ted a single
truck accident un SR 7, at ilhe
Intersection of· Forest Run and
Dark Hollow, at 12:19 a.m. today.
According to the r£1)0ri Fred J.
Muler, 21, of Ironton was driving a
delivecy truck owned by Bryan
Sparks. Ironton, when It went over
a guardrail and struck a billboard.
Miller was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency. It Is believed the
driver went to sleep. No citation
was ISsued.

•,• r:

~, r •• •,

r. ~

(inem&lt;\7)
.
'

Meigs County Emergency Medi·
cal Service r£1)0rts five caDs
Thursday; Pomeroy a! 12:21 a.m.
transported Fred Miller from an
auto accident on Rt. 7 to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
3:51 a .m. to 939 Ash St. for Vesla
Thnle to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Rutland at 12:26 p.m. to Salem St.
lor Ida Young to Veterans Memor·
Ia! Hospital; Mlddl£1lQrt at 4: 10
p.m. to Story's Run Rd. for Arthur
R Fife to Holzer Medical Center;
Thppers Plains at 5:57 p.m. to
Reedsville· lor Martha Bailey to
Veterans Memorial Hospital .

Correction
Nellie Mario&gt; Cox, Pomeroy who
died Wednesday was 69 years of age
not 61. A sister who survives was
unintentionally omitted, Jean
Columbus.

Admi u ion Pri ce Poli cy
Bargain Matinees
Sot . &amp; Sun .. AI! Seals $2 .25

Adm . Every Tuesday . S2 .2S

TOM
HA!t:S

SHELLEY
LOOG

KfoNEY.
,._1PIT
__ Gf -

~ J?~

YRON

L.ELECT

COOPER

CHRYSLER•PLYMOUTH•DODGE

'BUD" McGHEE SPRINO FLINO
94th DISTRICT
SATURDAY 10 AM·1 PM

Emergency squads
answer five calls

r-------.

*EveniDJS 6:30, !1:10
Sal. •nd Sun. M11. 2:00
S•t. Midniellt, 12:00
*Please note early starting
lime

ELECT

tal; at 5:03p.m. Racine to Southern
High School lor Julie Dillon, laken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7: 36 p.m. Rutland to Depot
Street for Effie Buskirk, taken to
Holzer Medical Center; at 9:16p.m.
Rutland to SR 684 for Earl Arlx,
laken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

St1r1J Friday, May 2, 1986

"OUT Cf TillS
WORLD"

'

Li~e

WMPO Radio Remote
Free Cokes, Coffee
and Hotdogs

STATE
REPRESENTATIVE
Paid lor by lhe Gallll Cou~ Repobhcan Club. MJrk
Kies~ng, Treasurer, 456 Second Ave., Gal~polrs , Oh.

Waiting In Line
Doesn't Have To Be
Part Of Your Life.

Ask About Our
Direct Deposit.
IT'S THE QUICKEST AND
EASIEST WAY TO I.QIYE

CLEAN • SHARP • TRADE-INS
'84 DODGE D100 PICKUP ................ 56795
'86 DODGE COLT 3 DR..................... 56495
'85 BUICK SKYLARK V-6 ................... 56995
'85 PLY. HORIZON AUTO-AC-STEREO ....... 57195
'83 CHEV. CHEVETTE LOW MILES ............. 53495
'79 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DR................... 52695
''80 PLYMOUTH TURISMO .................. 51995
'75 FORD T·BIRD ................................ S69S
'81 DODGE ARIES ............................. 54195
'79 CHRYSLER NEWPORT .................. 52195
'79 FORD T-BIRD .............................. S2995
'84 DODGE ARIES ............................. S5495
'82 PONTIAC 6000 '......................... 54995

"THE DO IT ALL DEALER"

~ ~f!'!J..~!£UIJ

E•enlngs 7:10; 9:10
Sal. and Sun. Mat. 2:10
Sat. Midnight, 12:10

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL!

PEOPLES BANK

COOPE.
R
Chrysler•Plymourh•Dodge, Inc.

M•btr FDIC

399 S. Third Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614)992-6421

StciiMIStrwt
Ma ...,w. v•.
r7JoJII4

5 GOP hopefuls
seek nomination
m·Gallia County

Po=roy First; John Manley,
Pomeroy Serond; Evelyn Clark,
Pomeroy Third; George L. Harris,
Pomeroy Fourth; Larry R. Thomas, Bradbury; Nathan Biggs,
Laurel Cliff; George Nesselroad
Jr., Rock Springs; Cora B. Beegle,
Racine Village; Emmogene Hoi·
stein Congo, Syracuse VIllage;
James Carnahan, Racine Precinct.
Democrats have six races lor
central committee posts. The races
Include Thomas E. Mankin II and
John H. Ridgway Jr., West Chester; Chester E. Wells and FranciS
Andrew, Long Bottom; Robert A.
Matson Jr ., and William Wesley
Arbaugh, Ollvedale; David R.
WellS and Larry E . Barton, Reeds·
ville; Daniel D. Thomas and
Kenneth E. Imboden, Middleport
Serond; and Rebecca J . .Triplett
and Wlillam E. Snouffer, Middle·
port Third.
Other Democr~ts, all unopposed
for eiectkln, seeking central com·
mittee IXJS!s are David M. Brlckles,
West Bedlord; Henry L. Hunter,
North Chester; Raymond H. Boa·
IJ1ght, South Chester; CecU E.
Gillogly, Columbia; Winston Var·
ney, Lt;banon; LolaJ. Proffitt, East
Letart; Linda L. Turley, Letart;
Elizabeth Farrar, Orange; Samuel
B. May, Rutland VUiage; Peggy B.
Brickles, East Rutland; Norman C.
Will, West Rutland; Edward D.
Anderson, Salem; William Martin
Weaver, Middleport First; Yvonne
Scally, Mlddl£1)0rt Fourth; Mary
McAngus, Pomeroy First; Melinda
Jane Thompson, Pomeroy Second;
Catherine L. WelSh, Pomeroy
Fourth; Paul F . Thomas, Brad·
bulJI ; Gacy F . Hysell, Laurel Cliff;
Carol Ohlinger, Rock Springs;
Elwood Howard Jr .. Harrisonville;
Woodrow T. ZwUilng, SyracuS&lt;'
VIllage; John N. Ihle, Minersville;
Edwin S. Cazart, Racine Precinct.
Stale, area races
Meigs County voters will he
helping to dee! de district, state and
national candidates In Tuesday's
primaries.
Republican candidates lor 94th
district state representative are
Garry E. Hunter of Athens and
Myron L. McGhee, GallipoliS. The
(Continued on A.Ji

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel SlaJI

·

. . .....

WOMEN'S 10-K WINNER - .Iackie Moore, Wheelersburg, captured
the 1986women'sdlvlslon ollhe ltl-K (6.2mlle) run Saturday during the
annual French City Run In Gallipolis. Two tundred 111dsevenly rumers
participated In all evmts, Including 72 m the 10,000 meter oontfSI.
Above, Mike Roe, removes tag from Moore al finish line. Complete
resalls and additional pictures appear on C-l1111d C-2 today.

Meigs voters facing
•
two county tax ISsues
POMEROY - Meigs Count y
voters wUI decide on two county·
wide Issues when they go to the polls
Thesday.
In addition, there will be Issues In
two other subdivisions or the
countv.
All Meigs voters wtll decide upon
an addltkmal. 5 mill levy, live years
duration , for the care, mainte·
nanre, treatment and hospitail7.a ·
lion d Meigs countians who are
suffering from tubercuklsls. The
levy, known as the TB levy. has
received the endorsement of a
number oC communlty and civic
organl7.atklns.
The second issue on which all

Meigs voters will decide Tuesday Is
a one mlil, additiOnal tax , five
years, lor current expenses of the
Gallia ·Jackson ·Meigs Menial
Health Board.
In Chester Township, voters will
decide on an additional tax of one
mill , five years duration, for dust
control.
Local option decisions wUI face
voters in West lledlord Precinct .
They wUI decide on whet her the
sale of beer shall te permitted ;
whether the saleol wine and mixed
beverages by the package for
off·premiSe consumption shall he
permitted, and whether Sunday
sa les shaD be permitted.

GALLIPOLIS - Five Gallla
County Republicans are In the
running In Thesday's primary for
county commiSsioner, county audl·
tor and state representative. All
Democratic candidates are run ·
nlng without opposillon.
Polls in 36 voting precincts In the
county are open at 6:30 a .m.
Thesday and close at 7:30p.m .
Incumbent CommiSsioner Veri In
L. Swain Is opposed In the primary
by G. Gordon Fisher, who retired In
February alter 30 years with Ohio
Valley Electric Corp.'s Kyger
Creek plant.
Swain, a farmer and business·
man who was county trl'3surer In
1961·1965, bested five other GOP
rontcnders for the commtssklner
nomination In 1982 and went on to
defeatJ.E. "Dick" Cremeens in the
general electiOn.
The winner of Thesday' s votewUI
lace Democratic candidate Dr. Dan
C. Notter. Notter ~posed Commis·
sioner Kail Burleson In the 1984
commiSsioner's race.
Ronald K. Canaday, a Democrat
elected auditor In 1982, will face
~posit kln In November on the
Republican ticket rrom either R.
Rosalec Walker, an accounting
coordinator, or Markln E. Caldwell,
a tanner who has been Green
Township clerk since 1963.
Running on the GOP side for
nomination as state representative
are Myron L. "Bud" McGhee,
county treasurer since 1982, and
Athens Law Director Garry E.
Hunter. The winner of that contest
will oppose Incumbent Rep. Jolynn
Boster, D-Gallipolls.
Incumbent Common PleasJudge
Richard C. Roderick Jr., a ))&gt;mo.
cra t who unsea ted Judge Ronald R.
Calhoun In 19!ll, will fac e GaUlpolis
attorney Donald A. Cox In the
November electkln. Cox, a former
ass istant GaUla County prosecutor,
is unopposed on the Republican
ticket.
Tax lssu.s
Three tax issues wW appear on
the ballot - a ooe-mW levy for the
Gallia.Jackson-Meigs GIS Mental
Health Board; a three-tenths or a

mill renewal-reduction levy for ilhe
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Library; and a one·miU fire
protection levy In Morgan
Township.
The &amp;18 te&gt;vy ~ to provide
addltklnal funding lor establlsh·
ment or ~nt.al health services in
the three-county district. Board
dficials have cited dwindling fed·
era! and state funding as a primary
reason ror the public to suwort
locally-directed services such as
counseling, domestic violence shelters and human development.
The library is seeking renewal oC
a levy at a lower rate than the
five-tenths d a mW tax approved In
March 1981. Because of a change In
.a, state funding rormula henefil·
lng the library, officials and
supporters are seeking a reduced
tax burden on county residents.
Fire levy explained
Morgan Township Trustees Johnnie Russell, 1\trley George and
Clarence Hash ex(ialned that the
total for the township's 1985 fire
contract was In excess d $3,00land
Its debt on fire contracts Is $1,150.
"ThiS Is money well spent," the
trustees said Saturday. "Our t'llr·
rent rontract Is with the VInton
Volunteer Fire Department. The
contract Is one of the. best In the
county and the department Is doing
an excellent job lor the large area
they must cover.
"Money lor this contract comes
from the township oodget. Every
dollar spent on t!J: fire rontract
means a dollar that can't he spent
lor other township programs and
needs," they continued.
Should the levy he passed, funds
collected rrom it will be used solely
for fire protection and prevention,
ilhe trustees said. It cannot he used
for any other pulllOse. they added.
"Passage rl. the levy will free up
money that. in the past, was spent
on fire coni racls. for other programs and township needs," the
trusteE's said. "This money rould
help us provide you, the township
residents, with S&lt;"rvices that we are
unable give you because of budget
restrictiOns.
"We would also like you to know
(Continued on A,\)

Gas price decline hits hard
at area's oil, gas 'industry

DEMO SALE
'86 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER LOADED ..... S16,900
'86 CHRYSLER LeBARON GTS LOADED......,S.11,900
'86 DODGE SHELBY LOADED.......... Sl0,900

12 Sectionl, 104 Pog.. 110 C.nta
A Muhlrnedio Inc. Newlj)ap•

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, May 4, 1986

Committee posts
primary highlight
in ·Meigs County

Weather forecast

Ohio weather:
Sunny, mild
-Page A-3

entine

tmts

Joe Kirby Jr., who celebrated his
seventh birthday onAprU 14 with a
party at his home on Yellowbush
Rd . In Racine, Is the son of Joe
IGrby of Racine, and Dora Ann
Clay of Middleport. Peggy Kirby,
Racine, Is the step-mother.

HEATH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

Emergency squads answer seven calls

Along lhe Rlver ........... 1H8
Busln-............ .. .. .... ... E-1
Comics-TV ............... Insert
Classllleds ......... I»+U.7-8
Deaths ...................... ... A-7
Editorial ...................... A-2
Sports ........................ C-1·8

•

Correetion

Mayor's Court

bus

Inside:

A Henderson man surre~ders to W.Va.
authorities following a standoff A-6
Bob.Hc:ieflich off~rs best wishes to a Racine
youth facing an upcoming operation - Page 8-7

Admtsslons .. Erllnda Obregon,
Henderson, W.Va.; Frank Wolford ,
Vinton; Cheryl Ferguson, Pomeroy; Naomi Sims, Pomeroy; Ida
Young, Rutland .
Dlscharges--Zelma Hawley,
Timmy Smith.

Partly cloudy today, with highs
(Continued !rom page 1i
between
55 and 60. Clear tonight,
Council again voiced lis diSpleawith
a
low
between 35 and 40. Sunny
sure with the cable system. It was
Saturday,
with
highs In the low IDs.
noted that council has not been
Extended
Foree!~$
paying franchise fees lor quile
Sunday
through
1\tesdBy
sometime.
Fair through the period. High&amp;
Attending were Mayer Eber
wiD
range from the upper Sis lo lhe ·
Pickens, Janice Lawson, clerk ,
low
li(B
Sunday, cllmblnJ Into lhe
Jack William, Glen Cuoolff, Jim
li(B
Monday
and Into the 'lOs
HUI, Bill Amott, Ernie Sisson and
Tuesday.
OVernight
lows wiU be In
Kathryn Crow, council nJembers,
tbe
30s
Sunday
and Monday
Gene Imboden, lire chief, Mr. and
(Continued !rom page I)
lee being $150 with mileage. The
mornings
.
and
In
the
406 early
Four defendants were fined and Hoffman Wednesday night.
Mrs. Sampson Hall, Jim Teaford,
cook will report back to the board
Tuesday.
Smith on the rondltion ott ne c . B. and other personnel.
six others forfeited bonds In the
Fined were Bruce H. JamiSon , Morarlty and Junior Teaford .
radkls In the buses. AlSo approved
The county academic awards court ol Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Rio Grande, $50 and costs, driving , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - was a new ~XJilcy on immediate banquet was announced for May 8. Seyler Thesday night.
under suspension; Gary A. FreE&gt;·
•
emergency removal of a student
Fined were Thomas Hoskins, Jr., man, Cheshire, $2i and costs,
O!aperones lor the senior trip will
from a bus.
receive prolessionl leave for that Chauncey, $375, driving uooer the squealing tires; Steve R. Dailey,
Barbara Young was given a time period, It was voted. The influence; $63 and rosts, driving Racine, · $15 and costs, speed;
continuing contract as secretary at
South Third at Main St.
Norma A. Torres, Middleport, $15
anendance pollcy was reviSed to under suspension; $313 and costs,
Riverview.
destructkln
or
property,
and$600
lor
and costs, running over fire hose;
Middleport, Ohio
read "When a studnt attains 18
Kindergarten enrollment was years, it is his or her choice to destructin or a parking meter; · Greg LaudermUt, Middleport, $alO
diScUssed and It was noted that 32 remain in school. If a student Lena K Riffle, Pomeroy. S:alJ and and costs, leaving the scene of an
have registered at ThWE&gt;rs Plains choooes to remain in school, he or cost~. leaving the scene; Brian L. accident; Roy Boggs, Middleport,
and 28 at Chester. Location and she Is required to abide by aU school Holman, Rutland, $63 and rosts, $50 and costs, criminal trespass.
time schedules will be determined rules and regulations as any other squealing tires, andThomasFergu·
Foefeltlng bonds were Larry A.
by the board.
son, Racine, $63 androsts, faUureto
Howell, GallipoliS and Johnny T.
student under the age oC 18."
On recommendation ol Supt.
control vehicle.
Grueser, Pomeroy, $40 each,
Roberts, tllP board approved 20
Forfeiting bonds were Patricia speed; Larry D. Robinson, Pomepercent sup~XJrl for the TAG
A
problem at the Chester Hand, ReedsvUie, $44, spE('d!ng;
roy, $41, speed.
!All Agesl
program, a rounty-wide effort. It school reportedly causing a safety Donald Dlglaw, Navarre, $&lt;5,
was noted thai after the first year, problem was noted with Supt. speeding; Martel Will, Pomeroy, Ohio lottery winners
funding Is taken over by the state. Roberts to handle. The superintend- $47, speeding; Chester Dingus,
CLEVELAND (U PI i - ThursDtsciPilne problems at the high ent was also requested to check Into Carhoooale, Sll3, Intoxication;
REV. C. SONNY ZUNGA WIU PREACH ON
school 'were noted and are now duplicating spirit masters for read- Gayla Haning, Pomeroy, $:al3, day's winning Ohio Lottery
"Keeping Our Christian Family Values"
under control, Roberts noted.
ing programs in the elementary leaving the scene, and $43, left of numbers: Dally Number
315.
The board approved sending a schools. He l&lt; to secure cost ligures. center; Mark Rhonemus, Torch,
fellowship L-h•on Following S."ic•s
Ticket sales totaled $1,320,574,
cook to a food preparation work- Sanitary problems at the Chester $43, left of center.
with a payoH due of $2,7M,333.50.
shop In August at the Hocking school was noted and will be
Six defendants were fined and PICK-4
Teclmical College, NelSonville, the Improved as needed.
three others forleited bonds In the
7635.
court of Middl£11011 Mayor Fred

Committees chosen

C-1

Run for the Roses

.,·

were drilled by J.D. DrUiing, and
By NANCY YOACHAM
the 1ayoffs began.
'l'ln-senlioel Sial!
Only seven new wells, Including
RACINE - Lower prlees at the
gas pump mean good times lor the four this year, have been drilled
motorists but hard times for the &lt;il by the rompany since AprU 1985.
And payroll for 1985 fell to
and gas Industry - with even
$1,072,427, "About a 36 percent
harder times expected:
"This year we've drilled four drop," comments Smith.
This year, J.D. DrUiing'saverage
wells and we don't anticipate
drU!Ing any more this year, " says price for .gas is $2.8J met. 011 is
Tom Smith of J.D. DrUIIng Co., selling lor an average of $19 per
barrel. Smith says.
Racine.
Those prices are expected to drop
Along with other oll and gas
producers, J .D. Drilling, which in ever further before the end of the
1984 probably drilled more wells year, he adds, to $2.30 met and $13
than any other rompany In Ohkl, Is per barrel.
J.D. Drilling's total payroll for
feeling the effects of declining oil
~ Is expected to he $1B5,00l
and gas prices.
The declining prices, coupled which, according to Smith, is about
with stringent regulatklns In the a ro percent reductiOn.
At the rresent time, J .D. Drilling
dis!X'sal of brine, a byproduct of oil
and gas drilling, have caused the has 53 employees within its main
ttflce.
layoffs of numbers of employees.
"The oU Industry In Ohio Is on
At J.D. Drllllng's peak In 1984,
explains Smith, the company hard limes," agrees Ted DeBrosse,
drilled 253 wells and sold liS gas for assiStant chief of ilhe Ohio Departan average price of $4.60 per ment d Natural Resources' Dlvthousand cubic feet and oil fur the tskln of 011 · and Gas. "Many
companies are laying off slafl, "
average price of $28 per barrel.
The company payroll that year DeBrosse adds, "and some comwas $1,677,895, not Including panies may end up filing
bankruptcy."
subrontractors.
The law r1 supply and demand
In 19Hi, Smith reports, J .D.
dictates oil prices, exjialns De·
Drilling's gas and on prlees feU to
Brosse, and "when OPEC rouldn't
averages of $3.90 mel and $~ a
agree on production quotas. they
barrel, respectively.
fiooded the market and the bottom
DriDin&amp; drops off
In April of 1985, House Bill 501 • fell rut of the lndustcy."
"When oil goes up," exjialns
regulating the disposal d brine
Smith, :·gas goes up," and vice·
went Into effect.
In all ~f 1,91!5, only 41 new wells
versa.

.,

Although no actual Qgures have
been compiled regarding the
number of laydfs within OhiO 's oil
and gas lndustcy, Kirk Jordan,
executive vice president of t!J: Ohio
OU and Gas Associat!ori In Newark,
estimates that the productiOn end of
the industry has klst more than Zi
percent of Its employees since the
first of t!J: year. He ful'fher expects
that total employment will "down
to half by mid -summer."
Effect seen marea
The Ohio Oil and Gas Association,
which Is an Industrial trade organ!·
zatkln, operates group Insurance
programs within ilhe Industry. It Is
on the number of cancellations In
!nsuranre coverage that Jordan
estimates layclf figures.
On the productkln end oC drilling,
Jordan estimates that during
Ohio's peak, about 15,lm people
were employed In the on and gas
lndustlJ', not including those workIng In relatro fields.
Locally, reports Kathryn Hart,
head of unemployment claims at
Pomeroy's office of the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services,
at least six area oil and gas
producers have employees that
have ftled claims this p~t winter.
For example, there were three
round-the-clock shifts, with four
men to a shift, on each of J.D.
Dr!Wng's thrre rlgs whJch are now
parked. '"lblse men," says Smith,
"are drawing unemployment at the
pre;ent time."
Hart has ~ Idea exactly how

DRILLING AT STANDSTilL - In 1984, J .D.
Drllllng Co. of Racine drilled 2113 wells. In IJ88 the
company has drilled lour we&amp;, with oo additional
many people In Meigs County are
unemployed from the oU and gas
Industry, "because some may sign
up In other counties."
oThere have alSo been claims filed
by employees from related indus·
tries, such as excavating, she adds.
During the summer of 1984, says
Smith, J.D. Dr!lllngh~ "eight rlgs
operating (three which'\vereowned
by ilhe rompany, one leased and tre
other four subrontracted), 20 doz.
ers and seven dltchers working
rtve, six and seven days a w~k ."
Three local excavating comP..·
les were under contract to buDd and

'• drilling anlidpaled. J.D. Drilling OWiflll.-ee rip lllld
Ill are abut down at lite )llesent time.
rip
""' parked In lhe company's yard In Racine.

reclaim drUllng sites and three
local pipeline contractors were
laying pipe, he adds.
But oU and gas will no longer
suwort the excavating and pipeline
contractors, explains Smith. "so
they've had to try and pick up &lt;ther
types of jobs."
Seeldng otber )lbll
Local contractors are oow tid·
ding for jobs such as strip mine
reclamatkln or water and sewer
projects he says.
JeHers Excavating, of Laurel
CUff, has picked up some work In
Kentucky, says Smith, where the

These,,.,

majority or drilling In the rountry is
being done because r:J. the soli

fonnations and less stringent government regulatiom.
Local well-servicing companies,
such as the Leading Creek Corp.,
and brine haulers, have also been
hard hit by the virtual shut down In
gas and oil drilling.
J .D. Drllllng Is licensed tohaullts
own brine, and with only minimal
amounts to be hauled !rom .wellS
already In productkln, the company
ro longer contracts rutslde haulers.
Terry ~to haul brine
(Continued on A-3)

'

�'

May4, 1986

:Commentary and perspective
i'mmq 'Ia ,.. i"tntiutl
A Division Of

Alb

S!m~
~v

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446·2342

Ill Courl St., Pomeroy, Oblo
(&amp;If) 892-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.

Executive Editor
A MEMBE R of The

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

United Press lnternatlonal,lnland Dally Press·-

Assoclatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welromE'. Tht&gt;)' should be less than))() words
long . All letters are s ubject to edl11ng ~ n d mu s t!}(" sig ned with na m e, address and
~ tt'lpPhone number . No un sl.gnEd leiters will be published. Leltfrs should bf" in
. good taste. addrt"ssln g ls~mE'!l , not persona lltl f's.

.-.!~=~~===========~
-~: The Lighter Side

f. Make mine lite
• •

By DICK WElT
wASHINGTON (UPI) - The government has anoounced new rules

::
; · governing the use of the word "lite" todescribemeatandpoultryproducts.
· : The regulations were changed, In part I gather, at the behest of the
: · American Meat Institute. Too bad the brewing Industry hasn't weighted in
: · with a similar request
· ; , "We need lo ensure that labeling infonnation on fat contmt of meat and
:; poultry products is clear and not misleading," says a le!X&gt;ral official
.• I'·: - · "AI the same time, we don't want to be 'so sUict with our labeling
· · : standards--- th•t we discourage Industry from producing klwer-fat
:: products_"
; - ·~fever I read a statement that also could be applied to brewing industry,
&lt; that Is It
: • But what should federal standards for beer labels be•
:: Well, !or openers, I recommend that the government adapt the meat and
-: poultry standards.
The tenn "lite" can be used oo meat and poultry "containing atleast 25
; : percent Jess Ia I than the majortty of such ~ucts In the marketplace."
· : That, to me. seems like a lair standard lor beer labeling.
: • Let's say the brewers of "Old Spumeundschmaltz" wanted to cash in oo
; : the currenl mania for slimness among beer-&lt;lrlnkers.
·; They couldn't merely change the "Old Spumeundschmaltz" labels ID
: · read "Spumeundschmaltz Ute" and be done with lt. Under rey plan, they
&lt; might have to change the recipe as welL
•: In other words "Old Spumeundschmaltz" couldn't be called
; • · 'Spumeundschmaltz Lite" unless it contained at least 25 percent fewer
·: ciilortes than the majortty of the beer being sold by the average bar or
: · ~kage store.
; · That should keep consumers of "Spumeuooschmaltz Lite" from
· :developing beer-betues.
; ; As for taste, thai would be up to the Individual brewers involved. The
: ·govenunent, of course, wouldn't even think of dictating taste standards.
:: ·:n "Spumeundschmaitz Lite" tasted more like mouthwash than beer, so
.; ~ lt.
;. · · Previous labeling requirements allowed diet claims "to be used
· : ~r~terchangeably on meat and poultry products" containing no rrore than
.... ;h o pereent rat
•·-Brewing .a fat-free beer should be fairly simple. It Is using tne word
;"diet" In the name that Is compllcated.
• Soft drink companies have relatively little trouble meeting the criteria,
: but a diet beer wou ld be automatically suspect .
; Would you buy a six-pack of "Diet Spumeuooschmaltz" from this man ? I
thought not
• But what lf the brewers of "Old Spumeundschmaltz" wanted tofancy up
;the label a bit by calling the new beer "Foamandgush Ute?"
• Well, In setting new standards for meat and poultry, the government
:SSys the tenn "ilte" can be "part of fanciful names, trade nameS and
;trademarks only If the producl meets the requirements for that claim,"
·excluding brand-name products like frozen dinners.
~ That strikes me as a sound policy for beer, as well.
: But If someone trtes to sell you a six-pack of "Foamandgush Ute" with
•ice on the label, let the buyer beware.

~ Herb

is running

~ for court position

Sunday Tnnes-Sentinel ·
May4, 1986

PaQ&amp;--'A-2

Burden-of proof_________::.. :la::.:.;m;.:.:.es.. :. :l·. .::.. .:K.:. . J.ilpa_t_ric_k
WASHINGTON - The U.S.
Supreme Cwrt han~d down an
opinion the other day of primary
lnlereit tv t!Dse of us in the news
business. The oplnlon will make It
rougher lbr private persons, as
distinguished from public ftgures,
to sue us successfully for libel: I
think the cplnion was wrong.
These were tre facts: In a series
of five articles between May 1975
and May l976, the Philadelphia
Inquirer made serious cliar~s
InvolVIng Maurtce S. Hepps. The
newjlaper nporled that Hepps, as
pflnclpal stockholder of a chain of
"Thrifty" stores, had received
specially faVPred treatment from
the Pennsylvania Liquor Control
Board. The articles discussed a
state legiSlator, described as "a
Pittsburgh Democrat and convicted felon" whose actions "dis·
played a clear pattern of Interference in state government by (the
legislator) on behalf of &amp;pps and

truth or falsity. all the same, the
The stories reported that l!deral Supreme Court's opinion slgnlfl·
Investigators "have found ronnec- cantty alters the rules of combat
tlons between Tiu1fty and under- Henceforth, "a prtvate-flgure plain·
world figures ." It was said thlit tiff must bear the burden of
showing that the speech at Issue Is
"The Thrifty beverage beer chain
false before recovering damages
--- had connections with o~ganlzed
for defamation from a media
crtme."
Hepps sued lor libel. He lost In the defendant."
Uial rourt, but the Pennsylvania . The high court split 5-4 In ' the
Supreme Court reversed and re- · Hepps case. Justice Sandra Day
manded the case for a new trlal. On O'Connor, joln'ed by Justices PoApril 21 the U.S. Supreme Court well, Brennan, Marshall and Blackreversed that judgment. Unless mun, observed that the Inquirer's
Hepps can prove at some su~e­ articles obviously dealt with matquent reUial that the newspaper ters "of public concern." This was
stories were false, Hepps will have speech "that matters." The
lost and tile newspaper will have char~s Involved a state agency
and a•state legislator.
won .
The trouble is that not all speech
In this particular case, such an
Is
provably true or !Jrovably false.
outcome may well be justified. The
Un~r
the old common law, It was
Inquirer has a high reputation ,
presumed
that defamatory statewithin the newspaper fraternity; Its
ments
were
false, and It was up to a
reporters do not ftlng reckless
newspaper
in
prove the truth oflts
accusations with disregard to their
stories. That rule, said Justice
11u1fty.''

'Tl-IE EX'PLORATION OF SV'Aee IS

A MINt:'- 80GGL.1 NG
CONCEV'T.,,

~E

HAVE WI'TNESSEP MANY

~~NTA&lt;:aTIC

At-19 AWESOME

ii:\ING~ .. •

-T

'"\

&gt;

.

!Ale

... ANI' MUC.~ ~EMAINS iO SE l)IS-

CO"EREP. WE'RE ON A NEW
FRONTIER Of S'PA'E EY.'PLORATION

,., WATC.t\ING

THE FIRST

AUtiiTOR SET FOOT ON

NASA·

c:

Missile limits scrapip ed
WASHINGTON - In a sa;ret
White House report, President
Reagan has admitted what we
disclosed llJJre than a year ago:
The United State; and the Soviet
Union tacitly agreed four year agd
to scrap the limits m nuclear
mlssHes set forth In the wtratltled
SALT ll treaty.
News reports continue to r(llale
the American public with details d.
suwosecJiy vehement arguments
within the Reagan administration
over deployment of new nuclear
miss Des without cu ltlng up old ones
- as If SALT II numerical Hmlts
were stUI being o~erved by the two
supelplwers. The news media
generally ~ - unaware of what
really happened behind the scenes
In 1982.
On Feb. 21,19!fi, we reported that
the Soviets had secretly notified the
Reagan administration In 1982 that
It no longer planned to abide by the
SALr ll limits on the number of

Herb's here and he's running lor justice d. the Ohio Supreme Court. No,
: not the Herb of Burger King fame; this ooe's a Columbus lawyer, novelist
: and fonner sportswrtter.
- Herbert R. Brown ls In a three-way primary contest lor the Democratic
: nomination for justice. He's not the favorite; that role belongs to Judge
: Donald R Ford of Trumbull Cou nty, who Is endorsed by the Ohio
· Democratic Party. The other candida te is Columbus lawyer John A.
: connor rr.
: Brown could capture the nomination despite his underdog status. He's
· got several things going for him. One is his name- not Hem, but Brown.
Unless I am presented with
; · Brown has been a strong ballot name in Ohio lor years. There have been convincing evldenoe to the ron·
: several Supreme Court justices named Brown In recent years, in fact , trary, I have to go along with Kurt
· Brown is running lor a spot oo the bench being vacated by Justice CUfford _Waldhelm's story that altbough he
: F. Brown.
was a lieutenant on the staff of a
· Brown -also has a secret weapon - John Kulewlcz, his campaign Nazi general, he had no Idea that
; manager. Kulewicz, you may rl'ltlember, Is the same gentleman who any atrocities were committed In
; engineered Colorado Sen. Gary Hart's victory against heavy odds k1 the Greece and Yugoslavia during
· 1984 Ohio DemocratiC presidential primary.
:1942-45.
: Kulewlcz said Brown has been In every county making himself lmown .
There Is no reason at this point In
; "By the end of this campaign, more people will have heardo!Hemthan the time tn question the fact that the
· other two candidates," said the campaign manager. "He's worla!d really - fonner Secretary General of the
: hard."
'
U.N. was anything rrore than a
: Kulewlcz also divulged that Brown Is spending money oo radio translator t&gt;r German General
· advertising to create voter awareness.
Alexan~r tohr, who unfortunately
: State Democrats are now charging that Republican gubernatortal cannot be with us today because he
: candidate James Rhodes has received campaign contrtbutlons i&gt;tallng was han~d as a war criminal.
• $9,565 from ~ classified state employees des!Bte his !llbllc statements that
DesplteunfouOOed accusatlons,lt
: you shouldn't do that.
Is my .humble ~Inion that Mr.
: "The former governor is a hypocrite," said Democratic State Chalnnan Waldhelm was a victim, as were
· James Ruvolo. "He falls to practice what he !X'e8Ches."
most German dficersof World War
; Republicans raised the roof last summer over revelations that Gov. n.
: Richard Celeste was tapping civil service empklyees fordonatklns . Celeste
I cannot verify it, but this is
· ordered his campaign committee to st~. and said the rontrlbutions were probably what happened.
: being refunded.
Mr. Waldheim, then a lrlght
: "We have no way of knowing which (do mrs) are state employees," said young d.flcer d. Austrtan birth, was
· Rhodes aide James Duerk. claiming the conUibutions were "purely assigned to General Lohr's staff.
: voluntary."
Lohr's job was to kill as many
; "But I'm sure Mr. Ruvolo has the (civil service employee) Jist, the way Yugoslavs and Greeks as he
· he's shaking down the state employees."
possibly could and solve the Jewish
: Turns out Ruvolo does have the list, and cross-checked lt with Rhodes'
Balkan question O"""! and for all.
: roster of contrtbutors.
'
But Lieutenant Waldhelm never
· Why did Ruvolo have the list? Not to shake down employees, he said, but knew about any of this. He was
: to find the state employees on Celeste's list of contrtbutors and give their under the impression General
: money back. A llkely story, !k!Y the Republicans.
Lohr's mission was to keep the
• How serious Is Rhodes about stopping employee contributions to Yugoslav and Greek partisans
: campaigns? He says he will propose legislation "forbidding any state from looting stores.
· official _to receive such donations. But that does not apply to
When Waldhelmflrstarrivedand
· non-Incumbents, like himself. "We rould always chan~ the language (of presented himself to General tohr,
• the bill)," said Duerk.
_
· the general told him, "I nEEd a
; Why would anyone In the Celeste administratiOn want to give to Rhodes, translator."
&lt;
· anyway? "I think there's a lot d. people In state government tl\111 are up to
"Jawohl," said Waldhelm.
; their ears In the shenanigans going on over there," said nJerk.
"What would you like me to
• And are the Democrats going to retaliate, now that they have ferreted translate?"
: rut the state employees giving to their arch· nval? "Definitely not,"
"Shakespeare. I love to read
: answered Ruvolo.
Shakespeare In the original. It

nuclear weapons each side could
have In Its arsenal. We added:
"President Reagan secretly agreed
to this."

That same evening, at a nationally televised press conferenoe, a
correspondent as~ an apparmlly
bewildered !l'esldent about our
report. Reagan said, In effect, that
he had read lt and had no Idea what
we were talking about
Our enterprising rolleagues In
the Fourth Estate let the matter
rest And to this day, their !&gt;1ortes
continue to make much d. supposed
&amp;lvlet "violations" of the missile
!ImitatiOns - and d. supposed
pressure from hard-liners tv have
the president scrap those same
limitations. The plain fact Is that the
!Eclslons were made In both
Washington and M!srowlburyears
ago to Ignore the limits - and were
given mutual, If secret, approval.
The president finally confirmed

O'Connor, has to yield to the First
Amendment's commandment that
freedom ol the press cannot be
abridged. "We believe that the
Constitution nJ:Iulres us to tlp (the
scales) In favor of protecting true
speech." The common law presumption cannot staitd "when a
plaintiff seeks damages against a
media ~fendant tor speech of
!llblic roncern."
The four dissenters, speaking
through Justice John Paul Stevens,
strongly disagreed . The majority
had grossly undervalued "the
strong state Interest In redressing
lnjurtes to private reputations."
Stevens cailed the opinion "pernl·
cious," a "blueprint for character
assassination." The decision
"trades oo the good names of
IJ'Ivate Individuals with little First
Amendment coin to show for It"
11 allllbel suits Involved publica·
!Ions at the level d. the Philadelphia
Inquirer, Stevens' dissent could be
written oft as hyperbole. Unfortunately, the "media" include a
number of scurrilous tabloids
whose stock In trade Des In
sensational gossip and veDed allegations of misdoing. When such
!llbllcatlons smear public figures,
the publlc figures can fight back.
Private Individuals have a tougher
time.
Twenty years ago, In whal I
thought was a light piece, I said of a
certain establishment that lt was "a
second-rate delicatessen." The
owner sued fur $5.M In Hbel. My
ftr~atlng thought was to go to
trtal, plead truth and prove the
marge. Our lawyers, not so belli·
cose, settled out of court for 400
bucks. But suppose the case had
gone to trial under O'Connor's
decision. How would the owner
have proved that his store was Nar
c second-rate delicatessen?
To be sure, this was not speech of
"public concern." It didn't "mat·
ter." All the same, this new rulethat a ~Flamed plaintiff must IJ'OVe
the falsity of the allegations against
him - may give the media more
than we ought to have. When
O'Connor set out to tilt the scales,
· she used a heavy thumb.

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta

our revelation In a White House signed SALT n, until Septemtx&gt;r
report to Congress last Dec. Zl , 1~1. Both sides had agreed to abide
entitled "Soviet Non-compliana- by the missile llmlts set, pending
wlth Arms Control Agreements." ratHicatlon by the Senate (wl"ich
Because the report is classified never came)_
"Secret," the !llbllc Is not aware of
And hoth sides kept their word.
Its contents.
The Soviets continued to have the
We've obtained a ropy of til&gt; same number d. "strategic nuclear
report. It contains a fascinating ~livery vehicles" - a tenn that
explanation of why the administra- Includes all intercontinental nution has failed to hold the Soviets' clear ml&lt;islles as well as planefeet to the fire over brooches of the carried born~. In fact, the secret
SALT ll limitations. There's a hard White House report• states, the
shell of bureaucratic and legalistic &amp;lvlets may actually have had "a
obfuscation, of rourse, but the meat few less" than the limit of 2.~ can be picked out of pages 16 to 19.
Presldent Reagan started the
"Since signature of the SALT n second "time pertod" in Septl'lllber
Treaty there have been three 1981, when he secretly notified
distinct time periods during which Moscow that he was "relieving both
the obligations of the U.S. and parties under International law of
U.S.S.R. have varied," the report any obligation with respect the
states. This In Itself wUJ be news In treaty," the report states. Surprts·
some quarters.
lngly, Reagan did not lnfonn the
The first period, the report Senate untO the highly classified
explains, was from June 18, 1919, rllJOrt of last December.
when the Ca rter administration

to

He's innocent_-....----------=B=u.: :.:. : ch: :;wa==-ld

•

•

/'

(

relaxes me after a long day on the
battlefield." tohr han~d Wald·
helm a German copy of Shakes·
peare and said, "I want a new play
on my desk every night"
"What about riJy fighting, sir?"
"Don't worry about fighting.
Leavethatl&gt;rourboyslnthefleld."
So Walcltelm moved Into an
office three doors down from the
ll'!neral and started to translate
Shakespeare.
Every so oftm someone would
rush In and say, "We have 5,M
Greek men, women and children In
trucks outside. What should we do
with them? "
Waldhelm would yell, "That's oot
rey department. Can't you see I'm
translating 'Hamlet'?''
Or an SS sergeant would crash In
and say, "Where are the freight
trains t&gt;r the Jews of Sa!onlka?"
Waldhelm would put his hands
over his ears so he couldn't hear
what the man was saying and run
out of his office.
For three years Waldhelm kept
his hands over his ears and eyes,
never once hearing or seeing
anything that the Gerrn1111s were
doing In the Balkans. As long as he
completed hlsShakespearetransla·
. lions no one ever asked him to do
anything lor Hitler's war effort.
Probably one of Waldhelm's
· ' great triumphs was translaUng
"AD's Well That Ends Well" whlle
.Lohr and his troops wiped out 15,&lt;ro
IYui!Pslav partisans In the Infamous
. "Operation mack ...
' The fact that Waldhelm appears
jln a photograph at a Montenegro
airport In full uniform with otrer
oflloers a few days preceding the
cperatton In no way IJleans that he

was Involved In lt. He was just
saying hello tn old friends before !te
""'nt off to his tenl with hi s
German-English dictionary.
Some people maintain that lt Is
awfully diUicult to serve on a Nazi
general's staff ln the Balkans from
1942 to lM'i and oot know what went
oo. Kurt Waldhelm was the kind of

Doonesbury
IM~lD

ct:I(Ft5$, a'Ire,
rMAUTTI£

NONPUI5CP

8YAU.YaJR

guy who could do It
If he made any mistake It was oot
mentioning ln his autobiography
that he served In the Balkans as a
translator of Shakespeare lor General Lohr. The only reason I can
gue;s !OJ the omission ls he was
ashamed lo ad mil he had no Idea
what happened In World War 11.

BY GARRY TRUDEAU
11/HITE- UBE/IAJ.$ WANT
IJlACKS 70 &gt;Tiff VICTIM?
f0~_ /TM4$

THeM fflil. U5EFU/. .

\

_&lt;c_ont_lnued_fro_mA_
-n ___,.,---,--·--

also seek tre oomlnation to run for
the Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court and they are Frank D.
Celebrezze and StEPhen M. Stern_
Democrats running for the full
term as Chief JustiCE'. term begin ning Jan. 2, 1987, are Herbert R.
Brown, John A. Connor !! and
Donald R. Ford.
William A. Lavelle and Pau l T.
Whllaker both seek elec tion the
lOth District Democratic central
committee.
Meigs Republicans will help pick
one of three candida tes who will
oppose Gov. Celeste for re-election
in the fall. The candidates are Pa ul
E. GUlmor, Paul E. Pfeifer and
James A. Rhodes, a fonner
governor of Ohio. Both Gil!mor and
Rhodes have visited Meigs County
in their campaign dfot1s. There are
no other oppoSt'&lt;l Republican candidates for other state offices CB' court
posts the parly havin g one candi date for each post. On the lOth
Dlslrlct level, Republicans have
two women seeking to IX' named
State Central Committee Woman .
They are Barbara L. Deeds and Jan
Seaman.
Po lls will be ~en Tuesday from
6: :1) a.m. to 7::JO p.m.

(Continued from A-ll •
winner of the race will oppose
Democratic Incumbent Jolynn Bc6·
ter In the fa ll_Bc6ter Is unopposed
Tuesday_ The dlstrtct rEPresentative serves Meigs, Gallla and
Alhens counties.
A former Middleport resident,
Jan Michael Long, now an attorney,
ls unopposed In his bid for the
Democratic oomlnatlon as state
senator from the 17th District and
he will oppose long-time Republi ca n Incumbent, Oakley Collins, also
unopposed ln the primary, ln the
Ia II election_
Democrats will vote oo state
candidates with Richard F. Celeste·
unopposed in hls bid for reelection
as governor of Ohio. Arace In whlch
local Democrats wUJ help &lt;k-cide
the party's candida te for fa Ills thai
of state treasurer with Incumbent,
Mary Ellen Wlihrow. helng opposed by Bryan E. Icard. Sen. John
Glenn is opposed by Don Sco tt and
three candidates srek the oomlnatlon to run for represenlatlve lo
Congress. They are Ray H. Blair
Jr ., John M. Buchanan and William
W. Palmer. The wlnnerwllloppose
Incumbent Republican Clar rnre
Miller ln Ire fall . Two Democrat s

to

5 GOP hopefuls ·
mittfl' sa id Ire LaRouche candidate&lt;; arc Don Scott , William W .
Palmer and Paul T. Whitaker. The
comm ittee urgt'&lt;l party mPmb&lt;&gt;rs
to "vote for other quallfit'(] Democra lic candidates."

!Continued from A-ll
thai we are seeking additional
sources of fund s through stale and
fe&lt;k-ra l grants and requesls of the
county commissioners." Ire trustfl's said.

..

Oil, gas industry hit hard _ _ _-

Committee posts

for
DrU!Ing,
reportstheSmith.
NowJ.D.
Proffitt
has removed
tanks
from oome of his trucks so he can
haul commercial klads, Smith
explalns_
Other local businesses which
have likely felt the ripple effect of
the &lt;k-cllne In oil and gas well
drtlllng Include hardware stores,
lumber yards, feed and grain mills
where rec lamation materials were
purchased. and attorneys' offices.
Pomeroy altorney StE'Ve Story
agrees that "In 1984 especla Uy,

local lawIn offices
were
Involved
tltle work
lor actively
aroo oU
and gas drUiers.''
With declining priDes, strtn~nt
regulatiOns and an average cost of
$150,&lt;ro to drill and put a shale well
In production, "you won't find too
manypeoplelnvestlnglntheolland
gas Industry," says Smith.
"J.D. Drilling is cutUng corners
E'Verywhere," he adds, "because
expenses aren't coming down gross revenue is. For now we're

lo~~~;:';lm~n;~~~~tln~a~gmo;o;nu;;:'l~t;~;l;to;;~;:;~;~;~;~;~;;;·;;;fo;;;r;;;t;;;he;:IO;;;w;;;es;:t;;;ope~ra;;;t;ln~g~

Happy
SSth

...

FBI arrests hijack suspect
HILLSBORO, Ore. (UPI ) - A
man who apparently had been
drinking hijacked a commuter
plane over Oregon and forced lt to
land at a suburban airport, where
he surrendered early Saturday
13
without having hanned his
captives.
The man , Identified as Doug
Thomas, 29, of Tulsa, Okla.,
surrendered lo FBI agents and
~llce wltmul a fight at about 1:40
a.m. PST, some thr~F hours after
he oommandeered tre aircraft as It
flew from tre town of Eugene
Portland.
The man - who had demanded
wa ter, four parachutes and fuel for
the aircraft - turned himself rr;er
to authorities after releasing 12 of
his captives in two -group;. Moments alter the second group was
turned loose, the pllol escaped.
No charges were Immediately
filed .

to

Anniversary
Mom
AND

Ted Gardner, who heads the FBI
office in Portland, said no weapon
was bund oo the hljacki-r, who had
claimed to be anned, or lnsl&lt;k- the
Horizon Air Metrollner, a twinengine turbo-prop aircraft

Dad

fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiij

cacLec~
O'DELLS aaw
SEASON VPENERS
SAU ENDS 5-9-85

CUB CADET
8-HP Rear Tine Tiller has 5 1orward speeds and
power reverse lor easy maneuvering in the toughest
Jerrain. 9-position adjuslable handle swings leH
and righl, so you won't walk in newly- ti lled
soil. Fini sh last with 21-in. lilting widlh,
adjustable depth, 6-qt. iuellank.

Reg. Sl 049.99

LAWN TRACTORS
51699'5 ·

•805 - 8 hp 38'

NOW AVAILABl£ IN OHIO
COMPREHENSIVE LONG-TERM INSURANCE
COVERAGE FOR: NURSING HOMES
AND HOME CARE

Search continues
for jail escapees

FOR FIIITII:I INFORMAnON CONTACT:

THE WISEMAN AGENCY, INC.

CHARLESTON, W.Va . 1UPI1Tlw search continued late Priday
night for lwo lnmales who escaped
from Ihe Kanawha County (W.Va .)
Jail aflcr taking owr the facili ty
and swlplng gu ns from three
guards .
Pederal marshals in Charleston
say they have expan~d the search
for Wllllam Snl'&lt;'d. 32. of Nitro and
Anthony Pfeffer. 31, of Hunllngton.
Into surrounding sta tes.
Spokesmen would nol say which
states, but county s~rlff's offic i al~
say they are dtecklng all addresSI'S
of girlfriends and relatives_
Pollee also arc checkin g connections Pfeffer had while he was In the
federal prison In Lewisburg, Pa_
On Thursday night, Huntington
pollee arrested a man suspected of
driving the getaway car t&gt;r the t"o
Inmates who escaPed' early Thu rsday morning .

446-3643 - Ask For Mark Curry

doctc, 2·

•1604- 16 hp 44" mo-docll,

4

an1i~acelp

wheel•. 4

g~l.

$89995
IIACTOI

...~ %'t-,"'

~~

~,.._.~

SUVJCI

'5 1j!J\'l ~

2400 USTIIIN

&gt;\1 u_
s.t-·

.Avt,
*At O'Dell Lumber we not only offer the best
prices on Cub Cadet Tractors and Tillers. we also
have factory trained mechanics and complete
stock of repair parts.

VINE ST.
PHONE 446-127 6

2400 EASTERN AVE.
PHONE 446-7826

1982 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREME
2 door roupe, finished m charcoal gray with gray cloth interior, lafl:lau vin~
to~ 3.81itre V-6 engine. auto. trans. PS. PB, air atfKl ., AM!fM stereo.tilt wheel,
cruise c0r1lroi , S~Xtrt mirrors, SIXJrl wheels. Nice Local Trade-ln.

Ohio weather

ss,500

Ohio E•tended Foreca.st
Monday lhrough Wednesday
Fair Monday and Tuesday wit h a
chance of showers Wednesday.
Highs will be In tt.' 70s. Lows will be
In the upper 40s to mid 50s.
South Central Ohio
Sunny today. Highs today will bc
in the low 70s.
The probability of prPCipltation Is
near zero through today.

ov

00

THE OHIO VALLEY BAN
CIALLIJ'IOLt•,

CO.

CHIC 41!1.:JI1

MEMBER: FDtC
PHONE [6 1 41 44&amp;283 1

JOYCE LYN U BARLOW
ASSISTANT '-liCE

~(SI!XN T

&amp;

OIA£CT~

FOR TRAINING &amp; CUSTONEA SERVICES

Dea r Customer:

We are very ple as ed t o announce that we will be offering a new money market.
account called DI A-PLUS. Because of gove rnment de[egulation affecting
intere s t on deposits, ~e can no~ offer an improved version of our current
money market account with addi tional features. Thi s new accou nt will be

Ohio Louery
CLEVELAND 1UP! 1- Frid"Y"s
winning Ohio Lottery numbers:
Dlllly Number
583
PICK-4

ROSALEE
WALKER

~·

available t o all depo sitors and our present Daily Investment Account II
owne rs will automatically benefit with this account.
One of the main advant ages of DIA-PLUS is the opportunity for your money to
earn at an even more a ttractive rate. The interest rate wiil be determined

•

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

by the collected balance in your account each day.

Simple interest will

acc rue daily based on the following tiers :

GAlliA COUNTY
AUDITOR

,iunba~ 'ilrimes- lftntintl
CUS I' 121-KOO I
PubllshC'd rach Sund ay, R?.1 Third A\'r .,
Gallipolis. Ohio. by lh&lt;' Ohio Vall ~· Publl!i hln g CompMy rMulr lm«&lt;la , lo L·. SPr ond r lasf&gt; postag&lt;' paleS at Gal lipolis.

Ohio 456.11. Enterro
mailing marw
Offl1'1'.

&lt;~ I

a .~

SN'O nd r lass

Pomrr o.v. Oh io, Posr

Mrmber: Unltrd Pr£&gt;ss lntrrn &lt;tl lonal.
Ohi o Nf'wspaper As~odatlon, N;i!iona l
Adwr!lslng Rl'prt&gt;s('n! atl ve, Br anham
Nrwspaper Sa les, 7:\3 Third AvPI\ U(\

Nrw York, New York 10017.

SUNDA V ONLI'
SUBSCRII'TION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
. .... . ~I Crnts
Onl' \\'e&lt;'k .....
Om' Yf'ar .. .
. .... ... S2fi.OO
SINGI.E COPY

PRI CE

Sunda y ..... ....... ....... ........ ~l Crnts
No s ubsnlpllon s by m a ll pNmi 11C'd In
towns whf're motor carr iPr s('n ·ir r is
a v.1il ablr.
Thl"' Sund ay Tlmcs -Sl'nllnt' l will nol lx'
responsible ror adva nc(' pa y mt • nt ~
madf" to ca rrl('rs.

MAIL SUBSCRII'TIONS
Sunday Only
On(' YPar ................................. $26.80

Six months .... ............ ... ............ $1 3.00
Dally and Sunda)'
MAIL SUBSCRII'TIO NS
In• Ide Ohio
52 Weeks ... ........ .. ....

26 Weeks ..............

..... S~J8 .2 4

.. ....... $29.12

13 Weeks ...... --------------- . . 11-1 .56
RaiH Ouh,lde Ohio
~2 W
eeks ........ ------ ..... ·------ 159811
26 Weeks ----------- ______ ......... 131.2U
13 Weeks -----------· ...... ______ .. . 115.60

1

.00 t o $
499.99
$
500.00' t o $ 2,499.99
$ 2,500. 00 t o $49,999 . 99
$

$50,000.00 or more

The office of County Auditor is a demanding and important part of county.government. It requires full time dedication
and prior experience in this type of work. I
believe my past experience and education
qualify me to be .your complete Auditor.
For years, I managed a division of over 20
employees, and for the last 11/2 years I
have traveled from my home here in Gallia
County auditing divisions all over the country.
Being your County Auditor will be my
ONLY job. I can assure you I will be there
when you need me and I will not forget
that I am working for you. It is my duty to
serve you with respect and honor.
Vote for a competent, full-time
Auditor. Vote for Rosalee Walker.
Paid for by

Walker, Rt. I, Bidwell, OH.

5-l/2%

5-3/4%
floats daily (current DIA II ra te)
floats daily (cur re nt D!A II rate, plu s 1/4%)

You may ·continue to have six transfers per month, of which no more tha n

may be by che ck, draft or debit card.

thre~

Personal withdrawals are unl i mlt ed,

We are also pr ov iding a new service for this account. The Bank will retain
your checks in safekee ping and send you a monthly statement showing the
amount of interest paid and ide ntifying transactions by check number. ~s an
additional convenience t o enhance this service, ~e are off ering duplicate
chec ks which will be fully pe rspnalized. Dup licate che cks are ldeal because
j ~ they provide you wit h a comylete copy of each check written.
However, if
proof of ·payment i s ever needed, we will be happy to furnlsh you wi th a
reproduction of the cancelled check at no cost wi t hin 48 hour s.
The staf f at OVB is excited about this truly flexible account which re quires
only $25. 00 to open and has no monthly service charge.

We s incerely app re ciate your business and welcome t he opportunity to give
your financia l matt ers our 'home-town' t ouch. Please feel free t o contact
us at any of our offices should you have any que stions regarding this
new- ac coun t.

. Joyce l yn M. Barlow
Assistant Vice President

JMB:jac

fuel .

5289591

SALE

Ga Uia County Democrat ic Party
met and recommended saturday
that voters ignore candidates idcn·
lifted as followers of conservative
economist Lyndon H. LaRouche.
The Democratic execu tive com -

rna-

vur limited warranty , c11t Iron
front axle and ful length twin
channel heavy duty lt•l fr1me .

tank .

Democrals Issue advisory
ln another developmenl , tt.&gt;

Inl and Dall y Prt&gt;S s Assoc ia ti on an d !hP

•

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-A·3

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

�•

•

Page-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

May4, 1986

Pol'l18f9y-Middleport-Gal!ipolis, Ohio-Point Plea....t W. Va.

r---Local Briefs:-::-,-..., Area Guard
unit back
.
Track replacement begins Monday .
from training mission
GAU.IPOLIS - Chessle System will rep lac&lt;' tracks across Pine
Stm&gt;t In GaiUpolts starting Monday, ..follce Cl!ief JOP Owen sald
today. Work should be completed by ~y 9, he added.
Eecause of the work, Pine Street between Fourth Avmue and
Vinton Avenue wUl be closed to through traffic. The detour is as
follows:

Eastbound traffic (vehicles headed into town 1 wUJ tum left onto
Vinton Avenue and follow Vinton to Fourth Avenue. At Folllth. they
will turn rtght and go back to Pine Street.
Westbound traffic (vehicles leaving town) will turn right from
Pine onto Fourth Avenue and go up Fourth to Vinton Avenue and
tum left. From Vinton Avenue, they will merge with Ohio 160.

Miller representative in area
GALLIPOLIS -A representative of U.S. Rep. Clarmce Miller
IA111 be at the GaUJa Coonty Cou rthouse Tuesday from 11 a.m.
until I p.m. in an open door session.
Anyone with questions about the federal government can stop by
and discuss them with the representative.

:· County gets ADC distribution
GALLIPOLIS - Gailia Coonty received $318,953 in Ald to
!J&lt;opendent Children payments for 3,334 recipiPnls in May, tlx- state
auditor's office has reported.
Meigs Coonty received $256,410 for 2,691 residents.

· Memorial Day parade plans set
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipolis Memorial Day parade has been set
for Mav 26 at10 a.m .. Gallia C'oonty Veterans Service Officer D:lvel
T. Mvers said.
·
.
The parade \.\1il fonn at the Foodland store at Third Avenue a~d
Court Strt'E'I and will march up Third to Spruce Street. where It wrll
• cross over to Second Avenup,

From there, the parade wlll head downtown to the city park and
the Doughboy Monument. ThP parade will form at9a.m. and mov~
out at 10. 'lllose entering the parade are to contact Fred Wood at
440.0173 or Myers at 446-4612. PX!ension 258. to get on the parade
marching llst, Myers said .

: Centerville sets entry deadline
CENTERVILLE- The deadline for anyone wanting to enter the
annual Centerville parade and bean dinn~r or set up a food booth is
May 10, according to a spokPsman for the Cc nt en1llr Volunteer
Firemen's Association, which is sponsoring the event s.
The parade and bean dinner are set for May 24. For more
f information, contact Fred Childers at 416-3222 or 682·&amp;347.

I

Fort A.P. Hill is the biggest
operation the company wUI be
Involved In this summer.
Among the support maintenance
carried out by the 3001th were
repairs to electronic equipment
Including radios and radar, com·
pulers and teletypewriters, work
by the ground support equipment
section on generators and r!'!rlger·
atlon and heaing units, autcrnotlve
repairs and heavy equipment
work.
Olmmander of the 3001th Is
Capt. Marlon A. Rose. First
sergeant is PSG Charle; Henson.

The local maintenance company, \.\1th a caravan of 47
vehicles, joined National Guard
and U.S. Anny Reserve troops
froor Wisconsin, Texas, Connecticut, Kansas and other states.
The A.P. Hfll mission Is !lie first
in a series of summer camps local

GALLIPOLIS - A GalJJpolis
man was fined Friday in Gallipolis
Municipal Court on three traffic
charges stemming from an acci·
dent earlier in the day.
Larry E. Martin, 18, Lower River
Road, was fined $.JJO, sentenced to
three days in jail, given a OO&lt;Iay
driver's license suspension and 18
months probation for DWI. He was
also fined $12 for rn operator's
license and $15 for failure locontrol.
The state highwa.v patrol said

Martin reportedly backed from a
driveway on County Road 8,
three-tenths of a rrille west of Cfay
Township Road 13, at 12:02 a.m.
Friday, went oflthe light side of the
road and into a ditch .
D:lnald L. Martin, 21, Lower
River Road , r!fJorled an injury but
was not treatEd , the patrol said.
Arrested and jailed by the patrol
for DWI and driving under suspen.
sim Friday was Alexander F.
Gray , 39, Columbus.

Ames store
In the Sliver Bridge
Shopping
PiaU!.
Police arrested and jailed Robert
W. Parsons, 29, Virgie, Ky., on
Friday. reportedly on a year·old
warrant charging Parsons with
rape.
PoUCI' cited Jeffrey L. HaUry, 31,
2106 Chat ham Ave., for failure to
yield In a two-car accident on
Eastern Avmue Friday.

number of comJX'[ili:&gt;ns.
To part icipate In the contes t. a
customer needs only to complete an
rntry fo nn. There Is nothing to buy
and any licensed driver can enler.
"It's our way of saying thank you
to ru r many friends around the
counlry ," says Dairy Isle Vier
Pres ident. Shirley Chapoton.
"When people think of Dairy Isle.
they think of summer and what
nicer way is there to spend summer
than driving arrund in a vintag~
American mad e au tomobile?"
Dairy Isle- which last year gave
away a 1951 Nas h - will hold its
drawing on the WllJys on .lull!' 16 at
the company headquarters In
Utica. Mich.

Officers said Halley r!fJOrtedly
pulled from the driveway of Rax
Restaurant, 1503 Eastern Ave., al
12:46 p.m. and struck the light rear
of a southbound car drivm by Lu A.
White, 30. Rt. 2, Bidwell. Damage
was slight to both vehicles.
Pollee also cited Troy A. Broyles.
19, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, ..for no opera.
tor's llcense, and Robert F. Manton,
48, Louisville, Ky., speeding.

IIr:===;;~~;:~~11

On

OPEN HOUSE

FRENCH CITY
MOBILE HOME inc.

. 269 UPPER RIVER ROAD

6,

For Judge or the Court
of Appeals (4th. Di•lricl)
1 r~11 Tum t:tmmfncinll :l ·&amp;-117 ~
I VOtt'

LARGEST SELECTION
OF
.
NEW AND USED HOMES IN
THE AREA AT

Super· Speciai .Prices

-

Central Committee,

G. G
Republican Candidate for
Gotlio County Commissioner
1om retired ard con devote full·
time if needed Ia the office. Your
vote, wpport and influence will
be appreciated.
Ptl. for "' G. Gotllon fol«. Rt I. ea 1 , ,~
110

fltOI"t

1Vo tr for flO! mllft tlr.tn ON[)

For Stale
Representative
(94th. District)

to Congress

X

SAVE

20°/o

All 14 KT ART&lt;ARVED DESIGN
WEDDING BANDS 20%

$17,995

ASK US ABOUT
THE ALL NEW
ELECTRIC HEAT

X

FRANK D. CELEBREZZE

(\'ott' for lot ""llrP 111111 ONE)

PUMP

STEPHEN M. STERI\
t'or Justice of the
Supreme Court
ELECTRICITY DOES IT ALL
FOR LESS!
~-.../

l hll lfrm fn mmf'ntint I · Hill

trun

hrm

t' CJrru•~t• n ttfl l

',, ''""

I '"''

,.,,, . t . " .• .• ,

.,. " '" "

$2495

···· 11 -••11• '
• h I , -u l,

'

nnlll l.o'• ·

lh''" (t\(

( \" o r o• lou~" ' rtln ro • lkHn It\ I. •

For Audito1· of State

S269 &amp;UP

1\ ul ~ fur nul mrm• lh:on 0\'f 1

For Senc la r.v of State
1\ ul ,. fu1 nul mm 1• 1h ~ n 11,\ "t.l

Fot' Treasure •· of Slate

S2295 &amp;UP

X

FRANCIS E. SWEENEY

GENTS AND LADES CWSTER AND SOLITAilE RINGS, PENDANTS AND EARRNGS
- NOW MARKm DOWN 20%
.IS ct. Solitaire.,. ... ,. .. 250.00 .... Now 199.00
.21 ct. Solitaire ......... 337 .SO .... Now 270.00
.25 ct. Solitaire .......... 395.00 .... Naw 316.00
.41 d. Solitaire .......... 595.00 ..:.Now 476.00
.49 ct. Solitoire ........ 1295 .00 .. Naw 1036.00
.88 ct. Solitoire ........ 2195.00 .. Naw 1756.00
.50 Ct. Cluster ...,. ... ,..875.00 .... Now 699.00
1.00 tt. Cluster ........ 1495.00 .. Now 1196.00

SAVE

40°/o -

SELECT DIAMOND
PENDANT • EARRINGS

.11 ct. 4 prong Pond ant ... Reg . t 65.00.,.Now 9'1.00
.11 &lt;1. 4 IJ'OI1!I ptndont ....... llog. 295.00-Now 177.00
.25 ct. 4 IJ'OI1!I l'tndont ....... ilia. 560.00-Now 116.00
.37 ct. 4 pn&gt;l1!l Ptndant.. ..... llog. 965.00-Now 579.00
.SO ct. 4 IJ'OI1!I Ptndant .... flog. ISOO.OO .• Now 900.00

JOHN A. CONNOR, II

For United Sta les

~ nr l ,n , "r ~or ·

RI CHARD F.
CHF:STE

~Ht

'"'

I WY i rn ~nl

20°/o

20°/o

NOW

MOfHER S DAY IS MAY liTH - BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

WA·TCHES

20-60°/o
ALL OMEGA, BllOV A. PULAR, SEIKO, CARAYELLE
REDUCED

GENTS:
Bulo•o Yel. Digitol ................... 84.9l
Sei~a Yel. Q111rtt .................... l6S .OO
Omega SS, Mt&lt;honicol ............ 175.00
lui••• Yel. Q111rh ................ .1 qs.oo
LADIES:
(onmlle Yel. Qoortt ............. 105.00
8ulo•o Yel. Qlllrtt. ................ 155.00
Soi~o 55 Q111rtt ...................... T50.00
Omt!JII .14 II Med11uical ,.,. .. 350.00

52.47
6t.U
74,q7
174.50

( , n., •rn&lt;&gt; r

PAUL R.
I.EONA RD

X

,\NTHO:I'Y J. CELE BREZZE, J~

X

TIJOMA S E. FERGUSON

X

SHERROD IIROWN

X

llHY1\ N E. ICARU

,JOliN GLENN

Senator

x·
X

DON SCOTT

'

Come In For
Other Mother'• Dav LLOYD LOUNGER
81ft ldeat
900
CORI:&gt;IN &amp; SNYI)fR
fURNITURf CO.

$1 3

446-1171

SAVE

SAVE

FANTASTIC SAYINGS ON ENTIRE ENYEN10RY

1\ ' n1o• fn1 nul mono• I han ll\'t.l

RECLINERS

955 Second Ave.

ETC.

SPECIAL GROUPING

.09 &lt;1. 1W 4 prong Ear.......... llog. 132.50- Now 79.50
.20 &lt;1. 1W 4 IJ'OI1!I Ear-Reg. 295.00- Now 177.00
. .36 ct. 1W 4 prong Eor........ lloq. 57S.OO.•Now 345.00
: .55 &lt;1. TW 4 prong lr,. .... itog. 120.00.. Now 720.00

ALL GIFTWARE

ALL COLORED STONES

10°/o TO 30°/o SAVINGS

COLORED
GEMS
OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY OF COLORED GEMSTONE
JEWELRY REDUCED TO INCLUDE BIRTHSTONES,
RINGS, PENDANTS, EARRINGS, BRACElETS, LOOSE
STONES.

WOOD, BRASS, CRYSTAL, PEWTER, SILVER
JEWEL BOXES, FIGURINES &amp; MORE

BU1 NOWI

SA~E

40th Annlrel'lffg
Celehffflon Specie/
BRASS

'\, .

SPECIAL

HERBERT R. BROWN

MARY ELLEN WITHROW

•

INTIRE iNVENTORY OF LADIES
AND GENTS STONE RINGS LINDE' STAR, BLACK ONYX,
JADE, OPAL. PEARL, MASONK,

WHILE 10U CAN

•

20°/o SAVINGS

SPECIALS

BEDSPREADS

S8900 &amp;UP

~
..
· IF~
·

20°/o OFF

t :1

For :\ttornt•y (icneral

MICROWAVES

By
PRINCE GARDNER
ENTIRE INVENTORY OF
ltiN'·S AND lADIES LEATHER
PRODUCTS - SAVE

and

C•J\t'I'IHH'

' . '"
,, ,

BILLFOLDS

STONE RINGS

ALL DIAMOND JEWELRY

I ·HI1J

l.i ('U tl\n nnt Co\·rr nor

SURFACE
. SAVER

Sj900

AU 14 KT FASHION OIAINS NOW R£.
DUCED. HER£ ARE JUST SOMEOF THE
SAVINGS NOW BEING &lt;»'FEllED.
RIG. NOW
16' Htrringbone ....... 89.00 53.40
18" Herringbone .... I02.SO 1&gt;1.50
20" Solid Rope ..... 257.SO 154.50
7" Herringbone ...... 97.97 58.78

DONALD R. FORD

hu

::·

'

(Volt ror not morr thtn ONF.l -

For J usticc of the
Supreme Court

OUR ENTIRE SEUCnON OF
14 ~T, GOLD FILLED &amp; STERLING

2o·~i~· · ~ ~,.,

NOW

ANNI~ERSARY

WILLIAM W. PALMER
For Chief Justice of
the Supreme Court

~~,

EARRINGS

ADD-A-BEADS - 14 KT GOLD CHAINS- 40°/o OFF

X

JOHN M. BUCHANAN

• -I • I

WOOD ROCKERS

FOR THE LOWEST PRIUS ON
PLAIN BANDS - SEE US.

I

TO THE FIRST 100
CUSTOMERS, A FREE GifT

~@ PIERCED

2MM·14 KT PLAIN,_...................... 3S.SS
3MM· T4 KT PlAIN ,_ ...................... 54.95
SIIIM·T4 KT M~ICHAIN ........1......... 77.25
SIMI·T4 KT
116.55

X

ON~: ~

24'X40' SECTIONAl

MOTHER'S
DAY
GIFT
SUGGESTIONS

today.

·Our largest
tale aver!

BANDS

ALL

RAY H. BLAIR. JR.

(lOth District)
!Voir for 1t01 mort thlfl

$249 &amp;UP

I

Storewide
sa.,lng•

For Representative

So 8end early.
Call or vit~il

lOCAllY OWNED IY JOHNNY HOOD &amp; MICE AWN

JAN MICHAEL LONG

JOLYNN BOSTER

Week hegi ns May 5.

~{iij FLORIST

FREE

(\'ntt' fnr nlll 111111'"' tktn ONEI

!Vult' for not morr thln 0~ £1

Bouquel. MOther,!!

Phone
446-9721
Gallipolis

X

ONE)

th1n

For Stale Senator
(17th. District)

..----SPECIAL----.

~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~=======~:

Douqu&lt;t. Or tho• FTD
Fragranl Blossoms, ..

ORDER
EARLY

to be given ciway
Saturday, May 24th

PAUL T. WHITAKER

JULIA A. LAMBE

)

One. of three fabulous prius

For

Th .. F''£0® S1uing Gardf'n 111

Fast
Courteous
Oelivery

I REGISTER TO WIN

For Member of State

OPEN SUNDAY, MAY 4- 1 TO 5

Fragran t

T~e Floral Teacup and Saucer
Bouquet lor Mother's Day.
Beautiful flowers in a charming
stoneware teacup and saucer.
The loving gift that lasts a long,
Icing time.

X

WILLIAM A. LAVELLE

i\'u i" fur ~ul m1.0rt' th•~ ONf:1

i \ ' !lh • nul mmt'

U8

No L 1ndid1tt f'IIC'd • Utdauuo~

of l'1ndid1ty for 1h1• Off'ltt'

(10th, Di•lrict)

I '

Bouquet.

you with savings
throughout our store.

INCLUDES ALL 14 KT BEADS
STONE BEADS. "CLOISONNE"
AND CHAINS.

Committee. Man

•·

Blo sso m s ' ~

or

State Central

Woman (lOth. District)

Vote

Admitted - William Young,
Ruiland; Janet Oiler, Pomeroy;
Rnbert Klein, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Cheryl Ferguson,
Charles Whittington.

MOTHER'S DAY SUNDAY - 11TH
Make Mother's
Day bloom
with love.

ON I:)

~01 ITI Ort tllln

for

For Member

1986 .

Veterans Memorial

o·'th._·

25°/o

OFFICIAL DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY BALLOT
PRIMARY ELECTION - MAY 6, I 986
GALLIA COUNTY

GALLIPOLIS

MAKE PLANS TO ATTEND
OUR SPECIAL OPEN HOUSE
NOW THRU MAY 1Oth

3-BEDROOMS
2-BATHS

May

MEDINA, Ohio (UPI) - A
Medina County firm wants pPrmlssion from the stale to drill and
operate a deep-Injection weU fort he ·
disposal of brine.
The fi1111, Serg-Land Inc .. part of
a company called Arland Rininger
Ent erprises based in Sharon Town barrels of brine, the sa lty byproduct
ship.
dispose
up toat2,000
of
gaswants
and tooil.
eachofday
an
industrial park in Sharon Center,
nt'ar the county's eastern border.

POMEROY - Four calls were
answered by local units Friday, thP
Meigs County EmergPncy Medical
Services reports.
At 8:46 a.m., the Rutland Unit
took William Young from Salem
Street. to Wter:ans Memorial Hos·
pltal; Pomeroy at 1:27 p.m. look
Debra Smith from throourthouscto
Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at
5:04 p.m. took Hugh Leifheit from
Naylors Run to Veterans Memorial
and at 5:05 p.m., Rutland took
Arnold Lindberg from Meigs Mlne2
to Holzer Medical Center.

1Vott for nol

Brine disposal sough!
POMEROY - Dairy Isle Corp ..
\.\1th which McCJu re's 3-in·1 R~tau ­
ra!Jt , East Main Street, Pomeroy,
and McClure's Dairy Isle, General
Hartinger Parkway, Middleport,
a~ affiliated. will give away a 1955
Wli!YS as grand prize in the
company' ~ co ll ec tor ca r
sweepstakes.
The conte;t will run throughout
May and residents may secure
entry blanks at either of the two
McClure locations.
This year's prize has won !JlfJir
prizes of its own. The WIIJys, a fully
~tared two-lone hard top, one of
the laler Wlllys ooilt by Overland.
has enjoyed an excellent history as
an exhibit car taking trophies In a

REI'URNS FROM Ml!SION -SSG Roger Gam!lt of GaUlpollll was
one of the members of the West Virginia Nallonal Guard's 36641h
Mainlalaoe Company In Pobrt Pleasant to return from a training
mission at Fort A.P. Hill, Va.

Court fines Gallipolis man

GALLIPOLIS- The theft of four
center caps from a car owned by
Randy Scott.1129Second Ave., was
reported to city pollee Friday night.
Scott informed officers the theft
occurred while his car was parked
at the First Church of the Nazarene
betwePn 7:30 and 9 p.m. Friday.
Officers reported a 15-year·old
GaUlpolls area juvenile was taken
into custody at 2:35p.m. Friday for
allegedly sho[iifting items from the

Classic
car offered as prize
.

Meigs emergency runs

GaWpolis Township, Courtlrluse.J.
lobby; Kanauga Pra:lnct, Jayceet
Building; AddlsonTownshlp, Bula·,
ville townhouse; Addison Precinct,
townhouse; Cheshire Township,
Community BuDding; Cheshire
Precinct, Bradbury Building;
Cfay Township, Clay Elementary
School; Clay Precinct, Clay Elf'mentary School; Guyan Township,
townhouse; Guyan Precinct.
Crown City Village Hall; Harrison
Township, townhouse; Huntington
Precinct, townhouse In Vinton;
Huntington Township, Grange Hall
in Vinton; GrPenTownshlp, Grange
townhouse; Green Precinct 1,
Rodney Community BuDding;
Green Precinct 2, Grt'E'n Elemen·
tary School; Green Precinct 3,
Rodney Olmmunity Building;
Greenfield Township, Gallla; ·
Morgan Township, Morgan Center;
Ohio Township, townhouse; Perry
Township, townhouse; Raccoon
Township, Rio Grande Elementary
School; Rio Grande Precinct, Rio
Grande Elementary School; Cen·
tervllle Precinct, Cent erville Village Hall; Sprlng!leld Township.
townhouse; Bidwell Pr..clnct.
Bldwell·Porter Elementary
Sc hoo l; Walnut Township.
townhouse.

MARKED DOWN

Police probe center cap theft

· aJILECfOR CAR - Area resldenls can secure entry blanks &lt;11 thts
i955 Wlllys to be given away by Dairy Isle C&lt;Jrp., al McClure's 3-ln·l,
Pomeroy, and McClure's Dairy Isle in Middleport.

,4·

GALLIPOLIS - GaiUa countians
wlll go to the foUoMng precincts to
cast their votes In Tuesday' s
primary election.
City 1-A, WiUlsTlre Co.; City l ·B,
Washington Elementary Schooi;
Cfty 2-A, City Building; City 2·8,
Bob Saunders Quaker State Service
Center; City 3-A, Washington Elcmentary School; City 3-B, Lodgp
Building, comer of Third Avenue
and Pine Street; City 4·A, Irvin's
Glass Service; City 4-B, City
Garage; City 4.C, Bastian I Building
(wholesale meal outlet );
·

guardsmen MD be partlclpatlllf
In, The 3664th Maintenance 0&gt;., at
247·members · strong the largest
single unit In West Vlrglnfa,
supports eight dftlerent camps,
Including exerciSes at Camp
Grayling, Mich., Fort Bragg, Fort
Pickett and in Guam. In addition,
two local guardsmen wUI be
training In Gennany.

POINT PLEASANT- Members
· of the 300lth Maintenance Com·
pany of the West Virginia National
Guard, based In Point Pleasant.
returned home from a 15-day
training mission at Fort A.P.. Hfll,
Va., Friday.
About 123 guardSmen In the
company provided direct support
maintenance to TRI\NS- EX '86, a
transportation exerciSe moving
fu el oil and bulk Items between
Fort A.P. HUJ, Fort Eustts, Fort
Lee, and Fort Pickert In Virginia.
Over 3,000 people were Involved fn
the exercise, according to 1st Lt.
Brarry Cox, a, spokesman for SGT
TIJomas Darst, publfc affairs
ortlcer for the 3664th.

:;:;4:.1~9;8:6========================~~iiii~~~~~~~~Oh~io~~p~~·n~t~AY~~~t~W~.V~a~.~~~ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We're celebrating 40· yean
Gallia voting locatio~ ·listed
g,.; ~tH''M
of business and thanking

Ohio

For County
Commlosioner

Wul l Ttm CD111menei 111 1·1·871
1\'ote ror nltl more I hOI! ONEI

For County Auditor

DAN C. NO'ITER

X

RONALD K. CANADAY

X

(\r'ote ror

1101

RICHARD C. RODERICK

•ort tllu ONEI

?aid for by R. WILHam Jenkins, Chairman , GaLHa Count y
Democ rLJt ic Execu tive Commit t ee.

Individual
Candteholder ,.,., ........... 3.47
flee. Hostess Lamp .... 12.97
Shell Qish ..... ,............. 13 , 97

ALL CLOCKS

10-30°/o Off
ALARM, BOUTIQUE,
WALL AND MANTEL
REDUCED-NOW

Your Choice of

19.95

Natural Stone

•14 KT Pierced Earring- Your Choice of

39.95

Natural Birthstone
•14 KT Solitaire Ring - Your Choice of
Natural Birthstone
•14 KT Fashion ~ing - Your Choice of Stone
w/2 Diamonds

79.95

99.95

CRYSTAl

(\ 'oil" ror not mon thin ONE)

For Judge of the CourL
of Common Pleas
!F'11II Term C:ommenellll 1·1·871

NOW

•14 KT.5olitoire Pendant Only -

X

H.. rt Box: .................... 2. 97
(andy Co~ote ........ ,.. S,97
fooled Candy Box ..... ll .97
footed Bowl ............,. 15.97

KNIFE SE1S
Co~lete b pc. Set .... 12 .97
s pc.

w/But1her Block ~ ..... 16.97
While S"plits lost!

MEN'S ITEMS

·-

TIETACS, MONEY CUPS,
KEY RINGS, KNIVES,
GIFTWARE &amp; MORE

GREAT FOR DAD AND GRAD

Save to

25°/o

'•

Jewtltll
404 SECOND AVINUE •

.....,..,

MEMSEI'I AMEJIIICAN GEM SOCiaTY

·-

.' '
..
..
'•

�0

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

,May4, 1986

Page-A-6-The

Area man suJTenders in standoff
By BRUCE CARTER
Tbnes-Sentlnel staff
HENDERSON -Troopers !rom
the Point Pleasant Detachment of
the West Vlrglnia State Police
arrested William Ersel Sleeth, 44,
for sexual assault here Saturday

ment, Mason County Sherttt' s
Departmel!l and troopers with t~
State Pollee that he would not glve ·
hlmsell up, according to State
Pollee Trooper A. E. BaumgardneT.
Sleet h reportedly told the r:tficers
Sleeth had barricaded himsell
with the 1-i?nderson Pollee Depart- Inside tlle house with at least two
pistols, Baumgardner said.
Sleeth was scheduled Saturday
for arraignment before Magistrate
Jam "Andy" WUson , charged with
' '
first degree sexual assault, Baumgardner said.
Th~ complaint was made by the
motli!r d the 16-year-old gtrl Sleeth
Is accused of assualtlng. Sleeth had
been Uvtng with his wile In
Henderson for about six weeks,
occordlng to Baumgardner. Sleeth
·): '
had Uved aU over tlle rounty In the
seven years he was as resident of
the area, he said.
~~
People watched from the par king
EXHJBrr OPENS - A fesllval ~ rn•a. an exNUt Today: Culture and Society, set for May 9, and a
perfonnance presentation May lK, wllh a reception
lot of McDonald's as two state
at the French Art Colony btGalllpolll huq~med,and
following a1 Rlverby, 500 f1rst Ave.. GaDipolls. For
pollee troopers, five s~rlff's depuwiD continue throughout May.Jn addition tothelterns
ties and a Henderson police dficer
lnfonnatlon, contact FAC at 446-38:11.
m exhibit, there are cooking claat!ei being olered
Slllt'Ounded the white frame house
each Thunday evening, along wlth;:.•.::lre::lure=~m::.ln=tl::a_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ __
with sll&gt;tguns and pistols drawn.
Baumgardner said tlle sheriff's
deputies had surrounded the house
early ,Saturday morning and had
. called Baumgardner at his HunBEREA, Ohio (UP!) -A Berea
tington home about 8:20a.m.
woman has been charged with
Baumgardner said the warrants aiding and abetting In the murder d
were ready for Sleeth's arrest by a 13-year-old girl, who disappeared
SYRACUSE, OH.
the time he had arrived. With the 011 her way home !rom school Aprtl
help of State Pollee Trooper M.L. 22.
Roach they were able to convince
Charlene Murphy , 29, was being
Sleeth to surrender, he said.
held by pollee Friday on a $250,!XXJ
"This was a serious situation. bond. Her alleged accomplice, a
eRose Bushes
•Hanging Baskets
Sleeth could have hurt one r:t us, or 15-year-old nephew. was In the
•Bedding Plants
•Porch Boxes
foroed us to hurt him. He seemed to custody of juvenile authorltles. The
he down, but the situation turned two were arrested Thursday , by
e&lt;ombination Pots
•Geraniums
oot good . I'm thankful nobody got Berea pollee,
hurt," Baumgardner said.
m e nude body of Robyn Field
OPEN DAILY 9 TO S
was found wrapped in a sheet 011 the
(MAY Sth to May lOth Only Open 9 to 7 p.m.)
bank of Rocky River In Cleveland
(SUNDAY, MAY 11 OPEN I TO SJ
the day after she disappeared.
momlng an altercation beglnnlng
Friday night caused Sleeth to
apparently barricade himself In a
Henderson house.

~· \

2 held for murder

GIVE MOM FLOWERS FROM

HUBBARDS GREENHOUSE
FOR MOTHER'S DAY MAY 11th

Light turnout

ARREST MADE AFTER
- West Virginia
State Police Trooper A.E. Baumgardner and Mason County Depuly
SherUf Paul f11zwaler esrort Wllllam Ersel Sleeth, 44, Ill a slate poBce
car afier II)Jopers convinced Sleeth to !ilrrmder Saturday. Sleeth had
apparently barricaded hlmsellln a house In Henderson with several
weapons.

is predicted

PHONE 992-5776

U.S. team monitors radiation
MOSCOW IUPI ) - The Moscow
Communist Party boss hinted to
West .German television that human error caused the Chernobyl
nuclear catastrophe and I~ Soviets
gave permission Saturday for
AmeriCan specialists to monitor
radiation levels In the capital.
A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Moscow said the Soviet
government has given permission
for a combined American military
and civilian radiation detection
team to monitor radiation levels In
water and food In the Moscow area .
The siXJkesman said the monitorIng team was helng brought In
mainly to reassure American
Embassy staff and Americans
living In Moscow of the safety of
tllelr envirOnment and what steps
to take In the event of
rontamlnatlon.
"We are not here to survey the
rountry, " the spokesman said.
"Their lengt h of stay will depend on
what til'y find . We have m
equipment to monitorthe air. tBut)
they want to see what I; going on

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-, Page-A-7

EUgenia Saunders
GALLIPOLIS- Eugenia Wright
Saunders, 00, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, died
at the home of a daughter early
Saturday rmmlng.
Born May 7, 1895, In Huntington,
W.Va., daughter of the late Albert
and Maggie Bumgardner, she was
a member of the Church of Christ ·
and attended the Hender!Kln and
Point Pleasant congregations.
She married Omar Saunders In
19171n Huntington, and he preceded
her In death In 1900.
Surviving are six daughters, Mrs.
Lewis (Marie) Slagle of Columbus,
Mrs. Oren (Fern) Henry of Orient,
Mrs. Allan (Beulah) Stone of
Cincinnati, Mrs. Jim (Grace) Funk
of Indian Harbor Beach, Fla ., Mrs.

ELECT

ELECT

MerrUI (Olive) Brown d Galllpolls,
and Mrs. Jack (Ethel) Saundi&gt;rs of
Gallipolis; three sons, .Herman
Saunders of Amarillo, Texas, and
Garland Saunders and Albert
Saunders. both of Galllpolls; a
granddaughter reared In the home,
Mrs. Jack 1Kay 1 Sweesy; and 31
grandchildren and 33 greatgrandchildren.
She was preceded In death by a
daughter and by two Sisters.
Services wUI bee lla.m.Wedpesday In Wlilis Funeral Home, with
-Evangelist Lewis Mikell and Evangelist Eugene Zopp officiating.
Burial will be In Oak Lawn
Cemetery , Barboursvllle, W.Va.
Friends may call at the funeral
home trom 24 and 7-9 p.m,
Thesday.

•

''

''

94th DISTRICT

Pfeifer cites concern
over Rhodes' health
I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Republican gubernatorial candidate Paul Pfeller has steadily
hammered opponent James A.
Rhodes during the campaign about
his age, but his latest suggestion Is
that the days of the 76-year-old
" lf I were
him, Iare
wouldn
't buy
tour-term
governor
numbered.
green bananas;" Pfeifer said durIng a news conference. Asked to
explain what he meant, Pfeifer said
with a laugh, "I don't think tha i
needs any Interpretation."
Pfeifer, who has received Jess
support than Rhodes and Senate
President Paul Glllmor In all
published polls, predicted Ohioans
will wake up Wednesday finding
Rhodes In "his proper p ace as part
of Ohio history."
He pointed Ill a bottle of Fresh
Start laundry detergent - an
example of his frequent w;eof props
at campaign news conferenres and spoke about Rhodes:
"This Is what he 's trying to sell, a
tresh start. But I've checked It out,
• It'sthesameoldsoapJimRhodesls
, tcylng to sell to the voters and I
·'don't think It'll wash," he said.
Pfeifer repmted hls claim that

there are unhappy Democrats who
would wte !or hlm and his runnlng
mate, Montgomery County Hecorder VIcki Pegg, but ' Rhodes
doesn 't al1ract those voters.
"His !Rhodes') nomin ation
would round the death knell for the

Paid for by the Gallia County Republican Club, Mark
Kiesling, Treasurer, 456 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Oh .

--- -·-- -- ~en~tlr;e~t;lc;ke;I·;";Pf;e;lfe;r;sa;l;d;.--~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-~---;;------------;;;:;;;;;;;,.

You Could Win A Brand
New Bicycle!

.Patrol begins
program to
'DWI accidents
•
GALLIPOLIS - Due to the high
·.number of accidents In May and
: Juite caused by young drinking
· -drivers, fatality and Injury-related
•• accidents are usually on the
: · Increase, the state highway patrol
: :!liivlsed Saturday.
0

:tll JACMSON Pf~E - AT.J~ WEST
Phont446-4524
IARGAIN HAl !NEES SATURDAl
I SUNDAY • ALL SCATS $Z.SD
AD11SS ION EVERT· TUESDAl 12.50

here."

Western diplomats today said the
plant apparently was st ill spewing
radioactive smoke a week after It
caught fire and Tass also Implied
that trouble still persists, saying
work was continu ing lo "eliminate

•

Traffic crashes are the number
one killer of young adutts between
the ages of 16 and 19. Last year Zi1
yrung Ohioans lost their lives on
state highways. Henderson said
that ~ percent of these deaths
Involved drinking and driving.

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

Garry Hunter receives my support for
State Representative as an extremely
hard-working individual who has a
proven record of dedication to public
service.
I have known Garry Hunter for many
years both personally and professionally .. Garry is married to Becky
Swindell from my home county of
Meigs. ,

OiEVYQ-!A&amp;:

~
))J ~~
-a:.,. . . ._ ~-

,-'--'A.DO

'

STOP's objective !s to keep
Ohio's rural fatalit y count·!or the
second quarter of 1986 below the
• second quarter count of J9ffi,
· Henderson said. With extra troop. ers on patrol In high Incident OMVl
areas working together In a coordl·
nated effort and maintaining high
· vislblllty In reducing the number of
: accidents caused ~ young drinking
· drivers, he added.

- ·

•Elementary school children b8tween the ages of six andeleven are eltible to participate.
•All entrants will receive afree !-shirt.
I
I
I
I
I
I

•
Name: ___________ Age.

DWI senlence issued

REflTilJ

•

GALLIPOLIS - ARt. 2, Gallipolis woman was fined for OWl
Friday In Gallipolis Municipal
Cou rt.

1

Address:

.

.

Phone:

GRAND PRIZE - One brand new bicycle and an invitation
to cut the ribbon at the Grand Opening Ceremony for the
Emergency Care Center on June 1, 1986.

Janet L, Groves, 24, was lined
sentenced to three days In )all,
glv~ a 60-day driver's license
suspension and 18 months proha·
lion. A charge of left of center was
dismissed.

100'5 OF MOVIES
IN STOCK
-fEATURING THIS WEEK:-

eAnnihilatorS • Invasion USA •Witness
•Howling II •Cocoon •My Chaufeur
•Agnes of Good

~soturdo'l

NkJ..ht

.:iFever

'l'halaad, Thalad·
aDd The VgiJ

R£()$!
ot
NewJ&amp;rk

Forfeiting bond for speeding
were James H. Cutrlght, 66,
CbWlcothe , $40; Jeffrey A. HaD, 23,
Preston, N.C.. $ll; Allan L. Ben·
nett, 28, Bakersville, N.C.. $40; Nlda
K. Unroe, 33,. 425 Green Terrace
Drive, $C); Rhonda M. Pushkar, 22,
Patriot Star Route, $4); Milton E .
BeriW&amp;ll, 53, Toledo, M .

P\AU. GAWPGUS
SA'NitA Y 11 TO I

'

'

•

I
1
I

s,m

The court fined John L. Mooney,
48, Rt. 2, Crown City, $17 for
disorderly conduct. TimothY S.
MurphY . 23, Eureka Star Route,
was fined $12 lor failure to display
valid registration.

I

•One panel prize winner will receive a brand new bicy~le
and an invitation to cut the ribbon at the Grand Opemng
Ceremony for the Emergency Care Center on June 1, 1986.
•Entries must be received by May 30, 1986. An
independent jutiing group will select the winners.

J
.
1-------------·-·---------------------------------

I

1\thens. Ohio 46701

11

•Color the picture, complete the information and bring or
mail to the Pleasant Valley Hospital Public Relations
Department, Valley Drive. Point Pleasant, YN 25550.

A statewide program, Spring
Time OMVI Program. has begun.
Funded by the Na tional Highway
Safety Administration. STOP allows off-duty troopers to work
overtime In areas targeted at the
youthful offender, Hende rson said.

Paid for by Hunt11r for State Representative, Everett Ridge , Treasurer,

SAUl

Follow These Rules:

.

Dr. Marion Fugate ·

HOml
VllEO

•

.; ··Teenage drivers make up about
10 percent of licensed drivers. total
·about eight percent of the miles
·driven and are Involved In :a!
percent of alcohol-drug related
accidents, said Lt. Dan Henderson,
commander of the patrol 's GalliaMelgs post.

GARRY HUNTER

FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
MAY 2-3·4

Children Ages 6 · 11

I

The following pnzes will be awarded for each age group, 6-11:
1st Prize - Trophies
'

.

2nd Prize - Ribbons
3rd Prize - Certificates

(All prizee and t-shi11S will be awarded at the Grand Opening
Ceremonyjor the PVH Emergency Cere Center June 1 II from 2-4
p.m.)

�May 4. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galipolis, Ohio-Point PleaiWit, W. Va.

•

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CANDLEMAKING - , _
Letart Falls fifth graden
leamed how to make candles
from RSVP volunteer Betty
Weyenmlller. Clllldlem~ ill
one of several "old fasldoned
cralts" sludent8 have been
learning throup lbe.Yesteryear
'116 program of tile Mefp CGunty
Senior Cttizen ·Center, set up at
the Mefp Museum In Pomeroy.
The program ill for fifth grade
students In Meigs, and they
leam sldlJs like qufltmg, lllendJ.
lng, chair canmg, embrodermg
and candlewlcldng, candlemakIng, furniture refinishing and
genealogical research .

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Seniors preserve area heritage

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ROUJNG OUT THE NOODUll - It's mt
ev\"")'one who can make good noodles, but Kyle

Wlcklllte, fronl, and Jerency Roosh, decided to give It

a try.

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Actually the project Is a coopera·
Sentinel Staff Writer
. live effort of three agencies, the
POMEROY - Once upon a I ime Meigs County Council on Aging, the
it was a mon' leisurely age.
Meigs Pioneer and Historical SoMom stayed home to mlnd the ciety, and the Meigs County Schools
kids and do all those domestic and through John Costanza, elemen·
creative things - llke making tary supervisor.
quilts, caning chalrs, dlpptng her
Mrs. Oliver describes the proown candles, and yes, making gram as " not only a time to teach
students the skills of yesteryear so
dinner trOm "scratch."
But times have changed.
that they can be continued Into the
More and more Moms opt for a future, but an effort to help them
career outside the home.
develop pride In their heritage.
"There's not a lot of pride In this
Combining that with taktng care
of the family and the hou se leaves county, and this perhaps Is one
little time for creative pursuits, for small way to stimulate some. While
teaching the younger generation the students are hen' In the
the sk ills so familiar to thelr museum they see lots d things.
grandmothers' time.
They find out, for example, that this
One small way to flU that gap has is the oldest historical society In
been developed by the Senior Ohio, that we have the oldest brick
Citizens Center's volunteers.
courthouse In Ohio, that there are
They call it "Yesteryear."'
lots of good things about this county
which nobody seems to talk about.
Yesteryear '86
"So one of our goals t to tnstlll
Yesteryear '86 Is a hands-on some pride, and lthtnk we'redolng
project tor fifth grade students that. "
from around the county. They come
Continuing, she points to the
to the Meigs Museum In Pomeroy advantages of the young working
where the senior citizens have set with the old. "It's not only great for
up rooms Into a 11s and crafts the young, I:AH It's great for the
learning stations.
volunteers. They enjoy II! When
Each school has been assigned a you ask peoJ:ie to volunteer for
day and the students are trans· somet hing for nine days, about six
ported by bustotheMuseum. There hours a day, and it's hardwork, you
they spend about tour oours In know that they have to be getting
kitchen skll is, quilting, stenciling, some satisfaction out of II or they
chair caning, embroidering and wouldn 't come."
candlewlcking, candle making, fur·
nlture refinishing, or doing genea·
Big partlclpallon
logical research. ,
Over !)() chlldrm are partlclpat·
As Susan Oliver, RSVP director, tngln the programalongwlthabout
and coordinator of the program, ~volu nteers each day. Before the
explains, "Yesteryear provides a students come they make a selt'C·
fan tastic opportunity for the rna· tlon of the area In which they want
ture to shan' thelr. knowledge and to participate. That craft cr project
skills with the young."
Is then studied so that when they
came to Yesteryear. they don't

come In "cold."
Each student completes a projret
- something to take home - and
then atso does an l'\laluatkm of the
volunteers carrying out III' pro- .
gram once they are back In the
classroom. Each work station has .
been limited to six sttidents allow- ·
lngeachonethetlmeandlndlvldual .
attention required to complete tlrll'&gt;• :
take-home project.
Full cost of Yesteryear Is paid '
through special tu nd raising efforts
of the RSVP. Projects and the .
volunteers are Josephine Smith,
Helen Fisher and Philomena Fol·
trod, kitchen skiDs; Eva Robson,
stenciling; Doroti1Y J))wnJe and
Edith Reiser, embroidery and
candlewlcklng; NeUe Wilson and
Anna Rose Fltch quilting with
nine-patch patterns for the students
assembled by Alecla Worner,
Margaret Jomson, Golda Rad·
cllfle. Bertha Robinson , Marie
Chapman, Mae Weber and Helen
Flslrr; Betty Weyersmtller and
Glailys Brothers, cancDe making;
Karen Werry and Margaret
Parker, genealogical resmrch;
and June Ashley, chair caning and
furniture reftnishlng with caning
frames assembled by Richard
Curtis. Numerous other volunteers
along with several staff rnem bers
are working with Yesteryear.
"This Is not justa fun thing, a way
to get out of school, It's an '
educational program," says the
RSVP dlrector. "Tiv&gt;se kids are
learning to do some ·rt. the skills of
yesteryear. They're here at the
Museum where lhelr Interest In the
county can be stimulated , where we
can trip them develop a pride In
their heritage, and It's providing an
opportunity for the yru~ and the
old to work together."

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BAKING AT ll'8 1111!1'1'- Jarne~ Wall, left, and Shannon Pierce, try
111e1r hand at rnUiq bomemilde rollll, aa Joeep!Ue Smith and
l'hfkjmena Follrod lltand by with tips on how to make them I gilt and
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tasty. Durlngthelrday,ln tile ldtclten, the studentslearnedlllwto make
clover leaf rolbi, butter homs, twist and sailor's knot rolls.
·

AN AGE-OLD ART - CGry Rowe, a l.eW1 Fals fifth grader, pi.l · '
lnlttmdloa In the art of cltlllrcanlnctromJ..., Ashley, a Retired Sealor

VolwUer.

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Navy Airman Apprentice Stephen C. Gibbs , oon of Billy D. Gibbs
of Route 2, Point Pleasant, WV,
graduated
!rom Basic Aviation
1
1
Ordnanceman School at the Nao,:al
:
Air . Technical Training Center,
:
Millington, Tenn.
;
During the 9 week course, Gibbs
,
was provided with the basic
knowledge of av iation ordnance
publications, records and reports.
1
:
and procedures on the handling,
•
storage, assembly and disassembly
:
of air launched munitklns.
l
He received Instruction on the
1
~rational lest of suspension and
releasing jq ulptnenl and proce·
•
dures lor the loading and unloading
;
of air launch'-"! munitions. Addition·
;~* , ally, Gibbs studied electrical and
.. electronic troubleshooting }rOce·
~
dures, small arms and aircraft gun
systems and safely precautions
l
1'6lUired for the handling of avla ·
;
tlon ordnance.
•
A1985 graduate of Point Pleasant
! .High School. he joined the Navy In
: ;September 1985.

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f \X!illiamson
:·

Airman Eugene A. Williamson.

! .son of Mr. and Mrs. Mer! Willlam-

• ·son of 204 Davis Rooo, Crown Oty.
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Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant W. Va.

4, 1986

lnthese~ke------------------------------~------Acree
Gibson

;

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May 4, 1986

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

has graduated from Air Force basic
training at Lackland Air Force
Base. Texas.
During the sL' weeks of training
the airman studied the Air For('('
mission, organl7.alion and customs
and received special training In
human relations.
In addition, airmen who complete
basic training ea rn credit s toward
an associate degree through the
Community Ccllege of th&lt;' Air
Force.
His wife, Cynt hia, is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs . Ken Keeler of :!118
Monroe Ave., Point Pleasant.
W.Va.
He Is a 1983 graduate of Hannan
Trace High School. Mercerville.

•: Litchfield
•

I

Marine Sgt. Lawrence R Litchfield, son of Owen and Ethel
Lltdlfleld of 2103 Monroe Ave ..
Point Pleasant, WV. has graduated
• from the Staff Noncommissioned
:
Olftcers 1SNCO) Academy at Ma·
rlne Corps Base, Camp Lejeune,
• NC.
._.-:;: Utchfteld studied the fundamen·
;.. tal skills. professional knowledge
; and leadership required by the

i

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Marine SNCO at the staff and
gumery sergeant levels.
He studied leadership, military
Instruction techniques, tra ining
management, staff organization
and management, rnllltary justice
and counseling.
He joined the Marine Corps In
february 1975. His wife, Glorta, Is
the daughter of Lester and Betty
Leonard of Main St .. also of Point
Pleasant.

Gibson
Bryan E. Gibson, SJn of Bobby E.
Gibson of Rural Route, 2, Chesapeake, and Barbara A. Glboon of
ll2 Lower Terrace, HUntington,
W.Va., has been promoted In the
U.S. Army to the rank of specialist

Airman James R. Acree Jr., son
of James R and Betty L. Acrre d.
Rural Route 143, P\:lmeroy, graduated from Air Fort"e basic training
at Lackland Air Force Base. Texas.
During the six .weeks of training
the airman studied the Air Force
mission, organization and customs
and received special training In
human relations.
In addition, airmen who ro,mplete
basic training earn credits toward
an associate degree through the
Community Ccllege d. the Air
Force.
He Is a 1985 graduate of Meigs
High School, Pomeroy.

four.

Gibson is a vehicle mechanic at
Fort Sill, Okla .. with the 2nd Field
Arttllery.
He Is a 1984 gradua te of Chesapea ke High School.
•

Aleshire
Navy Petty Officer lsi Class
Garland L. Aleshire. son of Howard
E. and Avonell Aleshire of 108
Union Ave., Pomeroy, Is currentzy
deployed to the Mediterranean Sea.
During the six month deploy·
ment, he will participate In various
tra ining exercises and make port
ca lls in several littoral nations of
the Mediterranean.
Aleshire Is currently stationed
aboard the guided missile cruiser
USS Dale, homeported
In Maurnrt
FL.
.
,,... '

Abman James R. Acree Jr.

Powell

Holter

Adkins
Pvt. Wllllam E . Adkins, son of
Giotis G. Adkins of 3 Glenwood
Dtive, Chesapeake, has graduated
as a reconnaissance 5cout at the
U.S. Army Armor School, Fort
Knox, Ky.
The training was conducted
under the ooe station unit training
(OSUT) program, which combines
basic rombat training and ad·
vanced Individua l training Into one
13-week period.

~

Wamsley
Army National Guard Pvt. Gregory A. Wamsley, oonofCharles IV.

Wamsley of 1201 ()hlo St. ant! Mary
E. Wamsley of llOO Ollonlal Lane,
both of Pobtt Pleasant, W.Va., has
completol basic training at Fort
McClellan, Ala.
During the training, students
received ln$tructton In drUI and

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Betty
Queen and Mr. and Mrs. James
Hively announce. the engagement
and approaching martiage of their
children, Betsy Jean Queen and
Chris L. Hively.
/
'

LIBRARY

VOTE

far

LIBRARY
LEVY

/

'II'"'Orn

and Bookmobile of Gallia County

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~::~~
URGENT
CARE
CENTER
If you could look into your crystal ball , you
would always know , in advance . when you
would need a doctor.

Miss Allen is a gradua te of Gallla
Academy High School and Ohio
'state University.
, Price Is a graduate of Big Walnut
High School and Ohio State Unlver·
!sty. He Is In the masters program,
and Is employed by the Ohio State
University computer sc ience
program.

Hayes - Kohrrnan
POMEROY - Mrs. Charles critical care nu rse and staff
Hayes, Pomeroy. announces the educator In the neonatal Intensive
engagement of Mary Sue Hayes, care unit of Rush Presbyterian St.
daughter of the late Charles and Luke's Medical Center.
DoiiiP Hayes, to Dr. Michael · Kohnnan, completed his under·
graduate and graduate studies In
Kohrman.
Ms. Hayes Is a graduate of Meigs chemistry at Stanford University
High School, the Holzer Medical and studied at Rush Medical
School of Nursing, and Ohio College. He a pediatric neurologist
University. She Is in graduate at the University of Chicago, Wyler
studies at Loyola University and Children's Hospital.
The couple will reside in Chicago
The Erikson Institute of Advanced
Study In Child Development in following their May wedding.
Chi cago, Ill. She Is empployed as a

For those times that you ca n't foresee the
future . ..

URGENT
CARE CENTER
Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Monday-Friday
5:00P.M. to 9 :00P.M.

llelsy Jean Queen
' Chrls L Hively

Vlcld Wise

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
James R. Allen, Gallipolis an·
nounce the · engagement and approaching marriage of their daugh·
ter, Usa Dawn Allen, to Ronald
Arthur Price, Sunbury, Ohio.
The open-church wedding wUJ
take place Aug. 16, at Faith Baptist
Church, Rev. James Lusher
officia ting.

Hemsworth
Morgan
GALLIPOLIS - Wedding plans
of Tammy Hemsworth, daughter ci
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hemsworth, and
Tom Morgan, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Morgan, have been
completed.
tht&gt; wedding will take place May
10, 6: :llp.m. at Grace Unlied
Methodist Church, Rev. Hughey L.
Jones olftcltlng.

r::=========:::;J
t:~aczbok

LifestvJ.e

Elect

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I

POSTER BED
S DRAWER CHEST
REG. $1276.00

Sale

Your Vot e and Support is
Appreciated.

We offer complete
tuxedo rental service
to help you look your
belt on thei specie!
dey. Prien begin at

GALLIPOLIS - Wedding plans
have been completed for Susan
Roush and Kenny Coughenour,
both of Gallipolls.
The open church wedding will he
held Sa turday, May 10, at 2 p.m. in
the First Church oft he Nazarene In
Galllpolls.
A reception will follow the
wedding.

S95700

Pard lo r by Dan C. No«er. 639 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis. Oh. 45631

18).

HASKINS-TANNER
332 Second. Galllpolla
448 -0578

Fragrant

I.The foundatlonz "Peter'· is from the Greek word "petros," meaning
a piece of rock or detached stone. Jesus uses it as a proper name, Peter,
"Thou art Simon the son ofJona: thou shalt be called Cephas. which iJ b?
ituerpretation. A stone (l'eter)" (Jno. I :42). "Rock," on the Greek. zs
"petra." denoting.a massive rock . The foundation of the church i5 the bed·
rock of truth manifested in Peter's confession, " Thou an 1he Chriu. the
Son of the living God" (Mt. 16:18). Peter's confession eStablished the true
divimty of Christ and His eternal relationship to God which are vital to the
support of the church. The church was not built on the philosophy, theology. and sentiments of man in regard to Christ, but on the truth that was revealed by God. imparting the falth that acknowledged His Sovereignty.
2. The bullden "f will" is future tense, and "build" libera lly means the
building of a house. Using the future tense, the church is spoken of in its
preparatory state. for it was not built while Christ was on earth but after
His ascension (Acts I :9). Jesus depicts Himself as the builder rather than
the foundation, buildin~ the church upon the divine principles accordin~
to God's will. He built II at the right time. "in the days of tho,. kings ·
(Dan. 2:44). that is. the Caesars (Lk. J : t); in the right place, "In Jerusa·
/em .. (Lk. 24:49; Acts I :8,12; 2:5); and on the right day, "the day of Pente·
cos(' (Acts 2:1).
J. Tbechurchz "My" is in the possessive case. denoting ownership, and
identifies Jesus as the personal owner. This is the first time "church ..
appears in the New Testament . "Church .. being the object of the verb
"build " is set forth in the figure of a house. The "church" was spoken of as
"the Lord 's house " ih prophetic words (!sa. 2:2). Paul identifies "the hoUoJe
of God" as "the church of the living God " (I Tim. 3:15). Peter alludes to
these words of the Lord in his epistle to the Christians, "Ye also, as lively
stones are built up a spiritual houJe " (t Pet. 2:5). Christians, who have
been called out of the rock quarry of sin and transfonned by the power of
the gospel into lively stones constitute this supernatural and heavenly
structure. Jesus did not lay claim to His building many churches, but "my
church ... which isthe "one body " (Eph. 4:4).
4. The chareh It perpetuolo "Gates " of a fortified city and the gatherin~
• place of councils were rega rded as being strong places. "Hell " is "Hades. ·
and has reference to Satan's fortress and the realm of disembodied spirits.
"Gotts of hades " signify the power and counsels of Satan. Jesus assured
the apostles that Satan with all his power, counsels, and fortress of evil
spirits wou ld not be able to defeat Htm in death , preventing His building
the church.
The church is important because (I)-Christ built it; {2)-He built it on
the truth; (3)-He built it at the right time, place, and day; (4)-it belongs to
Him; (5)-it is the house of God; (6)·He built only one; and (7)-it is perpetu·

Blossoms ''"
Bouquet.

presents

$29.95

A Message Fro m The Bible...
WHY THE CHURCH IS IMPORTANT
William B. Kughn
Chrlat b The BulldOr Of The Cburtb
"And I say also unro rhee, That thou art Peter and upon this rock I will
build my church: 011d the gates of hell shall not prevail against 11 " (Mt. 16:

Spring Garden ··
Bouquet .

Summer sheer.
pantyhose

Make Mother's
Day bloom
with love.
•

...

o.

The Lady Flora Bouquet! ·:·

... •

Would Christ have built the one, unmoveable church upon the bedrock
of truth if it had not been essential? If the church is not essential, Christ's
work as builder was in vain .
For Fnt Biblt Comspondtnce Course, Writt...

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

T-6 '

31elefiom"

..

The Flora. 'feapol Bououet

The Floral Teacup and Saucer

31eleflom'

1

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Road • P,O. Box. 308
Galllpollo, Ohio 45631

llulaviiiP

I

BEAUTIFUL ARRANGEMENTS
CORSAGES
POTTED PLANTS
HANGING BASKETS
ROSE BUSHES - AZALEAS
RHODODENDRONS
,..

Let Ut Help Vou
Plan Your Wd.lng

. Roush Cogenour

DRESSER
WITH MIRROR

Gallia Co. Commissioner

•

May 11

flll OR QUEEN

7 DRAWER

'

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DAN C. NOTTER

J

Mother's Day

~~;;;;;;;D£;.A;L;£;H;P;H;H;:£;.S;O;r-;·.J ;S£;L;£;C;T£;D~A;N;T~IQ~U~E~S;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iij~

He, a 1983 graduate of Eastern
field.
High School. wUI be earning credits
toward an associate degree in
applied sciences through the Community Ccllege of the Air Force
while attending basic training and
technical training schools .

FURN ITURE SHOWCASE

al or unmoveable.

I

:~ IIIli':;

· ~~ !

Wise- Patterson

Weekends &amp; Holidays

I :00 P .M. to 9 :00P.M.

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS
MONUMENTSGallipoli1, OH .
352 Third Ave .

·I

Allen Price

your

Bossard Memorial Library

-· ~- --- -- -·-·-- - · .
Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 dllferenl colored
granites. Whatever your requirements may be, complete
satisfaction Is assured with Rock ol A,tes.
Houn: Mon., Tuet~., Thurfl.~ Fri. 9 :00-4:00
Oth&lt;r houro h y appt. by ullinf!59:1-1455

PH . 446-2327

~.~;;;:::;

Usa Dawn ADen
RGnald Artlmr Price

446·5287
Phone (614 ) 446-408 4

...,,

RIIIWII- RldBCiiiD
Thank•

and Col/wiD/!,.
Specializing in Victorian / Edwardian Eras

Open Daily I0-6
Rt. 7 North of Gallipolh, Ohio 45631.

..

1111

Queen Is also the daughter of the
late Ray Queen.
An open-church wedding will
take place June l, 1 p.m. at Salem
Baptist Church In Gage, Rev.
Waybum Farley officiating.

'

F~aturing Et:rC'p'!c.r? Purn;r;hiner

'll
:!J

Queen - Hively

Your .C ounty

Britannia Bygones International

1JJ

ceremonies.- weapons, map read•
lng, tactics, rnllitary courtesy,
rnllltary justice, first aid, and Army
history and traditions.
He Is a 1981 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School.

SUPPORT

COME SEE WHAT'S NEW!

JJ

Mark A. Holter. spouse of Melissa
M. Holter of Bremen, enlisted in the
Air Force, according to TSGT
Ronald Dinges, Air Force re·
cruller, Lancaster.
Upon successfully completing the
Air Force's six-week basic military
training at Lackland Air Force
Base, near San Antonio, Texas, he
Is scheduled to receive technical
training In the Mechanical career

w.ya.

as srout's
the "eyes
theKnown
unit, the
joband
Is toears"
makeof
a
compleie evaluation of a tactical
sltuatkln anf! rejlort what he has
observed or learned to his
commander.
Hid wife, Noreese, Is the.daugh·
ter of David and Patricia Graham
of Rural Route 3, Proctol'lltlle.
He Is a 1984 graduate of Chesa·
peake High School.

William M. Powell, son of Nancy

A 1977 graduate of Meigs High
School, he joined the Navy In May
1977.

L. Powell r1 329 Davey Road,
Dayton J:leach, Fla., and Wllll~ R.
Powell of Rural Route 3, Sandy·
vllle, W.Va. has been promoted in
the U.S. Air Force to the rank of
staff serseant.
•
·
Powell Is an Inventory management specla!lst at Shaw Air Force
Base, S.c .. with the J63rd Supply
Squadron.
His wife, Carla,is the daugltterr1
Carl R Hood of 24 Warnick Road,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The sergeant Is a 1979 graduate of
Wahama High School, Mason,

3

The

w-,,
. . . ,lody

7aOOp•.

Pomeroy Flower Shop

•FREE PARKING
•FREE DELIVERY
OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. 9·8
TUES., WED., THURS., SAT. 9·5

106 Butternut Ave.

PH. 992·2039 or 992·572'

•
•

Pomeroy, Ohi.o

IV• AMipl All M•i" Cndlf Ct,dr tnd WI, .Ff•w•n Angwlll"

20Dfo ·off

Mother's Day Sale
May 1-10, 1986
300 Second Avenue, Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis, Ohio

�4.1986

The

LaTonya Rae Kincaid becomes
bride of Glenn Curtis Spencer

•.

A candlelight Cl!remoi\V was the setttnc for the II\IIT1age of
LaThnya Rae Kincaid, to Glenn Curtis Spencer, at the l'nl!byterlan
Cl!urch, Point Pleasant.
The Rev . Malcolm Mciver ill ot!lclated.
The bride Is the dau&amp;hter of Sherry 1\lncald, Point PIMSant and
Wayne Kincaid Jr. Leon, an the groom, the son cl. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Spencer, Point Pleasant.
Given In marriage by her parents and esc:mted down the aisle by
her father, she ware a gown designed with a lace rut!led Vlctcrtan
bodice with Schlffle embroidery, bishop sleeves, acce~ted witll
chant illy lace 11nd a seml-catlledral pedal train. Her headpiece was of
chantilly lace styled with a IUD three yard-wide, waist· length, veil
made of Imported Engllsll nylon illusion with a rumed qe. She also
carried a cascading sDk bouquet of white roses, Ully oft he valley and
white orchids, with babys breath and royal blue and white satin
rtbbons. The br1des only jNielry was a gold plnlcy ring, a e1ft !rem the
groan. and pearl earrings with a goldjacket.aglttfrc:rn the matron of
honor .
Matron of honor was Kimberly Lowe, cousin ol the bride, Cuyahoga
falls , Ohio. Bridesmaids Included Brenda Varney, Tina Holland. and
Janie Sergent, aunt &lt;t thebrlde, all of Point Pleasant. Eachworeray.tl
blue gowns featuring a rut!led art-shoulder neckline and a dropped
waistline. She carried white Slltln mulls accented with rOyal blue an d
white sa tin ribbons .
The groom wore a Lord Spencer tuxedo with grey asrot trousers
and a black jacket, bow·tle, and cumberbun. He also were white roses
for his boutonniere......
.
Best man was Jeflery Jones. Groomsmen Included Matthew
:Musgrave, William McCoy and OUn Rlce, aUof Point Pleasant. Each
wore tuxedos Identical to the groan.
F1ower girl was Melissa Kincaid, cousin of the bride Point
Pleasant. Her gown was Identical to the bridesmaids. Sh~ carried a
white lace basket filled with white sUk rooe pedals.
The ring bearer was Robert Smith, cousin of the bride,
Huntington. He wore a tUJII!do Identical to the groomsmen and carried
a white lace pillow.
The bride's mother wore a plum-colored lloor length gown with
darker plum accessories and a white orchid corsage.
The grooms mother ware a pink noor length gown with matching
accessories and a white orchid corsage.
The organist was Kathy Unch and the vocalist was Jeff Hilbert.
Musical selection Included, Evergreen, You Needed Me. The
Homecoming, Walk Hand In Hand, The Wedding Song, The
Processional was 1'l1Jmpet Voluntary and The Recessional was the
traditional Wedding March.

SWIMMING POOL Kll or SPA INVOKED tN Al'llt

'100 W11 Hold You r Pu~•e Tilt Sum- At T- Low Dltcount Prices

COMPLETE KITS
1d2-IJ350

18xU-S26SO

20x40-S2875

All Otho.r Size~ and Types of Pool Kits in Stock

SPAS With Heaters, Filters, Skirt ready to use, as low as 11575
Al10 aerylic wall. concrete bottom pools at wholesale pricea

HOURS 9:30-5 MON .-FRI .; SAT. 9:30·2

HOliDAY POOLS -Ph. 304-429-4788
2973 Pled-t ld., H•tl111ton, W. Ya.

I.F.D. 1, GAiliPOUS, 0111'1
PHONE 446·3362

1986 SUMMER LEAGUES
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn CU11is Spmcer
Emma Sue Smltll, aum of the brtde attended the guest book. The
photographer was David Snowden. The Wl!ddlng ceremoi\V was video
taped by Jlm Singleton.
A reception was held hllowtng the ceremoey at the American
Legion Post 23, Point Pleuant. The haU was decorated In wedding
colors with music provided l7y the Gary Stewart Quintet. The serving
table held a three tiered watldingcake with a fountain and eight accent
cakes fashioned In bridal white witll blue cascading nowers and
topped with the bride an&lt;! gJ'OOOl belonging to the brides great
grandparents. Serving the cake was Sharon Kincaid. Others assisting
at the reception were Marta Rider and Cozy Halstead.
A rehearsal dlnll€1' was held at the lrlme of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer.
The brtde ls employed by Holzer Medical Center as a unit
secretary. The groom is employed by the James M. Gavin Power
Plant.
After the reception, the o:&gt;Uple left lor a honeymoon cruise to the
Carl bean. They now make I heir home in Galilpolls, Ohlo.

MONDAY

1:00 P.M. BEGINNERS
7:00 P.M. BEGINNERS
7:00 P.M. 5 MAN TEAM HANDICAP

TUESDAY

7:00 P.M. lADIES HANDKAP (trio!
9:00 P.M. MIXm SCOTCH DOUIIfS

WEDNESDAY 12:30 P.M.
7:00 P.M.
llti»SDAY 7:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M.
9:00 P.M.
FRIDAY
7:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M.
9:00 P.M.
SATURDAY
SUNDAY

MEEnNG
Al'llll 29
Al'llll 29
MAYS
MAY 13
MAY 13
JUNE 7
MAY 13
MAY 15
MAY 1!

AJNIOR PROGRAM
MIXm HANDICAP
lADIES HANDICAP
MEN'S HANDKAP ltriol
attaCH HANDICAP
SCRATCH (men &amp; womon) MAY
lADIES INDUSlRIAl
FOOD HANDlERS

16

Will
STAll
MAY 12
MAY 12
MAY 12
MAY 20
MAY 20
JUNE 14
MAY 21
MAY 22
MAY 22

MAY

17

ea~o~a~f beverage se!Vect with

ASK ABOUT OUR SUNPAY FAMILY SPECIAL

and
Clean Up Days. (Voluntrers
needed).
Menus consist of;
Monday - Sliced ham, 5'Nilet ·
!lltatoes, brussel sprouts, lrlt rolls,
rookies.
Thesday - Fried chicken, noo·
dies with gravy, green llina ~ .
mils, pear half.
Wednesday - Pork roast with
gravy, mashed potatoes, spinach,
wheat bread, applesauce.
Thursday - Johnny Marzett! ,
salad, Italian bread, pineapple.

POMEROY - Bookmobile ser- 2: 10.2:40; Keno (No. side of Keno
vice In Meigs County Is brought to Bridge), 3:00.3: 30: Success Road
yoo bY the Meigs Coonty Public
(near 30010), 3:45-4: 15; Long Bot·
Library under rontract with the tom (POst Office), 4: 254:55; ReedsOhio Valley Area Libraries.
ville (Reed's Store) , 5:05-6: f6;
BookmObile Schedule for Mon- Tupper's Plains (Lodwick's), 7:05day. May 5: Carpenter (Laura's 7: 50; Baum Addition. 8; 05-8:35.
Church ) , 3: 10-3 ; 40 : Dexter
(Church ), 4: 10-4:40; Dan ville
(Church), 5:20-5:50; Rutland (Civic r--------------------~
Center), 6:30-7:30.
Bookmobile Schedule for Thes·
day, May 6: Portland (Post Office),
2: 10.2: 40; Letart falls (Effie's
Restaurant), 3:05-3: 50; Racine,
(Bank), 4: 35-5: 35; Syracuse (Pool),
5: 5(). 7: 20.
Bookmobile Schedule for Wednesday, May 7: Baurn Addition

Aglow speaker
in Pomeroy
announced

. FROSTING

t reg.

'28.oo

Mother's Day is Sunday. May 11 .
The Lady Flora Bouquet! A
collectible doll surrounded by
spring flowers. A loving way
to touch Mom's heart
We can deliver your
affection across the city. Or
wire it anywhere across the
United States and Canada.

•
f4.,.J FLORIST

/rom $700

+ Senior Citizens Discount
Glorious Color From $600 by Paula Kay

• Always hot and ready to use.
• MOTO-MA SSAGE~ the only
movi ng jets.
~

Deep, reclined sealing.

•

Never over $20 per month to

WARM WEATHER FEELS
BEnER IN A PAIR OF

Dexter sandals.
. $2700

operate.

Mon. &amp; Fri. til I p.m.
Tuu., Wtd., Tt..r.
&amp; !al. ril 5

Blackwood Home Soas .
40037 SUMNER Rif.POMEROY, OH .
985· 3805

..... c-,·. ow. """"' .

~IIUOT. OHIO

Ill IIAIT MAIN

•1711

el4/ttJ·J•••

WAJ::K•INS
WELCOME

Mothe1'1 Dsg

S il vt! r Bridge Plaza

44(&gt;.3353

•

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

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY
We Save You Monday
Everyday

WAS

S6995

•ms SAVI 'lO.OO

YEllOW 01 WH111 GOLD

141 GOLD
DIAMOND EAIIINGS

NCiw SJ995

•
•

$279°0

•

at

6?

If you're years or older, or handicapped._vour Golden Buckeye Card entitlesyou
to FREE Interest Earmng Checking at Ctvtc Savings.All you need is a minimum
depostt ot S100 to open your account. There'sno monthly service charges no lees
no per check charges- and you earn lnlerest on your average monthly balance·,
ll you don't already have a Golden Buckeye Cord. you can apply tor one at Civic
Savings. Stop by today.lt'sa golden opportunity

THE DOWN UNDER RESTAURANT
SUNDAY, MAY 1/, MOTHER 'S DAY
I 1:00 a.m.-3:00p.m.
ALSO FI'AJURJNG

OUR CLASSIC DINNE R MI:NU!

'The firsiSOchecks are m ££.

- Rr.II' RVA TI ONS SUGGESTED1614 ! 446-2)4)

OfP

pie to

•191 up.

CIVIC
SAVllNG·s
B

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King

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.· '

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•

1
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CARAT

Diamond

$3950°

$26995

.•

SAVE 190.00
SOLITAIRE

AGAIN

'•

MIN'S
DIAMONDS

250fo
OPF

..-.

Her Births1one

and 'Diamonds

RtNO OR H!NDANT

S3990!t
$4990!
Now On ly
- - -.

s7oooo

$349~c~ pc

Full

$900°0

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5120000 $549~!
$1600°0 $69900
set
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Now Only

$79900 $399!! pc
Full
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Queen $129900
$5995~
King $1699°0 S749 5! t

Twin

ALL MONTHS AilE:

E1rrtnp alto •~lilable

$299!! ~

CH2RO COMFORT
8ACK SUPPORTER

IIEG. 1169.95
SAYI s 40.00

DIAMOND
JACKET
RING

$199!! pc

Twin

Queen

$12995

WAS 1595.00 SAVI $200.00
YEllOW 01 WMm GOI.D

·'

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GOlD

S1,000
Regularly

•DEMENTI
•EARRINGS

14K ..

ssoo
S700
ssoo

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PULSAR WATCHES

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.•

K

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

Queen

•BULOVA • SEIIO

$3995

•

·'..
Gallio C01111ty Divioon of
Ololo Dopt. of Agilg will
bo htrt Frary, May 2
cnl Mlotday, May 5, 9 a.
m. tM I pat. to ~ JMO·

Full

•AU DIAMONDS
•ADD·A·BEADS
•CHARMS

was •sus uvr uo.oo
nuow 01 WIITI 0010

MOTHER 'S DAY

Twin

WAS S39S.OO SAVE 1116.00

Dian1011d Neddacw

.

THIS CARD ENTITLES YOU TO
FREE CHECKING AT CIVIC SAVINGS!

LUXORA
468Now Only
Regularly

UDIS

ITAn 01 01110/0HtO OEPAATMENT OF AGING

If You Love Her Without Re.rervation.r
Make Som e Today for

.~,.--,,

DIAMOND
CLUSTER

WAS 13f,tS SAVI IU.OO
25~

These Spring Air matlresses offer you the unbeatable combination
of premium quality construction at tremendo us savings. Come in
and see lor yourself. Limited time offer.

1/4CARAT

A&amp;l DIAMONDS

300 SECOND AVENUE

Great Cuts

I

A f.......

GA LUPOUS. OHIO 4!031

LU IS,

446-J/03

The Floral Teacup and Saucer
Bouquet lor Mother's Day.
Beautilul flowers in a charming
stoneware teacup and saucer.
The loving giff that lasts a long ,
longtime.

Now throutlh May 11, t986 wkh a copy of Uti ad.

POMEROY - Jo AIUI Pangia of
Middleport wut be spea ker at the
May 8 meet ing of the Pomeroy
chapter. Aglow, to be held at the
Senior Citizens Cent er, Mulberry
Height s. Pomeroy.
Mrs. Panglo: wHe of the Rev.
Michael Panglo, one of the area
Aglow Board advisors, and rmlher
of three children, will tell about her
Christ ian experience.
A light salad course buffet wlll be
seiVed at 7 p.m. with the meetin g to
follow at 7:45p.m. ReseiVations are
to be made bY Monday wlth
Beverly Rupe, 742JOOJ; Carolyn
Searls. 992-3467; Nancy Beaver,
992-5286; and Karyn Davis, 992·5893.

~

c:tsy·GHl'

S2150

We can wire it
anywhere for Mother's Day.
Sunday, May 11 .

ClUSTER

'

Our nmtempo rary ,

perms Jnd color ;1 re wl-l.·rt it all ~ tan s .
Wh y not ler Cha r m help you k1ok 1,111ud
for bs :~

Budget Wave back by request
Ask ror Brenda or Paula Kay

7 DIAMOND

I

Today's Chrmn Jt:li\'{.1'5 rt'K- lll'Wtst
looks JOd trends sr&gt;·led PJ sr for )HI ar a
prin: you e m affo rd, and wirh rt-&amp;:: q.wliry
;1 nd ll 1nVt1llt'llll' wt''ve lx:&lt;Hm(' famou s hJ r.

T-61

525.00
SALE 5}9.00

Let your good looks
go to your head .

Raccon Creek Bridge. For more lntormatton,coraact
the church at 446-®2.'

BEAUTY SHOP

Retreat
'· .

HELENE CURTIS POST IMPRESSIONS
SALE

group are P81'80118 and Ernie PhOIIps. The dturch Is
located six miles aouth of GaiUpolls off Route 218 at

A few minutes could mean the , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - difference between life and death .
Know the warning signa ls of hea rt
CHARM
attack and stroke. Ask the Ameli·
can Heart Associ a lion for lnforma.
lion at 446-3499 In GalilpoUs.
2o ST ATE ST

HOT SPRING SPA
Your 365 Day-A-Year

r~~~iiiiiiiiir====~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
(reg. 145.001

IN CONCERT - Squire Parsons and Redeemed
wW be In concert at Ellzabelh Chapel Church,
Wednesday, May 7, 7 p.m. Featured !lllolst of the

(for the whole family)

ADDRESS: -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

n~~y.

GALLIPOLIS - Cora one-room ·
school and Perry Rural School wUI
have a reunion June 15, Raccoon
Creek County Park, beginning 10
a.m.
At ll()()n will be a potluck dinner

Teleflora. Delightful The fine
stoneware teapot with its
delicately hand-painted
blossoms, will be cherished
and used for years to come.
We'll deliver The Aoral
Teapot Bouquet anywhere in
town - orwire it anywhere in the
U.SA and Canada
Happy Mother's Day'

NAME1- - - -- - - - - - - - - - -

PHONE:_____ _ __

School reunion set

The Perfec t
Mother's Day Gift

MAY 24

friday - Fish fillet. potato cake,
beets, wheat bread, jello wtth
topping.

The course ls designed for tlrlse
with cancer and their famUles.
There Is no charee ilr the classes.
For information, contact Mary
Harrtson, RN, at 446-5247 or Kay
Allbright at 446-5121.

The FloralTeapot Bouquet from

MAY 23

Paint and Clean Up Days.
Thursday, May 8- Center Paint
and Clean Up Days. (Voluntrers
May 9 - center Patnt

Mother's Day is
Sunday, May 11 .

7,00 P.M. SENIOR ClnZENS
7•00 P.M. "'Xm HANDKAP

to cancer dlsabllity.

To Mom,
with love,
for always.

Flowers-in-a-gift
for Mom.

SKYLINE LANES INC.

Tuesday, May 6 - S.T.O.P.!Physlcal fitness, 10:30 · a.m ;
Healt h Maintenance Semin ar,
Back Pain, 1 p.m.
Wednesday , May 7 - Crown Oty
Blood Pressure Cl!eck, 1 !l m.;
Vinton Bible StudY, 1 p.m.; Center

Meigs Bookmobile route set

GAU.!POUS - Identifying support systems and resources wm be
the topic c1 the fifth session &lt;t I Can
Cope, sponsored b.Y Holzer Medical
Center and the C'auta Unlt of the
American Cancer Society.
• The session will he Thesday, 7
p.m. In the ftfth roor classroom at
Holzer, and wut feature Pat Powell,
claims representative fortheSoclal
Security Office In GalllpoUs.
Mrs. Powell will define a support
network and talk about tts Importance with emphasis on Social
Security. She wut detall require·
ments of the IX'Ogram as 1 relates

,.

FREE SOLAR COVE. W/ln-Ground

Gallia County Senior Center activities set
GAI..UPOUS - Actlv K!es and
menus for the week r1. May 5
through May9attheSenlorCitlzens
Center. 2:D Jackson Plke, are as
follows:
Monday, May 5 - Ceramics
Class, 9: 30-noon: Chorus 1·3 p.m.

IL---------·

Masons to meet

Social Security representative
to address I Can Cope ·session

MIDDLEPORT - A
JTll'etlng of Middleport Lodge 363,
f&amp;AM , will bP held at 7::ll p.m.
Tuesday at the tempiP. Retreshments will be served folloWing the
Jl'll'etlng.

AVAIUII!, APRil
IS SliGHnYHIGHER.

nuow oa WH11E GOLD
FREE SIZING

EKclu!live'maker ot
the Back Supporter•

mattress.

Suttort the
Llhrary lewy

�.
Page-:-8·6~The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Gall~lie,

Pomeroy-Middleport

May4, 1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant W. Va.

MORGAN - Bethel Mlsskmary
Baptist Church services Sunday, 11
a.m. with Rev. Calvin Minnis;
Gospel Twilighters to sing.

ANNIVERSARY NOTED- Mr. and Mrs. Lowcll GIMsblm of J.i.M
Second Ave., Gallipolis, celebrated their 61th wedding anniversary May
3. Titcy were married May 3, 1922 at Bidwell by the Rev. L.L. RDush.

Johnson anniv~rsary celebrated
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Don Mrs. Scott Wheeler. Mary. Kathy
John sen. Portland, recently cele- and Laura. Wheelersburg; Mr. and
bra te d thei r 25 t h wedd in g Mrs. Tom Bltter more. Parkersanniversary.
burg, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
A party honoring the couple was Shriver, Reedsvtlle, Mr . and Mrs.
hPld at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Byer and Mary, Middleport;
Marvin McKelvey of Syracuse and Kat hryn Philson. Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hutchison,
Mr. and Mrs. McKelvey and the
Johnson' s sons. Brian an d Bruce. Evan s. W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Mlck
'J'he ta ble fealured a I iered wedding ( Williams, Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
ca ke and arran~ ment s of Oowers Bruce May, Rutland; Mrs. Mary
In spring colors.
Jane Wise, Middleport; Mr. and
Attending wrre Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. George Schnel~ r. Syracuse;
William A. McKelvey, Ravens- Brian Johnson, Char leston, W.Va.;
wood. W.Va.: l'&gt;lr. and Mrs. The·
Bruce Johnsen, Portland, and Mr.
rron Johnson. Racine. parrnts of and Mrs. MalVi n McKelvey and
the John scns; Mr . and Mrs. Ken
scns. Mike and Jay.
Koni cek, Parma Heights: Mr. and

GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolls JunIor Woman's Club meets Monday, 6
p.m. social time, dinner, 6:30p.m.,
Down Under.

Movie sel '
PORTER - Special services at
Clark Chapel Church are set
Wednesday, 7 p.m. A rellglous
movie wtll be shown.

GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolls Lions
meet Tuesday, 6:30p.m., Oscar's.

~[~.._._

FREE SCENTED PORCELAIN CANDLE
WITH ANY CHLOE PURCHASE

*Estee Lauder·
Eight wonderful fragrances to choose from. And as an
extra bonus, get Estee La.uder's "Color Encounters" make·
up tray.for only $15.00 with any purchase of $8.50 or more.

RIO GRANDE - Gallipolis
Branch AA UW meets Monday,
Rhndes Center, Rio Grande College
for Installation of o!!lcers. Reception 6: lJ p.m.; dinner 7 p.m.
ORANGE 'IWP. - Orange
Township Trustees will meet Mon·
day at 8 p.m. at the home of the
clerk, Dorothy Calaway.

LECTA -Rev. Earl Hinkle leads
Bible study at Walnut Ridge
Church, Tuesday.

*Chloe

MONDAY
GAIJ..JPOLIS - DAR meets
Monday, 1:30 p.m .. Down Under;
Jon Louden, speaker.

GALLIPOLIS Pembroke meets
'!Uesday, 8 p.m., home of Mrs. Herb
Moore, VInton.

Under.

·MOlliER'S DAY~'

HOBSON -Theron Durham wUI
be the guest speaker at the Hobson
Church of Christ In Christian Union .
Sunday at 10: 30 a.m. services and
at 7:30p.m. services.

*Ultima

•

ClARA MOTHER'S DAY GIFT SETS. NEW SUMMER
COLORS HAVE ARRIVED.

REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees will meet Monday at
7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville Fire
Station.
'

POMEORY - Meigs County 8 &amp;
4() Salon 710 will hold Its annual
dinner at the Trinity Church
Monday. All members asked to
rum In money from current project.

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

300 Second Ave., lafayette Mall, Gallipolis, OH.

Certainly the best wishes and
prayers of the
community go to
Todd Spaur!, 14,
Racine, who Is In
Children's Hospital Medical Center, Eiland and
Bethesa Ave.,
Cincinnati, Ohio45229, where he has
a bone marrow transplant
upcoming.
Kevin, 16-year-old brother of
Todd, will be the donor for the
transplant and both parents, Duke
and Betty, are in Cincinnati also.
Incidentally, the fund for Todd is
down to $7 and a new goal has been
set at $3,000. Contributlo~ns should
be sent to the Racine Home
Nationa l Bank, and called to the
a«entlon of Darlene Newell.
Sally Zerkle of Warner-Robbins,
Ga .. has been here to visit her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Duckworth and brother, Bobbie. in
Middleport, and her grandparmt s,
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Smith Sr.
Sally flew to Columbus fmm
Baltlrr10re. Md , where she had
been for a checkup at the National
Institute of Hea lth. She spent
several days here before returning
to her home In Georgia. Sa lly and
her husband. Butch Zerkle, for merly of Meigs County also. have
two children.
In the birthday corner we have:
Laura Riggs Hoffman. 1704 W.
Mound St., Columbus. Ohio 4.~22'l ,
former resident who will mark hPr
81st birthday today, Ma y 4.
And up Portland way, Mrs. Allen
(Audrey) Brewer will observe her
87th birthday on May 9 at her home
in Stiversvllle. She'd like to hear
· from you. The address is 31581
Brewer Road, Portland. Ohio 45i70.
Congratulations to Avery aQ d
Helen Gocgleln who will observe
their 25th wedding anniversary on
May 7 at their home at ;fj64(), Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy. No spec Ia I
celebt·atton of the sliver anniver·
sary Is planned.
Someone once since there's a
book in each of us.
Well - maybe not a whole book
but perhaps, a part of one - and
here's your chance . .
Margaret Parker. president of
the Meigs County Historical Society, Is announcing plans to print
an up-to-date history of Meigs
County. This will te vo lume 11. .

SALE STAm SUNDAY, MAY 4, ENDS TUESDAY, MAY·6

This new book wlll te unique in
thai It will be writtrn by you and
other residents of Meigs Cou nty .
The history will contain both topical
RECEPI'ION PlANNED- TherewWhe areceptloncelebrallngtbe
50th wedding anniversary of Raymond ad Rulh Burner, Route I,
Ewlngllln, May 10 from 2 lo 4 p.m at lhe Wilkesville Unljed 1\lelhoclal
Church. They married Mily 9, 1~ In Astiand, Ky. They are parents ol
Jerry R. Burns, Worthington; Linda Fulton, Columbus, and RltaBums,
Columbus, who are hosting the observance. The &lt;XIDple request gUts be
omitted.

Alumni banquet being planned
RACINE - Plans are being
' • made for the Southern Alumni
Association banquet and dance to
be held on Saturday, May 24 a t the
high school.
The dinner will be served at 6
p.m. and will be followed by a dance
to start at 9:30 and continue until ·
12:30 p.m. The price of the dinner

llckets are S7 and the dance tickets
are $5. They may be purchased at
the New York Clothing House,
Village Cut RBte, and Home
National Bank, Racine and Syracuse Branch. Further Information
may be obtained from Joyce
Quillen at 949-2695 after 5 p.m. or
949-2493 daytime.

I ' \1

t'pt 11Hlol ll ~· wmfur l,lblt• ht•t•lt•d ~.ll\J ,ll ~

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Lltn f11t or stmi-closs house
Jilin!. White or custom tints.

We nil just seem to love the
sidewalk sales tha t Middleport and
Pomeroy merchants stage from
time to time - and no won~r . One
ca n pickup some grea t bargains.
'lltere seemed to be a "goodly"
number of shoppers on hand for
Friday's event in the tm towns , but
•wely a discouraging foclor were
those t-old, strong winds.

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Doesn't tJKo new awning at
Clark's .Jewelry In Pomeroy look
great?! Too bad, that It no sooner
was put Into place tllan somrone
had to take a knife 10 it. I question
people who sel'n'\ to be so hell-bent
on be ing destructive. I fall to
understand how I here ca n be a kick
In that.

Phone 1-800-325-51311

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Anyone know about fig trees'?
Bank One personnel gave their [lg
tree, which they admit has been.
"neglected", to The Sentinel.lt' san
Ill wind , you know, t.&gt;cause our
reliable staff member, Barb Riggs
always wanted ooe.
It's going to get loving care now,
except none of us seem to have I he
answers to Barb' s questions. We
never had a fig tree tefore, Miz
Scarlett . I don't think Barb plans to
make her own fig cookJes ·or
anything like th at, but she would
like a little advice oo care. Do k:-1
her know and do keep srriillng.

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form prlson~rs . Including 'EJ7 mPn
an d 20 women.
The paying guests will be se rved
dinner, wit !I trlevlsion and snacks
available unt il lockdown at mid ·
night. They will also get breakfast
Sa turda y morning and a seuvenlr
T shirt.
Besides Britt , those resl'rvlng
bed' of the jail for the night include
the mayor of Br ier. a mln is t ~r . the
forr man of the company that built
thP jail and two tf'icvlsio n reporters
ft'Om Seattle.
"We have t.&gt;cn accepting reser·
vat ions for the last few weeks." said
Tom Lewis, a spokesman for the
Snohom ish Cou nty Correc tions Department. "We had to rut ". o~
Monday night. We're rooked soltd.

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Mon. &amp; Fri . 9-6: Tuoo. &amp; Thuro. 9-7:30: Sot. 9-3: Cto1od Wad.

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:11 111

MIDDLEPORT- The Women' s
Association of the First PresbyterIan Churrh wllt hold a yard sale
Wednesday at the church lawn In
Middleport.
Proceeds will go towards rE1Jalr
of the front door glass and canapy of
the church. Items arethesaleareto
be taken to the church no later than
Tuesday.

CARPET CLEANING
.

JOHN CREDICO, M.D.

®~'

Monday - Crea med chicken on
biscuit, carrots. apple sli ces.
cookie.
Tues d~y- Tu na salad sandwich.
baked beans, macaroni salad ,
oran!IJ! sections.
Wednesday - Beef stew, cole
slaw, biscu it, fruit crisp.
Thursday - Baked pork chop.
·.,.en browned potatoes, spinach,
peaches.
.
Frida y - Fish sand"ich. hroecoli, Waldorf salad, baked custard.
Choice of milk . juice, coffee and
llfo availabl&lt;· wit h meals.

baseboards.

!i iJf"!o .

'Ti

The
::r~ 0Rst~ Shoe Cafe

CHESTER- The Pooler, Wolle,
and King reunion wUI be held at the
Chester fire house on JuneS. Dinner
will be at 12:45 p.m. and those
attending are to take a picnic lunch
and their own table service.
Following the luncheon, there·will
be a siDrt business meeting and
program. All relatives are Invited
to come.

Tuesday, May :4! - a celebration Is
planned for the tenth annual event
at the oenter, a program will l:egln
at lO a.m . "1th music and singing
until 11:30. 90 year-olds In attend·
anoe will be honored a t 11 : 30.
Following dinner, · there will be
several speakers and more music.
If you plan to attend Senior
Citizens Day Event. call the Center
at !fl2-2161, by Wednesday. May 14 .
so mea l preparation can be
finalized .
The Senior Nutrit ion Program
menu for the week is:

Yard sale slated

BONUS! BUY 2

"DIANNA" in
White, Navy or Taupe.

~

Following the dinner a musical
program will be presented by the
Gabriel QJartet at 7: 00, a freewill
offering will be taken for the
singers.
·
Saturday - Round and square
danoo from 8 to 11, with music bY
tre Ohio River Drifters from the
Long Botton-Reedsville area, ad·
mission Is $1.50 per person.
The following week Is National
Hospital and Nursing Home Week,
tre Center's vans will be going to
the Pomeroy Health'Care Center at
1 p.m. on '!Uesday, Wednesday and
Thursday to visit residents, tour the
!acUity and participate In activities
there.
Senior Citizens D_ay In Ohio Is

Reunion planned

Martha Howell has had a 1ime of
it, but Is progressing nicely at the
moment.
Martha underwent open heart
surgery at University Hospital In
Columbu s and that w-ds nip and
tuck lbr a while.
She was released and trough!
home a-nd a few days later got Into
complications and was taken to
W terans Memorial Hospital. The
problem was solved and Mart ha Is
looklng tetter and doing better.
Many of you, I'm sure. know
Matiha from her work at Middleport Village Hall. You can send
cards to Veterans Memorial since
she is &lt;'X[FCt ed to te there a bit
longer.

4" potted plant adds

Mesh, durable tubular
metal frame, stackable.

)U it' lu bt·
Y• •ur W o1rm wt'.l l her frit&gt;nd~ nu m.H tr r whcrr yo u ~o
A Jt 't'P l U)h runt•d .md ~rn u mt' glt111t'-S1rft lea thrr
m,lkE' !ht•st' ~l ndn l s Jbuvr• lht· •ndmMy .

; 'T"I -

Olps! There was a little error at
the Pomeroy E)j'mentary School
Thur.;day evening when the first,
second and I hlrd graders presented
a musical program. The attractive
flowers and plants decorating I he
stage for the occasion were provided by Francis Florist.

Geraniums

o\rl '

Summer milgi c- ,wd rl,rH• nu\v rn ~ur!'- l u- fr l

and biographical sketches of 1\ilelgs
County places, people and events.
Tehre will be oo charllf2 for having
your pictures and stories published.
Now that's a good feature, huh?
I'll pass along roore lnlonnatlon
on what you do and when you do It,
as I'm advl~ by the historical
group.

Ea.

StHI Stack Chain

O lDM A I N E T R O TT E R S
r h t·~t·

2.97

El
~:.

3. 97 ~.;7

SUMMER

POMEROY- The Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, announces the.
following schedule lor the week o1
May 5-9:
.
Monday - Square Dance 1-3.
Tuesday - Chorus 1-2.
Wednesday - Social Security
Field Representative 11l-12, Bingo
1-2, Nutrition Education talk and
demonstration by Meigs High FHA
Demonstration Team.
Thursday - Ceramics 10-2.
Friday - Bowling 1:30 at the
Pumeroy Lanes, Public Dinner
with serving rrom 5 to 6:30, the
menu will be baked steak, mashed
potatoes and gravy, green beans,
roll, and beverage lbr $3, dessert
wUI be available at an extra charge.

Jail takes paying guests
EVERITf, Wash. (UPI ) More than 100 people have aw ({'d
to pay $Zl each so they can go to jail
- for one nighI .
In a fund -raising effort, and as a
sot1 of shakedown exercisP for the
jail staff. the new Snohomish
County jail wil l accommodate up to
120 paying, non -crimin al guests
tonight for a gra nd opening over·
night stay.
Among those with r= rvat ions is
Snohomish County Suprrlot· Court
Judge Dennis Britt. "I ju st thought
I'd lllw to sec what It' s like," he
said.
The $12 m II \ion jail will tegln
receiving rea l Inmates within the
next two weeks. The jail ha s room

• •

Meigs Senior Center announces acttvtttes

Don't forget about Todd
By BOB HOEFLICH
Thnes-&amp;ntlnel Staff

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- B-7

•

Beat of the bend

Calendar I happenings
SUNDAY
POMEORY - XI Gamma Mu
GAIJ..IPOLIS - French Art Sorority ~W meet Moilday at 7: 30
Colony Sprlng Craft Festival con- ·
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Evelyn
tlnues SUnday, 1 to 5 p.m.
Knight. Installation or Officers will
be held.
LECTA - Rev. Earl Hinkle ·In
'services at Walnut Ridge Church
TUESDAY
.
Sunday.
GALLIPOLIS - Gli!Upolls Rotary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m., Down
GAIJ..IPOLIS - Revival begins
Sunday, 7:30 p.m., White Oak
Baptist Church with Rev. Bill Price
and Rev. Miles Trout.

May 4, 1986

. SALE
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�~imesSection
Sports
Ferdinand ca lures Kentucky Derby
•entintt

May4. 1986

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fmishes out of money
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5

: LOUISVIlLE, Ky. (UPI) Ferdinand, a 17-1 shot artfully
ridden from dead last by Bill
Shoemaker, Saturday won the 112th
ruiUllng of the Kentucky Derby by
lengths over British Invader
Bold Arrangement.
Broad Brush was thlrd and
Rampage fourth In the 1% -mile
first leg of the Triple Crown.
Shoemaker, at &gt;4 the oldest
jockey to win a Derby, held
Ferdinand under light rein out of
the gate to guarantee the colt was
nol burned out by the fast early
pace establlshed by Groovy, Za·
baleta, Bachelor Beau and Snow
Chief.
It was the fourth Derby victory
for Shoemaker In 24 rides, but his
first since 1965 on Lucky Debonair.
Snow Chief, the 2-1 favorite, and
Badger Land, the 5-2 second choice,
finished out of the money, though
both were anwng the leaders
coming out of the tum lor home.
Ferdinand covered the coul'5e In
2: 02 4-5 - more than three seconds
off Secretariat's 1973 record of 1:59
2-5.
.
The chesmut colt paid $37.40,
$16.20 and $8.00 In the $784,400 rest,
the richest plll'5e In Kentucky
Derby history.
Second place .......,..
Bold Arrangement, ridden by
Chris McCarron, finished threequarter lengths ahead d. Bold
Saturday afternoon a&amp; Churdtlll DoWIL!I Ill l.ooilvllle, Ky. UPI.
Brush and returned $9.40 and $6.81.
Broad Brush, who ftnlshed a m:k
ahead of Rampage, pald $9~.
The victory by Ferdinand, which
gave 7~year-&lt;&gt;ld Hall of Fame
trainer Charles Winningham his
The winner earned $2l,!ri7 from a was only three-fifths of a second first Derby win, was worth $009,400
sklwer than the track record of :57 to owner Elizabeth Keck .
gross purse of $35,280.
Bold Arrangement won $100,lXXl.
In another supporting race, J.C. 4-5 set by Santiago Road In 19G!.
It
cost his English owners Anthony
Mr. Zlpplty Do Dab, with Julio
Pruitt's Z. Plasty, an Invader from
and
Ray FUchards half that to ship
F'klrlda ridden by Clyde Martin, Espinoza at the reins, was a neck In
him
!rom
England and enter him In
overtook Mr. Zlpplty Do Dab In the Iron! of 3-2 favorite Burnished .
the
Run
for
the Roses. Broad Brush,
Bright, with IUgh Shoals fourth In
final 16th to win the s.1i,6Xl WHAS
who
was
seeking
to become the
the fteld of a dozen 2-year olds.
Slakes.
second
Marylandbred
to win the
z. Plasty, who earned $22,815
Z. Plasty, who had won his first
Derby,
collected
$00,tro.
ArkansaS
and mly start at Tampa Bay with the victory, returned $10.40,
Derby
winner
Rampage
earned
Downs by 7~ lengtffi, scored $5.11 and $3.00. Mr. Zlpplty Do Dah
s~.tro.
Saturday by 1 lengths In a swift paid $4 and $3, while Burnished
Ferotnand, third In the Santa
:582-Silrtheflvefurlongs. His time Bright paid $2.81 to sh:lw.

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W1N!1 KENTUCKY DERBY - Fenlluuld wonlhe K4!lltudcJI Derby
with BID Slloern8ker In the &amp;addle Ill tile 1121h rumiDI ol the roees

Sovereign's Ace captures feature race
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) Sovereign's Ace, a 13-1 shot ridden
by Phll Rubblccll, Saturday held of! i
the stretch challenge of favored
Artichoke to win the ChurchUl
Downs Stakes, one of the supportIng featul'l5 on Derby Day.
Sovereign's Ace, a 4-year-&lt;&gt;ld
!J!ldlng by Sovereign Dancer, took
command- at the start of the
&amp;eVen-furlong event and neve{ was
' headed. The Alan Art Stable
entrant won by a head over

Artichoke, the &gt;-~ betting choice r:l
the large Derby Day crowd.
Clever Wake, second fa verite In
the wagering, was tlird, threequarters d . a length behind the
runner-up, with Diapason *lurth In
the Deld of nine sprinters.
Sovereign's Ace, !JCOrlng his third
win In elgllt !!larts In 1986, returned
$29, $11.40 and $5.81. Artichoke,
plloted by Jorge Velasquez, paid
$5.11 and $3.81, whlle Clever Wake
pald $3.40 to srow.

*

Anita Derby to Snow Chlet In his
was last outofthegate.
Shoemaker steadied him the Drs!
time past the stands to avoid
clipping heels with Wise Times, and
Ferdinand gradually picked up
horses. He was running In the
m1ddle of the pack on the
backstretch.
Ferdinand angled out leaving the
half-mile pole to follow Badger
Land, who was making a strong
move to the lead on the turn.
Shoemaker cut back Inside on the
stretch to split the fading Snow
Chief and Broad Brush. He took the
lead departing the eighth-pole,
!XJlllng away In the final furlong.
The compete order of finish was:
Ferdinand, Bold Arrangement,
Broad Brush, Rampage, Badger
Land, Wheatly Hall, Fobby Forbes,
Icy Groom, Wise Times, Mogarnbo,
Snow Chief, Zabl!le\a.,. Southern
Appeal, Bachelor Beau, Vernon
Castle, and Groovy.

I last trlp out,

Flrllt out of gale

As expected, Groovy was the ftrst

out of the gate followed by Zabaleta,
Bachelor Beau and Snow Chle!.
La WI Plncay was unable to follow
orders to hold Groovy back, and the
natural speedster hit the ftrst
quarter mile In 221-5 seconds, tying
the third fasrest time for that split.
Groovy hit the half mlle In a
record-tying 45 1-5 seconds.
Despite that pace, Groovy managed to hold onto the lead, with
Zabaleta and Snow Chief close
behind on the backstretch. Groovy
faded ftrst on the final turn, then
Zaba.leta followed, and Badger
Land and Broad Brush took their
turn at the front.
While Ferdinand was moving
Inside to the lead, Snow Chief, Bold
Arran!J!ment and Badger Land
were bumping.
Snow Chief faded badly, Badger
Land somewhat less so and Broad
Brush ran evenly while Ferdinand
made his move lnslde. Bold Arrangement, meanwhile, made up 12
lengths between the backstretch
and the turn for home.

Reds lose ·seventh straight; Montreal edges Houston, 7-6
CINCINNATI (UPI) -The Mets
and Reds are heading In opposite
directions.
Bob Ojeda and Jesse Orosco
combined. on a six-hitter and Keith
Hernandez hlt a lwQorun homer
Saturday to lead \he blazing New

York Mets to a 4-1 victory over the
ClnctnnaU Reds.
The Mets have won 13 of their last
14 games to Improve their record to
154, the best start In their ~year
history. Cincinnati, meanwhlle, has
kist seven straight and 11 of their

Braves defeat Phillies, l 0-4
PHIT..ADELPHlA (UPI ) Glenn Hubbard drllled three doubles and drove In four runs
Saturday to lead the Atlanta Braves
to a 1().4 victory over the Philadelphia PhUlles.
The Braves collected seven
doubles through the Drst nve
Innings and accumulated nine In
the game ID support starter FUck
Mahler, 24. The dght- bander
pitched 6 2-3 Innings to break a
pt&gt;rsonal tlur-game losing streak.
Atlanta .scored four runs cif
Shane Rawley, 3-2, In the second

NO HIDDEN

lD\T BfCAUSf

Inning. Bob Horner opened with a
single and scored on the first ci
three doubles by Andres Thomas.
After a walk to Ozzle VlrgU,
Hubbard ooubled In t~m runs.
Mahler singled Hubbard to third
and scored on Claudell Washington's groundout.
Philadelphia closed to 4-2 In the
bottom of the Inning. John Russell
doubled and Tom Foley walked.
RaWley sacrificed the runners up
and Mlll Thompson singled home
Russell. Rick Schu's sacrifice ny
scored Foley. ·

last 12. The Reds have not won at
ruv~rfront Stadium since Opening
Day, Aprll 7 - a string of nine

Bell threw to Orst. Heep scored oo
Howard Johnson's groundout to
make It 1-0, and Knight moved to
third oo flrst baseman· Nick Esasky's wlld throw home In an attempt
to get Heep. Knight scored on Barry
Lyoos' groundout.
The Reds countered with a run In
the bottom of the second. Bell hit a
chopper In front of the plate, and
Ojeda threw wlldly ID first, pennlttlng Bell to advanre to third. Sal
Butera followed with a single to
'drive home Bell, making It 2-1.

games.
Keith Hernandez was the prim·
ary beneflclary of the Reds' latest
bad break.
Losing pitcher John Denny, l· 3,
lost a high chopper along the first
base line by Hernandez In the sun
and let the ball roll foul. Hernandez
homered on the next pitch, deep to
right.
Reds player-manager Pete Rose
described the losing streak as

Montreal tops Houstoo
MON1REAL (UPI l - Huble
Brooks tripled home pinch- runner
Jim Wohlford with none out In the
lOth Inning to tift the Montreal
Expos to a 7-6 victory over the
Houston Astors.
Andre Dawson beat wt an lnOeld
single off losing pitcher Frank
D!Pino, ().1, to lead off the Inning.
Wohlford ran for Dawson and

"scarY."
Ojeda, 4-0, struck out two and
walked four over seven Innings to
pick up the victory. Orosco pitched
the final two Innings to earn his fifth
save.
The Mets took a 2-0 lead In the
second. Danny Heep led df with a
single. Ray Knight followed with an
tnfteld single, and Heep, running on
the pitch, took third when Buddy

Brooks tripled over the head or
center fielder Kevin Bass to score
Wohlford.

Jeff Rearoon, 3-2, pitched a
scoreless lOth Inning to pick up the
victory.

Mariners defeat Blue lays
a

TORONTO (UPI) -Alvin Davis ctf with double d.f Jim Acker, ().2,
collected four hits Including an RBI and scored when Davis bounced a
double and Gonnan Thomas drove ground- rule double r:Ner the center
In two runs Saturday to lift the
!leld fence.
1romas followed with the MarinSeattle Mariners to a 4-2 victory
over the struggling Toronto Blue ers' third ronsecutlve double to
score Davis. Thomas went to third
Jays.
The loss was the rourth In live on AI Cowens' fly out and scored oo
games for the Blue Jays, who are Danny TartabuU 's sacrifice fly .
Toronto cut the margin to 3-2 In
last In the American League East.
Mike Morgan, who was drafted the seventh on Emle Whitt's RBI
from the Blue Jays organization In single, but Seattle got the run back
1984, worked seven lnnJngs and · In the elgh th when Thomas lashed a
allowed two runs and eight hits single that scored Bradley !rom
while eo.oenlng his record at 2-2.
third.
Toronto had taken a 1-0 leacfln the
Peter Ladd worked 11-3 Innings
second when Rance MuBinlks
to notch his first save.
Seattle took a 3-1 lead with three snapped an ().for-15 slump with an
runs In the fourth. Phil Bradley led RBI single.

Weather perfect;
270 take part in
French·City Run

OF fREE
fiNANCING

"I'm glad I had this experience,"
said Bentley . "I'm In grad school at
Ohio University. The rroney will
help." Shonebarger, a fanner Rio
Grande College student, said," It is
nice to be back down here."
Tom Cherchuck, Huntington,
W.Va ., recipient of second place
and $00, said, " This Is the first time
l've ever won any money. It was a
good race."
Women winners In the lOK run
Included Jackie Moore d. Wheelersburg, Amy Carter c1 Gallipolis, and
VIvian Graham of Point Pleasant.
Moore's winning time was 43:41.
In the 5-K run Joe Barber d.
Ashland, Ky., placed first with a
tlme &lt;115: 39. DeMaris Crawford of
Millwood, W.Va., was th! first
female across the finish line In the
3.1 mile. Her time was 21: 26.
Steve Price of Pomeroy and
Laura
Saunders of Galllpolls were
.100.
I'I'S(l!lltlve
winners of the ooe-mlle
Co-winners were declared when
Dinosaur
Dash.
Price llnlshed the
one ri. the patrol cam leading
"fun
run"ln
5:
57.
Saunders posted a
ruiUiers through congested areas
winning mark of 6:33.
took the wrong route.
One ri. last year's yw_rwest
Bentley finished the 6.2 mile race ·
.runners,
Joshua M. watson, Rt. 2,
In 31:47. Shonebarger's winning
Continued
on C-2
time was 32:4.'1.
1
GALLIPOLIS - The weather
was perfect - In the mld-50s- for
Saturday's eighth annual French
City Run. Two-hundred and sevenly runners took part In three
races.
"The weather was better this
year than last year. Overall, this
was probably the biggest, smoothest race we've had," a run official
said.
Ron Saunders and Dawn Mea·
dows of the Holzer Medical Center
Recreation Committee, and Paul
Barker of the Ohio Valley Publlshlng Co., co-sponsors oflhe lD- K, 5-K
and Fun Run (mile run) events,
echoed thaI statement.
Mitch Bentley of New Plymouth, ·
Ohio (VInton County) and Mark
Shonebarger of Lancaster, became
the nrst co-winners ever In the lOK
run. Both received plaques and

FVN RUN WINNER - Steve Price, Pomeroy, captured lint place
hoDOn Ia lbe • .,._111r Race (o.e mile) with a lime all: Sl. DeMO
Oebortle, Polal r' n : -IICOIId Md David l!ornmei'VIIe, G•IJipol!s
lhlrd. Silty-lillie iWWMI took plri. laun Saunden, 01!Jipollo, glrll dlvlllloa wlh • time oft 31.

i

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J

•

�May4, 1986

. . Pomeroy-Middlaport-Galllpolia, Ohio-Point PIBIIIIIt. W. Va.

.~

..

RIO· GRANDE -

Weather ...

Rio ROTC will

Continued !rom C-1
Galllpoils, now 7 Improved his 19115 . ·
perfomlanre by 39 seconds with a · '

29:5Umlng.

The RJo

Reglstratkln w1ll stari at 7 a.m. at

Gran&lt;E College/Community Col· · tie LyrE Center Physlcf\1 Eduralege Reserve Officers Training tlon FacUlty, The race will start at 9
Corps w!ll sponsor a competitive 10 a.m.
Prizes, ribbons, and trophies w!ll
kilometer race on Saturday, May
IE awa.r&lt;Ed In dltferelfl
10, tn RJo Gran&lt;E.

sponsor run

·

. were:

i;

."

.·
~

;..

a

The Commercial A:
SavlDgs Bcmk

MIN'S DIVJjQN

I. DJ\1: 'f'llwn!y , 51i :M.
lJ.tl: 1. TomC.tewooi, 46:48; 2. MilcPW~ls, f7: l0. ,
._..: Kt'nl'l'lh lbvlln&amp;, 33:00; 1 Joill Ranepr, :
!1.51.
'
. .: 1. Chrb Seldtl. :rr:.ll: :1. Dlw Sapp, :m:Ol; l :
JoM Millet', u:n
a.ll: 1. Tom ~tuc.tt. 33:01; 2. Chart~&gt; Aym ;
11: :tJ; 3. Jeff CllK, lUi.
i
1Wtl.JimBrown.36:.12: ~.Steptl&gt;nFI'Iron,l8:58.,
._..: l. F'rfrd Wol•. 37:11; 1 V . Kt&gt;rurlh Hollil')', '
.1}:51: l Jlm Elliot 42:00.
..., 1. Ronald BaU, lJ :41: 2. Thomas Smltll '
'-'1 :46; 3. LaM- DlnltiS, 49:M!.
1~ :

a-M: 1.

GaQipvua, Ohio

:. r. z~•­

!..an)• Arrokl , Q: ~ ; 2. Ralph Morlk"r,

JOHN J.A.Jr.

!1:4,,

woMEN's 5-K

WOMI!N'S DfVEI}N

. .: 1. swan Fu!voy(', JJ:4J.

•

~·

winner SaluJ'da¥ Wll DeMaltl
Crawford, MllwOod, W.Va. Her

:J&gt;.JI: 1. \'Man Graham, :JJ:16.

IHI: l. TrickY Amok!, !1:4.1
5K RUN MIN'S DIVBilN
NVNDER: l.ToddBoolt-.. 18:28: 2-C'Iuis H•citl'f.
19:!'6; l Kt'VIn ~. ~: 03 .
11-•: 1. JE:'ffrey Haci«'r, 18:25: 2. Phil Grrmlc&lt;&gt;,

19:14: l Bob 8}1"1'1',

!I:~.

• •: 1. Doug Hair, J8:48; 2. J. Sron BumPnt&gt;,

19: 15; l StE'\,. H11neor.

lime was 21: •

Joe Barla!r,

Alihland, Ky., WOII lbe men's
division In 1~: 311. One-Jmndred
and twenty.nJae look part.

Srntb,

z.

l Ktp Hanmt.ch, Z'N8.

414: 1. Corky TMmpriOn, 11:1."!: 2. Jf'rry Flschrr,
18:57; .\ Rotl'rt MUMer, !1:46.
. . . : 1. Wallf'r iOtlo l Mattox , Ji:Jt.
• ovm: 1. Campbl'n N~l. 23: u .

K'OMEN'S DJVIii)N
M UNDER: 1. Andrea 'llll&gt;lss, ~: %7: 2. DHu.·T\11
Dank&gt;&amp;, JHI: l Lort H11:mllto n, ll:44.

•
!

• •: 1. Brenda RN'd, 23:21 : 2. Dana J:'!I'('I"S,3J: 2~;
J. Tr!shl Hill, 3l:J4.
..a : ) . ShPn't John!lon, 17:34 ; l Tm1 Hamilton,

29:.17; l DMna Morrts, 21: 18.

N : 1. G~· Garl::JEor, ;1)-:D; 2 Joly M
Jl:J'l: 1 S~n)' RulFr. !!: 19.
JWI: l . Carla

~uk'r.

11:22: 2. rA!rk'nf'

your

Bank MaslerCc ••d.
Which Has A 15°/o ::'.rr:A\,GE
RA11

28::JJ: Bam Artbur, 28:51; Tl!rrl

..

33:1~ Dar- ~aln, 33:20: Doona Daniels,
33:37.
Dione Caldwell, :li:OJ; W- Com!e,
:li:27: Sllerrl C«fee, :11:!15; Soo~aIt Dutta,
II:~ Ben Ball, t1:28; Paul
,li:31:
Rhlnda !Mo&lt;rdo, li:M: Sarah alker, 11:!13;
Barb l\lorpll, 11:53.

Jl..lt: 1 DtiW' C1 I.:M'f'll li:OI : 2. Slll'rrl Corftof&gt;.
:fi:.i\

"

Plan to

llamlllon, :19:17: bonna Morris, :19:18:
J""""'Y Hlll'l'lsm, :19:lll.
J...., Dalllels, :19:110: Joshua Watson.
:19:5t, lngoborg Adams, :JJ:OO: GaU BeMlle, ,
30: 1~ Dana Jellers, 30::11: O.Wna Danleb,
30:1t Marla ~. 30:42; L«&lt; llamlllon,
30:4t Blllv CrawiOiil m, 30:!1!1; Shayna
Olapman,.!J:Ot MartbaWUU.,ll:ll.l; J""""
WmfiB', ll:lt: Cindy s.xt111, :n:l7: u.a
Y011111, 31::JJ: Matt Daniel, 3\l::JJ: Trlslla IJJll.
3:1:31; L«&lt;RJdlaJ&lt;II,:I'l::li: TIIIVI'G'Garber.

. . .: 1. EdSamms.l7:.n: 2. Eart Woolm, 17:• : 3.
Owaln McKfdrre , :19:49.
. . .: l . LIUT')' May, ll:24; Z.Johnd.vl'11111d, l!l :U:

camps and open gym activities
wet·e released Friday by GAHS
basketball coach Jim Qsborne.
Open gy m will beobsetvedJune9
through .July 2.~. five days a week
from 10 a. m. to 1 p.m.
Somclhtng new this year will be a
"Wednesday Special" In the open
gym sessions. Every Wednesday,
for seven weeks, basketball
coaches and varsity players will be
In the gym to help youngsters learn
shooting and defensive concepts.
This portion of the program wUI
conclude with sk llls tests and and
contests.
Individuals may stay as bng or
as little as they want during the
Wednesday specials.
The Gallipolis Area Basketball
Camp will be held June 9-13

a vacc:•llon?

:n:a;,

.._. l.SamMohk&gt;r, 16: lJ: 2. Kl•nnyCopk'y.l6:fl :
3. Mart'U5 Be&amp;. ]6:&amp;3
. . .: 1. John Doollttlr. 19:01:
8M1 f'rasutl' .
J9:ll: l J&amp;mf'S Clark. !l::r1.

GALLIPOLIS - Dales for the
1986 Gallipolis summer basketball

GIIWI FUN BuD wmaer
Salurda¥ - 1Aiura SMQ!!Ien,
Oel!lpnllt, wllo completed lbe
COUI'IIe Ill 1:33. Dawn Cooper,
Jlwlllnafon, . llllCOIId .ad
AmJ Huber, Qa!Upolle, lblrd In
lbe mile llt'lllllon.

(8.1 .nle)

Bo;;tt'l",

With a C&amp;S Bank MasterCard you can
finance your vacation guarantee your hotel
reseNations or rent a car. And since Master·
Card Js accepted In over 4 million places
worldwide. irs really the only card you w11l
need
Stop by The C&amp;S Bank and apply lor your
MasterCard In time lor a great vacation

~·aln.

ll:lO.
..... : 1. Donna Danll'l5.lJ:37.
. .: 1. Margal"f'' BaU , 2i :22: lln!fbargMams,

...a: 1. Sllf1lh

•

l. Amy H\1=""·.'..•• ,~11!1!11'8

AVG. WT. 200/250 #CUT WRAPPED FROZEN $110 LB.
Custom Slaughered Beef, Pork and Lamb Cut,
Wrapped and Fronn

•
•

.

ON SALE MAY 5 THRU MAY 10

Open Daily 10-9; Sunday 12-6

Rocky Pearson 675-4444

:~:;SPRING

:::)dJTOMOTIVE
... .. -

1

~

SAVE 35%-40'/o
:)MADE BY

~::-:=MICHELIN

.: BACKED BY
.. SEARS

197

9

Our 39.97. Wlllon Exlla
iOflball glolle. All·
leather; 13', doubl&amp;-bor
open web. Adjustable
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CONVENIENCE AND
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v ar rJn ty·

lor

SlOOO

•Special seminar
discounts on CPC
chemicals
•Free prize drawing 1

DODGE CARAVAN OR PLYMOUTH
VOYAGER DO NOT QUALITY FOR
INTEIESJ RA1ES OR IEB~TES, BUT DO
QUAUFY FOR FREE VACATIONS.

•Free refreshments I,

MAY 6, 1986
7:00 P.M.

PLUS: AS A BONUS CARROLL NORRIS DODGE WILL

I Ina

GIVE YOU---

'I

lla•fll"t
565 JACKSON PIKl
GALLIPOLIS. 01110
PHON£ 614 -446-2206

Kerr Harrisburg Rd.

The
.._..Hil Beach
tbn and GolfClub

)[
OR

ISNEY WORLD

97
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Our 4.97 Ea. Softballs.
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Slow or last
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RT shocks
SM93101R

S9f9

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WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL
W

Priefllll ce1alog pr1ce5 r.ow IYliltDit in
"SM" Nle cafM:Ig • Shlpplng, lnst.a.tiOO ex"a •
•
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_...lbout

INTERIOR
EASYLIVING 10 FLAT
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WEATHEI!BEATER WB10 SATIN
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EXTERIOR PRIMER
WEATHERBEATER lATEX
WEATHERBEATER Oil

WIIPOUS
446-2770
11, 1,, 1Jon gu•r•ntHd
or rout rnoniJ IJaclr

Celebratins Our New Century
CSfttl, ltoeibuc:A: ettd Co., liN

Our 5.97 Ea.llatlen' glovet.
Nylon wl1h cobretta leather
palm. lett or right han&lt;;!.

---

Our 6.97. loflbaH lhlrt:
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with colored sleeves.
lcld .. _ " " " " ' """·

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Save28%

Save Up To 21%

14.97

ow 16.97·11.971a.lombal
aluminum IIOIIball ball. Varied
weights, lengths. COlor choice.

SILVEII-E
PlAZA

5.97
9·97
Our 13.97. Cocichlt'
aharllln color choice.
Adults'.
·
lcld

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For 1M OG-ft·VOUI... er
Fot Ol\fi·CMI rekA!s, ili S$1W5

Our 9.971a. llaltln' aloYM.

•

~
446-mo

Curved finaer pattam. Left
hand only.

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD GALLIPOLIS

Vacalion Good For One Year! lA limited Offer)

' *

~

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Deluxe
Accommodations for
Two Adults and two Children

; ,, ' .

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SAVE S6. to sa America's Best Selling
quahty one coat latex paints

Our Rig. 49.97Ea. 1:r
leather ball glollel.
Wilson Pro Stoff or Min·
uzo all-leather glove.
Press-tormed pocket.

miles used.

tire

ON AU.OTHER
CHRYSLER DODGE
PLYMOUTH
CARS

4 Big Days - 3 Great Nights

WEAROUT
For lhe specified mll8!1, Sears
will replace the lire or glvo ·a
refund, charging only lor the

ha•~lal

8.8°/o

IF INTEREST RATES ARE
NOT AnRAcnYE REBATES
OF UP TO

~

Our 39.97 Softbal
Glove.
All luhter, 13¥.'' flex
action.

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VACATION INCLUDES:

4" .000 '"'' " '' ~.ggres ·
sive ?II ()88snn !rac•!on 1

{r

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olll'
ooo:\y.o91to"

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We arr}ut

I
eo 0

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New York added a run In the
fourth. Henderson walked, stole
second and scored on Willie Randolph's single.

*
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Save2001o

39!!

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.. liD·"-"""' I"" deft

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SPRING PAINT SALE

~

OW 24.97·29.97 Ea.
lalballg'--12¥•' ·
nvtonJ1eOfher Soli Mag
or 13', IQPilraln COW·
hide Mag Plus glove.

Roadhandler 45
radial tires

New York went ahead !\.2 In the
second, scoring four times on just
one hit as lO mencametothe plate.
Texas pitchers walked six batters
In the Inning. Mattingly accounted
for one &lt;:I the runs with his second
scarl!lce lly.

yrtle Beach, SC

·~·
Save 20%-33%

•

LOWER INTEREST
RATES AND CASH
.
REBATES ARE STILL IN EFFECT.

Texas took a 2-Jlead In the second
on a double by George Wright and
RBI singles by Curtis Wilkerson
and ()jdliE McDowell.

3 milts pas!
Holrtr Hospital on lt. 160

Jack MIIC!dows 446·4920
Clmrles Kinder 24$·9446

YOUCAN1....._

who accompUshed the feat last
week.
Mattingly drove rome Rickey
Henderson with his first sacrifice
fly In the !lrst Inning alter !lender·
son led off with a single, stole
second and went to third oo a balk
by Witt.

Individuals wilt receive basket ·
ball Instructions, contests and
games to tests their skills. a camp
T shirt and a baskelba ll to takr
homo:·
A SJO deposit should IX' Sf'nt to
Coac h Jim Osborne, Ga llla
Academy lgh School, Ga iii[XJiis,
Ohio, 45631. The Individual's name
and grade he or she wUI be in next
year should IE lncludro with the
lE[XJSil.

,1(CHOICEGRAIN
FED
TYPE BEEF SIDE

cars Ban

The ·~ew Chrysler Corporation :
Does It Again!!

30, or at the door, and $35 if ·-==========~
r/~~~ters are re-gistered lx&gt;fore I '
FOR YOUR ADDED

611 SPECIAL ~

Walk.Pr, &lt;7 : ~; 2. &amp;lrb Mo,-gan.

nJN RIJN MIN'S DIVISJ&gt;N
l. S!f'\'e f-Tk.-eo, ~ $7: l Dens.ll Ostxlrnl': l Illvkl
Son'rnrrvllle.
MJME"f'S DIVIBDN
1. Lnr11 Saunck&gt;rs, 6: 33; l ~wn Heattf&gt;r CootEr.

(Monday through Friday) In the
GAHS gym. Area students who will
IX' In gradr&gt;s four through seven
next year (toth boys and girls ) in
the Gallla, Meigs. Mason · and
Jackson County areas areincludro .
Sesstpns will be 1 p.m. to 3: 30
p.m. each day. Cost is $40 alter May

Barr's Custom Meats

30:00.

47:S3.

The Yankees colk&gt;cted only eight
hits off six Texas pitchers but were
the beneficiaries of 11 walks.
Texas starter Bobby Witt, 2-J,
lasted just 1 2-3 Innings alter giving
up five runs a nd six walks.
Mattingly became the sixth
player to record three sacrifice flies
In one game. The most recent was
St. Louts Cardinal Vince Coleman.

Announce dates for
summer cage camps

4123 3777

•I:IJI; l VII'Jll Windon. ft J),
lUI: 1. Harokl UndPrwwd, 48: 4.1
., ~OVJIJl: 1. Bill Reyrolds, «1:~; 2. Adam Wll.~n.

dump Rangers, 94

NEW YORK (UP!) - Don
Mattingly tied a major-league
record with three sacrlllce files and
Bob Tewksbury scattered five hlts
over six Innings Saturday to lead
the New York Yankecs to a 9-4
victory over the Texas Rangers.
Tewksbury, 3-l. was relieved by
Rod Scurry, who pitched the final
three Inning~ for his second sav!'.

Top winners In each age bracket

The Sunday Times·Sentinei- Page-C-3

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Y~kees

•••

"'

'

1986

Mosl mtfchanchse aW"atlable
'Of' pick·up wilh•n a few .

one - ~ ~~ ~ m~t

REGULAR

NOW

11 s. 99
116.99
117.99
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$9 99 GAL
Sl 099 Gil.
S11" Gil.
$999 GAL
Sl 099 GAL

116.99
REGULAR

116.99
117.99
119.99
s19.99
122.99
124.99

• A Certificate That Makes Your Trip Transferable
To Reialives Or Friends
Tf{m.~prJflallon

Not lnrludtd

See The Ood1e Bog1.....

NOW

$f9t GAL

S1099 GA~
SJ299 GAL
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.

SJ599 ·GaL

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,.12.99
116.99
bt·

a®fo1~ d

S1099 GAL .
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CARROLL
NORRIS

MIKE
NORTHUP

DALLAS
WEBER

.

. \\
TOMMY
SPRAGUE

as duocle&lt;l

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE inc.

I

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
4..·2770

YOUR CHRYSLER-DODGE-PlYMOUTH DEALER
I

300 THIRD AVE.

446-0142

GAlliPOLIS

•
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�The

Sunday

Tll118s-Sentinel

4.1986

May 4,,198&amp;'

Pomeroy-Middlaport-GIIIIipolil. Ohio-Point Pleasant W. Va. -

.

and Bryan Durst of Eastern hooked Freeman laced a single and smlor
up 'In a torrid pitchers duel.
Kelley Grueser beltoo arun-smring
EAST MEIGS- A one-out single
Amburgey had not been beatm triple. David Amburgey then
up the middle bY ,;,phomoresecond
this season and has become an ripped an RBI slilgle to · put the
hasennan Jeff Johnson drove Jeff established strike-rut pitcher in the Tornadoes on top 2-0.
Caldwell home wtththe winning run ~. averaglitg over ten KO's per
The third Inning also provoo to be
here Friday evening as the Eas'te11n game. Durst, a seasoned veteran as Eastern's big canto as senior
Eagles rolled to a hard-fought 4-3 rnty a · sophomore, was equally Jimmy Caldwell looped a single
SVAC triumph over the Southern respected as both turned In super oown the rlghtfleld line to start the
Tornadoes. gaining a tie lor teague · efforts.
lnnlng. Bryan Durst pounded a
leadership In the process.
Durst picked upthe.win, going the single, Ed Collins singled, Brent
The extra lnnlng battle was distanoe to register sevm stri- Bissell reached 111 a netder' s
decided In the botton ot the eighth, keouts, one walk, and gtve up three choice, and Steve Horner smockro
when with one out sophomore Jeff tuns on ten hits. Aml:m gey .suf· a two-run single to give EHS the
Caldwell walked, then stole second lered the loss, also striking out
lead , 3-2.
and third to ·set up Johnson's seven , walkingt\MJ, while gtving up
Tha t score stood untO the sixth
game-winning tactics.
tour runs.11n seven hits.
frame when SHS platoo a single
Eastern. wtv has been bridesAfter two scoreless Innings,
run, however, the Tornadoes had
maid to a tough Tornado club all Sout~rn took a 2-0 lead in t~ third
threatmoo several limes earller.In
season long , now moves klto a lie lnnlng, when wllh two out Brian . the fourth SHS put ruMers at first
for first with Sout~m with ldentl·
cal 9-2 SVAC records.· Eastern Is
13-5 overall and Sout~m Is 11-9-1
overall.
The well-played game bY two
ou tstanding tea m; developed Into a
typica l Eastern-Sout!Prn thrUier
right from the start as sophomore
hu rlers David Aml:mgey of SHS

and third, however, Eagle catcher
Brmt Bissell fired rockets to naU llD
SHS mnner on this occasion and a
muple other key opportunities.
Several other key defensive plays
~both clubs gave t~lr respective
ptchers added support.
In t~ sixth frame Scott Wickline
161 off with a single aitd ca me home
rn John RJffle's second hit of the
evening, tying I~ score at 3-3.
Sean Grueser came In to pinch
run for R1ffle, but was tagged out In
a bang-bang play." at second as
Sout~rn tried to put the go·ahead
run In scoring poSition.
EHS wenI down In order kl the
sixth. After Durst had struck out the
first two SHS batters In I~ seventh,
Brian Freeman reached on an

error and Kelley Grueser singled to
~ put runners on the comers. With
hard-hitting David Amburgey at
tiE pate Eastern was very content
to get of tiP Inning on a fly out.
Eastern 's Kevin· Barber walked
with one out in the seventh, but
Amburgey buckled down to retire
tiP side on two CODS«utlve fly outs
bY the top ot the order.
In the eighth frame the Torna·
Illes again threatened by putting
rururers at the corners, but to no
avail as Durst struck out the fin al
batter to end the Inning.
Then with one out In the eighth
Caldwell walked to set the stage tor
Johnson's heroics.
Bryan Durst and Steve Horner
each had two $Ingles to lead the
winners, while Ed Collins, Johnson

~unt.

W. Va.

The

Yanks shut out 7..0; Indians defeat Chicago Chisox, 7-5.

Eastern downs ~-them 4-3,, gains share of SVAC lead
By sroTl' WOllE
'l1mes Smtktel stalf

Ohio-Point

back homers to spark Kansas City
and back t~ 10-hlt pitching of Bret
Saberhagen, 2-2, who registered his
S«ond shutout of the season.
Saberhagen struck out six and
walked one. Mike Flanagan, 1-3,
was the loser.
Brewers 3, Angels 4
At Milwaukee, Paul Moll tor
coUectoo a single and triple and
stole home to lead Milwaukee to Its
fifth victory In seven games.
Calllornla lost for only th~ second
time In 11 games. Rookie Juan
Nieves, 1·1, earned his first major
league victory , and Dan Plesac
earned his first major league save.
Don Sutton, 03, failed In his filth try
this sroson tor his 200th career
victory .
Indhms 7, White Sox~
At Dllcago, Tony Bema:zard and

Steve Buechele and made It 6-0 In
the s'ixth on "!~·scoring doubles by
The Yankees' biggest scoring ' Fletcher and Pete O'Brien.
threat came In t~ fourth. They had
Shirley, who walked a .career·
ruMers on second and third with high nine batters, was rellevro in
two out, but Willie Randolph filed t~ sixth bY left-bander Tommy
out to right fielder Pete Incavtglla John making his first Yankee
to end t~ Inning.
appe~ranoe slnoe Aug. :M, 1982.
"It's like a kid's dream to pitch In John lasted 21'31nnJngsandylelded
Yankee stadium," Correa said. "I Slaught's sixth home run &lt;1 the
. went out there and did my job season.
·
because Bobby Valentine has given
In ot~r games Friday, Kansas
me a lot &lt;1 confidence and given me City whitewas~d Baltimore 5.0,
the ball."
Milwaukee downed Calllomla 54,
Scott Fletcher- obtained in the Cleveland got past Chicago 7-51n 10
same trade as Correa -drove In
lnnlngs, Oakland stopped Boston
two runs with a double in the second 4-1, Minnesota crus~ DetroillO·l,
Inning oft loser Bob Shirley, 0-2.
and Seattle nlpped Toronto 3-2tn 11
Fletcher had two doubles and three
lnnlngs.
RBI.
Royals~. Orioles o
Texas scored twice In the third on
At Kansas City, Mo., George
RBI singles by Don Slaught and
Brett and Frank White hit back-to·

By BILL WOlLE
UPI Sport, Writer
·
Ed Correa's dream come true
was a nlghtmare for the New .York
Yankees.
Correa, at 2ll the youl)&amp;est player
In the&lt; major leagues, often had
thoughts about pitching In Yankee
Stadium. Friday night he made the
most of his first chanoe.
The right-hander, who until
Tuesday was a teenager, stopped
the Yankees 7.0 on three hits tor his
first major league shutout. Correa,
2·2, struck out nine and walked five.
"Last year, he told me he was
ready to pitch In the major
leagues," Texas manager Bobby
Valentine said ot Correa, who was
obtained from the Chicago White
Sox on Nov. 25. "This year he told
me he was ready to win. That's a

and Jimmy Caldwell each singled.
The sharp-hitting Southern team
jllunded out ten hits, led by Kelley
Gmeser' s 3-for4 nlght that Included
a ~·tple; Scott Wickline with two
singles, Frel.'man a single, Amburgey a single, John Riffle two
singles, and Ryan Oliver a single.
Eastern plays Zan e Trace (7-12 1
at Nelsonville-York in .the Class
"A" sec tional Monday, hosts Nor th
Gallla In a crucial SVAC doubleheader on Wednesday, then hosts
Kyger Crrek the !ollowlng week.
Sout~rn hosts non-teague Alexander Tuesday, plays Southwestern back-to-hack Wednesday and
Thursday In an SVAC game and
first round tournament play, then
hosts Symmes Va lley In a doubleheader on Friday.

mature statement coming lrom a

20- year-old. "

Dlris Banoo de livered RBI singles
In the top of t~ lOth to Uti
Cleveland. Ernie Camacho, despite
alloWing a run-scoring single tn the
bottom ot the nlnth to Jerry
Hairston, wrn his first decision. ·
Dave Schmidt, 0·1, was the loser.
A's 4, Red Sox I
At Bosfon, J ose Canseco, Dave
Klngman and Bruce SoqJte ho·
meroo and Joaquin Andujar fired a
five-hitter for Oakland . Andujar,
3-1, walked one and stru ck out three
In recording his first AL m mplrte
game. AI Nipper, 2-3, was the loser.
Klngman has lO home rurL~ at
Fenway Park in 15 games.
Twins 10, 11gel'!l I
At Detroit, KirbY Puckett ha d
three hit s, Including his major
league leading lOth home run. and
Randy Bush added a IIMJ- run triple

to power Minnesota. Mike Smith·
son, 3-2. pitched a six-hitter,
striking rut seven and walking ooe.
StPVe wmba rclozzt also homerro
oft loser Jack Morris. 3-3, who has ·
sun·endered 12 homers In 36 2·3
Innings.
Marinel'!l 3, Blue Jays 2
At Toronto, AI Cowens' IIMJ· out
hoS&lt;.&gt;s-loaded single In I~ top oft~
lll h scored Danny Tarta buU wlth
the winning run as Seattle halted a
six-game losing streak. Pete Ladd
pitched tlw final 2 1 ~.1 innings to
Improve to 2-1. Ma rk Eichhqm , 2-2,
took the loss.

r-----------,
friday's
linescores
AnM'rirUI, I.RRCUP
Oslo.kond ftlll 202 000 - I 7 1

100 !I'll ooe

Bu!;ton

-

I 50

All&lt;lu)&lt;Jr and Bart.&gt;. Nl f~lPr , Ll:lllar tl!t,
C'rawfurd t9• ancl IA~lm~n - W-Andu)ar
tl-l r l.- ;\IPIJ•r t2 .1 r HJt\-(J;J kWnd ,

Can!'.('l"{r ri r. Klnsl'l'nal'l r.lr . Bochlr 121 .
.JI%2 00% 100 - 1 9 I

T'"'as

.110110)()110 - 0 3 0
Corn·a ;, nd Sl;rur;:hl. Shlrlr~· - .John 1fi t.
l ~ r ~IY'tll t!J1 ~ nd Hfl.&lt;o!ii 'Y W -C'rJI"r!'~ r2·21

, . Willi'S

L- Shiill) r02• II R- Tr'l.as. SiaLI,I!ht 161

Logan
defets
Meigs,

fr.dtland 001) Wl 000 - ~ ' 1
J\o!lllln ..DdO 1011
l 50

ooe -

Amlu )ar and &amp;rtl'. ,'\ l ~ · r . I..()IJar rllr,
C:ra•donl 19• .md C1drtlan . W-AnduJM •
1.- Nlp JI •r r2-.1r HR.•-&lt;kr klllnd ,
1i • K u~mat1 1 ~1 . Bochr£&gt; 12 1.

•llr

(';·n ~

10 to 7 .

,\ lnl\'\t IJ I 010 010 - 10 I '~ 1
Oct rot tMll 001 WJ - _ L 6 ~
Smtth.~on ,,nrl Salas M orri~. n•IY' 121,
LaPoint 1 ~ 1. O'Nf'al 181 and l'arTl'ill,
H&lt;JrpPr 1'. - Smi!h.'oOtl 1.1-21 1..-Morrls
r.l-:11 lflb-Mi nJY-sotct. f' uri:rtr 1Hir !..om
ha rdo?Y.l 2,
r

111. in nin~&lt;:s•
SeUI 001(110 000 01 -liO ll
Trnt 010 tlOO 001 00 - t.. ! 1
Wlk:ux. ' 'ounl( 1'11 . Ar&gt;st •91, Gurttl'mliln

.

LOGAN - The state's class AAA
fourth-ranked (UPI I Logan Chief.
tatns overcame a tate Meigs
bur-run lead bY smring seven runs
In t~ sixth inning and defeat the
Marauders, 10-7, ~re Friday In
non-league baseball action .
The upset-minded Marauders,
wtv had a tour-game winning
streak coming Into the game,
sq&gt;red sevm runs in the first tour
lnnlngs, and had a 7-3 lead until
wgan eruptoo with t!Pir big sixth.
The Dllets bunched live hits
around two walks and three costly
Meigs errors in the decisive sixth.
With the win, wgan goes to 174 on
t~ year while Meigs falls to 12-8-1
overall. Meigs is 8-2-lln the TVC.
Meigs oothlt the Chleftalns,14-12,
as Mark Corbitt had three singles,
Mike Bartrum a single and double,
Rodd Harrison and Dave Hen·
dticks two singles each, Donnie
~ker hit his fourth home run of
the season and Chris Kennedy,
Sliawn Baker, Rick Wise, and Jeff
Nelson had ooe single apteoe.
Talentoo catcher Eric Veldt had
a single and double tor Logan whlle
D.J. Conrad had a home run. Kelly
Wolfe, Jose Medina, and Saunders ·
eaeh had two singles.
;Baker started tor Meigs before ,
giving way to Wise In the sixth.
COmtined, they tanned seVen and
walked three. Moore, Cremeans, .
and Shawn HannJng all .hurled tor
Logan . Moore started, Cremeans
relieved in the third, and Hannlng
lllrted two scoreless lnnil1gs to pick
UR t~ win. They struck oot nlne and
walked tour.
Meigs travels to Miller Monday to
wrap up 1VC league play. Logan
played Gallipolis a doubleheader
yeste rday (Saturday) .

Strikers slip by
Force in playoffs
BLOOMINGTON, Minn . (UP! )
-Thompson Usyian scored at,2: ffi
of overtime to complete a hat trick
and lead the Minnesota Strikers to a
54 victory over the Cleveland
Foroe In the semlllnal round of the
MlSL playofls.
The Strikers, who remain un·
beaten In nlne home playoff games,
hold a 2-1 lead and can clinch the
best-of·llve series in Game 4
Sunday at the Met Center.
Minnesota's Gary Etherington
stole the ball, dribbled around two
defenders and fed to Usy!an who
blasted a shot through Cleveland
goalie Chris Vaccaro's legs for the
game winner.
The goal that capped Usylan's
first hat trick ot t~ season came
befOre 10,:.54 fans, the largest
playdt crolll:l In t~ Strikers'
two-year history.
The score seesawed through
regulation . The Strikers scored first
on .Jan Goossens' eighth goal of the
playdfs at 5:27 of the first quarter
1
on an assist from Usytan.
1
Goossms Is the leading goal 1
scorer In t~ playdfs, Including ·
three PJ~r-play goals.
·
The Force aJ\s'M'red 43 seconds '
Into t~ second quarter oo a goal by ,
Alex Tarmczl, assisted by Andy ·
Chapman.
Minnesota took a 2-1 lead on
David Byrne's goal at 3:59 ot the ·
third quarter and Cleveland tied t~ ·
game 2-2m All Kazemalnl's goalal ·
10:28.
Each team scored two goals In ·
t~ ilurth quarter. Usyian scored
his first and second goals ot the
game at 8:22 and 10:43, sandwichIng a goal bY Cleveland's Benny
Dargoe at 9:33. The Force sent the
.ilame into overtlnne on Kal Haasld·
vi's goal at 12:46, lying the gilll!e 4-

4.
Minnesota goalie Tino Lettieri ·
faced :rl stvts and made 12 saves:
whlle Cleveland's Vaccaro con-,
fronted 45 shots and made a&gt; saves. ,
f

19 t,

t~ l

l..atld

a nd

Ki' ~ I'!W '\' ;

F~ k'hhorn

•~ 1.

M~nlnw .

W- La dd t2·lr

L-

1221 . H R.~ - Sr·a H ~. TartatJJ II
!l r: Toronto. llar!k'ld 1~1 .

Reg. 1.69, NM-814. FR-12

&amp;Volt

•

or All Air Cotndiitio.ningl
Fuses, Reg. u9

Motorcycle
BaHeries
Sale from 9.95, Reg.t&lt;om 12.95

Purolator·

1.88

6.85

' ' "'

Choice

49~fte&lt;m"'s50c
malt in rebate

STP Oil Treatm·e nt, m1s

America's best selling oil treatment.

lnterdynamics
AC Recharge Kit
Aeg.8.9S. #ACDS

or STP Gas Treatment, mso
Saves gas by keeping carburetors clean.

Sale 99e, Reg. 1.39.11m1! 2

10W30 Motor Oil :

Sadonal I.e~!'

Hou.&lt;tOn 1!0 too m -a • o
Morl:n'l

Pa rrrn •!:I t ~ nd 1-'ll~l'rald W- Kncwr
1:'1-UI l.-Yourrnns IU- .l • . HH - Montrral.
l..aw r21 .
Adanta .120 010 1.. - 1 II I
Phlla 100 0011000 - L 53
PalrnT and \'lr¢1 ; Carlton. StPiolodr1 6r.
Ru1· k~ ·r &lt;1 '· &amp;odtrn&lt;lan ,(j ~nd D&lt;rullon .W-

S.OOott

54.88.
Marine aattery #6-24M
The battlfy designed to start your
~~ lnsta~tly ... no matter what size.

1

Palm•r 12 11. 1_- Carlton •l-11 .

All Motorcycle
Helmets

,..,.,.,. \'rk 1121100 ldl - 11.

•u.

Reg. from 24.95

L-Cul~dt.'iOn

•

..

'

Everyday
•
LowPrice
Motorcycle Shields
ctur or smoke, #21-4835, 21-48-40

Designed spectncally tor epplications
mfr's rebett

Sale

tO:I I.

P1t.o1trra: 1110 1M 0 - I 1 0
s.nD(o IXKl ooo 001 - u a
Bll'k"rl: l. f ~nt~ t8L Wlnn rlh if'ld

3 49

such 11 Ironing motors. running lights
•nd RV's. Reg. 69.88, #6-27DC

At1er25e

~~

{'nt.Tint :M0000t50 - 1 JijJ
frrn..lll ~t . M&lt;'fAA·£'11rlil , 01'\'"f;(O !lit Jl'ld
Carlc-r. O•.dlk'k.J;o n. Pn•"f' 17 1. franro
Poll 'f"t" I!Jr Hml Dial. W- Frrnand" ~ r,liJI.

From 19.95

Reg.59.88.
#6-240C
Deep Cycle BaHeries

0

Srrtllh i!h and 1\si!IJo,•: ¥ouman.&lt;;, ROI'Y 171.

Pluas.set
Reg.3'l9

Aeg29.95, #UIL
Lawn &amp; Garden Battery

ou - u

11)1(10]

Knl'piJ'r . Kf'rfpkl 111. Calhoun 1'91, D.

ND Motorcycle

25.95
50.88Reg
55 -88
65.88

¢;

~

2.88

applications.
Reg. 2.99, limit 2

Reg. 94c. limit t 2

QUAKER
STATE

3.00 mall In rebale on 12 volt ba1ttf'lel

For most domestic

110 tnnlngs,
JliU 0000 1:12 - 11U
{11it'l KJI!l!CII 001 D - 5_ ! t
Hraton. Ea~ll'f" /y rfi •. Cam&lt;~rho 19 t alld
AJIM&lt;;On . IJ&lt;lnti"r: llanni~ l rr. ~· L'&gt;Cfl Hil .
J;tmf'!i lfll . Schmidt nn•. [MwJ,ry 110. IIJ'Id
H ill
~k1nnr r
W- Camarho t l 01
L-..'X-hmldl 10·1• lin- flrlril~ . ll ulf' l l •I,

CM

Oil Filters

Quaker State

lnterdynamics
AC leak Detector
Reg. 2.49. #FRL13. FRl51 5

F:k' hhorn
Oradlry

1 ~11 ,

Calli IIDIMII Im- ·ilO
Mlwkr IOO IIIJJI!tlx - S ~ 0
Sutlon. RryO!•n 111 iUid Milk&gt;r. Nk"WS ,
Pk:s.ar- 111 and Moort&gt;. W-NK&gt;v~ n -I t. 1.SI.rnon t!l-3• . HR-Mllw3uKrr, Moorr fir

7.95

lnterdynamics
Coldshot Freon

Clasrey.

l.on:lon t il t and WhJn,

J\:'fla ; Dr-~ l'fd:y. S1cUlard ii r, MeC\IIl'n
•9• &lt;1nd Krnrtxly W-Bk- ~ ..:111 0 ·0• l.Dravrrl) 12-:!1

OOGODOIIO - t li O

St~

lA . JlltUGOih - 311 1
Tudor , Ow~· t~l. Worrrll 111 and
l..:wa llll'fl'. Hruth: Rruss, Nk'drnfut,- 111.
HCM·('l l t'J t and Trr\'lno. W-Rnr ~ rl- 01.

valid with

,,,

I.-Tudor ,,HI. HR-l.ai An,l'('h Mar.;l\aD
Chic~ 100 Ill I ..00 - I tt t
SanFm MO 'lll IJII -1. ~ I

--.

Trout , Frat.kor 61 , Krou)lh 16•, Balil'f (i 1

64

'"·-··--·

r..ll - .. ..... ..

Your

Choice

1.49

¢

Gumout Carburetor/
Fuel System Cleaner

Foamy Engine Brite, •Fea1 .
Motor flush, •MF-2
liquid Wrench, " .... m -12

.

11 -21

Atteo 25e
mtr's rebate

Gumout Carburetor Cleaner

Resistor Sparlc Plugs

13 oz. bOttle, .11!7450

Sale.89e,_Reg. t.t9. timit 16

21.00

Titeseal Undercoating #T16·16

99¢

7 95.Everyday

Buy 3for2.00rebale·
12 oz. bOUle. 117518

Champion

Westley's Bleche White, ·

Motor Medic, rsoz. #M19-15

Md J. Davis. l~llf..I PI . Las ll'v r6 t
Robtru.on 17•. M [)avl&lt;&gt; tit . Golf dr and
Mf'Mn W -Kmu~ 12-l t L - M Da vl~

Armorall Protectant

1.08
1.98
2 88
88
8 88

4 oz. Reg.1.75, #5780113040

Save over 25%

Tune-up Kits

From

Reg. lrom 3.95

Alle&lt;mt&lt;st .OO
mall in rebale

16 oz. Sale 3.88, Reg. 5.98. #5782110160

Oil Filters
Original Equipment Quality
Reg. 3.95

... ... . .

c •oJo

Ignition Points

Save1 .00

Reg. from 4.95

Air Filters
Original Equipment Quality
Reg.4.95

•

From

IGfrlnlOH Hl~l

I - 11

Cherry Bomb
Hi-Performance

Reg. 14.95

8mm Wire Sets
over 7.00 ott

Reg.26.95

~.OOaH
CamKtts
Over

10 • 88
19.88 t~g-!· 88
10.00att

High Perfor·
Coils
lh"!~~~~'10.00

29.88

. 39.95 #140001

Mini Car Clocks

#MC-4

2.88

For examr,le :

3 95

t3 x 5. Reg. rom 32.95.
1121·0350

•

Afte&lt;mf&lt;s2 .00

&amp;Rotors

Reg. from 4.95

Spark Plugs
Reg.6.95 a set of 4

Al1e&lt;mf&lt; 's4.00

3 95
4 95
•

Clocks&amp;
Compass Combo
#C0·3

From37.95
landau Wheels

•
aseto14

4.88

For examr,le:

14 x6, Reg. rom42 .95.
#t7-0460

mall in rebate

29.95

1.88

Monte Carlo
Wheels

' J ) 20

From

Save"on Big Time Clocks

•

•

Gear&amp;Chain
.1rom39.95

2 95
3 95

64 oz. refill. Sale 12.88, Reg. 14.95. #10640

1.99

From39.95
Starters

Wax

II oz. Reg. 3.n . N2661

Everyday Low Pri(;e

Kit liquid Wax

From39.95
Alternators

Everydav Low Price

Kit Chrome· Polish

7 oz. Reg, 1.39, #2701

Evtryd•y Low Pnce

17.00 oft

PadsorReJmanul~cllut~td

4.88
2.88'

Mother's
California
Gold Wax
Rey.&amp;.ea. •5500
Mother's Mag
&amp;Aluminum
Polish
Reg. 3.95. #5100

209 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh.

AM:FMStereoCassette
with Auto Re11erse ·

38 88
•

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

High Power AM FM
Stereo Casserte

Store hours 8:30a.m. t&gt; 8:00p.m. Monday throul#l Frld•v.
' 8:30a.m. ID 6:00p.m. Saturday end 10:00 •.m. t&gt; 5:00p.m. Sundey

l)ual Cone Door
MounrSet

...._..,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioi..._ _ ___,

Roq

13 9S . • SK4~0

\ rrri l tl , 19JG

Team
Casey's .
PharmaC'v Nor1 h

1"1 .._
. ~e2'

'

Jhl-1
\hi
1 ~-.tl

Ui
... 1~ .
IIR
Jn5

....

Jr fff"f"S "Inl ck. J n~ X. r:-.:('
R&lt;'dman Inn .. .. .

.

·

EARL\'

•

84.95

·

BPtzlng, Dcobb lc Thomas. -l~.
Team Game - Ca.'&gt;~' ·s. 6.''11; Powell' s
SUper Valu, 642; Jf&gt;ltf'l"'i TNcktnJr, PharrrnC\· ·
North. 616; Tt'am Srrif'S - Ca~~··~. Hni: ·
Powell's Supt'T" Valu. 179.1: Pharman Nrn1h

.

52 95

~

.

Ind. Game - Flf-\wlv Rouii h. \~: .Juvn .•
Ha ll . 185: Laurif' Bf'l&lt;'l l'l g. 180: Ind. Sr1·1(,:' Brvf:'rly Roush. ~)2: Fnn:1Taybr. &lt;(IJ; LJurir·

··

WEU~ E}; 0,\ l"

MlXED I. E.'\G t JE
~lar ch

26, 1986

TEA~t
Ea ~l£''!1 Club.. .

PTS
. .. 58

Tony's Carry Out . ... ......... ........ .... ~ .')
1Smlt h-NeJsan Mutor-... ... .... .... .... .... .... ..fil

Middleport Lunch Room .... ..
Ati
Jim 's Gulf.. ..
....... ....... .. .. 41
Sh ammy 's &amp;

7-:n .. .......... .. ........... .. :SA

TEAM HI GH
19~ .

~E RI ES:

Ton v·~

.

C trn •
.

H! ( ;JI GA ME: Tony ' s Carry Out.

lll fi H SE R n -:s: Carolyn Rach nt•r ,
Smith. 5111: Bob Hf:'n &amp;J PV &lt;88·

Mar lene Wilson, 475.

·

'

.IND. HI GH GAME : Larry Du ~an, 213;
Ca r olyn Bachnf'r :))9; Betty Smith, 19R.

Charles Smt i h. 194.

'

OO'h ...

1-lutt!'i.

1m .

15.00 off
Req 99 95. IIS R305

:-.f fft~

l.a llery H11lr 1\ rl" ..

Reg 69 95 . • SR36

or I( it Carpet Cleaner

99¢

Every drLow Price·

From 1 4 . 9 5
Fuel Pumps

\"

SJr ~· Jinr ·

#CC·2 · - - - -

Reg . 49.95. 11'SRJOO

lralce

10 oz. Reg. 2.89. 1!12665
t2oz. Reg. 2.49, 112755

19S5

From
WaterPUm.PS.

~ONU\

Powt&gt;JI's Sup("! \',•lu ..
J &amp; T Su ppiiC'~ .

Over11.00ofl

~;~

Locai bowling

Deluxe Car Cloc

AMIFM Stereo Cassette

From 8 . 8 8
Midst ate Disc Brake

POINT PLEASANT - Brad
Min ton, site director for the shot
doctor ba sketball ca mp, has announced tbat t~ Point Pleasant
High School will host a camp June
16-J une 18.
The camp consists of 20 ho~rs of
special ized shcoting instruction.
Eac h ca mper receives a written
shoot ing evaluation and extensive
In structio n on mental cybernetics
necessary to become a good .
shooter. Maximum of 52 campers ·
wUI be accepted .
For luri~r Informa tion and a
camp brochu re. contact : Bri an
BUUngs at the city building, 675-2'lli0
or Brad Minton. site director,
675-4255.

Whak')' 's .UH'(I Cu·., ,\. P:rrl .&lt;. ...
Robbins &amp; Mn •r..

--. Save on Sparkomatic

Your
Choice

Kit Paste

15.88~9·~5

7mm Wire Sets
over 4.00 oft

Distributpr Caps From

4
•
mail in rebale
32 oz. refill, Sale6.88, Reg. 8.95. #10320

•

Reg. from 3.95

2 95
2.95

mport Applications

CAP I ROTOR
• -

E~gle Headers

low Price

Monroe Hose Kits #AKta

Distributor Caps From
Save over 25%

8 OZ. Reg. 2.98. #577011t!MlO
•

1

Savings From lapco·
Save up to 25°/o

49.88::~5

Air Shocks Reg. 2s.9s

PIJig Sockets 518 or t3116
Reg. 1.49

20 oz. Reg. 2.29, #500

Point Pleasant to
host shooting camp

�Page-C-6~The

.....

-'""~.

_

A.VDUCM' I.EACi\lE
Hy Unled

By MICHAEL BUR,NS

Mil. MurphJ'. At! , PaJ'kt1', C'ln lllld Schmldl.

....

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Minn. 10:

ransrco. O..lt. 7: Joyrer. Cal. Kltt k'. &lt;111.
and SlaURIII, Trx, ti.
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NBik&gt;M I U'ai:Ur - Ra,.v.Pitt 'Zl : MarshaU ,
LA, and ~ tunldl , Phil, :D; C'liM('f, N\' . !l ;
Rrook.S. Mtl, and U&gt;onard, sr 17.
Amrrkan Ll'll,gut• - Otn.....,"'l. Oak . :1.1 :
DcN· nlnt~ . Oil !2: Pud1Pit. Mint!. 2.1 ,

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r h prl.
11 J\ .3!17

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liS!; Slan«i \'C'Irran rtr-handrr Tommy

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calk&gt;d up rili:hl- hand£or Mlk«' Arm.&lt;;trons
rrom COlu mbu s or thl' lntrrnatloMilraj!\1('.
St&gt;attlr - Plll«'d r12'f1t · handrd rf'lk'\'rr
F.d wlll Nu!'f'z on rtw&gt; ~ay dlsablfil list
Oom dl'lt old musclE' In r1ght shooldrr \ and
IJ.lll' h a~ Lhl&gt; ctlnll'a&lt;'l of r1ght ·handrd
~lrht&gt;t · J l•rry Reftl !rom Calgary ol 11'1'
Paclfk'CoastlRague !MAl.

18 6.1 u '2'1 .349
XI !fi Ull'l .ll'l
11 n 11 24 .3'11

The Sunday Tirnea-Sentinei- Page-C-7

Enroule has belli mile al Scioto DoWll8

The Mets' lead oolgro toS.21n the dfioslng pitcher Mark Davis, 1-2, to
Ba;Jey. Mall Keough, 2·1, pitched
eighth. Carter was sale and went to score Bob Demler and Thad
me Inning for the victory.
second on John Franro's throwing
error, and Strwaberry walked.
LYNE CENTER SOIFJIUU:
Woe!&lt; d Moy 4, 1111111
Howard Jolm~n·s double drove In
PII()L
Carter, and Roger McDowell
=~~?:ASIV~M Roc. ................. .. .. .. .......
12·3 p.m. Open Swim
follwed with a single to knock In
•..,.8 p.m. 1l'lift' Rec. .... ..... ... . .... :...... ........ 7'...1~-8
........ &amp;8 p.m. College Swim
: ~~~ u.m. Earl y Bird SWim
Strawberry and JolDson.
May 5-0~~tro ............ .. .......
.......... .... .. . · tUI·t:m pm. Fttn&lt;'ls Swim
In the Reds' eighth, with McDoClosed
well pitching, Buddy Bell began tbe
May 6-&gt;1! p.m. rut"!!" R«- . ..
...,..
12 :ll·t;i ::~: g'1~~ ~J:::
rally by scoring ·from first when · May !-01! p.m. College Reo..
. ... .. 1 t5·H:t5 a.m. Earty B~d Swim
Foster misplayed Eddie Milner's
12 : :1 1-t : ~) p. m. F ttn&lt;'s Swtm
6-8 p. m. Coll('l:{e Swlm
single, making It 8-3. Ron Oester
May 8-01! p.m. College Rl"c...
. .. ......... 6·8 p.m. CoJIL~•· Swim
singled, Milner h:lldlng at third,
• ••
~R
... . 7: 15-8:15 .1.m. Ea rly B~d Swbn
May~= p.m. v yo• ec......
~· 1 ~ m Fttr&lt;S&gt; Swim
12 :.~
then Max Venable doubled home
:wti p. m OpenSwim
Mllner, closing tre gap to 8-4.
May ID- !·3 p.m. Opm Rec. ....
.. ............. ~:3 P~ · gve:: ~l:::
Davis followed with a single to
May 11-12·3 p.m. Opm Roc... .
··· ................... . .... . \23 p.
,._I
knock In Oester and Venable.
&amp;s p.m. O&gt;Jiege Rl"c ..... liom. A&amp;t.i;.!C ti~enOI
... fi.8 p.m. 0 """ • m
making it 8-6. CollCepcion then
Mon., May 5-Redwomt&gt;n SoftbaU V!l. Morehrod S ate Unlvffslly 12:00 p.m.ldoublclleadrr.
singlEd , setting tlr stage for ;:::::::::====~~=~=~==========
Omsco's oattle with Parker.

•

The 4-year-old raced last to the
Bruce Riegle
got her ootskle. She grabbed the
lead at the mldstretch and pulled
way for a length and three quar ters
victory In 1:57 1-5, more than two
seconds faster than'!lny other race
rnthe (I'Ogram on a chllly night.

COLUMBUS, aJio (UP!) ~
Enroute, ooe of the nation's top
flllles, paced the best rnUe of the
- night Friday night as she made her
season debut In !he featured race
fOr fillies and mares at Scioto
Downs.

~arter before driver

011 C••IIIH..II Tl
fmltl

o..n,, ,,

y, II

RIVER CITY
FARM SUPPLY

cr

GAWPOllS

446-2985

I A.M. TO 6 P.M. MONDAY
· - THIU SATURAY
-

National League
Bob Knepper overcame the cold
ri Montreal Friday to remain me of

Ire hottest pitchers In baseball.
"You always like the complete
games, but with cold weather llke
tha t, I was happy to be In the
clubhouse," said Knepper, wiD
worked s!J! Innings In winds gusting
up to 50 mph to lead the Houston
Astros to a 6-3 victory ()Jer the
EX]XIs and recome the first fivegame winner In tre National
League.

PREPARE FOR P~T.SEASON TOURNAMEIVI' -

,

Gallla

· : Acaderrly IUgh School's Blue Devils baseball team (6-16) Is pn!plrilg
: lor the 1lli88 Cl888 AA Sectional Toumament llti week. 'l1le GaDians
:. complete SoulheiUIIem Ohio League play at Logan Tuesday. Above,

Rookie Mike Bielecki and too
relievers combined on a four- hitter
and Tony Pena's single tooched off
a four-run seventhlnnlngtolead the
Pirates . The victory was Bielecki's
second of the }t'ar witmut a loss.
Winn pitched 11·3 Innings for his
second save,
Dodgers 3, Carolnals 2
Mike Marshall drilled a too· run
homer and Tom Nledenfuer
stopped a S«;Venth-lnnlng Cardinals
rally, helping tre Do~ers to their
sslxth straight victory: 1'b2 Cardl·
nals have lost four straight games
and ll of trelr last 12. Cubs6, Giants
5
Shawon Dunston's two-run dou·
bl e highlighted a four·run s""enth
inning and paced the Cubs. Dun- ·
stan, who rapped four hits, doubled

Jmeeiloc, left to rllht are Gary Hanlllon, Nick lloeler, Marv Pullos,
Sean Loag, Todd Casey and Rob YDUIIC- Bear - Scatt Miler, Tom
Meadows, Mike Wlcldlne, Joel Spmcer, Jeff Alldoaon •. Mille Bolide,
Todd Slone, Scat! Bailey 111d Brian MeCIII'Iey.

TEH FOR UPCOMING DISCOUNT PROGRAM
IAS1'EI MIX COMPLETE DAIRY FEEDS, CON·
AND SOYBEAN MEAL.
CALL OR STOP IN AND ASK FOR DETAILS!

~Rinky-Dink champs honored, skills.
:competition concludes 1985-86 season

Pirates 4, Padres 0

VANS-VANS-VANS
VANSII- WE'VE GOT 'EM - NEW &amp; USED
IF WE DONT HAVE WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR, LET US KNOWN - WE CAN GET IT.
ANY COMBINATION OF OPTIONS AVAILABLE ·
COME IN &amp; LET US QUOTE YOU A PRICE
ON WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FORI

1- )

Rlnky Dink
Basketball League champions
:were re::ognlzed last week during
the anrrual Gallipolis Youth Basketboll Sktlls Cbmpetltlon, held at the

:, GALUPOlJS -

'nna M)WS and Mand)o Murray, rll'd b llr.&lt;t 11nd

Kim Bk.l::m:&gt;r.
IUoclr. .lumptn
FOUJml

GAllS gym.

Teams receiving medals and
ribbons were the Sonlcs, 9-0 In the
boys sixth grade; Buckeyes, 9-0 In
the lxlys ntth grade; Hawks and tre
·Jazz, tied at 6-2 In the boys fourth
grade and the Nuggets, 8-0 In the
girls league.
Memrers rt t re G!HS oosketball
coaching staff oonductoo skills
competitions.
Results were:

"SERVICE TO THE TAl-COUNTY AREA"

• I

t

·

.

-....

POUR'11t GRADERS
llfld Ryan Row. all fkod IlK srmnd.

I'IFnl GIWIEIIS
Nathlln Mlllrf , llniMd Sam Ham ilton.

SIX'm GRADE
Rrlan Hu r1. f!r.; t and Robtr! Devk'.
IGlrtl l

1'\na My('n . first: Kim Bloomrr, Mandy Mu!Ttly
und JUichl"IIIOWfiL

81X111 GRADERS
Sro\1 Jlvldm 11nd Ryan You rtr.fln;l ltk•t liJld F' J
H.a snwll.
tGirtl )
8lld
Myers.

nna

WettkH ... l.v~¥
POI' R111 GllADDlS
, • Mlkr DonNioll)' , Rod You~ and Ja!!On ( · ~t~tor. Ht-d
tor hnt and John a.rr.
•
f1fTII G~KS
~ • ':'Jason~ . first and Mlkr t:a&lt;&gt;hUS.
•~
Ka111 GR.-\DER.S
. : ~an Yoo111. tim 1111d r . J . Ha111rwr&gt;11.

11
f ' •

"CAll FOI Utm QUOTES"

JamK&gt; 8 Uf('hum, tln l: Man DortRally. JOf' Bar1'

Sam Ha mllron ntSI, Nathan Ml ik'r.

r~

.

Mandy M urTay and Ki m Bloorlrr .

f10)'CI Evans and John Barr. first tllf' t .Jamlfo
Burcham .MWnd.
f1IITH GRADER.s

Kim 13k:ok&gt;r,

•

Camp will be ~ld June 9-131Drboys
and girls grades 4-7. Cbntact Ol~h
Oslx&gt;me for ftlll detaUs.

sevm weeks from 10 a.m. ttlll p.m.
each weekday.
The Gallipolis Area Basketball

UUIQ&amp;ADERS
Stoll Jlvldi:'n, 111'81 and F. J . HaJ!Wr ll .
CGW&amp;I

fUUtml GK.WDR!

REEDSVILLE - A fishing
derby will be held Saturday, May
10, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., at Forked
Run State Park. The derby w!ll be
open to all ages and no registration
is required. Prizes wlll be awarded
In the different age categories and
refreshments wlll be available.
Flshennen are remlnlled that they
must have a valid Ohio fishing ·
license.

oamms

BULK SERVICE

CAN SEIYE All YOUI GIINDING IIEEDS
.YIIG GlliN
llstet'

Mike- 0o111'18ll,y mnd Hod You111. ftr.;t: Rod YOU!ijl
and Jason Castor. ll«&lt;lor M'Ctlnd.
.
FIFI'II Glt\DEIIH
Sam Hamllton.llrsl and Nathan Mll l'r .

( Sinqta.d~ . . ~

.......

~ .J ] ~l

~- rt'r, (1

Forked Run Park
fishing derby May 10

Tolfd:t 11.1 Columbus
Ma!JW' at s~' l'al'U W

IJ 2.1 "ll!l

' Burlf!n. C1
·t o:tl)'. Bait

10 10 500
B !l 4il

·~-·~~ ~

. I IJIX'unvu~ -

l amt'8 u c h lf'llltl h1111 pl.t&amp;J•f'd ) l'lt !YIIHW

Ra~ · .

W L Ptt . GB
12 ~ ~ 14 s i.11
"'!

Tok&gt;OO J. Tldc'\l.•atcr 2

llattln,c

Schmdt . r

ldl\llatlon In pam.-

Pawtuckcl dh n
Hlrtlmonr:l •A tit
llt.rwatcr 1r'-o'\' ·r\ I. 1
lotu m b.Js 1!\·v i\ l. t
Maine- tCk•J
Rocht'SII'f tB.1h
S) rdcust• rTor •
Toll'OO IM!nt

Leaders

.......

Anwtican Lra~t·- Camaero. G •. and
MOon•, Cal£: llforrlitno:k&gt;z. [);&gt;!,a nd Ri i&amp;f'TTI,
N'l , !i; /Ui st•. l ~i \ 1 , Ht.M't•ll , Otlk .JU1d .l&lt;!mt-s.

L''TERNATJO!'Ii.U.U::.-\G UE

5I Lool' &lt;II Lei; An~ k&gt; '
Pilt ~t.l f'IO:h at San Dil'RQ

on .11 vta tr

--

Ni!1klnal Lf'a,l(l.l&lt;' - Smith. All . ll . Wd:h.
LA 37. ~1 1 . Hou .31: r.n.lCi&gt;n, ~''!'. Slf&gt;w.
SD. and Vtllm1tll'la . LA .11 .
,\rn(&gt;rlcan 1..1'~1'- Rijo. Oak . .fl : Hurst,
hos. 41: lk' ITlf'l\~ . lb.ll: ll ij.lu!T'.J , M\1. Jli :
1-loni ~. Drl . \'bL1 . Minn. ll lld Will , ('a\, Jl
Saww
l'utiurwtll .l'ri,l'\1(' - Smith. Uou , tt Balll'l',
Chi. Goss.~gr, ~ 1 1, and Orosro. NY , ~ ;
lll'dros~ n . Pl'l~ . Ml nron. SF'. Nlrdt:-nluPt ,
l A and Wori'('U , SIL J

I Map lAo~·

1\llMta a t PhUadrlphla
~N \'01·k a! CIJI('InnMJ
Hou~ton"' Montn'al
C1lk·11110 a1 San Franrtsro. 2

• Ill~

~t,

IL results

l.oo An,lt•lrs .1 St l.oub 2
(llk'a£0 "'· San F'ranclsm 1

su.,.·,

Oak

Od . ~

"'rldl.f'w Ht'f!Uiu;
llruslfln li. MIA111l'i!11
Allan Ia i. P hlbdt•lphlot l
~No· YCYk R f'inrinnal i j
P1tt.~butJ:h ~ -S an

liall S.

lla1. 11/ld IPibrandt. KC ~ -0:
1'••t•lw pl!chf't-s tk'd wit h J \'k'forlrs.
f..&amp;m'd ~n 1\ VlT&amp;l'f'
tAaso'&lt;l on 1 lnnln11: x nun'b'r 11 j!llmt&gt;s
C'il&lt;'h tram hu s ~ nyro t
Na llonal IA'al.'\ll' - TI!XIS. Mtl. 1.:!'1.
((x){k&gt;n. r\"'1:". l.li: Kli(&gt;Jl~r. Hoo, and \\ alk.
I'm . 1.31 : R{ltji\&lt;:On. r tn. 1 :1i
Ar'l)('ric'an Ll'llf..'\l l' - Eil.'hlklrn, Tor. 0 Rl .
IA'Onard. KC I). !(I; Haas. Oak 1 &lt;fl: ~'"•·rrlf'n~ .
1\ls. 1.1'1'2: ~t or)lan . s~ "~ ~ m

To'XiiS il l NMO.· Y or~
!\t1n~1 ;1 o1 i)p(rull
~·a n \II :1! Toronto

1\V
Monlll'otl

I

C'k&gt;mt'll~.

Sund ~ ' ~&gt; G IU'Iti'S

\\' I.

""""

Nationall.i'llt\lr - D!Jrra n. l. t\ J.l : [Awls ,
Cln and lkran, Hou. JG: CoWrruln , Stl..
Dr k.~tnl. !\'Y , an&lt;11Mit1lOOR, Phl l R
Amr r1r an Li'llf.'\l l' - lflltl&gt;n&gt;an, !'ol' 1 ~:
r:.n ~ ~l. Chi 12: t'£'ld'r. Mil !l'. Fin•
ptuyt...,. tlrd tMth 6.
PlldUIIf': \-\t:4orllos
Nntlonal l..t•agut• - KntWr. 1-klu. ~!l:
Go.Ja.n. )'.I'. W, F'oorlt'.' n J*l' h&lt;&gt;r~ tlrdwll h

:1 d t·rodot"'i

Oallla.nd Ill IJost(ln

....

Tt-x , Ill

w. Va. .

keep on ~ing; Reds 8-7 victim

Unled Press lntematlonal
CINCINNATI- Even tlDugh the
bottom of tbe eighth Inning started
with hts team lDidlng a six-run
lead, Mets' reliever Jesse 0rosro·
sald he was prepared to enter the
game - and it's a good thing he
was, for the Mets' sake.
Orosco struck out Dave Parker
on a called third strike wllh the
tying run on base Friday to
preserve t re Mets' 8- 7 victory over
the Reds.
The Reds bad trimmed an 8-2
deficit to 8-6 when Orosco entered
the game with Eric Davis on third
and Dave Concepcion on first. After
striklng out Parker tb::&gt;ugh, Orosco
threw a wild pitch to allow Davis to
score, making It 8-7. l.lo Dlaz
walked, and Orosco snuffed the
rally by Inducing Nick Esasky to fly
out.
Orosco pitched a perfect ninth In
earning his fourth save.
The Mets have won 12 ofthelrlast
13 games, whlle the Reds have lost
six In a row and 10 of their last l l.
Sid Fernandez, 3.(), walked 6 and
struck out Gin 51-3 innings to earn
the victory . Reds' starting pitcher
Bill Gullickson, 0-3, took the loss.
The Mets jumped to a 3.() lead in
the first. Len Dykstra singled and
moved to third on Wally Backman's
single. Backman stole second, and
both Dykstra and Backman srnred
on Keith Hernandez' double. Two
rots later, Ray Knight's single
drove home Hernandez.
The Reds rebounded with two
runs in the bottom ·of tre first .
Concepcion walked, Parker singled
and Tony Perez walked to load the
bases. Esasky walked to force In
the ftrstrun, and Sal Butera 'sslngle
one out later scored Parker.
The Mets bult their lead to 5- 2 in
the third , Gary Carter walked and
Darryl Strawberry singled him to
third. Georgp Foster's bloop single
scored Carter and moved Strawberry to third, who tagged up and
scored m Knight's short fly out.

N•tional l...f'MJlUt' - M 11 ~ll I.A. 7;
Knl¢tr . N'!' IU1d 1'\:!wosun. Mtl. 6; BrOOks.

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

·May4,1986

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Ribbons were awarded to skills
contest winners and also to each
pla yer parti cipating in the
competition.
Coa:h Jim Osborne anoounced
summer q~en gym bas!Q:!tliiD,
conductEd fort he Gallipolis Recreation Department, will feature each
Wednesday as Rlnky Dink Day, for
elementary age players Instruction
and skills sharpening.
Open Gym Basketball will beg1n
rn Monday, June 9andcontlnuelor

Ac.DELCO
SPARK PLUGS

s3oo
REBATE
..... Yau bur t2 a-t.

NON-RESISTOR

OUR SALE PRICE ........... 74' oo,
ltiAIL.-IH RElATE , •.. .• ..... . 25' 11.

•

c

Gasolne Saving

EACH

---

RESISTOR PLUGS

SALE PRICE

BALl! PRICE .... : .. 14' oo.
REBATE ............ 25! 11.

MOTOR OIL

890EA.

t0W.30 or tO\V-40

AFTER REBATE

$1,099
UQUI) or

MODEL 829

. .. 74C qt.
. , 25Cqt.

OUR SALE PRICE ...
IIAIL-IN REBATE .

0

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Pol••oy-'Middleport-GaiiJPO'lis, Ohio Point""-.--sant. W. Va.

.· Wildlife notes

Canada offers ~ bear bunting
By Tom Jleholle
evenings.
·
siDrt term license are sold for less.
Special Oom!apoadent
Most ootflttm put hunters oo
The rost dan outfitter can run from
GALLIPOLIS - With tiE trres stand between 3 o'clock and 5 around $.'IX) to as much as $1000
leaflng out and tiE shadows o'clock p.m. and tiE hunter ,..,.
dependlng on the !rills. But It Is
growing longer, spring bear hunt· mains tlrre unW dark or untll he money well spent for the serious
lng ~ to oreuw 11\Y tlllughts. !~{'Is a bear. This leaves tiE
!Far hunter.
Many area sportsmen travel north morning hours tn do a little ftshlng.
Any high powerEd rtne of .270
for spring bear hunting In Canada And, If yoo !1{"1 lucky and take a
callber or lar!l{'r Will do the job on
EBch year.
bear early, t~rn you can Osh black bear. You need to take along
The seemingly unending ex· throughout the day.
clotbng lor cold and warm weather
panses rJ. Canadlan Wilderness
The cost of a spring bear hunt alike. Also tt Is necessaiy to take
Provides nearly unlbnlted hunting might wrprlse you. Anyone should
along an old hunting license oc you
~por.tunllles and good numbers o1
re able to find a hunt to !It their
Will havetopassa hunter safety test
black bears can provide plenty oi llldget. With gasoline prices down
relJre you can purchase your
excitement lor the visiting nearly fl!ty cents per gaBon, a
Ucense.
Canadian trip Is even inore appeal·
sportsman.
Many ou !litters are listed In the
Spring rear SEBron regtns oo tng aJ the present time. Also, the
back of outdoor magazines. It ts
AtrU J51n Ontario and ~ebec , the Annerlcan dollar Is strong In
best tn ~ck out several, call or write
two closest provinces to our area. Canada the exchange rate Is around
tiEm and narrow It down to the one
AltiDugh the season opens In April, ll%.
you wish to hunt with. Be sure to
smious hunting doesn't usually
Bear license are a mere $25 In check relermces. The best time to
regln untU the !lrs1 (I' Sll!ond week roth Ontario and Quebec. ·An
take a !Far hunt Is problibly right
o! May.
annual l!shlng Ucense runs $.tl but
!llW.
Both · provinces contain good r-=====--numbers of bears. Ontario pi'Odu·
ces more black bears Ill t al9J
entertains rmre hunte-s. The smsons run through June l5ln Ontario
while Quebec offers hunting
through July 15.
Most bear hunting within the
lnrders ol rur northern nelghbor Is
oone over baits. With aU the dense
vegetation and vast areas It Is about
the ooly way to successfully hunt
ole bruin.
Outlltters usually place well-aged
meaty scraps on a bait sltetodraw
In bears. On a nice warm day the
smell can become wry offensive.
,However, tiE bears Sll'm to like It
that way. The more It smells tiE
more likely tlry WW come to It.
,Of course everyone knows of the
grmt Dsbng opportunities avaUa·
ble In Canada. The spring rear
hunter can take advantage of these
opportunities and mtx a little
!lshlng with his hunt. The prime
time for batt hunting Is In the

May4,1986

Blues win QJM(ner over Flames, 3-2 ·
CALGARY, Alberta (UPI) The St. Ltlilts Blues used a blend of
dlsclpUned "pestering" and close
checking to defeat the Calgary
Flames 3-2 \11 the opener. of their
best-d·seven Campbell Conference
playoff series.
"They reallydld not surprise us,"
Flames coach Bob _JOhnron said
following Friday nlght'scontest. "It
was a carbon copy of their first
ga_me here In early October. They
play good defensive hockey."
St. Louts coach Jacques Demers
saldCalgarycanexpectmoreolthe
same Sunday night when the clubs
meet In Game 2.
"We're going to come out
tougher. We put on a mask before
the game starts, and at end of the
game we have the same faces,"
Demers said, referring to tiE Blues'
tedlous, unemotional play.
Flames dell!nseman Jamie Ma·
coun felt the
of the St. Louts
night.

•'They really did not have wave
alter wave of players coming ai you
!!ke Edmontoo does," Macoi!D said.
It seems Uke they pester yoo and
pesteryouandalldsuddenyouare
oown a goal."
Mark Reeds and Mark Hunter
~red 66 seconds apart late tn the
third period to rally the Blues to the
victory.
With the score Ued 2·2, Hunter
took a pass from Bernie Federko at
the Caig!lry blueline and split the
defense before sUpping the puck
through goalie Mike Vernon's legs
for his fifth goal d the playdls.

r-----------1

The Blues lied the score 2·2 at
14:42 when ~ scored his second
goal of the game. REeds converted
Doug WtckeniEiset's centering
passtrombehlndthenetattheEdge
of the crmse. reatlng Vernon oo the
glove side.
"We stuck Ill our game plan llr
sixty minuteS and were a patient
club," Demers ~ld .

Senate leaders craft acceptable budget plan

Bidwel Cash Feed Stores
FINCE SUPPLY SPECIAlS
THRUMAY ONLY

GAUCHO 'IAI.JWIIE

$J12S
fENCE SUJIPLES $Jl2S
SD ll.
I.OW

HEAVY WOVEN WIRE $96DD
Also a c•lt
offttd, Mill

and gardtn slipp,lts.

.. . .

Gray, D-Pa., had mUd praise lor the Senate plan.
"I welcome the Senate's strong bipartisan
· agreement on the budget, especially In that It Is rmre
realistic and fair than the president's oclglnal
request," said Gray.
The flscal1987 spending plan reduces the deficit to
Its Gramm-Rudman target of $144 billion.
"WhUe the preslden,thasserlousreservatlonsabout
Individual aspects of the Senate budget resolution, he
believes It Is Important that the Senate pass a budget
for 1987, and recognizes their efforts," White House
spokesman Larry Speakes said Friday aboard Air
Force One en route to Tokyo.
, ' •
"It Is necessary that we keep the budget process
moving. Therefore, given the Senate action, (the
president) looks forward to working with the
Congress to ensure more acceptable levels are
reached for defense, taxes and spendlng reductions,"
Speakes said.
Possible taxes could Include everything from new

levies on gasoline and liquor to a fee on Imported&lt;»!.

House Budget leaders have said they would not
Include more taxes than Reagan would accept In the
budget but Sen. Lawton Chiles of Florida, leading
Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee, said the
Senate's budget "gives the (House) Democrats what
they needed - a budget that has a majority of
Republicans supporting new taxes."
The Senate budget counts $8.5 billion In savings due
to lower-than-expected tnnatlon estimates. Those
estbnates mean cost-of·Uvlng Increases lor S:&gt;ctal
Security and other Indexed programs next year wDI
be held to 2 percent rather than !he 3.4 percent
originally estimated.
House budget leaders had pledged to produce a
budget three days alter the Senate acted and a key
Republican, Rep. Lynn Martin of DUnol.s, urged a
meeting Monday. But It appeared rnnslderatlon
would probably begin Tuesday.

'"

· ~ :Clevelanders seek

Secretary pledges
more Libya raids

.....

}new; upbeat image
Ground Is to be troken this spring
By RICH~
, ·~· CLEVELAND (UPI) -Marred on a $268 mllllon Lakefront project
:·· fl!r years 1lY . jokes about the that wlll use land adjacent to
;.Cuyahoga River catching fire, the dollntown that for years has been
: ctty going Into default and the only a parking lot for Cleveland
.: school board president "shooting Stadium.
.·· the moon,'' Clevelanders are taking
"There's a whole new optimism
'~pride In being chosen the home of downtown right mw," said Andl
, ·the plannEd Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Udrls, assistant director o! eco·
Fame.
nomic development for the city.
·Residents and city leaders say
"We have one of the largest
the comeback has been on Its way downtown retail projects going on
;for years; It's just that the "Mistake anywhere In the country - Thwer
· oo tlle Lake" tag has been a tough City, with about lJO,()l) 91uarefeet
one to shake.
of new rretall space. Detroit. for
•
Cleveland has been chosen an Instance, doesn't even have a
All·Arnerlca City tllree times since oown town depanmen t store any
1982 and there has been as much more.''
, money spent revitalizing the down·
In addition to the retail develop·
town during the last five years as In ment at Tower City - the hub of the
• 'Milwaukee, Baltimore and Detroit city's commuter train system combined.
ground Is to he broken next week on
: "Everylx&gt;dy's tired of being the a two- story glass~nclosed down·
·.brunt of the jokes. I get aggravated town mall.
The May Co. has put more than
' when people talk about Cleveland,
· even though they have never been $~ million into Its downtown store.
·:here," said downtown office worker and the Higbee Co. Is planning more
than $10 million In Investments. The
;~ Jbn Hutzel. "Cleveland has been on
Halle Brothers store closed In 1982,
~. Its way back up for the last five
but the bulldinghasreopened with a
.~wars ."
variety of specialty siDps and
.·~~.
:·". •Four theaters In the Playhouse restaurants.
Clevelanders believe the Rock 'n'
•: squaredlstrlct keep nlghtUie active
&gt;lin the east end of downtown, and Roll Hall of Fame wUI complement
:~ghtclub-goers create traffic jams art Institutions In IDwn.
"That was a major part of the
·every Friday and Saturday night to
::·the west along the Cuyahoga River. (Rock ·n· Roll) Foundation's Inter·
: In between, more than $450 est In Cleveland and our Interest In
•, mUllon has been Invested In them," said Keith Karakul, spokes·
, bulldlngs along the city's main man for the Greater Cleveland
Growth Association.
business street, Euclid Avenue.

ASHLAND, Ohio (UP!) - Des·
plte Soviet rearming of Libya, the
United States will continue to attack
countries that support terrorism,
Secretary of Defense Caspar Weln·
berger said Friday .
1n a news conlerece prior tn his
address at the John M. Ashbrook
Memorial Dinner at Asbland Col·
lege, Weinberger said Libyans
have made up "quite a lot ollosses"
In equipment and mlssUes from the
U.S.S.R. alter the Aprlll5 U.S. air
raid.
"Generally the Soviets continue
to supply the Libyans, and they
have for a long tbne, and wlll
probably step It up to try to match
or account for the losses to Libya,"
he said.
Weinberger was the featured
speaker at the dinner that honors a
conservative Ohio congressman
who died four years ago.
Through strikes slmUar to the air
attacks, the U.S. wUI punlsh Libya
and other countries who sponsor
terrorism, Weinberger said, because "that's the only way to get
across that kind of message."

:''

Dallas
slips by
Denver
By MIKE WED..
UPI Spons Wrller
Suft srootlng and hard defense In
the closing minutes Friday night
enabled the Dallas Mavericks and
Denver Nuggets to stay In conten·
lion In the Western Conference
semifinals.
At Dallas, Derek Harper- hit a
three-point shot with three seconds
remaining to lift the Mavericks to a
110.1~ victory over the delendlng
NBA champion Los Angeles
Lakers.
At Denver, T.R. Dunn and Calvin
Natt dented Houston the Inside soot
In the last 14 seconds, allowing the
Nuggets to hold on lor a 116-ll5
victory.
· The Nuggets and Mavericks
entered Friday night's games
traDing their best-d·seven series
2.0. No team ever has overcome a
3.lJ dellclt In the NBA playoffs.
Harper was an unlikely hero for
tiE Mavericks. In a playOff game
agathst the Lakers two years ago,
he dribbled In circles as time ran
ou~ thinking his team was ahead.
The game was actually tied, and the
Lakers won In overtbne.
"I hope this puts two years ago to
rest," said Harper, who finished
with .24 points. "I wanted the
~poltunlty to beat them."
TraDing lM-107 with 20 seconds
remaining, Dallas worked the ball
to Mark Aguirre, whose shot
bounced oil the rim. Lakers
'forward James Worthy, attempting
to throw the ball downcourt,. then
tossed It right Into Harper's hands.
Harper hit a three-pointer with 46
seconds left to tie the game, but
·Byron Scott hit a three-point shot
:with 28 seconds left to P.t the
:Lakers back oo top.
· . Roland&gt; Blackman brought the
·Mavericks within a point with a
'jump shot lour seconds later and
,then fouled Mlcha!'l Cooper, who
missed IDth foul soots. Dallas
•callEd tbne out to set 1.p IIF play for
•Aguirre, WID l!nlshed with 'll

.

WEINBERGER SPEAKS - Secretary of Defense Caspar
WelnhefKer speaks to reporters prior to his keymte addm!s at tiE
fourth annual ,John W. Ashbrook Memorial Dinner Friday at Ashland
College. {UPI)

"I think we want to do what we
can to make It clear that terrorism
as pract!CI'd by Mr. Khadaly has a
very high price," he said. "That's
what that action a couple of weeks
ago was all about. "
Weinberger refused to speculate
on whether tiE U.S. would launch
similar strikes against Syria or
Iran, but said any country linked
directly to a terrorism attack could

face retaliation.
"People who do practice terror·
Ism, train terrorists and expon :
terrorism need to know there Is a
cost for that kind of conduct," he
said.
Turning to the Soviet Union's
nucler disaster, he said that
country's refusal to openly discuss
the lsaster Is a "matter d roncern"
recause the problem directly affects other countries.
He said the U.S. will continue to
d.fer technical and medical help to .
the Suvlets and the handling of the
Chernobyl nuclear catastrophe wUI ·
mt hinder arms talks.
"That Is really In no way
comparable to the Soviet reactor.
There have been 24 years oow of
error·lree and accident-free service. There are constant safety
reviews. It Is a quite different
reactor In every way than the
Soviets," he said.
On spendlng lor his department,
Weinberger said the $19 billion
defense cut In the Senate llldget
from the President's request comes
up shon but at least keeps the
trocess rrovlng andls hetter than a
deadlock .
"The president's llldget which .
norody seems to want to consider
would enable us to meet the ·
Gramm·Rudrnann deficit reduc·
tlon requirements, wouldn't require
any tax Increase and would give
defense $19 billion more than the
Senate," he said. "That's the kind of
IX'Ogfam that we think sllluld be
considered."

·~ Bone marrow transplants may help nuclear fire sunrivors
~

By ROB STEIN
UPI Science Writer
, \ Teamsd doctors arest.andlng by
, In dozens of Western nations In case
.. the Soviet Union needs help per·
•(onnlng bone marrow lransplan~ s
'• 9n victims poisoned by radiation m
·, the Chernobyl nuclear dL'laster.
. · U.S. officials say.
.
:; ' Donor banks In the UnitEd States,
·. Britain and other nations could also
. , !Je tapped to provide hard· to-mat ch
:. marrow for transplants of the
· ) )!ood-forming tissue - the only
:; kitown wa:; to counter severe
:· radiation exposure.
:&gt; Because Soviet doctors may be
-:overwhebned If scores of victims
•

need the risky operation, the
International Bone Marrow Tran s·

plant Registry In Mllwaul«&gt;c was
readying plans to arrange for
patients to be sent to Western
hospitals or to send doctors to
Russia If t~ Suvlets make such a
n:\uest, oHtclals sat d.
Bone marrow transplant teams
are standing by to help:" D~.
Mortbner Bortin, registry sctentifJc
director, said Friday after contact!?g physlcl~s In some 60 nations.
Everyone I ve talked to Is eager to
help."
The registry president, Dr. Ro·
bert Gale of the Unlvt'rslty of
California at Los Angeles, flew to

the Soviet Union Friday to help

assess the need for bone marrow
transplants. which often are used to
successfully treat leukemia and
some forms of anemia.
Low-level radiation exposure can
cause leukemia that may develop
after years. High doses ri radiation.
however, can klll the bone marrow,
a substance in the oollowofthe rone
that makes blood cells, including
disease-fighting white cells. if
patients do oot undergo a b·ans·
plant, they can bleed to death or
succumb to Infection wil hin t11u
Wel'ks.

"We don't know if there are any
oospttals that can do this in the

Soviet Union," said Dr. Robert
Ashe, another registry specialist.
Ashe noted that officials are
uncertain how much experience, if
any, Soviet doctors have had with
bone marrow transplants.
"Scientifically, It's the right thing
to do for acute radiation toxicity, "
said Dr. Stuart Und of tlle
Massachusetts General Hospital In
Baston. "Practically, 1 think It
could be very difficult for tar!~{'
numbers of pecple."
The first obstacle Soviet doctors
would face would be finding
suitable donor.;. The best donor Is
an Identical twin , followed by a
matched sibling.

But only one in four pecple can
expect to have suitable sibling
do mrs. After that, only one In 5 1m
to 40,000 can find a suitable dono'r In
the general population.
Several countries have listings ri
donor volunlrers. The Antlllny
Nolan Fund, the largest listing, Is In
LDnclon, Bortln said.
Donors are usually anesthesized
while about 1 pint of marrow Is
removed with a syringe and needle,
u;uaUy from the pelvis bone. The
procedure Is considered safe and
the ooly pain is soreness from the
several hundred needle punctures
required.

Donated marrow can be shipped
unfrozen if it Is used within 241Durs.
U it wUI be used after that, It can be
frozen and kept Indefinitely.
The marrow then Is gtven to tlle
recipient through a simple transfu·
sion. It usually takes several weeks
before the new marrow begins
working. During that period, pa·
tlents mu st be given large amounts
of transfusions and kept Isolated to
protect against infection.
Patients also usually are given
drugs to protect against the most
common complication- koown as
graft-versus-host disease. In about
40 percent of the cases, the marrow
actually attacks the patient's body,

··-· ------Ohio Briefs:---------------~. OEA representatives hear plea'

.

:points.

· Wort~ contributed 20 lor the
·Lakers and Scott had 19.
· For the Nuggets, Alex Engllsh
scored a game-high 33 points and
,BW Hanzlik, wiD missed four
;paydf games with a back Injury,
came Iii tiE bench to hit 21 and fuel
:the Denver . victory. Thirteen Of
;HaJizllk•s points came In a three·
·minute strEtch d. the !lrs1 hall. ,
r "BUI was sensational," Denver
roach Dwg Moe Said. "But this
game doEsn't mean garbage. With·
:out another win SUnday, this one
. ;won't mean anything." ·
• The Nu!!Kels led 114·104, but
'man'*'ed mly two points In the!lnal
•3:46. Houstoo scored 9 straight
points, lncludlng three straight
•jwnpers by rrolde Steve Harris oil
~ the bench, rut Lewis Lloyd misSEd ;
·a jumper with t\40 second left.
: "The most Important thing at the
·end Is just t&gt; get the ball lnlx&gt;unds,"
Houston coach Blll Fitch said. "I
wanted rome penetration from
Bobby (Reid). II we rould have put. '
the ball on the floor at tiE end, I :
·think we could have gotten It to

•

generate between $16 mlllion and S:Ji million In visitor and toorlst
dollars.

COLUMBUS (UP! I - Delegates to the Ohio Education
Association's spring representative assembly Friday were urged by
a UNICEF oHlclal to do everything possible to make a better world
for children In the years to come.
Tarzle Vlttachl, UNICEF's deputy executive director for external
relations, said educators have the means to make "the necessary
changes to make the 21st century worth Inheriting by the children
who are now being born and raised."
"The world we have out there today Is not a very happy place,"
Vlttachl, a former journalist In Ceylon, told the nearly l,(lXl
delegates.
He said 15 mllllon small children die each year, almost all !rom
preventable diseases.
"Just Imagine one child In your famlly, one chlld In your class,
dying from a. preventable disease," said Vlttachl.

•

Museum promoters plan meeting
•

Ralpb (SalqJSOII) ."

,

and several overseas telephone calls to the Reagan
party In the Pacific.
Budget Committee Chalnnan Pete Domenlcl,
R·N.M .,calledthe66-29vote"trulyhlstorlc" and said
It shows Reagan "needs to he concerned about the
deficit and needs to work with us."
The Senate budget added $!OJ million for science
and technology, $1.9 bUUon for education and aging
programs, S6XJ million for Jobs training, and s:ro
mUllon for chUd health above the budget passed by
the Senate Budget Committee In March.
The Senate plan allocated $.l}1 billion for the
mllltary, $6 billion more than the committee-passed
t1udget but not near the $.'120 bUllon Reagan wanted.
Sen. Lowell Welcker, R-Conn., said additional
education and health money won his vote for the
budget. ·
The House is expected to begin Its budget work next
week and Budget Committee Chairman William

By ElAINE S. POVICII
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Senate budget leaders
bought votes for their compromise spending plan by
adding money for the Pentagon, education. health
, :and a variety of other programs.
.
. They also made the $1 trillion llldget mor~ 1
.palatable to many colleagues by lowering the amount
of taxes the budget requires from the $19 billion
Included In the committee-passed version to $13
billion.
, .
And they succeeded In getUng an agreement !rom
!'resident Reagan not to throw out the plan
completely, though Reagan stUI has "serious
·reservations" about the budgetJor !tscall987 that the
Senate approved Friday. Reagan plans to push for
higher Pentagon spending ll!ld lower taxes than the
plan requires, the White House said.
' · Senate approval d the budget carne on a decisive,
; . 66-29, bipartisan vote In the early morning hours
,; Friday afterday-and·nlght negotiations with senators

CLEVELAND (UP[) -A contingent of Cleveland-area (Xllltlcal
and civic leaders has been Invited by the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame
Foundation to New York City for a news conference Monday on the
proposed national rock 'n' roll museum.
The olflclal announcement that the city has been selected as the
site for the museum Is expected.
The group Includes Mayor George Volnovlch. Gov. Richard
Celeste, Rep. Mary Rose Oakar. D-Ohlo, State Rep. Patrick
Sweeney, D-Cieveland, and representatives Of the Greater
Cleveland Growth Association.
After the 10 a.m. news conference at Rockefeller Plaza, the groop
will hold a follow-up news conference at 2:15 p.m. at Cleveland's
Burke Lakelront Alrporl.
The city received unofflcal word Thursday that Cleveland would
be the home of the hall of fame. The selection ended rmnths of
campaigning by Cleveland officials wiD arranged endorsements
from top performers, gathered 660,000 petltkin signatures and
organized a giant rock birthday party. ·
The foundation, made up of representatives from major recording
studios, Rolling Stnne magazine, Music Television and tl)e real
estate tndustty, considered several cities.
Growth Association officials estbnated that the hall d. fame could.
.

'

• ,

Coshocton revitalizes downtown
COSHOCfON iUPil -This east central Ohio city celebrates the
grand opening of Its revitalized central business district today with a
giant photoggraph of the townspecple.
Resldt'nts and visitors have b!en invited to gather at the
handstand on the Courlsquare to partiCipate In a community
slng·a·long that will be led by ex -va udevillian Vane Scott whose
Colonial Flag Co. a few blocks away turns oot the Oags that fly over
the nation's capitaL
The slng·a-long and the litotograph culminate JO days of festlvit ies
surrounding the revitalization work, said Chamber of Commerce
Execu tlve Director Pat Brown,
The Coshocton Towne Centre was dedicated Saturday morning.
Those present for today's sing-a-long will be Included In the
photograph.
Local photographer Gary Anderson will tak~ the picture from atop
the city ltre department's 92·fool aerial ladder, Ms. Brown said. He
will be using a special camera that produces an~ Inch ~JO Inch rolor
negative.
A framed 20 Inch by lllnch print wUI be displayed permanmtly at
the Chamber rJ. Commerce office. Individual prints wlll be available
In four sizes and can he ordered through the Chamber oiCommerd' .

Ohio woman gets probation
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (UPIJ -An Ohio woman has drawn a
flveyear probation term for her mle In a cocaiJ1e conspiracy .
Lisa Marte Fettig, 33, o! leesburg, Ohio. gullty tn U.S. District
~ourt In March to conspiring with Thomas HamUton, :Ji. of Petoskey,
Mich .. to acquire and reselll.5 pounds of cocaine In 1983.
.
Fettig, formerly of Petoskey, said she twice traveled to Florida to
acquire the drug and that It was stored with other· drug
paraphernalia In a small warehouse In Little Traverse Tol\1lShlp In
Emmet County.
She appeared Thursday refore U.S. District Judge Benjamin
Gibson, who earlier sentenced Hamilton to serve 179 days In polson.

PUCO objects to abandonment
COLUMBUS (UP! 1 - The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
Monday will file with InterstatE' commerce commissioners
objections to the proposed abandonment of a bus route through Ross,
Jackson and Gallla counties, said PUCO Chairman Thomas V.
Chema.
Greyhound Bus Lines appealed to the Int erstate Commerce
Commission alter the PUCO on March 6 denied it s request for
abant\&lt;Jnment of the only bus route retween Chillicot!Y.&gt; and
Kanauga, Chema said.
Cherna said Greyhound contends the route ;s unpmfitablr but that
his commission believes the company, In seeking to justify
abandonment. did everything It could to depress ridership In tl'l'
area .
Greyhound did nothing to Increase ridership or lmpmvr service.
said Chema, adding that testbnony presented to tl'l' PUCOindlcatro
revenue figures used by the company to prove alleged (('Onomic loss
were not Indicative of the true ~onomic picture .
" If the ICC allows the proposed abandonment ," t1&lt;' sa id, "this
could be just the beginning of the Isolation of all SfCtions of rura l
Ohio."

ROTC students set for training
TOLEDO (UPII - Twenty advanced Reserve Officer Trainin g
Corps students from the University of Toledo will Oy to Fort Custer,
Mich., aboard two Army Reserve cargo helicopters this coming
weekend for military exercises.
Two Huey helicopters from Sellrldge Air Fort'(' Base in MJchigan
wUI drop In on the campus at noon Friday to pick up the students,
then return them May 11, said Capt. Donald Booth. assistant
profesSJr of mUitary science.
He said U'l: ROI'C cadets have participated In wrekend military
exercises before, but this will b the first tbne helicopters have
transported them to a military base.
· The Huey helicopters wUI alro be oo the campus May ,lJ for public
viewing along with a Mast medical helicopter and an AH-1G Cotra
attack helicopter.
The medical helicopter, also from Sellrldge, can be boarded lor
closer lnspe..'llon: •The Cobra wUI be operated by the Ohio Air
National Guard out of Columbus.

�May 4, 1986
Page- D-2

. .

Latin American nations send plea to summit

Soil consen'ation practices reduce
·waste of land and water resources

' .

•

'

By Patty Dyer
Dlslrict Conservatknwi
GALLIPOUS - What Is tile Soli
Conservation Service (S.C.S.) and
what can it do JJr yoo? The SCS Is
an agency under tile United States
Department of Agriculture. The
SCS gives technical asslstanre to
local Individuals, groups, organiza·
lions, and units of government. This
assistance centers around reducing
the costly waste of land and water
resources.
SCS's technical staff analyzes
resource problems and suggests
safe uses and treatments. Land
users may recetveonslte assistance
from their local soli conservationist
- a professional skllled in applying
the combined methlds of the
physical, bloiogtcal, and social

..

•,•

,'

I

sciences to tile !X'actlcal problems
d land users. The soil ronservatkln·
1st helps people develop land use
plans. Land use plans are basEd oo
the specific problems and possible
oolullons of a land use area. The
SCS works through tile local SoU
and Water Conservation Districts
to provide assistanre to land users.
Assistance avallnble Includes :
A solls map of the land unit and
needed Interpretations.
A woodland·sultablllty map of
woodlahds.
Information about different safe
uses of adapted crops (inCluding
grasses, trees, and wlldlife) lor
each kind ol soli .
lnlormatlon about conservatiOn
measures needed on each kind ol
soU for each of the dlfferent safe

uses.
Information on the (lltmtlal and
llmltations of t.he different kinds of
soils lor various uses, such as
developing and building.
Technical assistance In resign ·
ing, laying out, and checking the
construction and maintenance of
dams, waterways, · animal waste
fac Ulties, and subsurface drainage.
In addition to assisting rural and
urban land users tile SCS Is also
Involved In the rec lamation of
abandoned mine land and resource
conservation and development
projects.
With the ever Increasing de ·
mands placed on oor soli and water
resources thi! local SCS stands
ready to assist in solving thlse
tough natural resource problems.

'

nations are not playing a sufficient
role
In bringing about an adjust·
said the Third World debt problem
UPI~Wrtter
ment
of the International ecommy,
TOKYO (UP!) - Latin Amert· and monetary reform were both on
the
results
have fallen short,"
can nations made an urgent plea to the agenda, along with measures to
Sanguinetti
said.
lndustrtaUzed eountrtes attending spur world economic growth.
He said Baker's !X'OpOsals for
the economic summit for help In
Japanese Prime Minister Yasu· .
resolving
the debt crisis, which call
resolving tile region's $3&amp;l bUUon hiro Nakasone also said the debt
for
$40
bUlion
In new bans to
debt crisis, It was teamed Saturday. problem would be gtven "due
countrtes
that
adopt
growth· or·
Julio Sanguinetti, president of consideration."
tented
structural
reforms
in their
Uruguay, sent a letter to each ol
"The enormous foreign debt
ecooomles
"Is
a
step
forward
, but
seven leaders meeting here urging borne by the economies ol La tin
the
amount
proposed
is
not
enough.
them to adopt measures tn their America Is directly influenced by
He said Indebted natklns need
economies that would help Indebted the state of the world economy,"
enough
new capital to make up lor
countries.
which currently is in "disequlll·
money
that
has "been lost through
The letter, sent on behalf ol the brium," Sanguinetti's letter said.
falling
commodity
prtces, partlcu·
11-natlon Cartagena Group ol deb"Latin Amertcan countrtes have
larly
oU
prices."
Oil exporting
tor countries, also said there is "an made numerous polltical and social
countrtes,
he
said,
have
lew options
urgent need for effective reform d sacrifices, and are continuing to
available
to
them
to
earn
enough to
the International monetary system carry wt economic adjustment
seiVIce
their
debt.
to take into account tile interests of efforts," he said, adding tllat
Uruguay, the smallest member
developing nations."
several of the countries have
of
the Organization of Petroleum
Treasury Secretary James implemented stringent Ii&gt;Hcles to
Exporting
Countries cartel, along
Baker, at a news briefing outUnlng control Inflation.
with
Mexico
and Venezuela, have
economic issues io be discussed at
"But because the industrtallzed
· the summit that begins &amp;mday,

By MARY TOBIN

•

growth without lnflatbn," he said.
"All involved ... have to assume a
common responsibility, and they
must continue to upgrade their
dialogue."
·
He ca lled on the !&lt;!mmlt leaders
to bring down Interest rates, boost
prtces of primary commodities and

had their economies thrown into
disarray by the sharp fall in oll
prices.
"lndustrtallzed nations, which
have such a great Influence ()'I the
state of the world economy, must do
their part to ensure sustained

I

MYSTERY FARM- This week's ~!tery !ann,
featured by the Meigs SoU and Water Qmservation
Distrtc~ Is located somewhere In Meigs Councy.
~
lndlvlduals wishing to participate in the weekly
: contest may do so by guessing the fann'sowner. Just
i mall, or drop oH your guess to the Dally Sentinel, Ill
~
Couri St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 457ffl, or the Gallipolis
· ' "Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and
you can win a S5 cash prize from the OhiO Valley
Publishing Co. Leave your name, address and
telephone nember with your card or letter. No

;
•

and celebration to launch Expo 86.
The pageantry began Friday
morning under the giant Tefl on
salls of the Canadian pavUion
where the future British king cut a
ribbon to open'the gates at the huge
waterfront site.
Whistles, bells and horns !rom
more than 100 boats ol every size
and description oounded a thunder·
ing chorus to welcome the royal
couple to the 54-nation fair. Cana·

VANCOUVER, British Columbia
lndlan warriors, red·
coated Mounties, daredevU pUots
and tugboat captains jobted more
than 100,00! falrgoers in welcoming
Brttaln's Prince Charles and Prln·
cess Diana lor the spectacular
opening or Canada's $1.2 billlon
world's fair.
The parties continued into the
early momtng today as Vancouver
ex j:ioded In a fanfare of fireworks
(UP! ) -

· Farm Flashes

.:..'lnfonnation on com
:rootworm
available
at
.
: ·G allia Extension office
..
'

By ED VOILIIORN
County Extension Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOUS - Com planting
'iime Is the time of year to make the
· decision on com rootworm control.
~ Com rootworm Is oftm a problem
in contlnJous com situatiOns. The
!,lest Indication ol potential root·
, worm problem Is achieved ~
'"'measuring adult rootworm abun·
dance in !at£&gt; July and early August .
· Tile adulls look like a "lighting·
: liug" and can usually be found near
the sllks on the newly forming ear.
- . Damage Is done when the
, rootworm larva feed on the rom
~ root system durtng June. Loss of
Yield, goosenecking of stalks and
severe lodging or falling over of
stalks follow. ·Several granular
insecticides are ava llable to aid in
control. Most of these fi'Oducts are
now, or ooon wlll be, avatlable only
• to certified appllcators. Extension
· -bulletin 545 covers Insect problems
In lleld crops. Call the County
&lt;Extension Office at 44&amp;-'1001 lor
~ more detaUs.
.• . The Ohio com crop was estl·
. mated at only 8 percent complete as
of the April 28th Ohio Crop Report .
•' · This was compared to :fi per re nt in
. 1985 and 15 percent complete lor a 5
- year average. Some growers have
· backed oil on the planting date
because they ran into crusting
'• 'problems with early planted com
: last year. Our area Is also one of the
;,.itrtest parts of the stale. We are
. •)!ready some 2.5 inches shori lor
.. • the growing season which officially
staned on Aprtl 1.
, A very btterest lng story was
·: reported by Doane's as a result of a
·'recent U.S.D.A Survey. The story
reports Cas h Rent·To-Land Value
rations. For most states, rents
genera lly have dropped less than
land value t'e6uillng In higher
.ratios. Cropland in Ohio for 1986 Is
expected to rent at 6.5 per cent of
the land value, while pasture land
~ wlll average 4.9 per cent of land
: - value. Under · this approach, croand In Ohio valued al $615 per
acre would rent for approximately .
$«! per acre. Ohio pasture land
_. 'loalued at $350 per acre would rent
· br 17.~ per acre.

p

In oome states such as Iowa, the
cropland rental rate reach 9.3
percent of land value. This high
(prime interest now 8.5%) rent rate
could encourage owners hip especially from outside money and thus
slow or reverse the downward sllde
In land valu es. I was particularly
Interested in this story since 11 adds
oome light to two of the most asked
questions: What is a lair land rental
rate? and; When wlll land prices
stabilize? These percen,tages will
vary from community to community depending upon the competition
among renters. It appears that
several acres of cropland in Gallla
County wUI be Idle this year
because no-one can pencil out a
lreakeven figure even at a very low
rate.
How does Amer1can public per·
celve Agriculture? A recent poll
showed that only 16 percent of the
public rorrectly estimated Agrlcul·
lure's co ntrlbutlon to the gross
natbnal product at around Jl
percent. Large majorities believe
that farming Is hard work, Is nsky
and requires high management
skills. On average, people estimate
the net income of farmers to be
about twice as high as H actually
figures.
For the hOme landscape! An
important practice to consider this
spring Is the fert ilization or shade
trees in ooryards. Even large older
trees need fertilizer. Aonce every 3
to 5 years program may he
adequate for trees that have lull
growth. Young trees should be
lertUlzed with an analysis slmllarto
12·12·12, at the rate or about 1 to 2
pounds per inch caliper or trunk.
measured at shoulder high. is what
Is normally recommended. This
fertilizer should be placed Into holes
that may be drUied or punced inside
the drip area of the tree.
The local ASCS Office is taking
sign-up lor the Agriculture ConserV'dtion Program (cost share on
seedings, etc.) from May 1 to May
30. Soli Test analysis must be on flle
before request will be taken. The
County ASC Committee will give
top priority to practices wtth the
greatest ooll loss.

· WASHINGTON (UP!) - U.S.
productivity posted a 3.4 percent
gain In the first quarter ol198i, tile
largest in two years, following a
revised 4.1 percent decline in tile
last quarter of 1985, the Labor
Department said last week.
Non-farm bllsiness productivity,
generally tile most reliable index of
output per bour because It excludes
the volatile agricultural sector.
scored the best quarterly gain since
the first quarter oil~. when it rose
3.6 percent.
The preliminary ligures released
by the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
which refer to an annual rate of
growtll adjusted for seasonal
changes, will be revised this month.
Including the !arm sector, overall
business productlvlty scored a 2.3
percent Increase in the three-month
periOd following a revised 3.9
percent decline In tile fourtll
quarter of last year, also I he largest
·
gain In two years.
The increase in non-farm produc·
tlvlty is due to a 4 percent gain In
output and a 0.6 percent gain in
hours worked. The increase In
outpu t was tile largest since the first
quarter 1984 and the gain in hours
the smallest sine!' 1982.
Hourly compensation in non·
farm businesses increased by 2.4
percent. Unit labor costs, which
reflect changes in output in relation
to pay, declined by 1 percent after a
revised 7.6 percent rise In the fou rth
quarter of 1985.
Productivity in tile manufactur·
ing sector of the economy rose by an
annual 2.4 percent. Durable goods
manufacturing, which Includes au·
tos, scored a 2 percent gain in
output over hours whlle nondurable
goods manufacturing experienced
3 percent productivity growth.
Real hourly compensation, which
takes changes In the Consumer
Price Index into effect , rose by 0.9
percent in the non-farm bllslness
sectoor and 0.2 percent overall , the
report said.
Slow groWl h In product tv tty has
been one of the most puzzllng
aspects of the currmt ecooomlc
upswing. Non-lalm productivity
declined by 0.2 percent In 1985
followbtg a slack 1.6 percent
increase In 1984.
Industry analysts believe 1~
wlll witness substantially stronger
growt h bt productivity as the
diverse stimulating afects of a
cheap oil. a weak dollar and lower
inten,;t ra tes are felt.

INVITATION TO BIO

Notice is given hereby that
GALLIPOUS CITY SCHOOLS
BOAR 0 Of EDUCATION wil
occept bido lor tho lolowlng
projlct:
.
8UI.DING IMPROVEMENT
ANO REMODELING
Woohlngton Etemontory 1

School
Golllpollo City School Olotrlct
Gollipollo, Ohio
accordtng to Drawing~ and

1 . New windows end en ·
trance door~ :
2. New IUapended ceil·
ings;
3. Mechanical and Electri·

Dyer, Galtla l&gt;lotrict Conservationist, SCS. In rear,
left to right are James Bauglunan, Chalnnan of the
Gallla SoU and Water Conservation District 1111d
Commissioners Vrrln Swain and Richard Cnmeens.

Crop .rotation good
way to up production
By OPAL DYER
Office Secr&amp;ry

MelgsSWCD
POMEROY - Reseecting a
hayfield by use of a crop rotatkln is
a good way to establlsh a new stand
of forages for Improved hay quality
and production; says David A. Burt,
District Technician for the Meigs
SoU and Water Conservation Dis·
lrtct (SWCD) .
Fields that are producing less
than two tons/acre/year an d have
poor quality forage should be
reseeded if hay productiOn is ywr
gllai.
According to Burt, a g~&gt;od rnethld
of reseeding the field is by use of a
crop rotation, such as planting a
no-tlll com crop lor two years. Two
years of crim can help in getting any
weed problems under oontrol be·
fore going back to hayland
A recommenO?d method is to cut
the first cutting of hay by mldJune,
and then plant no-till com In the old
sod, Burt says.
U the existing forage is less than
eight to 12 btches tall, no·tlll com
can be planted wlthlut taking the
hay off. When planting no-till com ,
the recommended procedures nrust
be followed tor success.
This Includes soli tests, proper
herbicide and Insecticide appllca·
tlon and correct seeding methlds,
Burt adds.

The following year after corn, the
field can then be reseeded to a
meadow of grasses and legumes.
The Meigs SoU and WateConservatlon Dlstrtct has available
for rent, to Meigs CoUnty farmers, a
two row, Allis Chalmers no-till rom

planier. Dave Hurt, 1s available to
assist farmers who use the planter.
If you have an old hayfield thai
needs reseeded and would like to
try two years of com, contact the
Meigs SWCD Office in Pomeroy at
992-li647.

!
'

!

I

of 1.8 billion tons of nationa l soil loss
from erosion measured by a 1982
national resource inventory.
Much of that _soil ends up In
streams, lakes, nvers and water
systems and must be dredged or
cleaned at considerable cost to
taxpayers. The study did not
estimale the impact of reduced soil
loss on those costs.
The economists said idling 32
million acres would not ellmlnate
crop surpluses, bill It would save
more than $5 blllion a year in
government crop subsidies and
costs of storing those surpluses.
Their estimate was less than the
amount of cropland tn be Idled
under last year's live-year !arm
law. In what was regarded as the
most historic conservation lnltla·
tlve since the Great Depression, the
law set a goal olldllng 40 mUUon to
45 mUilon acres d the nation's most
erodible land by 1900.
Minlrnm:n annual goals call for

idling 5 million acres this year, 10
milUon acres a year in 1987, 1988
and 19!D and 5 mltuon acres tn 19ro.
The government wUl pay
farmers io idle that cropland for a
decade and plan t grass or trees on
It.

The lnltlal sign up by farmers was
less than hoped lor, but Agrtculture
Secretary Richard Lyng said he
hoped the second slgnup May 5-16
wlll be more successful.
During the first slgnup from
March 3-14, farmers submitted bids
to Idle 4.8 mllllon acres. The
Agriculture Department accepted
bids for 838,356 ocres on 10, :~)7
fanns.
.
"Many of the bidders asked
unreallstlcaUy high compensation
lor removlngthelandfrom !X'oduc·
tlon," Lyng said. But he predicted
farmers would have a better idea
what lbe government wlll accept in
the second round.
Accepted bids fir annual govern-

cal h;nprovementa:
4. Other minor building
improvemenu.

Bldo will bo rocelvod lllr:
Oonorol Trodoo Controct

VJibdOw Aelac•n••t Contr8c1
Mtchanic1l Contract
Elec:trlcol CGrltriCt
S•lod bidl will bo rocelvod
ot tho Golllpollo Cily Sdloolo

Superin1.,dlnt'l OffiC8 ~til
Monday, Juno 2, 1988 ot
2:00P.M.
Bido will be oponod and

including

plus addi-

tlonol oell of printo of the
Drewing1. upon payment of

$76 .00 por nt, rolundoblo

11me u above.
3 . No par1ielsetl will be il·
...,ed .
.
All .bidl to bo occompo·

nied by 1 bid aecurity in the
form of

100% Bid Bond
conforming with peragraph
163.571 of the Ohio Re·
1

bidding.

Upon award of contrec:1,
wcc::euful biddar1 will be required 10 tubmtl a PerformanCe, labor and Ma1eriai

Payment Bond given i'l 1he
of Gotlipollo City
Schools Board of Education
in a specific amount equal to

nome .

10011 of tho Controct Sum .
No bidder~ may wHhdrew
hlo bid w"hln o!J&lt;th 1e01 do yo
llf1or tho actuol doto of the
opening thoreol.
By ordor ol tho Gollipolio
City Schools Boord of Edu·

cepted . Interested parti11
are invited to attend.
Beginning May 1 6. 1986
Proposed Con1ract Documents may be eumlned at
the achoolauperintendlnt'a

office. tho olllco of tho
Arch"oct, tho Bulldor'o Ex·
chongo of Control Ohio. ond
the F. W . Oodgo Corpore·

of the ArcMoct beginning
May 16, 1986 on tho following btlaia:

phone bU1 mull: be con·
firmed in writing to our St.
1iont plus one ... of 1*'1111 of Louis office wtl hin 11ven (7)
1. One copy of tho Project
Menuol. including SpocHico-

tho Drowingo, upon poymont
ol t76.00 depo~t oorrpletely refundable II Projoct

Manual and Drawi1g1 ere retumod to tho Archhoct postpaid. in aatilflctory ODnd i-

day1.

We have been IWA!ded
the g~neral contract for this
project. We will lten con·

1 Card of Thanks

w~h

CARO OF THANKS

The family of Victor E.
Yotll&amp;, Jt. wishes to extelll our heartfelt tflalis
alii sincm af"recialioo
to our manyiOVt_,.friends,
telltives alii neilllbors for
PIAN'nNG of m-tlll rom crop In a sod field L~ shown here. (SCS
photo by Roher1 L. First).

ment rental payments tQ farmers bulldup ol wheat stocks, the study would have to 11&lt;· ldit:'d ro &lt;UPIX&gt;rt
ranged from $5 to $90 an acre, wtth . said.
their prices.
an average bid of $41.82.
By contrast. more than 22 miUlon
"Tile effect on prices and prudurL
The Economic Research Service acres of land in row crops of com,
tlon of prolr&lt;'ling highly rrocllbl~
study of several impacts of the soybeans, sorghum and cotton are land in row crop., cwtalnlv will~
program was titled, "Idling Erodl- highly erodible. But only 12 million much greater· than protrc ting
ble Cropland: Impacts on Produc- to 13 mllllon acres of those crops wheat acres," the economists ""id.
tJon, Prices and Government
Costs."
It was wrttten by natural resource economists Shwu-Eng
Webb, Clayton Ogg and Wen- Yuan
Huang.
They said that seven major crops
are grown oo 75 perrenl of U.S.
By SON.JA RDLGREN
1.7 mutton tons, nearly doublt'
advanC!' sales at the sa me time a
cropland. Eleven peramt of the
UPI Fann Editor
land producing those crops ac·
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Cau· year ago.
Sbarply lower U.S. prit•rs
counts for 43 percent of soli erosion tlously optimistic American offl.
from water. That does not count ctais note that advance sales of this enacted In the 1985 farm law - In an
year's wheat crop are picking up, Iattempt to restore American comerosion from wind.
Retiring erodible land taUs to indicating U.S. prtc&lt;!S are becoming , peUUveness and sagging expo11sellminate crop surpluses. For more competitive on the WOrld · go Into effect with harvest of the
· 198i crop. American pollcymakers
example, about 7 mUllon acres market.
Through mld·Aprll, wheat sales . hope lower prices will I't:'duce
planted to wheat are highly erodl·
ble, but about 21 mUUon acres for shipment In the 1~ market- . incentives for competing nations to
would have (O Idled to avoid a Ing year beginning June 1 totaled Increase production.

U. S. wheat prices more
competitive ·o n world market

"

all 1heir killl deeds of
ptayetS, cards, flowetS,
food. money, 1110rds of
kindness and lor beifll so
lovilll

alii carirc d11i11.

1huickness allllhe death
of · our ptecious loved
dooe.
Special 1halis to Meics

Cotllly Eme11ency Medl·
Setvices, staffs of Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Oltio State Uniwrsily Hospital, alii Calnden-Ctart
Hospital, Dr. Jdln Minton,
Dr. Chanita SPii, Dr.
Jdln Rid&amp;eway, Rev. Ste~e
NeiSOII; Rev. James Leach,
Rev. &amp; Mrs. Liston Halley,
Jr., Miss Bonnie Smi1h,
MIS. Marie Qlrd, MIS.
MaiY Mcfileus. Its. Tom
Fields, Mr. KennH Waltln,
Mr. T1111 Wolfe, Ewit1 Fu·
nmt Home, E""oyees of
Beech Grove C&amp;mete!Y.
mambeiS of P001eroy Baptist Church. ard palillllr·
cal

MS. God bless you, nays.

With Love.
WHe, MaiY; Children, ·
Grandchildten and
Molher, BrothelS and
Sisters.

drilled pier end oprood

footing foundation . We are
requeotlng bldo on tho lol·
lowing:

ExcaVItion. bituminoua
paving. concrete
work.

1 Card of Thank•

CARD OF THANKS
The employees of
Southeastern
Electrical
Construction want
to thank Dilley
Halley for his
support.
SEC had the eleet!iul can·
tttcts on Southwestern,
Bidwell Porter and Vinton
tlemental)' Sclloals. SEC
was 1 Gallia County
C011'411ny lnd employed
severaiiiiO!km l!om Gallia
County, some wete hired
lhrou&amp;h OBES in Gallipolis,
many were vatmns of the
Aimed Forces. Acouple of
members of the Gallia
County Laul Board of Edu·
cation wera qainst us Ill·
tina thm conttacts from
the . vel)' btainnln&amp;, even
thou&amp;h we were low bldd·
ers.
The school boatd finally
succeeded in havin1 auf
contr1cts and jobs tahn
away. Billy Halley was lht
only 1111mber of the county
school b01rd who stood
behind us all the ny.

THANKS BILLEY

M1ture. r"pon1lbltperaon to 1it

7 wk. old black Yl Lib. &amp; Spaniel
puppiM. short hair, 5 maltl. 1
'-male. 203 Klneon Dr. C1ll
114· 441·8080 ....-.ningt .

HELP
Local corpor~tion now acctptinu
applic;ation• forsever1l positions
In ManllliJtment, Marketing and
DetN...,.. No experien ce. Will
train . C~"1)any benefits.

lawn ca re. auto work. body &amp;.
machnical. Painting, l'loute
roo1t·bamt. No ,Pb to big or
piddling. Reasonabl e rates, call
anytime 614 · 246· 9693 .

ing &amp;. sheet metal . cau•lng.
waterproofing, hoHow metal doors &amp; frames. flnith
hardware, aluminum windo·ws, glats end gl11ing.
aluminum doort, dryWIII,
acoustical ceiling, painting.
rniUent flooring. cerpeting,
ceramic tile . lath and pta•
taring , mitcellaneout tpe-

P1rt Beegle pupt. I weeki old.

c.n 814-1149-2414.

2 m•le puppl", 8 months old,

h•U B•'tl•. 304·676· 2978

avenlngs. References pt"eferted.
Laura. 814 ·441· 4409.

To Qualify

vou

mutt be:

2 free puppill, p..t Irish Setten.

cialtiet, hotpital metal CIH·
work. hospital equpmen1.
elevatort, mechanical, fire
protection and elec1rical.

304-&amp;76· 7207.

PLANS ANO SPECIFICATIONS will be available from
Lyle Forgy ot' GALLIPOLIS ,
OH. - HOLIDAY INN. 460
~ike St .. 614 / 448·0090 on
Tuoodoy, May 6 ond Wod·
nooday, May 7. 1986. ANO
CHAR LEST ON, WV - HOL·
!DAY INN CHARLESTON
HOUSE,
600
Konowho
Blvd .. E.. 304/ 344-4092

F.malt Irish S.ner, SPIVtd,
with doghouH, 304-075-N70 .

Willing to Work

7 wHit old puppill, bfown an d
black. 30'·875·305&amp;.

Applic;;•tlont accep ted by ap ·
pointment only 10AM to 4PM ,
Mond•y &amp; Tu11dav. 614 -446 -

2 rooltera, 3 drllt11. 304· 676-

7461 .

PLANS AND SPECIFICA·
liONS will be on SCAN .,d
at the following Plan
Roomo: F W OOOGE. St.
Louio MO ., Mloolon KS. Col·

Subcontracting Meneger
May 2. 4, 5, 6

Announcements
2

In Memotiam

In memory of my nephtw. Keith
G. Aeikar, Sr. He left us 3 Yllfl
ago Mav 4th. Wa ml11 yoU , Oaar
and will remember you alweys.
Aunt Alma Riggs.

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and 1ewoklg macf'lin1
rep1ir, p8rtl, and tuppll•. Picll:
up and delivery, Oavl1 Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georg• Creek Rd . Call 81ot.
U6· 029ot.

Memorial Dey flower1. Cliff '•
Place. Powell St., Middleport,

Ohio.

SINGLES. M11t that special
plf'lon l Free applcatlon . PerIIOnll touch intrOductions, boll
6536 . Chtrlutan. W. Va .

26302. t -304-727-8434 .

4

One Foa Tanllf dog. 3 Yllfl old.
Mel all 'shota. call 30'·176·

394.&amp;.

6

Lost and Found

Found: ame/1 black and whit•
dog In Rocksprktga erea . Wear·
ing fl.. ooll1r and raguler,c:ollar.
C111 814-992-5074.
LOST dog, part German She·
pherd and Wrottwirlly , pleue
c•ll 30ot-175· 3809.
lost two Bluetlc ~ hounds in
Redmond RK:Ige ar11. Reward.

Coli 304-875-3328:

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Fl.. Market

E~~pand•

Cu1tamer
acc~tance of our every weekend mttket pi.Cetorcuexpan·
Non of our outdoor d11l11' lfll.
cuatomer paved parking trN
1nd days at op•ation. Now In
our thltd ve• shop The Flea
Field, tvlry Wldn11dly , Friday,
Saturday and Sund1y. Plenty of
phed park ing and barg• ln • old
and new . Same location Rout"
35 • teo. The former Thaler
Ford property. Growing blggar
and batter· Juat tor yau .

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cuh for late model clean
used cars.
Jim Mink Chtv.-Oidt Inc.
BIII.Gene Johnson

61 4-44e-31!72
TOP CASH p11d tor '83 modal
and newotr unci can . Smith
Buldi -Pont iec. 1911 Eattem
Ave .. Gallipolis. C•ll 81,· 448 W81'1tad junk autoa. Ca!l 814·
388· 9303.

w.,t.:t: Cemplf or 2 bedroom
trtllw. In good cond idon. Call

61.·992·332&amp;.

£mploymenl
Serv 11:1! '

CARD OF THANKS

Signed
Francis Wau1h

Government Jobs. 115,040 ·
t59, 230· yt. Now Hiring. Call
t ·805-1187-8000 E... R·9805
for cuntnt flderal lilt.
Buslneu k1 At hent needs to hire
twv full tl,... emplayHI. Mu.r
po11..1 normal butin•• skill•.
typing, filing , telephon ing . and
bl .,Ia to work well whtt public.
Individual mull hiVI good work
1ttltude. Pltlle send reaume to
The Dally SMtlnet So..: 729 X.
Pomeroy. Ohto 46769 .

1382.

11 Help Wanted
AVON Se11Avonmak•60%. Call

6 14·448· 3368.
Caretlk• to liva· ln apartment
oo"f)lex .. Cell :J14·175-61 04.

Rovnoldoburg, Oh 43068.

aell e.

. bt a little boy Gad cltose
to take .
Sadly missad by
Grandma 11td Gr111dpa

Multi-level people n&amp;ld«&lt; to
launch n~ co ncept in you1 area .
S end SASE to : Vahoi'Till Alto ·
datn. 12221 BuKt on Drive.
Pin~N ille , NC 28134.

23

Professional
SeiVices

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR .

'"'''""'"'V""'•'"'"''be'"'""'
tone, c all today. Wards Keyboard. 304-676 -5500 or 675·
:1124 .

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 bedr oom houn, fi rtplece, 3
mi. south of Gallipolis. 829.900.
Call days 614-446 -1616 or
aveninga 61 4-ot46-1244 .
7 rooms &amp; batl"'. 1 ecte more or
leu. carpeted throughout. vinyl
1iding 826,000. 12 N. Main St ..
Chaahire. Call 614·440· 3793 .
Spac;;ioul 4 bedroom In town.
2'1.i bath . garage. &amp; much mora .
164.800 . Ca ll 614 -446· 2174
ah81' 5:00 weekdsys .
3 bdr .. 32 acres, oil heat. countv
water. At. 7, Eureka. acro11
from dam. 832 ,000. C•l l 81'·

445-2206 .

One bedroom house In city, vary
good condition, new paint, • nd
other Improvement• in outbulld·
tng , price reduced to 112.000.
Call 814-446· 3160.

Green Ac;;rn Reg kl nal Center,
Inc.. hal an opening tor e
pert-time LPN In Point Plauant.
lntlf'•ted persona should call
30,·702.· 2522 . wa are an
E.O.E.
Am•ica 'l New111 Pany Plan
"C hriltmu Around the World"
II hiring lrll IUPIIVIIOrt. Pr•
vious pany pfen htipful. No
lnvlltmlftt, no collecting, no
dlllvltlng . Call colttt:t30•· 486 f733 .
Teadlers. coltege student•· fix·
ceptlonJI 11ming opportunity In
Eduoatlon Sal... Flu:lble Hours.
An Equal OpportunltyEmployer.

12
CHRISTOPHER 1974·1978
he will stay a little
boy,
Who brou&amp;ht us love and
joy.
Forent 001 hearts wll

MAKE MORE MONEV I Earn
welk:ly commiuiona with ou r
prolit ll_f? le lina of edvartiling
c;;alendan. Pena, cap1. and
jadcet1 . Helpfu l u11111 ide11 . 1
Toii·F ree Meauga Center and
othar gr11t telling tool•. All
wl'ila bting your awn bou . No
tnvestment. No collectlona. Full
« part Ume. Our 77th year.
Wrlta Kevin P.. ka . NEWTON
MFG . COMPANY. Dept.
P2387. Nawton . low• 60208.

live i'l COfi1Janlon to ahsrre
hou Hhald dutl• whh elderly
lady. room .,d board, VIIY •mall
111ary. 304· 578-2039 , !578 ·
2523 between 4:00PM to 8:00

In Memoriam

Forevet

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAllEY PUBliSH·
lNG CO . recommends that you
do butlntlt with people vou
know, 1nd NOT to lind money
through the mail until you htve
Investigated the offering.

3 bdr. newly remodeled Yl mi.
from city, real bargain, ownet"
need• caah. l21 .900. can 614ot46· 2034 after 6PM.

304·882·2485.

2

Business
Opportunity

Bteuticltna needed . Call 30487&amp;· ot5t0 d•y; 304-675 -3449
wenhgs.

PM .

Free , H•ahh Newaltttar aub- '
General Contractor looking for
scription limited timt anly. Call
explf'lence working forlmln or
814-266-1712 .
a~perlntendent, 1111rv open,
long tltl'mpolitlon. Sendrnume
to Merk L Inc .. 0588 Aetton Ad,

1 wish to thank ever·
yone for their kind·
ness, sympatlty and
food at the 'time of my
mother's death, "Ruth
Waugh". I did not re·
qtlest anyone to lem
the church as was
stated at the funeral.

1714.00 pw 100. Gutrenteed
PIY,;,If'lt, No 11111. Detail1.
Send etamptd .,velope: Elan·
5847, 3ot18 Enterprill, Ft.
Pieree, Fl., 33,82 .

Help wsnted in tume. days end
WHk.,dt . Ctll 01,·992 -8683.

448· 3262 .

Card of Thanks

EASY ASSEMBLY WORK I

9U·3478 .

Bag of buttftr' molds. Call 814·

1

1!1129. EOE .

Part· time or retired person, to
ci btaln namu from locsl publi c
records . Phone 1·800· 326 -

318-8449 .

Lsrge muhl color.cl Hlmalay1n
Cit sp•ylld , brown large male
dog. Part Cttow &amp; Ub Rat.
spayed . Call 814· 440 -1751.

The G11Ua-Meiga Comm.~nity
Ac:tion Ag.,cy'a Job Tr1 ining
Par1ner1hip Act (JTPAI progr1m
h11 en ~enlng for 1 bookkeeper
at ita Central Off ice in C1'111hlre.
A miniMim of 2 yesrs experianCI In bookkiiPing reQuired.
Including lnpunlng fin1ncl1 l in·
formation into (Dighatl coft'4)u tlfl, hperlenCI In Fldtral Pto·
grem• praferrld. Post high
tchool.tucation detirable. Abil ·
ity to WOI'k wtth othen 1 muat.
Send ~me to Gallia-Melga
CAA JTPA. Box 272. Cht~hlre.
Ohio &lt;4&amp;120 by Mey 12, 1986.
For further Information c1il
(6141367-7342 ot !614) 992-

Call614 -367 · 0290.

Financial
21

Accountll'lt for Buckeye Comrrunitv Services, 1 not-for· proUt
oorporatlon providing '"ldentlal
eltemetlv• for people with
dwek)prMfrttl di11blilltl• in
nven Southe•tem Ohio Coun·
tl•. B•cht6or's degrN In Ac·
counting or Busrt•• Admlnla·
tr•tlan with a major
cone«~tratlan In accounting re4-lired: blckground in colt acoounti'lg irrctortant. Exclllent
fringe blnlfiu. S1tarv bllld on
lducetlon and e..:perlence. Send
r11uma to Robin Eby, Buckeye
Community ServiCM, P.O . BPlll
604, Jacklon, Oh 45840. Dead·
line far appllcanta: 6-14·88 .
Equal Opportunity Employer.

Buying da lly gold . silver coins.
ring&amp;, jewelry, 11erllng were, old
coins. l.,ge currency. Top priCit . Ed. Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ava . Mlddlepon , Oh. I14 -

Giveaway

Female Elkhound . would mtka
good tQulnel dog. Cell 114·

wm b•bysit in vour home have

192e.

2282.
The Melg1 County Fi1h and
Game Club Inc. will not be
responsible or liable for 1ny
accident or dlm~geto anvonaor
anything on their prop111y.

Dep.,dable

Tree work wanted . Prunning,
topping , removall, hedges &amp;
bu1h111 trimmed . Call 614-446·
8076 Of 304· 675 -4853 .
refer~nces .

umbus OH, Charle .. on WV,
PARKERSBURG · MARIET·
TA CONTRS . ASSOC .. Por·
kersburg, WV.
HBE MEDICAL BUILDINGS
Lyle Forgy.

Hon•t

3 mixed Blue Heellfl. 304-076·
7534 .

on Thursday, May 8 end Fri·

otructlon In June 1988. Tho

tion will be ltructurel lteei
withe prec:11t concrete skin

18 Wanted to Do

millwork. wood doors. roof-

work include• JPproxime-

tion, wi1hln twenty calendlr toly 1 31 .000 SF now throe·
ttorv edditton •• well es apdoyo alter bid op.,lng.
2. Addhionol copleo of tho pra.Jmotoly 12.11bb' SF oi
remodeling. The new addi-

Help Wanted

Going somep lace? You go- l'llto
111¥ In your home or drop in dai ly
to hed your pet1, w11u plants,
gat newspaper• 1!1 malt Call
Anne Mae Halley , 814-446 ·
09 20 . Rates, Mferencea on
requaat.

will be refunded upon retum
of the documonto w~hln 46
days of the bid dale.

HBE Medlcol Bulldlngo
Dlvioion of HBE Corporotion.
11330 Olvo Stroot Rd .. P.O.
BOll 27339. St. Loulo. Mo.
63141 , 1314)15117·9000
ADDITIONS AND
ALTERATIONS TO
HOLZER CLINIC,
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
TOTAL COST: 12.960.000
BIOS DUE: TUESDAY,
JUNE 3, 1996 betwoon
B:OO AM and 12:00 NOON
(loco! time) to Mr. Lyle Forgy
ot the HOLIDAY INN, 460
Pike
Stroot,
Gollipollo,
OH . 46631 , 614 / 446·
0090. Bido moy bo tole·

11

for two yuroldln my home. Part
time warldng up td full &amp; Sat

J01p Holley, Prnidont
Ellen Borry, Tr•ourer
May 4, 11 , 19, 26

ter 1ha1 time wUI not be ac ·

Giveaway

2 vr. old male dog German
Shepherd &amp; Belgium Sh.-p (bg
ex. with children, good watch
dog . Call IU -2158·1772 .

cetion .

Public Notlca

4

drilled piers, architectural
precast concrete, nructural
lit miscellaneous steel, metal
dllck, metal well panets,

cloy, Mov 9 from 8:00AM to
12:00 NOON .
A e50.00 chock poyoble
to HBE CORPORATION will
be required lor plano ond
spectfications. The deposit

read aloud at that lime and
th.lt ploco. Bldo received fl·

tton Plan Room in Colum·
but, Ohio .
Bidders may MCUrl copies
of the propo1ed Contrect
Oocumantt from 1he office

tPredict
new
program
will
reduce
soil
loses
s
.

By SONJA HILLGREN
UPI Fann Editor
• " WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Natu: raJ resource economists predict
; that Implementing the new pro1 gram to idle highly erodible
croplandeventuallywillreducesoU
! losses from erosion by hundreds of
, mlllions of tons per year.
!•~ - They said "a program to retire
hlghly erodible land from crop
;-.., production can reduce soU erosion,
i help support crop prices and reduce
£ government deftcency and storage
: payments."
! Speclncally, Agriculture Depart, ment economists calculated that 32
; milllon acres of highly erodible land
• would reduce soil losses from
: erosion by nearly 600 million tons
ner year
, f -Idllng ihat land would reduce Its
: erosion rate to about 10 percent of
• an average of 20 tons per acre per
: year lost from highly erodible land.
;_- , That could aceou~ for one- tlllrd

Manual ,

vised Codl, or a C11hier'1
Check in In amount not less
and detcribed in gentfal 11: than 10% of the toteltum Of'
Building tmprovomoruo end wm1 bid. The Owner rn·
Romodolling of on ·oxloting ervu 1he rtgh1 10 re)ec1 eny
thrw 11ory eMimentary IIChool or all bida and to watveirrebuilding. Tho work will i&gt;· gularity in the bid1 end in the

-

~
;

Project

Specification•.

Spacllicationo preporld by
Mark T. Epling, ArcMoct,

cludo tho following:

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

SOIL, WATER STEWARDSHIP WEEK - GaDla
County joins the rest ol Ohio lids week In o'-"'lng
SoU and WaterStewardl!hlp Week (May 4-11), Above,
counly Cornm1'111ion President Kall Burleson olps
proclamation lor the event. Looldngonat left l!iPalty

dian air force jets streaked by in
close formatbn above.
Vlslior.s !rom around the world
poured ooto the grounds, anxious to
catch a gllmpse of royalty or to
claim,a spot In Uneatonedthetil
pavUlons.
Local Indians, weartng'headsand
bllckskln, performed an ancient
dance to ward olf evU !Plrtts as the
royal couple toured the site by
yacht, limousine and rronorall.

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

telephone calls wUI be 800!pled. All conlffit entries
should be turned in to the pewspaper oftlce by 4 p.m.
each Weclnesday. In case of a tie, the lndlvldual whose
leUer has the earliest postmark ivm be declared the
winner. Next week. a Gallla eou.-y !ann wDI be
featured by the Gallla SoU and Water Conservation
District. Winner of the April 2'7 contest was Tony
Haner, Eureka Star Route, Galllpolls. Last week's
Galtla mystery !ann was Harold and Janice
Saunders, Rt. 218.

Overall business
productivity, fanns
included, up

eUmtnate protectionism.
"In addition, Latin America Is
hard·!X'essed with the rtse &lt;1
protectionism and the lowerlne: ol
prtces on basic corrunodltles
through trade frictiOn amD'lf the
lndustrtaUzed nations," Sanguileltl
said.

Ch~les, Di given royal welcome

\

,

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pige-D-3

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

May4, 1986

Situations
Wanted

Have vacancv In our home to
care for tlderly. Trained end
experienced . Pttona 814·992-

81183.

17 Ml•cellaneous

Small houaa, one bdr .. 64 Mill
Creek St .. Gallipo lis , 834,900.
Cell 6U - 448 · 2~39 .
Wa built big 4 bdt.. Early
American home• $18 ,995 on
your lot. See our new model
home. Ce11814 ·886· 7311 .
All brick home, lllC . cond ..
locatld Upp er Rt. 7, 3 bdr., 11.h
blth , dlnlngroom, kitchen. livingroom &amp; encio1ed back porch,
full blument. gar•ge9 catport.
niW'Iy lnttalled 4 ton central air
cgnd. unit I lenno• pul11
fum ace. 10ft. u ttelita lndudld .
Call 61 ' · 446-8252 efter 4PM.
3 bedrom ranch. lsrge kitchen,
dlnlngroom w ith sliding gl111
da or on to deck, livingroom. all
appliances . Woodburner,
16..:24..:' pool and utelite dlth,
Vlltagl of Patriot. Southw•tern
New School. 2YJ miles 0 .0 .
Mcintyre Ptrk. Buy now, IIVI
betott , go" an the market,
834.000. Cell 614· 379-2721 .
ot ~room home far 111e. G.o od
Hunting and good filhlng. Can
b1 negotiated with owner. Clll

114-985-4392.
Gov1r nment Homn from 81 (U
repair! . Alto delinquent tu

Dolson Tr• Slf'Yica, frH lltlma1•. 394-&amp;78 -2897.

propeny. Coli t -805-687·6000
Ext. GH-9806 for lnrorrr.t1on.

.......Gallipolis........ .
&amp; Vicinity

G•r-ue •••: M..,&amp;-1 Mon .. d
Tu.. Mil._ lftd Jordan 132
Grtlf1t St. 9:00ern.· 1. Men .. d
women dothinQ end • •·
ruga, c;;urulnl, CJ~Itl, bMt·
prMdl, lhlet.a.
fen•.
elec. ov.n. bed, rwno. diiMI,
Cflftl. loti of miiC.

IWMfl•·

Garage Sale Fri .. Sat. Country
Aire 'IJ mi . out Georg• CrMIII
from At. ? . Cloth•. bed. bts
meterial , remnanta. 1ntiqua
rocker, tebl .. , metal fold dllirt
end mu ch more.
Gerage Sale 4 family Msy 2.3 •
6th thru 9th. 6 miln down At . 7 .
signs.
Huge Yard Stle Fri., Sat. Tools,
fumttura, c;;ktthing mile. Acro11
from Gellipoli1 Locka in Ewtb.
Com munity Yard Sale linooln
Pike. TuM. May 6th &amp; Wid . Mav
6th. if rein cancellad.
Gar~g~e Sale Three Family Fair·
view Subdivtllon ri34 Hilda Dr.
May 6th, 8th, 7th. CIOthi\g 111
&amp;llll, misc. items. Open 8 1D 7.
Gar~g~e

Sale 1 mile out 218 off
Rt. 7. Moy 6.6.7. S to 4.

--

Y•rd Sale May 5. 6 &amp; 71n Parter,
old 160. Baby clothes. clothll &amp;
other other items.
3 .7 mi. out Rt . 100 tum left on
old Rt. 160 go 1 mi. on lift.
Fithlng equ ipment, child Cia·
thing, m ile;. Mav 8,9, 10 . Rlln lhine.

I

foml!y dlopoNI y .... 1011. Moy

2nd thN May 10th. c-.. ..
c... trucb, mo-.(pu .. lftd
ridlngl . odda·endl. . .10 to
11200. items. . too many 10
mention . Hwy U3, by DendI
Qulclc Stop ~.fbt .
403 l.Mity St., Pomeroy. J.ne
Brown. Drtvew..,. ..... Good
women·• clothing .(ch . . pl .
di1h11, kltctlen · wMr. gl111.
8:00 om tMI 4:00 pm.

Moy 5th, edt, ond 7\lt. 253 fll\lt
St.. Mldd,..,.rt AU liz• cto·
thing, mile:.

2.0 Reilrold St., M"dlipart.
Bookl. dilhel, good clothlne .
Mon .. May 5th Md Tu•.• M..,

lth. 9:00·3:00

.

May llh and Itt\. NIUtllnll
,...ld'""'· John St., IYFHUtt.

9:Q0-7 lldapr_,, ....._, cur-

tllinJ, mile;.

1 dly tx~ly . Mondly, Moy5. 117
H.h St., Mkklteport, Ohio.
Swing Ht , some fumfture,
mile .. 101M Mothlr ' t Day

~--

.....
....... P.om.erov .......... .......IllPt.Pieiiiianf
Vicinity
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

1 mile South pa&amp;t Roy1l Oak
Park . Tum left, follow tlgns. Fri.
thru Monday. Clothing. blbv
item•.
Ba1ement ule: Fridsy, Saturdey
and Monday. t0 -3 pm. l att of
misc. and children• nice ciMff
c;;lothing . 1881 Uncoln Ht1.
Pomeroy.

Yani Sell, M.,. 2 and 3.
9 :00-5 :00, 2411 Monrv• Aw.,
Cloth• •nd mite ll1m1.

c..,....

Sale, fri, 811, ·~ ·
4 :00, ttoullhokl iteml, buc*eta,
furniture. ck)thing. .1320 How.
ltd Ave .. ICf'O• from Vo~:~tionll
School.

Yetd .... Monday • TuiMiy,

lth • lth. prie. chiiiP. 3718.

Second Av.. Midd~,

Otlk».

~~~~~~~;;~~~~;;;~~~==~~
r31

Homes for Sale

31

Hom-.1 for S1le

6 room house on Nelaon Rd ..
Rutl1nd . Out ofhlgh w1t1r, quiet
area , reedv to mov• Into. Call
61ot -7'2·2007afttr ' :30.

R111ored older home. Ylne
StrHt. Radnt. N... oeta kh·

In Mlddlepon, 7 rooms, 2 baths.
fu n benmern, gu hut. air
condit ion ed , well intu latld. 2
Clr glfage, nice c;;Ofnlr kit.
Phone 814-992 -358!5 or 814·

Pdcod 13.6 .000.
2540.

992-2860.
Two .rorv frame home tar Ill e.
Four bedrooms 1Y.! btthl. on
State Route 124 In Syracu11.
Prlc;;e rlducld for quit* 1111. If
Interested call any lime P:CIPt
Sundays. 114· 992· 3&amp;25.
2 bedroom house with futl
bailment. Located on tpptoll . 1f•
acre of land on Dutcf'ltown Rd ..
Minllf'lllllle, Ohio. Ra•o nably
pric;;ed. C•lll14· 992-3171 tor
mora information.

ch'". ..,.,Nan~.

dlnlnt room.

living room. 3 bedrooma. birth.
aH window co7. ~.

I 11 ..1141·

" rooms. blttl, partly fum61hed.
c.,.ot tn ..........t. FO&lt;Cod llr
tum~. covered patio, 1 outbuilding. Colle1 • ·357-IHI"'
&amp;14-367-0315.

3 Announcementl

6 v11r1 a ld. 21tory, 2 bldroom1.
bath, walnut paneling, on privati
road. T.P.C. wtttr. RHCitvilll
1111. Call 614· 378-1452.

3 Announcementl

TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR
ROUTE DRIVERS.

SEND AESIJIIE TO: P.O.
BDX 337, RIO GRANDE,
' OH. 45674.

Swap Day &amp; Flea Market
May lOth
- NO ADMISSION FEE 15·30 Ft.

1-15Ft.

s5oo

SlOOO

FEATURING STEER SHOW
&amp; OTHER ACTIVITIES .
ATHENS CO. FAIRGROUNDS
. to

ELITE POLE BUILDINGS

PHO .. 667·3211
Residential - Con~~~~rciol - Agric~tural

"SPRING SPECIAL"
24'x8'x40 DELUXE GAIAGI

2 - 9x7 DOORS
1 - 3 ' WALK DOOR
2-WINDOWS

ALL PAl NTE D STEEL
ROOF VAPOR BARR! ER

.

OII.Y

$4925

"Compare The Quality Before You Buy"

I

�Page.- D-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
31

Home• for Sale

bulh IV. o""Y Tudoo
style home on I wooded acraL
10 mlnutlt from '-int Pte. .m.
Send HIH Rood, ua.ooo.oo.
304-198-3383.
Ouollty

3 Ndroom. alt *ectric, centrel
air, ltlrga .;Mck, 2 tots. attached
garage. Galtlpolll Ferry. 304·

075-2932.

H ,· nl.ll ~
~ 1_ H ouaes for Rent
Rodney VIM..e II; 2 bt'e-Eureka;
3br Evllna Hllght1; Oepoait a
raferenCM ~tquirtcl . lleckbum
Rtllty -151•· 4oti-OOOI.

078-8189.

Colll1~ - 21t - 0113 .

2 bdr. houM, 120 lt.ltl St.

agl, heat pu"1'1ndoth•utrll. A1frig &amp; no.,. fum.. htd, t200
Mayo Orlve, New H1vwn, 30ot· · mo., depoeh requWed . Call &amp;14·
882-3487 or 304-875-19111 448-0254.
•fter 5·00 PM .
Nlce3 bdr. hou11, tuu--.ment.
central 1ir, fenced Ylfd, no pets.
t325 plua diPOih. CIM 814 32 Mobile Homes
882-2810 oft• 8,00,
for Sale

-3 bdr. home In oountry water ,

NEW AND USED MOBILE trash. stove, nfflg. tum .. 1200
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY month. 1180 deposit. CIM 114MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI. 388-9880.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS. RT 35.

PHONE 814-441-7274.

In Punt1 Gorda. Ft1. 111 ,500.
Two bdr .. whh appU.nce 1nd
partly furnished. ,.. h..t pump
&amp; llir condltkm•. Florlde room.
c.wpet &amp; tool lhMI . Call 014441-11599 lfter 1:00PM.
Vlndtle 12•13 completely fur·
nithed, 16.000. CaH eve ' s 814441 -U37 or 814-US -928&amp;.
.72 Fre~om 14x70 3 bdr. ptrt.
remadeled . equ~ for wood
burn•. porch &amp; underpinning.
t4,500. Call 114-379-2808 .
14x70 Fattlval, 2 bdr ., 2 full
batht. )ott of c'osete. utility
room. AC . Calll14·446·6241
•nvtlma.
1971 Richlfdto" 121180, 1 ,~
beth, 2 bdr .. g• h.. t. cant. air ,
free delivery. Catl 81.- -446 -

017&amp;.

Corne to Chillicothll The Shtw·
n.. Ylllev M~nuftcWred Horne
Show II MIV lth thru 111h
s..·em 111 htfe .. . l'u Doln' 1..
Prlr11 ... Factory Repe ... Enter·
talnmen11 Bringing you you
'America' t aHordable alternative ' ... in tha Sllrt Mall. right on
bullnMsloop 23. IHYOU therll
1174 Holty Plrlt 11x65 • lot. 3
bdr., AC , very vwy nice. C1ll
114·448·4761 ef111r 6:30. any·
tirM weekenda.
1975 Malcot 1211110. good
cond.. inclt..u... din 1'111 ....
w11h1r -dry.,-. Underpinning,
t5,600. Call 814-441 -2452 or
81~ - 448 -7749 .

1!JIO liberty 14•&amp;4. 2 bed·
room, unfumilhllll, vinyl undlf·
pinning included. Must ..11. Call

304-773-&amp;873

MOBILE HOMES MOVED : inrat•. Call

lUted, raa10neble
30~·878-2338

Now displaying our new IPrlng
rnodlla in single and doubltwida
hqrMI 11 rlductd pricee. W•t-

Ho-. lltl AI. 110 E..

wood

BarbourtVflle. W. V1. 304·7383811 OJI'" ....ry d.y.

1o4'•70' mobil• home. 3 bed·
und~annlng. appll•n·
ceil ~eluded. NICE. 304-175-

roome,

1411.

1173 Klrkwoo~ doutM• wide on
pr+v.t• lot. large front porch. 3
bldroo~ . 2 full b1ths, din ing
room, famity roam. 2 lir cond.
fuUy carpetld. uc cond. nict
loc:.tion. GalllpoN1 Ferry, 304-

871-3087.

10d0. 2 bedroorna. compl.taly
remodeled, too muc:h to list. exc
cond, lftllt Mil leeving state.
12.710.00 or mall• otter, 304-

871-4891 .

33

Farm• for Sale

7 ec:rn. two bedroom mobile
homl, bam , peature, gardWI
1pKI. TPC water. quietloceUon
In Ch-.tar area . Nice for only
1111.000. Must
C•ll 814-

*1.

981-31125.

36 lots &amp; Acreage

"i•

For
by owner 4 .8 aCftll,
3211111 bldg .. prop.-ty all fenced.
good homa building eita .

022.1100&lt; Colll14-211-1822.

In Mills ViHIQt. fOOd building
tlte, re110nably prlnd. Call after

3 bdr . hou•, 177 Pommouth
Rd . OW. grb. d;.p .• rangl,
dou~e c..ehy echool
district, t300 mo . depoett ,..
qulred . C1ll 114-441-1134.

e••u•.

Furnished hou .., 4 roomt. bath.
7!5 raar Thlnl Ave.
1126 mo .. 176 dep . c.a 814·

Loe~ted

448-3870"' 814-"8-1340.

HOUM in CIOYntry. gll'dlft. t275
month. t35 budgtt gM. Ref. 6
diP. required. 2 trllltftpecet for
rant. C1ll 114-441-3710.
2 bedroom MluM In llomeroy,
furnished or unfurnished . Pay
own utilitiM. jutt remodeled.
Call daya. 614 -992-2311 and
nigh II, 114-992-87 23.
2 bedroomhouNand 2 Hdroom
IPirtrnent. Call Clel..,d R..ttv

ot 61~ · 992-2269 .

Middleport Area. ntoe houte.
good location, if lnter•ted ctMI

304·882-3722.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
For ule or rent , 14x70, 3 bdr.,
1lh bath, clo111 to town. Call

014-446-754&amp;.

2 bedroom. new c...-pet, AC , In
Gallipolis . Call 814-441· 1409 .
2 bdr. on O.J . White Ad. Quiet
country 1enlng. Call 814-441 7157 after 8PM.

careful play iS simply tO protect

' I • NEWSPAPRR IN'I'ERPRlSE ASSN.

8

• 875 2

SOUTH
tAB

fAK
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

Eaot

Pass

2+

Pus

••

Pus

44

44

Apartment
for Rent

Apartment for ,.nt. Quality 2
lh, 2 bath ..,artrrtell1 in prime
downtown IDeation wH:h off·
ltreat Plr11int-Kitch• twmilh..t
wtth rt1'rig., aeH-cleM own.
OW, gar. dilp .. hookup for
Wllhlf' / dryer. For nort-tmoidng
lllngl1 or couple. No drlldr~n or
plb . Alle*'rlc:. lnclultll water·
; ..,,/tr.. h. A oner...... •is
I'IIIIUirld. Call 1!114·441-1694
8AM 10 5PM.
'umlahld • '·· 1 bdr., 701 4th
Ave., GaiUpolll. U38 mo. utilitill p1id. Cell 446-4418 1tter
7pm.

&amp; Court St. 3 bdr. 1'h bath, 1260
mo .. Pkll ut~ltl ... refarenc• &amp;
no peta. Ctl 814-441-4921.

Coil 304-07&amp;-5104.

8

Cl .. tlc 3 bedroom farm hou ..
on 40 acr11. Racently rMtorld .
Larg1 btth wtth w1lk In clo.. t.
P111 OK . 1300 month. 014·

Apartment
for Rent

6+

Pau

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

From Gallipolis. take Route 141, turn left onto
louie
turn righl onlo Patriot Cadmus RO.d
Welch for sicns .
·
Looking lor merchandise? Try the Palliot Auction
Barn! We h111 alllypes of new and used rnerehandise - applilnces, ftrniture, anliques and collectors items. Something for everyone!
SALE EVERY SATURDAY al 7:110 P.M.
Door Prizes Giwn Weekly
Consipmt"llacceptad froiiii:00-5:00 p.m. on Saturday.
Have somethinc you want Ill sell? Contact Marlin Wtde m1Jtr, Auctionur. Arran1111111nls lor pickupsorvicemiltlble.
lam and Auctionur availllllt for Public Auctions on conlrac:t. Conlr~et includes lllullnc and lrmportinc all
llltrchandlsa.
Roident an' luslnos AIIC!Ion Servlet also mllabll.
l1riin WedtllltJ'Ir-'-Auctioneer

ns.

614/245-5152 - 614/318-1249
OTHER ACTIVITIES:
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT, COUNTRY MUSIC SHOW
ClDGGIIG &amp; SQUARE DANCf

Mlf t, 7:30 P.M. RAIIIIS:
TIMf &amp; COIII'IIY GlAD

eo.. 1 8,000- 2 12,000

Pass

2 bdr. utili1MII per11ally tum..

1175 010. CoN 304-071·1288
•• 304-876-5104.
New 1 bldroom eplrt'IMnt. tell

81C-441-0310.

+Q

Good lhllngroom .,itt.
tell.
Colll14 -448-8378.

FDor rent: 2 b.drootn furnilhed

opt. Adulto

only.

2749 .

SWAIN
AUCr!ON 81 FURNITURE 112
Olivt 81.. Gtlilii&gt;OIIo. Now 11o Ulld

wood-colll'tOV•. I pc wood Ut
alltl
bunk bldl t199,
entron rKIIn.. tit , """' &amp;
UMd bedroom tuk•. ranges,

uu.

wrWtger Walhtfa, • ahoM. Ntw

Furn. eftldtncy 11U mo ..
utlliti• peid. ahart bath. 807
2nd. Ave. GalliJ(IIil. Call «6·
4416 lftar 7pm.

Coil &amp;14-192-

2 bedroom fumilhld apt. for
rent in Mk:ldlepbrt. Aft utMitl•

pold. Coi1814-882-5084.

2 bldroom apt. for rwnt, frn
h11t . Call814· 992-7481.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 6, 1986

5:30 P.M.

llvingroom .. tt. t199 - t599 .
lempa. tllo buyln; co_. &amp; wood

110\M. Cell 114-445-3169 .
LA~NE'S

FURNITURE

Sot• lftd ctuin priced from
t28&amp; . to 1198. Teb .... tiO 111d
up ttl 1128 . Hkt••·bede, t390 .
and up to '1560., .ofa Mda
•146 , Recllntn. 8225 . to
t371 .. Lampl from t28 . to
t121. pc. dlntnll from t109.,

10435. 7pc.t189ondup.Wood

tabl1 wh:h ai.11 chllrt 1286 to
1741. DHII: t12S Up to t376 .
Hutch•. tl550 . Bunk t.d cor.
plete with m.ttr...... t276 .
and ~ to 1391. Baby beda,
1110 . Mattrautl or box
IPrinlll. full or twtn, 163 ., flrm.
173. end til. Queen aett,
822&amp;. Bed fnwn• . t20 .and
126., 10 gun · Gun cebintts,
t350. Gu or 4actrlc rang•
t371. llby metlrlaiU. 13!1 &amp;
.... illtl " - 020. 125 . •

no, kina ..... lliO. Good

"itct5Qn of bedroom ., ....
roc:lt ... ITM81 ctblnett, held·
board• 138 • up to S85 .
Uted Fumi1ure -- Drl!lt~llr , &amp; bed.
Trundle bed. mettl office deeka .
3 mil• out Bultvllle Rd . Op.,
9am to !lpm, Mon. thru Sn

Coudl, chair. twin size bdr.
eult1. beby bed. rock•. ilrf1'1.
coffM a. end table. C•ll 1St4-

dey1, 814-246-9273 cwenk-lga.

Antiquo round "' toblo plut 4
high bod&lt; choiro, good condl·
tlon. Coi1814-448-2701 .

Sawmill 3 block 58 indl UN.
niW wood, good cond., lilt
po~er unit U.&amp;OO. Ctll 114 -

Furniture.

Jenning• co,.,ound bow t121 ,
1977 AMC Homet 1100, 1111
Volkawegon rabbit •950, 1174
Dodge Dar
1971 Toyota

•sao.

11,080. Coli &amp;14-388·1813

44&amp;-8031.

Good

Good ueed wat• JIU"'l» for

CJIIIftv Uled fumlture. Op., 9 tt
I Of Clll for IPpGintment.

304-871-8483"' &amp;71-14110.
Coplolno bod. t180.00. Phone
30.·878-4038.

Lo~ated on St. Rt. 124 just out of Rutland.
Sold home and movin&amp; into camping
trailer so will sell the followin1.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Living room suite, 3 jl( . bedroom suite, RCA color TV, coHee
&amp; end tables, Maytag washer &amp; dryer, rockers, recliners,
lam~s. Kenmore microwave &amp;tab le, liggage, Sirlt~tr 8eetric
sew1ng machine, Hoover &amp; Rainbow sweepers, Haovtr
shampDOef, han~ncli.ght, table, misc. figurines, ~!sol Home
lntenor 4ems, m1sc. dtshe s, pots &amp; p1111s, food grinder &amp;processor, 111d all kinds rJ ~ectrical ~pliance s, bed linens, II!·
fr1g:· chest &amp; upriaht deep freezer. 13xl5 carpet, swina. exercise btke, lots of Tupperware and much more.
"ANTIQUE OR COlLECTOI !TEllS"
r/all and stand or! lights, misc. dishes, grein cradle, draw
knife, apple peeler, barr~ hatchet, corn sheller, st011e jan
8 gal., churn , cherry pitler, steel tr ~s and other Hems.
'IIISC." ·
IH 70 Cub Cadet w/mower, railroad jacks, lincoln 225 A.C.
welder, puch lawn mower, misc. halters, ropt$, nose lead
clampers, dehorners, pickup truck racks horse drawn turnilg plows, cast iron bath tubs br water, coal &amp; wood sloM
bow &amp; arrow. Unicorn log splitter, air COII'Ciresser, llt!lldi
grinder, sltill saw, hydrau~c jeck, tur stretelier, mise stuffed
real animals, 12' Craftsman band saw, Craftsman table saw
truck toppers. hearth fireplace stone. all kindsof misc.tools:

s-

3 big bloc:ltt for Chevy. A. .nld
ChtvV partt. 4 IPHCI chen geover, thiftllr. 1968 ,_., tQn
ChllyV pickup. 814·992-&amp;118 .

C•llah.-.'1 Ueed Tira Shop. Ov.1.000tlr•. elzn 12, 13 , 14.16.
18, US .&amp;. B mil• out At. 218.
Call 114-2&amp;6·8261 .

1970 International 60 pit·
sanger school bu1. Good oondi tton. No INti. Aun1 geod.

Electrolux vaccuum cleaners,
A- 1 conditlon -attachmlntl .
Av1ilabl1 11 172 .00. C•h or
terrna anenged. C1ll 814· 24&amp;·

Ufetlme concr ..• cufv«t1. 12
indlto Sl Inch. in etock. Lari"r
ebl'l evalleble. UJI to I ft . Cell
814·992-2834 or 114 -112 -

Pintle ci1t1m etale approved.
pintle teptic tanka. pl•tlc
cuiVertl, metll culv1n1. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
.on. Oh. 814-288·6930 .

lawnmower, lik• new . 3.15 HP ,
22 indt cut . Call 81•·992·2t03
afternoon .
Halt Prlcel Fl11hing arrow e.igns
12991 Ughtld. non -arrow t2?1 1
Nonllghted 12281 FrH lett••!
Only ffiiN leh. Sea loCIHV .
1 ·800•423·01&amp;3, 1nytlme.

Refrig.,-ltion &amp; Appllana~ Ser·
vice. All brands u•ad appliii'II'JII·
part1. Little'• Retr6g . • Appl.,
ChHhlre, Oh &amp;H -387-0440 .
Motorlzld trNdmill, uceflltlt
condition, 1600. Cell 81o4·446-

3874.

4PM.

10. Wood door penll1 w-ful
78" hgt. 34" wld1 1 ~
tnick t39 .9&amp;.
11 . Oct1gonal window watalnld IHdld glau III.IIS ••·
12. CIHr ecryllc thltU 010 ll'ld
1 2a ..... te¥trll llzll biQ

ul•aa

Btarcat 1415Xl 18 channel, 10
band, programmable. AC-DC.
Smith and W•.on M -80, 38
ep~eitl St1niH1, new . 304· 871Queen aize bed. complete,
1h11t1, bld1pread for Mil.

t130. 304-075-1828.1

8 ft. utUity bed for p-u tn~ck . All
cabin at tocb work.
304·

'r'"'ll.

TURN YOUR TOES

2 , Wallboard adhMIYeqt tubel

OUT TO GRASS AT

Of

OWN YOUR OWN
CAMPSITE...

RAILROAD TIES- Bin. x 10

Help Wanted

1118ilck 114·1192-2289.'

•Boating
•Fishing
•Hunting
•Swimming

Blodr., brick, matter tnd rnaIOruy .,ppllel. Mountain St•t•
Blo~ . Rt. 33. N.• Haven. W

Vo. 304-182-2222.

68

PART-.TIME EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

Bii Brothors/Bi1 Sistors of Moics. GJI!iJ, JJCkson, •nd MJSon
Counties. Stltry: Commensurlle with education and uporience.

Cattery Klhnll .
P•lllfl 1nd
Si•m•• kitten a. AK C Chow
pupplee. New pupp• • kltt1t11.
Coil 44&amp;-3844 lft1&lt; 7PM.

CfA

Position involves JX'O&amp;ram administration and

e~sewort.

Some

fiscal mmaom111t, personnel lid public relotions required.
Prefer Masters De&amp;rl!t in Social Work. Coumelinc or Counselin&amp;
PsyctloiOIY, or reh1ted fi1ld . Two years professionalexperienu
in field dtsirtd.

illtjl. -Ct11H·•2-:M07.
· uoo. C•h """' no
oh-.

Send resume and three letters of recommendation by lby 16,

1986 to:

Personnel Comminae

Big Brothers / Big Sittert of Meiga. Galli•.
Jackson , •nd M111on Countiea

P.O. Box 1030

Gallipolis, Ohto 46631

REGISTERED NURSES

Open House
1-5
Sunday
May 4th

FULL-TIME. PART-TIME &amp; PRN MEDICAL·
/SURGICAL POSITIONS AVAILABLE FOR
EXPERIENCED REGISTERED NURSES.
CONTACT:
Personnel Department
Holzer Medical Center
385 Jackson Pike. Gallipolis. OH. 45631
614-446-5105

Baby "acooont. UO .oo ..ch .
Duok Wing Nntlml, 304-•15·

y,,
0•
c..,.u•... c...,.,

3172.

67

74t• Rul...

WATEA-ElECTIK
BATHHOUSE
...CAlLE TV ...

493 Grant St.
Middleport
3 BR, l 1/2 bath,
living room,
dining room,
kitchen, back
porch, nice lot.

'Virfj tllt a

69 For Sale or T rede

PARK

Slla Of' . . . . . 1178 Ch..,.. van.
1178 Pon11ac, 1174Ford0tlftd
Torino. C..tmus phon1, 11 4 ·

378-2233.

DIRECTIONS:
6 miles below Gallipolis ,
cross Raccoon Crk. Bridca. ·
Tum ri&amp;ht &amp; follow sips.

An Equal Oppor1unlty

e\nplover 1.1/F/H

DAN IIITH - AUCnONEEI
,.

9' hay t.clder. 2 yra. old.

OFFKE OPEN TILl Dill(
Farm Equipment

CADIS. SONS
U.S. 31 WNI, JocbM. Ohio.
&amp;1 · -211-8481 .
M•_,. F•guaon, N..v Hollll'ld.
BUih Hou s.,.. 1. &amp;trvlc1. Ovtt'
40 used tractor• to d'looN from
&amp; CDrrttllltllna of new
ueed
aqulpnwnt. Lerpet •IKtion In

8mtlh

a

B.E. Ohio.

UIMity bldg. opl. ' 30'•40'x9',
11'x8' 1Mdlng door • 3' Hf'\1,
door, t&amp; ,HB ettcttd. Iron
HorM 81dg1. 814·332-97415.
WI WMI do etl type~ of custom
f•m rnadllnerv wort. Call for

..... f14-211-116a&amp;.
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. SR 311 W. OolllpoNt,
Ohio. Call 114-441-8777, eOJe.
S1o4·4tl·31582. Up front trac:·
tort with wenan tv aver 7li .used
lriCtOrt, 1000 tool•-

D•••

2010 Jolwl
wkla front ltva
power, powlt IIMI'Ing. 13,!150.
14 -T J•hn ·
baler t8915 .
John o... reke •1915. MF dtnt
bound mower Wtch 7ft. bar like

o.-•

n... con 11•·211-11621.

1970 (1)00 Ford dl. .l3 bottom
M•lle Fergueon plows. 8 pt.
treniPOrt diec. 8 ft. WOOdl
buthhog, 111,1118. Coli 814·

:111&amp;·11622.

180 AC tractor for ule. t3,1500.

10 oport diocJ.D. IBOO.
12 hfl.. .,Ho..ogiiOr.
10
ttiOO .. J.O.
Orlln Drill 1400.

1All

tot

•4IOO.o0. Colt 30C·4'8·38117
"'"I p.m.
New ld•au.-1 INRUrtiPrudar.
In .,oct condition. For mort
lnformetlon, call 114-742·
2%o41. Arnold Grate.
NtW HoiiMd 310 lqu•rt ,,..,,

Mitt ·- . t3888. Ford . 515
Oln•·lelanoe Mow.,, 11815.
Fergu10n Dln•lllenCII Mower,
1141. Lincoln AC W1lder

c....,., Wound, f1ZI. I ond L.

Ftrm Equlpmlnt, llortlend, ·

Ohio. 114-143·11 85.
LarQe rewnd H11opon 8100
ltllf'.
2 Mil equipment
....... Col114-·2-7401.

••oo.

Oeub •totor, ptrtl •nd HNIOI

I

SPECIAL NOTICE
WE liED AN OFFERII

•&amp;oo.

Here's you r chance l o~ s h in on aGOOD HOME BUY. Very mce

N8 Ford Tractor grldar blade. 4
n-.v tlr•. trell•. Call 614· 98&amp;-

4 OOdroom ranch . hu~re family ro om. f01mal dmtnl!. 2flreo lar.p_c;
2 baths. Nice krtchen. Natural !liS furn ace, central atr walk to

4382 .

school. AHratltVewooded netgh borhood Yru ""n'l hndabetler
buy.

John Deere garden tractor.
llectrlc ltlrt, llghtt. 34 in deck.
40 in blade, chaine, exc . cond.
1800. Call 814 ·379-2788 aftar

&amp;.

Real Estate General

~··
I
1

. , •••••
.
,~•

~,,.••.,,.••• ••

Better Jump at

IYour Cllances to Sa\le!

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636
LOOKATTHIS GREAT BUY NEAR RIO GRANDE. NICE 3 BEDROOM RANCH HAS EAT-IN KITCHEN. ATTACHED GARAG E.
ABOVE GROUND POOL PRIVACY FENCE, AN ABSOLUTE
STEAL AT $30,000.
THIS HOllE COULD BE THE BUY OF THE YEAR 1 3 BEDROOMS. IIi BATHS, FAMILY ROOM. UTILITY ROOM, NICE
COUNTRY SETIING NEAR CITY. $28,500.

OORGEOUS SETTING! RANCH WIT HOVER 3 ACRES WITHN:·
CESS TO RACCOON CREEK FOR F!SHNG OR BOATING. 3
BRS, 2 BATHS, LR AND FP, OR, FR WITH WET BAR AND BIG
GARAGE WITH li BATH. WELCOME SUMMER IN SIYLE.
PRICED TO SELL AT $59,000.

AN AFFORDABL£ HOllE WITH A POOl! HIS RANCH HOME
Hr\S VINYL SIDING AND BRK:K TRIM. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS,
EQUIPPED KITCHEN , NICE DINING AREA, 16X321NGROU ND
POOL HEATED FOR COOL DAYS. ATTACHED CARAGE. SOLAR
HEATING UNIT. A LOT OF HOME FOR $55,000. JUST Ml ·
NUTES FROM HOLZER HOSITAL. JUST LISTED!

WE HAVE A NICE FRAIIE BUILDING FOR SALE ON CLAY
CHAPEL ROAD PANELED. CARPETED INTERIOR, GAS FUR·
NACE PRESENTLY BEING USED AS A CHURCH OWNERS
HAVE PRICED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE $12 ,500.

BEAUTIFUL IIVII VIEW! KC SOIOOL
FRAME TRI-LEVEL. 3 BR'S, I Yz BATf£, FR
BURNER HOOK-UP, CIA, CARPORT &amp; LOTS OF STORAGE.
JUST LISTED -PRICED FOR QUICK SALE AT $45,000.

II
NEWLYWEDS! - We havetf'e perfect starter 11&gt;111!
I ATTIIITION
ilr yoo. Super locat~n in t"'n on lar0! 1~. Affordab~ iJrel at

SUPER SITE! 1.56 ACRES- NICELY lANDSCAPED WITH Ll
MESTONE DRIVE. HAS 2 SEPTIC TANKS, WATER TAP. 24X20
BLDG. W/CARPORT GR£AT PLACE 10 BUILD A HOME OR
FOR AMOBILE HOME. $141000. JU ST LISTED'

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NEW LISTING

. .:"

~:~. i~
. il'lt ,"-A ..

YOU WOKING FOR A NICE II)ME tn lhe Hannan Trace School OtStnct JJI:ed tn the mid
How about 3 !xjrm .. I li batlli. carpet, woodbumer &amp; much more a! on ooe acre lei'
TO HOSPITAL- Lotsof !lowers. shrubs, lg. ~ne lrees. plu savery well designed nome.
Fe;~:~~~~ha: rlf or mal l ivin groom, family room, 3-4 bedrooms. 11h baths. complete ~ itch en with

di

. ~av e and refrigerator. Fimshed ba sement w/carpet, 2 w garge and separate
shop. Alargecovered oo ck por ch,gasheat, Washington Elementary. Priced in low 70s.

I FIRST TIME ON MARKET124•44 oouble w~e on ntce Ievell .:re
lot 3 BRs. bath, ran0! &amp; refng., 2 wlbeildng;, country sett111~
I OwnetS buy;ng hOuse and have pr~ed for QJ~~ sale al $25,000.

&amp; L1vnl111.~

388-8826
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

P. Dolan
RAX RESTAURANTS. INC.
1503 Eastern Avenue
GalliPOlis, OH 45631

Coli 014-441 -0373.

1s1s.!XK!.

11'111 Sllpfllli'S

R[ SIDt PHI A, L . I N ... ESlM (NTS . CO ... IIIl RC IAL

If you have at least 2 years of
cOllege or 2 yean; of management expenence (a restaurant
background is prafaned). you
could be running your own operoHon sooner than you ever hoped.
· 1rs o ten~ic opportunity for those
\Ootlo wont to be part of on excitIng future. Let us hear !TOm you.
Send your resume Ia

.,.

21 ft . tri-P II trailer. U, HIO.

182-3231.

FOOT

HOME &amp; BIG Q'PORTUNITY
Very attractive remodeled 3
· bedr m.. l 'h baths and gar.
den rub. 17'x25' kitchen ,
· new "'lid oak cabinets, pan try , laundry room, !g.
screened ~rch . NEW GARAGE: 28'x40', heal, water.
220 w11lng, 12'•14' door. II
you are looking lor a busi·
ness apportunitj and home
- Tn IS is tl. M1d $50s.
4LARGE BEDROOMS &amp; 4 ACRES
SR 554 remodeled 8 rm home. Just ch arming lor all your
antiques. Family size kitchen ~ith bar and load s of cabinets.
Basement. rural water, beautiful trees in theyard. Mtd $50s.
TOWN AND COUNTRY
4 acres oo lhe Ohio River. 7 rms.. full basemenl,ltving rm.,
sirtin·grm ...3 bedrms., I' baths, 2wtbldgs, lruillrees, 2 ~r
garage.
$25.000 BARGAIN PRICE
SR 160 north offers a corrlortable 4 bedrm. home and 2
acres m/ 1. Rural water, new electric furnace and garage.
Vinyl siding.
SECLUDED LOCATION $9,500
10 acres wooded, stream, approved aeration system. Will
trade.
·
96.5 ACR'ES MI L
·Wilkesville, pond, older outbldgs: Will sub-divide.
BIIICK AND FRAME
5miles from town. Beautifully decorated home on SR 160. 3
bedrms., country kitchen, family rm. with WB Fp. Carport.
Priced low $50s.
VACANT UP THE RIVER
3 bedrms., and bath, !g. kit. lull basement.. Make an tiler.
$20s.
VACANT lOT
_
Neil Ave., Gallipolis. Gas. water, sewer and water available.
$4,000
50/50 BROKER CO-OP

IHC 2 ruw 3 Jll. cultivetor, 3 pt.
PTO Meder. Spring Tooth hlr·
row. Call 114-268·8681 . no
eunday calla.

Fend'tr Squire Str~ guttar. hard
ahell c: ... t250.QP. Muaic man
HD130 tubM amp hud , axe:
cond. t200.00. HOftdl 12 string
gutter with c11e 150.00 . 304·

BIG

Now buying shell corn or ear
corn . Call ftJrlatnt quotea. River
City Farm Supply. 614-446·

Farm Equiprn_ent

Coll014-448-1900.

Ill

BRICK AND FRAME RMCH ~ttin g on!ol acre lot l'&lt; th~Is rJ n(e trees and shrubberj . Lar0!
, 3 bedrooms, modern k~chen l'&lt;th lots~ ~ binels.Low ut11«1es, loll olms ulat~n. Storage
concrete and fenced dog pen. Pr~ed in the 40's .

ti,OOO. 304·812-2147.

ALL CAMPSITES
SHADED &amp; LEVEL

cf~

61

the

5·J

Kimball plano for 1111 llf11tt
consol•l very oood cond .

REAL EST ATE

We need more manager&gt; who
can accept immediate assign. ment to a local Rax Restaurant.
Your progress will be rapid. We
don't have years to groom you.

orgon.

Mogle .....
304·4&amp;8·1924. -

61

Rettaurant

Mualcal
ln1trument1

Lowroy

Real Eetate Generaf

An AA/ EEO EmpiOJtr

Hlmllay~n ,

R• . mlniiUre ICihniUZif' pup.

0•

HOUSE
FOR SALE

Pets fOr Sale

Or~gonwyncl

OF NATURE'S

Real Estate General

r.. x

9ft. Sin. t8.00 per tie Mlhltrld,

:JU . ·.

11

28oz. t1 .38 u . or by c.. e

t1 .2111.
24. P111111na nollo t .79 bo• .
PENN'S WARE'HOUSE ·
Wlitlfon,Ohio 11 C-384--3UI.

BIG FOOT PARI

•~·'9'"' ,,It,...,

Plea ta

2 Wanted to Buy

For leue tobacco poundiCII 40
cent1 a pound . Call bltwelt1
4 :30 to 9 :00PM, 614 -448·
4748 .

Real Estate General

21 . Prlflntlhld and ~fln.hld
door tn d window and Ill rypu ot
trim 1t1rtlng M 11 .00 fur 8'pe .
22. AknTWium mobil1hom11nd
b.m roof coating w-fib• 51 gal.
123.915 100 ull .,d up 120 .96

&amp;75-4831 .

UNSPOILED LAND
NO f~!JNI Y 1111m~

Farm Equipment

19.81 ...

Tony' I Gun Aap1irt. ICOPI bO,.
sightinG, factory rtbluaing ,
hou .. 9 :00 till dtrt, call 304-

1979 Pontile: Flreblrd. Exctllent
condition. UIOO. Aleo plua
equipment. Clll 814-992-2772 .

81

,.,.m

end 450 John Daer1 cll)ler
tn•-&amp;94·78•2 or B94·10De .

Ill(.

R£At'/'fJR

446-4206

:ifi22 .

6

-

JACKSON COUN T!' BRA NCH
286 -4496, 64 CHURCH STR EET
FilED &amp; Al.I CE HnL - OFFICE MA NA GEFIS

"Gentlemen,' we have only
two things to fear - fear
itself and someone getting a
look at the books."

mark••·

noo.

ACRES &amp; ACRES

s,._,...

Allis Ch1lm1r 2 row 3 point
no-till planter, dry fertllb:lf and
HVingtl.
.
13 . Plywood handy panels , inelct attachement, demonatr~ ­
82"1ong 18"wld• v. thick • .'1&amp;· . tot'l2,800.00. Alii Ch1lrntrl 4
row pull no-1iH. dry f"'ililer,
11 .0011.
.
14. M110ntte primed horl.zont•l lnsact atted'ltmnt. S1,9QO.OO.
IXtlrior lidinO 18'x·11".117-11 Atlle Chllmlrl 4 row pul no·dll,
11 MriN, lif wthl, dry llrf:lila.,
UO.OOoq.
15,1100.00. Allie Chalmere I
11. B·grede m1rbtl vanity tops row
dry fertlllz:•. hydr~ullc
choice 1iz• In 11ock. 120.00ea.
k1-.ct and h•tHcide
1t. 4'd' tr~•ted pine Iettice
attach....,, t1 .900.00. C111
114.915 ...
Modltl &amp;80 gu beckhot and and
17. K·lux brick andatonered 1nd
tan . reg. tl .99 ctn now 11 .150 lo•d•'· ctb, vary good.
ti,600 .00 . Inteml1lonail00 D
.,d t1 .te ctn.
18. Exterior key doorlock tluml· dlilel cmur hydr~ulle bllde and
...,.,ch t8,900 .00. Kaefer Sll·
flnleh U.99ea.
t I . Good Ulld 8· 2 bulb light vlce Canter. PolntPiellldf Alply
Rood, 30~· 895 - 3874 .
compllte w-bulbt 115.00••·
20. Wood·Muonit.. bathroom
paneling 4'x8' pc 14 .99 to

2823.

Aegitteted Miniature Sd'lniiUt.,
puppill, maiM. 1200. Cuh
on~ . no cheekl. ,Call 814-•2·

2807.
-:-:c:::--::c--- : - --:---ic-

1985 Honda XR100 parftct
condition. J .C. P~tnnv Ctbin
tent . Ctll 814-266-1811 after

10.

304-878-2107.

0704.

Positl¥1 I D
Call!
"!lot mponallllllor mH1111ts or losa ol property,

I

ThrN 1 belmt 4x8x12 ' 3 bng.
Two I beama4•8x18'1ong. One I
b~am Bxl•18' lont. t221 .00 for
all blama. 100 ceramic nx.lde
ch•p. Call lftar 4:00 PM.

814-892 -3410.

9116"' 304-676-8799.

118.81111.

1 . Thlrrnelln.,lttld gl111 panoil 78" hgt. 32" wldo 131.811

Cl, • ...,. ~ ... .... \

JI M STU 'IE~

~~;;:;:;;~~:::;~==

298&amp;.

t1 ,400. CIH 114-388-9832.

IJO NNI £ STlTES - IJTWK EH

310 lntM~allonal utility di••l
UKtoF &amp; loaded ' with hydraulic
bucket t2.960, 2 bottom JO
plowt 129~ . 3 pt . JD diell good
cond . *29&amp;. Call 614-2BB -

chlnory,RT. U4&amp;MoyhowRd ..

Rotary type hey mo-ver, mowed
le.. than 10 ac:rM, u new.

HA ~M\111

1000 Ford mator di•el with
Ford mower. 3 pt. MF rake, New
Holland H balar. All for 13.7915.
Call 814 -281!1-2&amp;22.

JackiOn , Oh 114-281-6944.

e.

Used ASS Dhdt Witch Trll'tcf\et

64 Misc. Merchandise

.

i

.,,,.,01

2038.

Opening Soon. Strtwberry
lleldt. Witch paper for opanlng
dltl .

1·814·694-1842 or 894-1008.

OWNER: HOWARD &amp; MARIE BIRCHFIELD

Elts

Htt \'i gl. . Ht• Uti.
4 . llftgle tid..,._
door
... t 'A tlwm1l al111 U99.91 .
B. Commercial litubll entrencaa
lilt brown all aluminum 1188.
Doubl11k111tt•• an~MC.ut
WOOd ~ PJI'Iei , tlelt wdeooratl'll trim t28t. 81 , '
7 . Prthung ~terlor dooq all
slu1 and flnlilhn 8 gred•
IJI.II5 ... .
8. Plllung lnter~r 8 penel pine
door'l lh IIIII (8) grtdM,

Pep• blldl: romen01 bookt 25
and 35 cents each. 304--8715-

for 111e good Ulld blrgak-1
priced color TV. Call 814-441 Used R·86 ditch whch trendier
&amp; 450 John o..re dozer. C1ll

store marl&lt;. Our expansion plans
will capitalize an this strong
founda tton.

Oh1o.

3. Doublelldaltle~nlnnoadoor

891-3322.

1149.

Buylng'llwaterbed and must tell.
King tin manr•• 1nd box
IPringe with frame and t\1¥0 eata
of lhHt.l. Coma aee1nd mlk1u1
an vffer. 304-882-2334.

The continuing growth of Rax Restaurants is moving us over the 500

SATURDAY, MAY 10,1986
10:00 A.M.

ond gillo lltlt or 11-. 1121.811.

2281 .

1h1llow well or dMP well. C1l

814-388-1782.

DAN SMITH: AUCTIONEER

PUBLIC AUCTION

2 . Pl'tttung ~teet lnadltld door

t2&amp;o.oo . Phone 304-175-

=

Aoy'o UHd Fumlturo, 814-3870837...
!look • "'"" 140. bod·
n&gt;om
-. l18&amp;, 00 n11 ..., 1,
116, - . ..n0o 140. d•oo••
t35 . ..,., no. dn&gt;p loot toblo
178· end llblt 18 ·00 u .

Pickens UIHid

..... .._.....

Fuel oil h11ting dove, ullid 1
wintlr , paid 11500.00 ..u
t275 . 00 . Utility tnll1r

5 -~
84_8_9_
bod 110. bobv hlghchlir 11&amp;. 4 3,..·30
_4_
. 1_7 _
· ____

248-8016.

For 1111 John O..ra 2 row com
titfltlfl •400.Im...-nat6onal pull
com pl..ter t100, oultlpacklfl
S100 up, equarebllera tBOO up,
whlel dlek 1400 up. hr;o rabs
13150 up , S ft. l.wn mower dedi
tor Ford tr1ctor t610. PTO
•iven oom lhtllf' 1275. PTb
drlv., '"~~'' w 111on t4BO. Mil·
uy Fergu1on Oynabalance
*BISO. 9ft. haybirla 11.7150, hey
6 greln lvelator U26 , John
DMrt 18 dlek wheat drill like
new 11.210. oth1r tllkl raady
aqulpmtn1. Howa'l F1rm Mt·

8tve Buildtrt luppW. 8urplut.
Clo..outs. 81tv"'·
t. PNhung atMIInad1tld 8 01 8

ck••

"''"'

81188.

81 .. Olilr.lil· Ohio Coil 114·
441·171 '

S11r'a upright frMZar, run 2
Willet, t100 .00. Crtftman's18
For lalanewYard·mll'l mower1.
inch chien saw like n1w
good uead mow1r1 from •so- 1100.00. Coil Aid 304·07&amp;ns. Echo trim'"" on ..,,, 2072.
Chlldrltlt 8.-w luppty, VInton.
Oh. 014·318· 8114.
Gunny Sac du6gn prom
1979 Hondl 400. t700. Wy , with hoop, pink .,d white. elz•

whttl untfonN, Nib jack,., 2 PI'ra.~rt• 1ho• UIJ. Mltor.tte
boote IUS. 2 prom dr.... 131
ea .. sauphone t275. cllrient
0100, guitllr IUiiO . Call .l14·

fanclng nMd•. Call 814·388·

lulldlng materl1l1, cement,
blcdc1 all1b:M, ylfd or deltvery.
Otllltpolil liodt Co.. 123\lo Plno

448·3224.

~·

Bldwetl Cbh FHd Store'• Fence

241·1121.

448-2338.

~qulpment

.,PPiv Bpaclall on 111 your

BlOC*,
IIW. . . .. Win·
dowt. Hmett. 11e. ca.ucte wa.
ton, Rio Or111do. 0. Col 114·

Trl County Sport Shop, Spring
VIIIIY Piau. Otlllpolla. Ohio,
Gunt, ~!'Chery. TeckJ1. 614·

014-440-0322

Located at D.J.'s Trading Post, 923 S. 3rd
Ave., Middleport, Ohio. Will sell till dark.
We hall a trailer van loaded with antiqueand collector i~111s from the Dane~ personal property. Somethllll for ewryone. LIYIAI room suill. hot water
heater. old school bus.
This hu been consigned to be sold.
Cash
,ositiw ID

3874.

7398.

61 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

Motorilld trNdmlll. ucellllllt
condition. •100. Call 81 4-4'1-

conditioner. 1125 • ·· 30~ . g•
range 176 . Skll(llgl AppH~nw1.
Upper River Rd .• 81 4-... 8·

~·

Pm

0 pemng
· lead:

PUBLIC AUCTION

Furn . apt. 818 2nd. Ave. Galllpolll. 1hare blth. 1inote m111.
1135 mo .• utilltin paW. Call
o448-441 e aft• 7pm.
Furniahed Apt. 2 bdr .. t19~
mo .. water pd . 1 136 2nd. Ave ..
G•lllpolil. Call 61•·441 -4416
1ft1r 7PM .

3.

PillS

881-7275.

44

Sotllb

1t

p.,,

Pink prom drftl eiz1 7 full
IWtuth. Catii14-J88-933&amp;.

R.trigemor frost fr• t715. 2
rtfria•Mol"' froet frel whtte
1160 .... lid• by aldl , ..,....
tor t1715 . 30 n. elK. ,.,.,oopptrtof1e t71 , 30 tn. tlec.
,.,,. gold t150 , 40 ft . elac.
rtng• white 191, Whirlpool
Wither IllS. GE wether hNyV
duty 1180. Kanrrore w•hl•
1mell 191. 8 dry..-. your choloa
175 n . while tMy lut, 3 alr
eondiUonert 1.000 BTU 195

+QH8S
.AQH

ad••

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

I

• Q 92
tQJI 3

t::;:-:~:;~~:;::::T-;;=:;::~~::_:;;:~=-r-;;;;:;;::=::;=;::;=;~~~

- •· Coli 014·115-359•.

I••·

.7 6 43
• J 10 7 '

"""*·

2 lerge lott with 1 biO MH , YJ JACKSON ESTATES A~AAT­
mile off At. 218, 10 mil• from MENTS IEquel Houlinl OpporGaiNpolia. RuJ~t ....,., •curity tunity! monthty ren1 1t1t11 at
t17t for 1 bedroom tnd 1212
light. build Int. c.. s 14-268- for
2 bedroom, diPOttl 1200,
6()otl wanings.
lo~ted near Spring v,u., Piau
and Foodl.,d, pool and C1~1 TV
3~ mi. Hollar hoep. Call b•
tween 4:30 to 9 :00PM, 114· ev1il.bla, offlct~ hours 11 posti·
bla 10 amto4 pmand7pmto9
440-47U
pm Mond~¥· Friday. C•• 8141·1 .crM,partlally wooded Iota «1· 27o46 or IIIYe m....ga.
n_. approved IUb-divltton. T.P. Nicely fumi1hed mobile hom1,
and C . wstar and epprovad road eft.
apt., centrll air 1nd heet In
to IICh lot. AtiiOftlbty priced,
city.
adult• only. Call 114-•4&amp;·
will fin.,ct with 10 ptfc:ent
0338.

•a aet'll mora or
part
wootfed. city watet", piYid road,
helf min.-al rlght1 . l1ndtown on
Bud Chattin Rod. 304-7763179 if inter•t-.:1. Seriou1
lnquir• only, t34 ,000.00.

·~

• 10 8 7 3

• 92

Color TV'• all MIP• and 11111.

Coi1814·440-1141.

High prlc. got you down?
Check u1 out. Mollohlfl Fum . •
Appl. OU.on I. KelvVurtor. At. 7
North, 01lllpolil. Oh . Call 614 ·
441 -7444. Credit avalltbla to
quallfletl buytn.

81 Farm

Bulldlnt:.r-"olo

164 Misc. Merchandise Hau~ 3 IPIId blcyclt for ... ~
I
.
Coiil14·892·1183.
·
Call 814· 441 · 0123 afur
l ,ooPM.
Above·ground pool for aala. 24
h . dlomot•. c h. dttp. Coli
26" con10le cotor TV, Mldng
11.·892·3183.

150, exarclta b'ke UO. Call
114-241·15070 betora 2PM.

LAFF·A·DAY

611 Building Suppllea

64 Mi1c. Merchendiee

V1lley Fumlture, new • ..-:tel.
Large Metlon ot qu1tlty fuml·
ture . 1216 Entarn Ave ..
Gallltolll.

EAST

2 bdr. Ill electric:, carpet though · Fum. efficiency 1pt .. 1Hh11te &amp;
APARTMENTS , moblla
out, AC. deck , with awning. quiet. 1ingl1 working per10n
hou .... Pt. PIIUint and Oalllpo·
woodburner. zy, mil• out At . onty . Call 114-441 -4107 or
lit. 014-441·8221 .
688. No ch lkfren or inaid• ptta. ~,8~1-4_
- 44_&amp;-_2_110_1~-- -- Two bedroom duplax wtth
C•II 114 -441 -4107 Of 814- 1·Fum. 1pt. 1 bdr. 607 2nd. Ave ,
c:lo.-d in porch, 111 utlfttl• paid.
440-2802.
GeiNpolie. 1226 mo., utiliti•
S85.00 pit week, depolft , .
quired , 30•·175·31 00 or 176 ·
Fully fumishld. AC. all utilti• peld . Ca11 .....8·..a.t18 after 7pm.
5&amp;09 .
paid, edulta only. Call 114·448·
Dlluxa 1 bdr.. garao• aptn·
4110 Of 114-448·2003.
ment. kitchen furnlahed, utMity,
1 bdr. city water 6 . -. CA. no pttt. no Clhlkfrtn, r.terences. 46 Furni1hed Rooma
adulrt. no pttl , r1110nlble rent Colll14-211-112t.
• ulilitill l dapollt l'lqulrtd. 1 bedroom apt. t9r rent. Buic
Fer f'lnt Sl...,lng Roome and
Call 814·445-31187.
r1nt 1t1rt1 1215 . a month tl'llt
Ught houM kMPinliJ rooma. Perk
Cen1ral Hotel. Cal 114o448Mobile homn for ,.,..._ CeU lndudel 1111 utllltl•- Oapolit
rtqund t&gt;l *ZOO. C-CI VH- 0758.
114-448· 0!527 aft.,- 3PM .
1111 M1nor Apt, Middleport . . -;;;::;~:;~:::;;:::::;:::=
614--812-7187 . Equ1l Houaing -:i
2 bldroom mobile home. Na• Opportunity.
46 Space for Rent
Recine. Call 114·992-15858.
1 bldroomfumilhad aptrtment.
Furnithld 3 b.clroom mobil• ld
..l for working couple. No COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pwk,
home. W11h• 1nd dryer. No peta.
DepoiH raqulred . Call
Aout• 33. North of PomerOy.
pets. Call 814-949-2253.
114-992-2837.
lq1lota. C.ll 814-992 -7471.
Mobile home for rent in Racine. Unfurnllhtd 2 bedroom. No
Trail..- epiCII , Gtlllpolil Farry,
Coli 81 4·317-7148
,..o. Coii114--9C9-22&amp;3.
watM and trJth ptc:tup' paid,
30··17&amp;-1338 .. 171·32···
2 bedl'oom ,;.11.- In Syrecu11.
A~AIITMENT FOR RENT-Now
Fwniahed. 1220. pet' month. 2
ICCIPtine •tlcetiont for r.,tal
beclroom fumtahed, 1180. par
.,.,amet1t1 In M110n Aptl Ll·
month. Pay own utHitiel and
mttlll. Two bldroom eptt 1t
depoai1 required on both. CaN
114·992-1231 or 114-592· t111 .00 .,... month. Rental
rM• mey 1M high• _.,ding
7180.
on lncom1. Houslnt will be
61 Household Goods
l\laHibll 1D aiCh aptrllcant re3, 2 bedroom mobil• hom...
ef their race. color.
Middleport. Ohio. 304-882or natvrll origin.
rellfion , •
3207 &lt;&gt;&lt; 304-773-602C.
lnter•ted ...,Mcanta should clll
104-173· 1011 Of' corwtact De· GOOD USED APPLIANCES
n ... Streib t1' Walter Jutt ict at W•herw, dfy1r1, r~frtu•atore ,
43 Farms for Rent
the Main Office. 1871 Brla~ r1nge1 . lkaggt Appilancn.
,. .. d . Rarnoldeburg . Ohio Upper River Ad . blelda Stone
4JOII or Cll 814-883·4!14.
Cte~t Mot1l. 614 -441-1318.
34 acre cropland, SO ecr•
PII1Ure • tObiCCO IIO'tment,

211·1211.

2 lots. 8 mil• from Point
Pleltll'lt. 304-171-1689.

WEST

......

a&amp;ainst what he can. To guard against
the admittedly slim possibility of the
singleton ace with East, declarer
sbould play a diamond to dummy's
king at trick two and then play a low
spade from dummy. When the ace
pops up, all is well.

1 bedroom houee for rent in
M1aon . t121 . per moMh . C•H

014-992-7312.

NORTH
t K42
'K 10 8
t K 61 3
• 10 6 4 '

Don't be so busy patting yourself on
the back when you get to a good slam
contract that y&lt;tu forget to play it in
the best possible way.
The biddit11 has some interest.
South, the sti'OI!g hand, made what
sounded like a 1ame-try when he bid
tbree · hearts. his second suit. Then,
when North accepted by bidding four
spades. South carried on to five
spades. That bid denoted controls in
both minors, since South could hardly
expect North to have them, and asked
North to simply evaluate his cards
based on the bidding. Holding both major suit kings, North had no trouble decidin&amp; to go on to slam.
Il£darer was pleased when the
dummy hit the table. He won the open· ~-t e
ingleadwithhisclubacean d 1na.~
of self-congratulatory euphoria, casu·
ally led a spade to dummy's king.
When that was go bbled up by Ea st' s
singlelon ace, declarer had to !011e another trump trick.
The only danger is lour trumps in
one hand, but nothing can be done
about four trumps to the A-10 in
West's hand. Declarer's obligation in

4, 114-440·4207.

For rent or 11le nk:a lot Oft
Aaoccoon Creak. Wlflt', IIWtr,
IIIKtrlc. phon1. I l l month,
tra'ai trt ilert onJo¥, Call 814-

County Appllana~ . Inc. Good
ueed appllar~cn and TV ute.
Open B~M to IPM. Mon thru
811. 814·440·1898.• 127 3rd.
A~ . Galllpolil. OH .

By J - Jacelly

3 b«iroom 46 Spruce St ..
c•trel Mr. wuh., &amp; dryer . Call

814-440 -2158.

J bedrooma. 2 betht . flnilhld
biHment. attlcflld 2 car gar-

James Jacoby

False sense
of security

I room hou• In courmv. pen.

fumlohld.

3 bedroom hou• for Nle Of'
1.... with option to buy. 30ot·

BRIDGE

61 Household Goods

Rent, , ..... land contreot. 3br' •

1986

May 4, 1986

Pomerov-:-Middleport-OIIIipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'

11 tho - ~~'""· ald... E..,ip.
m..1Co. 30C-87B-7621 .

ILDCATION- LOCATION- LOCATION! CLOSETO TOWN,
GROCERY, SCHOOL &amp; HOSPITAL ON RT. 588 VERY NICE
I LARGE LEVEL LOT WITH FRAME RANCH. 3 BR'S, 1!ol BATHS,
BIG F~ WITH FP.POSSIBLE OWNER ANANCING. OON'TWAIT
- CALL NOW' ASKING $42 ,000.

I
NEW LISTING IN CHESHIRE - 'VERY COIIFORTABLE 3
II WOOD
BEDROOM, 2 STORY . Hr\S FORMAL DINING ROOM, HARDFLOORS IN LIVING ROOM, SMIU DEN, GARAGE HAS
WORKSHOP
ARI:A. EXCELLENT BUY AT $32,0001
I
NEW LISTING - NICE DEVELOPMENT SITE JUST OUT OF
I CITY
LIMITS WITH OVER 7 N:RES. CITY WATER AVAILABLE.
I BEAUTIFUl
BUILDING SITE. PRIC£0 RIGHT AT S21 .!'1l0.
FISHING! IF YOU'VE OOT THE TIME, WE'VE GOT THE
I GONE
PLACE. PRIVATE LOT &amp; 14X70 MOBILE HOME AT IYCOON
I SOME
tAKE. BR &amp; BATH AT EACH END, All KIT. II'PLIANC£S,
WASI£R &amp;DRYER &amp;4 STORAGE Bl IX;S
I AlL YOUFURNITURE,
NEED IS YOUR FISHING POLE! SUPER PRICE
I $19,!M!O.
I LOG
HOllE WITH 48 ACRES- f\1111! sne is till wrth fantastic
view d Ollio Rr&lt;er and sunoundng area. Solll! rNer bottom land
Ohio Rr.er frontage. Home has 3 bedrool!li, I ll baths,
I will
'-·-~t.
2 car oarage, iar"' fr011tage &lt;11d side ll!cks.lh~ a
""""~'
I home yw and ywr' lamly ,.will be proud lo Dlln.
I NfAR ClAY SCHOOL- AIleal p.:eto iNe Just lar lflW~ off
the road for privacy and a sale place for childrlfl and pets: 3
I bedroom
frame has ~r0! country ll)tle ki1chen, spac10us INflg
II room, garage with workstl&gt;p. Priood IDII at $32,!'1l0.
.
tJI

E AS A BEAUTIFUl
GET READY FOR SUMMER! THIS HOM H
16X32-IN-GROUND POOL. NICE FENCED BACK YARD. 3BED·
ROOMS. FAMILY ROOM. 2\l CAR GARAGE. 10' DISH SA TEL·
UTE SYSTEM GR£AT LOCATION. KYGER CREEK AR EA.
$58.000.

i;

1
I

AHONEY FOR THE·MONEY! 2 BEDROOM FRAME HOME HAS
BEEN REMODELED. ONE OF THE MCEST HOMESWE HAVE

SEEN ON THE MARKET AT $20,000. FEW MINUTESFROM
II CITY
ON Rl 218.
BUSINESS lOCATION - COURT STREET I EXCELLENT
DOWNTOWN GAlliPOliS - 3 STORY BRICK BUILDING,
I 3,480
SQ. FT. EACH FlOOR. PLUS t· STORY CONCRETE
BLOCK AREA. $85,000.
I THE
HI-WAY INN IS FOR Sij,E! THIS RESTAURANT HAS
BEEN A KANAUGAlANDMARK FOR MANY YEARS. GREAT
I lOCATION ON THE OORNER OF RT. 7 AND BURNETT ROAD,
GOOD ACCESS TO ROUTE 35.LAR!I LOT WITH AMPLE
I WITH
PARKING. HOME AVAILABLE WITH RESTAURANT JUST
I LISTED!
1 .~-. AUDREY .F. CANADAY.. REALTOR i
I ~; 2 ~11~u~f0i&amp;E:r~~~~p~t,5~~~'o' ....
1

DOUBLEWIDE -Owner needs lo sell. l.!!lO acres, moreor less. 3 bedroom ranch 2
formal livtng room, formal dining room, familj mom, 1.920 SQ . H. of IIVtng space. 21'ar ge
ered patios. City schools. Priced al $38 ,000.
·- - . NEW LISTING- CITY PROPERTY- ONLY $35,000 - Nice modern 4 bedroom1anch.
balhs modem
· · room , new back ' palio built rut ol pre-treated ti mbers.
back lot w/1

I

C ree~ School D1 slrtct wiln 2- 1973
lor $250.00 per mon lh. Elcellent i

'
I

SMALL FARII WITH RACCOON CREEK FRONTAGE - REMODELED 2 BEDROOM HOME, BARN AND OTHER OUTBLIJG
NEARLY 20 ACRES, TOBACCO BASE. GAlLIPOLIS SCP."
SYSTEM. $45,000. JUST LISTED!

·m·
:

DON'T SETTL£ FOR JUST A WOODED LOT! FOR ABOUT THE
SAME PRICE YOU CAN GET APPROX. 40 N:RES OF WOODS.
UNBELIEVABLE SIO,!'IlO.
l.AIID _ APPROX. 160 ACRES. GUYAN TWP. SOME TILLA·
BLE, ROAD FRONTAGE. $50,000. OWNER Will SPLIT LAND
~8.-&amp;E~Ln ACREs FOR s20.ooo OR 83 ACRE TRACTFOR

II
I
I
I
II
I

1

~---------------------------J

ESTAIES - Beautiful brick

rome. formal81trY , LR, din tng, mod

k1tchen.

POSSIBLE LAND CONTRACT - 4 bed~ooms , LR, FR, modern kitch en, 21treplaces. M~~:;~~~l
floors, 6 acres, more or less. Good cropland. Large oorn. storage shed, '"
tobacco house, smokehouse and cellar. BOO lbs. loba cco base.
ACRES MORE OR l£SS -

Vacant land. Located m city school

t

FARM - Rio Grande area. Mostly tillable land. 2story countrj home. Just like
useto have. l ~. shadetreesin yard. Home has been teriTile inspected.
oorn . Citv schools. P11ced m SO 's.
NG - LAKE JACKSON - Rare retirement opportunity, immacu late 2BR
holll!, tr~iler pal for rental, all on beautiful3acres, M/l , lake lront land.

�Page-D-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel
63

Livestock

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by LA, Wright

71

la4-2398.

114-38a.8832

pb. oio, tiM cruioo, .... rm 11110.

Reg . 10 yr. old App1t. mtrt,
uctl•'lt 4-H hortt. Allo 2 Iff.

304-171·8132.

ol.d A.g . Balglu m filly. C.d

7'11 Dataun car with

I

pert.ct oondhlon, U,811.00.

814-446-3212.

Silddlt &amp; work hou .. tor aaltor
tradt . Ctll614·367-0293.

72

Tru cka for Sale

!lord. Chtrolail, heifert. wliijJh ·
lng 400-450 lba. Ca ll 614 -367 ·

17 auovy -..... 2a3. 3 11&gt;oocl.
~~~::;~·· *700 Colt 11f·

1980 Long 6 10 . 4114. 84 HP.

1878 Dltatn 4 apd ., fldlo,
*1.418. Joftn'l . Auto Soioo.

7676.

good co nd .. dleu l englnt .
16 .81128 lira. Call 614-245·

Bui~VDie R~ ..

Ooublt reg . Tenn . wt lklng
hone. Marn and Colta. Allo
, Oouble ng . Tenn . walkin g horn

eu .7·U-2060 .

3 Reg istered Polled Her8ford
Buill . Ca ll 614· 742· 2153 .
For Sall1: R~tgisterad white Ara·
bian mere. 614-992·5158 or
&amp;14·992 -726 1.

•

~~==~~~=~::~:J:;:::=:;::=::;:=;:~
71

Autos for Sale

1979 Toyot• Corolla delu.u
autom1tic. 4 door sedan, 1
owner, 26 ,000 miles , radio,
excellent co ndition , ru sty jon•
rust proofing , new muffler, e.:tra
tir•. 12,600 or beat oHer.
Please Clllll14·446·310.t efter
8PM weekdays.

Autos for Sale

1973 Olds 98 . Good work c.r.
body rough , motor good. Cell
614-992-6619 .
1974 MOB Good condition.
11.t00 . 1979 \lolkswtgonRab·
bit. Good condition. 11500. Cell
61tl - 898 ~ 7276 .

1979 Dodge Omni 024, 4spd., 1 ~-------­
front wheal drive, bucket seats. 1978 Malibu Cleuic4door. 306
3 yur old Appaloosa Mart. removable aunroof, 15 ,000 VB , PS , PB. AC, Cruila and AM
Gentle. f260 . Call 6 14 -843- ' mllll, uking 1950. Call &amp;14· RadiO . 7!i , 900 original miiM.
5425.
266-1648 between 3PM-9PM. Aaklng f18SO. Cell 1514-982·
2386 .
Aegiltered Hereford cow. l.,ge. 1981 Escort ••lionwagon. air.
gentle quan er norse . Good for 38 .000 mi.. U , tiOO. 1979 1978 Thunderbird Town len·
adult or chUd. Call 614 ·992· Buick leSebre 4 ctJor. kladed. eir deu. Full pow.r, AC , tour new
7201 .
t1, 900. CoM 614-448-7019.
radialt. Exc•llent condiUon .
Beef cows for ule. Call 6,4 . 19n Nova 2 «tor. auto . PS . PB. f1800 . Call 614 -985·"18.
388-9846 or 614 -388-9692.
rebuilt engine, clean. 11 ,100. 1981 Chevene 2 door. 4JPIId.
Call 614 -388- 98-19 after no lUst. no d.,tL rufti good .
Black Angua SuU for sale. Celt 6'00PM.
$860. Colt 614 -912-7403.

614-742-2880.

860 lb. Sorrell mare. 304-676 -

3287.

Frendl lop r~bb ils , live or
dreued . Call after 4:00. 1-304·

458 -1526

64 Hay &amp; Grain

Mike'• Auto Sal•. Optr'l Mon .·
Fri. 9-5, Sat 9 -12 . call 614448 -2900. Sa Inman Mark Se•
rles . 1980 Chevy Citatio n 4 cyl .,
auto ., t2 .196. 1981 Chevy
Chevette 4 cyl., auto , t1,195 ,
1981 Chryaler LeBaron 8 cyl,
IUtO , 4 door, f3,296 . 1982
Kawnekl CSR 760 f1,400 .
19 7&amp; Chevy Bluer 1795 .

1980 Fiata Strlda. l5epHd. AC.

AM-FM. 1650. C.U 614-1827403.
1975 Buick Contuoy. PS. PB.
Auto. Trans.. 3150 V8, nrN
banerv. "'"' good.
Call

814-186-3880.

1 98ol Chevy C1valier. 4 door,

Mixed hay large M~Uare balM,

.1 .26. 304-676·5679.

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

I r ).

Now arrange the circled letters to

form the surprise ansW&amp;r, as s ug·

I I I I I X)•(Tin

rough . Couldbetlledorutedfor
parta. 11!100. Call 114·192·
7201 .

ter 5 :00PM.
1983 Monte C.lo and 1884

Z2B

Com...,, 304-175-3248.

·u

Trulmph Trldtnt, 750, 6
lfJoed, 8 ,000 mil•. A-1 oond,

01,000.00. 304-871-4891 .

Real Estate General

Answer: Hl1 autobiography showed that the onl~

thing wrong with the author was thil-

HtSMEMORY

&amp;

1813 Aap•.:ltloeded. extra
otuom~. e·. 70o mllee, Ike !MW' .
c.at 114-441· 7310 or 814·
441- 1278~

3848.

Vans &amp; 4 W.D.

7e CluiYy 4 w ...i dovlo. 310
anglne with topp1r 11 BOO.

79 Motore Homes
&amp; Campers
1874 Stororolt foldout compeo.

IIIIPI I. CDfT1)1ttt whh atove.
Ice box, llghttll alnk.e•c . cond.,
Mh new. CeN 114 - 311 ~ 17&amp;5

.:."".:.:.".:.:.'.:.:.PM;_._ _ _ __
1872 Tt~~-o·lo~ compor. Vory

0111 be _.. on Third St. in

Racine.
::_:::_::.___
_ _ _ _ __

Slide
In c:ondiUon.
cemp•. Sl•ep•
4.
E•ctll~n'i
Call 814t-;;::;,;:;:::::-:;:==r.ii==~~~~~=~
74 Motorcycle•
76 Auto Pam
"M2·3028.

1878 Ford \4 ton pickup. tool
bous end up. ol tpetd , 1111 Nondl CH80 Elite. 733
'2.300.00 . After 5:00 PM ' mllw. Jutt1UMd up. Like niW.
304-871-4436.
..00. 08C . Colt 814-812-

73

Acce ..orias

All typu UMd • Nbullt tren•
millions A tranfer cu•. Will
deliver. Overdrive tranamla·
lions. front • ,.., wheel drive,
uanerNulon ldtt• tom convtr·
"'L .,gino robuiid kh~ Coli

-114-378-2220.

Kowooolli KX80, KIW-i 110 4n1Wtlr•Lt211·B&amp;R18,tt...
thr ... whl.t•, Kew&amp;llld 100 ' btf1Mrtdilll. 4newllugFord
foo on..- olfrDOd. Cott81f-182- cntck rinw e40o. Calll14·448·
1118 or c... be , ... 8eturdey. 1838.
May 3 ICIOa from l'fi'ICUII

_ _.:.....:_____-::-~

1971 Prowl• 21 tt. Trawel
lrelltr. SeH c:enUIIned. air, and
.wnin,. E•c.llant condition .
CAl 4·M9· 2013.

e

1974 Monitor 2oamp•. tamdon
whealt, good cond, tullyiCiulp ..
prlca neglotebte . 304-175 -

_38_83_.--~---

1918 wheel told -out c1mptt,
llaepa 8. Ice box. stove. oven.
furneca , awning. 304 -175·

3Jee .

7438.

74 Motorcycles

1983 Honda Sh.tow 710cc
with acceuorl•. ncelltnt con·
dtion, 2. 7110
3q4-171·21
38. mlioo, •1.110.

1983

Hondo

780 ••

Shodow,

ac cond, 3.010 ectual mlln.

75

Boets and
Motors for Sale

1874 Suzuki 111, Enduro, axe.
cond .. bw ·mll... l , 1450 . Call
814-379-2718 oft• I -

1171 8tarcraft aid bolt whh
meny atru. w•k through
windoW~. 11 Evtnrucro, ......,
C1ll
1879 ex custom 10o Honda.-' good oond., Met
txc. cond .. lOw mll-.ge, 1850. 814-f41-218f.

off•.

11

1985 VT 1100 Sh.taw low
mileage. exc. cond. Call aft"

8PM. 814-387-081a.

Real Estate General

773-1170.
~~;::;;:;:=;:;=::===79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

RIFFLE,
REALTOR

utrM, phone 30•·8'78·4312.

1437 .. 114-f48·9288.

Cotl814-388-8311 .

rtfflgntor. 3 burner gu 110~
wtth OYin, etc. Sl~ap~ ol. 30··

ft . Oucit.. ftbergi. . bolo

beNt with t...W., 10 ~Johneon
motoo

2211:

n1o.oo. SOf-176-

HOME PHONE

18ft. Taa·•·IDnecemperforNit
or ••• for pickup trucll. Call

992-3535

814-288-1818.

1178 AmlriCin Pilgrim aUdt In
truck camper, ttov., loe box,
fumace. ,....,, four 1760. CaH

814-381-8780.

Cud! man 11 fl. pop-up ctmPif
tleepa 8, 2 din.ttta, niM' tlrn.
utra room 11,.00. Call 114·
&gt;lol8· 7019 .
1111 1 I fl. Wldarn•a travel

Uoiior, futty "WUiopod. Colt IU·
&gt;lol6·3834 oftor S.

Real Estate General

(RI;oUi:ED-~- Farm
mobile home, 42 acres
pa~ially lenced. pond. tim·
btl. larm eQuip 40,000.00.

OIIINER NEEDS TO SELL AT
ONCE - Three bedroom
brick in good co ndition,
clean, lots oi charm tn IIJOd
neighborhood. low 30's.

81

Home
Improvements

Home
Improvements

WATERP~OOFINO

Un condltlonlll lltttlme gueren·
111. locel raferences furnith ed .
Free eatlmetes. Call coll ect
1-614-237-0488, day or flight .

1286.

Aogtrl Ba1e ment
Waterproofing.

1973 Tlten Mot or Home . 28 tt.
440 Oodgeenglna. Good Condition . 18000. OeH 614 -742:altiO.

POMERO-Y, 0.

. __,_,Nm . _ .
NEW. USTING - MIDDLE·
PORT - ASH ST. - 2·3
bedroom home. 2 ~~. garage.
FA gal heat $14,&amp;JO.OO
. POIIEROY - A2 ~IIY home
on 2 Ids lllth carport Needs
~k bul a barga~ at
$4.000.00.

lendscap l n~ .

BASEMENT

Trtvel tr~ller 22 fl . co mpletely
aelt-cont•inllld . C•ll 614 -256-

Rooflng, pelntlng, room ldditlons, etc. Free eatlmaln. ,7
yeare experlance. B &amp; W Construction. Ca ll614-448 -8668 or
81.t ·246-9448 eve' s.

Services
Home
Improvements

l.ewn cere. auto work. body &amp;
mechnic•l. Painting. hou11
raots-barna. No job to big or
piddling. Reasonable rat81 , call
anytlme0, 4 -24!5 -9693.

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal . Call 304-676- 1331.

Any type build ing or remodeling,
etc. E.:cavating, septic tanka &amp;
rooting . C1ll 304·876-15400.

RINGLE S'S SERVICE . ex pe·
rlencad carpenter, electrician,
maeon, painter, roofing (Including hot tar appli cation) 304876 -2088 Of 876 -7368.

RON 'S Tel evision Se rvice .
Hou ae calla o n RCA , Ouazar,
GE . Speciall ng in Zenith . Call
304· 676-2398 or 614 ·448 ·
246 4 .

81

304·578-2010 .

Rotary or ceble too l drilling.
Mo1t wella comp leted 1ameday.
Pump sales end service. 304-

896-3802

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

83

CARTER 'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Four1h and Pin a

Oalllpolla. Ohio
Phone 814·446-3888 or 61444 6 -4477

...,

... .tear 6:0 0 PM . 01.t·"8 · 97811?~
1985 Ford Tempo low mlle.age,
cruila m ntrol, ti h . stereo, blue
: Cl)kU, clOth interio'r, auto., e.:c.
~ cond .. f8 .300 . Call 10AM to
• 6PM , 614 -446 -7441 .

-- ----1980 MlfcedM Benr SE 450,

.. PW. PSR. exc. cond .. average
.. milnge, emeretd grMn, AM · fM

:=~·::,·fo~j::.·,h~~,:~~~:!:;:

, Coli fOAM. to &amp;PM. 11.4-448• 7..41 .
..

~ 1878 Chryaler Cordobl. 2 dr:.
• 318 auto, PS, PB, PW, eir,
.. cruitt, AM -FM , CB redlo ,
: 11 .®0 miiN, 12.100. Call

• 814-441-0373.

._ 1980 Malibu CIIIIIC landau,
" •c~ ex~ n d . low mil" , new
~ m•tllllc paint, thermo -gua rd,
rust proof, cklth•. intll'lor, lir
" tilt, wheel, AM·FM 8 track
: tterao, f3.600 . Cell 614-446·

• 0312.

-----------

.., 1973 Ford stetkmwegon, 8
• c-tl4k'lgtr, V-8, auto, PS, 1ir,
~ r.Sio , ~d tir•. klggega rack,
'" llir Jhoc::ka, t&amp;OO. Cell we. 6 to

: • • 814·268·9328 .

Good Nmiflg 1977 Cemero,
• .S60. C.lt 614-218-8278.
' 1978 AM C Pacer UOO, run1
: SPOd . Call 614 -4t6-262tl.

: 1877 Buldl A"Qal. 1975 Chev.
• rolet Slar:er. Ca ll 614·446·

.. 48&lt;48.
1982 Ponti.c T-1000 t2.300.
• 19 71 Old• 98 1600. Cell
114· 379·2228 .

~

8'
J

Che~~atte 24 ,000 mi., auto,
new tirM , 12.900. C1ll 814-

• 379-2882.

·- - - - - - -

• 82 Cavalitt auto , •unroof. PS,
1

~ ::eo~·~~ af~~·a7~~88 ;.••·

General Hauling

Coal, limestone, grevel , etc.
D11liverad 1 tort and up. J lm
Lanier, 304-675 -U47 Of 876-

7397 . .

87

Upholstery

R 81 M Furniture Manufacturin g,
St. Rt. 7 . Crown City. Oh. Ct~ll
614-256-1470. co!ill Evl!l . ea 448 · 3438 . O ld &amp; new
Uphost erod.

87

Upholstery

TR I STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .• Glllil)olh;.
614 -446 -7833 Of 614 -446·
1833.
MoWrey' • Upho latAring sarving
tr l county arA• 2 1 years. The best
in fu rniturfl upholstarlng. All
wor~ guarflnteed visi t ou r mod·
ern shoo et Muon Coun ty
Fairground t

Pho ne 304-876

4164 .

Stake Your Claim
On One of These
fine Homes

MIDDLEPORT - Hertin&amp;lf

Pialy. - Ahome to be proud
of at a remarkable pr~e! Seven

room roose w~h J.4 bedrooms. equipped knchen,lar!~f
utlity room wnh stll'age.
Lennox gas furnace, insulated.
largl! OO!Jble lot $30,000.00.

MINERSVILE - Approximately ~acre lot llith 5 mom
house, 1 bedrooms. garage,
and pail basemen!.
$15.000.00. •

I enlrance with open sta~rcase to thts lo"l'
redecoratoo . home localoo rn the ely. Wrthtn walkmg dtstan ce lo shoppmg m a. 3 bedrooms. 2 lull ba ths and
ch atmt ng large ot chen. spacrous hvm g room wtth wood
bu rnm g lirepl ac e. Thts gractou s home has a natural gas FA
lurnace lrke new. We 're watttn g lor your CALL
#146
Walk in to

oornp~lely

NEW USTING - Lln&amp;SVille
- 4 yr. ~d house, 3 BR, ~rge
LR, dililg nook, ~un trees and
approx. 2 acres grwrd.
$42,500.00.

'-""""" .,,,...,, - Th 5i&gt;an older 2~ory
hon-e that has been complete~ ll!novated. f!Jtre oHm 3 ~ rge
bedrooms, 1~ baths. livtng room w1th !replace. dtnrng eat-m
klchen and lull divided basement. Sluated on 3 .:res ·l&lt;ith avery
go00 location r&gt;'ar Buckeye Hills.
#il4

PRODUCTIVE FARM UNIT acres
oo Gage-Patr~t Road. flxldern ll
hon-e. 4.000 SQ. ft. barn area lor toloacco,
.
spnng~, small creek. Good deep v.eillor hotre and counly water
avat~b~. 50 acres lays well lor Clops ~2 ac. """ n excel~nt
ailana stand). 4Q ac. tmp1oved pasture. 50 ac. woods. gOOd cross
lence around pa~u re and most lme lence rew around pa~ure
16251b tobacco base. GGod home. good barn, iJoductive land.All
weiiiOC.lted. Ali for $118.000.
#342

oommu n~

REMODELED HOME - New beth. :lerob&lt; sepirc system.
plumbing roof. Hoor covertng krtchen tmprovement La1ge l~t loi
14x 30 separate buridrng Ftn61lld msrde. sortable lor o'f&lt;e A~o
one car garage Located 1us1olf SL Rl 160, 4 mrles ~om Holzer
Hospttal Askmg $31 .900

ms

Henry E. Cl1land, Jr.
992-6191
.
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottle Turner. .... 992-flli92

&amp;
'.

[9:

TIIS ISm - Alit!~ wll'k - alittle money.anda litt~ love wtll get
yw inlo th5 $25.000 horre. lbn1 wan. do tt now. Call to see.
#212

1[11 101

'Real Estate Gener111

SUPPORT
Your County
LIBRARY

#244

HA PPILY EVER AFTER - is how )Ou'il l•e rn lh6 J red1oom
cedar ranch. FeaiUmg lonna I d•og room. cllly lam tlyroom " th
~ooe ftrepiace large ~ncnen ana ' nall!i. Vlell decorated
throuW1oul. Ove11900 sq ft oiiNtng space 2"" !llrage. Buyer 's
Protettfjn Plan. $69.500
11249

VOTE

NEW UsnNG - Excelent 2
story home- in PomerOy. 3 BR.
hoi waler hea( carpetilg, ~nyl
~dn g, foyer, garage and r~er
vi!w. On~ $37,000.
5 PT. AREA - I Yr . ~d 1anch.
3 BR. _I&amp;closels, nice carpebng,
lg, mod. kitchen w/ran!J!,
refrigerator, di;irllasher, set"'ling bar lo dtn~g, full lllsement,
garage and level lot.
POMEROY - Nice carpeted 2
II' 3 BR hon-e neat posl office.
Mod. k~chen . basement and
garage. Only $19.600.
HARIIISONVILLE AREA - 6
acres, 1975 lllJbi~ lxnne,
12)60, two BR, pa-ches and
dbl. garage tr1 good country
road. Asking $22,000.
SALISBURY - li acres and 2
o~ houses next to Pmneroy.
3.75 ACRES - 3 BR ~der
ron-e. nat. gas, sewer and c~
water in Syracuse. $20s.
NfAR HOSPITAL - One lbll',
6 rms., lull tllsemmt, hot water
heat, dbl. garage and lg, lot.
Ideal ill' COUP~RT. 7 - ·Business ~caoon .
Rural water availab ~ and o~er
00100.
RACINE - Furniill?d or not 6
rms., Duel&lt; s1011e. I&amp; •eat-in
krtchen, carpeting and I&amp; level
lot. neat the school. Possession

GENTLEMAN'S FARM -li acres m/1 moslly
tiilab~. 3 miles oorth ol Rodney. Spritg, well
and county water, lmCI!d and crms .,need,
tobacco base. Vety ~ce 3 II' 4 b!droom ranch
style lxlme wnh ktchen. LR. bath. breezeway,
woodburning lireplace. Call tlr an
appoiltment

1.001 AT 11151 10 ACRES 11/L, ONE YEAR
OlD RANat - S3UJO -This rome ollern
1584 sq. It, 4 BRs. 2 ball&amp;, !~«chen, lamily
room, 12)24 LR, diling room, carpeting, elec.
BB hea\ Andersen theri1llpanes, county Wl!ter,
Sil g:hool district Can today and make an
appointtnent to see IIii me.

QUALm IN lYERY DETAIL-311'4BR Irick

home offers a 20x«l fllnly 110111, 3 batt&amp;,
klthen flith t:NI, displ., micrllilave illd trash
compactll', dinilg room, inlercam system,
central ai', 2 car garage, deck and a 20x«l
pool Over $100,000. Call fir an II!JilintltEftt

BLACKBURNTHE KIND YOU HAVE Ill IIINDI - .
ranch withn Wl!~ing distance ~ sdlools and
downtlloYn shoppng, 3 BRs. bath, LR, klchen,
dinng room v.ith buiH-in dina cabilet. lami~
room in illsemenl, gas II! at, !replace, attached
garage.
VINTON AREA - I ACRt 11/L - AttraetNe
ranch oon-e leafures 1104 sq. ft., 14x26LR.eat-in ktchen, bath, attached g;rage,addt~nal
~ can be purchased.

REALTY
RANNY BLACKBURN
Broker

Farms.. Residen rial.. Co ........ ue. . ..t·claU

RACINE - L&amp; 7 nn. 2 stll'y
family home. '-' rms, new
lweplace. furnace, 2 car Ill rage
and enormous shaded lot NlloY
just $39,500.
SEWNG
PROBLEMS?
Call 992·332&amp;

·

THIS HOllE DEIIAIIDS AMNTION!- l.lll
·acres. m/1, 2,024 sq. ft. d l~ing space. Other
outstandng features incklde mwith brick
fireplace, _IR w/lreplace, 3 BRs, 2 ball!;,
formal dnng, n~ly remodeled klchm,car~
lhrw&gt;ttwt, electr~ furnace, central aif 2 au
attached garage with openers, satelte d&amp;h.
lenced back yard. nO! !llrden space. Let us
show you !hi; hon-e today.
PRICE REDUCED TO $85.000! 20 ACRES
Mil, FRONTS ON RACCOON CREEK Approx. 65 acres tillable and 135 acres WJOds.
Comlortab~ two story home offem 4BRs, bath,
ktchen, lomg room. lam i~ room two
lireplaces, bam, 2 large screened rmches
lovely quiet settin~
PJ&gt;DISON I'M'. - Possom Trot Rd. - 93
acres mil, all woom. Old barn on IJoper!y.
$21.!0)
OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE ON TIIS
IDVELY IIOitlto $59,000 wtich inckldes 2
acres, mil. ftlme diem 4 BRs, 2 baths, LR. ·
k~chen, dining area w/palil OOO's illd
wooctburner, carpet~&amp; heat pump, cenl. ar,
lulliasement 2 car garage. lo~ ~trees and
llowetS. Addlional land can ill purchaslll Wlh

house.

103 ACRES 11/L, SPRINGfiELD TWP. ,Awrox.~ A. til~ble, okler home has 5 BRs,
oath, LH. krtchen, county waler, 40x60 po~
bid~. · 40!60 tobacco barn. var~us oil-er
outbu ildlig~.

CIDSE TO TOWN - Nice Me SillY ho~re
featuring klchen, LR,Iamily room,dinilgroom,
luN basement carpeting, gas t-eat, c~ water,2
car unattached biJcll!llratie-.

HANDYMAN 'S DELIGHT!!! Pa~rally compleled renova- 1
lion pro1ect. New lurn ace, new bathroom and lrvable
downstatrs. however-. upsta ~rs needs some work. Grea t lo- I
1
schools. large loi Prtced as ts for I

PRICE REDUCED $10.0001! ONE OF Til
lARGEST RESIDENTIAL tDlS ON SECOND
AVE. - Okler oome oilers 3-4 BRs, IR ,
klchen, DR, FR. balh, unattached garage. ean
lor more det~~ today.

••
•

,

514 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

(614) 446·0008

ATTENTION INVESTORSII RENTAL INCOitl
OF $485 PER IIDNTH - ASICING PRICt
$29,900!- 1.5 iDes m/1, 5 rooms and illlh
home, 12x65 mobile hoill! illd mobile ho~re
pill. Call tor more delaib today.
THIS HOllE HAS All Til TIINGS YOU
WAIIn - 4 BRs, eQUipped klchen, 2 tilth;
(master bath has a whr!JooQ,·LR, carpelin&amp;
il!al pump, cent. ar. attached garage, alxM!
grrund 1)00. Just minutes from tlloYn at
Centenary.
$8,000 - II ACRES - CIIESIIRE TM'.Vacant land. Septic lank oo IJ(ller!y.' Cal lor
tTOre inlormation.
EDGEIIDNT DRIVE - ClASSY CAPE COD IN
PERFECT CONDITION - Tbil home olleiS 3
BRs, kitchen with OW, displ., ranJ! andr!rig.,
dltilg room, 1r.ng room v.ith woodbtrnng
lirep~ce, lamily room, woodburner, two IIIII!;,
Ioyer. gas heat. cent ar, maltllirlance ~ee
sidil&amp; garage, almost new root, i mmed~te
possession.
PRIDE OF OWIIERSHIP - Love~ homeofters
3 BRs, 311!ths,equ~ped klchen, 14x441amily
room, dinette. !replace, 2 car atached garage,
20x«l 1)00 and satel~e diih. Call lor an
appointment
MOBIL£ HOME FOR SALE - 14x10 FleetwOOd
Broadroo-a 2 BR. 2 ll!tll, klchen with ranlll!
and refri&amp;. carpetin' lOx II metal slll'age
bid~ Call for more delaib.

EDGE OF TOWN, RIVER FRONTAGE -This
hon-e lealures LR, eat-in kitchen, nice lamily
room w~h hearth lor woodburner, bath, gas
heat. large unatlached garage, city schools.Call
for an appointment
D4NVILLE AREA - Close to Meip llines fif acres mil, nO! horr-e offers 3BRs, 2 111!16,
klchen with t:NI, displ., double OYen, refr~.
WB st011e. 22112 LR, dnilg room, elec.
furnace. carpetin~ Bam oo property 24xll
wilh loft. Cali today lor more infolmaoon.
PERRY TWP. - 21.8 acres m/1, okfer home
offetS 3 BRs, LR. k~chen, bat~ full basemen(
stll'm window~ well; rural water availab~. Cali
lor more detaib.
&lt;MNER WAITS AN OFFER ... HAS REDUCED
THE PRICE TO $79,900on th5 brick rome on
225 Third Avenue. 1424 sq. It, with lui
partial~ linilll?d basement Carport, wll'klrop
and 28x38 concrete bbck commerc~i bldg.
Call lor more inlormaoon.
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL - HASREDUCED
THE PI!ICEBYS IO,IJOO - 132.9 a: res mil in •
Walnut Twp.,l\0 story home ll!ss 3 BR. bath, ·
42x94 barn, large tobacco bas~ Call lor an
appoinlmenl.
'.
6100 SQ. FT. BUILDING - Solid concrete
walls, 200 II. iroolage on SR 7 i1 Cr'"'n City.
Fll'merly used as llmlure lactGry. Ideal tlr
retail sales II' manulacturing business. '

OWNER OWNS TWO HOMES - look~ lh~ (!Jal~ constructed.
home and see rt yoo agree that rt • aperfec13a-4 bedroom,lam~
hon-e. It's '" an !&gt;Cel~nt "'~hbor rood Ia- children. W!sh~gton
Grade School and cbSe to supermmket and other shopp~g,
Includes lormal entranre and dnog family room wrth !replace, 3
bath;, recreatton 100m and 2 car 111rage. Very nee eat-tn krtchen
and large basement. ll's ~cated oo a beaublul landscapf&lt;l lot .
$8U l0.
#106

...

for the
LIBRARY
LEVY
Renewai·Redudion
Thanko from your

IDEAL SETTING ol 6 room modern home on I a: ol mo;tly l~t
land very sunabo lo• garden and li&gt;'i n. NICe shade lrees. Wood
stove tn tllsemooi a ~ng wrth luel otl forced" furnace.ClayGrade
School and Galhpol~ h~h schooL $39.000
~341

Bossard Memorial Library
and Bookmobile of Gallia

_
WANT TO 00 A UmE FARMING TIIS
SPRING? - We have a new isting with 11.4 acres m/1, small tobllool illse, nice ranch style
home offern 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1!1'9! LR,
klchen, full basement. hard.vood lbtrS, Iron!
porch and rear paoo. Just off Rl. 35. near

,.,
I I l
••

BEAUTY WHEN IT SHOWS - QUALITY WHEREITCOUNTS -all
spelkld outtn th• 1000 ~us sq. ft. br~k ranch. Features 3BRs, a
sunken ltont room. 2illtl!i and l~ge Ill. 2"'' !I' rage pus a 24xll
garage burldtng S!uated on 1 .:res ~f Rl. 35.Was $125,000. now
$89.!XXl.

#405

GREAT lOCATION - REDUCED PRICE. NICE
NEIGHBORHOOD - Alltl'ese ttings describe
this all brick, ranch s~e home just dl Rt. 35 .
Thi&gt; hon-e oilers 3 BRs, I ~ bath;, IR. m.
eQUipped klchen. lull illsemenl, covered
patiJ, nice llat fenced backyard. Call today.
THIS COUlD BE THE ONE FOR YOU! - love~
brick ranr;h offers a 14x24 1R, ~tchen w/fJ/1,
displ., eye-lev~ oven. counter top ran ~ illd
breakfast bar, dinette, lam t~ mom, 3 BRs. 2
baths, lui basement, paoo, 2 lieplaces.
attached 2car garagewnh eectric openers,gas
heat, central air, paoo. intercom system. Just
minutes ~001 !lloYn on Debby Drive. Calllor an
appoi'llmenl.
COIIIIERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL - RESIDENTIAL - 50 acres, more or less, Yacant land
ideal for ~vestmenl II' any lYlE deve~pment
Road !rootage on U. S. 35 and M~chell Road.
24 ACRES Mil HARRISON TWP .. ClAY UCK
ROAD - . !loRing land. well on IJ(llerty, barn
and tobacco base. Cailloc moce detait.
THE FAMILY Will LOVE IT HERE! - Th6
home offers 1728 SQ. ft., 3 BRs, H\ balhs, ~us'
shower 1n basement, gaHey kichen i;
completely equipperl, IR, lamiy mom, dn~g
room, carpeting, central air /heat pui11J. ll!ar
!leek overtloks Raccoon Creek. Call il1 an
appointment loday.
PRICE RmUCEDI S2.ll0 OOIIIN! - lovely 3
BR ranch ~r !lloYn, knchen includes range
refrig., t:NI, displ. and oven, LR with !replace'
bath, lull basement. lenced ya~d , r,as 1-eai,alf:
Call today fot more det11t&gt;.
PRICE REDUCED TO $29,900!! - Nice ·
ixJme and 5 acres m/1oo ST. Rl. 141. This
ixJme offers a lillliiy mom w~h WOOdburning
stove. kitchen, lR, bat~ several fru! trees. Cal
today fir an appotntmenl.

I

PlAY ROOM FORTHE KIDS -lOOm and DiKI wtli really a pprec~te
the space lh~ 4 bedroomhotreoffers. Comp•te wrth 31JRlllths.
d~ • g roompus eat-tn krtchen andoversoed 2 car Ill rage Famt~
Ct~nted netghborhood ccse to hospnal $69.!ll0.
#237

i

~odney.

STARTER HOllE OR RIHTAL INCOitl $19,900 - 3 BR honE dlers LR. knc~en.
bath, 2 car un-!ttached !llrag&lt;, lmced yard,
Call lor intormaoon.

BRICK RANCH -ROUSH LANE- Thii lovely
oonE offers 1378 sq. ft. pus a lull basement
• Three bedrooms, LR is l •haped with !replace
and d~ng area, woodlurn~g stove in
basemen!, 1~ baths, garage. Call br i1llre
informaoon.

soort .

••
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•••
••
••
••
••
•••
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••

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING WITHIN THE CITY but wtth a I
counlry atmos phe~e 11 Appro!. I ac re located inside ctty •
lnnrl s 2 mce outbutld tngs, garage and ca rp o~ . Excellen t I
condtlron Buy now tor $55,00 00

••

COMMERCIA L PROPERTY - Located at corner d Second •
Ave. and Sycamoce S1 Call lor more tn1ormabon.
I

PRICE REDUCEDit!! - 29 ACRES, MORE OR LESS · •
Overlooking lhe beaublul O~c Rtve1. Includes nver hontage I
and small 2 bedrm. cottage. P1ime deve~pmenlland . Call lor
mor e t nlormat~n .
•
COMMERCIA LBUILDING ~catf&lt;l aengCourt St tn Gallipol5. ••
3.500 sq . h. plus 1.200 sq ft. apartn-ent. Call lor mo~e
tn lormat~n. PRICEREDUCED'
.• ". "'
I
RED BRICK HOME-locata:l tn Galltpoli;_Fuii!Bsemml Cent •
!C. nat. gas lurnace. Ftre p~ce. House 11 tn excellent condrtton. •
so 1ust ·:move 1n". Price $49.!ll0.
•
PRICE REDUCEC on this beauttlul Colontal DLich hoti,, •
~cala:l across hom till new courthouse CentraiAC, wblp, part . I
liniihed basement. $73,000.

•
••

FOR RENT - Two 2 bedrm. apts. 2nd fbor nea1{lln course. 1
$175 and $200 plus deposi..ADULTS ONLY'
I
I

FARM - 150 ac res. Green Twp. $79,000. Terms.
SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS .....
CALL AN EXPERIENCED WOOD RfALTV SALESPERSON
· f:,ll l Wood Rr• ,ti1V lrH
i7 I

«II

lJ'.t St

( J&lt;tllqHdl

I·

HIDDEN AWAY ON AWOODED tDT - four bedroombrck and
frame nestkld amoog the !tees on 1'h ac. ~~ n Green School
Oistr~t. but only about 3 miles from tlloYn Master bed1oom
~eludes walk-~_ close! and lull bath. Frrtnal cln ng,lamiy room.
~rge fweplace tn INng room. lots of cabnets 11 ~!then . Full
basement at groond level in back. Woodburne1 hooked tnto !Eat
ducts. LOW FUEL BILLS. Kids IIi I never ~~tired ol playtng rn the
eh!vated play house. Offeroo at $89.!ll0.
#i32
-

COUNT'I lOCATION - QUtet 13 a:. lor law n. garden ard stnall
antmati. 3 BR horre. 2 batl!i. I h20 irvrng room. 'rre s.wtng
krtchen. central heat and"'· energy effcent Nf.W hJ rre cond!fjn
2 car garage attached 20x32 add len nol IMI-ed rnsrde l'lril
ln5h to sun buyer lor cost of matertal A1krng $59 000

THIS ONE BRINGS BACK MEMilAifs
undetground railroad, blue coats. ---~:c-. ....
LARCI OLD BRICK HO~ S like Ills
3 ~tge BRs.
lonval dtnng, parlor. Iami~ room. 2 ltige lneplaces pusone tn Ihe
basement. Excellenl ~eaten on Rt. 141 on 31ots.!hi; can tl! one
lhat everybody admtres. $57.000.
SUI

UiESTOCK BONANZA - Secondto none- llO acres m/1, 100
ac. crop, 15(1 ac. pasture. 130 ac. woods and misc., 6500' mad
ltOntage, 4000' m/1 of new fence. Excenent hi~Ojl ~ew trom
present home. Could easily be d~ided inlo lhree or more s ~mier
unils. Total asking prtce let enlire u n~ roouced to $235.000.
#335
BEAUTIF.Ul BUILDING tDT - Char~ai; Hil~ Lake Estate offer
!llacelul surroundilg~ and seen&lt; landscapes. 1.5 ocre wooded lot
wrth small n~adow . Very nice spot Ill' )1lur building pL!ns.
$12.000.
#243
1~1 AC. M/ l of siiJthetn Oho hilt and valley area.Over'' mile of
Raccoon Creek ftontage with very scene tllnk areas. Good road
lrontage wnh several hillop bcatilns ll build. County water
availab~. Young walnut t ee planting w~h mant now 5"_in
d~meter . 100 ac. o( ltmber n all. let tli show )OU th~ l5tin ~ .
Askng $55.000.
#334
BIG PRICE REOUCTIONII
62.8 acres, Green TlloYnship, 1400 ilet d stale highway !rootage
Was $40,000, nlloY $33,000. ffifAT lOR LARII LOT
ri:VELOPMENT II yoo don11ike my prire, make ill dler. HI S
3

446 10GG
J

,.

BS

Clyde B. Walker. 245-5276
David Wiseman, 446-9555
B. J. Hairston, 446 -4240

1-1614}· 992-3325

FROM THE PAGES OF HOUSE BEAUTIFUL·
Ttu ly a near perfect home thai will sal~ly the "hard to pleese".
Gorgeous living room wnh marble Iaced lirep lace. deep pile carpeting and glass patio doors to a large scteenf&lt;l porch. You'll
biearhe a sigh ol reliel when you see the s~e olt he 31arge bed·
rooms and 2 g!eammg cera mic baths. Kitchoo ~elu des range,
oven, dishwasher an.d large ea~ng area with lots ol windows and
view ol a wooded ravile. The lamily room includes bu ill in bookcases and corner windows. Check lh e &lt;~Jality ight lixtu1 es,
drwes and shad es. 2 car !I' rage andbasemenl.localed in town
on a large shady, welllandscapf&lt;l lot al the end ol the street.
#141

------

446-3644
E. M. WISEMAN. BROKER

Real Estate .LJ3
rul.fDI

Housing
Headquarters

- --

REAL ESTATE

Phone
:

Jr. own~r.

ISEMAN

216 E. 2nd St.

: 1979 Thunderbird bk.le with
~ white vi'lyl top , good cond. ~a.ll

Jam" Boy• Water Service. Als o
pools tilled . Cell 614-268-11'4 1
or 814·.W6-1176 or &amp;14 -448 7911 .

1247.

tEAFORDm
Autos for Sale

Good· 1 Exetvatlng, b•t~tmentt,
tooters. drlvewayt, s.ptlcta nkl,
landacaping. Cell tnytime 81.t·
44-6-41'37, Jam• L. D•vlton.

Painting llllteriort, ~0 yeart
e•perlenca, free ettim•tea . 30467fHI384

176·2130.

: 71

General Hauling

Service . Well•.
clsterne, paola and waterbeda
filled . Call 614 -367-0823 or
114-367·1741 or 304-676 -

logan glan1 teed beana. 304 -

Tra nsp orl alion

86

Excavating

· The Sunday

Ken' s Water

MIDDLEPORT - South Fifth
- Room to grlloY int 4-5
bedroom horoo on &amp;l'K ll3'1ot.
Insulated. storms. f•ep~ce.
$15,000.00.

MIDDLEPORT - North Tbiril
- 2 story home w~h 2-3
bedrooms tr1 «l'x 113' lot. Gas
FA heat. Garage. Would make
a nice hon-e for ywr fam i~ for
ooly $14,500.00.

304-175-8478.
Bonk.
1871 a.. noo 302V·B.otd ...lft, =:-:::---:-:-::--- . 78 • Camping
lUna good . 1918 •
181515 IZ Kow-1 Sp-o. Futt For·
Equipment
lronoos tot parte. 11.200 or lng, redlo with Cllllftta, Mddlt
........... orodt.bocltroot.
- """· C.lt 814-387·711'*0. crull•oontrol.
Mult .... 11800.
IOOOmiioo. Coi814·H2·U21 1811 Fan Tr...,el TraMer, 17Y.I fl .•
blth ·wtth shower, gta·llectrlc
1976 Chevy Blazer. Naedlaome or 81f·f48-1113.
work . 1700. Ctll 81.t-317·

1983 Shennandolh 32 ft ., loti
of extras, exc. cond , Call 814·
446-1756.

E. M~inUII!iall~

(Ans,... Monday! gooclcondhion.8toopo8. Singto
axlt 1nd •tlf·contelnad. Cell
Yostooday'sl Jumbles: CAOWN MADAM BELFRY LIMBER
114-Mt-2109 oltor MOpm . .,

four speed, 2 tplld . . .. duft1),

1813 Honda 8hlldow 1500.
11. 200. Cell eva' a 81•·441·

*1.900.00. 304-671-4438 of-

1973 Cadillac Coup de VIlle.
Verv good co nditio n. Call 614992· 2603 afternoon .

1878 F210 Ford W . 410 four
8 " ..... ftot bod.
11&gt;0011*21100. 1986
1'700 Fotd :130

"1'1/JIM EN!:' U,..

geettd by the above canoon.

MOO. Cal

,984 Pontiac V· 6, 8.000 mlln,
fuly equlppad , 4 door, like new,
1980 Volkswagon Rabbit. Oelael. 4 door~. ftveapHd, Air con d.

1976 CadUIIIC good condition.
12200. C•ll814-992·5010.

1878 Ford Court•
114-912·11010.

01100. 304-671-1699.

16.900.00. 304-876-8022.

AT. PS. PB, low mlla~ge. Cell
614· 992· 3703.
MU.ed hay torula. Squartbaln, - - - -- - - - - i cfirst cutting, never wet . $ , 75 per 1983 Pontile 1000 PS, PB.
bale. Call 614 -742-2007 afler auto . 12.1110. Cell 1514 ·949·
21150 .
4,30.

1873 GMC ""'"· 311 OttrioL

13 ..,.ad, 31 ...... wet Int.
good cond. Col 814-241·H&amp;7.

1981 Hartay Da~~ldton low rid.,.
Col 814·387· 7170 oft• 4PM.

4-barrtll with extr1parta, liking

614-268-8870 .
22a7.

noo.

,973 Dodge Chllltr'lgar, 318

72 Pinto $200 or trede fo r large
AC , 2 color TV 175 ea . C•ll

Good CJ.IIIity hay. Never been
wet. $U)() bale . Call 614 -949 -

t"UX
NSADE
). I

HOW Cl'O•tWMO
c;M A~l! CA~ 5CWIE-

81

Stark• 1ree and Lawn Service,

eon today"..
446-4514
or 446-4841

NmAXj
v!, X X I'
_ I_

~:~~4Z.~.,o 116. CoN Anlwtrhelt:.. (

71

8985.

1

J

I

1978 CJI nM 4 WD. newty

;- '

Hllqboro
nturmatlon
7
:00PM ., Oklo.
UfllonForS1ockyltdl,
Cllll Urry Emlty, 813 -574-

Galltpoltl.

1 I

~-

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

&amp; Campers

'Roofing 'Siding
'Continuou•
· Guttering
'Fencing
0 Remodeling

_.A

.

-

986
79 Motors Homes

ICMIDUIIIO NOW 10.,

&lt;j

f\ ..A

BADIE

·I

884e.

10 , 1988,

t

71 •utn.. I 1~="'=...,.,-.,

1111 Plymout•
· - . . .1 ...
•
botlllfY
12110. 304·171·1111
nJ-1212.

Angua bleclc-whlte filet, Her•

V &lt;j

CHRISTIAN'S
CONSTRUCTION

s,n•l ,,.,,,

~.=..::-· -

.•3oo. 3D...... ,. 1m.

Ftrm~l Cub tractor whh equip·
m~nt. 11 .500. Ctll 81 •. 268·

Reg . ChatolalaCow Stlt, &amp;?Iota
sell, many w itt't cttvll at lidt.

.

CEK.·EH
mlfNooiii,OOO. Auto..tic. IlL· L-T~=&lt;.r-1....,...-,

82 Mere ZVI* 7 aoupe, 1 cvl. 1

8 gene for aalt, 160 tor 111. Call

Stud UI'VIca.

QiJ
.

.,...,&amp;

Bentley. 6ablnt. Oh . Call 513-

S.turdly, May

llWJlOOWl!JE
.
'
II

A1,1to1 for Sale

1
THAT SCRAMBLED WoAD CIAMf
e by HeM Arnold 1nC1 Bob Lee

302 looo
111.000 mllll. Unecr8!1blo f-lout JUITICIIII,
116~ . 87 Ford Cuotom uoo.
onelotterto-oqt11f11,10loon
304-171-:Un.
four onllnary woroe.
·

Purt bred Ouroc bolft. Rogar

9617.

May 4,1986

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Plea18nt W. Va.

····•"'"' ····- ..

IMPRESSIVE 2 STORY -II yoo are not ready 1D tlly. BEWAR Eof
thi; unusual~ nle 3 redtoom horr-e. Avery horrey lamdy mom
wnh lirepL!ce, IO&lt;mal entran!ll. lormal d~ing, wrte-approved
klchen wnh all applianres plls 'l'!ack bar stcoo. larjl! mastet
bedroom wlh tun bath and hug&lt; walk-in c~set. All tre carpel i;
new II' in go00 Ctrld!~n. 2'h ball!;, 2 klmace and ar oondiiOntng
systems. Your chidren wiD ~e the neighoorhood whiCh tncludes a
pool and tenn~. etc Mlm and Dad wiiiiOYe the quiet peacelul
street and lhe beauhlul setting overklokmg a tny L!ke. Dad can
forget about exlerilr paint~g, i1s mantenanre lr~ . 011ered at
$87,500.
#133

25 ACRES WITH 24 AC CREEK Ill !TOM - 6ac ol My, partrally
wooded area tncludtng new home ur&lt;!er oonslruclcn ManyyounR
ltutt trees and ~ape v1nes. Good place to ir~e ilr1&lt;1 have part-ltme
larm. Hold11g at $12.000
#330
209 AC .. M/L FARM - l.ocaled on St R: 325 prnng land ol
Soutl!.vestern Htgh School and nf.W 11.1ade school burld11g.
E1ceOent road lronlage for burldo g a~ng Sl At 325 and Roush
Road. Also good srtes 101 off road developlf'&lt;nt 00-00 ac of croo
area, IDOac. ol pasture. 1400 lb tooocco !IJSe 8room Iarm house
wrth modern feaiUres . Farm butld•Jg; br CrfJilS, l• estock and
e~~uipment storage. V
ery good water S\JPOII also county water Wrll
seUoo land contract Wlth sueab~ clown oavmen t and reilS&lt;lflab•
terms. Hold ing at $160,000

BROKER'$ NOTE:
It '1 Tl1116 TD GBI ExciiBd/1
/nfBnlf "'" '" ths lowell In 7 gsm. Don 'f waif Fot
fommow - c1/l one ol ouf qu1IJIIBd ptOieulonslt lor a
'"''"'' counrenns ,.,;,,,,,we'll lhow.gou how sllordeble
1 homs ctn fSIIIg be.

�-'

••
•

r

•

~ Pilga-D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

·ness

May 4, 1986

- ~~~~~~~====~~~~~~~~~~~============~~

~ Old

farming practice has become rare in recent years

By Palty Dyel'
Dlllrlct Conleftldonlsi
•
Sol Qaervadon Service
:: GALUPOUS - The use of
:;: legumes ~owed under for green
- manure crops Is one r:I our oldest
~P'actkes. Over the last several
• :years, this practice has becOme
' tare. There Is, however, stU! a place
.. t&gt;r this tractlce In modern farm in~

programs.
An Ideal place for this practice
would re In conjunction with set
as ide programs. When partictpat·
lng In programs which require that
you do not harvest a crop from a
given 6eld lor this year or several
years, why not plant that field to a
legume. The advantages of plant·

-~:Youngstmvn

loses
~insurance, closes parks

lng a legume include the nitrogen
traduced by tlx' legume which Is
available lor future crops, the
reduction In soU erosion by having
adequate cover on the f!eid, and a
reduction tn weed control measures ·
because you have a deslreable
plant cover on the field.
The value of the nitrogen pro·
duced lor the next crop can often
more tha offset tlx' cost otf planting
t1x&gt; crop. The nitrogen nxlng
potential of the various legume
crops range from 45 to 400 pounds ri
N2 per acre. The average for alfalfa

under normal growing conditions Is
l90 pounds per acre.
The actual amount of N2 pro·
duced by a green manure crop will
depend on the legume selected, soU
ronditlons, weather conditions,
amount of weed competition, and
clipping schedule.
Under good stand conditions a
green manure crop can supply the
nitrogen required to produce high
yields of grain crops without the
addition of supplemental nitrogen.
In selecting the proper legumes,
ywr proposed management must

•

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (U I'li rPmole.
:. Because the city's Insurant\' com·
" Even if we Hnd a company to
. pany refused to cover liability In insure us, it's unilkrtn hat wemuld
.: recreation areas, the city has closed afford tlx' premiums." he said.
- 25 parks, six swimming pools and
The mayer said t lx' city offically
- canceled the summer softball closed its recreation facillt iE's
•• program.
Thursday. He said the city plans to
Mayor Patrtck Ungaro said remove swingscts and sliding
Friday he plans to meet wilh stntc boards from parks and post no ·
ctf!clals Monday to discuss what · trt"sspassing signs.
optlons the · city may have for
The city has also closed the
::' rroiJpnlng the facilitiE's, Including a I.ffi'i·acre Lake Milton on the
wrslcrn edge r:I Mahoning County.
· city· owned golf course.
Ungaro said It's possible that the The lake suppo11s area boating,
,; city could Insure Itself tlu·ough It s fishing and recreation· related
line of credit, providing it can businesses.
remain clear ol expensive lawsuits.
The lake has been drained and
"We're expecting that we won't closed temporarily for repairs on a
- be able to get Insured ," sa id 69-yca r-old dam.
Ungaro. "Our insuranC!' lapsed
A Clel'eland lav.yer sa id Friday
\ about six months ago and tlw that the effo rt by insurance com·• Insurer has refused to renew our panies to reduce nabU ity risks is a
:.· poUcy.
ploy to put political pressure on
"This type of thing is happening municipal governments and the ·
• allover the country, but ottx&gt;rcity 's state legislature to pa.'s taws In the
• have two-or three-year pollcies that companiE's' interests.
• are still active. Our's just lapsed at
"The Insu rance companies are
:. a bad time."
attempting to bar the right s of
•
reco\·r ry of the in nol-ently injured
. Ungaro said the city would
claimants," said Joseph Coticchia ,
·• continue to advertise for bids, but
secreta ry of the Cleveland
. chances of being insured are
Academy of Trial Attorneys.
~·

•

TRACfOR TROUBLE Shooting Te11111 of the Gallipolis FFA chapter
placed second In the reeent Dlsbict 14 co lUst at Buckeye Hills Career
Center. They are Marvin PuDins, left, and Mike Bostic.

Half-century bridges time
of first and last serrnon

..

•

..

..

'

Wrote Rev. Denney one year
prior to his deat h:
"'The gt'eatest meeting I ever
held was at Coal Grove. The
meeting lasted two weeks and l\\-:1
days and we secured 104 converts .
The first !ilwereall m~n . nearly all
ot them married. The last 54 were
men and women, boys and girls.
"I went Into the water on the
second Sunday of the meeting to
baptize tlx' crowd and I baptized 26
~.-theme:
_.e. 111 bave
when the water was so cold I had no
.;;, lied thee on the earth, I have sensation relow the water line. I
;;: finished the work toou gavest me to told the deacons I could not stand It
7• do"
any longer. On the next Wednesday
:
The Rev. Mr. Denney preached we had bapllzlng again and also on
the next Sunday and got 62 of t rem
~ his first sermon In the old Gall Ia
Baptist Church buUdlng In JSTI and baptized.
"SIX 1'IME\l In my ministry I
:=-. be treacbed his last sermon In tlx'
- present building on October :!2, 19:!2. have baptized tlx' third genera !ion
;;_ S.S. Denney was born In 1851 and and on July 19. 1919, I baptized the
:" joined the Springfield Baptist fotlrth generation. I also ordained
; Church at the age of 18. He was the third generatio n as deacon In
"": licensed to preach two yea rs tate- the Mount Zion Baptist Church . Old
Ellis was the first one. then
and ordained to tlx' mlnistrv
. In IB72. Father
his son, Silas EU!s. and tlx'n his
~ J{e estimated that In his 51 years of
.: ;ministry he had traveled over ::B,IID grandson. W.A. Ellis."
Denney wrote that when he
by horse and buggy and had
became
pastor at Mercerville
· ~ baptized over :;DOO persons.
.;' .
Baptist. he found an old log church
and srven memrers and, when he
.~
to
.r.
left , Ire chu rch was In nourishing
condlt
ion. The same thing hap~~uspend
pened at Macedonia and Provi dence as well as at Ga llla Baptist
~
(also catled Souders Chapel) where
,.
Denney
served as pastor In a couple
.,r· DETROIT (UP! ! - American
,.,..Motors Corp. will suspend assem - , of different stretches for 26 years.
;':biy ofits four-wheel-driveCherok(.'('
In regard to his ministry at Gall Ia
:;:.vehicle In China for about two he recalled:
I HELD i\ meeting at Gallla
~ months beginning In June, because
.,_It has not received payment to sh lp Furnace In the old log church that
stood on the bank of Dirty Face
~parts from North America .
:;,. WIUlamPelfrey,an AMCs!XJkes· Cr&lt;E k. I had one man there who
for International opera! Ions, prayed In public, and the boys sa id

By JAMES SANDS
Special C&lt;Jrrespondent
•
GALLIA - The Reverend S.S.
·:: Denney preached his first and his
:" last sermon In the same churdt ;::_GaUia Baptist. In
;: tact, the Rev. Mr.
• Denney died just
.;. -nine days after
·:: -preaching In Gal: lla Baptist on tlx'

.. .

...

:::m11es

-.

AMC finn

part of
Eproductiuon

.

,;; man
~~~~~~P~:~~
...~~er~:;;::
...._lion, are being held In at dod&lt;S In
to'ttarto because tlx' Chinese go-

this area you m_lght consider
applying your potassium to tbe
greem manure crop rather than
waiting untij you plant your next
crop.
As you are making your final
decisions this year on ·which fields
to plant to what 9nd which fields to
set aside, why no! also plan to get
the maximum reneftt from those
set-aside acres.
An additional ben efit of a green
manure crop to a fo Uowln g corn
crop Is excellent ground cover for
no-tilt seedlngs, this there is less
weed competition.
If you have questions or would
like more Information on green
manure crops or otlx'r conserva·
tlon related topics, contact the SoU
Conservation Service at 529 Jack·
son Pike, Room nl·C, Gallipolis,
Ohio or call 446-8687.

be considered. If no clipping or
mid -season harvesting is planned
tlx'n Madrid sweetclover appears
to he lhe leader In total dry matter
and nitrogen production. However,
If clipping for weed cont rol or
harvesting Is necessary, then a
better · legume appears to be
Kenland red clover. ·
The decision on -a single legume
cr a oomblnatlon of legu mes should
re made according to the .goals of
the program. The management
practices must also be considered.
The single mixtures of legumes
may be used to maximize yields
under certain conditions. The appropriate mixture may permit you
to take the greatest advantage of
your particular situation.
Adequate levels of potassium are
also Important In the rate of N2
fixation. If your soli tests are low In

SUNDAY PUZZLER

trey wislx'd I would not call on him
to pray for they had no faith In him.
I told them he was all I had to help
me.
"They said there was an old
colored man named Phtlllps that
would pray and everybody had
faith In him. That night close up to
tlx' pulpit sat a colored man. I asked
him If his name was Phillips and he
said yes. I asked.him If he was here
to help me (JJ t and he said lx' was".
I would pray and then Phillips
would take over and we alternated
back and forth. On the last Sunday
of tre meeting we cut the Ice and a
big crowd was baptized."
According to the Gallla Times
obituary for Rev. Mr. Denney, he
had three simple wishes In Ute: to
outlive his wile Mahala, who was
for many years an Invalid; to
preach t!x&gt; gospel for !il years; and
not to be a burden on anyone when
he go t old.
All three of his wishes were
granted .
AS TO G.'\LIJA Baptist Church,
we are uncertain of Its exact origin,
b.Jt do know that It existed at least
as early as the Civil War; and that
tlx' present church building was
erected In 1887. According to Rev.
Mr. Denney's writings, the church
had 198 memrers when he was the
pastor around the World War f era.
"I never kept track of my
converts, but I don't believe I lost
two per cent rimy members. I was
always careful about the convert s
and let them make their own
):l"ofesslon and come Into the
dturch of tlx'lr own free will and
accord and when they came lntot he
church tlx'y stayed." (Rev. Denney
about Gallla Baptist) .

ACROSS

pronoun
1 Characteristic

6 Alomlze
1t Out-of-dale
16 Domicile
2 1 An increase in
sal ary
22 Commonplace

23 By oneself
24 Expels
25 Cloth measure

26 Challenged
28 Fruit cakes

30 Lie fallow
32 Equally
33 Indian mulberry

34 Vigor: colloq.
35 River. in Spain

36 Ravelings
37 Devoured

38 Son of Odin
40 Take unlawfully
42 Foollike part
43 Female student
44 Act or MacMurray
45 Possess

47 Barters
49 Decant
50 Chinese pagoga
51 Come into view
54 Paradise
55 Disturbance

56
59
60
62

Colorful bird
Anger
Church bench
Mysteries

64 Renown

65 Tellurium symbo l
66 Roman gods
67 Dance step
69 Devoutness
70 Regulation
71 The urial
72 Australian bird

74 Shadows
76 Meadow
7.7 Gnf~
78 Observes
79 Testlmony
82 Visions

Z, yernment has restricted the usc of

84 Mother ol pearl
85 Food tish
86 Conspiracy
88 Girl 's name
89 Harbor

~foreign

exchange and It has not
..,.Issued a letter ri cm:lll to ship tlx'm.
A team of AMC officials wUI
:! travel to Cblna to meet with
;,;:JIO"ernment officials and try to
~lve !he currency problem.
; ;.. "We are not the only ones
lltfected tiy this," Pelfrey said .
"""'.. The kits, which co mist mostly of
...,.,parts from AMC's Toledo, Ohio.
:~·JeEp plant. are sent to Beijing JC!'p
! Corp. In China to he assembled at
t- the rate of seven vehicles a day.
""' The au tomaker holds 31.4 pereen t
=-~ d tbe joint venture, formed in May
- 1!&amp; between AM C and Beijing
:::: Automotive Works.
~- Pelfrey said thai the sll.ttdown
.:;.. could re about two months long.
~ beginning In mid· Ju ne .
!: He said assembly of the Lllero·
, , l.l!e, known as tlx' BJ-213 in llllna,
~ represents only about 10 l""·ccnl of
- the total ~atilm tlx're. The
:;: remainder, which is tre manufac·
:; ture and assembly of a four.whfl'i ·
~ drive BJ-212 vehicle, Is unaffected
~: c because parts are butlt In Ol ina.
-~....-·
.

t-

90 Possessive
92 Steeples
94 State ol excited
Interest: pl.
98 Vehicle: colloq.
99 Sow
100 Informer: slan g
102 Scottish ca ke
103 Female rufl
104 Bitter vetch
105 Play loading role
106 Perplex
t08 Before
109 Brother of Odin
1tO Behold I
11 t Scorch
112 Sires
114 Antlered animal
116 That woman
t t7 Brisk: colloq .
119 Wan
120 Speech
122 Hindu guitars

124 Abraham 's
nephew
125 Seize with teeth
126 Citrus lruil: pl.
128 Measure of
weight

129 Liquefy
13 t New England
university

132 Delace
133 Communities
135 Physician: colloq.
138 Sultlx for a place
for
139 Manufacture
140 Take a seat
141 Tiny
· 142 Mother
143 Tantalum symbol
144 Servitude
145 Walking sticks
147 Food programs
149 Article of
furniture

150 Item of property
152 River in France

154 Catkin
156 Lying face down
158 Rent
159 Hebrew festival
160 Parts of airplane
I6 t Breed ingredient

DOWN
t Handle

75 Not ho llow

2 Recuperate

3 Is in poor health
4 Exists
5 Spread tor drying
6 Thoroug hfare
7 Make ready
8 Free of
9 Near

78 Hindu garment
80 "The Buckeye
State"
8I Neither
83 Dawn goddess
84 Informal letter
87 Cylindrical
89 Jury lists
90 Former Chinese

tO Still
11 Capital of France
12 Choir vo1ce
13 Distress signal
14 Tin symbol
15 Weirder
16 VBSI throng

17 Away
18 You and me
19 Declare
20 Ancient chariot

27 Likely
29 War god
31 Goal
36 Bumpkin
37 Sandarac tree
39 Hangman 's

units of money

9 t Great Lake
92 Scorch
93 Band worn
around waist

95 Painlul
96 At no time
97 P"rophets
99 Remain
101 Seesaw
105 Clan
106 Bund le
107 Eng lish streetc ar
It 1 Blemish
t 12 Doom
11 3 Narrow openi ng

115 Outlits

noose

40 Type of cook ie
4t Young boys
42 Wriltng
implement
43 Cries like a dove
44 Journey fo rth

46 You and I
48 Profound

116 Workman
118 Associate

119 Heap
121 lnlormed
123 As fer as
125 Bread makers
126 Tardy
127 Candy
129 Substance

49 Compassion

50 Domesticate
51 Assisted
52 Choice
'53 Remunerated

55 Hold back
56 Tropical tree

57 Additional
58 Plague
61 Linger
63 Musical

130 Expunge
13 1 Asian ox

132 Underground
worker

134 Snare
136 Foretokens
137 Mil itary studenl
139 Speck
140 Rational
144 Affirmative

instrument
64 Animal coats

68 Kind of light

145 Food fish
146 Carpenter's tool
147 Lair

footwear
70 Fic titious ta le

148 Secret agenl
149 Neckpiece

71 Mil itary

151 South America:
abbr .

subd ivi sion

t53 That man

73 Capsizes
74 Former Russian
ruler

155 Note of scale
15 7 Concerning

•.

-~.
,,
~

UPI~Wrler

Bank Pension Fund and a British
utUity company, he said.
Murphy s;lld Mitsui Real Estate
SalesCp., Ltd. and Mitsui Trust and
, Banking Co., both of Tbkyo,
consulted with Kokusai on the
Investment.
"Kokusal chose the United States
because it Is the safest market and
also provides the rest return on
such Investments," he said.
Murphy said tre Japanese are
learning the new market ·and
oomparlng It with the commercial
real estale market In tbelr own
country which, when available, is
prohibitively expensive and at best
gives a return of only two to three

DALLAS (UPI) -By laking a 15
percent share of a $175 million
Investment In a Washington, D.C.
real estate property; Kokusai ~o­
gyo Co., Ltd. of Tokyo has opened
yet another U.S. commercial door
for the Japanese.
The deal, concluded last rmntb,
made the aerial mapping finn the
first-ever non-Institutional Japanese Investor to enter the lucrative
U.S. commercial real estate
market, said Lehndorff USA Group
of Dallas, a real estate Investment
firm that put together the project.
Daniel M. Murphy, president of
Lehndorff subsidiary Lehndorff· percent.
Pacific Inc., said the '100,001
In the United States, Ire current
square-foot property kK:ated on 1001 return is retween six and eight
Pennsylvania Ave., stretching percent, he said.
from Capitol HOI to the White
Murphy said the transaction was
House, wUl he develop€~! into an a major turning point tor his ftrm.
ofl!ce complex. He said tbe prop- He said Letmdorff formed an
erty already is 00 percent leased.
alliance with the Mitsui companies
"The investment marks a slgnlfl· to Invest Japanese funds in U.S.
cant mtlestol'tl' for the non- properties to meet t1x&gt; growing
Institutional Japanese Investor," need ol rhedium-to small-sized
said Murphy whose firm special· Japanese companies to Invest tlx'lr
izes In Investing foreign capital In surplus fund s In aMractlve foreign
the United States. "There are a assets.
number of Japanese investments In
"We foresee a steadily Increasing
this country but they are mostly by demand from tlx' Japanese for
· manufacturers and distributors Investment In U.S. real estn te,"
who acquire property for t!x&gt;lr own · Murphy said. He said restrictions
use and not for Investment pur· against Japanese pension fund s
poses. This Is the first-ever invest- managed by trust banks Investing
ment by a non-institutional inves- In foreign assets may he removed in
tor. That Is why It Is so significant,"
tlx' near future, "and this will he a
he said.
major catalyst In increasing Japa·
nese participation In tre U.S. real
The enUre acquislliln was a cash
transaction and Kokusal and Lehn· estate market.
. "I don 't think this should he
dorff eac h holds a 15 percent
viewed
as an attempt to Increase
interest In the project, Murphy said.
foreign
ownership of U.S . assets.
Other lnvrstors Include the World

..--Business Briefs:-Graduate course offered in area
POINT PLEASANT- Graduate level murses In management for
engineers and other technically trained graduates are relng offered
In the Point Pleasant area by the West VIrginia College r:I Graduate
Studies at Institute.
Beginning this summer, tre program will be completed by tre
spring of 19111. Satisfactory completion of the coursework meets
requirements for a certificate or master's degree In engineering
management.
The.program IS deSigned to prepare students with undergraduate
education In engineering or science for posltioll'l ci middle
management responsibility In lnclustry or government. It Is
structured for part ·lime-students woo are employed.
During the first year, topics covered ·are training on micro
computers, management process, p€111lnnel admlnistratkm,
statistics and operations management. In the second year, classes
wUI address organizational behavklr, project management,
engineering economics and human performance.
While this is a regular degree program In the Charleston area ,lt is
a special schedule for the POint Pleasant area. EnroUment Is Umlted.
Several employers are sponsoring their employees and student
loans may be available. If Interested, contact Dr. Jacob PeterSIJD,
associate profeswr of engineering management at the West VIrginia
College of Graduate Studies. at 1·1ro6!2·2697 (Inside West VIrginia
only), or ll4-768-97ll, extension 459, refore May 9.

Firms file for incorporation
GALLIPOLIS - Articles of Incorporation have been tued with
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown's cifice by t..u Gauta County

@ 1986 United Fea tu; e Syndicate 1

TE'!T RUN - A coB of roled steel is prepared for a
le!t nm through LTV Steel's new electrogalvanldng
line In Cleveland. The sheet steellsrust·proofed rih a
thin coatmg of zinc chn1ng joumey throuch 20

separate chemical baths along the 895-loot line.
Inghly...,rroslon reslslanl, the coated steel w11
enable automakers to offer !().year warranties
against corrosion damage. (UPI)

Sphio's quarterly earnings decline
CLEVELAND (UP! l - The
Standard 011 company blames a
sharp decrea se In crude oU prices
for a 26 percent drop In earnings for
the first quarter ended March .
Earnings were ~ nrtlllon, or
$1.~ a share, down from $.'113
million, or $1.46 a share, for the
same period In 1985, company
officials said Thursday. The company declared adlvidend of70 oents
a share, unchanged from first
quarter 1985.
First-quarter revenues were $2.9
blltlon, down from $3.2 billion
during the first th ree months of
1985.
Operating Income from the petroleum business was $474 mUtton,
down from the $768 million earned
In the same perkld last year.

Product prices, especially for retail
gasoline, feU less rap idly and partly
cush ioned t!x&gt; Impact of falling
crude oil prices, company offlcia is
said.
"Oil prices have dropped substantially and we ex peel significant
volatility for tlx' nmalnder of the
year. As a result, our flrst-!Jlarler
earnings may not be representative
of tlx' ea rnings ror subsequent
quarters," sa id Chairman Robert
Horton.
Performan02 In the other bust·
nesses Improved significa ntly with
a cont rtbution to operating income
of $23 million , compared with an
operating loss of $33 million tor the
first quarter of last year. The
Improvement reflects the effect of
cost reductions, partly as9'Jclated

with the special char~s taken In
1985, officials said .
Exploration expendit ures were
.tl44 million. down from $222 million
for tlx' same period last year.
Otlx'r capital expenditures also
were reduced to $310 million, from
$lllll million for the ftrsl quarter of
last year when some Gulf Oil Corp.
refining and marketing·operations
were purchased for $315 million.
"We have already cut our
planned capital expen ditures from
about $2.3 lilllon to about $1.8
billion," Horton sa id. "We will
continue to review costs and
operations In tre Ught of the
changing e11vironment so as to
preserve tre strength of the
company and Ulke advantage of
future opportunities."
-

Safety inspectors analyze problems
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. tUPil
- Inspectors from the Mine Safety
and Health Administration and coal
operators say tlx'y are willing to
forge a new spirit of cooperation to
Increase safety and reduce the
number of repeat vtolatlons.
MSHA officials described a new
program to about )) coal Industry
officials earliE'r this week in
Morgantown. Under tbe plan,
operators, worters and Inspectors
will work togetlx'r to analyze the

basic problems underlying repeat
safety offenses.
"We felt we needed to do
something to get together again tD
address tlx' problems rather than
focus on the frustrations on each
other," said James Corsaro, vice
president of safety and training at
Eastern. "This not a mechanism
for , the operators to give up
managernenI or to disinvolve the
UMWA or to allow MSHA to stop
wrtt lng violations. "

Consol chief predicts
growth in coal exports
PITTSBURGH (UP! l - B.R.
Brown, chairman and chief execu·
live offlcer of Consolidation Coal
Co., says re foresees growth In U.S.
coal exports recause of stable labor
relations a nd Impr oved
productlvtty .
Brown told an audience earlier
this week at the Australian Coal
Conference In Brtsbane, Australia,
that relations between labor and
management In the U.S. coal
Industry possibly are better now
than they have ever been.
"There is a higher degree of
cooperation retween labor and
management," Brown said. "We
are working togettx&gt;r to Improve
safety, productivity and marketing
· prospects. We recognl7.e our t'Ommon Interests."

ATHENS - Ohio University's Communlverslty program will
offer a WORDSTAR word processing class on three Wednesdays
from 7·9 p.m. May 7·21 at 259 Alden Library.
Those attending the class will learn oow to create, edit and prtnt
documents, store and retrieve texts. move and copy texts and use
SpeUStar to check spelling.
Instructor Dennis Mroz maneges tlx' Alden Library computer
laboratory of Ohio University Computing and Learning Services.
The fee for the class Is $45.
For more Information or to sign up for tlx' d'ass, contact the Office
r:I Continuing Education, lower level Memorial Auditorium, Athens,
at 594-li876. Collect calls are accepted.

HUNTINGTON - The Huntington Association of Life Underwri·
ters· will be sponsoring tlx' 47th ll!lnual State Ufe Underwriters
Convention May 15·17 at tbe Holiday Inn Gateway.
For more Information, contact Ron Bates at 523-0156.

I

MARION - While results of an
independent audit released earlier
last week Indicate General Tele·
phone Co. of Ohio Is providing good
service to its customers, company
officials said they will actively
review all auditors' recommendations to further improve servioe
quality.
Arthur Young &amp; Co .. a national
accounting firm, was retained by
the Public UtilltiE's Commission of
Ohio In December 1985 to reviE'w the
quality of service GTE provides
nearly 000.001 customers statewide.
The audit of GTE service opera·
lions began that month and was
completed last week with submission of a 200page final report to the
PUCO.
Tbe audilors reviE'wed the company's policy and organization,
complianO' with ?UCO stnndards,
customer service and construction
management operations durtng the
process. Arthur Young submitted
20 rocomrnendatlons In Hs report,
ranging from a revision of various
Internal procedures to Identifying
opportunities for technl ca I
Improvements.
"WhUe we're pleased tre audit
stnv.s we haave significantly lm·
proved servlee in tlx' past two
years, we're keenly Interested In
areas where the auditors feel we
can mak e additional Improvements," said Robert R. !landaU,
state vice president-general manager for GfE telephone operations.
Randall said tre auditors' report
represmts an extensive review of
tlx' company's operatiln. He said
GTE will review each of the
auditors' recommendations and
work with tlx' PUCO In the romlng
weeks to develop action plans.
"The emphasis we're placing on
quality service slx&gt;ws In the h~avy
capital Investments we're mak·
lng," Randall said. "We're Invest·
lng DDre than 1!)3 million In service
Improvement and development
projects this year alone. And In the
past three years, we've channeled
nearly $:E4 million to upgrade rur
switching network and support
systems.
"We're confident that we've
made real progress, but we're not
st~plng here," he continued . "We
plan 10 take advantage ri tre audit
recommendatklns to make turttx&gt;r
service Improvements. QuaUty and
customer satisfactkln will continue
to he (JJr top priorities."

Word processing class set

W. Va. underwriters set session
GALUA BAP'nST CHURGH, locate&lt;! rlear the vBiage of Ganta,
WIL'I organized well over 100 yelll'8 ago, rih the present buDding
dating to 1887. The Rev. S.S. Denney·llel'\led t1Uchunlh2tlye81'8and
preached ids lint sermon and Ns last sermon In the GaiUa Baptist
Utureh, allllluglt that 111'1!1 sennon was In the old log buDding now no
longer standing.

GTE reviews
finn's audit

Filing are Blda Instatlation Co., with WOllam L. Darnell and
Kathleen Darnell as Incorporators and C. Mark KtesUng , 456 Second
Ave., as agent, and Patriot Auction Barn Inc., with MarUn
Wedemeyer and JoyC\' Wedemeyer as ilrorporators and C. Mark
Kiesling as agent.

RIO GRANDE - A slx·hour seminar to Introduce Lotus l -2-3
software on the IBM personal computer wUI be offered at Rio
Grande College and Community College Wednesdayfrom 9 a .m. to
3:30 p.m. The seminar is open to people Interested to people
Interested In business, government and home computer use .
"Hands on" activities will Include rmvlng the spreading sheet,
saving and restoring rues and an Introduction to developing an
accounting program. A cert~lc a te for0.6rontlnulngeducatlon units
will be awarded to participants. Enrollment wUI be limited to 14. The
cost is $125, Including Instruction and equipment use.
The seminar wtll be held In the School of Business, Room 126.
Instructors are Larry Higgins and Beverly Wilkins. To register,
contact the college at 245-5.1531n Ohio cr toll-free at l·Iro-282-T.JII, no
later than Tuesday.

.I

We are only bringing back the
dollars that Amertca has given to
Japan and It will help reduoe the
huge trade deOclt between the two
countries," he said.
Murphy said his nrm currently is
..urk!ng on two additional projects
Involving oon·lnstltutional Japa·
nese Investors.
"By next year, we feel conttctent
we wUl close six to srven more
):I"Ojects," Murphy said.

firms.

RGC-CC plans software seminar

!A ~"" .

-

By HARDIAR KRIIHNAN

77 Merchandise

~Jlemick role

~· HOLLYWOOD (UP!) - ill'
t:Remlck and Patrick McGoohan
:!"Wlll star In "Of Pure Blood," a
. ;inew CBS·TV two-hour movie
:;&amp;eheduled for next season .
,., The romantic-adventure film
~ will be shot entirely In Europe on
,.. JocatJons In Hungary and Ger·
.
~ntany.

AeriaJ ·m apping opens door
for new Japanese investment

Historically, he sa id, the United
States has provicled )) percent to li
percent of all seaborne coal trade.
Now that trade has bern reduced to
:ll perrent.
But theConsotexecutivesaidthat
with high-quality coal reserves,
Improved labor relations and lm·
proved productivity, U.S. coal
ex!D rts will grow In the futu re.
a

Canso! is a subsidiary of Conoco,
Pont company.

[)j

But for the new program to work,
safety inspectors wUt have to rmve
out of t!x&gt;lr traditilnal role of
lnspectiln activities, MSHA spokes·
man Ron Keaton said.
"Some coal operators will resent
that. In that case, It will be business
as usual," he said.
But tre opera tors agree the
):I"Ogram is needed. Consolidation
Coal Co. and Eastern both helped
draft tre plan and have thrown
their 91pportbehlndtre Idea, as has
the United Mine Workers union.
The program cans lor safety
Inspectors to meet with operators
and miners befor e arriving at the
mine site and after the dally
closout. AU parties wUt reviE'w any
violations and evaluate wby they
existed.
"We have to get to the root cause
of tlx' vtotatipnsand prevent them,"
Keaton said. "The bottom tine Is
safer mines."
Ronald Wooten, Consol's vice
president for safety, said his
company became Involved because
a cooperative attitude hasdegener·
ated to an adversarlal relationship.
"When that happens, it's an
absolute detriment to safetY and
production." lx' said.
If the new plan of cooperation ts
suecessful,it could become a model
for safety programs natilnwlde,
Keaton said.

The Consol chairman said the
current wage contract- reached In
1984 without an Industry-wide slrlke
for the ftrst tlme In two decades permits companies with miners
covered by Ire United Mine
Workers union to be more
competltve.

SELECJ'ED - Gallla County
native Richard K. Fisher,
D.V.M., hall been selecled for
publication bt the IJ85.8f edU!on
of "Who's Who In Frontiers of
Science and Technology." A 19&amp;1
graduate of Gallla Academy
IUglt School and a 19'76 graduate
of the Ohio state Unlvenlty
School of Veterinary Medicine,
Fisher and hili wHe, Anita,
owned and operated tbe Rio
Grande Velerinary Clinic for
Dve years. He Is wnomtly
employed In the anbnal re.seareh division ci American
Cyanamid C&lt;J., Pmceton, N.J .
He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard A. Fl8her of Rt. 3,
Gallipolls and the grandson of
Mrs. C.C. Fisher of Gage and .
Heber Felmre ol Columbus. His
wile 18 the lonner Anita Walker,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Walker of Thunnan. Dr. and
Mrs. Flaher and cldldrea Kelly
and Keith reside at Falrle~~~
HIUs,Pa.

With cont inued productivity lm·
provements, Brown predicted that
total hourly labor costs- Including
wages and reneflts - will stay at
even keel , or mJre likely, fat! on a
per-ton basis.
' 11loth

labor and management
are united In a commitment to sell
American coal compelltively In
world mari&lt;Pts," Brown said.
Brown said the average underground mine productivity In the
United States has Improved by 00
percent since 1918.
'
Technological Improvements, In·
eluding the wider use of lo~all
mining, were a strong factor In that
Improvement. Moreover, re said,
many higher-cost operations were
closed.
"There is mJreproductloncapac·
lly than the world can ~."Brown
said. "As a result, prtces are weak
and competition Is fierce. "

v

MO'I10N OF THANKS - A plaque was ..,_,led to outgoing GaD1a
Counly Improvement Corporation lllard member Donald Lbttala.

right, by CIC President Dan Davies. Llntala stepped clo\m from III!!
Gallipolis City Commlll!llon at the end of l98il, along wtlh fierce D.
McCreedy. B.-h men were honored with plaqiHS althe CIC's annual
meetmg earler ltult week.

lr

,,

�,·

Pleasant

The

w. va.

promotes
heritage,
tourism

Riaht To
limit Quantities .

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UPll The spirit .ol cooperation and
respect that helped buDd Springfield In the IBIDs can stU! be found
today In this west central Ohio city.
Especially on Sunday, or more
specifically, the first three Sundays
of the month.
Three homes !bat have historic
stgnmcance in the development of
the city are operated by three
organizations and open for tou rs on
different Sundays.
The Pennsylvania HouSI', a
former stagecoach Inn on U.S.
Rnute 40, Is open the first Svnday
afternoon of the month. The
Hertzler House In George Rngers
Clark Park is open the second
Sunday of the month. while the
David Crabill House In Buck Creek
State Park Is open the third Sunday
of the month.
Milchell Reedy, a lrusree of lh&lt;'

We Reserve

'

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECnVE THRU SATURDAY, MAY 10, 1986

:want to try their bands at p!e;baklng, hog.calling, and cow·mllking contests.
: Frontier fun features l:lg sawing
;contests for men and women, even
!though Findlay once advertiSed
)tself as a place where "women split

m wood."

: Some wags say tba t public
:relations claim led to a quadrupling
'Ff Findlay's population in 10 years.
• Visitors who want to spend a
ln!ght wUI find nearly a dozen ·
F,tels, represmted by major '
Chains and Independent qJerations.
Bed-and-breakfast establishments
have not yet appeared In Findlay.
Healy says there is no shortage of
places to find a meal, particularly
for travelers looking for a break
from fast· food menus.
"People In Findlay do appeclate
quality foods," she said. "Our local
restaurants create homemade
soups, entrees, breads and strive
for a natural quality and! air trice."

Ground Beef •••••~••• 99C
Ground Chuck ••••• $119
LB.

USDA CHOICE

·· ·

Round Steak ....L:.••• $179
FRESH PORK BUTT
$ 09
Steaks/Roast •••• ~.. 1

GRADE A WHOLE

Fryers •••••••••••••L!•••••
Chicken Livers ••••••
LB.

.
W1eners •••••••••••••••••

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

12 OZ. PKG.

COLUMBIA

Sliced Bacon·~~;:.2 f$1

Robertson breaks that down to
$45 for a room and the rest tor
meals. gasoline and the nominal
fees to some attractions.
The Pennsylvania )louse, operated . by the Daughters r:i the
American Revolution, was a main
st"' on the National Road in the
IB:!ls. Several prominent travelers
have stayed at the Inn, at one time
operated by the parents r:iDr.Jsaac
K. Funk of Funk and Wagnall's
dictionary fame.
'The coming of the railroads cut
Into the stagecoach ooslness and
the 23-room Pennsylvania House
became a sanitarium, boarding
house and a junk shop before the
DAR bought It in the 19JJs to
prevent It from being condemned.
DAR member Grace Porter
donatfd her collection of more than
100,&lt;nl buttons to the home. About
250 dolls are also on display.

WASHINGTON COURT
HOUSE, Ohio !UPII - While
board fences surround bright green
pastures and horses frolic In the
field , quite an attracllon for a child.
· But before the kids ask the big
question, Ihe answer is "yes."
Yes, It Is possible to vlslt the
many standardbred horse breeding
farms so common In Fayett&lt;'
County in southweslern Ohio.
Standardbred ho=s ' are to
Fayette County whalthoroughbred
horses are to Lexington, Ky., with
one big difference - operators of
the standardbred horse fanns
welcome visitors.
"We love visitors," says Joan
Speece: office manag&lt;'r of Fair
Chance Farm, where Adios Buller
stood stud until his death.
Speece, whose husband Earl
manages the farm . says mares
have their foals in the spring.
Secretary·bookkeepcr Sheila EIrich, who often guides tours, said
thai usually the mothers andbabie'

This three·story house has lour
porches and 16 exterior doors.
Fourteen d the23 roomsq&gt;en to the
public are filled with antique and
period !u mlshings. It Is open the
first Sunday anernoon of the
month, bu I DAR members will
conduct tours, by appointment, on
other days for groups of 10 and

more.
Some people say lhe Hertzler
HouSI' Is haunted because lhe
builder - banker and millwright
Daniel Hertzler- was murdered In
the house after his wife and
grandson Oed the attackers.
Hertzler built the house In the
l&amp;lls on his land In what IS now the
George Rogers Clark Park. The
house has eight (Drches- said to be
one for each Hertzler child - and
overlooks the site of the Revolutionary War Battle of Plcawey.
In the taU of 1867, Intruders

more and Ohio Railroad offer a
Chamber of Commerce.
Former city manager Edwin
reminder of the city's once-big
Ducey says tba I du rtng some industry.
.
The historical oociety, located in
restoration in the 1900s. historians
a Victorian .home built by early
found thP name "A.H. WilL" on an
bankl&gt;r Morris .Sharp. Is open on
envelope In the hand of the
white-gowned goddess In the paint- ·weekends. The cream- and-green
home. wtth a spira l staircase
ing, "The Spirit of the U.S. MaiL"
"They searched the ledgers and leading up a tower where Sharp Is
found tbat the ilterbr decorators said to have walched his workers.
subcontracted the work ool to houses items from the county's
Willard for $2,240.'' said Dueey. history.
One note of ca ution fort hose who
president of the county's historical
have trouble with directions: city
society.
slreets are not laid out in a true
The courthouse was built In 1883
at a cost of $100,00J and some ll nonh-south or cast-west direclion.
years ago, the painllngs - "Spirit Witherspoon says streels were put
of the U.S. Mail," "Spirit of In at an angle on purpose so thai
Telegraphy" and "Spirit of Elec- eac h side rt a house would benefit
from the sun each day.
trtcity" - were appraised al
Agricu lture is the primary Indus·
$100,&lt;nl, he said .
A gazebo, dedicated in June 1984. try in the county, but Witherspoon
sits on a comer of the courthouSI' says therl&gt; Is tight and clean
lawn. where people can have picnic Industry in an Industrial park. One
lunches In good weather. An big product made In Washington
unusual setting for a picnic is Coun House Is the pumps for
Eyman Park, where a locomotive toolhpaste.
One event to help decide when lo
and caboose donated bv the Baltlvisit Ihe county is the lhree-&lt;lay flea
market at the Fayette County
Fairwounds eac h month. This fl ea
markl&gt;t is sponsored by the Central
resulting from the 16.ctay strike In Ohio Gun and Indian Relic CoHee·
$295 million, shipments of 592,403
the
can·maklng Indu stry. Our lors Association.
tons and $10.1 million In profil. In
The assoclalion's president. Hosecond
-quarter bookings are strong
the firs! quarler of 1984, the firm
mer
Wilson, says that In warm
a
eros.•
aU
product
Uncs."
posted profits of $9.6 million.
weather,
as many as fOJ vendors
Loughhead
said
rising
compellLoughhead expressed confidence
set
up
booths
Friday through
live
pressures
pose
a
serious
ihe steelmakrr wm right Itself
Sunday
and
it's
no
I unusual to have
concern.
during lhe lraditiona!ly strong
as
many
as
IO,OOJ
ooyers on a
"New,
Innovative
labor
agree·
second quarter .
wcekend.
ments
In
lhe
induslly
are
making
The company has about 8,400
Flea markl&gt;lsa rescheduled May
competilor plan is rrore cost effec·
active employees.
9·11,
June 27-29. Aug . 15- 17, Sept.
live,"
he
said.
"Our
own
cosl·
·
"We were able lo partially offset
12·14,
Oct. 10-12, Oct. 31·Nov.2 and
cutting
clfons
arc
showing
good
thl' decline in shipments of canDec.H
results,
but
Industry
changes
bf&gt;ar
making rna Ierial by higher shipments of sheet products." Laugh- watching."
While there are Indications of a
head said.
"Over the balanre of the year. we downward trend. Loughead said,
expect 10 make up the bst volume
Imports remain a problem .

are put in fields near the road so
motorists can see them
ShP said a lot of elementary
schools have field trips to Ihe farms
and the veterinarian students from
Ohio Stare Un iversity visit the farm
as part of their studies.
Fair Chance Is localed on U.S.
Rnute 62, just east of Washington
Cour1 HouSI'. The best timelo vlsil ,
Speece said, IS Monday lhrough
Friday when mosl of the farm
hando are working.
The Fayette County Courthouse
offers anolher 'must -s«&gt;' attraction
- three original paintings by
Archibald H. Willard on the walls of
the third floor of the courthouse.
Willard, a nalive of Wellington,
Lorain Counly, painted "Spirit of
'76." the famous paintlngdeplcling
thrre Revo!utionaJy War marching
fifr and drum players.
"ThP 'Spirit of '76' b the most
identified paintin g by the leastknown art isl," says Carol Wilt..•r&gt;poon, cxecuti\'e vice pres ldenl of
lhr Washington Court HouSI'

WE IRTON, W.Va. tUPI 1 - A
16.ctay strike In the can- making
industry and lower sicel prites
have been cited in Weirton SIN'l
Corp. posting Its towcsl quarlr rly
earnings since It became the
nalion's largest employee-owned
company In 1984.
Chainnan Rnbert Loughhcad
sa id the first -quarter earnings of
$8.9 million were realized from
sa les of $287 million and shipmen is
of 585,032 tons.
Sa les fell3percenl and shlpmcnl s
slacked off I percent jor the
January·March period. comparr&lt;l
10 last year's first· quarter sa les of

The Ohio Valley Bank Company
FEDERAL RESERVE DISTIUCf NO. 4
of Gallipolis, Galli a County, In the State of Ohio all he close of business on March 31,
1986.

VIDALIA

Onions ••••••••••••••••••
LB.

tlme.1 '

GRADE AEXTRA LARGE

With just a little adlvance mtlce,
visitors can walk watch w~rkers at ·
WhirlpoOl assemble washers, dryers, ranges and dishwashers.
Kodak processes fUm In Findlay
and Ball Metal Container Group
manufactures beverage cans.

·
Eg-gs •••••••••••••••••••••••
BROUGHTON •
$ 49
2°/o Milk ••••••• !!~~N... 1
DOZEN

PRICE SAYER 32

Oz: BOX

·DAIRY LANE

Ice Cream •••••••••••• $1
BANQUET 32 OZ. BOX
$ 39
Frozen Chicken •••• 2

Mac. I Spaghetti •• 2/Sl

.

ARMOUR TREET

Lunch Meat •••••••••••
12 OZ. CAN

I

,,..TJVal •••..
....
........ •••....
·····couPm·······
i • •' •
•
•

MAXWEll HOUSE

COFFEE

~A~· $899
limit I h&lt; Cllll.,tr
Good Only At Pow••• S.ennarbt
OHtr bpirn Sat. Apr. 10, 1916 1T$ ·

: i

•

•

CHEER DETERGENT
•
••• 72 oz.
:

Urrrlt 1 ,. Ctrlte•
GHrl
Dilly
At
P~··•
S..,.,tet
1
1
• Offtr ..,.... s.t. ,.,. 10, "" m 1
" ...

• • e ......

.
t I I I. It I • t I I I

IOUNJY

I

: PAPER TOWELS

$289

• .

~

\AI\J C\111 • • • ' • l

I• ~

I

t

I.e

'12 GAL

~ ·, ~':

3/$2

GENERAL ELECTRIC

ALARM CLOCK
SJR7;;1

$399

limit I Per Customer
limit 2 Per CulloGOCMI Otrty At Powsll's ~tr. .rllet
... Dilly At Powolt's S..~n~~~~rllet
•• Dlhr laplm Sat. Apr. 10, 198/o m . • ••.,.,.,. bpir~ Sat. Apr. 10, 1916 SlS

••••• ••••••••••••••••••

ASSETS
Cash and balan ces due from depos itory Institutions :
a . Nonlnteres t-bcarlng ba lan ces and currency and co ln .................. 5,611,000.00
Securities ........ .................................. .... ........ ... ,........ .. ................ ... .40,029,000.00
Federa l funds sold and securities purchased under agreement s
10 resell In domestic off ices of 1he bank and of Its
Edge and Agreement subsidi ar ies. and In TBFs ........................... 1&gt;.000.000.00
Loans and lease financing receiv a bl es:
Loans an d leases, net of unearned !ncome ...... .. 70,B50,000.00
LESS: All owa nce for loan an d lease losses ........ ].250,000.00
Loans and lease;, net ot unearned Income,
allowance, and re;erve ........................................... .. ............ ........69,600,000.00
Premises and fix ed assets tinc ludl ng caplla lized leases 1... ..... ........... 1,543,000.00
Other real est a Ie owned .............. .. .......... .... ....... ... ....... .. .... .. ............ .. .. 62.000.00
Other assets ....................... ..................... . ........................ ............ 2,316.000.00
Total assets ..... .. ............... .. .. ........ ........................................... ... 134.161,000.00
LIABIUTIES
Deposits:
In domestic offices ..................... .. ........ .... ......... ..................... .. .. 123,559,000.00
1I I Non! nlrr es 1-brarln g............................ ..... ... 10.307.000 .00
121 lnl eresl-be ar in g .. .. .. .. .. .
.. ..... .. 113.252.000 .00
Other liabililies ............................................ ............... .......... ....... 1.111.000.00
Total II abllit les...... . .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...
. ............ .... ...... ............. 124.670,000.00
EQUn'Y CAPITAL
Co mmon stock 1No. of shar e; 1 a. Authorized .......... 200,000
b. Ou Is ta nding .. .. ... .193.500 ... .. .. ....... 1,935,000.00
Su rpiu s .... .. ........ .. ... ........... ............ .. ............ .... ..................... .... ....... 4,143,000.00
Undivided profit s an d capit al reserves ................................... ......... 3,413,000.00
Total equity ca pi Ia I ............................................... .... .................. ..... 9,491,000.00
Total li abilities, llmlied ·life preferred s10ck. an d
equity cal'ita 1..... .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. .. .. .. . .................. ...... ........ 134.161.000.00

I. the undersigned officer, do hereby dec lare that this Report of Condition ha s
been prepared in conformance with official Ins tructions and Is true to the best of
my knowl edge and belief.
Madge E. Boggs
Vice President and Co ntroller
We. the undersigned directors, attest the correc lness of this Report of Condition and declare that It has been examined by us and to Ihe best of our knowledge
and belief has been prepared In conformance with official instructions and Is true
and correct.
James L. Da!lev
Ca rrol H. McKenzie - Directors
Frank H. Mills , Ji-.
State of Ohio, County of Galli a, ss:
.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 29th day of April, 1986 and I hereby cer·
tlfy that I am not an officer or director of this bank.
My commlslon expires March 25, 1991.
Cindy L. Har~lngton, Notary Public .

Clark Coonty Historical Society and
Is open the third Sunday aft~
!rom May"ihrough December. ·
Small fees are c~ for t~
Pennsylvania House and !!If
Hertzler House, but tbel'l' Is no
charge to lour the Crabill House.
although Reedy says donatkms ai'e
a! ways welcome.
While In Sprtngfleld, vlsitors ~an
stroll through the Wittenberg !JI)Iverslty campus, enjoy a wfue:
tasting stop at Hafie's Winery arid
shop at a fanners market In
downtown Sprtngf!eld Wednesday
through Sunday In a building that
once housed an opera house and
later city offices and the jaU.
:
A flea market is held at the Clark
County Fairgrounds, off Interstate
at exit 59, on May 17-18, June
21-Z.l, Aug. 16-17, Sept. :!l-21, Oct.
18-19, Nov. IS- 16 and Dec. 13-14.
The New Boston Fair L\; Aug. :.&gt;
and 31 at the George Rogers Clark
Park.
For Information on what to see
and do In Springfield, the Chamber
of Conuneree qJerates a recorded
message at 513- 323-JNFO.
·

JE

r.:=======================i

We purchase 1st
&amp; 2nd mortgages
and land contracts :

Are you wllecting payments on a real estate mort·

gage, but would preler to have a lump sum ? Let
us show you how to convert all or part ol your
mortgage into cash. Out ol state mortgages are also
considered. as we are a direct national mongage
lender !rom coast to coast; plus no broker lees. for
details, call today .

CRBDI]BRJFI'
OF AMERI CA

Da vid Adams. Manager
131 2 Eastern Avenu e .... . .......... . ... . . ... 4464113

College of Business Administration

Ohio University
an ofjirrrnJII~

"In warm weather we bave a
couple ol hundred public events
going on," said Deb Autery,
director of the convention and
visitors bureau. "There's something going on in the parks all the

apparently seeking the nearly
SoiO,OOJ Hertzler was said to have
stashed In the house shot him
fatally. The ~rxt day two men were
arrested , but they escaped and the
case was never illlved.
This house, operated by the
George Rngers Clark Park Board
of Trustees, Is qJen the second
Sunday afterooon from March
through November, but special
arrangements can be made for
tours of :z; or more.
At about the same time the
Pennsylvania House was being
built on the west side rt Springfield.
pioneers David and Barbara Crabill were buDding a twc-story brick
home on the nonhea st side. The
CrabUis had 12 children and their
descendants have helped In the
restoration of the Federal-style
home.
The home, which has doors and
windows q&gt;poslte each other to
allow for good ventilation, was built
In what is now Buck Creek State
Park. Crabill's farmland is now the
Clarence J. Brown Reservoir.
This home Is qJerated by the

Weirton ·Steel lists earnings

CO~S OUOATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(In cluding Domrstlc and Foreign Subsidiaries)
State Bank No. 130

"We have an 81-year-old candy
and Ice cream shop where candy Is
still rolled by hand and 'swirled'
with a letter to indicate the flavor
Inside.'' she said.
A natural grain bakery. a
restaurant thai boasts of no freezers or microwaves on the tremlses
and a natural-feed turkey farm and
canned meat processing plant are
samples of the community's attl- ·
tude toward freshness.

"That's really a sight to see,"
Autrey said of the Ball plant.
"Hundreds and hundreds of feet of
stacked cans, almost 'uke · a
skyscraper."
Findlay started as a mUitary post
In 1812, but It took another nine
years before the settlers got around
to platting the first city block. The
town remained In obscurtty until
1886, when the flaming blooout of
the Karg gas well attractEd the otl ·
barons.
Rockefeller was only a visitor,
rut Findlay counts among Its
famous resklents John Chapman,
who under the alias d Johnny
Appleseed walked the countryside
planting apple trees; wrtters David
R Locke, who composed the
"Petroleum v. Nasby" satirical
letters durtng the C!vD War; Zane
Grey, autlxlr of western novels, and ·
Clergyman Norman Vincent Peale,
author of "The Power of Positive
Thinking."
The Old Mill Stream ISn't forgot·
ten In Findlay. A 3~·mllehlkefrom
Main Street leads past Riverside
Park, where a memortal rock
hooors the writer who trough! so
much of the Blanchard Rlver he
wrote a song about .ft.

Clark County Historical Society,
which operates the Crabill House,
reveres that cooperation and
respect . ·
"We respect them and what they
are doing,' ' he said of the two
organizations that operate the other
homes. "We wouldn't want to
Interfere with what they'"" doing."
People who want to see the three
homes have to go to Sprtngfleld
three different times - and three
trips to Springfield provides money
for the city.
"The throw-off Is always there,"
says Darlene Robertson, vice presienl of the Convention and VIsitors
Division of the Springfield Area
Chamber of Commerce.
" It doesn't 'cost' a ·tot to see
Spiingfleld," she said. "We figUre
people who come to Sprtngfleld
spend $75 a day."

:Fayette horse farms are open to public

:the

. The clean-shaven will havesome·thlng to m that weekend If they

The Sunday n11'181-Seuthti.;_P!ge-E-3

Visiting·Springfield delight for historical house hunters

Findlay

:. ' fiNDLAY, Ohio (UP!) - U you
qm hum afewbllf'Sof"Dowp by the
Olil Mill Stream," you already
kitow something a bout the Hancock
Cpunty seat.
The tune, now a standard In
American folk music, was wrttten
liy.Tell Taylor, who Uved near the
~~chard Rlver where It flows
through Findlay.
: But residents say more than a
meandering river attracts viSitors .
to their conununlty of 36,00J and
proudly note that Findlay Is not a
~uburb of a Iargt&gt;r city.
Located about an hour's drive
!lOUth of Toledo, Findlay IS "strong
on Its own, where people enjoy
Midwest tUe at Its best," says Susan
Healy of the city's viSitor's bureau.
"Just a mUe from the city limits
·IS some of the richest farmland In
nation, producing com, soy: beans, wheat and livestock."
· . About all that remains of the
:former boomtown's oil heritage Is
' the Marathon Oil Co., which
; maintains its world headquarters
; there. Ashland Oil Co. operated a
·refinery south of the city before
:placing It in mothballs.
: Cooper Tire &amp; Rubber Co. and
' Hercules Tire &amp; Rubber Co. are
i both headquartered In Findlay.
: ThiS year marks the beginning of
•the 100-year celebration of the
:discovery of gas and oll, a time
' when John D. Rockefeller, the
:billionaire founder of the Standard
·011 Co., was a frequent vtsllor.
Recognition also Is planned June
:12.14 for the century-old Hancock
:county Qlurthouse and residents
·are preparing by growing beards
:for judging In the longest, shortest,
:ugliest and best -groomed
·categories.

_Pomeroy-Middleport-GIII~il. Ohio-Point Plmint W.Va.

May 4, 1986

OCT IOn JnSIIrUI/On

Executive MBA
Program
The Ohio University Executive M.B.A. Program is:
currently recruiting the tenth group for this very successful and worth while course of study. Coursework will start in September 1986.
e a two-year (weekends) intensive course of graduate study leading to
the master of business administration degree.
e structured so that all academic requirements can be completed within
21 months. while the executive continues to handle his or her professional responsibilities full time.
e offered at the Ohio University Lancaster Campus.
e designed to be offered on one Friday and three Saturdays per month.
over three academic terms of 11 weeks each , with a five-week break between Thanksgiving and early January.
e for mid-career executives with seven to ten years of experience
designed to reduce the risk of personal and professional obsolescence
in the dynamic business environment
e taught by a highly qualified, experienced faculty and involves a specially designed' cl:irticulum.
e attracting participants from as far away as Wheeling lo the east
Cincinnati-Dayton to the west, Parkersburg-Marietta to the south . and
Canton-Akron and Toledo to the north.
patterned to take a limited group of only 25, which will include representatives of various types of organizations and diverse functional areas.
The Ohio University College of Business Administration is fully accrl'd iled by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business.

e

e

e

For details, call 614/594·6289 or 614/594·5446. or complete the

coupon and mail it to:

.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Director. Executive M.BA Program
College of Business Administrati on
Copeland Hall, Ohio University
Athens, Ohio 45701 -2979
Please send m~ information on the Executive M.B.A. Program.
Name

Scate
Business phone: Area (ode

Number

Zip

�" Page-E-4- The Sunday Times·~tinel

May 4, 1986

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

seasonal temperatures were experienced tlroughout the country U..
past week. (UP!)

FUN IN THE SUN - Boston Cdlege students enjoyed a lreak from
their studies and got a llltle relaxation at Alumni Stadium as more

museum's ·attendance is growing

WAPAKONETA . Ohio 1UPl 1 Take one small step inside the Neil
Armstrong Air and Space Museum
and you've made a giant leap Into
the history of man's explora tion of
the heavens.
The museum, just off Interstate
75 halfway between To ledo and
Cincinnati. Is named for and
located in the hometown of the first
man' to set foot on the moon.
: Housed in an unearthly looking
)!tructu re the Ohio Historical So(:iety describes as reflectin g " the
boldness and daring of air and
si&gt;ace conquest, " the muS&lt;'um was
tlie idea of former Gov. James A.
:Rhodes.
• 'Earth has been mounded around
:u,;. frame of the building. exposed
:concrete roof bea ms define it s
upper portion and a white dome 60
feet in diameter surmount s the top
of the museum.
A plaque just inside the front door
(!eclares the museum, opened in
)972, dedicated to Armstrong and
•"all Ohioans who dared to defy
:gra•.'it):."
• ·John Zw&lt;"l, the museum 's manager. says annual a ttendance of
some 5.'i,OOl Is on the upswing. He
oredi!S the Jan. 28 explosion of the
!ipace shutt le Challenger lor in:Creaslng interest in space travel.
: "We carry patches from that
:tJ~isslon 1In the museum 's gift
•
•

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

shop!. and I can't keep them in
stock they're selling so fast," said
Zwez.
Most visitors take an hour and a
half to two hours touring the
museum. Some. however, spend
the ent ire day.
"It just depends on how inter·
es ted you are," Zwez said.
Visitors are greeted outside the
museum by an exhibit ol the F5D
Skyiancer Armstrong flew for the
Air Force and the National Aero.
nautics and Space Administration
In the early 19ffis.
Inside, In the first gallery, are
displayed symbols and relics of
Ohio air and space achievements.
There's a reconst ructed Wright
brothers Model G Aero· boat, bu ilt
in Dayton and Down from the
Miami River In 191J; a large
dirigible ab'frame from the Toledo
II. the first manned and powered
flying machine to grace the skies
over New York; and a ba lloon
ba sket and trophl!"s won by Dayton
ba lloonlst Wan-en Rasor.
In the main gallery is the 1946
Aeronca 7AC ChampiOn in which
Armstrong lea rned to fly. !\'ext to it
Is a bicycle.
"Nell got hi s pilot's license before
he got his driver's license," ex,plained Zwez. "That's the bike he
used to ride back and fm1h to the
airp::&gt;rt ."
\

moon.
Alsc in thr main gallery arc film
A multi·media presentat ion de·
ex hibits and an engine from a
tailing the moon landing also is
Jupiter rocket booster.
shown In the Ast ro-T heater.
The Space Flight Galle!)· feaA moon rock , displayed in a glass
tures the Gemini 8 spacecraft used
by Armstrong and Maj. David Scott · case similar to the way in which a
fine jeweler would presen t a
to orbit the eart h and carry out
NASA's first docking mission in priceless gtom, of cout'SI' attracts
much at tention.
March \966.
Whether you spend an hour or a
In the sa me ga llery arc Arm·
strong's Gemini 8 and Apollo 11 day, the Neil Atmstrong Air and
backup spacesuits and a number of Space Museum is an educational
items illustra tin g his boyhOOil and inspirationa l cxpetience.
"The museum gives people a
intPrest in avia tion.
From the Space F1ight Gallery, chanre to learn about the space
program," said Zwez, "and the
visitors proceed through a sound
tunnel to a video room where an oppo t1un ity to relive one of man's
Apollo ll tape L' cent inuou sly greatest fea ts: selli ng foot on the
moon.''
shown on a television monitor.
The muSI'um is open March
There also is a mlnHhea tet· in
which the history of America· s through November. Hours are 9: :lJ
m a n -in · space progra m is a.m to 5 p.m. Monday through
Satu rday and noon to 5 p.m.
recounted.
One of the most popular attrac · Su ndays and holidays. Admission Is
$~ for adults and $1 for children 6
lions is an infinity cube, 18 feet
through 1~ . Group rates also are
squar~ and lined entirely with
mirrors, which offers visitors on an ava ilable. -

MASSn.LON, Ohio (UP!l - As
father goes, so go the daughtersat least In the Russell Leadbetter
family.
Debra Jo Leadbetter, a seniOr at
Tuslaw High School, has been
sworn In as a member of the Ohio
National Guard .. She joins her
father and two sisters as members
of the guard.
Debra will take her basic training
at Lackland Air Fo= Base In
Texas, then will be sent to
Intelligence specialist school in
Denver. After completing her
training In the Intelligence field , she
will enroll at the University of
Akron to major In electrica l
engineering.
"Debbie Is unusual In that she is
the fourth Leadbetter to join our
unit , but we have many family
members here In the 179th; broth·
Prs, fathers, sons," said Lt. Col.
Fred Laroon, director of operations
of the I 79th TAG who administered
the oath to her.
Debra's sister Diane, who started
her guard career at Mansfield in
the command post, the nerve center
of Ihe base In times of emergencies,
has since transferred to the com·
mand post in the Arizona Nationa l
Guard In Phoenix. Ariz. That is a n
air refueling unit allarhed to
Strategic Air Command . In the
clvU ian world she is an electric and
robotics engineer workin~ on the
space shuttle.
SJster Doreen Leadbetter Dil·
yard is attending the Uniwrslty of
Akron, majoring In computer
science and math and will graduate
In May of 1987. In the Guard. she is
stationed at Mansfield in the
command post.

Their father Is a sergeant who has

a multi-engine pilot's Ucense.
"Having been In the guard my sell
for 33 years, oor family under·
stands the Importance of my job
and the many advantages a guard
career offers," he said.
He has served most a. his years In
the Ohio National Guard as a
combat ab'crew member. He
wears chief aircraft wings and has
more than 7,000 hours of military
flying time In a variety of arcraft.
He also Is serv in g his second year
as president of the Ohio Enlisted
Association.
"We are a flying family and
always have been, " he said. "Each
of our children were In a plane
b2fore they were six months old.
"The expertence of Dying together has given them a knowledge
ol the country that contbtues
tOday." he sa id . The guard has
given our family an even broader
outlook on flying and the chance to
view other nations that most people
do not get to enjoy."
Leadbetter said the words "cltl·
zen ooldier" are very meaningful to
his family.
"It brought a lump to my throat
when I, 33 yea rs ago, ~wore with my
right hand to defend the life and
liberty of those In this wonderful
nation, " he said. " The lump was
still there .when eac h of my
daught ers In tum , these past seven
yea rs, raised their tight hands a nd
echoed the words I said so many
yea rs a~o .
"I love my da ughters and I'm
proud of them," he said . "What
mm·&lt;· could a father or mother
say.

~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
I
II 1011
mrssiAI molt UIJn

Pe ple
wi [ h a
h
ear ng
prob le m
are .
m sstng
a lor.

wor&lt;U

tllvt 1 Marrn11ou .' yo~ It
in~ souncl~
~ou rt mrn.r11

some of hie rtnll

J.nC WOU llfOIIII~ Clorfl /'lain IO Uo ID9(11.. of all '-""
pr oBlem' t an c. contcltel lui you shou ld luvt
ptofesuGIIal idvrcr

INHEAAING spwahn rn ual~o~aln'll and solw u11 hu11nc
problems. Our ur1ll r1d aud•ol(llist !\Is tht audtfllic
credtn t•ah and Ihe U~Mr•enct to uam•nt your Mauna
toss and acc ww tiW •dent•ty tilt I ~ IN:
If tt's mtdtul , wt'll r!trr 101110 a quaht11d plty11mn
II •I nn I» corrteltd w•tll 1 fiMttftl aid. wt offer a
cOfllpthent~n rlnft of nrvitn. hte:ludtt1 "' ultdtiC
IJid hH1n11n ltd pftC!Stly SU1!td !O your lltfl!S .
l'ltiPIAl yOU tOml IUUI!OI'I\Id IO USIAI II ... blnlf

llstentnlltchn •qlln ... "'' •djnt~~ttnts aRd maintenantt
~nd OUI IUif~ll tU Of ibiDhllt W11SIIction

Ca ll for 1 no.o-llption atltOtRtiMn1 lfitl'l 011 adi·
olotnt W• don't tlllll YOII to nun out 111-.y Mt tf l•fl.

USA M. KOCH, M.S.

licenaed Clinical Audiologist
1614) 446·7619 or 1614) 992-6601

417 Second Avenue, BoK 1 213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

CALl ABOUT DUI l·MONTH TRIAL OFFER

imaginary space voyage i:ln ('{'r ie

opport unity to see themselves
projectrd into Infinity.
Viewers In the · larw Astm·
Theater, another popular attrac·
tion , are surrounded by sights of
space travel and phenomena projected against a starry background
in a program designed to take the
visitor on an lnnaginat}' trip to th~

ERSDAY
ALL MICROWAVES AND
DISHWASHERS ON SALE
APRIL 27·MAY 10! GET A
COOK BOOK WITH EVERY
MICROWAVE OVEN!

Athens County man accepts responsibility a8 -single parent
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - David
Brennan says his ·two young
children werP planned and he has
no Intention of lettlllg the separation
from his wife Interfere with the joys
and duties of raising them.
Brennan and his wife, who
separated "amicably" about 15
months ago, have the tv.&lt;J children,
Rose, 4, and her brother, Shannon,
2, on alternate weeks.
It may be a little unusual for a
lather to have the children, but
"what's unusual Is that more men
don't have custOdy of their child·

ren," he says.
"I feel I have a duty to do certain
things. I took on the role of a parent
wUUngly.I planned for the children,
so I don't want to give them up."
Hav ing· the children every other
week works out surprtslngly well,
he says, and at times he even takes
the child ren to work with him,
rather than the babysitter they both
use.
"I take them to work with me if
I've sched uled a bus tour," he says.

"The senior cit izens go wild over

helps them to knowthey have both a
them."
rrother and a father. That's
'The agreement works so well that Important ''
. '
I! his job as tourism director takes
In the more than a year that the
hlm out of town the week he Is to arran~ment has been In effect.
have the children, he and his ex wUJ Brennan says he's noticed a lot of
trade weeks.
·
dllferences.
"Then I'll take them for two
"When I get home, I don't plop
weeks at a Iinne," he says. "And If I down In front of a TV any more," he
go over to her house the week she says. " I don't have the luxury of
has them, Rose will ask 'When do I havbtg someone cook the meals."
get to come to your house?"'
Brennan considers himself a
But the arrangement does have pretty good cook.
its drawbacks. He had the children
One night, he recalled, the kids
the week the Cleveland Indians wouldn't eat the salad he had
opened at home and he was unable pr~ared the day before, so he
to fit a trtp to Cleveland with fr iends. b2came crea tive with oome lef·
into his schedule.
tover fried chicken, a can of ooup
The arrangement , he says, and oome chicken broth - his
doesn't make a care giver or a gift version of chicken ooup.
giver out of either parent.
"The idcts atL;icked It with gusto,"
"When one parent sees the he said.
children every other weekend,
Since Brennan didn't marry until
discipline Is 'everything goes' and he was 27, he gained some
the parent becomes the gift giver," homemaking expertenre by living
he says. "The custodial parent is alone. He says he lived by the
adages "If I don't do It, no ooc wUI"
the care giver.
"I didn't want the kids lo see me or "The goOd Lord helps those who
as a gift giver," he says. "Some helps themselves ."
fathers don't sef' thelr kids at all. It

By SUSAN POSTLEWAfl'E
UPI Busln- Writer
MIAMI (UPI) - The vacation
time-sharP business. which sprang
up In the 1960s In the French Alps,
took off like a mount ain slide in the
United States In the 1970s. But with
Its fast growl h came sca ms.
State consumer prot ec t ion bu·
reaus fU!ed laundry ba sk~ t s with
complaints about come·on gimmicks and hard-sell operators.
Many of the Sl'a m opera tors arc
gone now. Time-sharing has gotten
less risky for investors, thanks to
.better state regulations and bigger
companies ent ering 1he bu slnE'ss.
But thl're are still pitfa lls for the
unsuspecting buyer.
Time-sharing l ~ts Jli.'Oplc own a
week's stay in a resort. usua lly a
condomlnlum. for a prier ranging
from $7,00! to $12,000. The buyer
can use the same apartment ~very
year during that week . The owner
can also "bank" the week and save
It for· another year. or exchange it
for a comparable wePk In another
time-share resori somewhere else
in the world.
Rea l estate Investment adv isers
compare time-sharing to the pur·
chase of a cemetery lot. Yo u buy 11
to use. not to make money on.
Edwin S. lversen, a University of
Miami marine· biology professor,
bought a tlnne-share condominium
5 years ago a few miles trom Walt
Disney World . Hr has learned from
experience that what looks at first
like an lnexpenslw vacatio n home
may have hidden costs.
Uncxpectro repairs can nJn up
bills, which Is one reason Iversen
recommends avoiding old bu Udlngs
that have been converted to
time-share. If the building needs a
new roof, for example, the timeshare owners wUI have to pay for it.

Maintenance fees can also be a
disaster . When Iversen bought his
time-share week for $7,000, the
maintenant'C fl'&lt;' was $100 a year.
Now it's $3)0 a year.
Leasing a time-share unit instead
of buying it outright can be a big
mistake. ht• advises, because If you
lease the unit. and the wner goes
bankrupt, you lose it.
Rrsalr can be a cha llengto.
Iversen's children have now out grown Disney World and he has
been trying to sell his apartment for
about 9 months. The developer. who
is still building and selling more
unit s, has been no help, he 111JOris.

rot Interested beca use they cannot
make much of a commission for
selling a tlnne· share unit . The best
way to sell in tlnne·shartng. he says,
Is through national time-share
listings.
Before buying, consider the
developer's motives, he adds. As
long as the developer coni blues to
manage the romplex, mal ntenanee
fees won 't go too high b2cause low
fl'(•s ar&lt;' a big sl'IUng point. But If the
developer sells all 1he units and
pulls ou t, the owners may be Ht
with no management. With as
many as 52 separa te owners having
&lt;XJUit y in each apart ment , proper

And rra I £"State agrnts ty pically are

man agemrnt is vita l.

r------------------------

Low rates
make state Farm
homeowners
insurance a good

\ I

,.

'

'

-~

Kenmore®built-In dishwasher

Kenmore®.5 cu. ft. microwave

24·i n. dishwasher with 3-levet wash. Reversible inserts m several colors. Potceta1n enameled steel
tub resists scratching, peeling. and rust.

Great Jor kitchens w1th lim1ted counter space• 2·
stage memory. Pause control plus tOO-m1nute delay
start control . Time of day clock'

24-ln. bullt·ln
dlahwasher

3-stage .8 cu. ft .
microwave

Reversible 1nserts. 3·
level wash . De luxe
utensil basket.

t2·hau r delay s:a 'i

18928~61
contro l Hol d war m

leature Probe

24-ln. dishwasher
with &amp;-hour delay

6 Ho111eowners in this general area will be given the opportunity of having superior quality, individual custom measured replacement windows or insulated
vinyl siding installed in their homes for a very low cost. These amazing products have captured the interest of homeowners throughout our state who are
fed up with high heating bills and old worn out and drafty windows.
Both the insulated vinyl siding and the replacement windows are custom measured and manufactured for each specific home. Energy loss is drastically reduced. Your home will be the showplace of your neighborhood and we will
make it worth your while if we can use your home.

CALL .FOR DETAILS - DON LITTLE
24 HOURS 1-800-544-1573 Ext. 771

417 Sec:ond Ave.
Gallipoli s, Oh.

Phone 446-4290
Home446-4511

Consolidating Report of Condition of
(Including Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)

The Commercial and
Savings Bank
Federal Reserve District No. 4

this R!"port of Cpndltlo n has lx&gt;en prepared in conformance with the Inst ructions is·
sued by the Board of Governors oft he Federal Reserve System and t he State Ban k· ·
lng Authorl!y and Is true an d correc t to the bes t of my knowl edge and belle!.
Roger W. Hysel l. Cashi&lt;'r

2 4 9A! !62
IOO · m1 nu1e a e1ay
start control. Hold
warm fe ature . Probe

Wli SIIWICE WHAT WE SELL

E ~ch of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advert ised
now a~arletlle '"

aur .. ~p · and "MR" sate catalogs • Shippmg. •nslallat•on e•tra • Ask &amp;bOut Saars Cred •t plans

SEARS
CATALOG MERCHANT
. lill and Jtntlle Hapttnttai- OWHERS
N. 2nd AVE.

992-1171

MIDDLEPORT

Setlsloctlon gueronttod or your money bock .

- - - - - - - F a l l Quarter 1986
9 a.m. through 11 :30 a.m.
and 1 p.m. until 3:30 p.m.
Open Registra6on ............. ........ ......... ........... .........................Sept. 22
eta.... Begin .. .................................................. ............... ....... Sept. 23
last Day To Add Oaues ......................................................... Sept. 29
last Day To Drop Oa... Without Recotd ...... ........................ .... Oct. 31
Winter Quarter faculty Advi~ng .. ........ ...... .... ....................... Nov. 3-7
Pre·Registra6on For Winte&lt; Quarter .... .. ............................. Nov. 10-14
Thanksgiving - No Cla100s .............................. .. ............. Nov. 27-28
last Day To Drop OaU.s ................ .. .. .... .. .. ........................... ... Dec. 1
faculty Development Day - No Claues .................... ...... ........... Dec. 2
Final Examinations .......... ........... .. ........... .... .... ... ............ Dec. 3-4-5
End Of Quarter ................ , .......... .......................................... ,... Dec. 5

Programmed defrost
cu. H. microwave

B~lt -i n dishwa sher
has rever.s ible in serts. 3·1evel wash .

P uce:~ are C41110g pr.ces

May 5-9 and 12-16

ASSETS
Cas h and ba lances due from depos itory Ins titutions:
a. Nonlnterest -bearlng balan ces and currency and coln .................. 1,796,000. 00
b. Interest-bearing balances .......................................................... 2,400,000.00
Securities ........ ..................... ... ......................................... ,......... .. ... 16,573:ooo.oo
Federal funds sold and securities purchased undl"r agreement s
to resell in domes tic offi ces of the bank and of Its
Edge and Agreement subsidl ares, and In IBFs.............................. 4,500,000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables :
Loans an d leases, net of unearned lncome ........ 27,399,000.00
LESS: Allowance lor Joan and lease losses ........... 286,000.00
Loans and leases, nl't of unearned In come.
allowa nce, ·and reserve ....... .. .... ... .......... ............ ... ................... .... .2i,ll3 ,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (including capitalized leases\ .............. .... .... 783,000.00 .
Other real estate owned ......................................... .. .. .... ................ .. ... 41.000.00
Other assets...................................... .... ...............
................ .. 838.000.00
Total assets ........................ .. ....... ................................................ 54 .044 ,000.00
UAWUTIES
Deposits:
· In domestic offices .. ...... ........ .... .... ........ ................ ........ .... .......... 48,818. 000.00
(1) Nonlnterest -bearln g ....... ... ..................... ....... 5,861.000.00
(2) Interest -bearing ... ........ .............. ........ .. ...... 42,957,000.00
Federal funds purchased and S&lt;'curitles sold under agreement s
to repurchase In domestic offices of Ihe bank of It s
·
Edge and Agreement subsldlaril's, and in lBFs .................. .. .............. -18,1100.00
Other liabilities ........... .. .. .. .......................... ........ ................ .. ............. 5:!VJOO.OO
Total liabilities .. .. ................ ......................................... .... ... ........ .... 49,:198,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Com mon stock (No . of shares a. Authorlzed .......... ... 1,800
b. Outsta ndin g ........... 1,800
900.1100.00
Surplu s .................... .. .......... .. ............: ... ..................................... .. ... 2.850.000.00
Undlvidl'd profits and capital reserves ........ .. ........ ........ .................. ..... 896.000.00
To tal equity capita l .................................. ,...... ...... ................ ...... ..... 4,646,000.00
Totalll abllltll's, limited-life preferred stoc k, and equity capital... ..... 54,044.000.00

1.4

349A!2,

I , Roger W. Hysell , Cas hi er , of the above-named bank do hereby declare that

Jo Ann Crisp, Notary Rubllc , State oJ Ohio. My commission expires July 17, 1988.

6 DISPLAY HOMES
FOR EITHER
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
OR
INSULATED VINYL SIDING

CAROLL SNOWDEN

~-~~:f · ·Pre-Registration

EQU ITY CAPITAL
Common stock ................................................................ .. ................ 400,000.00
Surplus .......................... ,......................... ............. ..... ............. ......... ... 600,000.00
Undivided profit s and capita l reserves ...................................... .. ...... 2.734,000.00
Total equi ty ca pit al .......... ................ .................................... ......... . 3.734.000.00
Total liabi lities, limited -life preferred stock, and equi ty capl!a l .... .. .. 46,239,000.00

Pau l E. Kloes
Pau l G. Elch- Directors·
Fred W. Crow, Jr.

WANTED

Stale Bank No. 983

IJAWUTIES
Deposit s:
.:
In domes tic offi ces ....................... .. ........ .......... ...... .. ......... .. ......... 41.980,000.00
tl l NonlntPres t-bearlng...... .. .................. . ...... 4.200,000.00
12 1 Int eres t-bearing ........... ,..... ...... ........ .......... 37 ,780.000.00
0 1hl"r liabilities.... ... . .. .. .
. ... .. .. .. .. ..... .... .. .. .. .. .
.. ...... 525,000.00
Tota l li a bllities . ... .. .. .. .... . ... ... .. . .. .. .... . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
.. ... 42,505,000.00

We. the undersigned directors, attest to the correct ness of t his Report of Condi·
tlon and declare that It has bePnexa mlned by us and to the best of our knowled ge
and belief has been.prepared In conformance with t he In st ructions Issued by the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Sys tem and the Sta te Banking Author·
tty and Is true and correct.

And although they had been told
that the children - upon dlsclplln·
ing - woold likely say "I want togo

but they're at the age when they'd
be wet ID the shoulders," he says.
At bedtime, daddy makes up~
stories.
"Rose goes crazy over stories
about the horse with peanut bu.t ter
on Its tall," he says.
Shannon is at the age that
Bren nan says he can see chan~s
each week.
:
"He's picking up new words and
phrases each day, " he said . "I'd
shudder to think what would
happen If I didn 't see them that
much ."

Give your Name, Area Code, Phone Number to one of our operators.
A consultant will return your call as soon as possible.

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS COMPANY
ASSETS
Cas h and balances due from depos it ory Instit utions:
a. Nonlnt er es t·bearing balances and currency and coin ....
. .. 2,lil.OOO.OO
b. Int erest·beartng balances .... .. .............................. ....... ....... . .. ....... 200,000.00
S..curit les .......... .. ......................... ....... ...... .. ............ .......... ............. 20,664,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements ...... ........ ..... ........... ...... .... .. .. ............ .. ........ ..... .. 2,350,000,00
Loa ns a nd lease financin g receivables:
Loan s and leases , net of unearned lnccm e ........ 19.574,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ......... .. 111 ,000.00
Loan s and leases. net of unear ned In come,
allowance. and reserve.... ............ ...... .........................
...... .19.463,000.00
Premi ses and fixed assets tlncludlng capitalized leases! .................... 463,000.00
Other assets..... ...... .. ...... .... ..
. .......................... .. ........ ..... .... ..... 748,000.00
Tot al assets ........................
.. ................. ............ .. .. .. .... . .. ... 46,239,000.00

my ex."

home," It's only happened a CXlUple
of times, he says.
·
The two adults Uve II) the 'same
county and since the children aren't
In school, the agreement doesn't
pose many problems. He says they
have talked about how to handle the
situation when they go to !(Choo l or
should one move oot of the area.
In the meantime, the children are
becoming great helpers, Brennan
says. Rose Is learning to set the
table, but the father doesn't let
them help with the dishes.
"They would love to do dishes,

of Gallipolis, Gallla County, Stale of Ohio 45631 at the close of business March 31 ,
1986.
.

of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Dom estic Subsidi aries , at the close of business
Marc h 31, 1986, a stale banldnglnslltullon organized and operating under the hank·
lng laws ol this stale and a member of the Federal Reserve System. Published in
accordanc"e with a call made by the Slat e Banking Authority and the Federal Res·
erve Bank of this District.
•

"About the ooly thlng I didn't do
when I was married Is the
laundry," he says.
But he's doing It now, and "Rose
Is helping. She's folding clothes In
her cmn unique way. And Shannon,
his thing Is unfolding."
The two parents have developed
about the same disciplinary stand·
arci{ although Brennan admits
"I'm rrore of a dlspllnlarlan than

Hidden costs cloud realty concept

Consolidating Report of Condition ol

•
•

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page E-6

-·5

Guard member
follows tradition

~Space

May 4, 1986

--1:~~11~~

-~,.-

. . . .A'!P"

Celebrating Out New Century

I

t

I, the unders igned officer, do hereby declare that this Report of Condl!ion has
been prepared In conformanee with official Instructions and Is true to the best of
my knowledge and be lief.
Allee K. Stover,
Vic~ President &amp; Comptroller
We, the undersigned directors, attest to the correctness of this Report of Condl ·
lion and declare that It has heen exa mined by us and to the best of our knowiPdge
and belief has been prepared In conforman ce with official instructions and Is true
and correct.
D. Paul Davies
William P. Cherrington - Direct ors
Charles E. Holzer, Jr.
State of Ohio, County of Ga!lla.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 28th day of April, 1986 a nd I hereby cer·
.
Illy that I am not an officer or director of this bank.
My commlslon expires May 14, 1986
Stephanie Stover, Notary Public.

c s..n. ftotbuclf tttfl Co., 1115

·"I': l,o 1 , ,

,

I

•

.,

�Shorter-ter~
By MARY TOBIN ,
UPI·1111*'- Wrller
NEW YORK (UP!) - Getting a
homP mortgage Is no longer a
matter of taking a long-term
fixed-rate loan from a local lender
at the going ratP.
"We offer fixed-rate mortgages
In 1()., 15-, ~. 25-and JO. year
maturities as well as adjustable
rate loans," said William Schellhase, regional executive for mortgages at Chase Manhattan Bank.
However, "the ]}-year mortgage
still IS tbe most (Xlpular; It's the ooe
most people's parents bought their
homes with."
On the whole, mortgage rates
have come down dramatically
from the peak levels of around 18
. percent In the Parly 1~.
ThP Bank Rate Monitor loan
Index of rates at 50 large banks and
savings and loan institutions
showed 15-year fixed rate rrorteages at 10.22 percent in midMarch, l}-year fixed rate mort gages at 10.51 percent and 1-year
adjustable rate loans (ARMs I at
8.54 percent.
But rates vary substantially. not
only In different regions ot the
country but in dlfferpnt Institutions
in the same region_
So do the types of mortgages
highlighted by Institutions, whose
offerings CPflt'Ct their view of the
futull' of Interest rates_ U an
Institution bPiievrs interest rates
have bottomed out it Is moll' likely
to featu!l' ARMs and give bPtter
terms on them.
ARMs represent so met hlng of a
gamble for both the homeowner
and the lending institution. U
interest rates stay the same or
drop, the monthly payments deCCPase. If interest rates riSe, tbe
paynoentslncrease.
"We have been doing very llttle In
ARMs In thls area," Schellhase
said. "We find tbe average consu·
mer wants to be able to do financial
planning and there's more security
on a predictable payment plan."
A higher income is needed to
qualify for a fixed-rate mortgage
because these loans entail high
monthly payments. Idea lly, annual
mortgage costs soould not exceed
28 percent of annual income but this
can vary depending on other debts
and personal llnanres. The size of
Your downpayment also affects
~¥hether you qualify for a loan.
. Banks and thrifts charge a
silmetlmes belly appliCatiOn fee
that might inhlllt yoo from shopliJlg around for a mortgage_ But
shop anyway, perhaps starting with
your own bank. A few IJ.Jndred
dollars In such lees may save
thousands on the total oost of a
mortgage.
: Your future plans should be a
rilajor factor In choosing a particular type of mortgage. If you don't
expect to sell for at least 5 years,
which IS the averagetimelt takes to
recoup the higher ratP, a fixed -rate
loan might be tx&gt;st. But If your
Income IS rising and you expect to
eem enough to cover any lnc!l'ased
payments, or if yoo plan • to sell
within 2 years. an ARM might be
tjle ticket.
If you choose an ARM. besu!l'the
Initial rate Is for a reasonable
period of time. A year 5 !landard
wt some unroollstlcally low offeril)gs can change more often. Be
sure therp's an annual cap and a
lltetlme cap oo the amount the rate
can rise.
Ask what index is used to adjust
tbe k&gt;an. Treasury tills are common but some banks use a
cilst-of·funds Index and some use
tbelr own formula that could give
you little protection.
Some banks have begun offering
15-year mortgages with a biweekly
paynoenl schedule. Many experts
feel this plan Is too rigid for the
avprage wage- earner.
- Most experts also adviSe against
"negative amortization," a ARM
feature that tacks on any Increased
payments from higher rates to the
end of tbe mortgage. With negative

aroortlzatkm, you could be paying a
higher rrortgage than you started
wlth after 5 years.
But tbere IS more Involved In
soopplng for a mortgage than
l&lt;JOidr)g can
for dramatically
tbe best rate.
Other
factors
affect
the
total cost of your home.
There Is tbe systPm of "(Xllnts,"
each (Xllnt representing a one-time
charge of 1 percent ci the total
mortgage that Is IBYableatcloslng.
Some lnstltutk&gt;re olfer IIO·IX&gt;lnt
loans while others charge tliree
IX&gt;lnts or rrore.
Often an Institution wlll shave a
percentage from the mortgage rate
for an additional (Xllnt and Vice

a percentage (Xllnt on yru r loan.
Finally, your personal tax sltuatlon, Including Interest k&gt;st on
dol&gt;npayment money, soould llgure lri your decision on whether to

more. With
changclosed,
oftenmortgage
a delay ofrates
2months
or
Ing weekly, you could be a
beneficiary or a victim tot he tune or

Mother's

Day is
May 11th

OLD WORLD
GRACEFUL CONTOUR,
STURDY CONSTRUCTION, ANTIQUE FINISH
WITH MODERN FUNCTIONAL DESIGN!

RLE 351
RLE 353
RLE 355

5698

•

Inside or outside, the Fiesta Royale provides beautiful quality in the
area of carefree living - at the lowest price possible. Rigid steel frame
- ornamental scrolls - antique finish- rust resistant hardware

REDWOOD SEAT .BOARDS AND TABLE TOP

$9900

:::~~~

unON MICROWAVES STARTING A1 S248

1•I denour

above, assume that there were
three (Xllnts (ooch representing an
$8)) charge) and $400 In other l!es
at closing. The cost of n!Jnanclng
would total $2,8Xl. BBut with the
reduced monthly payment of
$152.75, the oomeowner would save
$2,!ll2.25 In 19 mmths.
The savings would be E'len larger
It the current mortgage included 13
per!Pnt or 14 percent interest. Then
the monthly savings would be
$182.!ll or $245.84, respectively.
ReiS said closing fees can climb
to betwren 4 percent and 6 percent
of the mortgage with (Xllnts,
mortgage tax, title search and
Insurance, attorney fees and
appraisaL
But there Is a simple way to avoid
ou t-of-pocket expenses.
"Take out a (new) loan large
enough to cover the cost ci closing,"
ReiS said, adding that the first stop

slnuld be with your original lender
bef9re yoo go shopping around for
the lowest rate.
In addition · to reducing the
monthly payment, refinancing also
can be a way to slgnltlcantly neduce
the term of the loan and realize
enonnous savings.
The 100 Highest Yields makes a
st rang case tor core ldertng a
15-year mortgage when a ho-·
meowner goes to rf1Inan!P. I! you
take the same $80,1ro rrortgage at
12% percent and refinance for 15
years at 10 percent, tbe monthly
payment wm ooly be about $6more.
However, you will eliminate 10 to
12 years of payments, depending on
how long you had the previous loan,
and the savings on Interest could
amount to more than $100,1ro.
When refinancing, a homeowner
alSo should consider the tax
consequen!Ps.

CHESTER

..

~

fl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t

MANY HAVE RECEIVED CHECKS FROM

8&amp;8491BARGAIN
STOll·
GIN. HAI11NGEI PUKWAY
IIIDDLEPOU, OHIO

SOME WERE FOR MORE THAN SJOO.OO

YOU CAN TOO!!

JUS1 BRING THOSE NO
LONGEI NEEDED REMS TO US AND LET US WORIC
FOR YOU.

985-3307

raJ raJ l'a'l

L'I!O '---'""'L""""'

~1!1 [I L!9J L9J ~

Tub

i

I

and

I

Shower
Unit

Ofi.Y

Gas-Matic• Shocks

ON SALE NOW

53349

OUI POMEIOY
AND ~INTON LOTS

S1395*

WITH 42" SIDE MOWER

EACH

"After '3.00 mail-in cash back
when you huy one Gas- Matic

fEAIUIIS IIKI.UDI:
16 .. IOMLII - 1 • 8-Spee&lt;l

shock .

Uni-Onve ·• transaxle • Hour·
meter • 'Joftmeter • Halogen
headlights • 15 amp Charging
system • 15" Steering wheel •
Tach-a-matte ' ~ hitch system •
Structural steel frame • VJide
front &amp; roar tur111 res • Deluxe
seat &amp; tnm• Greasable
spindles

logan
Monument Co. Inc.

llulled dol pven lo hbn by his wile, acln!lll Trlsh Van Devere as an
openDJIIIIbl gift, had a big smile oo when he showed .., at a party bt
New York lastweekalteropenlngbt "The Boys ol August" at the Circle
In llle Square. Critics In local New York papers did rottreatthe play too
ldndly, althouJb they were more kind to Scott lor his performance.

Aqua Glass gives )UU a beautiful WifY to bathe and
a great WifY to save. Solid, one--piece construaion.
Easy to clean. Simple to install. Easy to afford . Available now.

(UPI)

PHONE 992-2581

•

R!:PlACEMENT ·
CAATRIDGES
Now Only

Mon~-Mm;c• $9 ~~!

.

-~ '

~~

'

• After '6.00 mail-in Cash bonus
when you buy one Gas-Malic
Strut or Cartridge.

Shocks

SPRING$
SPECIAl.

~::. S2Q95*
UCH
'$229L_.

GAS-MArie-

OPENING NIGHT GIFT - i\clor George C. Soott, clutching a toy

POMEROY, 01110-MEIGS COUNTY
DI!PIAT YAII NUl
POMEROY ·MAlON IIDGE
LEO l. VAUGHAN, MGI.

AS LOW AS

Meets or exceed auto
maker specs.

VINTON, 01110-GllliA COUNTY
Dt!PIAY YAII
JAMES 0. lUSH
MANAGER

NOW

PHONE 311-1603

·~~~~~~~~~~~.L:~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

r

IN STOCK.

·MONROE

' --j
SPRING
SPECIAl.

I

II

OFFER GOOD ONLY WHILE STOCK AND INVENTORY LASTS.

CASH-N-tARRY
Slightly Higher If
Charged or ~
Delivered.
6-0/6-8

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

For NEW HOUSING , or for
REPLACEMENT of aluminum slidmg doors
Operating Door "Swings In" instead of slidi ng
More weather tight, sec urity in locking,
ease of operation .

Radial All Season
SIZES AVAILABLE

P19S/7SI15
P20S/75115
P21S/7SI15
P23S/75115

Light Truck Van, 4X4's

Otenlng Monday

Frame and door panels preservative treated and N&lt;~ l :-.on l /.i' d Cl~?dr W p
Pine. Frame 4·1/2" jamb with WP180 Bric:k Mould "1JlJ ;-,,d Door pr~ 1 w ',

glazed clear tempered insulated glass standao d.
Sturdy, bronze -toned extruded heavy-.dUty a lum1n ·:rr

'1

mw :,C H'() '' ,~,.-, , 1 1

'-

fiberglass sc reen cloth. Sc reen coasts on outsid~ rr,,,..., ' ' )Jl c~ r 1tl )l, Jt ' ! ·:i
with sta1nless steel rollers spring loaded fry '" &lt;~ :-- 1·1 · u~ tm1Jn·
Hardware furnished with Atrium Door Unit . Pol1shPt 1br . t ~~ ,, 11 u11l" f' I n( ~- 11) r
swing door: sc reen latch and pull for slid1ng sn ... f•n

,·

,.

53995*

•All TilES PLUS RECAPPABLE CASING-PASSENGER 'ss TRUCK S6

CAROLINA LUMBER

R&amp;G
FEED AND SUPPLY CO.

•

'

:Same Friendly Service
Just A New Name

AND

The heavy-duty shock lor

for light trucks, vans, 4x4's.

ABSORBER

MAGNUM
STEERING
STABILIZER

$1695

sc 2920 .................... S19. 9S
0

INCWDES TIE

$3~~1-ln

CASH
BONUS
when you buy
one Gas-Magnum'"

shock absorber

SUPPLY COMPANY

399 W. Main

Pomeroy,Oh.

PH. 992·2164.

The Store wltl! "AU KINDS OF STUFF" for Pets,

675-1160

· 312 6th Street

$1 995
~~AGNUM" $2495*
Monro-Magnum"60,

.

ALL PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MAY lOth, 1985
8 .76-16.6
9 .90·16.6
12.00-16.5
N78· 16

'

BIG BEEF

(FORMERLY MODERN SUPPLYI

Deep lug

SIZES AVAILABLE

HANDLING

985-3308

The

A unique concept in Patio Doors.

P155/80113 P195/75114
P175/80113 P20S/75114
P1BS/7SI13 P215/75114
PlBS/80113 P205/70114

YOUR LOAD.

FOR VANS, 4X4's, UGHT TRUCKS

G78·15
H78·15
L78· 15
600-15

Sl995 ·

SHOCKS &amp; STRUTS

NEEDS

CHESTER

HIGH MILEAGE RETREADS

E78-14
F7B·14
G78·14

LOW COST
INSTAILA110N
AVAILABlE FOR AIL
SHOCKS &amp; STRUTS
CaD for an
Appointment

Ariens Bagger Vac attaches ea~ly to the back of the HTI6 tractor and
does a highly effident job of piclring up gri!Sl clippings and leaves as
you mow. 42" and 48" mower decks are available for the HT16.

LOWEST
PRICES
THIS
YEAR

FREE
MOUNTING
AND
COMPUTER
BALANCING

HANDLES

ARIENS
NEW HT16
TRACTOR

MANAGERS CLEARANCE

10.00-16
11 .00-16
1200-16
760.16
8 .00·16.6

meowner smuld determinl' If the
new rate will bP tbe one avafable on
tbe dayo!theappUcattondDt!le
ooe •
,.
avaUable on the day of t111 aetual .
closing. Some banks may charge up
to a fUll point extra If a hOmeowner
wants to he k&gt;cked In to ·a eltosen
rate before the·actual c ios~.,;·:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

invites you to see
their display of
monuments at

700 -14
700-16
H78·16
L78, 16
9.00·16

"U you reduce your monthly
payments you'rp llkely to reduce
tre in teres! deductk&gt;ns" avatlable
as a wrtti'-&lt;JII, ReiS said.
It Is also Important to know
exactly when the new rate you are
applying for wtll be establlsbed.
With rates fluctuating, a ho-

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

LOGAN
MONUMENT

A78- 13
878- 13
C78 - 13

HARTSELLE, Ala. !UPII -An
Internal Revenue Service computer glitch turned an assembly line
worker's dreams of an $8!1 Income
tax refund In to a $6 million
nightmare.
"I was shocked - spyerely
shocked,' ' said Eddy Sparkman, an
employee at a General Electric
plant. "Here I was looking for a big
refund of S!W or so and I got .that
thing saying I owed over $6
million!"
Accountant John Tomlinson, wbo
prepared Sparkman's return, said
Thursday that IRS officials blamed
the miStake on a computer error
and promiSed that Sparkman wtll
get his $82) refund .
Tomlinson said the computer
contradicted Itself In tbe letter
adviS!ilg him of the $6,ll7,147 tax
bill.
- "One. they said Mr. Sparkman
made less than $11,001 and was
entitled to an earned Income cr1'9It
because he supported a chlld.
That's oot true. He makes more
than Sll,lro and the Sparkman.•
have oo children.

years?
UPI~~us~ntm Wrller
-Do you havethecashon hand to
NEW YORK (UPI) - With l'Over a new round of closing costs?
available fixed· rate mortgage rates
''Typically, It makes sense to
below IU percent lor the first time In refinance if the difference In the
7 years, the Idea d refinancing an rate Is at least 2 percent and you
existing mortgage IS under discus- plan to stay In your home for at
sion In thousands of homes from least 5 years," said Stuart ReiS,
coast to coast.
senior product manager of ChemiA cursory glance at current cal Bank In New York.
Figures comp!IPd · by the 100
lntenest rates makes refinancing
look very attractive. And In many Highest Yields, a publication of the
cases It IS. HowPVer, as In all major Advertising News Service of North
financial transactions, some ele· Palm Beach, Fla., show why
ments Involved In refinancing must refinanclilg has an Immediate
attraction.
be given serious consideration.
With a current mortgage of
On the plus side, and the most
9bvlous benefit, Is that homeowners $80,1ro at 12'h percent, the monthly
who decide to refinance may make payment Is $853.81. By refinancing
sublitantlal savings In monthly the mortgagp at 10 percent, the
mortgage payments, and slgnlf!- homeowner would neduce the paycalltly 1-educe the term, and ment to $701.06 and thereby save
$152.75 a month.
therefore the cost, of their loans.
However, IX&gt;ints - a ooe-tlme
. However, experts advise IDI!II!OWIII'rs to ask themselves three up-front charge ot 1 percent of the
basic questions to ·determine If principal amount of the loan often !ll'e charged ~ banks on
rellnanclng. IS worth the trouble:
- Is your current mortgage rate rellnanclilg and this cost must be
at least two peicentage IX&gt;ints carefully weighed, cautioned ReiS.
ThiS Is where the homeowner's
higher than the new rate?
-Do you plan to stay In your futurp plans com" Into play.
On the $00,!ro mortgage cited
home for at least an additional 2to 5

~j;;;;;;;;_______iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!liil!iii•llt~

SIZES AVAILABLE

million error

By DONALD W. GALLAGHER

buy a home.
"We definitely encourage prople
to seek the advice ci their accountant and financial planner,"
Chase's Schellhase said.

versa.
Points are Included In the annual
percentage rate (APR) oo your
mortgage that banks and thrills
must disclose.-This IS the ·most
Important guide In determining the
total cost and will help you decide
whether to go for a lower rate or
!fewer (Xllnts.
Ask the bank how long It takes to
process a loan. Institutions !tiering
very low rales can lake 6weeks to
process your loan, and in that time,
you could lose tbe house you are
interested in.
Also ask about the "locking in"
lime. Some banks and t trUts lock In
lherateavaUableatthetimeofthe
application. Others lock In at tbe
rate available when the sale is

The Sunday limes-Sentinei- Page- E-1

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

Lower interest rates spark move to· refinance _mortgages

mortgages become po

4 Ply Polyester

IRS computer
inakes $6

May4,1986

4, 1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Stables, Large &amp; Smal Animals, Lawns &amp; Gartltns.

Point Pleasant

Store Hours: Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. to
Sat. 8 a.m. to 12 noon

5 p.m .,

Load·Handler AS LOW AS

· Coli Spring

Increases support as

,.,.__....

load Increases.

·
_p•,

$4911-r
~ 1/ .. "

Max·Air
Air-Adjustable
Shock Absorber
Best fo r handling really
heavy loads.

s

$ 995 r."".

Load-Leveler ·
Stabilizing Unit
Heavy-duty shotkl
spring stabilizes r~de _

$2995 PR.

�Page E-8 The Sunday limes-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

May4, 1986

w. Va.

Making additionsl, to homes are less expensive' than m~~~~~~n
By KEN FRANCKUNG

rooms, Is often less costly than a
move. As available oouslng lots
disappear near cities, such remodellng may be the only answer for
many homeowners.
"This Old House," the Emmy
Award-winning home remodeHng
series on PBS. has focused this
season on the concept of "sweat
equity," In which oomeowners do a
lot of the remodeling work them-

UPl Fealuft Wrtter
BOSTON (UP!) - If today's

staggering housing prices are
keeping you from buying a bigger
borne, one less Costly option may
satisfy your need for. more living
space without breaking the bank.
An addition on your existing
rome, either a secood floor or a new
wtngthat will provide several more

selves. Sweat equity not only
ennhances the value of the house
but can cut out-of-pocket expenses
by :Kl percent or more.
"At no Ume In lllstory does It
make more senSI' to expand
existing houses than It does right
now," says Russell Morash, producer of 'This Old House' at
WGBH -TV In Boston. "If you'vegot
the room on the lot, you should get
what you wan! by building on top&lt;t,
alongside of or Into (It) tocreatethe
space you need."
For eight episodes tills season,
the show brought Into 6 million
living !'OOIDS the experience of
Frank and Mary Jane Fernlno, who
had outgrown the ooe-story Readlng, Mass. ranch house they bought
In 1974 for $36.1XXl.
With guidance from "This Old
House," the Ferninos added a
second floor to their home by hiring
a master carpenter and agreeing to
do much of the work themselves.
The job involved taking off the roof'
. and adding three bedrooms, two
bathrooms and an upstairs deck to
whalls now a garrison colonial.
With Boston leading the current
housing price lx&gt;om In the Northeast, the •couple would have
needed $260,00) to buy a new
two-story colonial In the same area.
Thel!' renovated house Is worth at
least $llO,!XXl.on today's mari&lt;E't.

The addltlon cost tli! Femlnos
about $50,00), and Morash estlmates It wwld have cost about
~.UXlto $!lJ,UXl had theY hired out
all of the work.
"This Is the most successful,
cost-effective addition I have ever
participated In," Morash said. " It
more than doubled their floor space
and they were able to benefit from a
total change In their ll!estyle. It Is a
substantial house."
Femlno, 39, Is a rottware manager for a Boston-area computer
firm. His wife, a substitute English
teacher at the local high school,
says the 3 mont !I; of toll and sweat
was well worth the result.
"We did aU of our (Mnlnsillatlng,
pJt tile In the two bathrooms, aU ct
the painting and wallpapering. My
husband dug the suwort holes for
the deck &lt;tf the master bedroom,"
she said.
"We did aU the cleanup, which Is
considerable, because we tore off
the roof. Carpenters' time Is
expensive, and If theY're not doing
any cleanup, It cuts their time."
Fernlno says that nearby houses
comparable to theirs that are
selling for about $!ai9,1XXl are on
undeveloped land, while they have
retained a developed hall-acre lot
with an In-ground pool and mature
trees.
"Some ol our neighbors are

r-

thlnldng of adding on now," she
said. "Onelsaddlng a family room.
others are toying with the Idea. It
doesn't have to cost $SO.IXXl but we
opted for a few luxury Items. II
reaUy makes a lot of sense for
people who paid what now seems a
little bit of money for a house."
Funding for such pmjerts can be
obtained thi'Ough equity loans.
second roortgages 1r refinancing of
the remaining original mortgageplus the remodeling -all at today's
falling rates.
"Many people don't understand
that thel!' house Is apprerlatlng at a
.::ra~te;_of~a~t~le~as~t210!!.£:~~a~ye:;:·a~r;:."_

Southern royalty

Morash say(. Wre k this
g
whether to rem~ I li eecost ~f~i::!
have to to.lal updwha\~ 11
alnst
addition 18 an hewe
Th:f' the
other homes In 1 area.
s
sarrst way to travel.

Photo on Page 6

•
.,.

;Tournament
Winners·
.

1RY OUR "WAIIC-IN'r SERVICE
*No Waiting

** NoNo Complimlld
Appointment NeuuarJ
Farms to ill Out

** NoNo Cod
to M..icara/Mitliraitl Patients
Col1 to Other Haelth ..suranre Subscribers

We ..-.d raeults directly 10 your doctor and can bill your
iMU,...ce company at your requMt end at no charge.

REM!:M~l:H

i 630

Drive,

Ohio. Treas.

ti

COLUMBUS, ohio IUPI J - Only one-third of
Ohio's 5.9 mWion eligible voters are expected to vote
In Tuesday's pr1mary election which features the
start of a cornellack attempt by political legend
James A. Rhodes at age 76.
The four-term former governor. who has not run a
campaign since his last election eight years ago, Is
being challenged by Ohio Senate President Paul E.
GU!rnor of Port Clinton and slate Sen. Paul E. Pfeifer
of Bucyrus.
The winner will face Gov. Richard F. Celeste, who
wlll be renominated by the Democrats without
opposition.
Secretary of State Shefi'Od Brown predicted that
only 1.78 million voters, or ll.2 percent of the
registered electors, will go to the polls.
All elected slatewWe offices, Including thrre seats
on the Ohio Supreme Court, are at stake this year, but
only a handful have contested primaries.

Sen. John Glenn, D-Oblo, seeking a third term
following an Ill-fated bid for the presidency In 1984,
faces token opposition In the Democratic primary
from Don E. Scotl of St. Pans, a disciple of radical
economist-politician Lyodon LaRouche.
Rep. Thomas N. Kindness, R- Ohio, of Hamlllon.
has won the Republican Senate nomination wltmut
opposition.
There are contested Democratic primaries for
state treasurer and two Supreme Court seats,
Including the chief justlce's, where controversial
incumbent Frank D. CelebiWZe Is chaUen~ by
Jefferson County Prosecutor Stepb!n M. Stern.
There are 15 contested primaries for the House of
Representatives. All99 Ohio House seats and 17 d the
33 state Senate seats are up for election this ye11.r.
In addition, there will be 165 school tax Issues on
Ohio ballots, as weD as numerous local tax levies and
bond Issues. ' Franklin County voters wUI decide

.

f·

•

"'''1'
~

.!:' .'f.

'! .. ..
..

r

1

'.

•

By locallUid UPI reporis
Eleven people, Including three
Aki'On teenagers whose was car
was being pursued by pollee
officers, died In accidents on Ohio
roadways during the weekend, the ·
state Highway Patrol reported
today.
Alva Mitchell Martin, 47, Rt. 2,
Wellston, died In a single car
accident Saturday on SR 327, one
and nine tenths miles south of SR
1.24 In Jackson County.
The Jackron Post State Highway
Patrol said Martin was northbound
when his vehicle attempted to pass
another car In a non-passing zone.
When Martin swerved his car to
miSS a southbound vehicle, he lost
control. Martin's car struck a
culvert, then overturned. He and a
passenger were thrown from the
vehicle.
Listed In poor condition this
morning at Grant Hospital In
Columbus was a passenger, Clay·
ton A. Snyder or Ewlngton. Another
passenger, Donna J . Martin, 46, Rt.
I, Ewlngton, Is !!sled in stable
condition at the Holzer Medical
Center. She was admitted for

"Jii""P
WE HAVE OVER

15. QUAliTY

1985 MODELS IN STOCK,
INCLUDING

1985 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
ONLV

~~
MAY llth

-....,..._
_,
n •. . -

(), .. , . , .. ,

~ ..a

,., ••,a,,.,...,

. ....... W," ' " " '

ROll

'"""".
.'""-...e
.. . .........
................

.. , ,.

19" diagonal

··~

RCA 19" dioaonal ColorSTV S
lrinlent coiiDr periarrlliFu~ with tht
~ottowtnu dotu .. ,.,.,,.. ,
•Per pte lei
·-n:::.e,:-:~=~~-·
•AutorMIJc OOfltrMt/ color trecltlng.

...

•SUCMJ AccuFtltlf blKk m•trlx
pic:ture lube.

$2 99

1985 CUTLASS 2 DR.

RCA VIDEO
CAMCORDER

IU 19" diagonal XL·
loommate '" Color 1V with
Chamellock Digital lemote Control
Blilliant color perlormanre fuatunng
the ch~rside convenience ol rem &lt;:Ce
cootr~ and mu~i -band t.1ble tu nin~

.G. ••a9.00

$41 9

Ttlt wheel, AM-FM, luggage rack, factory air.

ONLV

1985 BUICK REGAL LIMITED-

RCA ProWonder

RCA 26" diagonal
ColorTrak Stereo
Monitor-Receiver

$8 49....

$1274

-A-FTE_R_
-R-EB-ATE----t
OUlUTT SERVICE
~ _,._.
.uw-~

PECAN ott PINE
•Digital Command remota control
Reg. S979
•Broldcaat stereo aound ~at em .
•Direct ater..O audio / video jack panel
au clio channel reception (SAP)

•

" ..J/;.,~)·~ . . -1_...

-fro)'

$6 59

RCA 25'•oon•XL·100
Color TV with
Channelock Digital
Remote Control

RCA 13" diagonal
Color TV ONLY

$239

Brilliant amall-acreen color performance in a
handsome contemportii'Y cabinet. Deluxe
feature• include:

Brillilnt color perfor1111nce featurina the chairside
convenience of remote control and multi -band cable

•Automatic olor oontrollnd ft11htont oorrectlon.
•Au1om~tlc con1rntlcolor tr.cking.
',
•Sup• AccuFIItw biKk m1trlx picture tube .
•Unltb«&lt; XttndedLHt dl~nnil .
•Autornltlc Ftnt Tuning IAFT}.
•Ourlblt plutk cablnl'l wtth walnut ftnlth .

tun inc.

SAVE ON RCA COLOR TELEVISIONS AT

ELBE FELDS

2 DOOR

ONLV

$1 0, 900

1985 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA LS
4 DOOR

·Sterling silver finish, tilt wheel, air conditioning, AMFM.·

S8995

\::: ·

scanner mamorv

lEG. 5719 NOW

S8995

Absolutely Immaculate! Only 12.000 low miles,
power ~indows and door locks: tilt wheel , cruise con:
~ol, w1re wheel covers. Designers Accent paint. New
L1st $14,700.

80 New Buicks &amp;
Pontiacs In Stock
and Coming!
See Jim Cochran, Kent Shawver,
Harland Wood or Greg Smith

SMITH

Buick-Pontiac
h•c.
1911 EASTERN AVL, GAlLIPOLIS
446-2282

POMEROY - 992·3671
..

FOR 80111 YOUNG AND OLD - · Jbn ll8all of
Point PleutUII, and IM11011, Evan, look awa.y from the
antique lraciGr they were examining to look at 110me
of the other slgiU at the Sevmth Annual Steam and

change" - a double-edged attack on Celeste and
Rhodes, whom many Republicans would like to see
step aside.
Glllmor has stressed his leadership role in bringing
Republicans into a majority in the state Senate, In
reducing the state Income tax rate and in ru Uy funding
education.
His running mate is freshman state Sen. Olarles F.
Horn of Kettering, whose speciality is local
government.
Pfeifer, 43, has been far more direct in his attacks
.on Rhodes, likening him to Ferdinand Marcos and
Muhammad All, neither of whom knew when to
retire.
Pfeifer has raised more Issues than either of his
opponents, proposing to abolish county boards or
education and patronage-laden deputy motor vehicle
registrar positions.

KUied were:
treatment of a fractured left leg and
Sunday
multiple trauma. Snyder was-taken ·
Akron
~o
Kevin
M. Kardasz, 17;
to Grant Hospital by the Grant
Matthew
.J.
Bast,
18; and Robert
Llfefllght team.
Pelyhes Jr , 17, all of Ak!'On, In a
Meanwhile, there were were me-car accident on a &amp;tmmit
seven deaths Sunday, two Saturday County road.
and two Friday night, a patrol
Massillon: Todd A. Brooks, 19,
spokesman said. Two motorcy- Wooster, In a one-car accident on a
clists were among the victims. MassUion street.
None rJ tb! auto crash victims was
Akron: Merrtll R. ~!ton, li,
wearing a !ll'at belt, and neither of Akron, when his motorcycle struck
cyclists was wearing a helmet, the a tree along a Summit County road .
spokesman said.
Lebanon: Cathy S. San&lt;i'rs, 33,
The victims died In seven accl- Mount SterHng, and Glenna K.
&lt;i'nts, Including one that killed the Netter, 32, Chilllcotb!. In a 11m-car
three Akron teenagers.
crash on Ohio &lt;lBin Warren Coonty.
A Copley Township pollee &lt;tflcer
was ~rsulng tb! teenagers' car
Saturday
when It crashed on a SJmmlt
Batavia: Jeffrey E. Saville, 11,
County road early Sunday. The Goshen, when his motorcycle colpursuit began when the officer lided with a car on Ohio 7'n In
discovered the teens' car parked Clermont County.
behind Copley High School and the
Jackson: Alva M. Martin, 27,
vehicle sped away with Its lights orr, Wellston, in a two.car accident on
a patrol spokeswoman said.
Ohio 327 In Jackson County.
The patrol counts traffic fatalities
Friday Night
resulting from accl&lt;i'nts m the
Fremont: Claren A. Lee, 59, and
state's public roads each weekend his wlf~. Evelyn J . Lee, 56. both of
between 6 p.m. Friday and mid- Bettsville, In a two-car accident on
night Sunday.
a Seneca County road.

Ne~ seatbelt

1,85 PONTIAC 6000 4 DR.·

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Bucket seats, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM,
power windows. 16,000 miles. Compare to new!

ONLV

whether to raise the county sales tax by one-hall
percent to buDd a $1JO million convention center
seating up to 65,1XXl people.
Rhodes, who has not run for office In eight years,
has received 55 percent or more of the Republican
votes In several dlfferenl polls, although Glllmor's
own poll three weeks ago showed him only 5 points
behind.
The former governor, claiming b! Is the only
Republican who can beat Celeste, has largely Ignored
his rivals and trained his fire on the Democratic
governor, whom he says has presided over "the most
scandal-ridden admlnlstratlon In the history or this
great state."
Rhodes' running mate Is Hamilton County
Commissioner Robert A. Tall II, a 44-year old former
state representative from Cincinnati. ·
Glllmor, 47, a veteran &lt;t:Klyearsln theOhloSenate,
has campaigned on "leadership you can trust, for a

Jackson County man killed;
two others hurt in accident

.' ,_,

':'

Featuring air, power windows, AM-FM, tilt. cruise,
rallye wheels, vinyl roof, only 16,000 ow miles .

~

1 Section, 10 Pagoa 25 Canll
A Multimedia !nc . Newspaper

Light voter turnout expected in Ohio

l U VOTE IVIAY 6. 1986
the Committfe to Elect Donald Co• Judge

.

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 5. 1986

cox
COMMON

...

at y

e

PLEAS JUDGE

NEED A LAB TEST?

•

-

DONALD
ANDREW

•Graduate of Southwaetern High School,
Rio Grande College and
Ohio State Unlveraity College of Law
•Haa served Gallia Countiana aa a11latant aolicitor,
assistant prosecutor and
aerved on varioua public boards
•Concerned about fair and effective adminlatration
of justice for at! Galtia Countlana
•Believes in impartial enforcement of domMtlc
support ordert and tho clvH and criminal
ltatutea of Ohio.
'
•Evon though 1 have no opposition In the May&amp;. 1986 Rapubli·
can Primary. I still need your vote and tupport.

Pltoto8 011 Page 10

S&amp;ortel,011 Page '

Vot.36, No.267
C011yrlghted 1986

ELECT

DEDICATION SPEAKER - Charlie Sc..-,PI of the ScrlpJIII
FOUIIdatloD spoke at the detllcatloo ceremony of Ohio Unlverolty's new
E.W. !lcrWB Hall, the new homed OU's Scltooloi Joumallsm, Friday
In Alhms. 1be fouod•llog donated Sl.'lll mUllon to OUforthe hall. (UP!)

EMS training session·

.

"Sweat equity Is here to stay·" he
adds. "There Isn't enough money In
Washington to pay for all the things
that nerd to be done. You can'! let
the man do it· It's a question not
only of money. but of style, or
cxp?Ctation. There Is no way for the
homeownrr to pay his way out of
what must be done around the
_!:h!9_0US~e·:__ _ _ _ _ _ __

Gas EnPte SOOw .tlllrl weekend al the West VlrPda
Fann M.-un north ofPolntl'leasant. Thetl'IICtor, a
· Silver King, was dooaled to the museum by H.L.

Ohio motorists were being ad·
vised today that thestate'snewseal
belt law takes effect Tuesday.
But those motorls Is will be given
a grace period until July 4. At that
time, the state highway patrol wlll
begin Issuing citations, a patrol
spokesman said.
BetiW'!'n Tuesday and .July 3, the
patrol and other pollre ctfirers will
Issue warnings to drivers to wear
their SI'Bt belts. The law requires
every driver and front-seat pas-

law effective Tuesday

In any passeng~&gt;r car,
commercial tractor. commercial
car or truck to wear "aU available
components of a pmperly adjusted
belt," tb! spokesman said.
The mly exemptions are for:
-children required by law to be
In a safety seat;
-employees of the U.S. Postal
Servlre while delivering mall;
-persons d e li ver ing
ne..spapers;
-drivers or passengers In cars
seng~&gt;r

rut required to be equipped with
seat belts (models built Jrlor to Jan.
I, 1966):
-people with a signed affidavit
from a ooctor or chiropractor .
stating that the person has a
physical Impairment that makes
wearing a restraint imposs lbl~ or
Impractical.
Anyone with questions about the
law can contact thr Ohio Department of Highway Safety t&gt;:-t ween 8
a.m. and 5 p.m. at l·IDl-54:\. 7.128.

Clarll of Che8hlre, Ohio.
•

GOP state representative
•

•

race maJor pnmary contest ·
By KEVIN KELLY
OVP staff wrUer
Two Republicans with numerous
area concerns on their minds are
vying In Tuesday's primary for the
nomination to run against a state
representallve whose Influence In
Columbus has grown considerably
within three years.
Incumbent Jolynn Boster, DGalllpolls, faces noopposlt ion In her
bid for a third term to represent the
94th House District of Athens,
Gallla and Meigs counties. Gallla
County Treasurer Myron L. "Bud"
McGhee and Athens Law Director
Garry E. Hunter are seeking the
GOP nod to oppose her In
November.
Boster said her efforts on behalf
of the district have given her a
leadership position !hat can only
help the dlstrici.
"I was personally surptised when
I was chosen to chal!' the Legislative Ethics Committee," she explained. "It gave me an opponunlty
to work with other leaders, the
people who make things happen ."
During her second term, Boster
has chaired a special eommlttee m
delnstltutklnallzatlon that exam-

!ned the problems of mental health
and mental retardation clients
discharged Into the community,
and drafted ,(eglslatlon to create a
state development offlcr to take up
tre slack when federal funding ends
lor the Appalachian Regional
Commission.
Area progriiiRS cited
She noted that Governor Celeste's highway program Includes
lour projects In her district Including widening of Eastern
Avenue In Gallipolis and a study on
a connector road between Ravenswood, W.Va., and Pomeroy. Additionally, she helped Gallla County
obtain a tourism grant.
A common area conrern - jol:l;
and highways - are connected,
Boster said, and she wlll push for
funds to cOmplete highway projects
already planned.
"From the sW!dpolnt of being a
representative, t flght harder lor
projects In my district, but we must
have a . regional approach," she
said, citing area suwort for the
Jackson byp8ss. "Anything that
connects with Gallla or Meigs ·
counties wUI help attract business
and Industry to the area."

•

Even If there is a change In the
statehouse majority after November, Boster said she envisions
no problems In accomplishing her
·goals because she has given and
received bipartisan support.
"Look at the bills I have worked
on," she said. "Most of the crucial
things have been nonpartisan. I
don't think you can say, in anyway,
shape or form, that I'm a party
voter. When It comes to my district
or an Issue, my district comes
first."
As an example, she cltt:.'(j ~r
recenl vote against the transformation of Shawriee Slate Community
College Into a four-year university,
partly because of Its negative effect
on Rio Grande College and Community College.
Ollldldate glln!r perspective
McGhee, who became county
treasurer In 1982, said one of his
primary goals In running Is to help
Improve the economic condition of
the area.
"The lact that I have been In
business and In here (the treasurer's otlice) since '82 has given me a
perspective on what's happening
with people, par1lcularly the hard·

Garry E . Htlder
ships people face when they come In
and pay their taxes."
While ~ wouldn't discourage
attracting a large lnduslry to the
district, McGhee fee!sgetllngsmaU
businesses such as mobile home
construction or development of a
tourism (ndus try would be
beneficial.
"One or our grealest natural
resources here Is the Ohio River,"
McGhee said. "We've l!Pt U.S.
Marine, which Is a boat engine
manufacturer, coming In and setting up In the old Chris-Craft plant.
Now why couldn't we bulld boats?"
On other Issues, McGhee said he
has heard numerous concerns

Myron L. McGhee .
about new highways and jobs and
feels that by being responsive to
constituents and making connections In and out ofthestatmouse,he
wUI get things done for the area.
"In filet, as far as seeing the
constituency, we're going to schedule regular meetings In the rounty
seats, and m:&gt;re, If necessary," he
said.
QlflaiWcatloJB debated
A former salesman and realtor,
McGhee, wbo woo the enoorsement
of an Athens ne..spaper last week,
took Issue with Hunter's claim that
Hunter Is roore qualified or the job
because he's an attorney.
"Most people who don't know me

•

Jolynn Boster
ask me If I'm an attorney and when
I say no, tb!y say. 'Thank God." '
McGhee said. "I think people want
to be governed by their peers. They
feel good thatl 'm not an attorney." .
Should a Democrat.lc majority
stU! control thr House If he's
elected, McGhee said he wUI seek
~partisan support.
"I have a philosophy In life that·
you can't he bosom ruddies with
everyone, but you can try to get
along with them." he said.
Hunter, who has been Athens'
law dlrectot· slnre 1977, said he's
qualified to lJEo state representative
because his attornl'y's experience
(Contlriued on page 10)

••

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